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fp REAL ESTATE or NTS COLLECTED. FARM AND CITY PROPERTY REP"* HUNTING PRESERVES Raoairia* aad Care-Taking of Property I ALL FORMS OF INSURANCE I DeKALB INSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE CO. I Cfckme BuiMinf ? Telephoo* 7 ^South Carolina Newa H,ceivt.? ot the People's Stste r ,,f South Carolina announee I mailed out approximately S0,? I 3?,l23? totalUnif 2,000,000 to deI ^Kora in the banks ?4 units. The I ^ receivers said they had been I ItSel a loan from the Reconstruc t f nance corporation hV^jbssn I ,!r.nd within an hour 0?>?I ?5Of the notipe, ??,$** we" I did as a dividend of 20 iper cent I s unsecured depositors, after paying I #,000,000 to secured creditors for I "Mrs HonnirKate Fowler, 82, a naI tive of Darlington county, was shot I ?} instantly killed in Florence by I Z husband, E. J. Fowler, at their I 51e near the airport. The woipan I * killed with a pistol, following I Imestic troubles. Fowler, it is reI norted had threatened the life of his I ^ only a few minutes before Flor-! I once officers arrived on the scene I lith a warrant for his arrest. He is I a native to Tabor, N. C? and is beI ing held in the Florence jail. I There is a widespread epidemic of I ,fantile paralysis in -Germany, with I several hSndred cases being treated I in B6rlin' i notice of stockholders |wwu meeting I State of South Carolina I County of Kershaw ?? I \otice is hereby given to the stockI hlers of The Hoffer Company, I South Carolina, thatPa meeting will I be held in the office of Henry SayI age Jr., Attorney, in Camden, South I Carolina, on Tuesday, October 9, 1934, at ten o'clock, A. M., for the purpose I of passing the necessary resolutions I for surrendering the corporate I charter of the suid Hoffer Company. I d. M. HOFFER, President. i "summons for relief I State of South Carolina I Countv of Kershaw I In The Court Of Common Pleas I George T. Little, Plaintiff, "V8" I Clarence A. Dunn and Lillie M. Dunn, I Defendants. (TO Till-: DEFENDANTS ABOVE NAMED: , . 0 I You are hereby summoned and reI quired to answer the complaint in I this action, of which a copy ??J>??" I with served upon you, and to serve a I copy of your answer to the said comI plaint on the subscriber at his office I at Camden, South Carolina, within I twenty days after the service hereof, I exclusive of the day of suchservice I and if you fail to answer the comI plaint within the tirte aforesaid, the I plaintiff in this action "will MW w I the Court for the relief demanded in I 'he COm"laiHENRY SAVAGE, JR., I Plaintiff's Attorney. I Dated at: I Camden, S, C. I August 30, 1934. I TO THE NON-RBSrDENT DEI FEND A X T, CLARENCE A, BUNN: 1 You will take notice, that the sum" mons in this action of which the*05.f~ going is a copy, together with tne -complaint were filed in the office or the Clerk of Court for Kershaw Countv on the thirtieth day of August 1934. ' __ HENRY SAVAGE, JR., Plaintiff's Attorney. Camden. S. C. . September 4, 1934. ?ti. summons for relief State of South Carolina County of Kershaw In the Court of Common Pleas The Enterprise Building and Loan Association of Camden, South Carolina, Plaintiff j v8. Ella Frazier, sometimes called Ella Frazer, and Doctor Frazier, sometimes called Doctor Frazer, Defendants. TO THE DEFENDANTS ABOVE NAMED: You are hereby summoned and required to answer the complaint in this action, of which a copy is herewith served upon, you, and to serve a copy of your answer to the said complaint on the subscriber at ljis office at Camden, South Carolina, within twenty days after the serfice hereof exclusive of the day of such service and d you fail to answer the complaint within, the time aforesaid, the plaintiff in this action will apply to lb? Court for the relief demanded in the complaint. HENRY SAVAGE, Jr? Plaintiff's Attorney; Dated at Camden, S. C. August 1, 1934. JO THE NON-RESIDENT DEFENDANT. DOCTOR FRAZIER, sometimes called DOCTOR FRAZER: You will take notice, that the summons in this action of which the foregoing is a copy, together with the complaint were xiled in the office ox th? Clerk of Court for Kershaw C?unty on the twentieth day of August, 19^4. HENRY SAVAGE, r Plaintiff Attorney. CundeB, 8. C. f ? . V 1 Avrut 20, ltti,'- 1 ? K ML ' "t ha'; k * '* ' ? _ ^11 ,H| n, I I. 1 Report Nudists Modest Folk Port Itoyali iSept. la.?Gilbert 1 arks, handsome, dark, twenty-eight years old and head nudist at the Cat Island Sylvan Sanctuary, answered the knock at the door of the "Big House," in the heart of what may be the only domain of the national uneovery act south of Washington, D.C. The reporter looked at his head, then shut his eyes and looked hurriedly at his feet. At either extremity he Was wearing Clark Gable moustache and a pair of sandals. "Hello," said Mr. Parks. "Come in." Somewhat encouraged, the reporter ran his eyes over Mr. Parks. He was clad in trousers. "Why the disguise?" asked the reporter. Mr. Parks laughed. "You thought you were going to see a lot of nudists flitting about through the trees?" "Well, don't you? Flit about through the trees, I mean." "Not always," said Mr. Parks. "There are mosquitoes and brambles and they make flitting about through the trees in the nude rather a tiring process. You should try it some time." "I will," the reporter said. ?."Some time." In the big living room of the big house, ten some time nudists were sitting around informally. All were dressed, at least partially. The reporter was introduced. It was embarrassing but not as embarrassing as it might have been. As Mr. Parks himself said later, "It's a mere matter of pigment that makes all the difference in the world." Someone had to start things going so the reporter said, "Ha, Ha, I suppose no nudes is good nudes." d'That," said a young man wearing a brown pair of bathing trunks and exhibiting a rather sunburnt and paunchy front, "is very funny.' It is a grade A pun." "It has been a grade A pun for years," said Mr. Parks. "I thought I was coming to a nudist colony," said the reporter. "This looks like a houseparty at Folly Beach." "You haven't seen any nudists in the nude altogether?" asked Parks. "I saw four in swimming when we urrived, but that's all." "You seo," said Mrs. Parks, as she adjusted a long silk dress already below her knees so as to cover her ankles, "we have rules. We don't let people come to dinner without clothes and we don't allow .them to come in here (the central club house and sitting room) without clothes. We swim, play games and take sun baths together. _ And we walk.-around with* out any clothes. But when strangers are on the island." She shrugged her shoulders. "We're not exhibitionists?" "Nakedness is not compulsory to members or guests," said Mrs. Parks. "However, persons not desiring this additional facility for health and recreation probably will- prefer holidays elsewhere." Twenty-five nudists now are encamped on the mile square island, four miles from Beaufort, a mile and a half from Port Royal, and within easy binocular distance from Paris Island. In small bungalows arranged in a row along the waterfront, supporters of the national uncovery administration reside. And they are not completely without modesty. On several of the houses, shades were in evidence. A large sign at the big house read: "Laundry will be done for 50 cents a week." According to Mr. Parks, "one woman remained here for three months and never knew it was a nudist colony. She went off by herself to take (her sun baths and at meal time people were dressed. When she ran into a naked" person, she thought that he was merely careless." But to return to the -Big House and the ten sometime nudists: Mr. Parks was speaking. He already had explained that the colony, started \p April, 1932, was the oldest privately-owned .(Sylvan Sanctuary for Nudists in America; tihat it was largely self-sustaining; that the nudists cultivated the land; that cows, pigs, hens, mules, goats and sheep were raised; that the group canned vegetables and fruit fot their own purposes and commercially; that it originally was started as a "back to the land government" but the original settlers, Germans, began to light among themselves about Hitler an# the Communists so that the venture : I .J f. -r--V? If r, -irnrf-:/-. - or.n?r+?K~rT ,' 'in ~i T wii i i proved unsuccessful. "In im," he said, "I was **u* dated with McFadden publications, making $12,000 a year. I knew Mrs Roosevelt, who was at the time writing for 'Babies Just Babies.' I lost money in the stock exchange. I thought 1 saw the trend and 1 believed in the back to the.land movement. So I wrote the Beaufort chamber of commerce a letter saying, Have you any sea islands for sale cheap? I want one about a , mile square.' They wrote back about Cat Island and here we are." The room was not modernistic. The curtains were of cretonne. Tasteful, small etchings were hung on the wall. The furniture was old and comfortable. A stark plaster of paris death mask, hung to the l^t of a large fireplace, lent the only modern touch to the Big House. An insurance man from St. Petersburg spoke up. "I come here for my vacations. I find I can get as much rest in two weeks here as I can in three months at a resort." This from a lady from Kansas City who was wearing a Mother Hubbard. "It's a wonderful place. I've gotten .rid of my repressions." This from a Chicago* lawyer, said to be prominent: "I don't see what all the shooting's about." This from a handsome young Philadelphia woman, the wife of a successful doctor: "iSocial sunbathing and sharing in zestful' outdoor life has become publicly recognized as a proper health measure." This from Mrs. Parks: "Not overstressing the physical, the cultural or the esthetic, we aim at a normal union of all these." This from Mr. Parks: "I guess I have the Robinson Crusoe complex," This from the sunburnt paunchy fellow: "I work in Beaufort. A bunch of the boys and myself come over here week-ends and fish. We don't take off our pants. It's great?the fishing I mean." - These from Mr. Parks: "We are entering a new dark age of artificiality. Only nudism can wipe out the repressions and despair of the maChine-mode of civilization. We are not fanatics or freaks. The average person's conception of a nudist is your dirty-minded high school studeftt who sneaks off to the beach and goes swimming with girls at night. That's nudism to him?forbidden fruit." At night, bridge, poker, checkers, reading and listening to the radio are Ilfcll II I II If -IU-OJU-.I Mill,' III Do You KnW Hilt There are 8,000,000 Ma&ons in the United States. .v Buttermilk has practically the .safne food value as skitu milk. There is no one antiseptic that, will kill all known kinds of germs. The practice of lending money to home owners for repairs and improvements (the purpose of the new Federal Housing Administration) was first started in 1884. Negroes in tire iSouth consider alligator tail one of the best foods. Seventeen of the 02 known chemical elements have not yet been found in the free state. American colleges and universities now have nearly 10,000 students enrolled from foreign lands. The whale shark is largest fish. Payjp this country V foreign service li anges from $2,600 to $10,000. America has diplomatic representatives in over 60 foreign countries. An acre of corn in tho silo will winter 50 per cent more cattle than the same acre fed as fodder. In every state marriages can be dissolved not only by divorce but by annulment. There are now'more than 2,000,009,000 (two billion) human beings on' the earth. About 72 per cent of all business officials open their own mail. Officers of the iGrace liner iSanta Rita, arriving at iBalboa, Central zone, witty fire in her hold, charged the blaze to be due to the incendiary work of Communists. on the entertainment program. Strip poker is seldom played because one hand would be the end of tho game. Rates ai-e from $0 per month?if you want to work-*?to $3 a day, if you don't. It was beginning to .get dark. There was a stiff row in prospect to return to Port Royal. The negroes who had manned the boat would be growing restless. The reporter, accompanied by ten of the Clad nudists, walked along the row of small cottages to the wharf. Several unclad nudists were on the street. A few could be seen resting on the bods in the cottages. They looked so cool and comfortable and unconcerned. The reporter felt as though he had come to a hard times party in morning clothes. "Come hack and spend a weekend," said Mr. Parks. "Bring your friends." And the reporter said, "I'd like to." And he really meant it. it'.' -lliisj il1 m. wm Household Uinta When boiling old potatoes, if you will add a teaspoonful of vinegar to the water, you will find that the potatoes will not turn black. Did you know that if yop wash brick tilwf with vinegar they will turn out like new? When clothes have had too' much bluing put in them when they are being washed, you can remove the bluing by giving them another bath in clear water to which has been added a bit of vinegar. A teaspoonful of vinegar added to the water in which corn beef is cooking will make the meat much more tender. Rubbed over raw meat, vinegar makes it tender. Used with salt, vinegar will remove the ink stains from your fingers. ? Vinegar will also serve as a flno cTeancr for pots and pans which have acquired an ddor from the cooking of fish or cabbage, etc. Half a teaspoonful of vinegar added to poaching eggs -will make them hold together. It Vvlll have the same effect on fish, / Cut flowers will keep longer when a pinch of salt is added to the water. To avoid a ring after cleaning with gasoline, rub spots on washable goods with strong solution of salt before applying gasoline, Gasoline odors (Win easily be removed from hands by rubbing them with a little moistened salt. . , Remove stains and discoloration from china and earthenware by rubbing stains with salt moistened with a little water. Half a cup of salt to the water in which curtains are being soaked will loosen the dirt more rapidly. To kill weeds in driveways and gut-, ters, wet the ground and sprinkle with a generous quantity of salt. If you have to stand on your feet all day long, a nickel powder puff t? , > - -v* gz-uT. ?; ?*?." V.-Knew All The Answers. "What is the opposite of sorrow?" asked the teacher, "Joy," answered the lad, "And the opposite of misery?" pursued the teacher. "Happiness," said the pupil. "And what is the opposite of woe?" was the next question. "Giddapl" was the quick response. 4 ' " ? s ' 1" vV.v."^ The iinai,count of the dead and missing because of the disaster to the Morro Castle off the Jersey coast last Saturday morning, places the number at 133. The number of ibodies recovered was 110; identified, 01; partly identified, 2; unidentified, 23; unaccounted for 17?total 138. Survivors, 237; crew, 187?-total 657. placed in the heel of your shoe will have you practically walking on air,. Lemon juice will brighten aluminum. Kub it on with a cloth and wash afterwards in warm water, Tin ware wjll not rust if it is rubbed with lard and placed in a hot oven for an hour when it is new. Place a thick turkish towel in the bottom of the dish pan when washing fine china. It will keep the china from chipping and breaking. If y.qu will add a pinch of salt0t? the water in which you are washing the apples about to be peeled, you* will find that they do not turn bro^n as quickly as they usually do., Chopped sour apples added to beef will improve the flavor. If you will drop your tomatoes in a pan of boiling water for just a moment, then take them out and let them cool, then put them in your ico box until you need them, they will e. keep hotter. iSave all your dry celery tops, put them in a jar, they will make seasoning for soup wheft there isn't any celery in the house. .WW"11 ,WWWHWWWMWWWWWWWeWiaaee*^ NOTICE I A (wo per cent discount will be "allowed on 1934 taxes paid during the month of September, only, J. C. BOYKIN, t- ' ? 9 i City Clerk and Treasurer * ' for the City of Camden, S. C. J . , I ! . ^ C. ! ... GET IN w - M^i Bn -:o /^H ' H n wql?b, K/I B Get behind the wheel of the new Oldsmobile Six! A touch of the starter and the engine springs to life. Then watch this handsome car step! Pick-up from 5 to 60 miles per hour in 27^ seconds. 77 actual ?not speedometer?-miles per hour. Positive braking?yet smooth. Oldsmobile's brakes are Soper-Hydraulic?always equalized ? selfenergizing, momentum of car increases stopping power?they bring you from 40 miles an hour to a dead stop in 2^ seconds! KneeAction wheels?the most comfortable car you ever rode in. CenterControl steering?the easiest steering car you ever drove. Ride Stabilizer?no sidesway on curves?no roll at high speed. All-Silept Syncro-Mesh Transmission, no clashing or grinding of gears. Economical ?17 miles to the gallon at "fifty." Get in and go?and see! Sixes $650 and up, Eights $885 used up, list prices at Lansing, subject to change without notice. Spare tire with lock, metal tire cover, bumpers front ami rear, ami rear spring covert built in all cart at extra fost. MORE EXTRA VALUE THAR YOI RET IN ART OTHER LOW-PRICE CAR! Super-Hydraulic Brekw Knee-Action Wheels CMiter Cotitrot Steering Mdt StabKbeer All-Silent TrammlMkn Fisher Safety Bodies wtth No Draft Ventilation 17 miles to the Gallon at 'W A GENERAL MOTORS VALUE / OLPSMOBILE s650 ? .' ? -- ? &y' . ... y WW ' ' "i DeKalb Oldsmobile Company u- i} y*. * ' yyj* ' i * * % t~ j { 3-1 71 t$ i :> < '.- ' i N, ' ./Mtisi . Jk.-', "ft, W'j < '. *?t~ ? f. < V^l DeKalb and Lyttleton Sts.. ' Camden, S. C. <fO oat iQitulismnl. ' >{ :'J?n:*e t . * -;T %4 V>"3v .'*" * . _rV * - . - : * Pffirjl