University of South Carolina Libraries
Receipt of cablegrams declaring that two American miaaionarios and the infant daughter of one of thorn had been killed in an attack 'on an Isolated .station near Juruena in the wilda of Brazil whh announced Sunday by A. H. Vroom, of Ridge wood, N. J., treaaurer of the inland South American Miatfionary union. The inessagoH lifted the dead a a A. S. Tylee, of Worcheater, Maaa., hia twoyear-old (laughter, and Miaa Kthel Kratz, about Ml. Mra, Tylee waa injured but U recovering. ' SIMONDS F ,^Ked CuU more itivl better lumber. It must hit iron to lose teeth or rings. We trade in and give terms. Phone or vMit/- UK for a demountration on your mill! PROMPT REPAIRING. All work f. is guaranteed. We can now change auws to curry Simonds F tooth. MINER'S EDGER DOIJRLES THE GUT on small logs. Half the extru profit Lakes care of the payments. ?* J. H. Miner Saw Manufacturing Co. Phone 487.'! Columbia, S. C. "I Lost My Best Customers I hru Rats," Writes J, Adams. "Used to have the busiest Restaurant in town until news spread that the kitchen was infested with rats; lost a lot of my l>est customers until I tried RAT-SNAP. Haven't a pest in the place now. Restaurants should use RAT-SNAP. Three sizes, 35c, |i.r)r, $ 1.25. Sold and guaranteed by Zemp & DePass, 1 )ruggists, Camden, j S. ' .. and Ilethune Hardware Co., ! I'uthune, S, ('. ft KERSHAW l.ODC K No. 2'J 7\\ A. F. M. , / C, \ , Regular communication of J * * r'. \ this lodge is held on the! first Tuesday in each-month at K p.m. Visiting Brethren are welcomed. S. W. HOG UK, J. E. ROSS, Worshipful Master Secretary. 1-14-27-tf Relief From Curse of Constipation A Battle Creek physician says, "Constipation is responsible for more misery than any other cause." But immediate relief has been fopnd. A tablet called Rexall Orderlies has been discovered. This tablet attracts water from the system into the lazy, dry, evacuating bowell called the colon. The water loosens the dry food waste and causes a gentle, thorough, natural movement without forming a habit or ever increasing the dose. Stop suffering from constipation. Chew a Rexall Orderlio at night. Next day bright. Get 24 for 25c today at the. nearest Rexall Drug Store.?Zemp & DePass and DeKalb Pharmacy. R. RABIN District Agent MISSOURI STATE LIFE INSURANCE CO. Camden, S. C. Phone 397 ~~ T66 is a doctor's Prescription for COLDS and HEADACHES It is the most speedy remedy known. 666 also in Tablets. **1 think Cardui in n wonderful medicine, for 1 improved greatly after taking it," says Mrs. A \Y. English. of K. F. 1). -1. Koanoke, j Y.i. "When I was ju-<t a girl cf * 1.1, my mother gave this modi- ] t in?* to in"v :;n<T it did me a great J <! al of good. I v.as weak ami j run-down. Alter 1 h.i.l 1. '..a I C irtlui awhile, I felt mueh he: t ;*. | "In lt'lM, r..\ l.altn was j r, ^ I felt inist ."ie, and ... . | enough stream .. to do mv l.< ..-< { work. It took all m> wil.ju.wt to keep up. I was pale and weak. "I got Cardui again and took it. My improvement was wonderful, I can recommend Cardui to others, for my health was so much better after I had taken a course of the Cardui Home I Treatment." Death of lAged l/ady. Mrs. Elizabeth Young, widow of the late Judaon Young, died Tuesday at the residence of her son, William Young, near Heath Springs, at the age of 111 years. Mrs. Young was a sister of the late Judge W. F. Russell and it was singular that their passing wan within two weeks of each other. Judge Russell died last week at the age of eighty-five and neither new of the desperate illness of the other. Mrs. Young wus stricken with paralysis #ome months ago ami had been lingering since. She is survived by three sons and four daughter*? W. J. Young, of Heath Spring*; C. M. Young, of Laurens; C. T. Young, of Atlanta; Mrs. Alice Terry, Mrs. Carrie C'authen, of Igtncaster; Mrs. Kmma (iolvin, of Raleigh, and Mrs. Lula McDowell, of Rock Hill. 4 The funeral aud burial occurred on Wednesday at Heaver Creek church, near Heath Springs. Her nephew, Wn rdlav^" F. Russell, attended the funeral from Camden. General New:; Notes Michael Jakubiak, 44, of Chicago, III., who confessed he walked out to I meet his wife as she returned from ! work and stabbed her to death as he kissed her, was sentenced to prison fiii* 50 years Tuesday. He plead guilty. The three passengers of a missing Pacific transport mail plane were found dead late Wednesday near Hurbank, Cal., where the plane had ( lashed on a sloping plateau. Discovery of the bodies ended a Id-hour -earrh hy soorc.s of planes. Alleged to have struck and killed his wife in Savannah, Mo., because she ai l ived at the polls on April 1st, too late to vote against a proposed increase in school taxes, James \V. Payne, Oil, a farmer, was convicted of murder Wednesday. He was sentenced to 'JO years imprisonment. In New Orleans, La., doctors were pu/./.led when a baby was admitted to a hospital in a dying condition. They ran forceps down the throat of 18months-old Floyd Flight and pulled. Out came- a whole fish. The baby recovered quickly. Dick Merrill, air mail pilot, Atlanta to New York, jumped from hi3 plane near Casar, Cleveland county, N. C., early Wednesday rdorning from an altitude of 5,000 feet. Ho had left Chaiilotte going north; his radio apparatus went wrong and he flew around for several hours in the dense fog unable to locate his directions, until he was forced to abandon his machine when the fuel became exhausted. His machine was destroyed, the mail was saved and he was slightly injured when he struck the ground" with his parachute near a farm house. Josephus Daniels, secretary of the navy' in the Wilson administration, declared in an Armistice Day address at Asheville,- N. on Tuesday, | that while the United .States was the | most beloved nation ;n the woi Id mi November II. 1018. today she hasn't a friend among the nations. Federal indictments have been returned in Detroit courts against 14 members of an alleged .-syndicate said to be engaged in dumping aliens .and Canadian liquors into the Ctiited states by the use of airplanes. Klsie Ma lone, dancer of Los Angeles, was on M-onday ?t?bl?ed pigHt times hy Frank Domingo, Filipino, whose love the girl spurned after accepting many valuable gifts, including two automobiles, from him. He then stabbed himself in a suicide attempt. Both are perhaps fatally wounded. Philadelphia has raised nearly $ >.000,000 to be used in welfare work in that city. The estate left >y ,L,ho late T. Coloman Dul'ont is estimated at $50,000.000. Vp' Announcement h^fiF been made ?of the approaching marriage -of Congressman Charles B. Timherlake >f Colora<lo, over 70, and Mrs. Roberta Wood Elliott. in her thirties, the ceremony to take place m Washington. _un Doc cm her 22. The brule-tol>e has been head-waiter in a Washington restaurant. First Snow For Atlanta Atlanta, tia . Nov. JI -The first >n ?w of t he winter in tieorgia foil for ten minutes m Atlanta tonight. The weather bureau predicted "fair and I'ddc" for the >tate tonight a*; i torn i l ew. Snow lagan falling at '? p. m and mc'.'ed a> fa>t a. it fell t lie w eatllt 1 bo: ea .1 said. Federal Warrants For Wilson Anderson. No \. JJ. -Federal w.urants charging violation of the Ma: n white slave act and the Dyer mot >: theft act were served today on Willie Wilson, drover. N. C., man, hell in the county jail here in connection with the alleged kidnaping of his the? Furcrou, 17-year-old Anderson college student, last month. Murderers Convicted Gaffney. Nov. 22.?William Cole and James Cromer, charged with killing l/oslie Lane irv^a gun battle here, were found guilty of murder in general sessions court he re today. The jury recommended mercy, making lif sentences mandatory. Attorneys for the men gave notice they wuold file a motion for a new trial. . ima ^j i J,?... .. "tr Klan Membership Now Dwindling Says Report Washington.?The Ku Klux Klan, a powerful political factor in some stat-.s five years beo, is now on its j last legs, the Washington Post in a copyrighted story lias stated. This] information, it is explained, come* from an "authoritative aouree." Figures compiled show that the men hership, which had climbed to about 0,000,000 in 1025, has dwindled to leva than 350,000 in 1030. It is e? timated that up to 1025 the Klan had collected in fees more than $00,000,000. , The Ku Klux Klan, which backed William GLbbes McAdoo for the liem ocratie nomination for the pnewidency in 1024, played an important part in the national convention held in New York. "Today a crumblig shell of jug gernaut, skidding dizzily toward oblivion, the Klan makes a last desperate stand," the Post said. "Casting a faltering shadow athwart the ballot box to exact tribute for a politjcpl power exposed as u collossal myth and ruling a vanishing domain, fantastically small even now, it is dying." Former members of the invisible empire, ?aid the story, want to expose it as a great money-making or ganization for the benefit of a few head men. They assert that is is a ! shining example of big business. Millions of men who belonged to the order have never been able to | learn just how much money was ta-1 j ken during the days of prosperity or where il' went. The sums paid out in salaries to the imperial wizard and j his lieutenant are not listed. Channels for a highly remunerA- i live inflow of funds came /from the higher degrees of "Knight Kamelia," for which ' more than a million knights paid $5 each, and that of "Knights of the Great Forest," which numbered some H6,000 mem liers. Sinco its incorporation in Georgia in 1020, with its citadel at. Atlanta, the klan is estimated to have received more than $100,000,000 an-1 nuuily from those two elevated rank ! sources alone. i * j Kdward Young Clarke of Atlanta was first to see the possibilities in ' the klan movement. Col. William Joseph Simmons, who conceived the idea to organize something on the; _ 1 order of the original K. K. K., and who struggled for years, making spread-eagle speeches and struggling for financial existence, accepted an offer of Mr. Clarke to make the klan a "business success." Clarke was to propagate ami Simmons wag to operate the klan. Benig an expert advertiser and organizer, Clarke soon put the klan on it* financial feet. A controversy that came later resulted in the elimination of Clarke and Simmons and the promotion of Dr.v Hiram YV. Evans, a Texas dentist. Ev. an? took the klan over at its prosperous period, but was not able to keep going the steady flow of money started by Clarke. Figures given to the Post showed for the first time the extent of the rise and fall o<f the klan. ' * By 1925, the membership of the order had reached a total of 8^904,H71, but after that it commenced to fade away. This number represented all jrersona initiated up to that year. It was about the time the imperial wizard Evans made a demonstration in Washington, and announced that from thqp on the klan would discard its hoods and other disguises. By the last of 1926 the' | I membership had fallen u>u3* The 'membership fWb rapidly J |B that, it :fi5i,4ii iri 469 in 1908, 82,602 in 1929 694 in 1930. >? 15u I lot? Favir Biennial Nov. 22.?With couptiea unreported, passage uSP stffte^wide constitutional. amendn^M in the recent general election, (Xt appeared assured. Every indication is now Jjj ject to thd amendments, the Su^l Carolina general assembly after iXi will meet only every other >i<?r jH stead of annually. ||| The amendment providing f0r classification of property by the oral assembly for taxation i>urpo^| was ahead 4,892 to 4,206. The B reported counties were Anderso&^l Union. The Federal government |a |^| troit, Mich., Wednesday held in4i^| ments against 14 alleged memben^B airplane smuggling .syndicate# |H lieved restfonsible for the dunpitg^| scores oif aliens and thousand! cases of Canadian liquor withi#(^| ! United Stotes. Twelve airph^H j have been seized. ;,||| I Santa Clans Arrives in I Xolumbia, Monday December 1st J A Blaze of Thousands of Brilliant 1 Lights and a Throng of I People Will Greet Him J Everybody Invited I A Beautiful Pageant of Months Will be I Given in the New Auditorium I I Amid a brilliant scene of lights, pageantry, singing, and with bands playing and colors flying, Santft Claus will arrive in Columbia Monday in a special chartered airplane. | More than 6,000 colored lights draped around beautiful trees and | hanging overhead on Main street, will lend cheer to the festive event. As Santa arrives at the State House at 6 o'clock he will ceremoniously usher in the Holiday season, by I turning on the switch that will ilj luminate the Capitol. Fron* the ? State House there will be a paVade I up Main Street. At 7 o'clock Santa be greeted at the new Columbia Township Auditorium where he will be greeted by officials of the State of South I Carolina, the County of Richland I and the City of Columbia. .iJm But the official welcome, to this great dignitary will hold second I place in the minds of the little chil- I drenwho will be there. More than 1,000 costumed children will greet _ Saint Nick with a beautiful Pa- 1 geant of Months. Bring the children on this greatest I of all days next to Christmas itself. ~~-jfl Bring them to the State Capitol at 6 I o'clock Monday and to the Audito- ' riirm tit 7 bTcTock. All is free, of 1 course . . . and all this marvelous 9 program is to bring more happiness to the little children ... to have them meet the Saint of Good Cheer. m I Come to Columbia , 1 BRING THE CHILDREN! 1 See the South's Most Beautifully Decorated | City! See Santa! See Him Daily ? | I in Columbia! _,4 ^