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.:v. "'V MjtZ -~uB. P. DAVIES, Editor and Proprietor. THE BA&NWELL PEOPLE-SENTINEL, BARNWELL, SOUTH CAROLINA Thursday, august 22, 1935. TImBarnwell People-Sentinel JOHN W. HOLMES 1849—1912. Entere?Pat tlie post office at Bornwoll, S. C., as second-class 1 nutter. SUBSCRIPTION RATES/ - One Year ........ $1.50 Six Months ..—AO Three Months AO (Strictly in Adeaaee.) THURSDAY, AUGUST 22, 1935. Will RoRers—“The Top.” , A world was stunned, shocked! and saddened Friday morning when word was flashed out of the cold, bleak wastes of the Arctic by that modem miracle, the radio, that Will Rogers, peerless humorist-philosopher, and Wiley Post, internationally! famous aviator, had met Death in an icy river of the frozen North. In the vernacu lar of the d*y> each of these two men was “the top’ in his chosen life work. i 1 f Will Rogers was universally loved, by all classes of the civilized world. People in all walks of life felt that they knew him intimately. He had visited in the home* of millions through the magic medium of radio; other millions knew him through his daily newspaper messages, and still others from the silver screen of the talking picture. Each of these feels a sense of personal loss in his passing. The reason? “He walkedl with kings, nor lost the common touch.” Will Rogers was more than a hum orist—he was a philosopher of rare type. He used his gifts as a humorist to carry *his listeners a philosophy of life that was refreshing. His barb ed shafts were often aimed at the foibles of politicians and the weak nesses of public polcies, but the gen tleness of his wit robbed them of any lasting sting. He took a keen interest in aviation and it has been sai<f that he did more to promote its interests than any other man, not even excepting Col. Charles A. Lindbergh. It seems ironical, there fore, that he should have met his death n a sixty-foot fall in a plane piloted by 'an aviai,/r who had flown able to improve this condition some- around the world and invaded the up per reaches of the stratosphere, thousands of feet above the surface of the earth. Wiley Post, in his sphere of life, was no less great than was Will Rogers, but he did not come into the same intimate contact with the masses of the people. There are and will be other great aviators, but there may not be an:ther Will Rogers. The world! has suffered a great haps an irreparable—loss. would, suffer severely” if the proces- own protecdon and! to improve living sors “could pass the tax on entirely,” , conditions, but there are certain activ- aftff the expressed fear that;' if that ities of labor unions of which we do were done, “relief to the farmers would np^ approve and have so expressed be offset by injury to the working ourself on various classes”—most of whom, The Post j For instance, we might have pointed out, are protected bers of'a unio by high tariff walls. /—-I —1° their The tariff is just as much a special dlitaStefiil fif tax on one particular group of citi- ’ but we contend k that mem- ght to strike their'work be any other reason, it they have no law- the man can get his insurance, or run ourselves to death betwixt it and the town pump with buckets of waiter by vollunteer department wfeepi a Are do start, someboddy gets so excited, he always pumpy too fast and breaks the pump handle and then the Are takes its coarse. yores trulie, zens for the special benefit of an- ful right to prevent other workmen other particular group as is the pro- 1 from filling their places. The right cessing tax. -The.only difference is to work is—or should be—an inalien-i that the tariff is not collected by the! able right, guaranteed under the Con- governmeht and disbursed through the stitution, of which "we have heard so treasury, but is paid direct by the con- much of late. If it be necessary to suming-public to the manufacturers to call out troops to uphold, 1 that right enable them to pay the high wages to work, then a governor of a State demanded and received by orgariittdfl' would be derelict in his duty if he , i » it. • j —• *• j-' *oSi.wi -'i" protection to labor. In the increased cost of goods to the, consumers, which causes the most suffering: the high tariff or the processing tax ? Why does The Saturdlay Evening Post “jrtrain at a gnat and swallow a camel”? Nero zithered (there were no fid dles in those days) while Rome burn ed. Now the world jitters as Musso lini seems determined to start another conflagration d°wn Ethiopia way. Fulmer Attacks Freight Rates. failed to give ample those who .Seek jobs. But what we started out to say is, of all the foolish things that may be laid to the door of the leaders of or ganized labor, that of calling a strike of “relief workers’ ’in New York City be^ase the “security wage” paid by the federal government is low er than the union scale of wages cer tainly caps the climax—and! those who are frank enough to so express them selves are better friends to the unions than many of their own leaders. Congressman H. P. Fulmer, of the! Second S. C. District, is to be con gratulated for leading a fight in Con gress against the alleged discrimina tion against the South in the matter of freight rates. His charges were baaed Everybody knows—or should know —that what the government is doing in the way of relief work is because of an emergency bronght about by the de pression. Billions of dollars have been appropriated to safeguard: the unem ployed against privation until such time as they can find gainful occupa- , , ^ t-. tion with private industry. President arge^yon ejs . ^ ew n K-^ jj 03geve j t was r jght, therefore, when he warned the would-be strikers that those who quit their jobs on WPA projects at the behest of labor or- land States to Detroit, Mich., as com pared with rates from the South (Co lumbia in particular) to the same des tination.’ Mr. Fulmer stated that “the , , ... , „ ganizers would be dropped from the rate from Columbia is nearly 50 per . , ... • ... , . , , , . dole. After all, it is nothing more cent, higher than the rate for the .. ’ , , . * * , . . than a dole, but the lecipients are same d.stance front a compet.t.vo ^ work do in New Enelandl sh.ppmg point. • • klt-ttlftet. For a long time there has been al order .to save It is such' tactics as these that cause the labor, unions leged discrimination m the matter of t0 , 0M popul!lrity with and the sup _ freight rates on asparagus shipments from the South, and this section has rfot enjoyed the benefit of its near ness to the Northern and Eastern markets that it should, California, about three times as far away, being able to place its produce on the port of the rank and file of American citizens, who are fair enough to back any group of people in the enforce ment of reasonable cbmands but will turn thumbs down on the same group when they become unreasonable. mike Clark, rfd. corry spondent. legal Advertisements NOTICE OF DISCHARGE. Notice is hereby given that I will file my fiijal account as''Administrator upon the estate of Chas. Carroll Simms, with the Hon. John K. Snelling, Jutlge of Probate, for Barnwell Coun ty, upon Tuesday, August 27, 1935, at 10:00 o’clock in the forenoon and peti tion the said Covtft for an Order of Discharge and Letters Dismissory. JOHN G. SIMMS, Admr., Est. Chas. Carroll Simms. July 30, 1935. 4t CITATION NOTICE. ’ * i ■■■ X The State of South Carolina, County of Barnwell. By John K. Snelling, Esq., Probate Judge: WHEREAS, Mrs. Pura StiJ) Ussery hath made suit fo me to grant unto her Letters of Administration of the Estate of and effects of Emery Ussery; THESE ARE THEREFORE, to cite and admonish all and singular the kindred and creditors of the said Emery Ussery, deceased, that they be and appear before me, in the Court of Probate, to be held at Barnwell, S. C., on Saturday, August 24th, next after publication thereof, at 11 Ofclock in the forenoon, to show cause, if any they have, why the said Administra tion should'not be granted. . Given tinder my Hand this 10th day of Aug., A. D. 1935. JOHN K. SNELLING, Judge of Probate, Barnwell Co. Published on the 16th day of Aug., 1935, in The Barnwell People-Sentinel. , , , ..... , I Labor never had a better friend in same markets at only a sl.ghtly high- th( , whit< , Housa , haI1 MASTER'S SALE. er freight rate. We understand that Roosevelt a „ d the nnbns will do well the asparagus asaociations have been^ foH ow his teadershtp. Under and by virtue of a Decree of President, the Court of Common Pleas for Barn well County. South Carolina, in tha what, but if any vestige of discrimina tion remains we hope-that Congress man Fulmer will exert every effort to remedy the situation. The People-Sentinel feels sure that Back in the days cf 1914, Austria did have the murder of an archduke and' his consort as and excuse to make war on Serbia. In this year of grace, he will not^relax his efforts to benefit Ital * d3esn, ‘ even have that to bolster his constituents in every way possible. ^ er fi etern ii ria tion to conquer Ethio pia. It is said that female gnats bite but the males do not, which is further proof of the saying that “the female •of the species is more deadly than the male.” Every few Jays, Russia lays claim to some new lecord in. aeronautics, P“r- and the' increasing frequency with which those “Rooshians” are breaking aerial records tends to rfiake us just a leetle mite suspicious of their aur thenticity. Processing Taxes and 'the Tariff. Whatever may be thought of the policy of paying the farmer not to produce, the idba of raising the motley from a tax on processors was extreme ly hazardous from the start. Con gress no doubt has the .right to levy special taxes for the benefit of the Treasury as a whole, but there is a very real question, which the courts must decide, whether it has the right to put a special tax upon one partiQii- lar group for the special benefit of another particular group. Besides, if the cotton mills, flour mills and packers could pass the tax on- entirely, and without injury to : themselves, thea consupiers would; suffer severely, and iclief to the farmers would 1 be offset by injury to the working classes. But the inci- dence of taxation is never simple; each new tax has far-reaching and often cumulative effects. Few business taxes are passed on completely; fre- qqently they are passed on just enough to hurt the consumer and also retained sufficiently to work havoc with at least a part of the trade it self. Iq an industry, already de pressed, a new tax is an mportant contributing factor making for fur ther loss.—The Saturchy Evening Post. Note how fair (?) is this great moulder of public opinion upon which •ome of our South Carolina news- i paper friends rely from time to time for amratmltlbii to use in their at tacks on the Roosevelt administration! A blast against the processing tax which was designed* to lift the agri- <ultural classes from abject poverty, hot not one word of protest against Hjie high tariff, by means of which the industrial North and East have sys tematically robbed the agricultural South and West for generations! Note the hypocritical, benevolent, for the consumer^ “who Nobody’s Business When Two Wrongs Make a Right. By Gee McGee. Flat Rock Is Going After Water works Again. a new effort is bfcing made by our poleesman to get watter workfe andj-eonvevimr gbvverment on The United States will abandon all its coit-n exports rather than let our farmers go into open competition with^gg^j^g f r0 m the Brazilian peons or Sudanese sheiks, their, new wp_a. pU*n which seems to Chester.C. Davis, AAA acJmioistrator, ^ easier than the pwa or the rfc said at Stoneville, Miss., one day last which didden’t pay no attention to our wee ^- ' applercation for aid in the past. “I would give up the last bale of ROTCL SAYAN NAK lOO HHf PROOF ROOMS t re staurant s / ANDHIWA.SMITM MjW Near / Fversthinq Wn* th wH i Ip SAVANNAH. jEORGIA. Boiler Wanted • • ' “f ■ WANTED:—used upright or Loco motive Type Boiler, either 12 or 15 hofbe tower. CENTRAL CLEANING AND PRESSING CO” ‘ f Augusta, Georgia. Highest Cash Prices for Old Gold i % t ■—f. Thousands of dollars worth of scrap GOLD is lying ^dle in BARNWELL COUNTY that you can turn in for- READY CASH. $2.00 to $35*)0 for OLD GOLD WATCH CASES. We also buy Washed of Filled Gold and Silver. Bring your old Gold direct v to our store. Do not be misled—look for the^jpumber 626 BROAD STREET. BEWARE OF HOUSE CANVASS ER?. We do NOT have canvassers. We also buy from jewelers, dentists and opticians. We will appraise And - assay your old gold free. Scrap Gold Dealer 626 BROAD ST. AUGUSTA, GA. •A • Buy and Use A CARQL1NAS SCENIC « AND HISTORIC ! STAMPS Boost Your Scate! « ADVERTISE IN ' The People- Sentinel. INSURANCE FIRE 4 WINDSTORM” PUBLIC LIABILITY ACCIDENT - HEALTH SURETY BONDS AUTOMOBILE THEFT x Calhoun and Co. P. A. PRICE, Manager. -nr our exports and see every exporter padlock his .doois before I would sell out the farmer,” Mr. Davis is quoted as saying. Let Brazil have the exports, Mr. Davis said in effect, .“if our farmers have to go into runious competition” that would put them in the same economic brder as Brazilian farmers.” And that is exactly what The People- Sentinel has been contending for a long, j t}j e mayei; is keeping verry quiet long time. It rs senseless to expect o n .the subject of watter works and it seems that the pwa will give a citty 45 percents of allrits costs to install anythj.ig, and ; it will ial?so permit a town ttr-hire men for what they are railly worth, vizzly: 1$ to 4$ per day instead of 4$ to 12$ as heretofore. thi s will put flat rock where she can negotiate with sam. the Southern cotton farmer to “main tain a favoiable balance'of trade” for the rest of the country when, in or der to accomplish this resuIfTWmusV sell his product in the world markets in competition with cheap foreign labor, whose standards of living are^ nil, while he is required at the same thru, time to supply his needs in a tariff- protected home market. sewedge improvements as the muny- cippal election is only 40 days off, and he is afraid that a spending plank in case of Sarah C. Price, plaintiff, vs. W. M. Cook, Mis. .Ida Cook and S. C •Power Company, defendants, I, the undersigned Master, will sell in front of the Court House at Barnwell,South Carolina, during the legal hours of sale, on the 2nd day of September, 1935, same being salesday in said month, to the highest bidder, the fol lowing described premises: All that certain piece, parcel or tract -of land containing onfe hundred and two (102) acres, more or less, and known as a par: of the Andrew *. . Lee tract conveyed! to me in two -deeds, for seventy-nine (79) acres, more or less, by Florence H. Still, upon the 3rd day of September, 19l5, said deed recorded in the office of the Gerlj. cf Court , for Barnwell County, in Book “U”, paj^e 217; and one deed twenty-four (24) acres, more or less, by R. C. Holman and dated the 2nd <jiy of -May, 1915, re corded in the office cf the Clerk of Coqrt for Barnwell County, in Book “D”, page 165, cbTnposing the first above mentioned $tact of land, con taining one*hundred two acres, more or less, and tpunded on the North by the Bainweli and Hamburg Public Road; on the East by lands cf Goldie C. Holman, originally a part of the same tract of land, and on the South by the Barnwell, and Sand Bar Ferry Public Road; on the North by lands cf H. L. Creech, formerly owned by W. H. Duncan; the South boundary being mentioned as the Sand Bar Ferry Road- is the old Public Road which was used before this deed was drawn. . big flatform mought re-act against him and he would get beat by holsum moore, the other candy-date, ever- boddy hopes that this project will go last year, when it looked verry much Just so long as it is the policy of like this^govverment help for watter these United States to protect Ameri- ansoforth was an assured fact, 3 can industrial labor and manufactur-, different families bought bath tubs ers with a high tariff, it is only fair from the male order house up north an fi rifipht for the government to give and tliky were shipped, 'Lut onner thd - AWeidtih farmer some measure of "count 6T~fKe deal falling thru* they protection from peon labor. If pro- newer took them out of the depot, tection to the American farmer is and the agent shipped them back wrong, then it follows that protection with demurrage and everthing. to the American wage-earner is like wise wrong, but it is one time when two wrongs make a right. yore corry spondent, mr. mike Clark, rfd, has alreddy donated a plot A vigorous fight has been made by in his cow pastor for the watter to be the exporters, buyers and others pumped out of his creek, and he has against President Roosevelt’s agricul- 'offered them a knoll of ground of 1 tural program and Mr. Davis’ state- •ment is encouraging, to say the least. Labor’s Rights. • The People-Sentinel has always be lieved, and freely admitted, that labor has a perfect right to organize for its aker for the &tand pipe for §0$. pro vided the fedderal land bank will re lease its mortgage on same and let him get the 50$. this will be a big step forwards for flat rock, in case of fire, we either have to let it burn up the building- so’s Terms of sale.-eash-purehaser to pay MARK’S Mid-Summer Clearance Sale ^ Lack of apace permits us to quote only a few of our specials. 4 35c to 50c Seersuckers, special, yarcfr 25c 69c Dress Lace, yard 25c 49c Dress Lace, yard'-.-^--- 15c 75c and $1.00 Linen Remnants, per inch —--- 1* For Furniture Covering, Etc. Ladies , 'White and Fancy HancT- kerchiefs, each 1c up $1.00 to $2.50 Fine Silks per in. 1c 50c Fancy Silks, yard 25c 50c Slip Materials, yard 35c 39c Slip Materials, yard 23c Pique, Prints and Play Cloths W^H GOODS, yard 9c f I —SO-SqUareT^nbisr^arTT^TTSWc Hand Blocked^Linen^J yard 23c 89c Highly Mercerizea Shirt ing and Broadcloth, yd. 10 yds. 6-oz. Ticking $1.45 10 yards 220 Denim $1.45 10 yds. Extra Heavy Shirting 1.35 36-in. Gq;d Quality Bleaching 8c Men’s Hemstitched Handker chiefs, doz. 30c up 50e Terry Cloth, yard H'/iC Embroidered Bridge Sets, ‘ 89e value 49c $1.50 to $2.75 Tapestry Clo.h, yard $1.00 75c Fancy Tapestry Cloth, yd. 59c 36-in. Yellow Sheeting, 10 yds. 45c 80 Squaie Sheeting, 10 yds. 95c Curtain Scrim, 10 yards 23c t i MARK’S LINEN & REMNANT SHOP IVinim U ov*i rn:. c* AiirtiiCTA n k 941 Ellis St. AUGUSTA, GA. ... i 1 TEALE Theatre WHERE SOUND SOUNDS BEST % Friday and Saturday, Aug. 23-24 Trans-Atlantic Merry Go Round with Jack Benny, Gene Raymond, Nancy Carroll, Frank Parker, the Bos well Sisters and many. others. Don’t miss this Big Musical Picture, i for papers and Revenue Stamps. And that the successful bidder shall make a deposit w(th the Master of five pier cent, of his bid as earnest money or evidence of good faith in the' bidding, the same to be applied' upon the bid should there be a compliance with the same, but shculd the bidder fail to make such deposit at the time of ac ceptance of his bid, then the premises shall be resold at the risk of said bid der on riie^sam^jalgsiay. or on some subsequent salesday, at the option? of the plaintiff or her attorney. | Should the bidder make the deposit I and thereafter fail to comply with the bid without legal excuse being ihown, then such^depopit shall be de livered to plaintiff and retained by her as liquidated damages, and the proper ty shall be thereafter resold on the same terms and at such purchaser’s risk. No personal or deficiency judg ment is demanded and the bidding will not remain open after the sale but a compliance with the bid shall be made immediately upon the conclusion of the bidding. G. M. GREENE, Master, Barnwell County. Comedy—“FIFTY DOLLAR BILL.” Monday and Tuesday, Aug. 26-27 “MILLION DOLLAR BABY” with Arline Judge, Ray Walker and Jimmid Fay Also Short, “TREES” and FOX NEWS , * • • / / “ ■ / / Wednesday-Thursday, Aug. 28-29 “Mysterious Mr. Wong” > with Bela Lugosi and Wallace Ford - Short: “Song of the Sun” and Chapter 2 of “TAILSPIN TOMMY” Coming'FRI. and SAT., Aug 30-31 WILL ROGERS DON’T MISS m