I /ivrm niA _ ? f -r? - 1 Ki " mped Man's Body Is Found 1!;., aid, Calif., Nov. 20. A body, dt- Uu 1 by officer* to be that of |lr .y Hart, kidnaped and slain -ye :> I son of a prominent- and weal!.- v. San Jose merchant was found Ho: ti " in San I'lanvCeo Bay n*iii h* r -?day hy duck hunters. p. body was baifty decomposed, olT .-i a id, and it was imposs'ibb.. to' 1 ntr . ny i-hnt .li-at ion from hU f?\ixtu The elothinft, hbwevi r. Uoputy Si . Q Ov.br [IttU de-dared, talked ex with that worn by the youth \\h iii- wa kidbaped a 1 h.e - i N'ovbmber 0. The dttek hunUo-Kr Leonard 1.. -Uaiva ,an ,i .void Stephens, 'both- ot lied* wood i ity, wi re rowing a skill' on the hay this morning when they sighfetl an object floating about a half mile south of the San Mateo-Ilayward bridge. Crossing the bay and rowing closer, they found the body and towed , ^o" v it ashore. Two men, Thomas Harold Thurmond and Jack Holmes, are held in ; San Jose, charged with kidnaping and slaying tho youth. In confessions made public by officers they declared they took Hart in his. motor car^out ot San Jose, transferred him to another car and drove onto the long bridge. There, the confessions said. Hart was struck on tho head and stunned, his arms were wrapped to his body with wire and he was thrown into the bpy. Charles O'Brien, chum of young Hait, brought here by Sheriff William J. Em'ig, of San Jose, positively ident lied a gold collar clasp as having belonged to the kidnaped youth. "These gray trousers also are with- i out' doubt part of the now" doublebriasUwi suit which Brooke bought just a few days before he was taken,' young O'Brien declared. "lie was 1 wearing it that day because he was 1 going to have his picture taken." O'Brien, who at one period of the 1 negot at ions for $-10,000 ransom had been named as a go-between by the elder Hart, could not identify a pearl handled knife found in the clothing nor a white shirt with fine maroon i stripes. The shirt, a new product of a na.ionally known manufacturer, i however, was sold by the Hart store. Won't Furnish Troops Sacramento, Calif., Nov. 20.? Asked today if he would furnish national guardsmen to protect the two confessed -slayers of Brooke HaH in San .Jose, (Jovemor Holph. Jr., replied : "What! Call out the trops to protect those two guys? Aftev a brief pause lie added: "That's the. sheriff's job." Special precautions were taken at the San .Jose jail, where Thomas 11. Thurmond and Jack Holmes, who cor.IVs -ml to kidnaping and killing the yolllh, ;r c held. A crowd gathered in the .vicinity today when news came that duel; hunter*, had foiri 1 Hart's body in San Francisco Bay. The federal government and the state of Illinois have so far spent approximately $100,000 in the futile attempt to cxtra-lito Samuel ln,sull, fugitive Chicago traction magnate, from Ureece. Ciovernor Ritchie, of Maryland, has recommended to the legislature that it legalize "taverns"-?places where a man might buy his whiskey across a bar, stand up and drink it. aJ-'lui... i ' ?w;t'y ' Slabs Wife, Then Commits Suicide Charlotte, nT'TCnov. *? As she was busy preparing Sunday dinner in her bungalow home hare, Mis. Annie ISviJtlshHW Privet to, i?vUy IbVycuv-old lilm inspector for a motion picture oxcliungo ho'itsc, was stubbed to (If it 1 by her hu*bund, Kdward F. PriveUw. i > Privotte then oohunitL-d suity.de. Ti i'l Iifrn'i injuries during tin \Vorld win' which alFociC.ti hiniimb tola lives said. A former uu mobile mechanic, ho had not worscd i'i?r so\ oral yours. No olio but the.couple, was in the house at the time of the slaying. Some three hours later Flhs P. Pnv tale, father, ol the ,.u: YJlliralb. liable to get admittance at the tiont door, crawled through a bedroom window. f Hi* found the body of bis .son on the bedroom floor, ft pistol between his outstretched legs. In the kitchen lay Mrs, Privet te in a big pool of blood, beside a butcher knife. Pork chops on the stove were byrncd to a crisp. vi, "A (dear case of' murder and suicide," said Coroner Frank P. ^ov*3No inquest will be held. ' ^ The couple had no children. Friends said the husband appeared abnormal and seldom left the home, lie suffered severe injuries to his head, relatives said, when he fell from a camp building during the World war period anil never fully recovered. Making (Lxxl at Clemson Clemson College, S. C*. Nov. 28. Something of an outstanding scholastic* record has been made at Clemson College by Francis C. Truesdalc, a graduate in the JiWO class from Kershaw high school and now a senior at our state agricultural college where he will graduate in Agricultural Chemistry next dune. Young Truesla.lt* bad the distinction of receiving the reward for having made one of the two highest scholastic records in. the agricultural freshman class, a recognition given him by the Alpha Zeta. a national honorary fraternity which promotes scholarship among men majoring in agricultural course*. This high record has been kept and he now ranks among the highest in the senior class. ^ F.vea though excellence in scholarship has been his deepest concern. Young Truesdale has identified himself with other activities which have afforded him recognition. He is a member of the Tiger Brotherhood, an honor organization that promotes a finer school spirit and a stronger character anTong Clemson students, lit* has the military rank of a hirst Lieutenant, an honor given because ?f the efficiency shown during his Sophomore mi .Junior years when he solved as Corporal and Sergeant, repott ively. Young Truesdale is also a ntotnlu r of the Senior Platoon, a prizeswinning military organization which took oif highest honors at the Fourth Corps Ana Kneampmeni la>t summer. THIS CIKCl'S IS Ol'T OF I)ATK Why Continue to I'se the Horse and Buggy Method in Campaigns? The Spartanburg Journal says the eounty-to-coi^*f>Kmpa.ign is a hang o\ er from ?lfcymer: generation, when there were few if any motor cars, no radio broadcasting stations and precious few highways, none of a modem type, yet as the Columbia Record predicts, "next year will see the same old countv-to-eounty political ciicu* in operation." . That exchange cites an in?lance ot the absolute indifference in which . n.t g ..it .'. > * : 1 t -e > .ate s.'e*u >. ,:.g ::a statu- quo porta n.ug to ; any .-hapc. l .^r.n;i.ri the ].r..O?lV .I.e.. .hnuid.be improve.1 and ra i-a. nat g." made govern '.ng ' ,l -N a.ivo.acy of di.-turbi: g the prima-y h,.b> up. though, the hue and er;^ -ai-ed against it. ms '-no nncm* >o.nething >acn d and perfect. ^ The people are hearti.y tet nothing i- done about ?~ Tt rang ?n*er abide- with tht p? .isten. y of an unconquerably he ad:,che or a throbbing, decayed mo.ar. JohnlTifockefeller, Sr . >avirg Tarry town. N Y., today for hi^win ter home in florida. Smith's Monetary Stand Condemned Detroit, Nov. 29.?Without immediately referring' to Alfred K. Smith by name, the Rev. Fr. Charles K. ('oughtin; pastor of the Shrine of the Little Flower said in a speech today that an ''outs tanding Catholic citizen" "has loaned-his illustrious name to a i-ause that is inconceivable." Father C-oughHn said in opening his addiess that he would "unfortunate:ly" have to he personal in his re'-; ma*ks. "The man who proclaimed the negative battle cry of 'Stop Hobs.excit' was the Democrat who was content to squint at the future with hi.-- face tLL' IK el iloNViiid the past." General News Notes In the federal relief work program. for this winter, workers will be paid 40 cents an hour for common labor and $1 an hour for skilled labor in the South, including South Carolina and its public works projects, and each man will work 30 hours a week, Washington says. Dig boy, whenever you begin to hoar church treasurers talking about their churches getting on their feet financially, right then you can put it down in black and white that "Prosperity has arrived."?Yorkville Enquirer, Luther Sherman, 65, was killed in Pender county, N. G., by a neighbor, F. L. McGuir, 45. It was the result of a long feud. Miss Doris Duke, daughter of the late James B. Duke, will on November 21 roach her 21st birthday, and will then come into her fortune, estimated^ approximately $50,000,000. The Rev. Dr. D. A. Howard, now pastor of the First Haptist church at(lairney, has arrived there with his family from Louisville, Ky., where he has held a pastorate for several years.,. (1. 1L Malum. 70, former mayor of Greenville, and prominent business man, died at his home in Greenville Friday after an illness of several weeks. Mr. Mahon was mayor of Greenville from 1005 to 1011. He was born in Ookesbury and in early life was in the mercantile business in Pe-lzer and Williamston.' For the past several years he was traveling representative for a textile concern. George White, farmer of Hamilton, Ala., plowed up two gold bars weighing 60 ounces and valued at $1,500. Mrs. Wiley Bishop, of Rocky Mount, N. O., was. seriously injured when she was hit by ati 'automobile as she chased her hat across a road. Public Works Administrator Ickes on Wednesday gave approval to 54 non-federal projects, involving expenditures of $ 12,30th230 in 27 states. Mrs. Green Newton, the first woman ever held in La Plata .county on a cattle rust-ling charge, is on trial at Durango. Col. Fifteen youth- arc reported to have been injured when a tornado hi-t a Civilian Conservation camp near Oxford, Ala., Tuesday night. Albert Comos. .*>1. has been arrested in Brooklyn, X. Y.. charged with writing a letter to Otto Kahn. New Yoik banker-, asking for $100,006. The man is supposed to be insane. An outbreak of malarial fever in Livingston parish, Louisiana, has resulted in .-;cven deaths during the past vcek. Much apprehension is being felt in the Holy Land because of the continued agitation of the Arabs against Jewish immigration into Palestine. Dauntless Dcrreen 10-L has set a world record for laying eggs at her home at Abassiz, B. C., laying 357 eggs in 365 days. Exports of automobiles for the i month of September totaled $8,610,000. as compared with $5,258,209 for the same month last year. Nine of the 18 children of Reuben Davis, negro, are starting to school at Fort Gaines, Ga., this year and entering the primary grade. They rango in age from 0 to 15 years. W. L. Jennings, president ->f> the South Carolina chapter of the Rainbow D:\';r that a.... been t'i'ei in the t .n*v jad. - found nearly ha.f nf the b~ had twrrvvi tn wn tor. A nr..i < u-vr. ings. 2>. a.icago j woman, wn-i a ear\ ing set at a neigh1 Igh hr?ot be interfered with by the NRA. The cabinet of Premier Albert Sarraut, of France, was defeated in a vote of confidence Friday night by 321 to 247, after just four weeks of life., the third cabinet to .fall in succession in attempting to save the imperiled French franc. Ambassador Welles, who has been in Cuba for sometime past and especially since the turmoil in governmental affairs the past several months, will be replaced shortly by Jefferson Caffery, now serving as assistant secretary of state. Mark H. Shank, 41, Akron. Ohio, lawyer, went on trial Monday at Benton. Ark., on a charge of murdering four persons and attempting to kill a fifth, till of the vic^ms being k.Jleil by p Shark some months ago admitted his guilt. l-'-ife ?!tiring the ?.;gn wind of Sunday n ,i ??w r aiioiit dUO acres at l a :r.p .la .? r !'?<) R. F. C. ,t at concrete roads , tttrouv:; ' amp. I Fai m? r I'a.i! Sm.th. of Ocor.ee Loan:y. trd - war ra.-ed .*> '??? bushels of <> r, i,it li.v acres <>f land, at a cost of la t and wrist. A policeman {Tur.-ued them in the store truck and caught them near Ridgev illc, on a byroad. Both confessed and $185 of the loot was found on Cox. Passenger buses operating in the southeast have announced minimum passenger rates of one and a third cents a mile, to meet the rates announced by the railroads of one and a half cents a mile. A bitter rate war is in prospect. ?Mrs. Mattie Worley, of Charlotte, N. G\, was bothered with bedbugs. She tried all known remedies and then set the mattress on fire, the mattress being under the house. The fire was put out and she was put in jail. In the November election of next * year Kansas will vote on the question of repeal of its 53-year-old ban on the sale of liquor in that state. Governor Landon opposes repeal, but is not opposed to a referendum. A six-car aluminum stream-line "tube" train is to be built for the Union Pacific by . the Pullman company for trang-continentaT service. 666 Liquid, Tablets, Salve, Nose Drops Checks Malaria in 3 days, Colds firs day, Headaches or Neuralgia in 3( minutes. FINE LAXATIVE AND TONI( Most Speedy Remedies Known ? KERSHAW f/ODGE No. 1 */7\V A' F* M* . Regular communication o this lodge Is held on thi ? v first Tuesday ittfeach montj At 8 p.m. Visiting Brethren are wel corned. N. R. GOODALE, JR. J. W. WILSON, Worshipful Mast? Secretary. 1-14-27-t SUNDAY DINNER SUGGESTIONS Ily ANN FACIE Although thanksgiving is not untii the thirtieth. It Is not too early to be making n market list of the foods yon will need fur the holiday dinner A turkey of the size desired sfioM ,1 of ordered enrlv Thev are going t> he \ low priced an 1 within th>- re i, h el almost everv budget. : |?. ' atue viTmv 111r?;. j?s* an.') } o- v\ ... he plentiful and cheap. < ' * . a r.- ea j.r 1 hn;?er >r j-r i* - } .f ! i uri" ' s I' -c i 1 irs, r i . ,;. i i ; . \ nits w ,. iV. , . . ,r i".' i-rii e i \ .i . I ?he . 1 or t i I r ; .1 ; . J ; I r. : | and ; tn,?' t' he a v i >' at n *e ; r. C toned tor |oi : ph n pies , :>< f si' ii''i>: v and It her a i \ n l'nd:J ited ea | "': a! d milk 1 hei|>?- ?> make r.eh and creamy The Quaker M i.d suggests the fid-, losing menus Low Cost Dinner Pan hro-ied Hmin ' Stenk Dak -d I'e'it Dread and 1' r* i*t Apple Petty Tea or Coffee Milk Medium Cost Dinner Ross1 .a! Mashed Sueet Potatoes Puttered C.iu :flower Cee-ry an 1 Orange Salad Prea ! and Putter Deep \ Ihe Hani Sauee Cof.e Milk * Thanksgiving Dinner Oyster Ch ektail O ves 'elery Nuts Roe.-- Stuffed Turkey Gtblet Gravy M i-bed Potatoes Boiled Oniona Cranberry Sauce Cider Rolls and Butter Pumpkm Pie Mince Pie Vruiu Mixed Nula Coffee NECESSITY IS THE MOTHER OF INVENTION" F.very farmer knows he must keep his produce dry on the way to market. But a good canvas cover costs money and Mr. J. T. Koonce of Kinslon. N. C.. has fmind a way to save this expense. Me uses the moisture-proof bags in which Arcadian Nitrate of Soda is packed to make a sturdy, protective 'canvas" as shown, in the above picture. , He says: "In addition to getting better crops from. Arcadi?n Nitrate of Sbda, by using the bags, 1 get a good, serviceable truck cover which .costs me nothing." STRONGER THAN EVER IN POPULAR SUPPORT Courlevy Ufuvayu Umly 1'imca BUY NOT, EAT NOT ' By BOOTH TARKINGTON Sometin" ? have to go against our training or go broke. Sometimes what \ .;ave always believed to be u rule of virtuous conduct proves fatal in practice. For instance, we have grown up in the belief, fostered by our parents and teachers and enforced by our government, that we have no right to take or use the property of another person without his consent, but if the property in question happens to be a blackjack that the other person is about to bring down on my head I shall have a better chance of surviving if I perceive, in time, the unwisdom of clinging unalterably to old convictions. That is, th'" * are times of emergency when clinging to an old conviction v.il1 ruinous. Let us consider the present time-in its relation to our old c viction in favor of thrift. People of pioneer stock are often spoken of as the "backbone of the country," and probably they are. Pioneers are thrifty or they don't survive. If the wood pile is used too freely in the autumn it may not last through the winter, and the Midland child learned thrift at its grandmother's knee. Moreover, we've been taught for several generations that it isn't what a man earns that counts and takes care of him in his old age; it's what he saves. We've always believed that thrift is a virtue, that spending is risky and that squandering is suicidal. o demand thrift from <>ur government, vote against political candidates pro\en unthrifty, and we investigate, and often relegate to private lite, ofh< ials shown to be carelessly lavish with public funds. The value ' unsettle it; but here is the I niled States government coming I" us now, a-king lis to buy, buy. buy, advi-ing us to spend our money rath T than to save it. and generally appearing to set it-e!f strong I v in opp"-it: 01 to that old principle hi thriftine-s in which wc vvere trained, i h-TC seems to !,<* a r -ntradiction somewhere. Moreover, the government ask- us to spend at a time when we have the least to spare, at a time when the Federal government il-e!'. as v< d as our State, county and city governments, are taking heavily fro in us in taxes and in that way lessening our power to spend. Worse our government, through the N.R.A., asks us to spend at a moment of great financial uncertainty in our lives, at a moment when we d vn t know whether we re emerging fr-un the depression or going deeper into it, and when wc aren t sure whether we're less afraid of the future than vn were a year ago, or more so. The curious thing about the government s exhortation to us to spend is that the exhorters know how we feel nnd how we're situated; they know our old conviction in favor of thrifiiness and thev agree with that conviction?and yet these same exhorters ask us to buy, buy, buy! that's the answer? Money is a means of trade. If you had a cord of wood and no food, and your neighbor had a cellar full of potatoes nnd no fuel, and if neither of you were willing to trade, he'd have ra*f potatoes to eat but he'd free/e to drith, and you'd have heat enough perhaps, hut you'd starve to death. Thrift is indeed a virtue;- but Uus is a time of emergency during wlih !i it's necessary to buy goods sq, that somebody'11 have money enough to pay us for what we fir'odure. If it ? hard for us to get rich by wash in or one another's shirts, it s crr' tainly impossible for us to make a liv'rvg by washing our own. ft seemi wiser to live by spending than to perish by saving.