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WT "LET ED DO* IT !' \it Our Expert Dyer Change the Color H of That Garment! It m*y ** that some time in the past yoa have had an 1 I:-1*', ?geph'.aaant experience in dyeing. ? ;If so, send it here, for we are all the more anxious to . y/Kjrove to you that WE CAN DYE IT TO PLEASE YOU. , M h(. KNOWS^HOWr SlH>nt a U?etlme in th* businy^ and M It's much cheaper to dye than it is to buy and we can mate a now looking garment by changing itk color MAKE US PROVE IT MAIL OKDKK Business Solicited. We Prepay Iteturn Puatage I CLEANING ED. ROBINSON dyeing I J - 1 "hones 8187?8188 Columbia, 8. C. 1017 Gervais Street 18 MOSELEY SLAIN? tiHinuationH Made In Statements By Relatives . ced that Charlos R. Moseninent Spartanburg iniur-( n whose body was found trestle near Columbia last iras murdered, members of y and local friends have statement to | The SparHerald with ^reference to oseley, son-in-law of Prof. uPre of Wofford College, life while en route from >n, where he had been ng business matters, to his this-*city, The Herald says. r was discovered a little an a mile from Columbia, first theory evolved was had fallen from the trestle alking along the Southern. tracks. This theory has' en accepted by members of1 ly or by his friends here,! rmined efforts will be made| tain the real circumstances 1 with Mr. Moseley's death, atement follows: family and friends of Car-' ?ley, of Spartanburg, are 1 that he rrte't his death by f, and that he did not lose by a fall from a trestle, as irst reported in the papers. Moseley left Charleston in son coach on the afternoon h 1, to return home. He out from the Francis Marion f 6 o'clock, having talked veral - parties just before Katly the following morncar was found on a spur f the Southern Railway, lirty feet from the highway into the town of Cayee, 1 a half miles from Columle car showed very evident f a struggle. The upholsterthe top of the car was rip n in two places. The right as torn completely off, and., n the ground beside the lere was no scar of any the door to indicate that it nek anything. There was the car and blood on the ift. The glass in both doors attered, but the glass in the wind shield was intact. Some c AS. upholstering was torn from ,d(Se backs of the seats. y A "Mr. Moseley's body was fouftd half mile away from the car beneath u Southern Railway trestle.'? i There was a three inch open cut in the back of his head, and a circular depressed fracture of the skull just below it. There were bruises on the forehead, nose, mouth and pjhin, and a circular bruise on the right wrist and left hand. Mr. Moseley's shirt and ,coat sleeves were saturated with blood from near the shoulder seam to the cuff, yet the skin of the arm underneath was nowwhere broken, showing that the blood soaked in from outside. A peculiar and telling piece of evidence is the facjt'^at the left sleeve of the raincoat, vtdjieh was ajsp 'oft the body, had practically no bloptjr on it, showing that it had be'eft-y^t on after the blood had soaked into the other two sleeves. Furthermore, the raincoat pocket had a three and a half inch tear in it, and the pants belt strap was torn half in two. This strap had not ripped loose from either side, but vya&'broken in two. The clothes under the raincoat were Very muddy, both back and front. "The condition of his clothes, and the fact that there wag so little blood at the spot where his body was found, no bones were broken and no bruises on his body, a fatal blow on the back of his head yet bruises all over his face, were conclusive proof that he did not fall from the trestle but was killed and placed there. In the face of all this evidence, the Governor's detective stated that they believed it was a clear case of accident. "There was a filling station with a light in front which burned all night within two hundred feet of whc.e the car 'was found. Had Mr. Moseley had car trouble he would nave gone to this filling station lor help, and4** would never have attempted to walk one and a half -miles, through the town of Cayce, to Colombia, across two trestles on so terrible a nigh^.^'ffe was bitterly cold, with a strong .biowing, rr. i : a'n and sleet, followed by snow, M;', Moseley's suit case was found in he A;, and his brief case containing raprrs was found leaning against a faction house near th? railroad about one hundred feet away. "The coroner's jury has n?Ver rendered a verdict. The physician called to the ?<*?e stated that he could not agree to a verdict of accidental death because he did aot believe there was enough blood at f?r U man to hav* be*n killed there. "Upon request of the coroner and members 0f the family, governor Richards assigned a State detective on the case. Hut the following uay> the same detective, W VV Rogers, was sent to Cheraw to break up a still, and was detained there several days. Later he was .lent to Camden to arrest Sunday golfers. All this time clues to the dune were getting cold. ."Upon request of the family for further investigation, Governor Rich rds assigned State Detect!Carlos Rector on the case. Born detectives reported that they could find no clues whatever. "It was rumored in Columbia that ? >ootlegger was coming through from Charleston in a Hudson coach the same night of March, the first J Uaroliha, State detectivei T double duty- Tbey serve both as detectives and as prohibition officers. / Bootlegger King Slays Wife Cincinnati, Ohio, Oct. 6.-George Remus, one time "king of bootleggers," today shot his wife, Imogene, to death as she leaped from a taxi cab after seeing Remus' car swing out from a parking place into traffic behind her. Mr*. Remus was on her way at the time to attend a hearjng on a divorce suit she filed against her husband before he was released from the Atlanta penitentiary in 1926. Remus was being held in jail tonight without bond on a first degree murder charge. The shooting occurred as Mrs. Remus drove through Eden park here. She died after being removed to a hospital. The divorce suit was to have received a definite hearing today after it had been delayed by repeated continuances. To forestall an insanity plea, County Prosecutor C. P. Taft late today ordered Dr. Wr. C. Kendig, Hamilton county court alienist, to interview Remus and form his own conclusions regarding whether Remus was insane at the time of the killing. An automobile with Remus in it swung out from the side of Victory parkway early this morning to follow a taxi in which Mrs. Remus and her adopted daughter, Ruth, 19, were riding to court. Look Before You f ire I he owner of a department store walking through the packing room, noticed a boy idly leaning against a case and whistling. The owner glared at him. "How much do you get a week?" he demanded. '^Five dollars, sir," replied the boy. Then here's a week's pay. Now get out!" The boy put the money in his pocket and departed. "When did you hire that loafer?" the owner demanded of the department head a little later. $ - Never, was the answer, ' "he was delivering a note for another firm. Everybody's Magazine. AN ORDINANCE Ordering an Election Submitting to * Electors of the City of Camden the Question of The }fo^I!L?fvThirt>' Five Thousand ($35,000.00) Dollars. Municipal Bonds, for the Purpose of Paving 5ileltr^t8 ^f the City of Camden, South Carolina. ^ ordained by the City* Council of the City of Camden, South Carooafu Ln * session assembled, this 26th day of September, 1927: re?P?n8? to a petition of the majority (as appears upon the tax books of the said city) of the Wh ?.City of Camden, South Carolina, petitioning the ordering of an election for the purpose of the issuance of Thirty-fiv* Thousand^ dollars ($35,000.00) munluof 5* City of Camden, S. k? j ?8' tbe Proceeds of same fbe purpose of pavJng certain stWs of the City oi Sf.mQenvi?'WiU ?*K*lh Street, from We?t ^Srn^a n0ad track ?b the 5 VI ft X'l"1118 on . the East PoHrloae , Seaboard Air Line Railroad track on the East to the "i ?vthie We8t and Broad Street, from York on the North tc the City limits on the South. Thai e^10vn i^' and' *8 hereby, order SW>, r u ,n tht.Cit? of c?n>den South Carolina on Tuesday, the 18tt Octoher. 1927 on the questior of the issuing of J35.000.00 coqrior bonds of the City of Camden for X E.W?i Pdving said street# of thi li Ca?de". South Caroline. ? ,? ? That said bonds be issued ol SSiirtsftsaa.-10ne Pe,A*"d bear in 1 at- tha rate of not more thar 6 per cent per annum, payable semi In!!"* ^t,m date bonds (40) yea* ?ron ? the issue, with the privi font ? recfcmptttm, after twenti Issue ** m th* dat? ***< 0 C. P. DuBOSE, AjteH: ~**yor "a?-* j ~i. j * in. . ji- njuuu'lijjh i '* . Parson GeU Two Years Charlotte, N, C., Oct. 7.?Recommending mecy, a jury in Mecklenburg superior court today found the Rev. WilUe T. Jordan of Columbus, Ga., guilty of bigamy, and Judge Jaa. L. Webb sentenced the aged divide to from two to three yeara in the State penitentiary at Raleigh. ..}JEne trial, begun here Wednesday, swept forward to a rather lagging finish after the introduction of voluminous testimony, which for three days pivotal around an alleged seHes of matrimonial escapades culminating in the preacher's marriage here to Mrs. Kmma Langridge-Jordan of Washington, D. C., August 19, the specific incident which led to his ar-' rest, indictment and trial. Sent back to jail with bond fixedj at $1,000, a ray of hope was seen tonight when Tom P. Jimson of de-! fense counsel said he believed he would be able to post bond Monday! from voluntary subscription of citi- J zens who have offered to contribute ' sums ranging from $26 to $100 to ef- j fecfc'*the minister's release from jail, j TAX NOTICE | Office of Treasurer Kershaw County, Camden, S. C., Sept. 12, 1927. Notice is hereby given that the books will be opened for the collection of State, County and School I axes from October 16t>h, 1927, to [arch 15th, 1928. A penalty of 1 per cent will be added to all taxes unpaid January 1st, 1928, 2 per cent February lBt, 1928 and 7 per cent March 1st, 1928. The rate per centum for Kershaw county is as follows: Mills State Taxes, 5^4 9-0-1 School 4 School Taxes, ..../, 7 County Taxes, 8 tit Hospital, % Constitutional School Tax 3 Deficiency School Tax .... % Total 29 V4 DeKalb Township Road Bonds, for DeKalb Township only .. . 2V4 Dog tax $1.25. All dog owners are required to make a return of their dogs to the County Treasurer, who is required to furnish a license tag. All dogs caught without the license tag the owners will be subject to a fine I of $5.00 or imprisonment not more than five days. The following School Districts have special levies: School District No. 1 18?j School District No. 2 16Ms School District No. 3 19 School District No. 4 20Vj School District No. 5 1 School District No. 6 18 School District No. 7 10 School District No. 8 1 School District No. 0 1 School District No. 10 5 School District No. 11 8 School District Ne. 12 19% School District No. 13 1 School District No. 15 1 School District No. 16 -2 School District No. 19 1 School District No. 20 1 School District No. 22 19% School District No. 23 . . . . 1 School District No. 25 1 School District No. 27 1 School District No. 28 1 School District No. 29 7 School District No. 30 1 School District No. 31 ...... 9 School District No. 33 11 School District No. 37 ....... 1 School District No. 38 1 School District No. 39 5 School District No. 40 ......20% School District No. 41 1 School District No. 42 1 School District No. 43 1 School District No. 46 1 School District No. 47 1 ' The Poll Tax is $1.00. All able bodied male persons from the age of twenty-one (21) to fifty (50) years, both inclusive, except residents in incorporated towns, shall pay $3.00 as a road tax except ministers of the gospel actually in charge of a congregation, teachers employed in public schools, school truitaea, and persons permanently disabled tit the military service of the State and persons who served in the War Between the States, and all quarantine service of this state and all realdents who may be attending schoel or college at the time when said toadtax shall become due. Persons claiming disabilities must present cartjp- . cate from two reputable physician#- of this county. All information with reference to taxes will be furnished upon applica* tion. S. W. HOGUE, County Treasurer. RHEUMATISM While in France with the American Army-'# '.obtained a noted French , prescription for the treatment of. Rheumatism and Neuritis.. 1 have given this' to thousands with wonderful results. , The prescription coat me nothing.*' I ask nothing for it. I will mail it if you will send me youf address. A postal card will bring it. Write -today. PAUL CASE, Dept. M2lt, Brockton, Mass. I 'ii ft'] ' w c ' - '%' " TlSK'fl/Si ?\ I Clrtin lovers of this vlrinily will have an opportunity to wltneae Philip Kfldv. orialnator of the somersault oil the tight wire, when John Robinson's Circus conies In the near futnre. Eddy was the first nan to ??r turn a somersault on the wire and has appeared In practically every sentry on the faea of the globe. Several Imitators have attempted (II erne feat with varying snscsss the past few years. Ksroltae IMf la a ssnsatlonat dancor on the wire, dolarnftl the.steps ^ the Valencia to the Black Bottom. TheKddys are Just one of the ay acts at International reputation with Jafia RoWnaen a Clrcna Jofcn RebiMon'i Circua.at Sumter, Friday October 21. --V^" 'v.. - -.4. mm ? a bw i ^au LJi,r -l^.w;ll^i!ffWwww r^ YES! THE STANDARD WAREHOUSE COMPANY IS PREPARED TO MAKE LOANS AT 5 1-2 Per Cent. ON COTTON STORED" IN ANY OF ITS WAREHOUSES WAREHOUSES IN: Columbia, Anderson, Greenwood, Newberry and Orangeburg If Interested in Holdinf Your Cotton write STANDARD WAREHOUSE COMPANY f COLUMBIA, S. C. r- ^ AUGUST KOHN, Pre.. T. B. STACKHOUSE, Oun'ii. Board Or Consult Our Local Manager at 'the Warehouse. JW Trmntfiortrntte* wj-rr-g-jr-jj BEBimBEflS^^ _ ^x\\\ ", .> i (wKc^j ft 11 that defies ? comparison./ 0 < 1 ,v Just think what Chevrolet offers you today! r \ " r-j -._,v v* ; vg ; - . 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