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U. Honor Roll Bethune Schools * - -11 Grade ll.^Huth Jones, Mary B. Radcliff, Edith Clybum, Edna Uutley. Grade 0.?-Ida Outlaw, William Est ridge, John Edwin Williams, Marguerite Foster; Elsie Mae HuiumOnd, Gladys Joyner. Grajie iK-?Mary Alice Baker, Annie'Mae Hearon, Mary Ellen McI?aurirj, Keith Gordon, Sara Ruth McKinnon. Grade H.? Evelyn Elliott, Gertrude Hearon, Arlene V^agera, Frances Bethune, Oneida Outlaw, Sara Hrannon; Nannie Ruth Hilton, Clarence Heustess. Grade 7.?Estella Johnson, Rachel Williams, Grace Horton. Grade 0.?r-Robbie Newton Marion, Lavorn Jonea, Evelyn Johnson, Ha B. Mangum, Juanita Bate, Allene Tynert Frankip Beard. ./ Grade 5, ~v Margaret McLaurin, John Ban McLaurin, Lorene BJaekmon, Jerry Davis, Katherine Foster, Rowena Holland, Eunice McCaskill, Iris McCaskill, Tom Ed Hearon, Eva Morton, Olin Watkins, Nellie Margaret Whitley, Dorothy Horton. Grade 4.? Myrtis Mungo, Alene Hilton, Clarenc Hilton, Margie Jones, Irene Mangum, Bertha Lee Horton, Loutee Hinson, Margaret Eubanks, Emily Hearon, Oran Baker, Laurence Copeland, Geneva Barker, Helen Hester, Alvin Kelly. Grade 3.?Alvo McCaskill, Grace Mungo, Drucilla Ratcliff, Earl Jones, Jo.sfe Horton, Lizzie Kate Hilton, Nellie Horton. Grade 'J.?Harvey Johnson, Doris I^ine, Betty Best, Mary Nancy McLaurin, E. W. Tolbert, Louise Watford, Vera Horton, Billy Best, Mary Dean, Theophileus Cassady, Wilber Copeland, Laverne Tidwcll, Myrtis Horton, Genevieve Kelley^ Ethel I<ee Watkins, Doris Blaekmon, Thelma Cato, Elma Cato, J. W. Hearon, Sue Hilton, Janette Hinson, Alva Horton. Grade 1.?Sara Gordon, Elvin Jones, Sara Margaret King, Thomas Bethune, Jr., Betty Hammond, Eli Moseley, W. A. Johnson, Thomas Hough, Kverette Hilton, Eula Moseley, Frances Therrell, I/eroy Gainey, Helen Jactson, Bertha Mangum, Evelyn Mangum. The interstate commerce commission recommended Federal regulation of motor vehicles engaged in interstate commerce and that railroads nnd water lines be encouraged to use the public highways. Chicago's police have been making scores of raids on speakeasies in thatcity of late, and it is said to lie an effort to clean up the oity- prior to the holding of the national political conventions there in Juno. Indications are strong that the senate >vill overwhelmingly defeat the proposed $2,000,000.000 soldiers' bonus measure if the hill should reach that body. Republican and Democratic leaders oppose the proposition. Hilda Brodsky, 0 years old, was kidnapped from her home in Wilmington, Del., last week and held for ransom. She was returned to her home two or. three days later without the random being paid. NO-MO-KORN i FOR CORN'S AND CALLOUSES Made in Camden And For Sale By DeKalb Pharmacy ? Phone 91 ^ il no nr. w.mitch a: Architect Crocker fiuilding, Camden, S. C. KKKSHAW LOD(iE No. 21 /I A if 1 o Regular communication of v this !odj?e is heid on tb? first Tuesday in each month it 8 pa Visiting1 Rrpthrsn are welcomptj \V. R. ("f/VBURN, J K. ROSS, Worshipful Master. Secretary 1-14-27-tf t?rK \ f H H'NCtf. Nn X* ^ liininr Order I . A M. K'u'.ar .-ounei! ??won?i und Mittulavs of ertoh mon* n Ji' ^ m .iik nrnniPH .,:-o .1 W, THOMPSON. I,. H JON Kc. Tou:uMllor RecordiStV. y. ] EYES EXAMINED tad Glasses Fitted I THE HOFFER COMPANY Jewefera mmd Optemetriete IssL: Protests Breaking tip Farm Families Columbia, S. April 20. 1 ho pros* recently carried an' account of sixty-five thousand farm families being sold out for taxes in .Mississippi, and that the lands sold embraced some seven million acres, said I ierro Mazyek, publicity man for the Taxpayers' League when talking over the tax situation. "I noticed" said Mr. Mazyck, "in one of our county papers, in addition to two hundred and thirty-seven farm homes to be sold, about one 'hundred and fifteen separate notices of sale of household effects for taxes in 24 school districts of one county. rhere were two hundred and Sixteen beds,ninetyfour dressers, twenty-seven washstands, one hundred and fifty-one chairs, fifty-two cook stoves and ranges, twenty-two sewing machines, nine template living room suites, and endless number of organs, kitchen cabinets, tables, eleven clocks?-in fact all sorts of household necessities; then mules, cows, agi4eultural implements, and other farmers' stock in trade? his gnly asset now for jinking a living?or at least of being able to feed himself and family." "If wt! figure up," continued Mr. Mazyck, "the average of five to each family, the 237 farm homes to be sold May 2 in one county, about 1,200 people; and assuming that the forty-six counties in the state are about in the same fix, that means that about fiftynine thousand men, women and children will be homeless, and many without household effects or farming implements to even try to be selfsupporting for a time at least. "These are, of course, in addition to the thousands who have already been closed out and are now seeking work in towns and cities" said Mr. Mazyck. "The Mississippi farmers have three years to redeem their places, and have a chance yet," stated Mr. Mazyck, "but what are we people going to do about South Carolina's farmers?" "The towns and cities are now overcrowded with people looking for work, and the civic relief agencies are doi.pg all they can, but, would it not be a good plan for the civic relief workers to "anticipate" as it were, these homeless people drifting into towns and cities, and make some arrangements to keep them on their farms where they can make a living and in time get back on their feet?" "It seems that it would be cheaper to help them tide through, instead of trying to locate-jobs for people, who, possibly, only know farming as a means of living." "Besides," said Mr. Mazyck, "where will we find work for some forty thousand people these days?" "It's true," concluded Mr. Mazyck, "that we all have to meet taxes and death, but if the doctors are able to stave off death for a while in some cases, seems to me we people could manage some way to stave off these taxes for a while too." "When the state takes over much of this land, those who still have property for taxation will have to double up?and make up the deficit on these abandoned farms." "Just take your county paper, and add up the t;ix execution 'notices, and what is being sold, then just multiply that hy forty-six as an average over the state, and one will get an idea just what is happening." Three directors have been arrested at Stockholm. Sweden, following investigations into the affairs of the h;g corporation headed hy Ivar Krcuger. the "mat-th king." who committed suicide in Paris a few weeks ago v-> (alotaDs T H AD t MARK REO. For Inzy liver, stomach and kidneys, biliousness, indigestion, constipation, headache, colds and fever. 10/ and 35/at dealer*. This Woman Lost til Pounds of Fat \; ; i * . I 1. > . \ .. .? I v. . . . I ? . t;(M- K ,,u l A. -v - I : , . T ar.-i \v T..?? - :r. !' . ! If < i\ in ':< ..r>? "J" vc*. ! the m.thi r - f L' . h:!.!:-. r.. ' ! ' :iv.?i :r.?other Is Kvery -t.< ,,f my fr.eud* -ay it'* man ecu* the way I reduced." To lose fat SAFK1.Y ar.d HA KM LF.SSLY, take a half tea*poonfu! of Krusehen in a glass of hot water! in the morning before breakfast? don't miss a morning?a bottle that last* 4 weeks costs but a trifle?hut don't take chances?be sure it's Kruschen?your health comes first?i ret it at any drugstore in America. If not joyfully satisfied after the first bottle?money back. In MANCHURIA I ^n""Miiitn<iii ii f if "diMMiftflf i ivriilWfri WfiljnMUnirnn*n rrnt"rft|f-" ?" ji tit -vr njiir ~-r? Loading Manchurian FlouV Aboard a Sungarl River Boat. (PrepnrVd by National Oeographlc Society. Wiinhiiitfton, l>. 0.)?WNU Service. Or Till-; three principal focal points of the Sino-Japanese disturbance In Manchuria? Tsitsihar, Anganchi, and Chlnchowfu?Tsitslhnr la, perhaps, the most widely known because it has been a stopping place and press box for world-glrdlers in recent years. Tsltslhar is the capital of Ilellung Klang, largest of the three provinces of Manchuria, and the principal city In ' a vast, only partially-developed areu ; of rich fanning and grazing land. Mil- j ltary activity is no new sensation to the 3ff,000 Inhabitants of this brownwalled city In the fertile valley of the Nonnl river. Tsltslhar was built In 1002 to overawe marauding tribes of Mongols and Cossacks. Later China sent nu\ny bandits Into exile In Manchuria. The medley of native population groups In the vicinity of Tsltslhar forced the construction of huge barracks there and the details of military units to the town, so that It has .long had the aspect of a for-; tress. Like every other Important Manchurlan city Tsltslhar owes Its ! present wealth and activity to railroads. When the Chinese Eastern j railway .was byllt as a ?hpf(. cu^be-, tween Chita and Vladivostok, Tsltslhar was a slovenly settlement of ramshackle buildings back of Its crenelated walls. Guilders of the Chinese Eastern missed the town by laying the line 18 miles to the south. Later, however, a nnrrow-gnuge spur was built, connecting with the Chinese Eastern nt Tsltslhar station. Tsltslhar came Into the recent "misunderstanding," however, through a new and extremely busy railroad line, constructed during the last decade northward from Taonanfu, through Anganchi, and crossing over the Chinese Eastern main line on a bridge nt Tsitslhnr station, the Junction point Qf the narrow gauge line. This new line is Chinese-operated and Japaneseowned from Taonanfu to Anganchi, and entirely Chinese owned and operated from Anganchi to the city of ; Tsitslhnr. The new line does not end nt Tsi.sl- i hnr but continues in a northeast direction for TP miles to Taianchen. Even- j tunlly it will reach the Siberian bor- j der and will connect with a branch I of the Trans-Siberian railway nt Ilia- j govoshehensk. Town With Modern Improvments. Vow travelers visited isolated Tsitsllu.r before the railroad came. For a time those who did passed by cofllns i/ro\vn outside toe town walls?ending: it natives whose families were un- I able to pay burial expenses. Inside | the walls the travelers saw a dingy ; panorama of dirty sharks lining un- [ paved and unlighled streets. i ltailroads have changed all that, j Today Tsitsihura busy town, greatly changed and Improved by modern ! development. While It is neither as, large nor as modernized as the other two Manchurlan provincial capitals. Mukden and Kirin, Tsitsihar lias several wide, paved streets, electric lights, telegraph and telephone services Tile-roofed houses, with coats of bright paint, are rising where old shacks once stood. Since the new north south railroad r..... . .. uuutu lu ,.?e spur lroni the fhr.ese Eastern railway, Tsitsihar is en the way to becoming one of the chief industrial centers of Manchuria. M..'s arc gr;n>!;r;L* out meal as f.i-t ? m?v beans can be brought from! \T T ' 'i ll^ . slimm- Mfel | ?*. ?. - " -o; j w '11. e .oilier--, and it--. I i; \ ( '.!- .iPe ,,f n,t|V ' I * ... ali ! I : v< ^ ; . \ . i ... .t . i : ':' v ... i w its. I ' > d :" . M I , !.: lij the popil it :..|?. M t!:ei.-iriatt iit'M'S come n. . s from the g: a-uncovered plains in the) vn inity of T-nlsi!i.?r. The regain Is I the native borne of llie pony which, helped to build up the near vv.u bl empire of the great Kublai Khan. Shaggy and stubborn, the Tsitsihar mount has endurance nnd Is dependable on long marches over cold, irregular terrain. lleilung Kiung province leads In the production of barley !n Manchurls ; Is sscond In soy besns and whMt Of Its 20.ft00.000 cultivable v - ? ^* Lucres only a third have so fur ueen put Into use. While Tsltsihar Is In about the same latitude as Seattle, Wash., it suffers from extremes of heat and cold. In summer the thermometer rises above i>5 degrees for days at a time, and in winter It nose-dive^1 to 40 decrees bei low zero. Nevertheless the reglo? around Tsltsihar contains some of the richest soli in the world, and Is capable of a good deal of future development. In the Nonnl"river Tsltsihar has a stream capable of carrying a considerable amount of water trade In Junks and barges during the summer months. T^he Uttle village of Ahganchi, captured Japanese forces in the drive on Tsltsihar, possesses an importance fur out of proportion to its limited population because it 'stands near a kiiid of "spark gap," supercharged with the economic ambitions and railway interest of Japan, China and Russia In northwestern Manchuria. Why Anganchi |? Important. Anganchl is two salles south of Tsltsihar station. It is the northernmost station on the new Chinese-operated, Japanese-built railway line from Taonanfu. Anganchi was practically unheard ef until the new line, pushing up from Taonanfu during the last decade, built its terminal in the town. In a land which has constructed more miles of railway in recent yeare than any other part of the world, and which, In some places, laid new lines at the rate of a mile a day, it may seem strange that the two-mile gap between Anganchi and Tsltsihar station was not closed for many months. Treaty rights, dating from the close of the Russo-Japanese war, were Involved. The Taonanfu-Anganchl railway was built with funds loaned to the Chinese by a syndicate of Jupnneso hanks, who in turn gave the construction contract to the South Manchurlan Railway company. When the line reached Anganchi the Chinese Eastern railway, jointly controlled by Soviet Russia and China, objected to the crossing of its main line by a "railroad linked with the South Manchurlan railway (Japanese) interests. Consequently, when the lino was finally .continued to Tsltsihar station, to Tsitsihar Itself and to the city ?>f Taianchen beyond, only Chinese capital was employed. Aside from the yards and station of the railroad lines, Anganchi possesses little to distinguish it from hundreds of other mud-walled villages in the wind-swept farming and grazing lands of the Noani river basin. The inhabitants, several hundred in number, are mainly Russians, although the Influx of Chinese lias been noticeable since the completion of the railway lines to the north and south of it. Chinchowfu a Shipping Center. Chinchowfu is the chief city on the Manchurlan panhandle that penetrates China on the west coast of the Gulf of Chihll. It Is the first important Manchurlan city beyond Shanhalkwan, where the Great Wall of China comes down to the sea. North and west of Chinchowfu rise the mountains and desert plateaus of Inner- Mongolia. South of the city stretch the tidal flats of a branch of the Gulf of Chihll the Gulf of Liaotung. Anyone passing along the narrow coastal plain, therefore, would have to deal with walled Chinchowfu. astride the middle of it. Chinchowfu itself is a metropolis of about P'"pu.at mil. Much of Its newer part -prends beyond the ancient u aiied Iiiv. ex:?e? iwdy ! ) ?* ? ) in J the :\ >' t' e railroad f rmiiial. A- 'i. : "V :i: .iNo .? ; ..n p.. n? | for a branch iii.e in'o !.,*. r >1 :,_'oli;i | its i\ . 11-.\ e ra.!:" ! \ .o d- j c?i|!i< *. \ e -!. !<. ?; way di\ - head quarter--, i b f i! and -! : wareI:oi|<i-s. It. : , ;I -t.ii.u:. and tiiej wa'le.] i .t\ :t e n a Miil't.ir.v l.at'iai k s. J The prov.telil .\eminent Mli.e n temporal*.!\ !m ited in the I*n,\or-py of CoaiTiiunicatii lis. north of the tr.i In addition to it- lmpoit^iee as a railway and military center Chinchowfu nifo is n shipping point for the greatest- fnttr and cotlon raising regain of Manchuria?the nearby Liao river valley. Shallow draft boats may ascend a tidal river to Its wharves to recetxe fruit brought by train and earts. hut most <>f its water borne commerce Is carried on through the new harbor at Hulutao, with which Chinchowfu laavmnected by a spur railway line. / a # ZA?J ?r. Monument Unveiled To James M. Miller ? ; y The unveiling of tJie James M. Miller monument at Five Forks cemetery came t?IT beautifully, I he ex ercisea wero gracefully presided over by the president of the Chapter, Mrs. K. E. Cooke. All who had part on the program did their part very acceptably. % The address delivered by Hon. Mendel L. Smith was one of the finest we ever heard. The church and the marker were most beautifully decorated for the occasion. , The church was seated to capacity and many on the outside who couldn't get in. There were people from all the adjacent towns including Charlotto. , ? . The afternoon was an ideal Spring day with the young buds and blossoms of the season adding much to the tender memories of the thing we met to commemorate. As we listened to the tributes paid to the noble hero who gave his life when it was in its prime, so tragically and yet ,w> nobly, for the land he loved so weH we thought of the many long years his body had slept where the southern sun could shine on his resting place, and the songs of the southern birds and the soft sighing of the breeze could makB' melody above his head. We thought that had he been allowed to choose this his last bed he ,would have asked for nothing better than the quiet little cemetery at Fiv? Forks church. We believe that his example of sacrifice and patriotism is and should be an example of nobility for us all so long as history shall be written and honor shall be esteemed.?Pageland Journal. Boy, Page Mr. Ripley Here Is a Tall Story Here's one for Ripley! You may believe it or not, but according to a Kingston, N. C., report, Plato Collins, veteran secretary of the Kingston Chamber of Commerce, is .authority for the statement: . A .^armer. ..perspiring in -the .sun hung his vest on a fence. A calf chewed up the vest. In a pocket was the farmer's watch. Recently the calf, now seven years old, was butchered, having outlived its usefulness as a milk cow. The watch was found lodged between its lungs. Respiration, the closing and filling of the lungs, had kept the watch wound. It had lost only four minutes in the seven years. Mr. Collins is a front row member of the Methodist church. C. H. At wood, clerk in a chain store of Little Rock, Ark,, was shot to death Friday by a negro bandit as the clerk tried to prevent robbery of the cash drawer by the negro, who got away with $200. TRESPASS NOTICE All hilling, cutting of wood, raking and hauling of straw or any trespassing whatsoever is forbidden on my place of one hundred acres, nine miles north of the City of Camden, S. C. The lands formerly known as the York Alexander place. Anyone disobeying this notice will be dealt with according to law. ESTELLE FAULKS, R. F. D., Camden, S. C. < March 23, 1932. # 51-53sb |=PHIUIPS=i P'fSi Fa?*V?A^t3* ? ,HQlCKi>TlOH ) ACIO *TOMACH HIART?^?N MfAOACHi ca$C5?KAUSI^ Hour I stomach i JUST a tasteless dose of Phillip iMilk of Magnesia in water. Thai is nn alkali, effective yet harmless. It has been the standard antacid for 50 years. One spoonful yill nfeutralire I nt once many times its volume in acid It's the right way, the quick, pleasant and efficient way to kill all "the I excess acid. The stomach becomea '1 sweet, the pain departs. You aie 9 happy again in five minutes. pon't depend on crude methods I Employ the best way vet evolved ia j all the years of searching. That it fl Phillips Milk of Magnesia. Be sure to get the genuine, 9 "Milk of Magnesia'* has been the f U. S. Regbterea Trade Mark of the 9 Charles H. Phillips Chemical Com- 9 pany and its predecessor Charles H. I Phillips since 1875. j Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler, heed I of Columbia University, New York, in 1 an interview, says that the Republi- 1 can party platform will include t 9 plank advocating a repeal of the I eighteenth amendment. i Arthur M. Hyde, secretary of agri- 9 culture, and the dryest member of 9 the Hoover cabinet, has revealed him- j] self as sympathetic to the ides of 9 submission of the prohibition ques- 1 tion to a national referendum. 9 Former 'Governor Byrd of Virginia, 9 has come out as favoring ? w?' natiea- >9 wide referendum on the question of I the eighteenth amendment. Biabop 9 James Cannon, Jr., partially en- 9 dorses the Byrd plan for a referen-.J dum. _ 9 j Fat Girls! Here's I A Tip For You 1 All over the world Kruschen Salts j9 is appealing to girls and women who strive for an attractive, free fro?^l fat figure that cannot fail to win admiration. j Here's the recipe that banishes fat S and brings into blossom ,aU the nat ural attractiveness that every woman possesses and does it SAFELY and 1 HARMLESSLY. 9 In the morning take one half tea- 9 spoon of Kruschen Salts in a glass S of hot water before breakfast?cut 1 down on 'pastry and fatty meats?go I light on potatoes, butter, creain and fl sugar. f "It's the little daily dose that takes fl off the fat" and "brings that Krus chen feeling" of energetic health and 9 activity that is reflected in bright eyes, clear skin, cheerful vivacity and j charming figure. 9 But be sure for your health's sake 1 that you get Kruschen. A bottle 9 that lasts 4 weeks costs but little- ^B You can always get Kruschen at all I druggists and money back if not sat- | isfied with results after first bottle. fl r _ rromheadaches colds and sore throat neuritis/ neuralgia Don'? be a chronic sufferer from headaches, or any other pain. There is hardly an ache or pain Bayer Aspirin tablets can't relieve: they are a great comfort to women who suffer periodically. They are always to be relied on tor breaking up colds. It may be only a simple headache, or it may be neuralgia or neuritis; rheumatism. Bayer Aspirin is still the sensible thing to take. Just be ? :t's Bayer you're taking; lL not hurt the heart. (/et the genuine tablets, in thi*famiiiar package for the pocket. BEWARE OF I * IMITATIONS I