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I A CALF and A CROP Have the Same Idea on the Food .Question Why is a growing calf like a growing crop? Answer: Because the food requirements of each are so much the same. Scientists are making this point clearer every day through their research into the importance of vitamins in animal diet and the need of impurities in the food of plants. These vital impurities are the all-important thing in fertilizing today. They are the rarer elements ? boron, iodine, magnesium, potassium, calcium, lithium, strontium and many others. With them your crops produce as Nature intended them to. Chilean Natural Nitrate contains these rarer elements in Nature's own balance and proportion. Chilean's quick-acting nitrogen, plus its vital impurities, make it the safe, sure fertilizer for your crops. See your dealer for Chilean Natural Nitrate. Two kinds? Champion (granulated), Old Style (crystals). They are both genuine. Both are natural. And both give your crops the vital impurities. Chilean Natural Nitrate?the only nitrogen that comes Jrom the ground?the ideal side dresser Jor your crops. r Chilean NATURAL NITRATE THE OLD ORIGINAL SODA I've got those ? natural S; IMPURITIES! | is^SS&323&K& ) So ^*1 have I! J Reunited After 32 Years Lit lit- Hock. Ark., May 10.?The two happiest men in Little Hock during (the cotton festival are John and Monger St ruff. Het ailing events of their youth here, tin brothers until several weeks acu thought each other dead. The tiH'titig in Little Rock was their first in over ;'.i! vears. i John ln-ard that Monroe had been killed in the 1DU6 San Francisco tanluiua^o. Mourno had received information lha* John had died in a train wreck. A ?oiisin. who informed Monroe that John was living at North, S. C\, k-d to the. reunion. Monroe's home * id l.i'tlo Rock. !' . : - Tablets General X.. V' hl'ops TONIC Catawba Indians Ask For Land Columbia, May 8.?South Carolina, ono of the few states making Indians its' wards, would make a jrermanent settlement upon the small tribe of Catawbas in York county and ends its long ^guardianship under terms i of the free conference appropriation bill. The bill empowers the state budget commission to pledge not more than $100,000 over a five-year period for "the rehabilitation of the Catawba Indians and a final settlement with them." Chief* Blue and a delegation of tribesmen asked the budget commission last fall for funds to buy new farmlands so the Catawbas could become self-supporting. The tribe, which has always vaunt' ed its friendship for t.he white man and claims only one murder of a white in 250 years of living side by side, once owned the land on which the city of Hock Hill and other towns I in the vicinity stand. STATEMENT OF THE CONDITION OF THE MERCHANTS AND FARMERS BANK ' "< AYED AT BETHUNE, S. C.. AT THE CLOSE OF BUSINESS MARCH 4, 1035, _ ASSETS oAc " and Discounts c An is >>t drafts (secured by cotton) ? and Stocks owned by bank ' ' '' '"i rure and Fixtures J'* -;" ' ankniK House 1,068. fB ,I:'' r Real Estate Owned - a-li on band and due from Banks oli V*> h" ks and Cash Items B( ' oil., lion Account J? r-diz.T Account 2,003.41 TOTAL $83,010.09 Liabilities * ur'i.iul, s,oc.k ,ra!d: ,!w?S n,li\ ided Profits Less Expenses and Taxes 2.338.89 t'posits: D'tnand $41,681.69 Time ? 9,607.03 ' ashlers Checks 1,381.98 Total Deposits " a2-6<1-20 TOTAL $83,010.09 ,al? of South Carolina, Oounty of Kershaw. Before me came O. B. McKinnon, Cashier of the above named bank, who, l??n being duly sworn, says that the above Is a true statement of the Edition of said bank, as shown by the books of the bank. O. B. McKinnon Subscribed and sworn to before me this 16th day of April, 1936. orrect Attest: Loring Davis W. M. Stevens Notary Public for South Carolina. T. M. Clyburn .... - * Loring Davis Directors %' Nobody's Business Written fur Tin* Chronicle by (ice McCiee, Copyright, 11)28. FLAT HOCK UHKVniKS ..while pitching ball behind the kitchen, Willie spivvens drove a cuivu thio the winder of mo, art square's pantry and knock ml down 1 Unties o?' jelly she hud ju?t bought down town und she is filing a claim against w illie's daddy for ctM) and punny-live danunages. she did in^ gel hurt as she was not at home. ..the everreddies and the moonbeams of rchobor church hell a big winnio roast in the eow pastor south of town last friday night ami enjoyed theiy-., selves good, .they could not find anny winnies to use, so they bought some hot dogs and toasted them over a blaze till sudie crank's dress ketched on fire and was put out by her sweetheart, spudd Clark. . .the poleesman says that he has given Up hopes of getting govvermcnt aid from the p. w. a. to put in sewedge pipes watter works, as the seeker-terry of the treasure failed to ancer his lust 3 letters which went to the dead-letter offis. he is fixing up the pump in the public well and will keep it a-going until the new udd-ministralion of republicans conies in. ..our legislature has adjourned and come home and gone to work on their respective farms, they passed sevveral bills, but none of them can remember what they were, the act to create a home for the aged june hugs and mudturkles was debated 1 or 5 days, hut it failed to get by the ways and means, and was turned down presto in the free conference. ..the high wind of last week done a right smart of dammage in cur hereabouts, sevveral trees Was blowed down acrost the street and the 5 benches at the hoss-shoe pitching grounds were mashed all to peaces, allso, G outhouses and 2 cows are missing, it come from the north and went towards the south at alx>ut 500 revverlutions per minnet. no insurance was carried by the losers ansoforth. ..the 1 dogs belonging to yore-corny spondent. mr. mike Clark, rfd, which were thought to of benn kidnaped a few nights ago turned up this morning, they had took alter a fox in the outskirts of flat rock and had run him a sight race for over "KmJ miles thru 1 counties, ever-one of 1 hem had fox hair on their mouths and undoubtedly they ketched him. yores trulie. mike Clark, rfd. corry spondent. SOCIAL NEWS FROM FLAT ROCK . .a verry pretty girl has benn working her way thru a bizness coarse in colledge enduring the past 2 weeks by selling maggyzines in Hat rock, she has brown eyes, yellow hair, tan stocking, sweet lips painted betwixt a purple and a red, swell fissique, and a perfect figger. . .ore corry spondent, mr mike Clark, rfd, hope her all he could and fixed it so's she would make his otTis her headquarters. he bought a different maggy-zine nearly everyday. she travelled from house to house and was admired by everyboddy in flat rock except the wintmen folks. ..her home is out west and she has finished the high seholl and went to colledge 2 years and now the bizness coarse will equip her for life, she weighs about 124 pounds and is not over t> feet 5, and she would take the prize in anny contest in. the country if yore corry spondent happened to be a judge of same. *. . VrjiTt tKhH rote* nrrri" r?* could buy 6 maggy-zines for 3 years for half price or 4$. she had the prettiest teeth that has ever benn saw in anyboddy's head in flat rock befoar. -her cheeks stayed flushed and her price for G maggy-zines for 2 years was only a third of what the owners of the maggy-zeens themselves charge for. same. . .her bizness coarse will include type riting, spelling, short hand, bookkeeping, and off is Work and she hopes to get in the oflfis of a miller-naire so's she can advance, she has alreddy rote for a job with mr. vanderbilt and mr. morgan of n. y. she will use the touch system if she gets in with them. ..she wore dark crimson fingernails, 2 big diamonts on her left hand, a sollid gold wrist watch that her daddy gave her last year when she reached 1-6. it was hartbreafcing for the citizon-?hip when she rolled out of town on the bus friday night, but she will return back verry soon if she needs more maggy-zeens to get her coarSe. she will be badly missed from now on. yores trulie, mrke Clark, rfd, corry spondent. MAY 17TH BIRTHDAY Dear Readers, (If any):? . .Today is my birthday. It has been a long time since I came yelVng and snorting into this old world of work and woe. I was bom very yoking, in fact?I was only a year at my first birthday. ??# .. For the first few months of my life, I was a bottle baby. Af^er a while, I developed into a tin-cup baby. Shortly 'thereafter, I became a born; v.- i dodger baby, 1 never tested any store-1 l>ought baby food in my life, but wo i always kept 2 good mileh cows, ..My baby-clothes, consisted of a lindsoy dress and one other cotton garment, that is?until I got old enough to wear a shirt . . . and then, I wore a shirt for a few years. Not the same shirt exactly: 1 had as many as 2 shirt* at a time. ..Old terra firma has benn pretty good to me, but nature has never learned very far my way. Man doesn't live by looks alone, as women do. I have found it desirable and necessary to work all of the time, and have been able to make a living . . . most of which came by the sweat of my brow. ..I have never had much "pull," but the Good Lord gave me plenty push. Somehow, it has never suited me to depend upon the other fellow. My schooling was too limited to be talked about. I learned to read a little, spell a right smart, cipher a few figures, and sweep out the school house. .1 got married in due course. My wife and I are still married. She took me for my figgor, and not my money. In fact, I didn't have any Dead Hamilton Ignored By Crowd Dallas. May it*. tIh* thousands wlu? liiui stormed uiiili itukliiK parlors a ) fti r aya? to view ilif slatn outlaws. <'I>.t?? Marrow and l-ionnic Marker, Fnitn> tailored in (loath diminutive Kay inoint llaiutlton, one-tint. lieutenant of the Marrow Mat her > rime team 'l ilt* W. st I'alius hoodlum, who had risen from a milk bottle snateher to the Soil l It west's tanking tlienaee and was electrocuted early Friday ait liuntsville state prison for the slaying ot ? sotted, lay in an expensive ettsket at it funeral home undisturbed. Joe Maimer, his companion in the execution room, was viewed by curious townfolk at liuntsville as relatives prepared to move his body to San Antonio for burial Sunday. It wits the wish of Hamilton's mother. Mrs. Steve Davis, that no one be allowed to see ln*r son's body. She recalled the wild scenes last year, wh.-n close to 2a,U0t) persons hud shoved, fouMht and pushed their way past the biers of t'lyde and Monnie. slain hy posseuon in Louisiana. money, but I think she thought 1 w?s pretty close to $<1000,00 whet) wo le<l each other to the alter where the preacher got $5.00 of my earthly possession, which left me only $05.00. ..I have lots to l>e thankful for, but birthdays only sejrve to give notice after to that old age is in the other direction. 1 am thankful for my friends, a place to live, a country that is still democratic and tit to hold up for, a family, a good preacher, a first-class school system, and tine town to make a livelihood in. (Juess how old 1 am: the first U5 correct gue.ssers will receive a birthday present and further recognition. Your friendly friend, (Joe Me<ioe c-o, Your Newspaper. | THE BIG QUE8TION ..The big question of today Is not Huey Long and his impossible gestures, nor liis wild promises, nor his misrepresentations, nor his ambith lis, nor his misleading statements. ...Neither is Uev. Coughlln's antics the hlg question What he says and 1 docs and thinks will die and pass j away 1 ik? so much Texas dust when ? the thinking public gets enough of his wind-jamming, idiotic tirades, and foolish ideas. ..And the big question nln't Cm*. Talmudge and liis ."pulled-too-green" secretary of Agriculture, Linder. the guy with the seceding proclivities and gy-raling Imaginations; as soon as he gets back behind a 1-inule plow his greatness (?) will subside' . . . No, it s not them. ...Nor is the mooted question the (MI0,(100,000.<)<) relief fund That will be gone as soon as we can shovel it out. Nor Is it the Dionne quintuplets: they wilt grow up and scatter to (htt 4 wind* uiu long. and tily be forgot. .The nal question la not J a pun and Cerniany . . . with their war preparations and "wo want to-tight-soinobody" spirit It ain't KuhhIu and hor h your starvation plana and convict practIcch. Nor Is It thc.boo/.cru and anti boozers; thoy have both forgotten their differences and opinions. ..Nor is It the NHA or the CCC or the AAA: these things have been attended to with postscripts. It Is not Ifecent cotton and 1 dollar wheat. Nor is the processing tuxes the big question of today. Mussolini lias no part in the real issue, and he, with others of Ills type, are too tiny to be classed in the issue. ..The big question today . . . tho real question . . . the mighty question ... is not any of tin* tilings enumerated above . . . but don't guess . . . It goes deeper and further thuii the casual tliingH referred to . . . Tiie real question of the day and hour and minute is . . . parking space. Chain letters This morning's mail brought mo two of the dime chain letters. It is probable that everyone elso throughout the country has or will get one of these "Prosperity Club, in Cod we trust" letters. If asked what, it's all about my reply would be that I know as much as anyone?which is nothing whatever?but lots of fools are destined to lose their dimes. Hut the reason so many of our people are taking chances at a fool proposition is that all of us like to gamble. An old-time lottery is preferable to this dime club, the originators of which may make a lot of money. Also they may get in jail.? Monroe Knquirer. DIXIE i CRYSTALS .. 11 36 MORE OFFICIAL REMIRDS in one of the most gruelling tests ever given an automobile ... makes clean sweep up to and beyond 1000 miles 1000-mile record beats best mark ever set by any closed car NEWS FLASH?Muroc Lake, Cal., April 13?36 official A.A.A. records broken by a stock Hudson Eight. Top speed?over 93 miles an hour for five miles. Average speed?over 85 miles an hour for 1000 miles and beyond. A clean sweep of every record in its class up to and including 1000 miles and 3000 kilometers, and four unlimited class closed car records. Electrical timing correct to a millionth part of a second and every record certified by American Automobile Association. Here's what it means to . Probably you'll never care to drive a car five miles at 93 miles an hour. Yet, it means a lot to you to have a car that can go that fast?TO shoot out of traffic tangles or flash you out ahead on the highway. It isn't likely you'll want to drive a thousand-mile stretch at 85 miles an hour, but you do want a car with the fine engineering, power and ruggedncss it takes to do this. Ordinary driving is no work at all for a car like this. That'9 what it means to own a Hudson ?smoother miles, more enjoyable mile9?plus ruggedness and gasoline economy that make those miles cost less. You can see and drive an exact duplicate of this record-breaking Hudson Eight at any Hudson showroom. You can also see the complete list of these 36 new records, and scores of others held by Hudson-built cars. Take the-wheel today and discover l-~. what this record-breaking performance means to you. HUDSON Sixes and Eights RECORD-BREAKING VALUES, TOO! ? UP (or Hudson Six ... Hudson Bight $760 and up ... Terraplane $585 and up. All prioea I. o. b. Detroit (or olosed models. HUDSEX MOTOR CAR COMPANY CAMDEN, S. C. TUNB IN ON HUDSON AND TBMATLANI BSVUB fcihHy|t? f fit Tfi fir 4 I * ?? B.D.O.T., 7:30 B.t.T., 7:30 C.D.O.T., MO CAT., OiJO MATT/ViM FJ.T.>CMi NthraS ??" 1 "** g - ^ .V-~r . _,v. ; ?.V..-r,i?