University of South Carolina Libraries
Scientists Find Fast Way to Relieve a Cold Ache and Discotnjort Eased Almost Instantly ISow f Take 3 BaVeH Tablets! Make sure you get the BAYUR Tablets you ask for. i? 1 0% prink a full glaie of water. Repeat Katmcnt in 2 hour*. r- -? ?- ? ? If throat b man. crush and tflr 3 "** BAYER Aspirin Tablets in a third ?T a clMB or Mftar. Gargle twice. Ttui aaaaa throat ooraaaaa almost Imumly. - w :r x.. MOTS ** DIRECTIONS PICTURES" The.simple method pictured here is the way many doctors now treat eolds and the aches and pmns colds bring with them I It is recognized as a safe, sure. QUICK way. For it will relieve an ordinary cold almost as fast as you caught it. Ask your doctor about this. And when you buy, be sure that you get the real BAYER Aspirin Tablets. They dissolve (disintegrate) almost instantly And thus work almost instantly when you take them. And for a gargle. Genuine Bayer Aspirin Tablets disintegrate with speed and ->? completeness, leaving no irritating particles or grittiness. BAYER Aspirin prices have been decisively reduced on all sizes, so there's no point now in accepting other than the real Bayer article you Pit ICES on Gmnuinm Imy* Aspirin "dually Rmduc+d on All Slxms William McCarter, 70, of Aiken, S. C., 45 years an engineer, died on a train while accompanying his nephewi from Washington to New York. The nephew was taking the body of his wife, who died in Washington, to Nashua, 1SL H., for 'burial. Mr. McCarter died from a heart attack. NOTICE OF FORMATION OF LIMITED PARTNERSHIP State of South Carolina, County of Kershaw. Notice is hereby given that a limited partnership has been formed in pursuance of Article 2, of Chapter 135, Code of Laws of South Carolina of 1932, entitled "Limited Partnerships." That the name of the firm is Walsh ami Alexander but the trade name I'a. met to Dry Cleaners may be used, ami that the general nature of the business to be transacted is that of; owning and operating dry cleaning plants and establishments and or laumlriieither or both. That the names and places of residence of the general partners are1 T. V. \V;:!,h, Jr., of Camden, Kersha.w j County. South Carolina, and W. M..j A.t-xaiider, of Camden, Kershaw County, South Carolina; and that the r.ames and places of residence of the limited partners are John W. Corbett, of Camden, Kershaw County, South Carolina; W. F. Nettles, of Camden, Kershaw County, South Carolina; A. Stanjey Llewellyn, of Camden, Kershawkounty, South Carolina; S. L. Crolleyf of Camden, Kershaw County, i South Carolina; J. H. McLeod, of Camden, Kershaw County, South Carolina; J. H. Osborne, of Camden, Kershaw County, South Carolina; J. C. Ciilis, of Camden, Kershaw County, South Carolina; W. T. Redfearn, of Camden, Kershaw County, South Carolina; R. M. Kennedy, Jr., of Camden, Kershaw County, South Carolina; 11. D. Niles, of Camden, Kershaw County, South Carolina and M. M. Johnson, of Camden, Kershaw Couny. South Carolina. That the amount of capital stock * hu h the said limited partners have contributed to the common stock or capital of the partnership is $2,000.00, which has actually been and in good faith contributed and applied to the sa me. Inat the period at which time said umite.l partnership is to commence January 1, 1935, and the period ; ich it will terminate is ten years -' m that date. 'hat a certificate thereof as requir< by law was filed for record in the "tLco of the Clerk of Court for Ker> aw County, South Carolina, on the ' "h day of January, 1935. Dated at Camden, Kershaw County, nth Carolina, on the 15th day of January, 1935. T. V. WaLsh, Jr., W. M. Alexander, L'-neral Partners. John W. Corbett, W. F. Nettles, A- Stanley Llewellyn, S. L. Crolley, ' H. Osborne, J. H. McLeod, J. -C. Lulis, W. T. Redfearn. R. M. Kenne y. Jr., H. D. Niles, M. M. Johnson, Limited Partners. 43-48 sb. h- . mm. ? Twenty-Two Men To Get "Hot Squat" Raleigh, Feb. 10.?With the arrival of Dortch Waller, sentenced to die in the electri(c chair Afljril 26th for murder at state's prison, 22 men were on death row today facing electrocution. Waller, a 43-year-old negro, was sentenced to die for the m,urder of John Harris, Granville county merchant, on December 30th. Wade Blackburn, Talmadge Parrish and Helen Beard arrived at the prison today to begin long sentences for Tobbery with firearms in Catawba county. The two men face terms of from 25 tc 30 years each, while the woman was given a sentence of from 20 to 30 years. A jailer and a negro prisoner were killed in a duel inside of an elevator in the Union county court house at El Dorado, Ark. Just what occurred as the jailer was taking the negro back to the cell block on the top floor is not known, but both are dead following a pistol duel. TAX RETURNS Notice is hereby given that the Auditor's Office will,be open for receiving Tax Returns from January 1st, 1935, to March 1st, 1935. All persons owning real estate or personal property miist malce returns of the same within said period, as required by law, or be subject to a penalty of 10 per cent. The Auditor will attend in person or by deputy at the following places in the county on the dates indicated for receiving retunis: Bethune?-January 17th and 18th. Kershaw?January 23rd and 24th. Liberty Hilj-TJanuaTy 29th. Westville?January 30th. Blaney?January 31st. All persons between the ages of 21 and 60 years, inclusive, are required to pay a poll tax, and all persons between the ages of 21 and 50 years, [inclusive, are required to pay a Road tax, unless excused by law. All Trustees, Guardians, Executives, Administrators or Agents holding property in charge must return same.' Parties sending tax returns by mail must make oath to same before some officer and fill out the same in proper manner or they will be rejected. B. E. SPARROW, Auditor Kershaw County. 39 sb. SPECIAL TAX NOTICE After January 31, 1935, one per cent assessment penalty will be added to all taxes assessed for the year 1934 not paid. This penalty is added according to law for the month of February. S. W. HOGUE, Treasurer, of Kershaw County, Camden, S. C. 44-48 sb. - . J ? ! Willi OIIIKIl I'AI'KKS ! i t Out?".a i.l making u ? > the in.la o! ,MM.,! wiuupp?: g. !iui^ Ttme.--Democrat. Judging lii.iu soiir' ctgaretu advertisement* a lew putD equal a hupi ! sandwich, and a couple lugs w ill givo the sumi' energy a* a lull meal, -j Grangeburg Times-Democrat. A New Jersey fan who dropped a j balcony chair 0/1 a wrestler's head j has been jailed. This senseless destruction of property must be (Irmly deult with.?l>etroit News. Professor in Northwestern University says co-eds pretend to be dumb to attract the boys. Some of them don t have to pretend much.? ButFulo Times. L*t not your angry passions rise Because the cost of all supplies, Liom coal to coffee, beans to bread, Is soaring far above your head.? Pathfinder. Seest thou a man diligent in his business? He shall stand before kings; he shall not stand before mean men.?Proverbs 22:29. If you saw a lot of squirrels half starved alongside of a tree-full of nuts, you would think they ought to be sent to the nut-house. Yet that is exactly what the people of the U. o. A. are doing.?Monroe Enquirer. Small negro boy peddling dogwood trees in the city, selling them for ten, fifteen, twenty-five cents and higher, according to the size. An oppQrtunity for property owners to put in some of these trees which will add much to the beauty of the city later on.?Orangeburg Times-Democrat. It is not surprising that a crank like old ,4Doc" Townaend of Califoinia, in order to reap some silly notoriety, ahould advocate an old-age pension of ?200.00 per month. The mystery is that California should send two aliens to Congress, foolish enough to back up the old "Doc" in the mad dash of smashing windmills. ?Calhoun Times. , The other day the Georgia house of representatives invited Huey Long to address it. Whereupon a group of Ellaville citizens telegraphed the house: "If there is nothing before your body more important than listening to Huey Ixmg, for God's sake adjourn immediately." Sounder advice, inspired by more lively disgust, was never given any legislative body. ?Asheville Citizen. An Andersonian says that although he has eaten from heavy-laden banqHet tables numbers of times, he has yet to find a meal so satisfying as a cheap sardine sprinkled well with pepper sauce, sandwiched between soda crackers and eaten at the rear of the oounty store near his boyhood home.?Anderson Mail. Nothing will take the place of honest advertiising in this country for 'many years to come. Advertising carefully prepared and attractively presented will /help business now just' as it has done in the past. Those who practice'the doubtful method of economy by refusing to use any advertising media are woefully ignorant of facts.?Western (Mo.) Chronicle. Lady Editor Loses A Front Tooth Miss Hattie B. Newell, associate editor of the Canton (Pa.) Sentinel, recently had a front tooth extracted and she tells of her experience in the following humorous and unique manner under the caption "Thmiling Through:" One afternoon during the clothing dayth of 1934 the atthotiate editor of thith paper vithited Floyd Thaffer th plathe and had a meal that leminded her of the latht repatht therved to a condemned convict. The then went to her dentitht. We are tbparing you the gory detailth. ThufTithient to thay that when the came out into the dark winter evening there wath a thenthe' of loth, of thomething gone, never to return. "But what we wanted to thay, wath that we are not at the prethent time atthempting gifth of thalted ; nuth, thour ballth, or caramelth. Altho wo will not fill any public thpeaking engagement for thome time. "However, we are thtill at the thame old thtand and more ready than ever to take ordcrth for job work and thubthripcionth. "Altho, we have a tooth bruth, onlv thlightly uthed, which we will thithpothe of at a dithcount. Thithn t the funny either. I^augh if you want to, but remember, he laughth becht who laughth latht." Doris Duke, daughter of the late J. B. Duke, and credited with being the richest girl in the world, was married New York on Wednesday to James H. R. Cromwell of New York. (.nod Money Stays 5.'{ Years In l etter I . . > \ i .1 > :i i > i . KIt" ? - -1 .: a .? ' 11 '. - 11 i 1 I' W . ': / Ui d. o: l.i .vnglui.. ami .n ; i.at .fi.fi flu o -c i two t) v I on.la i i?i!l> aiiil a ?iin* ilollai L?) 1!. Mi. Kfi-lfi \ne if siding ut the time at Biiick.-took, S. ! or the letter, at !ea>t, written ! from that town. The letter was duly received hy Mr. ! Wingard, and presumably its eontents noted. In the letter it was Mated that the eleven dollars in curreney was for "campaigning purposes." Hut the money was not used for campaigning purposes. In fact, it was not used for any purpose at all by Mr. Wingard, Mr. Wingard must have read the letter, laid it aside, and forgo^_itr and the money, for Tuesday of tiiis week the letter was again opened and read, and therein was found the two live dollar bills and the one dollar bill placed in it fiftythree years ago. Earl Fulmer, a I/exington county boy, attending the University of South Carolina collects old newspapers, old records and deeds and other such relics for the University library. Tuesday Miss Mary'Wingard, of Lexington, let him take a large number of old papers from her home, ipapers that had been put away years before by her father, Simon P. Wingard, and browsing through these old papers young Fulmer was greatly surprised when the money was discovered in the Keisler letter. The bills were the huge affairs of that day and time. They were of the series of 1678 and 1880, with the name of James Oilltan on them as registrar of the treasury.?<Liexington 'Dispatch-News. The victim, of a "ride murder," whose body,, still warm, was found near Dayton, Texas, has been identified as that of "Tony, the Greek," a notorious rum runner in Louisiana and Texas. The police have no clues as to who killed Tony. Setter Of Woods Fire Quickly Convicted A violator of tho law covering the negligent setting of woods tires met swift retribution when hailed before Magistrate Yarborough in Shiloh on February 5th by Warden Mints und Rural Policeman Tisdale. Mr. Minis was called out o* "the fire, which was burning in u valuable tract of timber belonging to a neighbor. And with one of his crews was able to extinguish it. Whereupon, with aid of Mr. Tisdale he seized one Kidney McKnight, who was hanging around suspiciously, and carried him immediately before Magistrate Yarborough. McKnight confessed that he carelessly set the Are and it got away frpm him. For which he received a sentence of ten dollars or twenty days on the chain gang. Warden Mims states that within two hours and half after the Are had been set the Are was out and McI Knight convicted. Of the many woods Ares occurring in Sumter county almost all are caused .by careless burning of brush and ditchbanks. It is | hoped that this will serve as a warning to such careless persons who are so unmindful of the property rights of others.?Wednesday's Sumter Item. Three bank thieves, who tried the game a la American style at Budapest, Hungary, December 31, have been sentenced to be hanged. January Wrecks Kill 20 Persons Columbia, Feb. 14,?A report issued today by the state highway department said twenty persons were killed in highway accidents in South Carolina in January. The total for the month represented a decrease of three from the number killed in January, 11>34. Eighty-three persons wore reported injured in 128 accidents last month as compared with ninety-eight in 127 accidents in the same month last year. Reckless driving was listed as tho cause of twenty-ftve accidents, careless driving thirty-two, recklessness due to liquor nineteen, poor visibility five, and carelessness of pedestrians four, while various causes were listed for the other thirty-eight. The bones and diving helmets of two sponge divers were taken from the burned wreck of a sponge boat six fathoms under the surface in the Gulf of Mexico, 12 miles off 'Cedar Keys, Fla., after having lain at the bottom of the gulf since November, 1983. John H. Happel, confessed slayer of his wife, whose body he dismembered and stuffed in a trunk, has been sentenced to life imprisonment by a court at Los Angeles, Cal. He tried the insanity dodge as a defense, but it didn't take. i / Hi:| J All 1934 City Taxes unpaid I H jo | March 1, 1935, will be subject || I to an additional penalty. I ; J. C.BOYKIN, i City Clerk-Treas. of Camden, S.C. 8 s&GX3s&ai&mwaama&&i., New Kidneys If jroa OOold trad* yoor tired and Dta^na^Phi ItawiB<trp^,UcM^n4 try t^'fWMUjd Doctor ! ?" ??' piaarHptton calfod CY8TKX (Stat-tax). Must^fU^oo I JlTST RKCIOV8 !) "1 U| A com[i?ete line of Wood'x AA touted gaVdt.n la seed* of every known variety. Plant early garden jgfj peas ami onion sets now. I DePass' Drug Store! NEW FORD V-8 I in The Car Without Experiments ? I There's never any doubt about value when you buy a Ford car. You know it's all right or Henry Ford wouldn't put it out. One thing that never changes is his policy of dependable transportation at low cost, ^That's the biggest feature of the New Ford. The reliability and economy of its V-8 engine have been proved on the road by upwards of 1,100,000 motorists. Owner cost records show definitely that the Ford V-8 is the most economical Ford car ever built. Sec the nearest >M Ford Dealer for a V-8 demonstration." .; | J new ford v-8 trucks and commercial cars also on display. 3 jj|^ ^ FORD MOTOR COMPANY I REDFEARN MOTOR COMPANY f ? ? ? ' SALES SERVICE