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^ ofticers wore shot to death on witnesday at Columbia, Mo., by lr fleeing with their loot tZ* fn a holdup of a 'bank. The of. a tr? a sheriff and a highway paiman wore killed when they atoptr?i the bandits for questioning 45 Sti. ?a?r the holdup. ? ? notice of sale Undo. anil by virtue of sundry ?v?u?nl? directed to me by J. ' 11 ? l- n City Olerk and Treasurer ;-ru\ of Camden, S. I have f f upon and will .sell the followleV property the first Monday m fv W'?g the 3rd d?y of July, A. ' n i?j; in front of the Court House .. raimlen, S. C., during the legal ' r ale 13 noon. Terms of sale hours oi ?IC? ""tHhi 'ot of land, fronting one hun4 ! ntl forty (140) feet, more or f east on Market street of the Is, ', of Camden, County of Kershaw, Site of South Carolina, and extend back west to a depth of eighty(H2) feet, more or lew, and ^..nded north by property of George rtfitle; east by Market- street; ?th bv property of George I\ Lit?? levied upon and to be sold as hfl property of the Rata to of Postell Brow.' for I?, 1?30 >"<? pavInj nsscssmenU.^ WH,1TAKBRi Chief of Police City of iCamden, IS, C. notice of sale Under and by virtue ofsundry tax executions to me directed by J. C Sn City Clerk and Treasurer of hp City of Camden, iSouth Carolina, I have levied/ upon and will sell the Llowine property on tho first MonZin July 11)33, being the 3rd day ia> f _in front of the Court House J Camden, S. C., during tho, legal hours of sale, 12 noon. Terms of >a \ll Vhat piece, parcel, lot of land u'thf City of Camden, County of | . *l?er?haw. State of South Carolina,) . feet east on byttle.on j ret; and extending back west ?>.l '/.V.f !?.'ur.i!ed north and west by lot.. *-trme n of William Mcintosh; east I hv I v'i'cton streetV south by lot for-: ' (,r S. Li chimin. Levied upon, .|,Vtn b.- sold as the property of the; Y--a'.f . f Lilian Sutton for 1929 and ' \V. I). WHITAKER, Chief of Police City of Camden, S. C. NOTICE OF ASSIGNMENT OF HOMESTEAD State of South Carolina County of Kershaw Ex Parte: Charles L. McKinnon Notice is hereby given to all creditors of Charles L. McKinnon, and to all other* whom it may concern, that Charle* L. McKinnon has duly filed his petition with me as Master for Kershaw county, on behalf of himself to have a homestead set off to him in real estate and personal property, which real estate and personal property are si tuated in the co?unty and State aforesaid, and that in pursuance of said petition I will, at 10 o'clock a. mM on the 10th day of July, lt'33, at a y office in the city of Camden, County and State aforesaid, or, a> soon thereafter as may be, pro-1 ceed to ?p;>oint appraisers-to set off j ?aid hoau-tead as provided by law. All person.* interested are notified to be pre.-ir.t at said time and place. \V. L. DePASS, JR., Ma.-'er for Kershaw Coupi-^ Canider.. v. C., June 9, 1032L/^^ NOTH 10 OF ASSIGNMENT OF HOMESTEAD Statu of South Carolina 1 unty of Kershaw Kx Piiiti : Amanda B. McKinnon Notice is hereby given to all creditors of Amanda B. McKinnon, and to ail othoi* whom it may concern, that. A mar. < In B. McKinnon has duly filed her petition with me as Master for Kershaw County, on behalf of herself to have a homestead set off to her in real estate and personal property, which real estate and personal property are situated in the County and State aforesaid, and that in pursuance of said petition I will, at 10 o'clock a. m., on the 10th day of July, 193;;, at my office in the City of Camden, c-ounty and State aforesaid, or a< soon thereafter as may be, proceed to appoint appraisers to set off said homestead as provided \>y law. All persons interested are notified to be pro er.t at said time and place. W. L. DePASS, JR., * 1 aster for Kershaw County C., June 9, 1933 NoilCE OF ASSIGNMENT OF HOMESTEAD x'.v ' South Carolina 1 -ur.ty of Kershaw i'artV: G. B. McKinnon .hereby given to all cred- i ' IV McKinnon, and to all :r. ; may concern, that G. i '. has duly tile<l his peine as Master for Ker- . on behalf of himself to : envy toad set off to him :n and personal property, ii-al estate and personal proper:, mtoated in the County and >'z\- a foresaid, and that in pursuf >aid petition I will, at 10 a, m., on the lffth day of July, r:at my office in the City of am :, n. County and State aforesaid, 'r h~ ?o>n thereafter as may be, proCfx*d to appoint appraisers to set off ^ d homestead as provided by law. persons interested are notified to ,K- present at said time and place. W. L. DePASS, JR., Master for Kershaw County ' amden. S. C., June 9, 1933 tax notice .".'.re is hereby given that June will be the last day for paying: '' '- taxes. After that date all taxes j unpaid will go into execution with f'. P?r cent penalty and other petnal >** as prescribed by law. S. W. HOGUE, Treasurer Kershaw County. May 3, 1933. Unique Editor Dies In Georgia Dahlonegu, Ga,. June 14?William Benjamin Townsend, "editor and pro", who made n gem of hU Dahlonegu Nuggett because he wrote what he thought, was buried today in the hills he would not forsake even when fame rested on his weary old shoulders. He was an old-fashioned editor, who prof or red truth to grammar. The Nugget, his little four-paged I newspaper, was published weekly back here in the Blue Ridge mountains, where there are no railroads and where a man can spill tobacco on his shirt front and still bo a gentleman. Townsend was the sago of the hills and was quoted wherever men appreciated wit and philosophy, lie was offered fancy prices to write for magazines but he was always too busy. He had not been away from the hills in 40 years. The last edition of The Nugget carried this story at, the end of the last column: "The editor is sick." And yesterday he felt a mite weak us he sat before his ancient type cases and his 7*5-year-old hand press. Ho closed his eyes to rest. They found him there with a type stick in one hand and his head bowed. The editor was dead. Georgia mourned his death today. There are no more like him. He never wrote a story. He simply set in type by hand what he thought and then published his Nugget on the old press. His paper was full of typographical errors but it did not .worry the editor and pro. He never read it ?in fact, he never pulled a proof. "Folks know what I'm talking about," he said. His paper circulated throughout the United States and copies were always at a premium. lie was 78 and had been in the hills 70 years. , He was a printer's devil when the government had a mint hero. He got printer's ink on his fingers as a boy and it stayed there until he died. New York subscribers were delighted with items in The Nugget like this: "There will be singing at Cane Creek next Sunday by Ice Carter in the old song books." The South, which is a way of life, understood his brief: "Blackberries will soon be in, which will enable the editor to- live pretty cheap for awhile longer." He used an old printer's stone and slept in his shop. 'Some of his comments were extremely caustic. He called a spade a spade. If folks did not like his paper, they did not have to read it. He would not go to church and when evangelists and pastors said things: he did not like, The Nugget took | them up. i Two ministers, however, stood near 1 his body today and called him a great man. Then they took him over the hills and left him in the shadow of the Blue Ridge. There is a movement on among the citizenship of Long Island to form another state to become a part of the Union of states and to be the 49th. The movement had its inception out of the fact that New York city in an endeavor to raise more revenue has proposed additional license taxes on automobiles equal to the state license tax, and bridge tolls. The senate on Tuesday night passed the administration's $3,012,500,000 emergency appropriation 'bill and sent it to the house for consideration of changes made in the measure. The bill carries money for the administration's public works program, unemployment service, farm credit administration and to set up federal savings and loan associations and to insure bank deposits. The Cotton Spiners Federation of Japan has unanimously approved a boycott against Indian raw cotton. The action is in retaliation against a j recent 50 per cent, increase levied by . India against non-British cloths. As a result of the boycott against India cotton American coton will replace the Indian staple, which heretofore' has been mostly used by Jfcpan. "Eugene Meyer, former governor of the Federal reserve board, was the purchaser of the Washington Post, which was sold at auction last voek f6r $825,000. Meyer ,a Republican, and a very close friend of former President Hoover, has long been prominent in national financial affairs. This is his first venture in the publishing field. FINAL DISCHARGE Notice is hereby given that one month from this date, on the 10th day of July, 1933, at 11 o'clock a. m.. I will make to the Probate -Court of Kershaw County my final return as Administrator of the estate of Annie M. Catoe, deceased, and on the same date I will apply to the said Court for a'final discharge as said Administrator. G. <S. CATOE, Administrator Camden, S. C., June 9, 1933. Nobody's Business ! f, * Written for The Chronicle by Geo MoGoe, Copyright, li>28. MIKK "8KKK8 A GOVERNMENT JOB mr. jhon Wallace, seeker-terry of agger-culture, Washington, d. C. deer nu\ seeker-terry: i not is by the papers that you will put an exercise tax on wheat about julio 1st, and i am riting you to apoint me to look after the crops of same around Hat rock, i will collect yore o\eroiso taxes and turn same into you once a month, less my sullery which i rather take out than have you send to me as i will, need monney all along, i have had a great deal of exponents with the publick in collecting monney and enforcing the law and was kurriner of our county for 4 year when i got beat on a wet ticket, overboddy knows me and they will be a-skeored to hide anny wheat out as they know i am verry smart and will ketch pp with them and put them in jail, i will allso handle the cotton exercise taxes when you get reddy to hepp the cotton farmer who is broke allso. you will hafter furnish me a way to get about besides walking as i am stove up in my left leg with roomy-tism. a new car can be bought for less than i can a-ford to walk, so be on the lookout f<jj^a?j good seconthand one like my son s strip-down, his name is budd Clark and he will go with me on my work as i can not drive a car. he was in the war but got his bonnus of 12$ cut off in may ami that throws him back on my hands. plese ancer the following questions if you decide to give me the job: l..will i be a-lowed to tote a pistol? , 2..must i take cussing or knock him down ? 3..will i hafter measure the wheat or take his word for it? 4..will oats have an exercise tax allso ? 5..or is it only on wheat? 6..will you take part of the wheat in pay? 7..who started this bill or law nohow? 8..how will it hepp the farmer n he has to pay the tax? 9.. will you hire me on eommish . lOT. if so, i will take haff what ,i collect. 11.. must i except checks or cash or monney orders? 12..when will you send me my eommish to go to work? 13. .could you spare 10$ in cash by male at once on sallery? plese rite or foam rpe what to expect on reseat of this letter. yores trulie, mike Clark, rfd. tax collector. THIS PROGRAM COMES TO ^ Ol THRU THE COURTESY OF A TYPEWRITER ..The greatest thing in the world today is toothpaste. Wore it not for toothpaste, the radio would be practically worthless. Ten thousand tunes and five thousand speeches about toothpaste come to us every week over the radio. Nothing could fill this gap were toothpaste forgot. ..I was 24 years old before I ever used a toothbrush for any purpose other than that of blacking the edges of my shoe soles j that s what I pai my dime for the brush for. I began brushing my teeth when I was about 30, but used soap, soda or salt for film-removing purposes...every Sunday morning. ..Us school children made toothbrushes out of dog-wood sticks. We'd chew the little green sticks till the ends became brush-like and then we would rub our teeth, but we di? . so then because our gums itched, or to get blackberry stains off, or mebbjam stain* so's ma wouldn't kno v who =tolo her jam out of the cuphoard. ..Now I wish you'd lo??k at my bathroom! Each pa and each ma ar. 1 each child has his or her own toothbrush and tooth-paste and a place to i<eop each one of them. I Used th one that is radioed about at 7 o'clock P. M., daylight savings time; my wife's toothpaste comes on at 9:30 P. M. The children use pastes that are sung about at 6 P. M-, 7:li5 P. M., 8:15 P. M., and 8:45 P. M. ..There are only 15,000 different kinds of toothpaste on the market, and every single one of them s guaranteed to be the best. Magazines could not exist either were it not for toothpaste. They wouldn't have nothing to advertise except razor blades... .were it not for tr.e stuff that keeps one's teeth glistening -in the sun. ..I've often wondered what a tube of toothpaste actually costs the man ufacturer: I'm talking about the soap ami emery dust (if any) that you rub 011 your teeth. 1 am sure it costs them over 1 cent, that is, the best ones....and all of them are like that, but 1 realize that the radio and the magazine advertising, plus freight, the tube itself, and the manufacturer's profit (?) and the retailer's profit, with several different kinds of taxes added, have got to be considered. o ..Well, another toothpaste program j is starting. I like the singing end I the music all right, and some day ! . .. .when I get 50 cents ahead. .. . | I'm going to pay that much for a ; tube of this fellow^ stuff and see if it is really any bettor than bi-car1 bonate of soda spread on a brush j freshly dipped in flowing aqua. 1 I am thankful for toothpaste for the entertuinment and amusement it in-' j directly affords as well as for the' toothpaste itself.... which 1 .would use. .. .if I had any teeth, i , Widow of General Dead Washing-ton, June 18.?(Mrs. Nellie Bernard Leo, 80, widow 'of fhtzhugh Lee, Confederate general and once governor of Virginia, died today at the homo of a daughter in Alexandria. General Lee was governor of Virginia from 188G to 1890 and was consul general at Havana in 1893, being made military governor there at theQlose of the Spanish^American War. He died in 190/VvThe steamship Bremen on Wodnesday-icomploted u record trip across the Atlantic from Brooklyn to Cherbourg, France, making the passage in 1 days 17 hours -13 minutes. Andrew Den son, well known Sa*. annah, Ga., negro, is dead, aget* 11KH years. The government of Lativia has put the embargo against all Germanmade goods in retaliation for a German embargo against Lmtivian butter. Two cortvicts were seriously shot and another shot in the leg when | they attempted to escape from the prison farm at Caledonia, N. C., Wednesday. The Charlotte Ketuil Grocers association is planning to test the sales tax law recently passed by the legislature of that state in the courts as | to its legality. Standing Still? Do you remeiriber the story of the young lady who went into- a wellknown establishment and said to the "aisle director:" "Do you keep stationery ?" "No, miss," replied tho young man, "if 1 did, I'd lose my job!" It's a good story-?because it is funny. It is a 'bettor story because it makes you think. I How about yourself? Are you "stationary"?or are you on the job, and making things hum, even if it is a warm day? The United Stales forestry service announced this wctvk the purchase of -i acres of land to be added to the forest reserves of tho country. The purchase price averaged $1.76 per acre. & ^i * 4 ' \ Teachers' Notes Accepted In order to help in every way possible the floating: of the notes given teachers, the City of Camden will accept at face value these notes in payment of all taxes , due through 1932, including 1932 paving assessments and licenses. However, the City is not in a position to pay in cash, in change where th^ note exceeds the amount of taxes, but several persons may pool the amounts they owe. The acceptance of these notes is not limited itr original holders but will be accepted from merchants or others who have taken them in trade. This privilege is subject to withdrawal at any time, so prompt action should be taken. R. M. KENNEDY, | MAYOR CITY OF CAMDEN NEED TIRES? Get in on these PRICES while they last! SAFETY you can SEE . Look at this tread, you can see it has big, husky, suregripping, quick-stopping blocks of rubber in the center of the tread. That's where you want them tor safety, because that's where the tire contacts the road. Blow-out Protection in every PLY! Every ply In every Goodyear Tire is built with patented Super twist?the ply ma-terlal that stands up longer under the heat ?nd strains of driving, because it is built to stretch and come-back long after ordinary cord breaks down. All you need to do is look at these prices to know they're low . . . And take a good look while you're at it?because you may never see such price* again! .. . But the biggest news is?these prices buy GOOD YEARS. The best tires Goodyear ever built. Higher in quality?better in mileage?greater in safety than any tires you ever bought before, regardless of price ... Better hurry and get all the tires you need for a whole summer's driving?because anyone who watches newspapers knows that prices are headed up . . . Don't miss this opportunity to save money on the world's first-choice tires! GOOU/Y?AR Ail-Weather 4.40-21 $ 6.40 4.50-21 $ 7.10 4.75-19 $ 7.60 5.00-19 $ 8.15 5.25-18 $ 9.15 5.50-19 $10.45 6.00-19 $11.85 6.50-19 $14.60 _ Carolina Motor Company Open Day and Night \