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II'AX NOTICE -easurer Kerahaw County, 8. C., Sept. 12. 1U7. " ? J ' # hereby given that the be opened for the collocate, County and School October 15 th, 1927, to , 1928. A penalty of 1 ill bt^added to all taxes lary^rM, 1928, 2 per cent at, 1928 and 7 per cent 1928. per centum for Kershaw i follows: Mills raxes, 5% ichool, e.. 4 Taxes, 7 Taxes, 8% I, ..?v- % itional School Tax 8 icy School Tax .... % al 29% Township Koad for DeKalb Town 2% I II.25. All dog owners are make a return of their County Treasurer, who is furnish a license tpg. All L without the license tag will be subject to a fine imprisonment not more ays. owing School Districts levies: strict No. 1 18% strict No. 2 1*6% strict No. 8 19 strict No. 4 18% strict No. 5 1 strict No. 6 18 strict No. 7 10 strict No. 8 1 strict No. 9 1 strict No. 10 5 strict No. 11 ...... 8 strict Np. 12 19% strict No. 13 ,, 1 Btrict No. 15 1 strict No. 16 ....... 2 strict No. 19 ...... 1 strict No. 20 1 strict No. 22 19% Btrict No. 23 1 strict No. 25 .1 strict No. 27 1 strict No. 28 1 strict No. 29 Trv, .. 7 strict No. 30 1 strict No. 31 9 strict No. 33 11 strict No. 37 ...... 1 Btrict No. 38 1 strict bfo. 39 ...... 5 strict No.- 40 20% strict No. .41 ...... 1. strict No. 42 ...... 1 strict No. 48 1 strict No. 46 1 strict No. 47 1 Tax is $1.00. bodied male persons from twenty-one (21) to fifty both, inclusive, except resncorporated towns, "shall i A road tax except minisgospel actually in charge egation, teachers smployi. schools; school trustees, j permanently disabled in ' service of the State and o served in the War BeStates, and all quarantine this state and all resimay be attending school t the time when said road come due. Persons claimties must present certifitwo reputable physicianr lty. mation with reference to >e furnished upon applicaS. W. HOGUE, County Treasurer. ERSHAW LODGE No. 29 A. F. M. egular communication of lis lodge is held on the rat Tuesday in each month /isiting Brethren are "welT. V. WALSH, Worshipful Master, tary. 1-14-27-tf jKifi wn iiiibbiiiiii h eadache f Sluggish Feeling V* BVc are a healthy-family and B pr.'t had to uao much medh ^B" Bays Mr. J. H. Adams, of S ^Hfccp. Gn. ''But I have found S ^ jocepsftry to take some B ^^Bcinc. fej I had headaches. My head I I WE^nnt^ li^co * oooldn*t 5 Shad a bad taste in my | Bth; felt alnggiah and tired. -* brought home some Black- J Sight and took a few doses, g |I got good reeulte. I felt 1 Bnch better. My heed dear- j Bp. I was hungry and want- 5 Bo get out and work. Black-Draught has proved B ^Hlfactory and we have used Bouamdi of other families I ^Be had equally satisfactory B ^Brionoes. ^Bld everywhere in 26 cent J ^ MM 5 In Trim This Winter? Watch Tha Kidneys After Winter's Colds. f*lOLDS and grip are hard on the kidneys. When the kidneys slow up, impurities remain in the blood sod are apt ?o make one 'tired And achy with ^eadaches, dizziness and often nagging backachto. A common mming is scanty or burning secretions. ' Doari* PitU. a stimulant diuretic, increase the secretion of the kidneys end aid in the elimination of waste impurities. Are endorsed by users everywhere. A*k your neighbori IDOAN S p,&s I A STIMULANT DIURETIC tU, KIDNEYS fe*t?r-MUburn Co. Mlg CLsstSulfslo.MY Vn ?? ? i . Second 'the Motion. A small boy in the' visitor's gallery was watching the proceedings of the senate chamber. "Father, who is that gentleman?" he asked, pointing to the chaplain. "That, my son, is the chaplain," replied his father. "Does he pray for the senators?" asked the boy. "No, my sou} when he goes in he looks around and sees the senators sitting there, and then he prays for the country."?Team-Work. His Handicap. A doctor advised a corpulent patient to take up golf. After a few weeks the patient returned and said that , the doctor would have to ad-: vise another game. "But there's nothing to beat golf," ; said the doctor. "Quite so," agreed the fat fellow, with a. touch of impattience, "but it's no good to rhe. If I place the ball so that I can see it, I can't hit it, and when I put it where I can hit it, I can't see it." . ^ . ^Palm^Fete^ Queen | n '[(^rroo^xx^) W | Miss Elizabeth McKenney, who, was crowned Queen of the Palm Fete at Miami, Fix. -The city celebrated .the Palm Fete with a parade, an historical pageant representing the landing of Colombo* and other feature*. CITATION The State of South Carolina, County of Kershaw. By W. L. McDowell, Esquire, Probate ' v Judge ' Whereas, H. S. Thompson made suit to to grant him Letters of administration, cum testamento anhexo, of the Estate of the effects, of Williatrf Thompson. 5 These are, therefore, to cite and admonish all and singular the kindred and creditors, of the '* said WiL liam. Thompson deceased, thai they be aand appear before me,' in the Court of Probate, to be held at Camden, South Carolina on Tuesday, January . 31st oieit after publication thereof, at 11 o'clock in the forenoon, to show cause, if any, tlu-y have, why the said Administration should not be granted. Given under my hapd, this 17th day of January, Ahno Domini 1928. ... w, l. Mcdowell Jrobate Judge for Kershaw County. Published 20th and 57th. days of January, TS28 in the Catndeni Chrohicle, %and posted at the Court House door for *the time prebcribed by law. Notice of. Lost Certificate of Stock. A Certificate of Stock of one (!) I Share in ^he Fifteenth Series of the Enterprise-Building it Loan Association No. 20 was issued on the 8th day of -Jfcnuaty,- 1922, to FaitnieiDuBose. This Certificate has been'lost and I, aR representative of the Personal estate of said Fannie DuBosc, will, on Satifrday, February lltli, 1928, apply to said Aasociatioft at its office in Camden, S. G., for^-Wttlement upon the* said Certificate, retired by sard Association December feint, 1927. ' ? --v p ?r W.^lcDOWELt, J. P. Tv- f. Administrator. $ Camden. 8, XI,, Scenes In S-4 Tragedy Above is shown a generaFview of the funeral processionof Lieut. Commander Hoy K. Junes, late commander of the Submarine S-4, sunk in Collision with the Coast Guard Destroyer Paulding Lower view shows the Hoard of Inquiry chosen by Secretary of the Navy Wilbur to investigate the S-4 crash. Seated, left to right, are: Hear Admiral Julian iL Latimer, Rear Admiral Richard H. Jackson and Capt. Joseph V. Ogan Standing is shown Commander Leslie Pratton, Judge Advocate of the Board. NAVAL OFFICER KILLED Children Stumble Over Dead Body In The Woods. Ha],timore, Jan. ^15.?7Found under cii cuhistances that led authorities to believe he had been murdered, thebody of Ensign John M. Miller, U. S. N,, of Bay City, Mich., was found today in a thicket near Odenten, Md., by two 11-year-old girls. The body of the naval officer, who was discharged from St. Elizabeth'shospital, Washington, last Friday, was dicovered by the rfewo children* lying on a pile of leaves. Twenty feet away, county police said, they found a rifle, buried in the uqderbrush. It was of the same caliber that had caused Ensingn Miller's death. One shell had been dffi charged. There was also indfca-* tious of a struggle. Ensign Miller was graduated from the Naval academy in 1925. He was a son of Dr. Maurice C. Miller of Bay -City, Mich. Phillis bowman an'd her twin sister, Josephine, stumbled onto the officer s body while they were strolling through the woods' and, frightened at the discovery, brought their parents to the Bcene. Authorities were notified, and they admitted while the case might be a suicide, there was strong suspicion of murder, basing their theory on, the point that the rifle, which caxlsed Miller's death, had been hidden under leaves and the fact that there was evidence of a struggle. | At the Naval academy tonight it I was said that Ensign Miller had been active in social activities and had limited his athletic work to swimming, although he was not a member of the varsity team. Three children were burned to I death in a third story attic in .1 Newark, N. J., home on Tuesday. Lewis Wakeman, a teacher in a school near Troy, Kansas, offered I a stick of gum to the pupils for each j mouse caught in the schoolhouse. j The children responded with seventyfive mice. A retired railroad locomotive, with its wheels removed, heats a Norwich, Connecticut, passenger station." "it performs efficiently, supplying-heat; to the train shed, station ant! cars ' in the yard as required. The foot of the modern girl has within the last decade outgrown the 4B size which for generations was the average size of the foot' of the American ^ woman. / Athletics and dancing are said to be the cause. . Ruth Elder, noted aviatrix, is under$500 bond to appear at Clayton, Ga , in February, to answer to uncharge of misconduct with Rev. Hubert Jerik* ins, an evangelist, the alleged misconduct occurring* four years ago. notice, ~ January is the last month to pay your dog license tax for 1928, without penalty. Ten per cent j>enalty goes on the first of February. ?S. W. HOGUE, ?Treasurer for Kershrw ^nty. ;s;-a the Probate Oourt of Kershaw County j my final return aa Administrator of the estate of Sam Belton, deceased, and on the same date I will apply to safd#A^h^rjtora ***** aischa5*e as , - JOHNNIE BELTOtf January' ' . F^AL DISCHARGE Notice is hereby given that one P?h^?r^?5? on Tueeday, nuMnffiiii[ & \ 1 wiU mak?J* ty my final return aa Administratrix cL^a S* ?f "enry P* DAvi8? de' Lcn 15?^* I Will PP?y to the said Court for? a final NEW LIBEL LAW Would Live Newspapers More Latitude In Case of Suit. Columbia, Jan. 12.?Embodying the main features of the North Carolina etatute, a new libel law for South Carolina was proposed in the house today in a bill introduced by Representative Dreher, of I^exington. Although newspaper publishers of the State have had under consideration a suggested modernisation of the law of libel, Dr. Dreher, said ;that he acted upon his initiative in 'fostering the measure. The main features, he explained, hre as follows: Libel against any newspaper-notice before auction; before any action, either of civil or criminal, is brought for the publication in a newspaper or periodical of a libel, the plaintiff or prosecutor shall at least five days before instituting such action serve notice in writing upon the defendant, specifying the article and the statements therein which he alleges to be false and defamatory. "Effect of publication in good faith and retraction; if it appears the trial that said article was published in good faith, and that its falsity was due to an honest mistake of the facts and that there was reasonable grounds for believing that the statements in said article !fWere true, and that within ten days after the service of such notice a full and fair correction, apology and retraction was published in the same editions or corresponding issues of the newspaper or periodical in which said article appeared, and in as conspicuous place and type as was said original article, then plaintiff in such a case, if a civil action, shall recover only actual damages, and if ip a criminal proceeding a verdict of guilty is rendered on such of facts, the defendant sha'l be fined a penny and the costs, and no more." i The bill was referred to the judiciary committee. Gored To Death By Bull. Florence, S. C., Jan. 14.?H. W. Horton, of McBee, who was gored by a bull, died at rin early hour this morning at a local hospital. | According to physicians who attended Mr. Horton, the bull's horns entered his right chest and literally ripped off the entire chest wall, The hemorrhage was frightful and he suffered terribly. He deyeloped pneumonia which together with the trauma were the causes assigned for his death. "Bud Boy" Andrew & Gillies became mayor of Newburyport, Mass., on Tuesday. He was formerly a gasoline station operator. His first move was to turn out df office all who had opposed him.' Made in England in 1761, the bell which was to become on July 8, 1776, wr famous Liberty Bell, had to be Twice" recast after ~ ttir, Arrival - in America before it could be hung in the new statehouse in Philadelphia. President and Mrs. Cpolidge will leave Washington on Friday for a visit t^ Havana, Cuba,4 the president American congress "to which body he will make . the opening* address! Twenty nations are to participate in the congress. ' - * : COLUMBIA LUMBER & I HmiTOFACTDRlNG COJ MILL WORK .9ASH, DOf 'RS, BLINDS AND LUMBER PLAIN ? HL ERSTS. 71 I r COLUMBIA, S.C. wmammummmmmmamammmim ^ grvi:^ _ Mi ' ' 1 'i Jl WWUwtf,!'. ; ' 1 . ...?^USH&T, Dr. Frank Crane Says: WORRIES If we will carefully take stock of our woniment# we will find that most of them are about things that <lo not mutter. For a caption that would he suitable at the head of the lia>t of rules 1 would suggest, "What Of It? 1 suppose 1 had the best mother in the world. She is entitled to all of my respect and esteem because aho patiently put up with me all through my childhood and cared for me until the day of her death. I can remember, however, that when I went away from home in my younger days she was always solicitious that 1 should wear clean underwear and stockings because she said that, 'f there was to be a train wreck and my body was found, what would people think if they found out 1 had on dirty underwear, as though J should care about the state of my underwear when I was u corpse. Much of the care and trouble thut mothers take is of the Martha kind, for Martha was "careful and troubled about many things." Suppose the children do litter up the floor and pick the flowers in the garden and tramp into the house with muddy feet. Anybody who knows children expects that and if they don't know children t))ey are out of luck. ft might be all right to see that your boys are washed behind the ears and that their finger nails are clean, but you should remember that while these things should not be left undone there are some more important things. It is important, for instance, that your children should always think of you pleasantly and gratefully. Your affection for your son counts more with him than your solicitude for his appearance. It is well that the dandruff is brushed off your husband's coat collar and that his tie is right and his boots are polished, but if you do nothing else for him but call attention to these peccadillos by and by the idea will seep into his head that you are nagging. What he wants most of all is to keep his love and esteem for you and you ought to work at making yourself worthy of that much more than to wprk at how he will look to other people. I do not mean to upderrate the little attentions that should be bestowed upon those we love, but I emphasize the fact that these little things are of small importance compared with the greater matters of life. On one occasion it was said by a wise man that the Pharisees paid tithes of mint, anise and cumin, but neglected the greater matters of the law. So we m>mutinies make tlie mistake of looking for flecks of du.it when we *lu?uld ho admiring the latKlscapc. * It is all a mutter ??f proportion. The princip;.! thing to l^arn in living is how to value things, how to Ik* particular about the essentials and give small hood to the non-ooacntiala. A Iniy recently turned up at Cutulina Island after having been lost for several day>. His mother broke down and wept. "He's safe," some one remarked. "I know," sobbed the mother, "hut he has a dirty shirt on right here in front of all of these people." Thornwell (?ets Large Gift Clinton, S. C.,?The Thornwell Orphanage and Presbyterian college of this eity, are in receipt of $25,000 and $211,000 respectively from the estate of the late Miss Mary Carmichae] of llanier, in Dillon county. "Checks were received by both institutions Wednesday. It will be Recalled thut Miss Carmichae! died nearly a yeur ug> leaving one of the largest estates ever recorded in Dillon eounty. When her will was recorded, it was revealed that she had provided liberally for charitable and educational work, most of the estate being left in cash money. Miss Carmichae) "was a devoted member of the Presbyterian church and her gifts were made largely to institutions under the direction of this denomination. Columbia Theological seminary was bequeathed $2,000; Chicora college $22,000; Presbyterian college. $28,000; and Thornwell Orphanage, $25,000. The handsome gifts received by the two local institutions are to be applied exclusively to their endowment funds, this having beeti stipulated in the, will of Miss Carmichael. Her gifts to the other institutions are likewise designated. Harry Gordon, 16, student, turned thief, was killed in New Yqrk Mon- ( day night when he tried to jump from a window he was trying to open, to a nearby roof and fell-six storleH. Lewis E. vLawes, warden of Sing Sing prison, New York, has officiated at more than one hundred executions since he took charge of the prison in 1920. He is opposed to capital punishment. ' John Laurence Davis, a fireman on the navy cruiser Trenton, who was drowned in Charleston harbor when he jumped from a burrfing motor boat, was a son of the late J. S. Dpvis, superintendent of the Grendel mills at Greenwood. He had been in the navy two years. ft>r your NEW Cotton Crop /"^OTTON insurance . . . that's what Chilean Nitrate of Soda is. ? This nitrogen fertilizer meets every cotton need. Beats the weevil. Brings cotton through bad weather. Grows a strong, healthy, money-making crop. j Read This! \ "On two hundred end thirty'Ave acres I picked end ginned 1 two hundred bales of cotton averaging five hundred pounds , end over in 1927', a season of excessive rainfall end heavy I 1 1 weevil infestation. * o ( j - "My fertilizer deed efae Are htmdred pounds of 10-4-4 hortie I piixed. I need 100 pound* of Nitrate of'Sod* in mf mixture before planting and 100 pound* of Nitrate of Soda aa a aide dreaming, at the eecond working. "I And Nitrate of Soda *1moat indispensable for making cotton under weevil condition*. "I have already bought Afty toneof Nitrate of Soda *>' K my next crop." B, T. BOAT WRIGHT 11 Route No. 4. Johnmton, S. C. -S It's Soda, not luck, that makes real cotton sue- ,CLI v. - " ' Free Fert^isor Book Write for our new 24-page illustrated book "Low Coat Cotton." It ia frem Aak for Book/efN*. 2 or tear I but thie ad and mail it with your name and addreoe. If. Chilean j- educational^ureau^ V&fjl ?*pt. 69C, Carolina Building, Columbia, S. C. W tfflS hI