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i7n??ly Ke/rS, [Jgsociated Charities V ,ho Associated Ch?ritl? I Sen ? ><! Kershaw county fo, IS of 'May. IKS'. ' I f^ iaat ^onth .. Jl.h70.lt K?jpls thin month 28311 I Total . Children ? Home L Brothers ? RU* M?wen*er *:? K- fl*R Ti ueadale, milk .. 12.00 I^Vilaon. dry *ood. .... 10^8 f'tohtansky. shoes ......... 2.M trumoy. groceries 4.90 i.??,bor Company 1?.8? I i Price carpenter d.60 Walter Price, ^ Kctrklnnd, egga and butter 10.00 l^mtih, Iron. ^ (Upjnal, rent K< ?., nnil light . m VSatei ?n<> ?> 82 Bl r10""? /hiMren-'. hair''.'.'.*... 0-70 QltttnK ( , . 20.00 loimden Chronicle o Bell Talephono If E. l.amoy 'ft c, lAtn.be, Company O-40 Walter Price, carpenter ...... ".70 |u Price carpenter .. L60 incidentals 6 *25 |C. E. Umoy i/?5 Repairs 4-15 Burns ^ Harrett ? ,0 |u?u Walker, superintendent -.40 K Egg- and butter , ".20 , .... 153.54 Transferred 60 ISaiV.'Mrs. .Scott 6.05 waiter Price J;80 Richard Price C. E. Lanioy Stamps and envelopes stamp tax ' Labor and servant hire ?2.59 It E. $510.96 I Balance, *1,312.32 I SOUTH CAROLINA NEWS I F. L Mellard, of Holly (Springs, is I getting old, and when two strangers I offered to sell him a radium belt, he I parted with $100 cash, a $500 check I which he authorized to be cashed immediately and a $3,900 check on a I New York bank. They told him it would keep him youthful. They did; not even mail him a belt as promised and after awhile, he tol ( his family of his worry at its non-| arrival. The check on New York was j stopped, but the others were cashed by the strangers, of whom there is now no clue. The Bank of Hartsville has installed a system by which the entire bank building is filled with tear gas in twofifths of a second after a bandit points a gun at a teller. South Carolina highway police have been ordered to look out for automobiles with poor braking ability, faulty steering nu-chanism, or worn tires, and to arrest and prosecute all owners taking ^uch defective cars upon the roads, to endanger other motorists, as well as themselves. For Success With i ? Fall Potato Crop i Clem&oii College, June 10.?-Good soil well prepared, the right seed potatoes properly handled, and planting at the right time and under favorable conditions will go far to-1 W^rds assuring a good fall crop of flinh j>otatoes, according to A. 1 K. | Schilletter, extension horticulturist. His suggestions are: Select as nearly as possible, a moist but well drained and fertile piece of soil. Second bottom land, if not too heavy, is good. Break the ground thoroughly several weeks before planting time and- harrow every week or ten flays until planting. Plant July 10 to 30 in upper South .Carolina, July 20 to August 10 in puddle South Carolina, j v Lookout Mountain variety is the ;best to plant except in those sections .where other varieties have proved better for the fall crop. I Plant a big piece of potato, about 1 twice the size ordinarily used fpr spring planting. Plant in a deep, freshly opened furrow so that the potato may be covered in fresh, moist soil. Seed that have (been carried over winter in cellars or cold storage are much better for the fall crop but s?prin!g-grown potatoes may be used when the other kind are too highpriced or unavailable. When small "potatoes of the springgrown crop are used for seed, plant the whole potato, but sprout it beforehand. To do this, dry the potatoes in thin piles in a dry and semidark place* for 10 days to two Wseks, and: then mulch them. A go6d plan for mulching is to spread the pofc tatoes thinly on ground under a tree and cover thrfce t6 five, inches deep with straw, and water often enough to keep wet, ibut not drenched. Still another plan is to spread the pota. toes out thinly and cover with an inch j or two of sand and keep this moist. When handled properly, sprouts will usually start in two weeks. Plant aa soon as the sprouts are an eighth to a fourth of an ircdh long. Cultivate immediately after plants atI up and often enough thereafter td keep down weeds and grass and to prevent a crust forming. The senate on Monday passed a resolution giving the senate 'banking and currency committee sweeping power to inquire into stock sales made to avoid income taxes and Pecora said the committee will begin today an investigation of the income tax transactions of the partners of J. P. Morgan and Company. Charles .Smith Maddock, 3rd, freshman student at Princeton university, Princeton, N. J., committed suicide with a 22 calibre rifle. It is believed he killed himself because {of grief over the death of his grandfiwaier, to whom he was greatly attached. Eleven bandits withawed off shotguns and pistols, their faces masked with handkerchiefs, terrorized 26 persons in the Main -State (bank Chicago, and escaped in two stolen automobiles with $17,000 loot. In Answer to Popular Demand JUDGE RUTHERFORD < has arranged for the rebroadcasting of his three stirr- < ing speeches of last April, then broadcast over a national network. The subjects and time are "THE WAY OF ESCAPE" ' Sunday, June 18 \ "EFFECT OF HOLY YEAR ON PEACE AND PROSPERITY" \ Sunday, June 25 KINGDOM BLESSINGS FOR THE PEOPLE" J Sunday, July 2 f It you did not hear the broadcasts in April, you u canr.or afford to miss this opportunity. If you did hear , h"!'U-e, you will want to hear these talks again. , For several years past one evil upon the people . ha- been quickly followed by another and greater evil. I ^ N -u the whole world is in a state of distress and perP xity. Human remedies have failed to relieve that lj^ w,old distress. In the language of Jehovah's prophet, IF now "all the foundations of the earth are out of ' coirse." (Psalm 82:5) The final evil will be reached jy ;t' Armageddon. When will it come? j i I What is The Way of Escape? I c ^ hat Will be the Effect of the "Holy Year" on Peace |G and Prosperity? js P What Agency Will Bring Kingdom Blessings For- The a People? a For the Correct Answer be Sure to Hear JUDGE RUTH E KPOR D S n Stations Announced: T WIS, ColumBlarS. C:, 8:15 P. M. " , WOT, Charlotte, N. C? 5:16 P. M, * I Keep Spring Pigs j For Fall Feeding ! CI em son College, June 1*2.?The short corn crop last season has greatly reflected itself in the spring pig crop, says Proif. L. V. Starkey, animal husbandman, who finds that hundreds of spring pigs have been sold out of the counties in the lower part of the state at a very low figure, five cents I a pound being the top price. While it is true that there is a lack of feed, Prof. Starkey advises j farmers to make uvery effort to keep I the spring pigs, which can be carried I on a maintenance ration until the corn crop reaches the glazed stage, after which they should be allowed to hog down the corn, using a protein sup[ plement such as fishnieal or tankage., If there is no fence around the corn field the corn can easily be snapped | and carried to the hogs. *AU indications are that the. price of hogs is going to .make a substantial rise," he states. "When feeds rise in price as they.-have done recently it has always followed that hogs also showed an increase in price per pound. The price of hogs usually vises sometime later than the price of feeds but in general high priced feed means high priced pork. "In this connection it should also be emphasized that it is a good time to keep some of the best breeding stock, for the supply of hogs is going to be limited and the demand for breeding stock is going to be greater this fall than it has during the past yea r." General News Notes The grand jury of Fentress county, Tenn., on Wednesday returned indictments against seven men charging them with the murder of Burton Brewer, a non-union miner. The dead body of Henry Huntington Gibbes, sophomore of the University of Pennsylvania, who disap<peared from the university on January 6 last, was found in the Assiniboine river near Winnipeg, 'Manitoba, last Monday. A representative of Hitler's government pledged his word at Geneva on Tuesday (before a public League of Nations council that Germany will give back to the Jews the positions they recently lost in German Upper Silesia. Wiley Post, who with Harold Gatty made a record flight around the world in an airplane, is planning to make another 'attempt for a world record about July 1. He proposes to use a robot to aid him in his^ one-man flight, and in this way will be able to sleep a part of the time as he flies. An attempt to assassinate Eleutherios Venizeles, several times premier of Greece, and a leading European statesman for many years, failed at Athens, Greece, Tuesday night, but shots fired Iby the would-be assassin hit the wife of the former premier and his chauffeur. The wife was hit by four bullets. Senator Reed, of Pennsylvania, ife leading the fight in the United States senate for insertion in the administration's industrial control-public works measure, a section to provide for a manufacturer's sales tax as a a part of the scheme of raising revenues to carry the measure into effective execution. A Marshville, Ga., woman has a ' j hen which is mothering five fox ter- , rier puppies and will not let the i mother of the puppies approach them.. The puppies rush to the hen and; fliddle under her wings when she j :lucks to them. f Twin brothers, students at Newj fork university, whose work was so nearly alike that both received the ;ame average for four years, were j graduated this week with the highest lonors that the university can bestow )n a student. Thoy were 21 years of ige Tuesday. Chairman Steagall, Democrat, of he house banking and currency comnittee, said Wednesday that the diferences between the house and senite banking reform bills are being atisfactorily worked out and that he measure will be passed at this ossion of congress. Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler, pre.dlent <?f Columbia University, Now {ork, predicts "that as a result of that has been and is now going on n the world, money may be dethrond and expelled from the high place ,'hich it has been occupying for some: 00 years." ) Walter C. Teagle of the Standard, )il company, Alfred P. Sloan of the] leneral Motors company and Gerard hvope of the General Electric cornany, are said to be ready to accept ppointment by Hugh S. Johnson to id in the administration of the inustrial act. A youthful assassin shot and killed idar Muhammed Azzis Kahn, Afghan linister to Germany in Berlin on uesday of last week. The slayer barged the minister with Infidelity > Afghnmstan, claiming he sold out te fatherland to England. The astasia made bo effort to sacaps. I" i i ik 11 'I ? ? i PI" i i n . .i . ii " LOOKING BACKWARD j Taken From the Files of The Chronicle Fifteen and Thirty Years Ajro i . ! FIFTEEN YEARS AGO June 14, 1918 < 4tliuit'H school closes ami diplomas presented by Thus." J. Kirkland to the following graduates: Cor inn? Lewi?, Willie Belle Mackoy, \[*y Rush, Mary Clyiburn, Sara Campbell, Olive Rhame, Mabel Fate, John deLoach, Jimmie Griggs, Norman lluckabee, Everette Schenk, with Jimmie Griggs first honor graduate. Oharli? Hough makes trip to France aboard a freighter, along with a flotilla of thirty-one other convoyed freighters. Miss Harriett Inby engaged to marry Karl P. Emanuel of Borden. Dr. Sydney Capers Zemp, of Camden, promoted to dfeptainey- in modi cal reserve corps. Frank Goodale, infant son of Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Goodale, dies. E. I). MdCutcheon resigns as superintendent of water and light plant and goes to Dillon. J Hermitage cotton mills installs ice plant to make ten tons daily. "Aunt" Mazerene Reynolds, 72, dies at her home in Kirk wood. A. L. Mills, leading business man of Greenville, dies in a vain attempt to save Ed Johnson, a stranger, at Laurel Park lake near Hendersonville. Washington reports prospect for a bumper whe^t crop. J. K. Shannon named to succeed E. D. MeCutcheon as superintendent of water and light plant. Mayor Brasington calls on all citizens to enlist in army of savers to support the army. Clifton F. King, of McBee, meets horrible death when he was .thrown against a saw at Horton's saw mill near MoBee. Moltao Kirk land volunteers for service and leaves for Vancouver, Washington. . THIRTY YKAKS AGO June 19, 1903 Curcton and Alexander open colored undertaking parlor and cabinetmaking shop on lower Main street. Mrs. E. S. Vaux, former resident of Oanuien, whbse husband \va^ manager of Oan^den oil mill, dies at her home near Baltimore. iMrs. Andrew W. Burnet, Sr., aged 8#, died at her honio in Charleston. Methodist Sunday school from Kershaw, to picnic in Camden. Mrs. Lula lang Baker, wife of L. T. Baker, died at her home in . this city. A *S?t. Phillips A. M. E. is now colored church established neo>r Antioeh. Military revolution breaks out at Belgrade, Servia, and king and queen and many ministers assassinated. A new government is formed. Floods' destroy Ave hundred persons at Heppner, Oregon. Oglotree Bucken, of Eastman, On., .vtnmts and kills his father, l>r. T. J. | Bucken, when the latter attempts to i beat the son's mother. The city hotel at Jackson, Ky., destroyed by Are. It was owned by Capt. B. J. Bwen, principal witness against Jett and White, slayers of Lawyer J. B. MareUm. Violent rains flood many mines in France,, Nine great banks in the city of Pittsburg to ibe merged into one? making the greatest- banking merger ever undertaken in America. ? . . i . sra BANK EXAMINER E. P. Miller, Bennettsville Man, Is Named Chief Examiner Columbia,, June 13.?E. P. Miller, of Bennettsville, yesterday was appointed chief state bank examiner by Governor Blackwood by authority of a 1933 legislative act. Miller will assume the duties of his office at once it was announced. He will have supervision over all bank ing activities, cash depositories and building and loan associations under the general direction of the state board of bank control. Salary of the examiner was placed at "not above $8,000," by tihe state appropriation act, but the remuneration has not been definitely fixed. The new examiner was authorized to appoint his own "Ifsffistants subject to approval by the board. A $37,000 appropriation was made for the examiner's office and board expenses for eighteen months. A Ohicufro fortune teller told a woman to put $185 in jewels and $140 In CA&h in u (bug and hung it in a closet for a few duy? and ?ho would , bo Hunprixed. She was. When sho went to look for the jewelry and cash they were gone. .Secretary of the Treasury VVoodin has announced treasury offerings on June 16 of a total of $000,000,000 of government (obligations, including half a (billion to run Ave years and to draw interest of 2 8-4 per cent, and $400,000,000 to run nine (months and draw interest of 8-4 of 1 per cent. During the first four days of the week there were more than 86 deatha in the middle and northwestern states due to the high temperatures prevailing. Many (farmers were forced to give wp all farm"work because of the scorching sun. David A. I .am.son, 80, a sales manager for the (Stanford University Press, is (held at Sun Jose, Culif., changed with the murder of his wife; Alone, whoso nude body was found in their Stanford campus home on Tuesday of last week. A preliminary hearing will be held June 16th. Aliami Peach, Fla., has a murder mystery. The bodies of two women of Woodstock, Va., sisters, wero found tied together in the bay. They had been clubbed to death. Underweight Children Need More Iron in Their Blood! Children who arc thin nnd pale nnd who lack appetite arc usually suffering from a deficiency of iron. When the blood lacks iron it becomes thin and poor and fails to nourish. Then a child loses appetite and becomes still thinner and weaker?and easy prey to disease! To build up your child, give him Grove's Tasteless Chill Tonic. It contains iron which makes for rich, red blood. It also contains tasteless quinine which tends to purify the blood. These two effects make it an exceptional medicine for young and old. A few days on Grove's Tasteless Chill Tonic will work wonders in your child. It will sharpen his appetite, improve his color and build up his pep and energy and increase his resistance to disease. Grove's Tasteless Chill Tonic is pleasant to take. Children like it and it's absolutely safe for them. Contains nothing harmful. All stores sell Grove's Tasteless Chill Tonic. Get a bottle today and see how your child will benefit from it. If you WANT MORE LIFE INSURANCE but say "I CAN'T AFFORD IT" " Here's a NEW LOW-FIRST-COST Policy For the man or -woman who wants permanent life insurance?at a low cost?this 88-year-old company announces a nerw 1933-model policy. I This unique policy is based on standard insur! ance principles, yet it recognizes the fact that, in l these days, many persons who need and want more life insurance cannot pay as much as they could a few years ago or as much as they can a few years hence. This is not a term insurance, although the first cost compares favorably with term insurance. You do not have to convert it. The. premiums do not jump suddenly in three years, nor double in five. After ten years, the yearly premium is exactly the same as though you waited fise years (losing five years' protection) and then to<>k out ordinary life insurance. The premium rates start at approximately half I those of ordinary life insurance. Yet this new policy offers benefits and privileges of a standard Mutual Benefit ordinary life policy. The benefits include cash values, loan values, dividends as earned beginning the second year. The privileges include days of grace, change of 1>eneficiary, extended insurance, paid-up insurance, and the option of leav- < - ing the dividends with the Company to accumulate at interest or to purchase additional insurance. i In short, the New Policy is ordinary life insurance with the advantage of present low cost? to meet today's conditions. ! company. At the beginning of 1933 it had (194,150 was established in 1845. It is a purely"**mutual company. Ot the beginning of 1933 it had 504,153 i policies in force on the lives of more thpn 350,000 policyholders, for $2,334,602,527. Many of these | satisfied policyholders are in South Carolina. ! This company's business has been achieved through public favor, obtained without pressure. The Mutual Benefit does not engage in experiments. Nfyv^policies have never been offered except after the" most careful deliberation. ; Further information concerning the New Policy j may be obtained, without obligating you in any way, by sending in the coupon. JAS. A. HOYT, District Manager Columbia, S. C. Telephone 3982 THE MUTUAL BENEFIT LIFE INSURANCE CO. of Newark, New Jersey M. M. Mattison, General Agent - W. E. Mattison, Agency Superintendent Anderson, S. C. ?. Agents Wanted in Kershaw County JAS. A. HOYT, District Manager 805 Carolina Life Building Columbia, S. C. Please send me, without obligation, further details about the new low-first-cost ordinary life policy of the Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company. Name A.ci Vf tfsfei ** (For more complete information, give age and amount of insurance I i ... - on-which you ^vould like exact figures.)?? I . __ ^ . .. ? ^