University of South Carolina Libraries
” K A m I ' rT PAGE FOUR. V V THE BARNWELL PEOPLE^SENTINEL, BARNWELL. SOUTH CAROLINA THURSDAY, MAY 23RD, 1935. The Bara well People-Sentinel JOHN W. HOLMES *V840—1912. plane. Room Improvement Club—Virginia And yet, in spite of the big wage Buist, Marie Still, Orie 'Smith, Birta differential 1 fixed" by executive order Hightower; BlackviLe-B—Room Im- of thjj President, the manufacturers provement Club—Virginia C*in, Mil- of the Korth and East have been com- dred Collins, Nina Lee Collins, Ruth ”— plaining of a weekly^ wage differen- Croft, Merriel Breeden, Mary Guess, B. P. DAVIES, Editor and Propriel*n>>4jal of only $la week for ^textile em- Lucille Grubbs, Theo 1 Lott, Ehrlist > . ployes—113 as compared with $12 in Still; Barnwell-C—Poods Unit-I— Entered at t e post o ice at rnwe * South. On a percentage basis, Marjorie Goodson, Helen Sanders, Jau- V \v Thirty Million Miles '*0 S. C., as second-class matter. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One Year $1.50 Six Months .90 Three Months .60 (Strictly in Advance.) I that means that the textile wori North of the Mason andi Dixson gets only 8> per cent, more than his fellow worker in the South, while a Northern “relief client,” doing the same class of work as his Southern don Harley; Bamwell-B—^Eoods .Unit II—Joe Ann Bauer, Avalon Darno'd, Virginia Darnold, Esther Diamond., Alice Fletcher, Mildred Mahaffey. Mary Olive Robertson, Alva Stevens; Poultry Major 4-H Club—Louise THURSDAY, MAY 23RD, 1935. What„^\bout a New Peat Office? We winder if any of our readers have seriously considered the sugges tion made a short time ago by “Civic brother, will be paid more than 100 Hartzog, Anhi£ Rebecca Shuler per cent. more. So what? High Schbol Student Has Marked Ability Diplomas wete-jtwarded to Beth Manning, Frances Manning, Virginia Cain, Theo Lott, Nina Lee Collins and Ekaae Sanders. Pride" that local leaders endeavor to Three Poems and a Sketch Published secure a new post office building for Barnwell before President Roosevelt’s huge “recovery fund” is exhausted? Down Allendale way^we learn from a newspaper dispatch, “a group of progressive citizens is beginning an in South Carolina High. School Literayy Yearbook. -—■ M iss Margaret Christie, a Barnwell high school student of marked ability, ADVERTISE IN The People- Sentinel. Notice Calling in Creditors. effort to secure more permanent work en j°y« the distinction of having three ^ g t2te>0 £ g :ut ^ Carolina, from the expenditure of federal re lief administration funds” going into that county. They have reached the conclusion that “hundreds, of dollars' have been wasted by not making proper plans prior to the expenditure of the money,” and it is planned “to see if it is possible to secure funds to raze the Allenda e town hall and erect on the site a community huddl ing.” poems and a sketch published in the cunent edition of “The South Caro lina High School Literary Yearbook.” Miss Christie, who is’a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert R. Christie, of this city, recently received a letter fiom Prof. Grin F. Crow, dean of the School of Education, University of South Carolina, congratulating her upon her achievement and expressing the hope that her “interest and abili ty^ in creative writing will continue to If Allendale can secure the neces sary funds for such a project, what d^idop.” is to hinder Barnwell from getting ^ titles of the poems published money for the erection of a building ere: “Rain,” “To-a Place I Have in which the post office could be Known’ and “Dusk.” Her sketch was housed? As “Civic Pride” pointed out “Diry of James Edgur Smith, Esq.” a short time ago, the present quarters ^ ne <J f h er poems is re-published are not in keeping with the progress herewith to show her outstanding lit- that the town has shown in the past| era, y ability: several years, and something should ' T° a Place I Have Known. be done to secure a more modem home Why should! this sudden longing over- for Uncle Sam’s local branch of the postal service. We wonder if it would be possible to secure PWA funds for the purchase cf the necessary material, etc., and use unemployed! “relief clients” for the construction work? whelm me? Why should this heart’s caressed and fondled tear • Slip forth, bringing dim, forgotten memories Of things, I yet, unknowingly, held dear? Won’t Senator Brown, Representa- Pictured bubbles hang before my mist- tive Bhatt, Mayor Fuller and. other , eyes» progressive citizens take the matter Small miniatures, complete with • its in hand and see what—if anything— remembered scene— can be done along this line? Aching voids that call across the ——| empty years Are torn afresh, with old pain whet ted keen. And here the dark, loved, queerly empty hall, —— A1 Smith may or may not have ad dressed his friend, Roosevelt as “you old potato” on that more or less famous “Hello, A1—Hello, Frank” oc- . . -cuta-rf 4h* 1932 presidential cam- ■>«« ■« wa«-how m«ny ygara tgol ..ipaign, but he has certainly been County of Barnwell. Herman Brown, trading and doing business under the firm name and style of Simon Brown’s Sons, in his own behalf and in b#half of all other credStors of the estate of W. A. Ross, who desire to come in and 'contribute to the expense of this action, . Plaintiff t vs. R. Hartin, Defendants. Seymour Ross, D. I. Ross, Pretto Ross, Garlin Ross, Archie Ross and Mamie To ell lien crediors and general creditors of the estate of W. A. Ross, late of Barnw’ell County, said State: Pleaae Take Notice, that you are hereby notified and required to pre sent your claim, with due proof there of, to the undersigned! Master for Barnwell County, on or before the 15th day of July, 1935, at his office, Barnwell, South Carolina, at which time the Master will hear and deter mine any and all questions of law and fact that may arise as to any claim or claims which may be presented. And upon the failure of any creditor to appear and present his claim or claims on ot before the date above designated, the said claim or claims will be perpetually barred as provided under Statute at Large No. 808, Acts of General Assembly for S. C., 1934. G. M. GREENE, Master for Barnwell County. 5-16-6L \ of Ford Economy * * % Hi; i&S&v a - m throwing some over-ripe verbal vege tables at President Roosevelt since that~;jtimie. 1 The Wage Differential. Holding perhaps within its scarred old wall ‘ ^ The silvern memo’-iy of a bygonei laugh And the. sharp pop of nuts cracked un- • der heel. Here—there well-Remembered,- tim'e- kissed rooms, An executive order signedi by Presi- That whotd ont . e and overflowed with youth’s exuberant feel Of Joy and Life commingled with for bidden .talks. ' y We are gone—leaving you behind forevermore, And I do not think that you can fe?l the name ---^ 7 —- who CITATION NOTICE. dent Roosevelt Monday night estab lishes the pay rate under the four bil lion dollar work-relief measure, and shows a differential for unskilled labor from as low as $19 a month in the small towns of South Carolina and other Southern States to a peak of $55 a month in the big cities of the p or thpge North, East and West, the correspond ing wage for the $19 to be paid in the South being $40 a month;’while an unskiliebl laborer in a Southern city the size of Atlanta, Ga., will receive only $30 a month, as compared with the top of $55 in other sections of the country. The differential for skilled new loved you long ago. The State of South Carolina, Ccunty of Barnwell. By John K. Snelling, Esq., Probate Judge. WHEREAS, R. R. Moore has made suit to me to grant unto him Letters of. Aministration C. T. A. of the Es tate of and effects of Jerry Scott; THESE ARE, THEREFORE, to cite and admonish all and singular the kindred and creditors of the said Jerry Scott, dieceased that they be and appear before me, in the court of Pro bate, Jq.:, be held at Bflrnwell, S. C.. on Saturday, May 25th, next, af ter *pirbIication thereof, at 11 o’clock in'the forenoon, to;-ghoW» cause, if any «V%. V.v. r.V»«-*V .Af.V.V.v 11 More miles. Faster miles. Greater economy . . . that is the story of the Ford V-8. There are conclusive fig ures from owners to show that it is the most economical Ford car ever built A particularly .interesting and complete report of costs comes from a national fleet owner who has owned 854 Ford cars which have run more than thirty million miles in business use. . .. 175 were Model T Fords which were run 5,017,075 miles. 599 were Model A Ford cars which were run 24,041,632 miles. 80 are Ford V- 8 cars which have been run 2,982,886 miles. This owners cost records show that Ford V-8 car* cost 12% less to operate than the Model A Fords and 31% less than the Model T Fords. And they covered more miles per month 1 The monthly average for the Model t Fords was 1509 miles. . . . For the Model A Fords, 1866 miles.... And 2571 miles for the Ford V-8. Each year the Ford car gives you more in value and performance and costs you less to operate. Actual Figures Show V The Ford V*8 is 12 % S ■ Am M . and _ . r More •co- Q1% ihoa 1 Iki More *co- omical than lb* Model A. Modol T. Sty. .4 I I M : FORD V-8 m m . ...v.v':;*; : ::■;%$< <: • • yoy .y» oy .wav. »v>v>ev» .■i.’.v.y.v.y.y.vif. .******•*** answer to said Complaint on the sub- 4-H CLUB MEMBERS RECEIVE ACHIEVEMENT CERTIFICATES Sixty-five 4-H club members com pleting their projects for 1934 re- and intermediate labor is about in the reived certificates on Achievemnt Day same ratio. hel ( j recently. This is the big premium that the The awards were based on the satis- country must pay to help maintain the factory completion of a year’s work “American standard of living" in the including _ attendance at meetings, populous centers of the North, East home practices in the respective pro- and West, and lends color to the News jeets and the keeping of record cards, and Courier’s contention that the New note books and the canning of at least Deal was designed primarily to “save” two dozen containers of fruits and the big incAistrial cities at the ex- vegetables. ^ pen so of other sections. * (^ertifi&ate awards were as follows: Of course, to pay a scale of wages Healing Springs—Room Improvement in the South as high as that in the Club — Hamette Bieeden, other sections of the country would Grubbs, Christie Lee Davis, Aubrey disrupt private industry, even though I-ott, Lois Lott, Evelyn Whittle; Gali- the pay rates established by the Ice—Rcdm Improvement Club—De- President are 20 bo 30 per cent, bo- boiah Black, Martha Black, Mary low the prevailing wage scales, but Black, Leira Grubbs; Barnwell-A— it doesn’t seem reasonable that there Room Improvement Club—Margaret .should be such a great difference in Croft, Mildred^Sields, Edith Fields, the cost of maintaining a uniform Carrie Grace Grubbs, Beth Manning,' they have, why the saj^fj^dministra- tion C. T.‘ A. should not be granted. /$rr Given unde^my Hand this 10th day of May, A. D. i935. JOHN K. SNELLING, Judge of Probate, .BarnweTTCo. S. C. / Published on the 16th day of May, 1935, in The Barnwell People-Sentinel. scriber at his office at Blackville, S. C., within twenty cays after the service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service; and if you fail to answer the Complaint within the time aforesaid, the plaintiff in this action will apply to the Court for the .relief demanded in the Complaint. A. H. NINESTEIN, May 6, 1935. Plaintiff’s Attorney. NOTICE TO MINOR. TO: GILMORE SIMMS, infant . de fendant, and to his mother, Fanny M*. Simms, the person wfith whom he resides: YOU WILL PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that you are hereby required Important Notice. Complaints from various sections of the county have been made to the coun ty authrlties and also to members of the Grand Jury about farmers plow ing' into the public roads. This is in clear violation of the statutes, and those guilty of the practice are urged to cooperate in helping us maintain a , good system of roads and highways. F rankie jf ^ j s continued, it Will be necessary to take legal action. M. W; WISE, Foreman, Grand Jury. SUMMONS FOR RELIEF (Complaint Served.) State of South Carolina, County of Barnwell. “standard of living” in different parts Frances Manning, Izqra Polk, Donnie 1 Court of Common Pleas, of the counlry. If that be true, then Lee Norris; Oak Grove—Room Im-1 MRS. ZELMA BROWN, it would seem to be in the interest provement Club—Irene Black, Maud of economy to bring about a shift of Ruby Knopf, Annie Laurie Knopf; population^—from the crowded cities Long Branch—Room Improvement of the North, East and West, with Club—Dorothy Baxley, Mildred Black, their high costs of living, to the vil- Rebbie Birt, Vickie Carroll; Hercules lages, hamlets and countrysides of the Southern States, where living costs ore 50 per cent, lower. Not,’ however, that an influx of settlers from the -RoomT 1 Improvement Cl^ib—Myrt e Sanders. Ashleigh — Room Improve ment Club—Blanche Hair; Joyce Branch—Room Improvement Club- Alberta Still, Elizabeth Still, Virgie Plaintiff, vs. FANNIE M. SIMMS, JNO. G. SIMMS, KATE M. SIMMS, PERRY B. SIMMS, BEVERLY SIMMS, ED MOND SIMMS, GILMORE SIMMS, EDYTHE AGARD, FRANCES SIMMS, and MARY C. SIMMS OLIPHANT, Defendants. YOU AND EACH OF YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required tenement districts would be a great asset frOm a social viewpoint, but a Still, Leola Still, Louise Bates, Pearl Jiappy medium in living standards Bates; Hilcla—Room '‘Improvement might be effected—that in the South Club—Thelma Morris, Birta Lee Delk,jto answer the complaint in this ac- e'evated while the standards in other Frances Delk, Margaret De’.k, "Sadie tion, of which a copy is herwith served is lowered to a reaaooable Hutto, Eloise Sanders; Blackville-A—jupon you, and to serve a copy of your to have a suitable guardian ad litem appointed by the Couurt to represent you in'the foregoing action, or your parent or guardian with whom you re side on your behalf shall have such guardian ad litem appointed within twenty days after the service of this notice upon you, and upon your fail ure to have such guardian ad litam ap pointed, then the undersigned on be half of plaintiff shall petition the Court to appoint some suitable and competent person to represent you in the foregoing action. A. H. NINESTEIN, Plaintiff’s Attorney. Dated May 6, 1935. R. L. BRONSON, . Clerk of Court. I spend most of my time being rethreaded. Do you? T NoH. I sew with J. & P. COATS best 6-cbrd thread—it doesn't break every TEALE THEATRE NOTICE OF ELECTION. Where Sound Sounds Best Thursday-Friday, May 23-24 “The Woman in Red” With BARBARA STANWICK Also Comedy—“WHAT, NO MEN." By authority contained in section 2, of Act 295, passed by the 1927 Gen eral Assembly, notice is hereby given that an election will be held in Barn well, S. C., on Friday, May 24th, 1935, for the purpose of electing one trustee for Barnwell School District No. 45. Said trustee will be elected to fill the position of trustee left vacant by the expiration of Terie Richardson’s term and the tiustee electee) shall serve until the second Tuesday in April, 1940. Said election shall be held as is provided by law for the holding of General Elections. The polls will b3 opened at the Court House, and the following will serve as managers: Angus Pattrson, George Halford and Carroll Davis. - . . HORACE J. CROUCH,- County Supt, of Education. Barnwell, S. C., May 7, 1935. 3t. SATURDAY, MAY 25 BUCK JONES in . “Rockey Rhodes” ALSO SELECTED SHOOTS Monday and Tuesday, May 27-28 f a -in- The little Colonel” ALSO COMEDY AND FOR NEWS