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r^EA^E^TrE 1 (WANTED Want tt i onee 3 ond horae farms. Must have good soil, buildings, water and reasonable pricea. 4 Want 4 and 6 room hop**H in good neighborhoods to rent. Want Invc-HtrnV-nt property. If yon have property that can be developed profitably see uh. FOR SALE We have several excellent farm* for Male. Keul opportunities for good farmers. Several line homes in best location. Also some small houses. Building lots in every section of City and suburbs. Several large tracts suitable for game preserves. | FOR RENT A number uf fine htilled homes to rent for Urn winter acajou. A few f> anil <? room houMcw. I SHANNON REALTY COMPANY I j Crocker Bldg. Phone 7 j j Annttirncemenl/ Of Corn-Hog Terms Clemson College, Nov. 10.?The corn-hog production control program announced toduy by the Agricultural Adjustment Administration providea for not more than 00 per cent in corn acreage and 00 per cent in hog number" and for unrestricted use of acres shit ed from corn. Details of the program were announced here today through Extension Service officials. The maximum corn acreage that may be planted under the 1035 eontract is 0b per cent of the average for the two yeara 1032 and 1033? that is the same base as was used in 1034, says the announcement. This muximum figure represents an increase of about one-eighth over the 1034 maximum and will permit the production of about 250 million bushels over the reduced requirements for livestock feeding, but this is regarded us desirable in view of the need for rebuilding feed reserves. Individuals can receive payments on reduction up to 30 per cent below base-period corn acreage. Only contract signers would be eligible for the contemplated corn loan program nex; fall, drawers who did not sign a contract this year will be eligible to sign for 1035. With some allowance for the additional current adjustments in hog numbers caused by the drought and in view of the practically unchanged condition of world trade since a year ago, the individual contract signer is being u?ked t*? hold the number of hogs produced for market from 1 (*35 litters to '.'t> per cent of the adjusted average number produced from 1932 and 1033 litters instead of 75 per cent a< provided in the 1031 contract. Fori complying with these provisions the j participating producer will receive a' hog adjustment payment of $15 per head on the number of hogs represented by the 10 per cent adjustment. For complying with the corn control provisions of the new contract the individual signer will derive the following benefits: a corn adjustment payment; unrestricted use of the land shifted from corn production; and eligibility to participate in any government corn loan program that may be available in the fall of 1035. The corn adjustment payment will b? ma<jc at fhe rate of 35 cents per bushel of yield estimated for the number of acres by which the corn land area is kept below the 10321033 average. When the 41 election precincts in York county, Pa., voted last week on the wet and dry issue, 3d of them voted dry. Baruch Horses To Winter In Columbia Due to the ever increasing number of newcomers to their quarters, it was announced yesterday morning thut 40 new stalls are to be added to the Buxton brother training quarters, located at the State Fair grounds, during the forthcoming week. The announcement followed a conference yesterday morning of Clarence Buxton, William IvykeB, secretary of the chamber of commerce, Mayor L. B. Owens and Paul V. Moore, secretary of the State Fair association. j. The new stables are necessary to properly house the 35 or more horses that are scheduled to arrive this wefck and next. Horses belonging to the string owned by Bernard M. (Barney) Baruch, the .Schwartz brothers, John T. Hertz, Marshall Fields, It. L. Gery, Mrs. Stewart Plunkey and others are now being prepared for transporting. With their arrival, the total number of horses at the stables will be approximately r.?o. With the decision of Mr. Baruch and the Schwartz brothers to bring their horses to Columbia, South Carolina definitely established her supremacy over other parts of lite country, long noted as favorable places for race horse training. In speaking of this last night, Clarence Buxton said, "The winters at Belmont training, stables have proven top severe and have noticeably affected the j horses' spring competition. Mr. Baruch and the Schwartz brothers, being the great sporsmen that they are, realize the value of coming to South i Carolina with her more favorable cli! mate. ! Horses quartered in South Carolina are, due to the early springs here, out on the track working and are primed and ready for competition when the horses up North are hardly finished with their preliminary workouts. Two barns are to be built, each containing 20 stalls. The 15 jumpers which were announced so"me time ago as coming to the Fair grounds stablos, have all arrived and are snug in their winter homes. "Doc" Crawford, renowned jumping trainer, will supervise the completion of the mile hurdle track and the installation of the jumps. Mack Garner, the jockey who was up when Cavalcade romped home first in the Kentucky derby last summer, and jockey No. 1 in Mrs. Isabel Dodge Sloan's stables, is niso at the stables wit I* Jockey Litzenberg and other famous riders, according to Mr. Buxj ton.?Columbia State. For Thanksgiving Dinner tSI^T* We Have Them All Clrirlcpnfi AT Squabs Very Reasonable Prices FRESH VEGETABLES Specials For Friday and Saturday PORK ROAST, per lb 15c POT ROAST BEEF, per lb 15c ! VEAL CHOPS, per lb 15c LAMB STEW, 3 lbs 25c ! HAMBURGER, 2 lbs 25c BEEF LIVER, 2 lbs ? 37c EMPIRE MARKET Telephone 26 ? .JUL 1*1 ??wwum i^y?T Canning of Vegetables Idea of an Englishman America prides herself on being the fender of the canning Industry. But It was an Englishman, Peter Intrant, who yeurs ago took out the find putj&M to preserve "animal, vegetable, and ' other perishable foods" by healing them in glass, pottery, tiu or any other metal, according to Tit-Hit* Magazine. The first cans were fashioned out of tlnplute, but instead of uiuklug them by machinery at the rate of thousands un hour, each one was laboriously assembled by hand, the craftsman using shears to cut out the body pieces, scissors to shape the top and bottom disks. He soldered the various parts together, and finally, when the fruit was Inserted, cupped Ids handiwork with the blow of a mullet. Through no fault of their wukers, many of those cuns leaked mid quickly rotted their contents. lhlngs looked black for the future of canning. Then in 18S5 an American firm Invented a large, clumsy plant for seaming the Joints automatically. This altered tho outlook entirely. Hut us the old method of filling through u small cap was retained, large fruit, especially, continued to suffer Irreparable bruises In being thrust Into the tin. Later came a double -seamed system of Joining, making for greater security and air tightness, to be followed by tho Introduction of a strong adhesive, a llqpid rubber compound, which gave security to hermetic sealing. City of London Has an Area of One Square Mil* What Is the area of London? No, don't trouble to answer 1 Whatever reply you make, nobody can say you are right, for no one knows the exact size of London, asserts a writer In the Montreal Herald. The County of London, which ? includes the London boroughs, has an area of 110.08 square miles. The London county council, however, Is effective over an area of 110.05 square miles. The London postal dletrlct covers 232 square miles. The j Metropolitan police are even more am- j bltlous, for thoy keep an eye'on nearly . 8,000,000 people over an area of almost 700 square miles. The Metropolitan water board supplies the housewives from Iladnm, in Herts, to Sevenoaks, j in Kent?a total nrrengo of 307,361. The electricity supply of London is j distributed over an area of 1,841 square miles, 1 lie city of London has an areu of only one square- mile?known as "the most valuable square mile In the whole world." The Tower of London Is-not in London! It stands In .Stepney. Butterfly Fishes In a species of butterfly fishes caught off the coast of Zanzibar, certain markings on the tail fins often suggest Arabic letters. Some years ago, one of these fishes had Its markings so arranged that they appeared to spell "There Is no God but Allah" and "The warning sent from Allah." So n superstitious Mohammedan bought It for S 1.000, or 80,000 times the price It would have brought In the native fish market.?Ool Iter's ' Weekly. Early Highwaymen Highwaymen were so bold in Sev- j enteenth century England that they ! often posted notices on the gates of j wealthy men, forbidding them?under penalty of death?to go on a Journey j with less than $100. In fact, writes ' W. M. Forsythe, New Brighton, Pennsylvania, in Collier's Weekly, lawlessness was so rife that few prominent j ment would venture more than a mile from home without a bodyguard? usually two servants carrying blunderbusses. Sun and Shade Temperature The temperature registered by a thermometer In the shade Is not the snme as when exposed to the sun. The sheltered thermometer gives the temperature of tho air, which Is substantially tho same in sun and shade. A thermometer exposed to sunshine, unless strongly ventilated, registers only the temperature acquired by the Instrument Itself. The Instrument get's much hotter under the sun's rays than does the air. Russia in the World War Pre-revolutlonary Russia had the only national anthem which contained I as Its chief note a prayer for peacSi Yet, writes F. G. Taylor, Jr., New York city, In Collier's Weekly, when the World war came, no country mobilized more quickly. In fact, enthusiasm ran so high In Petrogrnd that a prize of $100,000 was raised as an award for the Russian who set foot In Berlin. "To Stew in Own Juice" Ihe proverb "To stew in one's own Juice" was made famous by Bismarck during the siege of Paris by tho Germans In 18(0-11. But the Idiom Is much older and Is found In Chaucer's Canterbury Tales. "The Wife of Bath Preamble." "But certainly I made folk ' such chore, that in his own grees I made him frie." Paint Protects Brick Brick and stone surfaces fare better when painted, experiments conducted by authorities In the paint and varnish Industry have demonstrated, '.fflorescenca should be removed by brushing the surface before paint In applied. ??. - ---3? ??^ 1 , Lower State M, E. Conference Met , Following is a Hat of the appointmenU of the Ix>\*er State M. E. Conference which met in Kingetree last week. Of intereat to friends is thereturn of L>r. C. F. Wimberly to the Lyttleton Street Methodist church bore. Kingstree, Nov. 18.?Nine men were ordained ministers of the Methodist Episcopal church, South, as the 141* annual session of the South Carolina conference of the church came to a close here today. The ordination service was preceded by a sermon by Dr. Frank S. Hickman of the Duke university school of religion, and was followed by the reading of appointment of ministers for the ensuing church year. The Rev. Peter Stokes, Jr., was ordained an elder, and the Revs. S. J. | Bennett, Jr., E. S. Dunbar, T. M< Godbold, A. M. Jones, C. O. Shuler,, J. C. Smiley, F. C. Smith and L. W. Smith were installed as deacons. Preaching to a congregation of more than 1,000, which overflowed the Kingstrce Methodist church auditorium, Bishop Paul B. Kern, presiding over the conference, delivered the conference sermon on "The Jews Require a Sign, and the Greeks Seek After a Vision, but We Preach Christ and Him crucified." The service was preceded by a love feast, or experience meeting, conducted by the Rev. T. G. Herbert. Three tests of religion were asked by men, said Bishop Kern, men's judging religion from the pragmatic, intellectual and dynamic tests. "Some arc inclined to judge religion by the startling, the unusual and the bizarre connected with it," he said. "Some judge it by its exterior, outward manifestations. But Jesus turned completely away from signs. | "The only sign he gave was the sign of Jonah, which was not that the whale swallowed Jonah, but of people's repenting of their sins. We also fall into the obsession of the worship of 'the big,' but we must not judge by numerals nor by size. Nor must we judge by the Greek test of intellectuality. "'The really rational test of religion is life. If we are to know the doctrines, we are to do the will of Hint who made the doctrines. Men suv doing away with war is impracticable. But I say, use the principles of Jesus for 100 years, and it will do more for?the world than war has for 1,800 years. "Religion is a personal thing. God is right at the heart of it. It is a personal relationship to a person, God, Jesus, the Savior. And we preach Christ and Him crucified, said Paul. Our religion loses when we take out of it reality of suffering and, the cross. It is the only way in our ] personal ministrial lives. We live by love. The only way is to live the j kind of lives Jesus lived among our people." The list of appointments: Charleston District: Peter Stokes, presiding elder; Beaufort, E. O. Wat-< son; Bluff ton. P. K. Crosby; Charles-1 ton, Asbury Memorial, Bben Taylor; Bethel, W. V. Dibble; North Charleston, F. S. James; Spring iSfreet, B. L. Knight; Trinity, W. R. Phillips; Charleston mission, to be supplied; Cottageville, E. Z. James; Dorchester Lebannon, L. W. Smith; Ehrhardt, G. E. Parrott; Estill, Black S^vamp, j P. K. Rhoad; Hampton, Ernest Dugan; Harleyville, W. M. Mitchum; j Hendersonville, \V. S. Heath; I?dge, J. It. Dennis; McClellanville, L. C. Sanders; Muggett, 8. I>. Colyer; Itidgeland, A. Saasard; Ridge ville, G. A. Teasley; Ruffin, JR. P. Hucks; St. George, A.-D. Betts; Summerville, F. L. Glennan; Summerville circuit, J, F. Way; Walterboro, W. D. Gleaton; Yemaasee, S. J. Bennett, Jr.; Parris Island, C. B. Burns, Professor in Emory university, B. M. Bowen; student in Asbury college, E. V. Best; conference secretary of missions, W. V. Dibble. Florence District: .S. E. Ledbetter, presiding elder; Bennettsville, Woodrow Ward; Bennettsville circuit, L. E. Peeler; Bethlehem, W. T. Bedenbaugh; Beulah, F. L. Frazier, supply; Cheraw, W. G. Ariail; Chesterfield, D. N. Busbee; Darlington, S. O. Cantey;, Darlington circuit, W. O. Henderson;1, East Chesterfield, T. M. Godbold; j Florence, J. H, Danner; Hartsville, J. It. Johnson; Jefferson, J. P. Atta-' way; Lamar, W. E. Sanders; Liberty, Paul Whitaker; Marlboro, J. W. I Jones; McB^e, T. W. Williams; McColl, H. L. Shuler; McColl mission, G. T. Rhoad; Pageland, L. D. Hamer; Patrick, D. O. Spires; Tatum and Hebron, J. E. Cook; Timmonsville and Pisgah, W. C. Kirkland; Twitty's Chapel, J. B. Weldon; chaplain CCC, j C. W. Lovin; director of superannuate endowment, S. O. Cantey. Kingstree District: J. T. Peeler; presiding elder; Andrews, B. G. Murphy; Black River, B. II. Covington; Cades, E. C. Scoggins; Georgetown, Duncan Memorial, Welborne Summers; Greeleyville and Lane, S. W. Henry; Hemingway, P. B. McLeod; Jamestown, J. Rv Gardner; Kingstree, L. L. Badenbaugh; Lake City, K. F. Kirby; New Zion, Iverson Graham; Pamplico, W. R. Jones; Pinopolis, G. H. Varon; St. Stephens, George S. Taylor; Sampit, D. T. Smoak; Scranton, K. S. Carmichael; Trio, J. C. Smiley; Turbeyville-Olanta,1 J. G. Ferguson; Union, H. D. Shuler. Marion District: J. H. Graves, presiding elder; Aynor, J. F. Campbell; South Aynor, F. C. Smith; BlenheimBrownsville, T. G. Phillips; Bucksville, Thomas W. Kemmerlin, Jr.; Centenary, F. E. Hodges; Clio, Gobe Smith; Conway, W. J. Snyder; Conway circuit, T. E. Derrick; Dillon, G. E. Edwards; Floydale, Paul T. Woods; Lake View, B. S. Hughes; Latta, H. F. Collins; Little River, L. W. 'Shealy; Little Rock, J. H. Justus; Loris, E. B. Johnson; Marion, E. L. McCoy; Marion circuit, John L. Sandlin; Mullina, C. C. Derrick; MulliftTfl cuit, C. P. Chewning; Nichols, M.I Arant; Waccaliiaw, S. M. AtkinnnB Orangeburg, District; E. K. Gal son, presiding elder; Allendale, J.H Inabnit; Appleton, C. O. Shuler; fyB berg, J, E. Clark; Bamberg and^B angeburg* mills, H. D. Inabine^B Barnwell, J. S. Inabinet; Bowmfl C. E. Hill; Branchville, W. L. Parlfli Cameron, j. M. Shingler; DenmB A. F. Ragan; Edisto, L. T. PhilliB Elloree and Jerusalem, A. V. HarfaB Eutawville, Peter Stokes, Jr.; Gro^B J. M. Harrington; Holly Hill, D.B I Phillips; North and Limestone, J.I j M. Hoffmeyer; Norway, J. M. ColliB Olar, W. P. Way; Orange, L, D.I | Williams; Orangeburg, St. Paul's,l| (J. Herbert; Providence, S. D. Newflj Roweville, G. W. Davis; St. Matthe^B W. A. Beckham; St. Matthews fli cuit, E. H. Beckham; Smoaks, J, Graham; Springfield, C. S. Feldlj conference secretary of Christian ucation, J. Emerson Ford, assi&ta^B II. L. SpelL j Sumter District: J. T. Fowler, p^B siding elder; Bethany mission, A. B ! Corbett, supply; Bethune, W. V. jfl man; Bishopville, R. B. IlerbeB Camden, C. F. Wimberly; CollcB Place, G. W. Way; Columbia circi^B J. J. Stevenson; Heath Springs, J.B Griffin; Jordan, C. S. Floyd; KershaB R. R. Tucker; Lynchburg, G. L iB gram; Manning, J. A. Campbell; (B wego, L. E. Pope, Jr.; Pinewood.B M. Rogers; Rembert, T. W. GodboB Spring Hill, A. M. Jones; SummB ton, M. L. Banks; Sumter, BroB Street, R. P. Turner; Trinity, C.B Herbert; Wesley Chapel and HebrB E. S. Dunbar; West Kershaw, C. H Woodward; conference treasurer,? H. Noland; professor in Duke Ufl versity, Mason Crum. To Join Pact For Political P&ce i . j v * Rome, Nov. 19. Chancellor Kurt Schuschnigg of Austria, here for conferences with Italian leaders, told the Associated Press today he had issued an invitation to Germany, Yugoslavia, Czecho-SIovakia, and Kumania to Join in the Italo-Austro-Hungarian pact in an effort to bring economic and political peace to Central Europe. lie said Italy is not interfering in the internal affairs of Austria and "has never interpreted her relations with Austria in the sense of a protectorate." Water ruined 400 men's hats stored in a room under a bootblack's stand in New York. The damage was done following u fire. Full strength beer was put on sale at Augustu, Me., Tuesday night for the first time since 1861. The state recently voted to repeal its prohibition laws. [ Camden TheabE 1 Wwk Begbning NovT^il FRIDAY W I "BELLE OF I I THE NlNKTlEfl I With Mao West and Hoger PrC^H I A1m? "So You Won't Talk," "(^H I Bhei>," and Paramount Newt. 1M SATURDAY "A MAN'S GAME" ] I I With Tim McCoy and Kv*? I Knapp. AIm> Chaptei 6 I 'Em Up Bames" and ( omuly.^M I Saturday Nite At 10:3ol I "WOMAN IN THE DARlfl I MONDAY and TUESDaB 1 "SHE LOVES ME NOT? 1 With Bing Crosby, Mu am n.H 1 kins and Kitty Carlisle. I Also "Modbury Arctics and jj WEDNESDAY I "DANQEROUS CORNEsM I With Conrad Nagle and YnkM,,H I Bruce. Also Picturesque I'orfl I gal." and "Poisoned Ivory."^ I THURSDAY - I "THE RICHEST GIRL I IN THE WORLlfl I With Miriam Hopkins, Joel mM I Crea and Pay Wray. I Also "Flame Bong, and "Ruai^l I Around" and News. I Matinee at 8:15, Admission 10 |H 1 20 centa; Balcony 40 cents. I Evening at 7:15 and 9:00; I mission 10 and 25 cents; Btle?M I 40 centa : Beauty in a beautiful setting is presented in our II i new home . . . new equipment?the best and neweet . I that the market affords , . . expert operators . . the "jl I best line of cosmetics . . . we offer in our new salon . | PERMANENT WAVES FREDERIC VITA TONIC (SpintfT^ I j FREDERIC VITRON (Croquignole) I I PHYSICIANS PRESCRIBED AND BERESA FACIALS I | All Guaranteed ;;l REVITALIZING THE HAIR 17v/ Call Telephone 22 J now for an ^poinbnM^^^ you will look your best for The Marian Beauty _ _ . . ? -_i*?js g q * * Z ^1 Broad Street