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I, of Union h?*? Kivi'tt' tginning th? first w??k wtl begin curtailing ouo month because of sleek their products. Two nore worker, will be afmatob-s notice. indebted to the eatate ; 3 whscs Eg 1 withiri the time preK>K F. MAHAFFEY, Administrator Lancaster, S. C. C., May 27,1929. * TO DEBTORS AND CREDITORS T ... ... err indebted to the estate of ley, deceased, are hereby ike payment to the under* *11 parties, if any, having ut the said estate will i duly attested within the bed by law. ,YpIA L. V. BAXLEY, Administratrix. C? May 18th,4029. ? sale of property payment of paving SSBSSMENTS OTsg^anibwlii?... ? ? 1 by virtue of sundry erected to me for .non-payzing assessments due the iden, S. C., April 1, 1928, icd upon the following d will sell the same for the legal hours of sale Monday in July, 1929, bet day thereof, before the ) door in the City of Camproperty with building jute - on corner of Broad j streets in the city of ormerly the property of Savage, later of C. W. d now owned by J.H: Mc:o be sold for nonpayment issessments for 1928. ? D. HILTON, 3hief of Police, City of Camden, S. C. dONS FOR RELIEF outh Carolina, f of Kershaw. >urt of Common Pleas) ott, Plaintiff, ack, John Mack and L. B. Defendants. Defendants Aboye Named: hereby summoned and reinswer the complaint in this which a copy is herewith n you, and to serve a copy ^wer to the said complaint >scribers at their office in . C. within twenty days ervice hereof, exclusive of such service and if you ;wer the complaint within aforesaid, the plaintiff,, in will apply to the Court ief demanded in the comKLAND and KIRKLAND. Plaintiffs Attorneys. , C.( April 17, 1929. Defendant John Mack: please take notice that .the md Complaint in the above ion were filed in the office rk of Court for Kershaw the 19th day of April, A. KLAND and KIRKLAND, Plaintiffs Attorneys. (Conducted by Leonard L, Brown, internationally known authority and founder of the Brown and Maun > strain of S. C. W, Leghorns. En-1 quiries addressed care of' this paper gladly answered by Mr. Brown.) , Permanent Quarters It is a good idea to get under way iwith the laying houses and winter quarters of the flocks as early as possible because careful planning and construction is like most everything else of the kind in that it usually takes a lot longer than figured on. j Certain general principles apply to 'all poultry-house construction, although individual conditions will govern a lot of the details. Comfort is the first esential in housing chicks I or chickens. To provide comfort, a house must have plenty of room firsf of all, be well supplied with fresh Sir and sunlight, and be alwayB dry in every kind of weather.* The need for economy demands attention in ways that are frequently overlooked until the houses are in use. A new house need not be expensive, but to be economical in the long, run it must he durable as flimsy houses soon have to be replaced. The example of the country's leading poultrymen, with concrete foundations and construction that would do credit to a human residence, indicates that it must pay to build the poultry houses right. The angle that is so frequently over-looked however is that the poultry house to a considerable extent is a house for men as well as for birds, as the men, or women, have to occupy it in doing their work. Too often the mistake of building small houses with low roofs is made, so that work in the houses is. slowed down and made into inexcusable drudgery. Since labor is an important factor in the management of poultry, the arrangement of the house for convenience ad(Js greatly to the chances for financial success. In planning your poultry quarters be sure to provide good drainage of water and circulation of air, so that the floor and yards wall be dry. The house should never be in a low pocket or hollow in which cold air settles. Wherever possible a southern or southeastern exposure ^should be selected, although this is not so vital if there iB good reason for facing thfe house in some Other direction. Any well-drained sodl is aill right for raising poultry. A light loam which will grow good gr&ds is well adapted1 for this purpose, whereas a very light, sandy soil through which water leaches freely is best for intensive poultry keeping. A heavy clay is not so good. It doesn't drain well and invites contamination and disease. If no other kind of ground is available, most especial care should be taken to both underdrain and surface-drain most thoroughly. Miss DeLoache Gets Praise. Her Columbia friends will be interested to know that Miss Meta DeLoache, former. resident of this city daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. E. DeLoache, now child health director of the Paterson Tuberculosis and Health league, made one of the principal talks of the fifth annual conference on child health education for tuberculosis workdts at Atlantic City, N-J., recently. The conference was held in connection with the annual national tuberculosis convention. '"7 The account of the meeting as carried in the Paterson Morning Call of June 1, says of Miss DeLoache: "Miss^ DeLoache has had charge of ,the hu-" trition camp for the uriderhourishea children at Lambert Castle for two yehrs and has carried on the leagufe s health work in the parochial schools biere. She outlined the activities in Paterson and was highly commended for her paper following the conference."?Saturday's State. Miss DeLoache was born and rearin Camden, where her family formerly resided. John H. Cameron, who escaped from the North Carolina penitentiary in, 1914, after serving orfly a year of a twenty-year sentence and who wa3 recaptured in Alabama Fast November, and taken back to the prison to complete his sentence, has made a formal application to the state pardon board for a parole, Cameron had becoihe an outstanding business man ft Alabama. The Italian Royal Automobile club has proposed publication of a black list of Italians who purchase fbreign made cars, as a protest against the new American tariff rates. Italians are large buyers of American cars. United States government authorities show that under favorable conditions with a beginning - of on* male and one female fi>% they may increase in one season to ovef 80,500,000,000,000 flies. 7 This shows-^Uie- need o. FLY-TOX. FLY-TOX is the scientific insecticide developed at Mellon Institute of Industrial Reswch by Rex lik. It - ..f*. sure.?Adv. ? .,... ; COMMUNISTS IN CHICAGO Mi ?taf? Near-Punic Over The Gantonla Flare-Up " . K Chicago, June 17.?A near panic among shoppers on Michigan boule ? vard resulted Saturday when several hundred communist*,! attempting to hold a meeting in Grant park, battled with police who sought to disperse them. p ^ The meeting, called by the Workers' Communist party to protest against what the meeting leaders termed mistreatment of cotton mill .strikers by authorities in North Carolina, began shortly after 4 o'clock with about a thousand persons thronged about a aoap box rostrum. The Communists carried banners reading: "Defend the Soviet Union," "fight the frame-up charges at Gil* tonia," elect a Farmer-Labor president," gnd "join the. Young Pioneers," . The Young Pioneers' league, the Young Communist Workers* league and the International Labor defense were among the organisations partici- j pating. The crowd ignored police orders to disperse, but tne meetihg was finally broken up with the arrival of special police details. Twenty-seven* of the Communists were arrested, including 'several women. They were charged with disorderly conduct. Three hundred and ninety-eiflAt young women received their diplonias at the graduating exercises at Win-r throp College Tuesday night. Among them was Miss Leontine Berry, of Branchville, who has not missed a class nor been tardy in her sixteen years of grammar school, high school and college work. . * NOTICE OF SALE Dave Collins, doing business as the Camden Service Station, has this 25th day of May, 1929, made an assignment to the undersigned for the benefit of his creditors, therefore; pursuant to provisions of the statute regulating such assignments there will be sold to the highest bidder for cash on the 24th day of June, 1929, at 10 a. m. at the corner of DeKalb and Campbell street, the following fixtures and stock of goods to wit: Stock of groceries, auto accessories, gasoline, oil, and garage tools, also the following fixtures: 1 National Cash Register. - 1 Computing scale. 1. Air compressor. 1 Cary safe. 1 Stove* 1 Floor show case. 3 Counter cases. 1 CheeBe cutter. 1 Refrigerator. 2 Cake racks. 1 Screen case. 2 Sectional floor bins. Terms of Sale Cash. B. M. SMITtt, Assignee. . I1 ' " H"J|i l.'JL . 1 * Bethune News Notes Told by Correspondent Bethune, June 18.??Miss TheLma Smith who hue been teaching at iChristianburg, V?. arrived at home I last week for the vacation season. Mr. Ix)ring Davis left Saturday evening for Dothan, Ala. where he jW?H visit his brother, Mayo Davis. On his return he will be accompanied |by Mrs. Davis who has been spending several weeks in Dothan. Mr. Guy Parrott and Miss Dorothy Parrott are at the Columbia hospital (With little Sarah Parrott who has Jx-en in a critical condition for the past week. The ltev. M. B. Gunter has been attending the Baptist Assembly at Coker college, Hartsville, during the past week. l)r. lliers of Bamberg has been the recent guest of Miss Ruth Watts. Mib. J. M. Clyburn, Mrs. A. K. McLaurin and Mrs. C. C. Pate are attending a meeting of the grand chapter Eastern Star -which is being held in Columbia thiH week. Misses Mary Louise McLaurin, Sarah Hammond and Lula Lee Williams are attending summer school at Winthrop college. . Mrv und Mrs. J. E. Copeland and family have been recent visitors to Charlotte, Mr. and Mrs. I). M. Mays and Miss Cecelia King were the guests on Friday of Mr. and Mrs. Mack King and Miss Ix>uise King at Neeces. Miss Emily Hester of Hartley is spending some time at the home of her brother, Mr. P. 11. Hester. Mrs. J. G. Richards, Jr. of Cheraw is visiting her parents Mr;, and Mrs. John McCaskill. Mrs. MT O. Ward ami daughter, Mrs. ('. H. Wall and Miss Katherine Ward, visited, relatives in Columbia Monday. '1 ho ]>eople of the "*lo\v'n and community are gratified to know that the paving of the Jefferson Davis highway No. 1 is progressing so rapidly. It is almost completed through the town and down as fatas Lane's lilling station. The population of Bethune, both white and colored, has been greatly augmented during the paving of this highway. , , Curtailment of production because of dull market conditions will become effective in all the mills of Union beginning the first week in July. In one group of mills employing about two thousand operatives the curtailment will be one week a month until further notice. In another group of mills with about one thousand workers the shutdown will be one week a month for four months. After the dead body of Ben Axnin Mottola, 45, restaurant manager, had been found in a Brooklyn tenement. Spnday night, police arrested !A?nnie Tangradj, 35, who confessed to Jciilling Mottoln with a hatchet. i<*?? ? ??4mmwmsrn^tm Prohibition Killings Denounced in House <y i Washington, June 14.?'Prohibition killings were denounced in such caustic terms in the House today that a protest was made by a dry against language used by Representative La Guardia, Republican, New York, going into the record, j The protest was made by Representative Murphy Republican, Ohio, : after La Guardia?a wet?declared the government had become "something hated, something oppressive." Representative Williams, of Illinois, who was presiding, held the lunguage did not transgress the rules of the House and could not be excluded. I>a Guardia predicted that a continuation of fatalities in the enforcement of prohibition would lead to civil war. "Uncle Sam, the United States government," he shouted, "was always considered by the American people as something kindly, some thing to love; instead, now, it has become something hated, something oppressive." "Don't you say that the people hate this government. while I am here." Murphy interjected, rising from hie seat. "I am saying that th'e conduct of the administration, the conduct of sending out these officials and murdering innocent people of taking a man returning home with his family, including his two children, is not conductive to love of x x x Government and even if the gentleman from Ohio stands up here and shouts, that does not change the condition," returned the New York member* As he proceeded, Murphy arose with a second protest and demanded unsuccessfully that the language be excluded from the record. La Guardia called attention to tho recent International Falls and Detroit killings and said that there had been 264 lives taken by enforcement agents. Driver Held For Murder. Florence, June 18.?R. B. Dangerfield of Charleston was charged with murder by the grand jury here yesterday in connection with an automobile accident at Lake City June 1 in which three persons were killed. The coroner's jury held both drivers responsible, but, the other was killed. Those Jelled were Robert Beard, Harvey Beard an^l Henry Thigpen of the Lake City section. Two children aged 4, are dead and two others, 8, are seriously ill at Newton, N. J., as the result of eating nitrate of soda. c.V " . ' . . . . . ....... .... ... ^ jf&mf,ffi0f?AIIH mm c#r"~pr 1927 Master 6 Buick $650.00 j I |j*jfO fj II n I 1928 Model. A Ford Ch 425.00 I 1926 Ford Roadster 125.00 ^''" /Td/POj 1926 Ford Tourin? 125.00 : / 1927 Ford Coupe 225.00 / ^ 1928 Model A Ford Op 450.00 Unquestioned Reliability t Guaranteed Cars ! O Greatest Values ever offered to quick buyers. REDFEARN MOTOR CO. if FINAL DISCHARGE Notice is hereby given that one onth from this date, Phi Thursday, dy 11th, 1929, I will make to the obate Court of Kershaw-County my ial return ns Administratrix of the Ute of Mary H. McGraw, deceased, k! on the saine"'date I will apply to e said Court for a final discharge said Administratrix. MARY E. GARDNER. "??<fen, s. C? June 7th, 1929. 1 ^ i>FTEHjainwk| I ?td9fez?d with heart- ^ B | burn tnd bilious indt- T H WE*I gestioa. Whatever! I I I ?*? Qm cm my item* I I Hi L mA ach made me very | uncom^?rtA^e- I ^a(^- * needed a good I I L- * laxative, and eo my I mothor-in-law gave me some I i Black-Draught and told me to 11 ^ tako it I found it helped me 1 | >ery much, so I bought it far I ( myself. Ssome it was the very H # ? 1 needed. It ifl a fine I I mmily remedy, and 1 uae it I I 1 IK>Tn*t^<n< for I I I BIbH Bvg] ^ " * ^ ? v > Atm Fair Pric* 30c per Qucrt AH Grddts wBSSm*-v. ; . / ? ? -A. 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