University of South Carolina Libraries
AFTER MEAL afford* benefit a* well a* pleasure. Healthful excrdM lor the teeth tad a spur to digeetkm. A bay> htdog refreshment, eoothiog to x nt I and itomM h. The Great American 8wc?tm?at, untoachcd by haodfi full of j flavor. I Hardy Stock of Fowl. Fasting for twenty-two days in the record achieved by a young Rhode Island Red pullet belonging to Henry M. Boozer, on Main street. The young hen, which was hatched some tjmc in the spring of this year, disappeared from the sight of Mr. Boozer on Aug. 20th, and all sight of her was lost until the 17th day of Septemer, when *he was discovered fastened in the woodpile in the yard. The hen had wedged herself in the wood and with very little difficulty eould have back ed out, hut she managed to linger on until found. The chicken, one day after being fed and watered, weighed two pounds, compared with five pounds by her mates or chickens hatched out at the name time. Mr. Boozer says the chicken will live and that he will never sell nor kill her. The chicken withstood the tempera ture splendidly, passing through the hottest days since records were kept in Newberry, the record being JOT. ? ? Newberry Observer. Charles Davis, a painter, was kill ed by a live wire at Summerville last Friday. ? CITATION State of South Carolina, County of Kershaw. By W. L. McDowell, Kfcquire Probate Judge. Whereas, Chritvieen Hall made suit to rne to grant her Letters of Admin istration of the Bfttate of and ef fects' of J. A. Hall. These are, therefore, to cite and adironrsh all and singular the kindred a-nd creditors of the said J. A. Hall, deceased, that they be and appear before me, in the Court of Probate to be held at Cpmden, South Carolina, or Wednesday, September .'loth, next after publication thereof, at 11 o'c lock in the. forenoon, to show cause, if any they have, why the-said Administra tion Should not be granted. <;iven "undrr my hftttd, U?i-h duy_ <f September, Anno Domini ll)2f>. XV. I,. McDOWKLL, .Judge of Probate for Kershaw County Published on the ISth and 2.">th days '{ September, in th?> Camden Chronicle and posted at the Court. House .door for the time prescribed b\ low. TAX NOTtCK County Tu Book* Opto at '!>??*?? Iff'l <>f rikfl October 15th Notice is hereby given that the books will be opened for the collec tion o i State, County and School Taxes from October 15th, 11)25, to March l&th, iWNk A penaHy of 1 per cent will be added to alt tuxes unpaid January 1st, 1926, 2 per cent; February lnt, 1920 and 7 per cent March 15th, 1926. The rate per centum for Kershaw J county is an follows: Mills .State Taxes . . . . .5 1-2 6-0- 1 School . . 4 County Taxes k 1-2 HospKjtf 3-4 School Tax ok ;< Total 21 3-4 DeKalb Township Road Bonds, for DeKalb Township, only 2 3-4 Dog tax $1.25. All dog owners are require*! to make a return of their dogs to -the County Treasurer, who ?is required to furnish a license tag. All dogw caught without the license tag the owners will be subject to a fine of Twenty (20.00) Dollars.^ The following School Districts have Kpeoial levies: School District No. 1 .. 23 School District No. 2........ 20V: School District No. 3 23 School District No. 4. ....... . 15 School District No. 5........ 8 School Dirftrici't No. 6 ...15 School District No?- ? .7. . 17 School District No. is 8 School Distinct No. 9 4 School District No. 10........ 5 School District No. 11........ 15 School District No, 12........ 18 School District No. 13 8 School District No. 15 ..8 School District No. 16 4 School District No. 19 8 School District No. 20 4 i School District No. 22 23 ,! School District No. 23 11 School District No. 25 8 ! School District No. 27. ...... 0 School District No. 28 4 School District No. 29 K School Difitriot No. 30 8 School District No. 31 8 School District No. 33........ 14 School District No. 37 8 School District No. 38 8 School District' No. 39 8 School District No. 40.'rr.*r7>-. 25 School District No. 41 8 School District No. 42... 8 School District No. 43 4 4**hool District No. 46. . 8 School District No. 47 8 The poll Tax is $1.00. All able-bodied male persons from the ages of twenty-one (21) to fifty <50) years', both inclusive, except res idents <:.n incorporated towns, shali pay $3.00 as a road tax except min isters of the arospcl actually in charge of a congregation, teaihors employed in public schools, school trustees, and persons permanently disabled in the military service of the State and per sons who served in the War Between the States, and all quarantine service of this state and all residents who may be attending school or college at the time when .said road tax shall be come due. Persons claiming disabili ties must present certificate from two reputable physicians of this county. All information with reference to taxes will be furnished ui>on applica tion. D. M. McCASKILL, <'ounty Treasurer. Is a Prescription for Malaria, Chills and Fever, Dengue or Bilious Fever It Kills the Germs DR. HESS STOCK TONIC 25 lb. PAILS $2.50 DR. HESS POULTRY PANACEA 25 lb. PAILS $3.00 Also Stock and Poultry Remedies in 25c and 50c packages DeKALB pharmacy PHONE 95 CAMDEN. S. C. Teach Them to Save The success of your children to a large extent will depend upon the start you 3*ive them when they are young-. It is not the amount of money you leave them so much as it is the kind of habits they learn from you. Are you teaching* them to save money ? Loan & Savings Bank CAPITAL $100,000.0# 4 Per Cent Paid on Savings Deposits r _ ... - CIRCUS NEXT Tl KS&AY Will Have Greatest Menagerie Ever Brought to Caaulen There have been marvels through ] all ages, and the seven wonders of i the world have been known for cen turies to the entire civil iated universe, but it has remained for Christy Bros, big five ring wild animal shows; which exhibit hero on Tuesday, Sept. 29, to produce others as equally well worthy of recognition.: Jungle melo dies and scenes from the immense steel gilt arenas that would have held a Pharaoh spellbound, are reduced to perfect harmony and seta the blood of tht onlooker to dancing in hii veins, as they witness the disciplined submission of the fiercest and most ferocious African lions, Bengal tigers, with other wild animals, as they obey the will of man, and at a simple and quiet direction perform the mpst marvelous feots. Fire, the most, terrifying of ele ments to the beast creation, is en countered without hesitancy at a simple word of comnkand. Unleashed in the great steel ribbed arenas a big African lion springs like a. wild cat to the back of his intrepid mount and with all the grace and dexterity of riding rivals performs feats that are almost incredible. Hoops of fire have no terror for him as he leaps through them with all the abandon of a finish ed artist. - Then there are the fearful foes brought together in perfect amity to present in conjunctive harmony a spectacular performance, the like of which the world has never Seen or even thought within the range of pos sibility. They are the tiger and the elephant, the equestrian sensation of ! all time, in which a beautiful and ma- ! jestic royal Bengal tiger springs with ! civet ric speed to the back of a mon- 1 gter loping elephant and rides with a J consummate grace around the steel arena, leaping to and from distant pedestals, through fiery hoops, over hurdles and other obstacles, and pre senting 'the most startling perform ance that eye of man ever lookeJ upon. These are but a few of the leading trained wild animal acts, which also include performing bears, leopards and leopardesses, pumas, boar hounds, zebras and zebrulas and a troop of trained wild elk. For the first time two troupes of wolves are introduced. This is the first time that these ani mals have ever been educated to per form and they arei marvels in keen conception of what they are doing, I'ages might ' be written and then not tell in advance all of the startling novelties introduced in Christy Bros. Shows, which are vastly superior to any other show of the kind in the world. Former Treasurer (Meads Guilty Spartanburg, Sept. 17. ? L. G. Mil ler, former county treasurer and pres ident of the Bank of Duncan, who pleaded guilty last ""-week lo~ violating the state banking laws was sentenced by Judge <\ .J. Ramage of Saluda, S. presiding judge in general ses sions court here today, to serve not less than two nor more than four years and pay* a fine of $1,000. Mil ler was given the privilege of choos ing the stare penitentiary or the pub lic work? nf Spartanburg for serving his sentence. The charg' <= to which Miller plead ed guilty w.v that of receiving funds at the Hank Duncan knowing that J it was insolvent.' (). I'. Negro Leader Dead. Washington, Sept. 10. ? Henry Lin coin .Johnson, negro republican na tional committeeman from Georgia, died here early today from cerebral hemorrhage. He suffered a stroke last Sunday and wa* removed to i. hospital. Johnson, who was ,"?G years of age, serving his >econd term a? national committeeman and was practicing law here at the time of his death. He attended the last , Republican national convention as a delegate at large and also had attended three pre vious conventions of the party as *\ delegate at large. By appointment of President Taft, Johnson ?erved as recorder of deeds for District of Columbia during his administration and previously had practiced law in Atlanta. He was born in Augu?ta, July 27, 1870. C. P. Mitchell, young Charleston j business man, was killed n few miles I south of Orangeburg Monday night j of last week, when the car in which , he and two others were driving ran ' into a tree that had blown across the i highway. f J TEACHERS' EXAMINATIONS The State Board of ..Education has I ordered an examination of teachers for primary and general elementary certificates to be held at the Court House on Friday and Saturday, Octo ber 9th and 10th, 1925. No high school examination wfll be given? Examinations will begin at 9 a.m. ' J. TEAM ofclTlB, 4 Supt> Rdur ation Kershaw County. Columbia has again b?en selected ?s the meeting place of the Soath Carolina Teachers' Association for ire* . t JUUI SUMMONS FOR RBI.1KF State of South Carolina, County of Kershaw. (Court of Common Pleas) Jasper Lawhorn, Harmon Montgom- } ery, and Leford Montgomery, Ellen . Montgomery, Richard Montgomery and Jessie Montgomery, by their 1 Guardian ad litem Mat McLeod and i Mary Jane Lavrhorn, Julia Ann ! I*awhorn and Ellen Lawhorn, by j Jasper Lawhorn, their Guardian ad ; litem, Plaintiffs, against John Hey ward TVuesdel, Henry Mont gomery and Joe Miller, Jr., and Minnie Miller, minors, Defendants j To the Defendants John Heyward Truesdel, Henry Montgomery and Joe Miller, Jr., and Minnie Miller, minora. You are hereby summoned and re quired to Answer the complaint in this action, o! which a copy is here with served upon you, arid to serve . a copy of your answer to said com plaint on the subscriber at his office Broad Street,' Camden, S. witfoin twenty days after the service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service; and if you fail to answer the com plaint within the time aforesaid, the plaintiff in this action will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the complaint. I. C. HOUGH, Plaintiff's Attorney, August 26, A. D. 1925. Notice: ? To the defendants John Heyward Truesdel, Henry Montgom ery and Joe Miller, Jr., and Minnie Miller, minors, and to Joe Miller and to Julia Truesdel, the parties with whom the said minors reside that the summons and complaint in this action were filed this the 26th day of August, 1925, in the office of Clerk of Court for Kershaw County, S. C. I. C. HOUGH, Plaintiffs' Attorneys, j ~ August 26, A. D. 1925. To the minor defendants Joe Miller, Jr., and Minnie Miller and to Joe Miller and to Julia Truesdel, the per sons with whom the .said absent minor defendants reside, that unless you apply for the appointment of , a guardian ad litem for said minors, that the plaintiffs, through the un dersigned attorney, will apply to the Clerk of Court for Kershaw County, S. C., after 20 days have elapsed, after the service of this notice ex clusive of the day of such service, for the appointment of a Guardian ad litem to represent said minors in said action. I. C. HOUGH, Plaintiffs' Attorney.*. August 26, 1925. K lumen Came D?M|e < (Chester, Sept. 14. ? The general mercantile establishment of S. W. Guy containing also the United State* post office and another building, hous ing Giles Brakefields' market were destroyed by fire at Lowry's, eight miles north of Chester tonight. Most of the goods were mrried out of Guy's store. Xhe mail and boxes were saved. The fire caught from a kero sene lamp in Guy's store, brought too close to the wall, it is thought, the store was open and the b!aze started before anyone was aware of it! As the town has only a bucket brigade it was a most difficult fire to fight. Tin- wind was blowing in the right direction, otherwise many other struc tures may have burned. The ginnery nearby was in operation and a large crowd was there. For a time the fire teemed threatening to nearby buildings. Chester people motored there to offer aid. The flames made, a great blaze and could easily be seen here. . . .-.v ? ' ? ? - - The fire began at 9:30 o'clock and at 11 o'clock it was under control. It is impossible to estimate the loss to night. State Faffcer'a Ct?. Herman Krazier, young Dfgro roaa, is in the Lancaster jail charged with stealing a milk cow from his father, George Fratier, who lives severs! miloa east of Lancaster. The theft was committed during the month of August, the cow being sold to a Mr. Nei.) of the upper part of the county for $17.60, according to the father of the boy, who was in I*ncaster Thurs day. After selling the cow, Herman hied himself to Columbia, where his presence was discovered by hi* father who had a warrant issued for him and brought back to Lancaster by Sheriff Hunter. Frazier says his son admits his guilt and that he will let the law take its course. After tha facts in the case were known Mr. Neil willingly returned the cow to its owner. The boy, said the father, claimed that he was living below Elgin and had sold out all his belong ings except the cow, for which he had been offered only $16, but for which he would take $17.60. - The cow was stolen about 4 o'clock in the morning, said Frazier, father of the boy.? Lan caster News. "Why, The Second Day , After I Took This Kar nak I Was Improved. In , Ten Days I Felt Like A New Woman," Says Mrs. Wright "I just couldn't say too much for this glorious new medicine, Kar nak, for in ten days' time it l\as given me complete relief fromi troubles from which I had suffered over five years," declares Mrs. Lou Wright, of 13 Wright St., Rock Hill, S. C. "Why, it's just miraculous what Karnak has done for me," continues Mrs. Wright. "For the past six years I had gastritis and the worst form of indigestion, and oh, how I did suffer. It lust seemed like a ' large lump would form in my chest and almost smother me to death. "Having so much acid in my stomach had given me a form of rheumatism, and for several months I had been where I couldn't raise my hands up above my shoul ders or put them to my back. "Finally, I began taking Karnak and the Karnak Pills, ana there is simply no way of over rating this 5reat medicine. Why, the second ay's treatment began to show a great improvement in me, and in only ten days* time I now feel like a person all made over. "If there's a trace of Indigestion or rheumatism left In my body now I don't know it. Why, Karnak. just overcame that acid condition of my stomach at once, and I now eat r.nything I want and never feel a particle of trouble from it after ward. Nights I used to almost smother from gas bloating, but that's all gone now, and I sleep as sound as a tired child. Oh, Kar nak is just the grandest medicine in the world." Karnak i9 sold iu Camden ex clusively by Zemp & DePass and by the leading, druggist in every town. HHer&s the way to crank it lady NEXT time your starter goes dead and there isn't a man around to crank for you, try this. It isn't hard if the engine is O. K. First be sure you retard the spark. Then pull out the choke wife* Always ? crank up, with the handle held loose, palm tip. If half a turn doesn't start her in the ordinary weather there is something wrong with the spark and you ought to have us look her over next time you're in the garage." ' The Fleet Boss has learned a lot in. twenty years of hard earned experience. We have been refining petroleum nearly three times as long as that. It it not natural to suppose that all this accumulated experi ence is bound to make for a better product? Of course it is. Ask any user of "Standard" Motor Oils why he sticks to "Standard". STANDARD OIL COMPANY (New Jersey)