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/ ! £!'*, PAGE POUk THE BARNWELL PEOPLE-SENTINEL, BARNWELL, SOUTH CAROLINA THURSDAY, JANUARY Y, IfSS". TksBmrawell People-Sentinel JOHN W. HOLMES 1844—1912. W\ B. P. DAVIES, Editor mnd Propritjor. Entered at the post office at Barnwell, S. C., as second-class matter. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One Year $1.50 Six Months .90 Three Months .50 (Strictly in Advance.) THURSDAY, JANUARY 3. 1935. The general assembly convenes next Tuesday and 40 days—or more— of bad weather may be expected. V Heard during the holidays: Bing Crosby attempting to croon “Silent Night, Holy Night” on a raciio pro gram. Bub-bub-bub-buh-boo-o-o! After carefully following the eiili- torials of Dr. W. W. Ball, et al., in the News and Courier for the past several months, we have come to the conclusion that the Charleston news paper is firmly convinced that if the Roosevelt adfrninistraftion "vfins the war against depression it will be a “Pyrrhic victory.” One of the reasons being advanced for immediate payment of the soldier bonus is the fact that the government seems to have plenty of money to spend on everything else. Um-m-m. Just what were the reasons advanced two or three years ago when full pay ment was being demanded and half of the amount was finally made avail able? So What? It was announced from Washington a few days ago that families in South Carolina on federal relief in Novem ber totalled only 62,666 as compared with 74,548 in October, a drop of 15.9 per cent, while obligations incurred decreased from $1,978,737 in October to $1,902,880 in November, a reduc tion of 3.8 per cent. In other words, 11,882 persons were dropped from the relief' rolls with a consequent saving of $75,857, or slightly more than $6 per person, while the 62,666 persons retained on relief cost the overnment $1,902,880, or a little over $30 per person. So what? Does this bear out the contention of many newspapers and individuals that entirely too much goes into the administration of the relief funds? In the words of the Japanese school boy, “We ask to know.” formed that he further stated that the savings thus effected on printing are to be given to these In needl of re lief. To effect these savings, it is necessary to circumvent the code in a way that works a hardship on the smaller printers. We commend the State administrator for his efforts to \economize in relief administration, provided it isn’t be ing dene exclusively at the expense of the printers of the State, all of whom are taxpayers who help intone way or another to foot the huge expenditures for relief. Is the same economic ef fort being put forth in the purchase of the various other suppiles and commodities that are handed out with such a lavis*h hand by the various county administrations? And is the same noble effort being made to economize in the matter of salaries and personnel in the 46 county relief offices, to say nothing of the State administration itself? Was there any effort at economy when common labor was being paid 30 and 40 cents an hour? Has there been any drastic redaction in the matter of personnel and salaries in the various county re lief administrations and the State ad ministration itself? If these questions can be answered in the affirmative—and doubtless they can be—then the printers of South Carolina can have no just cause for complaint when orders that they think should go to them are placed by the State administrator in Columbia at prices lower than they can proouce the work in small quantities and show a profit. And here we have been thinking all the time that the efforts of the Roose velt administration were being direct ed at effecting quick and substantial recovery along ALL lines by insuring profitable prices for finished products in order that larger wages might be paid for shorter hours! _ No Criticism. But Disapproval. Hk ; i Criticism is one thing and disap- ftrcval is another, and the difference between the two is clearly shown by the following editorial comment from the pen of Palmer W. Johnson, ediior of the Marion Star, anent the “back pay” of judges: “Of course to criticise one judge is bad! enough, but to criticise all of them is likened unto pulting one’s head into the lion’s mouth. We did merely say that they have elastic -minds, which enable them to worship the constitution from one angle and (tpit on it from another angle. All cf our “rights” are in their hands, and we merely hope that they w-ill safeguard our “rights,” when the time comes, as carefully as they have taken care of their own “rights.” But if they fail so to do, we must remem- ■ber that they are just judges—and t men—and that underneath the pified black robes there is weak- i Nobody’s Business By Gee McGee. Mike Clark’s Weekly Market Letter, cotton. sentiment was strong on monday, but the market was weak on tuesday, and everybody decided, to go slow on Wednesday pending cold weather in georgy, however, july broke on thurs- day and this hurt spots on friday, and the market closed on sadday and the preechera got -reddy for sunday. over 75 boll weevils froze to death recently in luzy-anna onner count of huey long not looking after their comfort too. i advise going slow enduring bad weather, but hold yore trumps and look for higher prices as usual. the goverment for everthing. i will pay for my own tobacer, snuff and gass or do without. 2. resolved, that i will not say nothing deroggertory about my wife’s kinfolks unless they spend over, 3 weeks at a timev at our. house per month. 3. resolved, that i will not pay anny attention to what a politician promis es while he is running for offis, and count verry little on him'after he gets in. 4. resolved, that i will get up and start the fire in the stove on every 5th sunday morning, provided 5th sun- days do not come but 2 or 3 times per year. 5. resolved, that i will not knock budd kitchens down as heretofoar un til he tells me the same old nora’s ar^ joke 15 different times enduring the same month. 6. resolved, that i will sign anny petition of lunacy transportation fetched to me cowering the fcol who blows his horn in a traffic jam, or when i have choked down in front of him and can’t get started the second the green light comes cn. 7. resolved, that i will hold my tem per when the guy in front of me at the pitcher Show wobbles his bushy head so’s i can’t see what’s going on, and allso when uncle joe eats at our house and askes a blessing 15 min- nets long. 8. resolved, that i will quit think ing that all of the members of rehober church have no more reiigion than i have, and that i wnll try to push for ward instead of pulling backward when annything is started by some- boddy else that will help our town. gram. chitago offeredi no inspiration "for higher wheat onner count of a boat load of corn landing at omaha, but new york says it was all spoke for before it was unloaded, wheat fin ished the week-end cl down to c2 up, and so did coin and oats, except wild oats—they were firm till after mid-night, the rye market (except bottledl in bond) w-as stagnant in sympathy with "barley malt and rub bing alcohall. buy stuff as you need it and w-hen you can pay for same. 9. resolved!, that enduring 1935, i will gripe less and boost more, look for the good in my feller-man rather than spy-out what little bad he mought have in him, sweep around my door fiist, paddle my own canoe till i choke dow'n, brag on my nabors (be cause they e’eserve it), and help my preecher to make a sucktess of his big job. yores trulie, mike Clark, rfd. corry spondont. ADVERTISE IN The People- Sentinel. Legal Advertisements CITATION NOTICE. produce. potatoes were dull in long island, while butter was firm in the refriger ators, but lard fetched 9.70 in the middle west where it could be sold a-tall. pork was quiet till someboddy hit it in the head, but tallow showed no signs of easing off. flour was sted- dy, but hides on native steers were fair 4o middling, but furrin skins ness, sin and sorrow, and that men wele thin, eggs broke tuesday, but lly take care of themselves, if usua i hennery selections, including •Me to do so, whether they be men, ducks, geese and mud-turkles sold* at like judges, or judgeSjjwho, it now de- c 25^pcr dozen in the shell, but were ▼elops, are just men. expect anyway?” What did you We’d Certainly Like to Know. Frankly, we don’t profess to under stand all that we know about the ad ministration of federal relief in much stronger scrambled. other markets wound up the week about the same, ^thank you. (p. s. poultry scratched\a new low for . the season, friday.) The State of South Carolina, County of Barnwell. By John K. Snelling, Esq, Probate Judge: WHEREAS, H. P. Compton made suit to me to grant unto him Letters of Administration cn the Estate of and effects of Joseph C. Wingard; THESE ARE, THEREFORE, to cite and admonish alJL.§nd singular the kindred and creditors of the said Joseph C. Wingard, deceased, that they be and appear before me, in\he Court of Probate, to.be held at well, S. C., on Saturday, January 6tK> next, after-.publication thereof, at 11 o’clock in the forenoon, to show cause, if any they have, why the said admin istration should not be granted 1 . Given under my Hand this 21st day of December, A. D. 1934. JOHN K. SNELLING, Judge of Probate, B. C. Publisher on the 27th day of Dec., 1934, in The Barnwell People-Sentinel. Notice of Discharge. tween the legal hours of sale in front of the Court House at Barnwell, S. C., on Monday, the 7th day 6f January, 1935, this being Sulesday in said month, the following described estate: Five hundred and forty (540) acres of land and 9 buildings in Tinker’s Creek School District, boundled on the North by Turner Smith and others, East by Est. of G. W. Jowers and R. O’. Sprawls, South by Mitchell, Bell and Kennedy, West by Youngboodand others. Levied upon and sold as the proper ty Estate of C. M. Bell to satisfy the above Execution and costs. —ALSO:— Sixty acres of land in Morris School District, bounded on the North by M. C. Diamond, East by G. J. Diamond, South by Liza Cave and West by Con nelly Mill Creek. Levied upon and sold as the proper ty of Johnnie Cave to satisfy the above Execution and costs. —ALSO:— Seven acres of land in Barnwell School District, bounded on the North by J. Bunyan Black, East by J. Bun- yan Black, <South and West by ’Terie Richardson. Levied upon and sold as the proper ty of Miss S. T. Patterson to.-satisfy the above Execution and Costs. --^ALSOj— ^ Eighteen acres cf land in Reedy Branch School District, bounded on the North by Barnwell-Orangeburg Public road, East by 'Orlando Black, South by Atlantic Coast Line Railroad, and West by Mazie Butler; Also, 36 acres of land in Reedy Branch School District, bounded on the North by Baifnwell-Orangcburg Public road, East by Nix-, South by Atlantic Coast Line Railroad, and West by Orlando Black. _* Levied upon and sold as the proper- Around fbe Clock yith Reddy Kilowatt 7PM V r # You twist his nose—and look! . There's a light upon your book Or any other necessary things ‘REDDY KILOWATT’ YOUR ELECTRICAL SERVANT SouthXarolina COMPANY POWER J. W. Ruff, Local Mgr. stocks. —^unregulai itV ruled in naw york South Carolina, nor the ^Graphic Arts an( j trading waX verry skace, how- .vS4a uno'er which the print shpps are eV er, some amer.\obacker changeed R' supposed to operate, but we have hands when penn r \ r ran into Ren about concluded that some depart- motois> a cVop in \ enI}ie copper ments of the federal government art tommon was heard as X r as 33^ st<f juat about the most flagrant “chisel- but u s> stee , slipped b ^. k to 38 on «ra" extant. j tuesday; dupont showed a loss till Macently,^ an effort was made by c hinner and jappan offered to pay members of the S. C. Regional Code them for the ammernation used in the Ailtliority to effect a more equitable oriental war betwixt them and man- distribution of the orders for printing cb usky, which voted 100 percent jap- *r the various county administra- pane8t at the close c and 0 ghowed turns, instead of keeping it mtre or a sma ]| | 08S when the trucks com-, leas centralized in Columbia an<S it is menced to hall coal and salt, we ad- reported' that the State admimstrator vj 8e swopping yore can for radio the committee■ that ordars corpse, 2 gallons for.7Dne. -"v—— from Washington are to the effect that yoreg Notice is hereby given that I will file my final account as Executrix un- dler theAeims of the last Will and Testament of the late Ransom Snell ing, deceased, with the Hon. John K. Snelling, Judge of Probate for Barn well County, S‘ate of South Carolina, upon Saturday, Januaiy 12th, 1935, at 10:00 o’clock in the forenoon, and pe tition the said Court for an Order of Discharge and Letters Dismissory. Elizabeth Snelling, Executrix, Estatg, of Ransom Snelling, Deceased. Dec. 20, 1934.—4t. . SHERIFFS SALES. ty of L. B. T. Black, to satisfy the above Execution and costs. • —ALSO:— ^ Three acres of land in~Four Mile School District, bounded on the North by Odom, East by J. F. Swett and South by Kennedy Estate. Levied upon and sold as the -proper ty of S. J. Fickling to satisfy the above Execution and costs. —ALSO:— One lot in the town of Blackville, bounded cn the North by Springtown Public road, East by lot of Williams,' South by lands of J. D. Whittle, West by lands of Jupiter Brown. Levied upon and sold as the proper ty of Handy Flem to, satisfy the above Execution- and costsi —ALSO:— * — Ninety-five acres in Red Oak School District, bounded on the North by P. T. Carter, East by Baldock Public road, South by lands formerly of Black, West by Rosanna Carter. Levied upon and sold as the proper ty cf Mis. S. C. Hay to satisfy the above Execution and costs. -ALSO:- \\ o Seventeen acres of land an d 1 build ing in Kline School District, bounded as follows: North by Brown and Bush, East by Sou. Cotton Oil Co., South by Jim Mori is and West by Brown and Bush. Levied upon and sold as the proper ty of Caesar Johnson to satisfy the above Execution and costs. —ALSO: Eighty-three (83) acres of land in Ellenton School District, bounded on the North by 'lands of W. B. Turner, East by B. L. Peeples, South by Juno Johnson, West by^. M. Turner. Levied upon and sold as the proper ty of Adeline Tutt to satisfy the above Execution and costs. —ALSO:— \ Ninety-two ’(92) acres of land in lenton School District, bounde d on the\ North by Cause's Co., East and South by Ashley Co., and, West by Charily Cato. Levr Ty of W. A. Todd to satisfy the above above Execution and costs. " ALROj—l—_ Forty-five acres of land' and one building in Friendship School Dis trict;-bounded on the NortK and East by lands of Jim M orris, South by lands of B. L. Zorn and\West by lands of Britton Morris. Levied upon and sold as the proper ty of Est. Mrs. Belle Zorn and heirs at law, Joe Zorn, Ed Zorn and N it Zorn to satisfy 4)ie above Execution and costs. - —ALSO:— Twenty acres of land and 1 build ing in Diamond School District, bound ed as follows: North by Brown and Bush, East by Baldock Public road, South by Terie Richardson and West by Est. of Morris. Levied upon and sold as the proper ty of Est. of £. F. Sease to satisfy the above Execution and coats. ^—-71 — BROWN & BUSH Attorneya-at-Law BROWN-BUSH BUILDING BARNWELL, SOUTH CAROLINA / J PRACTICE IN STATE AND FEDERAL COURTS 1 tt/c well County, State of South Carolina, in the case cf Aiken Mortgage and Realty Company, plaintiff, vs. A, By ron Hair, J)lrs. M. E. Still and J. J. Cudd, defendants, I, the undersigned Master, will sell in front of the Court House at Barnwell, S. C., during the legal hours of sale, on the 7th ofey of January, 1935, same being salesday in said month, to the highest bidder, the following described premises: All that certain lot of land with the improve ments thereon, situate in the town of Blackville, Barnwell County, South Carolina, at the coiner of Clark and Pascallis Streets, and bounded as fel lows: On the North by Pascallis Street; on the East by what is known as Railroad lot; cn the West by Clark Street and on the South by lot of B. L. Boylston. Terms of sale: Cash, purchaser, to pay for papers and revenue stamps. And that the Master require the suc cessful bidder to deposit with him at the conclusion of the bidding, a sum of money equal to five per cent, of such bid as a guaranty that such bid will be complied with; that upon fail ure of the successful bidder to make such deposit, the Master shall immedi ately re-sell, on the same salesday, the said! premises, upon the same terms and conditions, ignoring any bid made^ by or on behalf of such defaulting bid der; and that such deposit shall be credited upon the purchase price, and if said bid! be not complied with with- pay for papers.am? revenue stamps. That the Master shall require the hip-hmf hidHpi- ai. the aa^a, tha-w- Under and by virtue of a decree of the Court of Cdmmon Pleas for Barn well County, South Carolina, in the case of Marie T. Cornell, plaintiff, vs~ upon and sold as the proper- A reasonable time the said deposit Mattie Bell, et aL, defendants, I, the A 4- fttA akk/wro , • m . . ... _ 1 mto. a A ^ 4 * ’ 1 11 • 0 a to be forfeited) to the plaintiff as liqui dated damages. G, M. GREENE* Master, Barnwell County. MASTERS ALE. most be bought as cheaply as le and that if this end cannot mike Clark, rfd. prog-nosticator. by purchasing from South ' , printers, then orders must Mike Clark’s New Year Relations, in Baltimore.” We are in-j L resolved that i will depend upon Stale of 5 South Carolina, County of Barnwell. Under and by virtue of certain Tax Executions to me directed by J. • J. Bell, Treasurer of Barnwell County, I have this day levied upon and will sell to the highest bidder for cash, be* Under and by virtue of a decree of the Court of Common Pleas for Barn well County, State of South Carolina, in the cata of D. O. Pfenning, plain tiff, vs. E. W. McKerley and B. J. McKerley, defendants, I, |he under signed Master, will sell in fj^nt of the Court House at Barnwell, S. C., during the legal hours of sale, cn the 7th chy of January, 1935, same being salesday in said month, to the highest bidder, the following described premises: All that certain piece, parcel or tract of land, situate, lying and being in Barn well County, State aforesaid, with improvements thereon, containing and J B MORRIS mpasuring sixty (60) acres, more or Sheriff. Barnwell Co. foHSwa^On tR Barnwell, S. C., Dec. 18, 1934. MASTER’S SALE. - ■ f, - • Under and by virtue of a decree of the Court of Common Pleas for Barn- by landb of A. B. McKerley’; on the East by lands of W. H. Baxley and N. Blatt; on the South by lands of D. O. Fanning and on the West by Reeves Oeekr—- Terms of sale: Cash, purchaser to the plaintiff, to make a cash deposit cf Fifteen ($15.00) Dollars (which does not exceed three (3 per cent.) pei centum of the total indebtedness due the plaintiff,) as earnest money in the bidding. The deposit to be applied upon the bid, should there be a com pliance; that the pers .n making the highest bid, other than the plaintiff, fail to make such deposit immediately at the time cf acceptance of his bid then the mortgaged premises will be re-sold at once upon the same termv at the risk of such bidder, on the same salesday; that any bidder making the deposit herein required fail to comply with his bid, without lawful excuse then su(;h deposit shrill be retained by the selling officer and forfeited to the' plaintiff as liquidated damages. That no personal or deficiency judg ment is demanded and thht the bid- Art* ding will hot remain open after the sale, but that compliance with the bid may be made immediately. G. M. GREENE, t Master, Barnwell County. MASTER’S SALE. undersigned Master will sell in front of the Court House at Barnwell, South Carolina, during the legal hours of sale, on the 7th day of January, 1935, same being sales d ay in said month, to the highest bidder, the following de scribed premises: - “All of that piece, parcel or tract of land in Rosemary Township, Barn well Coi^ty, State aforesaid, contain ing 90 acres/Tnore or less, and bound ed on the North by lands of the estate of W. P. Mitchell; on the East by lands of estate cf W. P. Mitchell and Hamp Woodward; on the South by lands of J. W. Kennedy and on .the West by lands of R. E. Woodward.” •• Also: “All that piece, parcel or tract of land in Rosemary Township, Barnwell County, State aforesaid, containing IJO acres, more or less and bounded' cn thev North by lands of Bertha and Maj McLemoreon Jthe East by lands of C. B. Parker; on the South by lands of J. W. Kennedy and on the West by lands of A. I. McLemore.” Terms of sale: Gash, purchaser toi pay for papers and Revenue stamps. G. M. GREENE, Master, Barnwell County. /