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r (fttfts nf 3mm>lru I I Gifts that will last forever?gifts that will be an I j.irinir reminder of this year's Christmas sentiment, f I our Election in complete. FOR LADIES RINGS WATCHES NECKLACES DRESSER SETS VANITY CASES BROOCHES FOR OKNTLEMEN CUFF LINKS BILL FOLDS ' I CHiARETTE LIGHTERS BELTS AND BUCKLES WATCHES KINGS BRUSHES Illustration (Shows the New Duo Dial Wrist Watch, j ! - DICK GOODALE Watchmaker & Jeweler BROAD STREET CAMDEN, S. C. 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 Caro-i lina' Plaintiff vs. Rosa Rainey, Hattie Kennedy, Florie Burroughs, Sadie Powell, Jessie Kainey, Charlotte Engerman, Sammie Kainey, and Alexander Rain- j e^' Defendants j 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 t copy of your answer to the said complaint on the subscriber at his office at Camden, Soutl) Carolina, within twenty days after the service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service and if you fail to answer the complaint within the time aforesaid, the plaintiff in this action .will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in this complaint. HENRY SAVAGE, JR., Plaintiff's Attorney. Dated at:^ Camden. S. C., November 20, 1934. To the Non-Resident Defendants, Hattie Kennedy, Sadie Powell, Jessie Rainey. Charlotte Engerman, Sammie Rainey. and Alexander Rainey: You will take notice, that the summons in this action of which the foregoing is a copy, together with the complaint were filed in the office of| the Clerk of Court for Kershaw j County on the nineteenth day of No-J u-mber, !'J34. HENRY SAVAGE, JR., Plaintiff's Attorney. Camden. S. C., November 20 1934. SUMMONS FOR REUEF~~ j | State of South Carolina, County of Kershaw, Court of Common Pleas. The Enterprise Building and Loan Association of Camden, South Carolina, plaintiff against T. E. Goodale, W. D. Goodale, N. R. Goodale, R. T. Goodale, Tom Shiver, Sailie G. Crane, James T. Ballard, Inc., and Reed Manufacturing Co. Defendant. To the Defendant above named: You are hereby summoned and required to answer the complaint in this action, of which a copy is here! with served upon you, and to serve a copy of your answer to the said I complaint on the subscriber at his office in Camden South Carolina, within twenty days after the service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service; and if you fail to answer the complaint within the time aforesaid, the plaintiff in this action will apply to the Court for,the relief demanded in the complaint. HENRY SAVAGE, JR., Plaintiff's Attorney. Dated at: f1* J . ? o r? s-omuf ll, O. November 27, 1934. To the Non-resident Defendants, Tom Shiver, Sallie G. Crane, James T. Ballard, Inc., and Reed Manufac^ hiring Co.: You will take notice, that the summons in this action of which the foregoing K a copy, together with the complaint, were filed In the office of Clerk of Court for Kershaw l"S?2*nty r,r' 27th day of November, j ^934. HENRY SAVAGE, JR., Plaintiff's Attorney. Dated November 27th, A. D. 1934. Yugoslavia has ordered 27,000 Hungarians, who have been living in the Yugoslavian st6te, to get out. Governor Refuses Clemency To Floyd Announcing that through u personal investigation, he was convinced that combined attack and robbery had "became a racket" with the negro, Governor Blackwood Tuesday refused to take action in the case of Clarence Floyd, convicted of criminal assault in New Bookland upon a young white woman of Columbia. The governor states that investigation of the negro's past revealed the facts that the case tried in the Lexington court was not the first of the kind the negro had been guilty of. The case was tried in Lexington court of general sessions August a year ago and Floyd was sentenced to die in the chair after being convicted. The execution was held up by an appeal to the supreme court, that tribunal having handed down a decision, sustaining the verdict tp the lower court, last week. The case was a most unusual one, it not having a parallel in this state or any other state, according to statements made by learned judges. The negro committed the assault in the I presence of a white man, the young woman's escort, while holding him at bay with a pistol while, the act was committed. There is no doubt that the jury rendered a verdict in accordance with the evidence, but much of the most dangerous evidence was questioned by some who heard it. With the governor's refusal to exI tend clemency, Floyd will be re-sentenced and will go to the chair some time in the near future, unless this case should prove another Scottsboro (Ala.) alTair.?Lexington DispatchNews. ? ? Wool worth Rock Hill Store Burned Rock Hill, Dec. 10.?Fire of undetermined origin early today virtually {destroyed the F. W. Woolworth store here, causing a loss estimated by C. W. Pope, the manager, at $62,000. The flames discovered shortly after midnight, started in the basement and went up the elevator shaft to the roof. Firemen fought the blaze until mid-morning. Pope estimated the damage to fixtures at $10,000, to the stock at $30,000 and to the building at $22,000. All were insured. The 'building was owned by the John T. Roddey estate. Sergi Mironovich Kiroff, revolutionist for 30 of his 46 years, and occupying a high place in the councils of the Soviet at Moscow, was assassinated in his office Saturday. His assassin was arrested, but has not been identified. The funeral of Kiroff is to be a state affair on December 6th. Two suicides wer? found imar Greenville on Thanksgiving day. One was J. D. Maxwell of Hendersonville, N. C., who had a bullet hole in his temple when found in a tourist camp cabin. 'S. V. ^cClain, night watchman, also had a bullet in his right temple when found by his wife in their home. 'At Head Waters . ! Of The Catawba! | _?? By Rev. H. ('. Byrum in Monroe Journal. i Old Fori, N. C.?-Here 1 sit at the judge, of the great Blue Ridge, the source of that famous stream that i meanders down out of these rugged I hills onward toward the sea, known to us as the ( atawha river, a name that the Indians gave it in the long otF yonder, when they roamed these j western wilds without care or worry. I I believe some good school teacher ' told me long ago thut Catawba in j Indian language translated into Ktvglish meant "Laughing Water." Well, I crossed the stream twice yesterday where it ripples over the rocks, in the language of the immortal Tennyson, singing the song that never ceases.' Here, where the winds, laden with the moisture from the blue Atlantic, have beaten against these lowering mountains through the unknown ages, have left these waters with u longing for the bosom of the great deep from whence they were picked up. They have torn gorges through these rocks ahd are bounding on hack home. The little stream here is only a step wide, but what a mighty stream she becomes before she slips silently along in and"out among the rushes down near Van VVyck, where Charley Massey used to catch catAsh by the basketful. What man has done to impede the course of this stream would make a book should it he told by one who really knows how to push a pen. Down tfie river a few miles from here the first obstruction was thrown across the way of these winding waters. The great dam at Bridgewater, where hundreds of acres of fine farming land gave 4way to a body of water that today is only thought of as millions of gallons. JBut the stream trickled on in its ever-winding way until the last corn row was covered and the cement barrier thrown across the way was scaled and onward went the stream as it had gone before. But down the way it encountred the Rode Hiss Dam. Well, it soon climbed over and on it went to the next trap set1' for it, just above Statesville and another one to climb. Just a short delay and onward the course; but mountain island gave a fine chance to shoot up a dam higher than any yet encountered. But onward the waters rolled and over the top and down toward k ort Mill, S. (_\, where they wanted the water to tarry for a while, but only a while because onward it must go. Down about Great Falls another stop was staged by only for a short stop, and I believe some one ran on down a few miles further and staged the last stop. The same thing happened ynd on to the sea the waters moved. What this stream has contributed to the life and happiness of our age can only he thought of as we think of the multiplied thousands of incandescent light bulbs ag^gw here and there and yonder, lighting up the habitation and pathway of multitudes while they march to the music of machinery roaring away in nearly every nook of our great Piedmont region. Only a short while ago we thought the water was going down hill because it could not stay on the hill, and the main purpose as to keep catfish alive; and now, with the dream of some of the wizzards coming true we see the real purpose is that it may render the greatest of all services to mankind. Civil War Veterans Are Fast Dwindling (The United States News) ~ -T *1 /-*:_ .M Tlf. . ' f Wbtaus ui CMC VMVJl TVtti, WIIU or.ee outnumbered all other pensioners on the rolls of the United States, are reduced to a few thousand. Their place of predominance is taken by veterans of the World War. There are now 366,895 World War veterans and 115,852 dependents of World War veterans on the pension lists. Gniy 18,030 Civil War veterans were on the rolls July 1, and it is expected this total will <be reduced one-half by the end of the next fiscal year. These figures have been furnished to the Bureau of the Budget by the Veterans' Administration. No more Mexican War veterans are left on the pension rolls. There are 343 dependents of these veteVans who are receiving allowances from the government. There are still 4,400 veterans of Indian Wars and six dependents of veterans of the war of 1812 on pension rolls. There are 186,838 (Spanish War pensioners. Their average age is 60. At the rate at which their number is decreasing the total at the end of the next fiscal year will be about 182,000. \ Phest Colds .... Best treated without "dosing" ? MURK'S ANOTHER SNAKE STOKY In Told for Trulh by Newspapers in Famous and liloody Horry County j ' A The Horry llctuld gravely tells this snake story as being true: Mrs. Kolishia Parker, of the Nixon* ville section of this county, reports the finding of a snake which provfll to be in u most curious condition. This occurred on the farm of H. K. Parker on November 20, us Mrs. Purker was gathering eggs. She discovered a chicken snake in the bushes, about three and one half feet in length. The snake had the appearance of being lull of something as if it had swallowed something, larger in proportion to its size. On closer examination Mrs. Parker decided that the snake had swallowed an egg, us it showed up white thru the snake's skin. The snake w*as killed 'by using a stick and when it was more closely examined the object the snake had swallowed was found to be a white doorknob. The doorknob had Been used us u nest egg and Mrs. Parker hut! missed the doorknob about two months before that time. Now, the bolt of the knob is what caused the snake serious trouble. This end of the knob had rusted thru the side of the snake. Notwithstanding) serious impediment the snake was still carrying on and according to Mrs. Parker was quite lively when attacked. The doorknob was about the middle of the snake. John Weger, the hotel bandit, was buried at Sumter, with rites by the Methodist pastor there. At the services were his brother, his cousin and his nephew, citizens of high standing at Lawrenceville, Illinois, who motored from there to Sumter in 30 hours of. continuous driving. They identified the body, and his brother said news of John Weger being killed by an officer was no surprise, as he feared that would happen. He had not seen the bandit brother for over a year. The latter was 48 years old and leaves a 17-year-old daughter and a divorced wife. Stephen Fowler A Northerner The most famous writer of Southern songs not a Southerner.! Stephen Foster was born in Pittsburg, Pa. At 20, after attending Jefferson college, he worked as a bookkeeper in Cincinnati. He took up has residence in New York, at 1M, and was killed in an accident there four years later. He never made his home below the Mason-Dixon Line, although he did make trips through the Country that is portrayed in many of his songs. Foster was no great composer; his ability to compose simple tunes was natural and was evidenced in the fact that he showed a definite aptitude for , music when he was only seven years old. , One of Foster's most famous songs was written about u river that he never saw?the "Sewanee Kiver." In the original draft of this song the composer had the Pedee River, but because tfhis name lacked pleasant sound j qualities he sought another to take its place. He noticed the iSewanee River listed in an atlas, and so substituted it for the Pedee. Thus this river, about which he knew nothing except that it was on tihe map, was made famous the world over in his song.?Exchange. | Stockmen and farmers in this country require approximately '275,000,000 acres of pasture annually for their domestic and meat animals. ',m rt ???rV--: 'i. . .i?.u'J To Copy Old Records Columbia, Dee. 10.?Preservation of valuable historical records of churchea urw) other organisations in this State has Ik*en undertaken by the University of South Carolina library which is making copies to be kept in the I fireproof room which houses its South \ Carolina Collection. A copy is now being made of the minutes of the Fuir Forest Baptist Church in Union county, the oldest church of its denomination in upper South Carolina. The original has been lent by the ehureh for this purpose through the efforts of the Rev. IOdwurd A. McDowell, pastor of the First Baptist Church of Union and an interested student of the history of both ehureh and state. Because of fires and carelessness, many priceless records of ancientlv churches upd other bodies, of which thete were no copies, have been lost forever. Senator Borah, Republican, member of the foreign relations committee, is opposed to a naval race between the nations and is quoted as saying that the time has come to hear from "those who must pay tbe bills and those who must do the fighting and dying in case such things lead to war." Tough Job "Deurest," sighed the young man, "couldq't you learn to love me?" "I might," said the girl, "I learned to eat spinach." Copy of a letter from Federal Home Loan Bank of Winston-Salem. Winston-Salem, North Carolina, December 10,1934 to First Federal Savings and Loan Association, Camden, S. C. "Gentleman: We are glad to see from your statement as of November 30, that you are no>w acquiring mortgage loans and we will be to assist you in handling additional calls upon the Secretary the Treasury just as rapidly as the local investments in your shares will justify." (Signed) Jos. W. Holt, Federal Sayings and Loan Division, of nThis Ptfte* it squarely up to you, thrifty citizens o* Lamden. If you can do one fourth of your part in aving and helping youtr community, your Uncle Sam ? ready do the othef three foiirthfl. / I T ; First Federal Savings and Loan Ass'n. ^ T " 1 -- - : r ii**1 " .>>f?r y- "" A HAT j FOR CHRISTMAS I What could please h Miss or any Lady more than u new HAT. Sport, I >ressy or Tailored. j Wo have them all in .stock form- ! erl> $2.1 ?f? and $3.t>f>. NOW?ONE DOLLAR Also line of scarf sets and Novel- [ ties. MISS M. E. GERALD j fa f ? ' Let our gift displays save you time?trouble?money Escape from the don't-know-what-to-give bugaboo! Just bring in your gift list today. And almost before you can say "Santa Claus" you'll have half those wide-open spaces filled in. Everything from gadgets to gems to watches are here?spread out before your expert eyes. Prices? Go as high as you like. But you can get nice remembrances for as little as a dollar bill. Come see us today . . . and save wear and tear on your shopping-weary feet! tl VI II K. * IiqaMu mw ptiun* la tnlloa and pUaod dim ImUqv wan by nationally knaarn aiakaca. i Attractive pan and pencil daak eat* Selected diamond rfa|t lad dUtinetirc coatume lawalrv , etyled la the modern mode. H??d*om? KUin 6-iUr clock. Nickel ekro. mimm pUtcd true*. MexUrnieUe Iwndi, $25 The Hoffer Company Jeweler and Optometrists y? rr'v;,;_ _;J < I1" ~ " ? " ~ v : r?"T 1 - - * - 1