University of South Carolina Libraries
TAX NOT1CB B Treasurer K?r?lM? Geanty. Men, a t, Sept. 12, 1KS7. Hft ? "'w 1,1 He is hereby given that the Bill be opened for the collec~ State, County and School vBrom October 15tb, 1027, to Kbth. 1928. A penalty of 1 K will be added to all taxes Banuory 1st, 1028, 2 per cent Bl*t> 1928 and 7 per cent Vl^|H I "I1 Bte per centum for Kershaw | as followti ^ ^ ,;rB Tiaea, 6% j^Eiiy ^Taxes', 8 'A Ktitutienal Schooi Tax 8 ' Bci#ncy Set*00* Tax .... % Bjalb Township Road Bds, for DeKalb TownSax fl.26. All dog owners are to make a return of their Kthe County Treasurer, who is |i jB to furnish a license tag. AU ; ^ Blight without the license tag Berg will be subject to a fine B or Imprisonment not more ^ i K following School districts n Becial levies: tBbl District No. 1 .18V4 i#l District No. 2 B>1 District No. 3 . ... 19 District No. ,4 .......18% Bl District No. 6 ...... 1 < Bl District No. 6 18 ; Bl District No. 7 .10 B] District No. 6 ...... 1 Bl District No. 9 1 M\ District No. 10 . ....i 6 B1 District No. 11 8 Bl District No. 12 19% ; Bl District No. 13 ...... 1 >v'>Bl District No. 16 1 I:.' B District No. 16 ,. 2 ! Bl District No. 19 1 %: Bl District No. 20 1 Bl District No. 22 19% 1 B District No. 23 1 - Bl District No. 25 1 : K>1 District No. 27 1 Bol District No. 28 1 Bol District No. 29 ...... 7 B>1 District No. 30 ....... 1 Bol District No. 31 .9 Bool District No, 33 .11 Bool District No. 87 1 Bool District No. 38 1 Bool District No. 39 < 5 , Bool District No. 40 20% Bool District No. 41 1 Bool District No. 42 1 Bool District No. 43 1 B?ol District No. 46 1 Bo?l District No. 47 1 B Poll Tax is $1.00. B able bodied male persons from Bge of twenty-one (21) to fifty Byears, both inclusive, except resH> in incorporated towns, shall Brio ab road tax except miuisBf the gospdl actually in charge Bgongregation, teachers employi public schools, school trustees, Btrsons permanently disabled in Blitary service of the State and Hs who served in the War BeBthe States, and all quarantine B of this state and ~ all resiBwho may be attending school Bege at the time when said road Ball become due. Persons claimBsabilities must present certifiBrom two reputable pThysici^nr Bpforroation with reference to will be furnished upon apphcaS. W. HOGUE, County Treasurer. B~KERSHAW LODGE No. 29 jjb^Regular communication of B^this, lodge is held on' the first Tuesday in each month B" ' Visiting Brethren are welB T.V.WALSH, ROSS, r /Worshipful Master. B?ec*et*ry. D14-27-fcf Just Tottering, || So Weak Bl was in a bad state of II Balth and was going through II critical time of my life," says SI te Ella Scarborough, R. F. D. |j > am, but I did not get |l Ig real relief pntll 1 begun to Jl |1 was' j ust as wea^ pp ooold II B My legs were ehak& And II Bp d ^ would patter I Kit was then that I bagao to II W>,OanlnL-~1 lrapt it iif for If ra&r saws1 Brteinly h friend to me in time I l*My health is splendid now, I BdJ seldom have to nee I ^Cfoj^but I gladly Bay a I FJ? V' j*'grP* ^ w . v ; ? "" new dollar bills Are R??l<"y N?? roc Distrlbatiort All At Once. Washington, D, C.,~Jan, 2.?The year 1928 will mark the first change ?' ImV*r money aince 1861. ror months the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, the greatest print shop in the world, will he buay making new and smaller 91 bills so that upon some fixed day next fall they may be issued simultaneously throughout the country and the old ones retired at one swoop, to bo redeemed, of course, upon demand. Notes Of other denominations will be I printed and put in circulation probably in 1929. The now notes will be 6 5-16 by 2 11-16 inches whereas tne notes now in circulation are 7 7-16 by 2 1-8 inches. By the change the government expects to save 92,000,000 annually. The reduction in sire of the bills is expected to increase the capacity of the Bureau of Engraving and Printing by BO per cent because twelve of the smaller notes can be printed at one impression upon .the same pre*s which now prints hut eight. e #iW in the bills will be made more convenient to handle and will also-be more durable. The new notes will Blip into a billfold or pocket, it is , claimed, without creasing or folding, and Jor this reason are expected to have a much longer life than those now in use. The life of thd average bill now is not more than six or seven months, treasury officials say. Folding is one of the chief items cutting short the life of paper money. Farmers Starving Sheep. Clemson Colleg, Jari. 9.?A sheep's ability to more nearly glean a living froin pasture than any other livestock has led many to abuse it by providing scanty pasture insufficient for profit, says L. V. Starkey, chief animal husbandman here. Sheep respond to good treatment and good rations as well as other stock. While stomach worms take ' the heaviest, sheep toll of all. the troubles in this state, i$ 7>s quite tpue they damage more the undernourished flocks.T. Most of the flocks in South Carolina are infested with stomach worms but constant use of a copper sulphate drench will control them if sheep are well fed, says Prof. Starkeyi Extra feed increases resistance to internal parasites and diseases. An excellent grain mixture for winter is corn, oats and bran in equal parts, which may be fed with either legume or grass hay, thpugh little is needed with a legume. On a legume feed, grain is not usually fed at all until a month before lambing. The standard grain ration for ewes is one-half pound a day. This seems little and frequently those who take a notion to feed grain feed too much. Another satisfactory winter ration for grade ewes is legume hay and corn. The legume is high in protein while corn is high in carbohydrates and fat. A shepherd can always tell by looking at his sheep whether they are up to weight and whether it is necessary to feed somq concentrates. An eight-indh crab with labeled shell was recently .captured on the Fifth of Clyde, Scotland. It had been liberated eighteen months before at- A^rdeeni three hundred miles away. An 'anarchist album,- containing the photographs of some five hundred anarchists of international reputation, was published and distributed among interested nations in 1894 by the French Government. Notice of Lost Certificate of Stock. A Certificate of Stock of one (1) Share in the. Fifteenth Series of the Enterprise Building & Loan Associa52? TO? j"u,ed on th?T 6th da* of January* 1922, to Fannie Dul6* Certificate has been lost and I, as representative of the PerSatath of said Fannie'DuBose, JJJoo 011 Saturday-, February 11th, 1928, apply to said Association at its office in Camden, S. C., for settleupon tjie said Certificate, resi ? 100-,8 Association December W? l?27w . fc. k ,? l. Mcdowell, j. p., [ri.Mv c _ T Administrator. ^Camden, S. C-, January 5th, 1928. F"'" 41-ie citation The State of South Carolina,. County of Kershaw, - By W. L McDowell/ Esquire, Probate .^O^^McC.skill w.d. to g"?nt him Letter, of Administration Estate of mad feffects of A. M. McCaskill. These are, therefore, to . cite and admonish all and singular the kindred and creditor# of the said A. M. MoOaskill deceased, that they be and *PP?ar before me, in the Court of Probate, to be held at Camden, South tfarolina^onjTueadty. January 17th. m&m pnhHftatlon thereof; at ll fl* foFeniioh to show cause, ' Kavi? why the said Administration khould not be granted,' Pubhshed on the 6th and 1.1th days pf J?n?nr, 1028... in s" C?,?.<fcS law . F 1 1 1 11 1 II * CONTEST WON BY TOMI?KIN8 CuvliM U. BUdeal Mil ltd 6-Acre Yield Only 7 Poind* Clemaon College, Jin. 9,?J, R. Tompkins, student it the University of South Carolina won the Cotton Guessing Contest at the State Pair in October. Prom a small part of two rows of cotton transplanted to the Clemson College Extension exhibit just as they stood in the fiveacre field of P. M. Arant, at Page-, land, all the contestants estimated the total ilnt yield of the five acres. Mr. Tompkins' guess cfpll just seven pounds under the official yield of 5,867 pounds, by which the grower won the Clemson College Cotton Contest. So Mr. Thompldns received the first prize of $io.00 awarded by the South Carolina Cotton Manufacturers' Association. The second prize of five dollars in the guessing contest was won by Walter Rawl, a farmer of Gilbert, I^exington county, by a guess of 5,878. J. P. Stockman, of Greenwood, guessed 5,813 and won third prize. There were three guesses of 5,800 pounds by James H. Haigler, Cameron, Orangeburg county farmer, M. W, Gramling, Orangeburg, and S. H. Laney, a farmer of Pageland. Quite a number of guesses ranged between 5,500 and 6,000. poundi. Between one thousand and eleven hundred guesses were registered. Second and third prizes were given by the Chilean Nitrate of Soad Educational Bureau. : V _ tt Quarterly Meeting of Kershaw Union '.The fifth Sunday meeting of the Kershaw Association*. Will be held with Flint Hill Baptist Church, January 28th. ' All th^.. churches of the Association ar^j urged to, send representatives to thhf. session, of the Uri* ion. Ten o'clock is the hour for opening with devotional exercises .. led ; by L,. H. Catoei Missions by Jf? P. Graham; Individual responsibility and church loyalty, by M. B. Gunter; the empty seat at the Communion Table, j by P. E. Blackmon; quartette, by the! members of Buffalo choir; The Pulpit as a Power of Reform, by C. L, Norman; Enrollment and Miscellaneous Business and lunch hour. Afternoon session begins at 1:15 with devotional service by C. O. Stogner; The Unused T^alent by Mrs. P. E. Blackmon; special music, quartet by members of Buffalo choir; Sabbath observance by James Outen; Social Evil by B. S. Broom. Miscellaneous and adjournment. John. R. Eskew, of Anderson, 55, got tired of living in poor health and fired two revolver shots at his head, but only creased his scalp with both bullets. He is recovering in a hospital. William Ernest Merchant, one of the wounded in the fight between the marines and ^ band of bandits in Nicaragua, was reared In Newberry, went to school there, arid attended Newberry .college until 1925. He is highly respected in his home town. Boys Accused of Arson. Sumter, J$n, 9.?Two negro boyg,v Simon Young ahd Cleveland Braeey*were arrested this* morning and. placed in the county jail charged *Wi^J arson in connection with a fire at the* store of I,. S- Vinsorty at Rembert, Saturday night. " V The boys'have confessed, according to the officers, and declare that it was ; theJr plan for Young to start the fire and for Bracey to rob the store during the excitament. The blaze was notifed by a passerby and the alarm sounded. Prompt action confined the damage to one end of the strgptqre^ r 'The boys used gasoline to start the fire. They are about fourteen years old, and will, be held for trial at tha next term of general sessions court. . 1 ' ' '; ??: Accused of Robbing HospMjt /* Columbia, 3)fan. 6.?David M.r Gibson, Until recently superintendent of the Columbia J^ospital, was arrested and placed in jail early this afternoon on it warrant charging breach of irust with fraudulent intent and embezzlement of public funds, sworn out by T. M, Roach, chairman of the Board, df Directors of the hospital. J- Q* Marshall, city magistrate, before whom the warrant was sworn, fixed bond st $2,000. Following his arrest and while confined at tl^ Richland county jail yesterday afternoon, Gibson issued through his attorney a blanket denial of all allegations. ' It is claimed in the warrant that Gibson as superintendent of the hospital did "willfully, unlawfully, fraudulently and without authority of the said county of Richland appropriate, dispose of and convert tf> his own. private use, purpose's r and benefit be tween January 8, 1^27, and November 18, 1927, inclusive, the sum of $1,690.87^-^,rlfey'-' The warrant^ It is alleged, Abased uppn 'jMftaaii of the Columbia Hos* FVtsJ ndW in process. It charged that Gjbaon forged names of certain pcrcash warranu ol ihe [Columbia Hospital. -- t t* .T *: -fip ye*-je??Vx I 1 . " RESULTS OK BKIJDGE BOMBING Army Air Corp* J? Well Satisfied With i^Mutou Um?l by It, The armyajr corps hat given out a statement about the destruction of the Pee Dee river bridge near Albermarie, N. C., which gives some interesting details of the job. "The speed of the plane from which the bomb was released la anch that it crossed the bridge in one-tenth of a sdtond," a narrative of the bombardment said. 'This meant that there waf only one spot in the air at which | a bomb could be released to l)it thjji bridge and that an error df one-tenth of a second in this release would result in a complete miss." "Considering this, it can be only realized that the army air corpa had a , difficult mission. As a matter of fact it could do exceptionally marvelous bombing from an accuracy point of view and still not make a direct hit with a single bomb." The outstanding lesson drawn by air corps experts from the bombardment was that it required bombs of around 1,100 pounds weight and containing 550 pounds of explosives, equipped with delayed fuses, to accomplish demolition of reinforced steel und concrete structures such as the Pee Dee bridge. The salvos of 300 and 600 pound bombs dropped previously proved "no serious menace to constructions of this type" even with direct hits, the reports said. Six hundred pounds which struck within five or ten feet of the bridge "did no effective military damage." The final bopibardment was undertaken with 18 of the 1,100 pounders and direct hits were scored in almost 2fc per cent, of the attacks. The first big bombs destroyed two approach spans of the bridge, the second demolished two more and last two hits toeing.close to a pier wrecked three large spans over the river. . In preparing for the test, army $ps carried to the advance operating base -bombs aggregating 61,800 poupds in weight and flew a distance of 25,000 miles ail told. "This amount of flying and this amount of explosive carried was ail accomplished without injury or casualty and without any motor or airplane trouble. . A case of tularemia has occurred in Richland county from skinning rabbits and state health officer again warns that rubber gloves should be worn by all persons skinning rabbits in South Carolina. j.. >;A receiever has been made for t^e gas and electric company supplying Spartahbufg and surrounding communities with light, heat, power and bus transportation, because it had defaulted on its bond payments to the Merchants and Farmers bank. ARCTIC LIFE IN CAROLINAS Club Which Ascended Mt. Mitchell * Bring Back Stories of Cold. On Saturday, the Blue Ridge Hik< ers club went to the top of Mt. Mitchell, the highest peak east of the Rockies, to welcome 1928 with a great blaae and display of fireworks, .aqd -oa.-Monday they returned to Marion, N. C., with tales that sound the stories of the oldtime arctic J expeditions in search of the north pole. . When the men of the club reached the top. of the peak, the thermometer was.-lj degrees <?elow zero; before they .started back, it was 25 degrees below zero with a gale of seventyfive miles an hour blowing snow into drift* and sweeping clean the icy ground, and blowing sleet that struck any bare skin like salt from a shotgum The club members holed in around a red hot stove in the cabin of "the forest ranger g$n top of Mt. Mitchell, wearing blankets over their clothing a resident of Black Mountttin, ftqm ed Alfather, staggered iritp the Jhut with his hea\\y kit of 11114 Prov,8,on*. almost exhausted and neajrly frozen to death. He had started before the storm arrived and faced the strong gale which dgiAre the sleet into his face almost unbearably. He had to discard hia spectacles when they became a mass of Ice from the sleet freezing on them. p . . ./; _ . Sunday morning, another Black Atex*nd?r, stumbled into the cabin almost dead. He had been out all night fighting the gale and sleet and cold which was then over 20 degrees below zero. Wearing a 50-pound pack, the wind had picked him up several times and dropped him down again, and one# it J^1?1 *n embankment, Which gavtf,JHm a severe cut on the wrist. His face cut by the sleet, and his eyes red and swollen almost shut, he despaired of reaching the forest ran|purs' (cabbi and shouted knrtily for help only .a few hundred yards away, feeling, top weak to dtagger the rest of tthe way to safety. The Hikqitthrt ' gSYe Jiiiu first aid. and thawed hitn oqt by their hot stove. He had made rht? *ay fourteen miles tbrougR.Aha j arctic storm. v*- *" si JHH ii? ? i 111 ppi i wwmi i?juuimj,j. ? ?...juuj.? * Mazda Lamps and Electric Appliances FOR HOUSEHOLD USE. ; 4 Standard Make*?Guaranteed to Give Satisfaction. 1 i. . ' EVER-READY FU?h tight. and Batteries * ; , W. Robin Zemp's Drug Store Phone 30 Delivery in City I I ? THE OLD FASHIONED BUGGY ( ' t" -* . ( l/0?in(( Out In The Ric? With The Automobile. 7 i According to the United State* Census bureau, only 8850' buggies were made in this country during the ; past year- The year before thero were manufactured a total of 20,500. So you. can see in an instant how fast they are decreasing. The whole nutriber for the United States last j year wohld not have supplied on* prosperous State back in the "nine- i ties/' In fact, there . were some counties that boasted more than 20,000 bug-gies. Mere mention of the buggy brings fond recollections to many hearts. > H ow smart it looked in its shiny paint 1 behind a spirited ? horse in glossy patent leather harness. And what pride shone in the feahis under skillful direction, caught the admiring glance of the fair sex. It was in the top buggy that blissful hours were spent, on the way to dances, to picnics, or just for the ride. It was a wonderful medium, for courtship, and many a mature. couple who now sit back on the comfortable cushions of their six-cylinder car first felt in the old top buggy that mysterious and .powerful stirring of the heart that united them forr'life. Doubtless rnkpy think of old buggy days with a sigh as they now glide smoothly, noiselessly and comfortably along. They are proud of the beautiful new sedan or roadster, of course. A London snuff manufacturer says that 65 per cent of the snuff now sold 1b bought by women of classes. ? On all railway journeys the King of England pays full fare for himself the queen and every member of the royal houshold in attendance-. The appropriation committee, of the lower house of congress has authorized an appropriation of $4,? 000,000 for the expansion of civil airways and encouragement of municipal airports throughout the country. 1 COLUMBIA LUMBER & I MANUFACTURING CO. I MILL WORK i SASH, DOORS, BLINDS fc AND LUMBER j] 1 i 1 - a PLAIN AHl'.EH STS. Ph.n. 71 I ! COLUMBIA. S. C. I j 2,678 Wed at York, York, Jan. 5.?York is Dan Cupid's headquarters for the two Carolinas, During the year that has just closed Probate Judge G. P. tymith issued 2,678 marriage licenses, this record easily surpassing that of any other place in the two states and making a high water mark for even York it* self, the "marryingest" town in Dixie. A big majority of those obtaining here the passports for hitting the matrimonii) trail were North Carolinians. It 48 estimated that automobiles to the value of $800,000,000 are stolen annually in the United States. NOTICE 6V FILING OF WILL. State of South Carolina, County of Kershaw. (In Probate Court) .* IN'RE: Estate of William Thompson, deceased. - Notice is hereby given that the last' " will and testament of William Thompson, deceased, was filed in the office of the Probate Court for said County and State on the 16th day of November, 1027, and is now on file ifi said office. , w. l. Mcdowell, Probate Judge. December 24, 1927. "TEX" RICKARD . * j ' " ' ?' ? ^ - -vWorld Famous Sports Promoter, writes: -'*sm - V m * * "Lucky Strikes never in* .. jure my thmat. Many of my friends in all walks of life #*se and enjoy them." Ft I I^A. ^ Jm ?. ? . lllllllll '"II i The Pream of the Tobacco Crop ; t and have grown .because of their quality.," 'The Cream of the Crop'goesintoLlJCKY STRIKE- The best Tobacco is bought for diem- I know, because it is my job to see that this is ?>.? "It's toasted"^ - mTjM No Throat IrriOKton-NoCoueh-^M .? i iiii ' n ii i Mi fn ' I'-I