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JERSEY KILLER CONVICTED Montclair Youth Murdered Chauffeur And 8ix-Year-Old Girl Newark, N. J., Not. 16.-~Jersey lustici' livvd up to its reputation for <wiftnes? and severity today when Harrison W. Noel, 20 year old Mont lair youth, was convicted of murder n tho first degree, with no recom mendation of mercy, after less than ?.wo hours deliberation by a jury. Under the verdict, there is no sen tence possible but death in the electric ?hair. Noel will be sentenced by Judge Edwin C. Caffroy November j;jrd. Noel shot and killed Raymond I'ierct', negro taxi chauffeur, last' September. After concealing the body, Noel used the negro's taxicab to kidnap six-year-old Mary Daly of Montclair, from in front of her home, Fie killed her by shooting her twico n the "hoad and concealed her body n bushes in a lonely section of Pas saic county. He was arrested three days after *,he murder of Pierce and made a com plete confession of both crimes. Noel had been an inmate of the Essex county hospital for the insane it Overbrook for several months prior io the crimes. The- defense in the trial pleaded insanity. Noel, standing in the prisoner's Jock, shrank visibly as1 the words vere pronounced that probably will send him to the electric chair. Qf^il ffs supported him a'g he was led to Ms cell. He also is under indictment i'or the murder of the Daly girl in Passaic county. . > Scientists declare that the Ameri can farmer can be independent of European potash companies by the Invention of a new process of making ?wtassium sulphate from greensand. PREDICTS SKVKKK WINTKR Think* Latr Spring Will Abo Seri ously Affect All Crop* Washington, Nov. U.?- A severe winter for the United States with heavy snowfall and long continuing cold waves, broken by warm periods of brief duration, is predicted by Herbert I. Browne, widely known ocean meteorologist. An abnormal condition, he holds, is pointed to by many factors, in cluding the record-breaking cold in many sections of the country this fall beginning with the first*snows in the Northwest on September 18, four days before the official close of sum mer. The winter, ,he believes, will be followed by a late spring* Primarily the predictions are based upon a study of ocean surface tem peratures as determined by the ataourit of sun's heat reaching to earth. The sojar radiation for more than three years has been below nor mal. The present weathor situation, he says, indicates that the world is facing a condition which will inter fere seriously with crops, the cold fall jand winter in prospect being but fo*e i runners of the next two years. A ; serious situation developing in the Southern Hemisphere in the crop year of 1926 to 1927 and in the Northern Hemisphere in 1927 is predicted. Two other scientists predict the re turn in Scandinavia and at least some sections of Northern Europe of the "Fimbul winters," that is, three win ters without intervening summers. The views of these scientists, Mr. Brown says, are supported by two other botanists of high standing, Dr. Helmut Gans of Switzerland and Dr. Rolf Nordhagen of Norway. The combined length of railway tunnels in the Alps is forty-six miles. HEADQUARTERS FOR DURABLE-DURHAM HOSIERY We Named It "Dollar Will" in honor of a bigger dollar's worth 11 J|*ApE expressly for the man who JLVX is hard on his socks ? but who wants sensible, nice-looking hosiery fore very-day wear. Durham V'Dol * LAR Bill" is made of finest mercer- . * ized lisle, with smooth, silky finish; quadruple -strength heel and toe. ^Special -value: Durable-Durham "Dollar Bill", box of 3 pair for $l t DURABLE-DURHAM HOSIERY for Men ? Wotn?n ? Children Mmrcaritod ?nd Cotton Homitrry, 15c. to 50c. Silk Ho*i*ry, 75c. to $ 2.00 Made by tbc world's largest hosiery manufacturer, operating 18 modem mills. Production of 90 mil lion pairs yearly saves 7H% 1? factory costs. This saving is passed on to you in added quality - and at least 20% more wear. Every pair doabfty guaranteed *? replaced free of charge if yoa arc not entirely satisfied. _ Wolfe-Eichel Company CAMDEN South Carolina Garages and Machine Shops Brushes, Wire Beats, Fan Belt, Leather Blades, Hack Saw Cam, Oil Qarbon Remover Cloth, Emery Compound, Grinding Dressers, Emery Drills, Electric Drills, Twist Drills, Bfeast Drill Presses Dust, Emery Kzy-Outs Frames, Hack Saw Piles, AU Kinds Graphite Grease Hose, Gasoline Hose, Air Hoee, Water Jacks, Automobile I>acer*, Belt Pliers Puller?, Crane Reamers, Critchley Reamers, Taper Pia Screw Drivers Screws, Cap, S. A- E. Screws, Cap Standard Screw Plate? Socket Wrenches Solder, Acid Core Stands, Emery Tape, Machinist Torches, Blow Vises, Garage Vises, Machiaiat Vises, Pipe Waste, White Wheels, Emery Wraaches, all kiads COLUMBIA SUPPLY COMPANY Columbia, S. C. 823 West GervaU St. Duckn Killed By Moving Train Fin? Bluff, Arkansas, Nov. iff. ? Approximately fifty ducks were killed by a St. Louis Southwestern train yesterday near Stuttgart, DoWitt Hope, engineer reported after his ar rival here today. The engineer de clared that members of his crew and passengers supplied themselves with all the ducks they could carry when he brought the locomotive to ? stop to determine whether the "collision" had caused any damage. The birds were killed when they attempted to cross the path of the train. (Joes Thirty Years Without Hair Cut Smith Center, Kan., Nov. 12, ? More than thirty years ago W. S. Clark, 80, a civil war veteran of this county, made vow that he would not have his hair cut until \V. J, Hi van was In the president's chair. The recent death of the commoner, however, weakened his resolve and yosterday a barber cut the hair that hung about Mr. Clark's waist. For many years Mr. Clark has beeij a picturesque personage at G. A. K. encampments. A wrist watch was presented .to Queen Elizabeth by the Earl of l^ei* cester in 1572. It was described as "an armlet or shakell of gold, all fairy garnished with rubiles and dia monds, having in the casing thereof a clock." Hannibal had a herd of forty ele phants in his cavalry. MASTER'S SALE. State of South Carolina, County of Kershaw. (Court of Common Pleas) Mary Alden Hopkins, Plaintiff, against J. R. Rodgers, Springs and Shannon, Incorporated, Julius Cahn and Ellis Cahn, Mackey Mercantile Company, and W. R. Gardner in trade as Farmers Grocery, Defendants. Under an order of bis Honor, T. S. Sease, dated November 16, 1925, I will sell to the highest bidder at pub lic auction, for cash, before the Ker shaw County Court House door, in Camden, in said State, during the legal hours of sale on the first Mon day, being the seventh day of De cember, 1925, tfte-fol lowing described real estate: "All that piece, parcel or lot of land situate, lying 'and being in the State of South Carolina, County of Ker shaw, about seven miles South of Camden on the Black River Road and Ginno Branch, containing two hun dred five (205) acre?, more or less, and being known as the tract No. 15 on a plat of Town Creek lands of J James Chestnut made by S. W. Boy- i kin, Surveyor, on March 30th, 1869. Said tract of land is bounded on the North by land of Arthur Moseley; on the East by Black River Road; on the South by Ginno Branch and on the West by land now or formerly J of Thompson. The tract of land here in conveyed is the same conveyed to Mary A. Alden by deed of J; M. De Saussure, as Master for Kershaw County of date November 7th, 1881, andt of record in the office of Cleric of Court for Kershaw County, Book 'GG' page 408, and by said Mary A. Alden devised to Amanda W? Hop kins, now deceased,, and same con veyed to me by deed of mortgagee of recent date. This> mortgage is given to secure deferred portion of purchase price." Before the Master shall accept a bid from any one, except thosq who have established liens herein, he shall first require a deposit of one hundred (100.00) dollars, either in cash or by certified check, as evidence of good faith; su^h deposits to be returned to the unsuccessful 'bidders respectively. R. H. HILTON, Master for Kershaw County. November 17, 1925. ' <.J WE'LL MEET ANY PRICE If low price in jour first con sideration, we can meet any body's price ? and we'll do it with a genuine Goodyear tire. That's whjr you see so maay Goodyears around tow*. Ask anyone who haa ever really tried them out, what he thinks about Goodyear tires. BROAD STREET FILLING STATION +^+*44+''? ~ ? -2-ty a. HrMYgBB, To Appear at Darling ton Theatre. "The Gorilla,'* one of the recent hit* of the New York, Boston, Chi cago and 1 jondon stages, is announced at the Liberty Theatre, Darlington, Wednesday night, November 26th, where it will be played by a special company. The cast includes: Sid Wil liams, Edwin Forsberg, Ellen Crowe, Victor Browne, William Balfour, Tom Burton, Clyde Dilson, Bertram Millar, Jack F. Ayres, James Kelo and Ber' nard Craney. This play was written bv Ralph Speuce and staged by Donald Galla her, It is said to be a "mysterious melodrama", like "The Bat", "The l?ast Warning" and "The Cat and Canary". To outline the story, says the press agent, "would be to invite permanent mental derangement." The Elot contains a master criminal, now n as the "Gorilla," who threatens the tenant of a haunted house. It also contains a playwright lit love with the tenant's niece, two detectives, a butler, a locked chest, a dead sailor, the Ku Klux Klan, screams, pistol shots, sliding panels and the inevita be reporter. Tiger Kills Keeper Manchester, England, Nov. 12. ? At Bellevue Biological gardens in Manchester today, a woman keeper, Mrs. Lambert, entered a section of the tiger's den to clean it but forget to close the trap door shutting off the section containing the tiger. The beast pounced upon her from behind and with one blow' of its fore paw laid her dead. Italians in France have quadrupled since 1872. MASTER'S SALE State of South Carolina, County of Kershaw. (Court of Common Pleas) The Federal I^and Bank of Columbia, Plaintiff, \ against Mary I). Pittman, E. L. Wooten, Bank of Camden, Bank of Williamsburg. R. H. Pittman, Camden Wholesale Company, George T. Little, Mackey Mercantile Company, Wataree. Na tional Farm Loan Association, Loan & Savings Bank, Defendants. Under an order of his Honor, W. H. Townsend, dated November 12, 1925, I will sell to the highest bidder at public auction, for cash, before the Kershaw County Court House door, in Camden, in said State, during the legal hours of sale on the first Mon day, being the seventh day of Decem ber, 192f>, the following described real estate: (Tract number one) "All that piece, parcel or lot of land situated, lying and being in the State of South Carolina, County of Kershaw, about eight miles south of Camden on the Charleston road con OIM7 Added safety mad easier driv ing are big reason* for tike wide popularity of the Better Buick. Bukk'i better iteerinf gear (the most expemive type bulk today) hat 5 time* the ordinary control surface. More than 400,000 4> wheel* brake Buick* have prored the superiority of Buick inci tMmical wheel' brake aeiign foe two winters and two raoMncn. Ajhd Better Buidk Controlia ble Beam Headlight* now make night driving safe. They fumiah bright light, all the time, without glare in the eye* of oncoming drivers* Your family and vow will fact aafer nn<f be safer In the Better Buick! BUICK MOTOR COMPANY, FUWT, MICHIGAN n iiji i ,/r iiniff % Bttkk S it Cyiimdm V| ***** t* pric* 25 te.0 1 995?/? I mit*. Ammmm Ac Bmiek qfw? mm cl**mT iksre U mnetkmt mill mtSym w dmlf 4 OeBeterBUICK LITTLE MOTOR COMPANY T. LEE LITTLE, MANAGER. CAMDEN. S. C. taining two hundred and forty-three (243) acres, and bounded NortWJby lands formerly of Sorrell now of Whitaker, East by the Charleston Road, South by the lands of L. W. Boykin and West by the Southern Railway." (Tract number two) "All that parcel of land situated, lying and being about eight miles south of Camden, containing two hundred and thirty-two (?32) ncros, bounded on the north by lands of ?antey and Winkler, east by lands of Winkler, south by lands of Shan non and West by the Wateree river/* The successful bidder shall be re quired to deposit with the Master im mediately after saidtsata the sum of one hundred ($100.00) dollars, either in cash or by certified check, the same to be applied on his bid should ho comply with Kamo, but should he fail to comply then it shall be forfeited, and the premises re-sold on the same or some subsequent sales-day at his risk. R. H. HILTON, Master for Kershaw County. November 14, 1026. I ' Annual Clearance Sale of Dresses, Coats, Millinery and Furs AT REDUCED PRICES ? cO Flat Crepes^ Crejpe Coca Satins and Cloth Dresses for merly sold from $12.00 to $16.95 Clearance Sale: .75 All Crepe Back Satins, Mirvoleen and Charmbloom Dresses, formerly sold from $18.50 to $25.00. Clear ance Sale : $14.75 Alterations Free Afternoon, Evening and Dance Frocks, formerly up to $25 Clearance Sale: $14.95 Coats in Pin Point Suedes and Bolivias fur trimmed, former ly sold up to$79. 50 now offered at $32.50 THE OUTLOOK Camden's Exclusive Ladies' Ready-te-Wear and Millinery Next Door lo Schlosburg's