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Pennion Money To Be Paid Soon Announcement come? fronri Columbia thai the pension money for Confederate soldiers and their widow# has Wen sent to the variou# judges of probate in this state who will disburse the money. The fund amount# to a total of 175Q.QW and of this amount $ i0.010 has been received by j Judge of 1'fobate W. L. Mci>owell. which represents the amount to be disbursed among the veterans and widows of Kershaw County. The County Pension Board composed of W. F, Russell, N. A. Bethune and H. M. Jones will meet tomorrow to classify the pensioners, after which the Probate Judge will pay the money out. There are twenty-four veterans left on the list, while there are hftythree widows of veterans, named as follows: Neal J. Bennett, Kershaw; N. A. Bethune, Bethune; A. M. Brailsford, Camden; William Branhnm, Lugoff; John S. Brasington, Cassatt; W. A. Cunningham, Liberty Hill; J. K. b)eLoache, Camden; Isaac Gardner, Kershaw; Isaac F. Holland, Camden; B. M. Jones, Kershaw; W. J. Jones, Kershaw; G. B. King, Bethune; A. S. McKeruie, Camden; I). P. C. Murehison, Camden; Hiram Nettles, Camden; J, W. Rose, Blaney; W. F. Russell, Camden; C. J. Shannon, Camden; C, J. Stewart, Camden; T. A. Stewart, Camden; William W. Terry, Camden; S. B. Turner, Camden; L. W. Watts, LugofT; G. W. Moseley, Camden. Widows R. K. Alexander, Camden; M. J. Anderson, Camden; Margaret Banks, Camden; Sarah Bar field, Westville; Nannie Benton, Kershaw; Mary A. Bethune, Bethune; C. S. Bradley, Heath Springs; Millie Brown, Camden; Y. A. S. Brown, Camden; Margaret Clyburn, Bethune; Susan Campbell, Bethune; Fmma Croats, Kershaw, K. J. Brasington, Camden; Millio F. Connell, Kershaw, M. . C. Cureton, liberty Hill; L, S. DuBose, Camden; Matilda Fnsler, Lugoff; Matild'i Faile, Kershaw; Harriet P. Floyd, Liberty Hill; F.mma Freeman, Blaney; Victoria Gardner, Bethune; Sallie R. Gay, Westville; Mary J. Gillis, Boykins; E. F. Goff, Camden; F^liza Graham, Lugoff; Mary J. Graham, Camden; Amanda Hull, Lucknow; Kii.iiui llinson, Lugoff; Caroline Hinson, Camden; Sarah A. Horton, Heath Springs; J. W. Hyatt, Cassatt; Margaret F. Jones, Kershaw; Rebecca C. Jones, Kershaw; Betty B. Kennedy, Camden; M. M. Kirkland, Westville; Margaret Knight, Kershaw; Alice McC-askill, Camden; C. A. MfCaskill, Kershaw; Rebecca Marsh. Camden; Laura J. Moore, Westville; Flla P. Pearce, Camden; M. A. Robinson, Cassatt; M. S. F. Sinclair, Camden; Henrietta M. Sill, Camden; Mary A. Smyrl, Camden; Julia A. Steven#, Bethune; Ann M. Thome, Kershaw; Nannie F. Trantham, Camden; Sullk* F. Trueswlale, Camden; Nancy M. Truexdale, Westville; Sarah West, Bethune; Rebecca W. White, Camden; Harriet Wilson. Camden. Mrs. Annie Terry, of Durham, N. mother of five children, is the woman attacked and thrown off a bridge at Avants ferry in the Cape ' Fear river a month ago. it turns out1 when her Lxiy is discovered three miles below the bridge the first of this week. Officers are hunting for a traveling man they believe t<> be 1 her slaver. 1 A pretty n.gh school girl 17 year" (.Ul was instantly killed at Ashevill-' when her six year old nephew fired the charge from a shot gun through her rn-ck and jugular vein. She was holding a school book in her hand and the father <>f the boy ju-t begin- i ning a tune <>n a harmonica when th" little fell w picked up tin shot gun and pulled the trigger. TO MKKT IN < 1IAKLK8TON Woman'* .Missionary Union To Be Held There April, 17 and IV The annua! meeting of the Woman's | Missionary Union, auxiliary to the Baptist State Convention, will be held with the ( itadel Stjuure Baptist Church, ( harleston, S. C\, beginning on the evening of April 17 and continuing Thursday noon on April ID. An attractive program is being ar ranged for this gathering, and aorne outstanding <-peaker? will be- heard. Among the out-of-state speakers will be Dr. Austin Crouch, Executive Secretary of the Executive Committer of the Southern Baptist Convention; Mrs. ( arter Wright of Roanoke, Ala., Ruby Anniversary Chairman of the Southern W. M. U.; Mrs. Una Roberts ! Lawrence, Little Rock Ark., Mission Study Editor of the Baptist Home Mission Board. Dr. C. A. Jones of Columbia, General SecreUry-Treas urer of the Baptist State Convention, will also be heard as will a number of mlssionaires in the state who are at home on furlough. The Ruby Anniversary of the organization of the W. M. L\, auxiliary to the Southern Baptist Convention, will be featured by an address by Mrs. Wright and other numbers which are being arranged by Mrs. W. L. Ball, of Spartanburg, State Chairman. The devotional messages will be brought by students from the girls' colleges in the state. The sessions will be presided over by Mrs. J. I). Chapman, state president. ! Special conferences for the discussion of methods will be held on i Wednesday afternoon? and these will 1h< presided over by the following heads of departments: Miss Vonnie i " Gance, Corresponding Secretary; Mrs. G. E. Davis, Superintendent of | V. W. A. and G. A., Mrs. W. J. j Hatcher, superintendent of SunI beams. Mrs. J. I). Chapman state president, will have charge of the R. A. conference. Miss Lance will be assisted by Mrs. W. H. Hunt, chairman of personal service. Mrs. J. B. Boatwright, superintendent of MDIsion Study, will hold a Mission study conference on Thursday morning. ; A feature that will attract many will be a trip to Magnolia Gardens following the closing session of the convention. The hotels and boarding houses are offering rooms at reasonable rates. Mrs. W. (\ Wilbur of Charleston is handling the reservations for the delegates. Mrs. J. V. Weston, president of the Citadel Square W. M. S. is general chairman of lie committee on arrangements. J.\ei\ society in Kershaw association is urged to send delegates to this meeting. Please don't forget the 'date. April 17th. I MRS. GEO. A. CREED, Supt. Body of Man Found I he body of Tom Lee, middleaged white man of the Rattlesnake | ( reek section of I>ee county, was touiul a half mile from his home Sunday afternoon in a little patch of woods. Lee had been missing since j^iturday morning. A heart attack was believed to have caused his death. He :s survived by his ywidow and two children. ?Monday's Sumter Item. Marriage Mr. John D. Motley and Miss Jes e Mae Heath, both of Blaney, were married by Probate Judge W. L. McDowell on Wednesday last. April 11th. Monument Unveiled Great Throng Present Stone Mountain, Ga., April The adoration of the nation war lavished today before the urt-atc.it atone carving in h:story, immortalizing the Con- , federate chieftain, Gen. Robert K. Iam, ami those who followed the "loat 1 I'HUhc " Or. the 63rd anniversary of their ; defeat and under grey skies that symbolized the April day in 18<55 when I>e surrendered hi* sword to Gen (.rant and bade hi* scarred velcian* return to their homeu, a yast a**einbly watched the two Hag? drop ! from the mountain aide revealing the I feature* of Ix-e preserved in granite for ali time. After Mayor James J. Walker, of New York City, had accepted the memorial for the nation, little fiveyear old Robert E. U-e, IV, great 1 grandson of the commander, climbed to a railing before the crowd, re- j leased a cage of doves and delighted ly watched them flutter free, symbolizing the states that contributed to make the memorial possible, the doves whirred up alongside the mountain a> a signal for the dropping of the veils. Slowly in the breeze, the curtains, a Hag of the Confederacy, on one hand and the standard of the United States on the other, fell away leav! ing in white relief on the cliff the nearly completed bust of Lee and the outline of his equestrian figure. A mighty cheer rang out and reverberated against the granite walls when the army band began softlyplaying. First came the stirring notes of "Dixie" the war anthem of the Confederacy, and then with every hand at salute or over the heart, the Star Spangled Banner welled from the instruments. "I am proud that I am an American because he was one," Mayor alker had said as he waved his hanu to the monument during his address. Ix-e was the only man in whom God joined the warrior and the saint. I.org after the pyramids have crumbled, his figure, like his memory, will still be here." The mayor's theme was that of the reunited country and the "greatness and power of this nation," recreated following the Civil war. The formal presentation address was by Justice Marcus W. Beck, of the Georgia supreme court, in which Lee was pictured to citizens of both the north and south as "a military chieftain incomparable, the crowning glory '-f Cavalier Virginia, champion of a sacred cause and foremost of the south'^ heroic sons." Georgia Mayor Was Missing For 16 Years Tifton, Gn., April 5.?Samuel M. Hyatt, former mayor of Tifton, missing for 16 years, has returned home after his family had given him up for dead. ( lyatt, who disappeared October - >. 1911, while inspecting his naval stores properties near Valdosta, Ga., came home last night from Florida, but he declined to talk about where he had been since leaving. At first believed to have been a victim of foul play, Clyatt later was reported to have been seen in several towns, but no verification of the reports came to his family. They searched for his body for several months following discovery of some of his clothing near a horse and buggy that he had been using. Attempts to collect $25,000 in life insurance failed when the insurance company became suspicious and employed detectives to investigate the case. Two years before he dropp.-d out of sight, Hyatt - resigned as mayor here to move to Unadilla, Ga. Ho owned extensive properties here and had large naval stores holdings near Valdosta. ( lyatt is 60. He was welcomed here by his aged wife and only son, Jas. J. Clyatt. It was learned that he haj communicated with them recently ' from Florida, where he evidently had j lived for some time. Took Them All In Wilmington, Del.. March 28.?Wish- j ing to please all her friends, Mrs. Geo;g.anna Macklin held a chnstenng party at the Homeopathic hospital yesterday, for her daughter, born ;?<t Friday. The child w?* christened Georgianna Augustine Kdgcwood Homeopathic Taylor Roys Miller Good Will Macklin. The name is derived from her own and her husband's, who is named August, She was once a patient in the Edgewobd sanitarium, which accounts for the third name, nnd the birthplace of the baby accounts for the fourth. Taylor, Boys and 'Miller are names of nurses who cared For bor at the hospital, nd the flood Will .is the name of. ^t)HL ambulance that carried her to the institution, r * .'w..t.1. ,.uij.il.,i,fmm 1 Bsagswmmmmrrr Time Getting Short For You To Subscribe Sane* our announcement #over*l week* ago that we would send The Chronicle six months for fifty cent*, this paper has added several hundred new subscribers?both on the lu/al routes, in the city and many abroad. Our subscribers have taken advantage of the offer from Maine lo Florida and as far west as California. Then too, we have readers in France and Germany and some in Canada. They have seen the offei and sent in renewals. But with it all the offer has not i met with the response that the paper had hoped for. One Camden* lady : came in this week and gave us three | subscriptions, at the same time telling us that she thought the offer had j expired, and that she did not .know about the offer until told about it by | a friend residing in the rural difcI tricts. The Chronicle force has been I so busy on iob printing and looking after the advertising and news service of the paper we have not had much time to devote to this campaign drive. \S e are offering to send the paper for six months to any one who will hand in five cash in advance subscribers for six month. Or we will pay fift^, cents in cash for five new subscribers. Numbers of our old subscribers have taken advantage of this offer arid had their subscription advanced for six months. Right here, we would make a suggestion to some school boy or girl wherein they can earn some easy money by soliciting subscribers for this paper. We will pay fifty cents in cash for every five new subscribers. Try it out andr see how easy it is to make fifty cents. I his offer positively expires on May 5th and rio one can get it for less than two dollars per year after that date. The actual cost of the blank paper used in its publication costs more than the offer we are making. As we stated in the first announcement we are not in financial straits and are not using this method as a means of raising money. We want The Chronicle to go in the homes of the people of the county?especially the rural districts. If you are a loyal subscriber and friend af this paper tell your friends of this offer and get' 'them to take advantage of it. This5 offer may never preserit itself again. ! \\ e are today mailing out several hundred sample copies of this paper. Watch for it in your mail box and come in and subscribe. Hydroflouric acid can not be neutralized by anything, and when Wil-' liam T. Anderson, of Charlotte, work-! ing with some lamp globes and that acid, got some acid on his hands, the surgeons could do nothing but let the acid eat the hand until its effects ended naturally. Anderson lost the ends of four fingers to the first joint and Buffered great agony for four days. Card of Thanks Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Melton, of Bethune, sends The Chronicle the fob lowing for publication: "We wish to thank our many friends for the kindness shown us during the illneisf 1 and death of <>ur fifteen months old son, who passed away last Thursday, April 5th at noon." Wholesome Meats for Better Meals! Good moat is the foundation of every meal. Every house! wife knows how impossible it is to phin a meal without it. At this shop you receive only the finest cuts?at the most economical prices. Our meats are received fresh daily?and kept in modern refrigerators?thereby assuring you of the best at all times. Try us once?and be convinced. MeLeod-Rush Death of Mrs. 0. A. Fletcher Westville, S. C., April 10.?'Mrs. O. A. Fletcher died suddenly Saturday morning, April 7, at the home of her father James Barfield of the Three C's section of this county. Mrs. Fletcher was born in 1891, the youngest child of James and Delia Horton Barfield. She married O. A. F'letcher in 1910 and to this happy union was born six children, James Alex, Myrtis Fllleen, Oscar Edward. Kobbie Eugene, Jesse Horton ana Orin Sulee. She leaves also surviving, 'her husband, two brothers, Messrs. Sam and Jesse Barfield and one sister Mrs. John Truesdale. For several days Mrs. Fletcher had been by the bed side of her father who was very low with double pneumonia. She left his home Friday frtorning to go to her home eight miles beyond Kershaw, in the Gates Ford section of this' county. In a (^w hours after getting there, she tvas summoned back to her father who was growing worse. At about 5 o'clock Saturday morning, she sent irer husband with one -child to the home of his father a short distance away. She would not go with him the rest and sleep she much lifeded but promised him, she would He down and rest as best she coul1 J there. She was apparently well, but was so overcome with wonj grief over her father that tat went to meet God shortly aft* lay down. Uniting1 with the Bethany, Baptist church, at . an early I life, she became a -woman o( character, quiet and unassumii faithful and dependable, rei and loved by all who knew her. was greatly devoted to her hu children and home in every rti Funeral services were conduj Bethany Baptist elvncYv Sun? 11 o'clock, by her paslot, th Gunter, assisted by Rev. J. H and P. E. Blackmon. Many beautiful floral tribute tenderly placed over the pt testing to the esteem in was held by a wide circle ol And relatives.?Contributed, Card of Thanks I W. L. McManus and faofl the following card of thankH Chronicle with the request tH published: "We wish to eqW sincere and heartfelt bhanbfl many friends for the kind dj^ spmpathy shown us during dij illness and death of our aeitfl wife and mother. May God^fl His richest blessings upondfl every one." STOP! Look! Listen! ( Watch this space for the most important and valuable announcement ever made to the Motoring1 Public of Camden and Kershaw County. Full details given in The Chronicle of April 27th. Kvery Automobile owner in the county will want to take advantage of it. Carolina Motor Co.1*Wholesale and Retail Gasoline, Oils, Tires, Tabes, Accessories, Repairs OPEN ALL NIGHT . / - jommmm RICE GRAIN lb, 5rt KINGAN'S RELIABLE-"" I HAMS lb. 25c PICNICS lb. 17k CHEESE Velra Kteme , lb. 29c PRUNES ^FANCY 2M MEAT ,? 12j, PEACHES ?*En* L29< aHMBalaaaaHHM__Ba_aaia_^^^^^^J LOG CABIN Small Syrup 27i WASHING POWDERS 3 for 11 Mil \C Borden's Large 10, lVllL.rW St Charles Small | TOMATOES It 3 f.r 251 CATSUP 10c CORN STARCH ifl QUAKER OATS 10c MOPS j| SL1CEE BEEF Jar 15c OLD DUTCH fyl ASPIRIN Lg 25c LUX llj | BRING YOUR | Tires 1 and Tubes 1 TO I 1 BEARD'S FILLING STATIONI g And Have Them Vulcanized by Mr. Huggins I IlllllllllllBlllllllllliailllllllllli?llllllllllll[?lllllllllllll51lllllll"j CAMDEN FOLKS ?By L. A. So*i Y3U SAY A MAN NAMED D/NE is A Good friend OF YOUG.FAMIL-Y SORE IS/wheh ) we (SET A CUT / OR AV\SM6D \ FINGER. OR TO? i HE'S ON THE s>0? ^ ~ " T ^ o.j .c. \ doctor. v friend of Yours, eh? v 7 A/OPE/ /'M 11 TALKING ABOOtlj THE I.O.PIM? .VIE 6ET AT j I SOWELL I ? ORU0 STORE I ^ats on&.ot* 11 ' J Simple remedies needed in every" home?-tHey are pure and at ntWldard st^wj Prescriptions filled with consumate care. You'll any. thM ,ji a store of consideration. ?