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TAX NOTICE Hte of Treasurer Kershaw County, Kamden, 8. C., Sept. 12, 1927. " ' r;' "7* Botice is hereby given that the will be opened for the colleciof State, County and School ft from October 16th, 1927, to Hh 16th, 1928. A penalty of V cent will be added to all Una Hid January let, 1928, 2 per cent Kuary let^l928 and 7 per eeqi He rate per centum for Kershaw H^Ky is t*n follows: ^ # HUte Taxes, "4* School Taxes 7 Bounty Taxes, 8% ^Constitutional School Tax 8 Hpeficiency School Tax ,... % ?... ... n Total t.w ..29% HDeKalb Township Hoad . Bonds, for DeKalo TowAe^. Sag tax 81.26. All dog owners are H^red te make a return of their H to the County Treaaurer, who u Hired to furnish a license tag. All Ha caught without the license tag owners will he subject to a fine $6.00 or imprisonment not more Hie following School Districts He specie*- levies: Hchool District No. 1 18% Hchool District No. 2 ...... Hchool District No. 3 19 Hchool District No. 4 18% Hchool District No. 6 Hchool District No. 6 18 Khool District No. 7 10 . Hchool District No. 8 ..?... 1 Hchool District No. 9 ...... 1 Hchool District No. 10 6 Kdhool District No. 11 8 J Hchool District Ne. 12 19% Hchool District No. 13 - 1 ! Hchool District No. 15 1 Hchool District No. 16 2 HEchool District No. 19 1 Hchool District No. 20 1 Hchool District No. 22 19% Hchool District No. 23 1 Hchool District No. 26 1 Hchool District No. 27 1 Hchool District No. 28 1 fschool District No. 31 9 School District No. 83 ......11 School District No. 37 '...... 1 School District No. 38 1 School District. No. 39 6 School District No. 40 20% School District No. 41 1 School District No. 42 1 HSchool 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 He age of twenty-one (21) to fifty Ho) years, both inclusive, except resHfents in incorporated towns, shall H^y 83.00 as a road tax except minisHe of the gospel actually jn charge H a congregation, teachers employH in public schools, school trustees, Hd persons permanently disabled in military service of the State and Hraons who served in the War BeHeen the States, and all quarantine H^06 ?f this state and all resiHpts who may be attending school college at the time when said road H shall become due. Persons claimH disabilities must present certifiHe from two reputable physicians H this county. MAW information with reference to fttes will be furnished upon applicaS. W. HOGUE, B County Treasurer. I t KERSHAW LODGE No. 29 KG J^Regular communication of H^^^this lodge is held on the I first Tuesday in each month 8 p.m. Visiting Brethren are welHned. T. V. WALSH, Hp. ROSS, Worshipful Master. ) Secretary. w Just Tottering, II I So Weak I H -I was in a bad atate bf || I health and was going through II H a critical time of my life," says || lira. Ella Scarborough, R.F.D. || I 6, Dothan, ilia. "Several dif- II Arent things were reeemiqend* || ad tp me, but I did net get || any real relief until I began to || take Cardoi. * 4B H was juat aa weak aa could II ^ lege were ahaky, and |j often 1 would juat totter II around the house. I finally got jl I ?d week^ 1 W** *n bed **! * II It was then that I began to || Htake CarduL J up for 1| quite a while, and at last I re- |l Hgained my health. Cardui waa certainly ? friend to nta in time II H ^ health Is || H^ ^b.ut^ ?*# Hrt/xi^x^ I H^TJT-m' ,uir*rin? i ?1 H ***** gv?*>r" ?? ^" y ^ ^ I UMTHUNK KBW8 NOTES * laUmmt '?* ToM By o D*r Regular Corr?Mp#Mleat Bethune, J in. 4.~The Bethune schools reopened on Monday morning yu v*^tio? for ChristJEt* i h*,vio* apent this time at their wepeetive hornet On Uat Saturday Mr. and Mr* A B. McLaurin ?ntartained a^Jt "01^ SX'y *di^rP^r,HWith " *?K turkay dinner with the exception of H1* HJn]um?f and family. Rev.' Derrick and fatally almost the entire number of guests weer cW relative* of the hoet or hostess. The J'jM. Forbia, of Andrews, spent adayend night in town last week the guestf of 'Mr. W. A. Rethune and family. pastor of the Freebyteriau church here for thir, Uen years prior to: going to Andrews and waa greatly beloved by the peop e who are alwys happy to welcome him back in their midst. ' Mi*. L- D., Robertson celebrated the twenty-first birthday anniverpry of b?r ?<>" Norwood Thom?? on bat Sunday with a delightful turkey dinner. A number of Mr. Thomas' friends were present for this pleasant oedaaion. , Moat of ^ the' girls and boys who &r holidays have returhed to the various institutions &Jja*n!SF^Th??? ,n<jlu<*e a I**** n0?*9?r the ypung people of our town andTeommunity. ?f Kershaw, J5J ffr' William. Cot>eland, of Bethune, were married fast week. Mr. and his bride will reside ?* his mother, Mrs. I la rif W JH'?arn of Pee Dee, N. C., has been4 added td the Seaboard railway, office' force here. This will fef^nigehtiCe entire day . tyr. Pred Wilson and family, of ZS^aEZ,'ft0*** t0 WW* an<* are occupying the upper story at the hame of Mr. and Mrs. Harley King) ?%>WUson will have charge of the new Rarage and fillirf* station which 2 JnM hY Wilson Oas k?-i i c?mf?ny? of Lancaster, on i?n the Bethune Mercantile Co., this lot h'aviifg been recentir purchased from the Rev. J. A. Graham; Mr. P. W. Best and family expect to move to Hartsville Boon where J~' -?f*t goes .-to look after the estate1 ?f his father, the late Mr. C. C. Beet*, whp. was a resident of that town. t _ , Mieses Katherine Truesdell and Dorothy Parrott apent a few days ****]***?j in, ^ran*oburg, the guests of Miss Lizzie Mae Riley. Mrs. D. M. Mays and children and Sedley King, motored to Neeses Sunday carrying with them, Mrs. Mark King and children who had been visiting relatives in Bethune. Mr. and C. C. Best, of Columbia, have been the guests during the holidays of Mr. and Mrs. Homes Josey. Mrs. E. E. Austin from near Charlotte, N. C., have been the recent guests of Mrs. Nannie Watts. umj ' and Mrs. Thomas Cooley and children, of Swansea, have been visiting relatives in town. Mr. and Mrs. Z. Brartnon are in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., where they went several weeks since to visit their daughter, Mrs. J. L. Seegars. Eighty thousand chests of tea, worth about $2,450,000, pass through the London market every week. One woman was killed and forty other persons were injured, when a limited train of the Chicago and Alton railroad crashed into a standing train in the Chicago railroad offices in Chicago Saturday afternoon during a blinding snow storm. Notice of Lost Certificate of Stock. A Certificate of Stock of one (1) ahare in the Fifteenth Series of the Enterprise Building & Loan Association No. 20 was issued on the 5th day of January, 1922, to Fannie Duje r ^is "Certificate hap been lost and I, as representative of the Personal estate of said Fannie DuBose, will, oa Saturday, February Uth, apply to said Association at its office in Camden, S. C:, for settlement upon the said Certificate, retired by said Association December 31st, 1927. w. l. Mcdowell, j. p., ' Administrator. ' Camden, C., January 5th, 1928. 41-46 CITATION ? x " J i ?$*? State of South Carolina, . County of Kershaw, By W. l. McDowell, Esquire, Probate Judge. * Whereas, Boykin MoCaskill made suit to me to grant him Letters of Administration of the Estate of and effects of A. M. MoCaskill. ' These are,' therefore, to cite and admonish all and singular the kin drod and creditors of the said A. M. MoCaskill deceased, that they be and gPPear before- iue, In the Court of fgjjftjW frrbe held at Camden, South f Carolina on Tuesday, January 17th, next after publication thereof, at 11 o'clock in the forenoon to show eaiute, jf any they have, why the said Administration should not be granted, Oiven under my hand. '-this' Srd , day of January, Anno Domini 1928. W. L. McDOWEM** j Probate Judge for Kershaw Chunty. Published op the 6th and 18th dayi ; ,of January, 1928 in the Can,*" Chronicle, and posted at the Coon House door for- the time prescribed by 1 ' I - VjV^.. ;. NOTICE . ' ;; The annual meeting of the atock 1 IP?*?? >f Bank of Camden-will be held at the Bank*s office on Tpesj day, January 10, 1988 at 11 o'clock. M. a CARRISON. Jr Cashier, r DKAtiTW KBaSBAW ' J. A. McCmIUU Wii Prominent Ctti> sen of That Town. Kershaw, S. ., Dec. 80.?J. A. McCaskill, prominent business man of Kershaw, died hers at his residence Thursday afternoon, after an illness, of seven weeks. Although known to be seriously ill, the news of his death came as a distinct shock to everyone in the town and county Mr. Mc Caskill was born in Chesterfield coun-' ty and previous to his removal to Kershaw was engaged iu the mercan-; tile business in McBee and Kershaw, entering the insurance business in1 J in which he was active up to a short while before his death. Mr. McCaskill was prominently^ identified with civic social and business life in the town and was highly esteemed by a wide circle of friends, who will miss him sadly. Kind, courteous, gentle and generous, he made numbers of friends in both county and state who will be pained to hear of his passing. He was an active member of the 1'resbyterian church of which he was an elder and taught the men's Bible < ^lacs. He was also a rtiember of both the Masonic and Knight* of Pythias orders. He is survived by his widow, who was Miss Theo Williford of Kershaw, two sons, Hazel D? and J. A. McCaskill, Jr., and two daughters, Mrs. W. Clyburn Perry of Liberty Hill and Miss Esther Margaret, a student at Chicora. Mr. McCaskill at the time of his death was aged G9, thirty six of which was spent < as a resident of Kershav^. The funeral was held at Kershaw Friday afternoon, the Masonic ritual being used. Funeral services were conducted by Rev, T. M. Stevenson, his pastor, assisted by Dr. F. M, Hawley, pastor of the First Presbyterian church of Portsmouth, Va., Mnd.fctev. F. A. Brennan. The numerous floral offerings bore silent testimony to the great esteem in which Mr. McCaskill was held. D A dairy herd of prize Friesian cattle, the property of Colonel Chafes Birkens, and including 94 head valued at $75,000, has been slaughtered because of being infected with foot and mouth disease. For one of his" bulls he recently refused an offer of $5,130; * James.. F. Yost, hotel owner, has been sentenced to serve a year and a half in the Atlanta Federal prison for striking a prohibition officer with a .bottle during a raid on the Hotel Warwick at Pottstown, Pa., The Chez Morgan, Broadway club, was raided by prohibition agents Thursday night, as a preparatory move against too much Christmas eve celebration. The place ?was wrecked to the extent , of $50,000 worth of furnishings, the proprietor and a number of employes were arrested. Big Blaze In Monroe. Monroe Dec. 22.?The origin of the $3M,000 blaze which raged for five hoWs early today in the heart of Monroe's business district, gutting three buildings constituting one half, a block, late today was still undetermined. The fire was the i^st disastrous in the town's history, it was declared. The first floors of the three buildings destroyed were occupied by the Union Drug Company. The Monroe Emiuirer, and the retail department of the Monroe Hardware Company. On the second floors were the ofr. fices of a majority of - the town's lawyers and physicians, as well as those of business men. Nothing was saved. The large stocks of the two concerns and the printing equipment and the paper . stock of the newspaper were destroyed. The lawyers lost their libraries and legal documents and the physicians theif instruments, books and ledgers. Most of these professional men carried little or no insurance and some of them described their losses as_ irreparable. Nothing .was left of the buildings but the blackened brick walls. " 1 11 II Kidnapper Hickman, self ganleeesd' kidnapper and. slayer of : 12-year-old Manan Parker of Loa 1 Angeles. Hickman waa captnrrd in Oregon after what is said to he the greatest man hunt the Pacific Coast has ever known. >i. i i OFFERS PRIZE TO WOMEN To 11MWO MitlH Tko Boot RNH <;?nhw U TM? SUto O " Prises totaling $446,00 are offered by the Chilean Nitrate of Soda Educational Bureau for outstanding home I gardens in South Carolina. The Contest wil) be conducted under the supervision of Mies Lonty J. Landrom, State Home Demonstration Agent. 1 The woman who ho* the bpst yearround garden in the State fertilised [ with nitrate of soda will receive ? prise of $50.00 iW second StateWide Prise will be $30.00, and the third 120.00. / ^ J' The contestants will be grouped ?? three districts and each district will | have a first prise of $15.00 and a second prise of $10.00 I The girl enrolled in Home DemonI stratlon activities with best record of I a year-round garden will receive an I educational trip valued at OOfi.OO I There will be a second prize of $13.00 I and a third of $10.00 in this division. Five girls in each district who excel in garden work and who fertilized I their gardens with nitrate -of soda I will receive trips to the Girl's Short I Course at Rock Hill next summer. I Miss Leah Parker, Manager of the I Home Garden Department of the 1 Chilean Nitrate of Soda Educational 1 Bureau, will arrive in South Carolina I shortly to confer with Home Demon1 stration Agents abeut the Contest. j Hurgry Wolves Devour Infant. L Rigay J^tyia, Jan. 1,?Hungry 1 wolves defeated the heroic efforts of j a mother ?and a faithful horse, near I the Lithuanian village of Malety, and I devoured the woman's infant child I when the horse fell from exhaustion tin sight of safety. I Driving to the village in a sleigh I with her baby, the womhn was sud-: I denly attacked by the ferocious beasts I when some distance out. tJrging her I horse on at full speed, the woman I gained sight of the village atid safety, | when the panting horse dropped in J its tracks. Before peasants that weru J aroused by her cries could reach the 1 scene, the wolves had devoured the j baby and severely injured the disI traded mother. . j Turtles As Weather Prophets , I Knoxvifle; Tenn., Decv ^,28:?The Pweather man may,make hrfatalces 4da. J to changes in the wind dnd various j other causes; but turtles, never! That I is the opinion of Mrs. Stockeley MitIchell, of Knoxvllle, who has forty ofJ J them. From observations of her pets, 1 Mrs. Mitchell foretells the weather, J For 1027-1928 she has predicted a geI vere winter, as her turtles burrowed I J deep into the ground. Although the ] j turtles hibernate, they come out of the ' j ground during warm days in the winter. "They are better prophele than 1 the weather man," says Mrs. Mitchell, I "for when a cold is predicted and the 1 turtles stay out, the cold wave never i arrives. Turtles are queer pets fori this delicate, charming little southern woman. Her collection started about I twenty years ago, when Mrs. Mitchell rescued a turtle from some small boys on the street. Her unique colony contains turtles varying from babies the size of quarters to grown-ups and grown-olds the size of dinner plates. They are land turtles and water turtles. They have shells that run the, gamut 6t colors from bright yellow to black. The Printed Word. There are this year just about 26 000,000 young people going to school or college within the United States. The percentage of illiteracy is being steadily reduced. In a few years there will be.3 or 4 per cent of thp, country's population above 16 years of age illiterate. Not only are multitudes being lifted out of illiteracy, but an even higher proportion of the whole mass is being educated into or through high school grades of intelligence. This 'haeans 60 to 70 millions of- people to whom the printed word is no enigma, but a familiar working instrument of the mind. It may be used for continuous study, for self-expression, for pure pleasure aiid pastime. Thus, the demand for printed matter must continue to expand indefinitely and hi turn will exert enormous influence upon the national life?an influence1' becoming even more omnipreseht and cotinuousj-^Spartanburg Herald. - . ' " -^.Camden People Hart In Wreck. ? Chester, Jan. 1.?Mrs. Mary OwenS and J. H'. Waits, both of Camden are at the Pryor. Memorial hospital with severe and painful though not serious injuries sustained in an automobile wreck on the Calhoun highway, about flvjs miles east of Chester, ' Sunday afternoon as they were moteVing tow ward Chester.' Mrs. John Ellis, also of Camden, was an occupant of the automobile, but miraculously ^hc escaped ipjuty,^ Sunday night Mr^Walts appeared the most seriously injured, it was said at the -hospital. He is said to bavt^kuatainad a fractured dollar bone mild suffdred.a severely lacerated ^ape. He, bled profusely before he reMched tho hospital. ' He has a number of painful contusion's also, it la s&M. Mrs. Owens has a broken shouldeaf bone , and painful contusion*. The cause of the accident is .unknown. ' In some unacco'Untablp manner the automobile is thought to have turned oven and then righted itself. ! Sheriff Ismcft O. Home fortunately came along shortly after the occurred In his Buick >coech and with great speed hurried fhem to pita!. The automobile was 'badly damaged. H it reported. ^ - miimmmammmmimmmammmmmmKfmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmtm ; ' . W. Robin Zemp's Drug Store I M?licino??SICK-ROOM REQUISITES?Prescription, j |j Prescription Work by Licensed Men ij'S Prompt Delivery to any part of city. Mail order* re- . eeive prompt ntUation. Our price* ere fair to u* and | to our oufttotner*. I TELEPHONE 30 fl * - ( K *1 , - T \j^^K T ~?rri 3 Other People'* Trouble*. Ike Martinu, 24 inches high, a vaudeville performer at Jacksonville, Fla., has filed suit for divorce from his wife, who is 23 inches high, charging her with cruelty. Daniel Brown, Tennessee mountaineer, believes that man must not alter the appearance God gave him. This belief led to his arrest for refusing to permit his two sonB to be vaccinated. A New York court fined a father for apahking hb 20-year-old daughter. Florence De Villier traveled from South Africa to Philadelphia U> have removed from her lung a paper clip which had been there for -12^y6ara. Miss Lisbeth Apler, who scratched her name on a comb she made In a Germany factory, will shortly wed a New York man who bought the comb and courted her by correspondence. When Leslie Makin and Miss Elsie Marshall of Liverpool were arraigned for fighting In tne .street, the court Sentenced them to be married at once. Columbia Woman Killed. Columbia, 'Dec. 27.?-Miss Sophie Rledlinger of 1905 Main street suffered fatal injuries about 6:16 last' night when struck by a taxi driven by A. S. McQueen one of the chauffeurs for Taylor's Red Top Taxi service, v^Jiile crossing Gervais street, at Marion. She died about 10 p. in. Miss Reidlioger, a native of Germany but 'practically a lifelong resident of Colombia, v&as between ^ 60 and- 66 years of ag<4. She was well bnown in Columbia, her family having been associated in different baking businesses for many years. His extreme youth at the time of the crime, will be the defense in the caBe of Webley Hunt, alleged companion of William Edward Hickman, when the pair killed Ivy Thorn, Rosehill, Cal., druggist, in a holdup a yea)' ago. THBFT PLOT IS BAKED | Many Nrgrora Pall By Way Hid* <yl^ At Or eat FuIIh. j f Chester, Dec. 31?Whut is ullegevl ' to have been one of the biggest I robbery plots ever staged in Cheater j county has just been uneurthed after iv many weeks of detective activities on j | Abe part of Chief of Police J. C. Steele and Constable Fletcher Dye of Great I Falls, and Rural Policemen John j Caldwell and W. Gladden Dye, in the arrest of John DinkJns, James j Coleman and Silas Hill, all negroes. 'They .were placed in the Chester I county jail. Coleman is out on $500 j: bond. 1 Thirteen were arrested in the alleged charge of receiving stolen ; goods, and each fined $100 each, and eleven paid thbir fines, while fl two, Bates McCullough and James 9 Deans, who plead guilty itt Magistrate W. L. Haynos court, appialedl for a hew trial, and were also placed In the county jail, but were released 1 on the payment of $200 bonds. 1 Rural Policeman .'Dye in discuss- . 1 ing the manner in which the stealing j was done, stated that it was mainly groceries and they would short order the customers. The trio, he stated, would go through the three big textile villages of the Republic \ Cotton Mills and take orders and* in delivering them would route some of the groceries out-to their friends, and the purchasers would report the shortage, which the firms would t~,i have to make good, merely thinking the negroes had made an error. He I thinks the thefts . mounted up to big figure?. Dinkins, Coleman and Hill will be tried the next terra of the court of general sessions. j The word "bible' is derived from the Greek word biblos, meaning book. II /SM FMTHFUL FRIEND II I ^ 11 I In every .community where there is an A. A P. store you II I , find women regarding it as a friend ot the family. JI I Daily they turn to A. A P. fully, confident that no mat- II I ter wjiat they select it is sure to be of good quality. I B jjj I And moreover they are utterly convinced that A. A P. II ol gives them honest value for every dollar they spend. I I To legions of wohien> nothing could supplant the A.AP, 11 I store in their neighborhood; to them A. A P. is a faith I ful friend. II I FLOUR$3.69 || I A & P. OATS, package - - 8c 11 | Best Pure LARD, lb . 15c || | RICE, Fancy Blue Rose, 5 lbs. - - 25c | I COCOA, Una Brand, 2 lb. can - 29c | I PEACHES, Yellow Cling, heavy syrup, large can 19c | I Spaghetti, Encore, ready-to-serve, 3 cans 25c I | Baked BEANS, A&P Brand, 3 Wo. 2 cans, - 23c | | LIMA BE^fepedhun green, No. 2 can - 15c || | Aunt Jemima's tefc; FLOUR ,T?r 25c | | taM '10c II j?q| | SUGAR, Finest Granulated, 4 lbs. - - 25c || | Grapefruit, large size, 3 for - 25c || & ATLANTIC & PACIFIC ? | jptor? on DoKolb and Brand 8to. ^ gBP&iite*-- ? - --