The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, February 01, 1935, Page PAGE SIX, Image 6
E? .. i . ' I'. i i i i
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C opy uI a .utter fi or?? A
Federal Home Lx>an Hank of Wineton-Salern.
Winston-Salem, North Carolina
to
I irst I r a I Saving" and l.oan A vso? lalion,
( amden, S. ( i
? J > e !ll Or f J U. 1 ^
"Gentlemen ,r '
We me glad >< ?* f <nn \>' ir -tatement a.- <>! Novt-r
l>U
10, that you art* now /i>t]iir>ng mortgage loan* end we w^_
glud to assist you in hand! ng add.tiona. <ai.s upon the Set _
of the Treasury ju-?t a* rapidly io the !? ai investment* >
shares will justifv " (Signed) Jo*. VV j
Federal Saving- and //oan " i
,i,i t i /?%j ,*tjTona of i
this puts it ?<)uare.y up to you, thrifty <o.
Camden. If you can do one f< urth of your part in
helping your coinmun.ty, your Cnde Sam is ready 10
three fourths. Fir?t Federal Savings *"d *0.
??J'
* ' ...a.
NOTICE
On and after Februao I, Iit'l'i tfi?*
offue of< the
MUST FKDKKAI. SANIM.S \
LOAN ASSOC! A'I I ON
will Im- located in (In- office ail
joining that of Henrv Saxage, Jr .
on Dehulh Street, in the < rocker
building.
THK AERO (iOVEKNOK'S KMT
By dubbing Mr Uhr zero
governor it i- not un-an' tn<?t m?
did nothing. J bo trnuo.i' ?a- t.'i.it
hi.-* official doing- vs.. i? ;r.'.ar.ao.y
wrong. Not a line is wi ttrv persunally,
arid tin- : * out 'a*', a.- wo v?'*-r 1
riot with the dead, jio'.ti ally or Olb' '
erwise. There :x no datm to be.'Oif *
an expert on gub.-na.<>1 .a? iccorJi '
Such a" it is, wo piaee Mr. Hiaciw*^ ,l
at the foot of the lander since M'OWe
have grave doubt* aixiu: ha> I"*" 8
ing been really eie > but tin* H
neither here not throe :.ew. J' {urns P
out that it wa* a !u T. y lay fot ^
and may be, C.d !m kier for Mr. id
John-ton Had 'i.r ateer received n
the plum .r: i'.Cm would n(,w prob- t
unlv. a* M* lbu^a'-"T Ih- '.unting a
a ".am, ; i r ' L'nder - xisting 8
, m jr.-'. rr.'i, along1 t
v. . .. , KJ" Smith, and
; ' s to fight ^
r to a fin- j
no into^est- c
y goes, Jimhelp
manipu- f
;te by political i
i ded .1 "hnston 1
,e's hide. ("harr,
is cha: ged with :
n as ton l?y burning :
tofore all the big i
gton has been going ;
. expensive buildings
the repute<l deal, the ,
- s-, that an agency which
; .'u,n* to the mouths of two
hunger marchers in Charleston, has
a.;,ta<iy been pushed across. Another
*: :e!;gn: is that Mr. Johnston was
very bitter and critical of Charleston
after the 1930 episode. When he
reached the old city in the campaign
of litTl, he was lovingly complimentary
and even hooked up, as a prohibitionist,-with
the wettest machine
leaders of the sodden old city, and
oamo forth from the 2nd election with
a booming majority. Politics certainly
make strange bedfellows, "carpetbag"
governors and two of their
Democratis successors. It looked bad ]
for the latter. The merciful Demo
crats, however, had this adxantngo.
They left more in the pen than they !
turned loose. In proportion to rhe:
population without and within, ad t.nei
records were rotten. In 1 v.pi (;,,v. I
Scott paixloned I:>?? of the j
vie La. ami in l*7<?. therr were 'J'1"'
pardoned out of *7."> Co. \; , .
his two years issued Id? par-i .*. a". :
left lfi8. During his ';i-' mo: ' ' < :
freed 1<>. Ibra beat : ha* * detth
in his windup. and in 1 < !. ?- > .? he
removed the stripes from !!> ;n Soar
tanburg County a! .a.*. ?. a;h..,ir
Times.
Five young men r? aped f? an 1
automobile that had -kidded from a'
highway in Delaware and -link in a .
creek that covered the car compb
The dri\ or of the car f? r? ed the door j
open ami then pulled his com nnnioi.s I
out. j ,
Ai>V'KtfflSINO
A fi n-n<l m ' aorthern who
i , u-.tA conditlona in South
n : arr: i!:a-r
< . r a r#eDlly wrote the editor of
j. >rer to this effect:
... understand why the merthe
small, towns in South
i na iit^
i uojf* do ->o little advertising. Take
ur town for instance and your pa*
, )\>u are making a really worth'
newspaper und you should be
irt,i?ded with advertisiments by your
>:* merchants. Here we have a
R(.iijpaper that U just ordinary or
and yet its pages are literally
men ng over with advertisements,
i/itl the merchants are glad to adverse
in it because they know it pays
icm dividends. They are not giv:g
the newspaper anything. They
re getting full value for their money.
"Small town merchants in your
tate would do much more business
' they would advertise in the local
apcrs more. People go to buy
rhere they are invited to buy and
f the small town merchants?the
lerchants of your town?don't invite
he people in your trade area to buy
t their stores, why they are naturally
foing to the stores that do inwte
ham."
Every merchant in York county
vould find it to his interest an ! a
laying investment to u?e the adverting
column? of The Ywk..\ F.j.jUirer.
Many do find *hat
The money the m?-! ehuv
'or advertising -pa- < :* . .. .
my body. It cannot i- a e .:
:?a*i< of -help:- g
I'. i- ju-a.- ma
x < 1t :n- i* t* ??t ci . ,
>ura?ui* i:.a' * . .. y
trood< ear. led .-r. r . . . ..
and in warthou-e-.
The Ford Motor company. the < Ionera
1 Motors eurpo-atinn. the big tobacco
companies or the Southern
Public Utilities company do not ad-,
vertise to help the newspaper?. They
do it to create more business, to sell!
more goods, to bring in new customers,
to make more profits. The mo
to** companies are this year spending
more money for advertising than ever
before, and it was stated in Charlotte
a few days ago that the Ford Motor
company will this year spend more
money for advertising in the "country
newspapers." Why? Because the
Ford company appreciates the fact
that the people who read "country
newspapers" have great potential
buying power. They are inviting the
business.
Small town merchant? will do well J
to follow the lead of the big con- s
corns.--Y'-rkv:l'o Kr-| iircr. i
|
k ma* t? r ! >v . o t or. a;... opt rat.? . :
or ; ; .. The otf.,.f \|.
1 > " ".at.. '. 1 m'iI by a -nil icier.
o - " do a l'.ut ad of the
-c- and, a. 1 of the k:* g's !
nil :: . ii'i '. opo. * \ . v\ :.i' - t o .-1a r t i
:i'' aga * . :t t fa y dec.de that they i
w.'i: ! i at tier .-.tay !o-ed dour, that:
::t::;ua;ly jangling with their :
? ??::< -ye-. Bu-;r.e>- v ondit :op- are ;
too uncertain, and the demand for:
.r id> to.weak. It's cu- gue.-s that i
' a general strike of some duration j
oci urs this .spring or summer many
'.he South'- textile plants will close 1
iowr. never to re-open.
I Notice To Roller Skaters I
| j? ji J? |
i
| No Roller Skating v. ill be allowed on the streets I
of Camden, except on Laurens Street, opposite the !
! j Public Library, between the hours of 3 an d 6 P, M? | |
each evening, except F riday. On Friday skating will
be Allowed until 9 P. M., on this street. Parents
H are requested to cooperate with the Authorities in j
this matter, before some serious accident happens to
I children skating on streets, not closed to traffic. j
I W. D. WH1TAKER, I
I Chief of Police. Ij
Fee Dee River Shad
Said To Be Finest
cour??r the markets are selling
rlorida shad, ami while they are
mighty gopd, we old timers do not
consider them in a class with Fee
Dee river shad?the finest in the
world. That is broad statement,
but the Fee Dee river is the only one
that we know of that hasn't a city
of some size on it that dumps its
sewerage or oil or fertilizer factories
to pollute the stream. Cheraw is the
first town on the banks of the river
and the shad, after leaving the ocean,
come 170 miles by water up the Fee
Dee.
In 1032 a few shad were caught
here in January, but the usual time
to start here is about the first of
March and will continue till about
May 1.
In recent years shad had become
scarce in the river here, though a
considerable number are caught each
season.
Below Cheraw drift nets and skimmers
are used by the fishermen, but
above the town there are some dippers,
a celebrated sein bar is situated
about five miles up the river. It has
not been operated for years owing to
the fact that not enough shad were
caught to pay the expense but we are
glad to know that, for the sake of
old times, and not for any expectation
of profit, Messrs. G. A. Sherrill and
R. K. Laney, who own the sein site
jointly, are expecting to operate the
sein this season.
The shad is a peculiar fish. Frimarily
it is a salt water fish, but they
come to fresh water to spawn. After
a shad is hatched in the spring it goes
out to sea the following October, and
there it remains for three years atui
appears at the mouth of the stream
in which it is hatched and goes up
that stream to spawn, after which its
cycle of life is over. From the time
it goes to the ocean as a fish a few
months old it disappears. No one'
knows where it stays in the ocean;
or what it eats, but as a three-year-1
o.d it starts up the stream in which
it was hatched as fat as a butter ball
?e.;U nothing in its trip up the river
- ar.d after spawning dies. The carp!
:n the river are largely responsible
j ' " ! ttc decrease :n -had?they eat the
' < ' -re 'ht7 are hatched.?Chej
* h onicle.
(Sail Shortage
Civil War
* 4 ' ? - A'
i " 'Y'11!"- ;
' ' - A ! ! 1.::. ' -
1 -??- v. :.? -a- :: a carerj
" t "l ~a.". oui.i ;,a > ? !?.*ceive : r.
j S..u'h i a- "lina the v.ilo.niv of 'he
j -ihn.f .-'.ate. Iha*. was during the
War for Southern Independence when
die! e a as such a scarcity of -ait in
SoUih ( aronna that people could not
cute meat. One of the most common,
means of obtaining it was to dig up
the dirt in the smoke houses and
evaporate the salt that had dripped;
from curing hugs in more prosperous i
years. j
The situation was so severe during'
the war that special measures were j
introduced in the South Carolina leg-j
j islature to secure this "great neces-1
sity of life," as Governor F. W.
Pickens described it in his me -.sage j
to the assembly in November, 18*32.
A resolution adopted at that ses-!
sion was: "Resolved, That fifty thous- j
and dollars he set aside to encourage
and force forward the manufacture
o. sal-., and that the Chief of Justiceand
Police be authorized to execute
-hi- in -uch manner as he may think
)< -; for the 8ta'.t." according to the
tin, o. ^ Seces?:?>n < or.venth-n of
t.a:'o,,i,a. i>-?'<o, is't'j, on'
I ni". er-i'y of S, .; . i'ar- lina
library.
1 ';i " u ?'?'e made a:::, various
manuf.,.-tur:::g plant- in the
. I >e-: ruction hy Federal -oldit
a;.- -o junhahle that" the h c.-laL1!l'
"a : '(> it'.-are the producer :'-om
hy the enemy."
Husband Killer j
Acquitted By Jury
t olumbia. Jan. 24.?A jury in the
Richland court of general sessions re.urned
a verdict of "not guilty" tonight
in the trial of Mrs. Mary D.
Thomason. forty-five, for the killing
of her husband.
The jury was out approximately!
four hours and twenty minutes in ar- I
riving at the verdict.
Mrs. Thomason took the stand earlier
to as-ert that she struck her hus- !
band, a laundry manager, with a stick I
of wood in self-defense November 27 '
after he had abused and threatened I
her.
"Ring Rule"
There was a time when we harped !
on the "Ring Rule." with headquarters
in Columbia. Our little hammer
has si owed down for the reason that
the old ringxters have either died,
been slaughtered, or weeded into a
thin stand, so far as we can ,>ee or
hear. \\ 11h these thoughts perambulating
through the garret, we remind
the vigilant young govctmor,
that, as matters now stand the best
field for a battle against "Ring Rule"
is in -Spartanburg county, with Greenville
for a flank movement. Tears
have always rolled for the weak, and
we. therefore, warn the Piedmont
ringsters how they "kick our dog
around."?Calhoun Times.
Nobody's Business
Written for The Chronicle by
McCiee, Copyright, TJ2S.
ANNUAL HOK8K-HW AITLNL DAY
IN FLAT IUM K
..last .satturday was u big occasion
in flat rock, it was our annual bossswapping
day which is hell ever year
at this place, a large throng of people
and their wives, childrens, dogs,
mules, bosses, and otter-mobeels were
present.
.a great mutiny fine swops took
plaice. holsum inoore swopped off
his old ford and got it back 3 times
and when he quit, he diddent have
nothing left but a fiddle which did
not have no bow. he says he sunk
nigh in the trading.
. .art square traded his radio and 2
hens for a nice hound with verry long
years with a fine repper-tation for
rabbits, coons, squirrels, and pattridges.
he finally swopped the hole
she-bang for 3 bird dogs which will
be used to set birds with provided he
can find anny to let them set.
..yore corry spondent, mr. mike
Clark, rftl. let 1 of his beegles and
2 scotch collers and 3 nice 2-yearold
fistes pass out of his hands for
u beef cow with horns who weighed
3-15 on foot, undressed, he will be
stall fed til next week, and then
peddled out.
..a great manny cars and trucks got
swopped off for more cars and trucks
and 0 or 7 pretty rocking chairs;
she was going to move back to the
country where folks do not have time
to rock anny. over half of the vehickles
in question was towed home
by the all-nite garage's towing car
for c50 each.
..the wommen foilks swopped everthing
from knitted skarfs and hoses
to dish pans and well buckets, at least
I 15 pocket-knives were swoppbd off on
j the ''hole blade or r.o trade" plaa.
only ti fights took place in connection
with the [KK'Ket-kn!ves swopping, as
- ome of them diddent ha\e no blades
a-tall in them.
-evvei a 1 musikal insfuments were
1 1 - ::.':g juite harps, mouth
~ 1 ' '-'an.' g.tta:.-. man ioKe.".s,
rum- too*intr
.r. f to v n.
ri- - "Pp:?tg
i " tuov> ai:ti
: > *? '. - A (><y ail -o. i
yoie- trull e.
mike Clark, rfd.
corry spondent.
FORTY YEARS AOO IN FLAT
R(H'K
..the noss and buggy which belonged
to the widder /ones broke loose on
main street with noboddy but her
.-etting in same in front of the gardhouse
and he tore off down the street
and flung her out with painful if not
serious injuries to her boddy and
limbs and clothing.
..a bad excident took place at the
party which was hell last night at
the home of judd allison on the county-seat
road when a spark from john
keliet s pipe lodged on miss sara lou
adkin's bustle and set fire to same
and as it was made out of cotton, it
hard to put out. she was only
> 1:ght!y scorched.
mr>. belle green slipped and fell
wh-ie (Uling her ash-hopper with
.i-h< - behind the smoke-house last
:::.:ay and it i- feared that her hip
V v ^ * ?
ti. t?.>>4oc:iLtil an<! it moujr*:
t- be a nt pert ad ed. dr. doolittle says
"? ihink- gangreen has set :n where
;"10 UO!t' a and lard poultice a
few days.
tne excursion which was run last
sunday or.r.er count of the picknick
at king's springs which was got up
by the rehobor sunday scholl was a
great ^ suck cess, the train pulled out
with fl coaches, and they were packed
full, and over half of the winders
had from 2 to 4 cupples of folks
hanging out of same, waving at the
crowd as it rolled off.
the combernation corn-shucking
and log-rolling which was givven by
pete gallagher on the outskirts of
flat rock on tuesday gone was a big
suckcess from all angles, plenty of
fine corn-licker was on hands and
that made it easy to clean the com
and stack the logs, a big dinner was
served by mrs. gallagher and it was
enjoyed by all pressent.
preaching service was hell last sat-1
turday at rehober church by the pasture.
rev. clem bellows; it was his'
regular appointment, but. he will
preoch again in the fifth sunday in I
niartch. the clerk of the bored reported
that bro. mike Clark had donated
a cord of good oak for use in
the church stove, some . talk was
started about putting an, organ in the
church, but it brought on such hot
conversation, it was called off indefinite.
n. h. the above was rote from memory
by?
yores trulie,
mike Clark, rfd
corry spondent.
FORECLOSURE NOTICE
Notice 1* hereby given that >*> accordance
with the term* and provisions
of the Decree of the ( "url
Common Flea* for Kershaw bounty,
South Carolina, dated January lltn,
S in the case of The Fidelity Mutual
Life Insurance C ompany, plai i
tiff, vs. K. Miller Boy kin and Kershaw
County, defendants, 1 will sell to the
highest bidder for cash, before the
Court House door in Camden, Souti
Carolina, during the legal hours of
sale on the first Monday in February,
1035, being the 4th day thereof, the
following described property:
"All that certain piece, parcel or
tract of land, with the improvements
thereon, situate, lying and being about
nine miles south of the City of Camden,
in the County of Kershaw, in the
State of South Carolina, on the western
side of the Southern Railway,
containing one hundred eighty-four
and 7-100 (184 7-00) acres, more or
less, and being bounded on the North
by lands of F. M. Woten and B. H.
Boykin; on the East by the center
of the tract of the Southern Railway
and lands of Mrs. Mary Boykin; on
the South by lands of Mrs. Mary
Boykin; and on the West by land of
Douglas Boykin, the shape, course,
metes and bounds of said tract being
more fully shown and delineated upon
plat thereof prepared by A. B. Boykin,
dated April 12, li>30, submitted
to the mortgagee, and being all the
tract of land heretofore conveyed to
me by A. H. Boykin, Sr., by deed
dated March 7, 1921, recorded in the
office of the Clerk of Court for Kershaw
County in book of deeds "BC"
at page 497, except tract of ninety
(90) acres, more or less, lying east of
said Southern Railway conveyed by
me to B. C. Truesdale by deed dated
September 28, 1925, recorded in said
Clerk's office in book of deed;, "BR"
at page 7; and also
(2) A right of way for access,
ingress and egress for all purposes in
common with all others who may
have a like right, on, over and along
the strip of land twenty-four (24)
feet in width over and upon that portion
of the ninety acre tract conveyed
to B. C. Truesdale which lies south
of the branch and between the^ Boykin-Camden
Highway and the Southern
Railway (being the southwestern
corner of said tract) the said twentyfour
foot strip following the neighborhood
road now located across said
tract, said road provides access and
egress to and from the tract hereby |
mortgaged and said Boykin-Camden
Highway and is a right of way r.ppurUT-Pht
Lie tract hereby mortgaged
to the enjoyment whereof the
same is essentially necessary, and uei
lag the right of way reserved to me
jar rr.y Kn v ami a-Cgns in a.n<? by
! -aid deed *o B < . Truesdale date.:
i Sop'cmber 2>, 192")."
| i't m.- of Sale: h'or .a-:., 'he Ma.--,
iter- to require ??f trie -a hid ier
| i:?i ail other h;.;<:ei- afu-i Im- public
' e. a <i< no-;'. of live (.">) p?-r vent ,
of his :::. in . a-h certified check,
.-ante to be forfeited ;n ease' ot nonomplianec.
The bidding will remain,
open after the sale for a period of
30 days.
W. L. DePASS, JR.,
Master for Kershaw County.
FORECLOSURE NOTICE
Notice is hereby given that in accordance
with the terms and provisions
of the Decree o? the Court of
Common Pleas for Kershaw County,
South Carolina, dated 19th day of
January, 1935, in the case of The
Enterprise Building and Loan Association
of Camden. South Carolina,
plaintiff, vs. Henry Jackson and Rebe
Jackson, defendants, I will sell to the
highest bidder for cash, before the
Court House door in Camden, South
Carolina, during the legal hours of
sale on the first Monday in February,
1935, being the 4th day thereof, the
following described property and
stock:
"All thosG parcels or lots of land
in the City of Camden, County of
Kershaw, ard State of South Caroina,
known a> Lots Nos. 108 and 109
in the subdivision of Monroe Boykin
Park, as shown by plat of record in
the office of the Clerk of Court fori
Kershaw County in Plat Book 4 at '
page 27. Said two lots front fifty
toU) feel each on Sv???n<i Avenue of t
.-aid property and extend back north '
of uniform width to a depth of one
hundred twenty (120) feet, bounded
orth by Lots Nos. 119 and 120; east
by Lots Nos. 110 and 111, and part of
112; South by said Second Avenue,
ami West by Lots No. 107, now property
of Gaskins. and being the lots
conveyed to us by J. W". Boykin by
deed of date September 25, 1923 of
record in the office of the Clerk of
Court for Kershaw County in Book
"AW" at page 211."
ALSO:
Two (2) shares of the Capital
'Stock of The Enterprise Building and
Ix>an Association of Camden, South
Carolina, the same being in Series
No. Eighteen.
Terms of Sale: For Cash; the Master
to require of thi successful bidder
a deposit of five (5) per cent of
his bid, same to be forfeited in case
of non-compliance; no personal or deficiency
judgment is demanded and
the bidding will not remain open afvter
the sale, but compliance with the
bid may be made immediately.
W. L. DePASS, JR.,
Master for Kershaw County.
Left His Card
Landlady: "A professor formerly
occupied this room. He was the inventor
of an explosive."
New Roomer: "Ah, I suppose those
spots on the ceiling are the ex-plosive
?"
Landlady: "No, they are the professor."?Crucible.
Snow fell in sections of Florida and
Alabama Tuesday night.
a -
FOREO-OSURE SALT^^B
Notice is hereby given that is?
cordance with the terms and pn? I
ions of the Decree of the Coq&? I
Common Pleas for Kershaw Con? H
South Carolina, dated 11th dql
January, 11)35, in the case of |?
Enterprise Building and Loan Am?
ation of Camden, South Ctn? I
plaintiff, vs. George F. I
Maggie L. Robinson, Carl B, Mi?
fey, Walter CL Mahaffey, C*th?
Mahaffey and Mildred Mahaffej?
Clara Mahaffey Brown, Defend?
I will sell to the highest biddw? I
cash, before the Court House doo? I
Camden, South Carolina, during?
legal hours of sale on the first X?
day in February, 1935, being tktfl
day thereof, the following deso?
property and stock: H
"All that piece, parcel or ltd I
land, situate in the City of Caafl I
County of Kershaw, and Sufe?
South Carolina, fronting sixty jfl
feet west on Fair Street and eC?
| ing hark oastwardly of a and?
i width a depth of two hus^| I
l(2u0) feet: bounded north 'byI
[ C. W. Hug-gins; East by prop?
! r."',v or formerly of M. C. Wescig?
! by pi oi.et \ now or formerly ofla?
li. Buri".-; and West by Fair .StrfttH
The above described propffl^B
that conveyed me by it. W.
gins by deed of date Decemi?? H
j r.'2.">, which deed is recorded ill?
tfice of the Clerk of Court fori?
shaw County in Book B. R. atj?
ALSO:
Two (2) shares of the C^jH I
Stock of The Enterprise Buildinj? H
Loan Association of Camden, ??
Carolina, the same being in &H
^o. Seventeen.
Terms of'Sale: For Cash; thai?
tei to require of the successful? H
der a deposit of five (5) per CO? H
his bid, same to be forfeited in?
of non-compliance; no personal c?
ficiency judgment is demanded)?
the bidding will not remain opea?
he sale, but compliance with tht?
nay be made immediately. I
W. L. DePASS, JR?
Master for Kershaw#^B
FORECLOSURE NOTICtl I
Notice is hereby given that in?
cordance with the terms and pr?
ions of a Decree of the Court of 0?
mon Pleas for Kershaw Co? H
South Carolina, in the case ofB H
F< deral Lank Bank of bolus?
daintiff, again-st C. L. McMan*?
O. Stognor, J. Q. McManus andB
Bai-.k of Kershaw, defendants, I?
seii to highest bidder for cask? H
lore the Court House door in C*>? H
South Carolina, during the l^J
hours of sale on the first Mondif?
February, 1935, being the,4tbj?
hereof, the following described p?
"All that certain piece, pawn*
tract of land lying, being and sit^B
in the County of Kershaw, Stw?
South Carolina, containing ail?
three (93) acres, more or lesv^^^H
bounded north and east by 1*?*B H
C. O. Stogner, South by Still B?
and Red Oak Creek and west by?
of J. O. Williams and being*? 1
of the land that was conveyed t?
O. Stogner by J. 0. Willing8?
which was conveyed to C. I* M*?
us by C. O. Stogner by deed?
December 6th, 1924. and recowW^^^B,
the office of the Clerk of Court?
Kershaw Co\*nty/ih deed book
Page 513, a plat of Aaid lands?
on file with the Federal Land
of Columbia."
Terms of Sale: For cash, the?
ter to require of the successful?
der and all other bidders awl
public sale, a deposit of five (*u?
cent of his bid, in cash or c*n?
check, same to be forfeited i# ?
of non-compliance. The biddinf?
emain open after the sale for*?
od of 30 days. I
W. L. DePASS,
Master for Kershaw Co^B
The NRA is -preparing an
quiring the cotton garment
to put in effect a 96-hour wee*?
out a reduction in pay.
JfiedkaledJ
Ingredients of Video
VapoRub in Convenient Candy Form
VICKS COUGH DROP
WHEN YOU i9
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use b spooi^B
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form. A liquid laxative can be u2fl I
in any required amount |(
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a bit too much.
Doctors favor the easily mT>t B
liquid laxatives. Instead of aayjJJ
that does not encourage varuaj H
from the fixed dose. A fixed do* ad B
be an overdote for you^r 3 B
Always remember this one tlj B
about constipation: the teen* Jj B
real relief it reduced dotage. . B
Give the bowels only as murhuB B
at may be needed, and Iqm htbS I
the need grows less. Vou will
Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin an exedhfl
aid in regulating the bowels,
tains senna and cascara (nthJ
laxatives) and it will ciefer-up^fl
bilious, sluggish condition wiuS
upset. Delightful taste, and p|^3
action. Your druggist has it. ^^B
ffl SYRUP PEPSIlB
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