| An Ideal (iraduation Gift jj NEW STARCHLESS ? COLLAR I ?'Will Not? 1 WILT , | Crush $ CURL X BLISTER 8 wiunkuo & LAUNDERED 8 PERMANENT X. APPEARANCE Stiff Collar Neatneaa jl Soft Collar Comfort ji Requires NO Starch V i . to I^aunder 9 Iron while damp. ' b Only $1.00 1; | BELK'S DEPARTMENT STORE The Home of Better Values . Auto Licenses Show Big Jump In Year Columbia, May 23.?A State Highway Department report set forth today that the number of motor vehicles licensed lri South Carolina Increased by 31,299 or 17 0 per cent during the past license yeur. Hen R. Htroup, director of the movehicle division, said there were 209,773 curs and1"" trinrks registered during the year ending last April 30, compared with 178,474. Through May 21, 1935, a total of 70,743 hulf-yeur licenses had been renewed. This wus a decrease of 27,000 from the number licensed for the Urst half-year. Stroup said, but the apparent loss should be less than 17,000 when allowance Is made for duplications, transfers and retirement of vehicles. Dictator Hitler of Germany lays the blame for Europe's dangerous race for building up armies and arnaments at ...the door of the nations victorias in the World war, and the conditions imposed on Germany by the Versail lies treaty. SUMMONS State of South Carolina, County of Kershaw, In the Court of Common Pleas. John S. Lindsay, Conservator of The Camden Building & Loan Association, a corporation in process of liquidation, Plaintiff. vs. Sylvester BrOOks, Mary Jones and H. L. Schlosburg, Defendants. To the Defendants above named: You are hereby summoned and required to answer the complaint in this action, of which a copy la herewith served upon you, and to serve a copy of the answer to tfie said complaint on the subscribers at their office in the City of Camden, 8. C., within twenty (20) days after service thereof, 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 tlie Court for the relief demanded in (he complaint. K IRK LAND & de LOACH. Attorneys for Plaintiff. Camden, S. May 21. 1935. To the Defendant. Sylvester Brooks: Notice ts hereby given that the complaint and summons, of which the forogoinu is a copy was on (lie 21st day of May, 1935. tiled in the oft ice of the ChTk 21. 1935. MALARIA 000 tOLLiquid - Tablets TONIC Salve and Nose Drops . LAXATIVE Valued Fox Terrier Dead Tin* end Iiuh come for Victor, the long lived fox terrier owned by Mr. and Mm. Chrlnt Anels. Victor wuh born in New York City, March 4th, 1916, and died May 18th, 1935, at the age of 19 yearn. Ah he was growing up ho received splendid training. First hiH Knglish was taught him; then lie learned to shake hands, either right or left. Me learned to Htand up, to walk on his hind legs, to hH down, to Jump over arms, and many other tricks. He was message carrier, mall carrier?even money carrier. Without seeing, he could tell whether a white or colored pemon waa paHHlng. Besides being clever at tricks, he was a great hunter. He killed several poisonous snakes and many non-poisonous ones. He liked to hunt squirrel and rabbits, but his favorite thrill was hunting rats?the bigger the better. Dr. Lawhon, Mr. W. H. Hicks, Sr., and many other people have seen Victor in action. Some of the rats he killed weighed over a pound. He and his son Bingo, on the hottest day in July, 1928, killed a croker sack full of rats. Victor was known all over the county and other parts of the state, and has made many friends who will be missing him now. He is lying under a tree in a lot back of Dr. bawhon's hospital. Dr. Lawhon very kindly contributed this place for him. A monument will be erected to his memory. Victor is survived by two sons, Bingo and Ilex.?Hartsvllle Messenger. "Buck" Newiom Sold "Buck" Newsom, Hartsvllle boy and last year's outstanding rookie pitcher in the majors, has been sold to the Washington Senators for $50,000, according to information coming from St. lxmis where Newsom has been with the Browns. Kvidently Rogers Hornsby has not been so well pleased with the performance of several of his laHt years best, for "Buck" is only one of several the Brown manager has parted with during the past few days. Newsom, starting in six games this Heason. has failed to turn in on the winning 11111in North i ll Maille re. ( titiy He rate-In hie lake t i tilt, tin- hieg. >; he had < v r !;. it le.t in hi- 3? I?and bu>> life. He was , Lit. < 1 lb- was so d"liglite,| that I,, telecr.ip! < d his wife "i'v. got rne. ,g! .- - inh: pounds and it is a beauty ' lie feeej\e.| Hie following aliSWl I'l So have I Weighs lime pounds. Not a luaurv. looks like you. Come home." I NOW OPEN I I THE S. S. PACKAGE SHOP I I State License No. 33 I I IN THE HEART OF THE CITY I I 1028 Main Street I | Complete Stock of Domestic and Imported I LIQUORS I a i - ' ' * ? - ~ _ <*- 'i:i. Nobody's Business Written for The Chronicle by Gee Mctiee, Copyright, 1?2?. FRQfA WORSE TO WORSEN . . }!y blood pressure made a now high yesterday, haviiiK gained 8 points In 3 days, but closed 1 point off. Thin thing has got me bothered. I am feeling all kinds of complications setting in. J believe my liver is becoming clogged and my spleen is expanding. .1 discovered that 1 ha?p tie in ;n toback* r ami casob-en and soft drinks; it (>tich: to be i;ti<.'d jit h-ast ]'< peimonth, so kindly look after our vetterans who was incapaeiied in the war aft. r the bonnus is paid and try j \oj-.- bevt to ge; it raised as aforesaid. dudd and scudd have a combined familev of 12. including their respectful children, and me and their ma laud our gramma, so ever govv* rment cent counts with us Chirks at pres! sent this liter was able to farm j some on the side up to the boys com; imtu e to receive their checks, but he I took the cramps and rommy-tism In ; his shoulders, shortly thereafter and j moved over with them, but what they 1 owe me is what i done for them boj foar their checks commenced to comj mence. ; after the bonnus is paid in full, you j can run for annything in the world and get eleckted. so make up yore j mind what you want to be, and leave { the ballance to us bonnus receivers. yores trulle, mike Clark, rfd. INTERESTING NEWS FROM FLAT ROCK . .our city counsel went Into exy-cutive session last night In the pressence of a largo throng of citizens and after several fine speeches, 3 of which was made by yore corry spondent. mr. mike Clark, rfd. they named a community service committee to look after fiat rock and the vicinity. Juat aa soon aa tha counaaU mast ing was over, the community service j committee called a meeting and com-j meneed to funcktion. everyboddy is ( anxious and willing, it seems, to get : some ideas started to keep flat rock | on the map both socially and flssically. as well as mentally and other-, wise. .' .mrs. holsum moore was chose as chairman, and she pointed out the need of the following entertainment plans, to wit?vizzly:-? 1 . . a publiek swimtning hole, i 2.. a publiek yard for playing marvels in. . a boss-shoe pitching coart. 1.. ti-nnis courts with > rackets . a.i-h. ">. . a er<>tv-kay ground with wit kan>otor;h. a hask'thuM I'm-Id with g.>ld posts. 7 a puMit k park with monk*, ys lit same, x. a park with benches to coart on in the shade, a baseball park with plenty parking room. 1<>. . and S other things. . mrs art square infarmed the meet-; ing tluit she thought her husband stood in vorry well with mr. morgan thaw, the seeker-terry of the treas- ] sure, and she felt sure that he could get the govverment to furnish all of j the f. e. r. a. free labor to grade ami, fix up everything, her motion was ; carried by a vicy-vocy vote. . .the folks were all full of enthusiam ; till someboddy suggested taking up' a collection for the purpose of buy- ! tng some lltter-ture and printing some! ritlng materials, and the meeting; broke up befoar the 2 hats got half j round, mrs. winkle said that she un-; derstood that everything would be furnished without cost, or she would newer have Jined the movement. ..If the committee ever meets again,! i will rite or foam you what took i place, if annythlng. if the citty do not furnish the monney to work with and if the govverment don't do the work grattls for nothing, the movement will die in the counaill chamber#. yorea trulie, mike Clark, rfd, - corry apondent. l I Get Weevils Early With 1-1-1 Mixture ClemsoD College, May 27.?Cilice i reports Indicate that Home cotton In | the Coastal Plains section of South Carolina is ncaring the frultiijp stage, fanners desirous of using tne 1-1*1 mixture are advised by W, C. Net-j ties, cxtonsion entomologist, to make j immediate preparations thus to control the boll weevil. The first application of the J-l-1 mixture should be made as soon as squares are as large as cowpeas and | before the squares are large enough to be punctured by the weevils, 4he entomologist reminds. Additional applications should be made at Intervals of five to seven days. Three to five applications are generally all that can be applied before the cotton becomes two large to protect with a liquid poison. The 1-1-1 mixture consists of one pound of calcium arsenate, one gallon of water, and one gallon of molasses. The 1-1-1 mixture should always be applied fresh as the molasses tends to break down the calcium arsenate I after several days and causes burning. Farmers of the Coastal Plains section are reminded that weekly reports from county agents on weevil activity showed that 1934 was a season of slight weevil infestation and that the weevil was less severe than might be expected during the average year. Piedmont county agents reported that 1934 was one of the most severe years on record regarding weevil damage and that farmers who practiced poison control were loud in its praise. Squaw Active At 114 Years Sudbury, Out.?An Indian woman who, at one hundred and fourteen, chops her own wood, paddles a canoe, [goes for long hikCB, through the woods, traps rabbits and partridges for food, has been smoking a pipe for 108 years and never lias been ill, has been found living in a little shack on the Whiteflsh Lake Indian reserve. She Is Marie Anne Tamokweg, an Ojibway squaw. She is Canada's oldest woman. Old Jesuit missionary records reveal' that she was born in 1820. Marie was considered a great beauty among Ojibways in the 1850s. She has been married twice. She married her second husband when sixty and i bore him two children. Doctors Get The Specimens A wealthy old lady died in Orangeburg recently. Report of a part of her will is interesting. After leaving a charity organization her home and $5,000, $2,000 to her butler, $500 to her church, and cash to others, she" then Is 6aid to have remembered two physicians In this wise. To one she gave her old horse, between 25 and 30, and to the other, her 15 cats. They tell It that the old lady had the hoofs of the favorite beast regularly manicured.?Calhoun Times. Saves Her Kidnaper Jefferson City, Mo., May 27.-?Governor Guy B. Park today heeded the j plea of Miss Mary McElroy and com muted the death sentence of Walter; McGee, her kidnaper, to life in prison ' i Grain And Hogs Advises Farm Agent There are leas meat animals, cattle, sheep and hogs on farms now than there has been In thirty-flve years. The reduction In hogs has been even greatei' and there aro less hogs now than there has been in fifty years. This situation has caused meat to advance very much and the prospects are that it will continue to bo high until another corn crop is made, and then hogs produced. , Live hog prices have also advanced and the packing plants are now paying above 9c for hogs. With this better price for hogs it will pay the fanners to plant more feed crops this year and feed out hogs for the fall market. Trucks are now scouring the country for pigs. It will pay the farmers not to sell these pigtf, but to keep them and feed them out for the market this fall. The price of corn may be high now, but most of the corn needed to finish these hogs can be new corn which will probably be much cheaper. Early corn and soybeans hogged down may be used for this purpose. This money from the sale of well finished hogs will help to swell the income of the farmers that have reduced their acres of cash crops. Then too, with the high price of meat, it will pay the farmers more now than ever to produce hogs for home consumption by their families and the tenants on their farms ad-, vises Henry D. Green, County Ageo?. What! No Crazy Crystals? Horace Horse, in his column in the Stanly News and Press, says the Columbia Broadcasting System is soon to cut out programs about stuff that brings relief to stomach sufferers. Now, that's to be deplored. It's most entertain' when polite company comes in and some old lady phones in to the radio and tells how her consterpation was relieved by taking a few doses of Crazy Crystals, or some other dope wuth a nickel and sold for a dollar. Weil, I believe it was.Barnum who said a sucker is born every minnit, and Shakespeare, a fool and his money are soon parted. Man Makes Deposit Annually In Lynn, Mass., scarcely 30 minutes bdfore closing time, Henry M. Lewis, 88 years of age, but still spry, entered the Five Cent Savings bank here and deposited $3.10. "We were afraid you weren't coming," said the teller. Oh, you needn't have worried," Lewis told him. When the bank was established on October 17, 1855, Lewis, then a boy of nine, was the first customer to open an account. It amounted to $3.10, and since then, every October 27 for 19 years, lie has made a similar deposit. McMillan Stands Alone Washjngton, May 22.?Only four Carolinians were listed today among the house members who voted to sustain the president's veto on the bonus. They were Buhvinkle. Doughton and Lambeth. North Carolina and McMillan, !>(nuh Carols JVO. I the other 13 representatives from the two states were recorded as voting to override. Illiterates Predominate Prisons Columbia, May 28.-Sixty.onc per < < nt o! m-uro prison inmates arc*, illit' i ate. according to Edgar Rav Trctx' r m his thesis. -The Negro as Influe need by Southern Negro Colleges," submitted to the I niv.rsity of South laro.ina m 1927 in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of master of arts. noticeof^JS Notice Is hereby yjVBI1 .. H cordance with the t.nn, .**? kfl lone of the Decree Common Pleae for KV ^?W|S South Carolina. & the ease of The Knterurt. 'nid leoan AHW,(.|.,,I 11 ,H?* ?uii^H South Carolina, plaintiff ?f Boykln and Loil?e H1 ukmu ants, I will sell to the hS'd?M for cash before the Court u** *B' at Camden, South cIEui m the legal houys of suh> 8Monday in June 1935 > property: ""vving (jeelng ,r? 'S'*!? den. County ?f Kerehaw of South Carolina. rouiin "4 ** esht and one-hair mS 'fJjm oil Mill Street and westwardly therefrom ' of ??JhB: width, to a uniform death !^B hundred seventy-three ijm, \ l*M bounded North by premi!!! '*?! premises now or formerly ? B land, and Went b,'????? Also: , : Twenty (20) shares of the rJH Stock of The Enterprise BtUldiSSB Loan Association of CaradefaM Nor043ia' thG 8ame bein? 18 tfl Terms of sale: For Cash' th. J ter to require of the succetittfl der a deposit of flve bis bid, same to be forfeited u!9 of non-compliance; no Tit* fS'fiJSf 3ud??lent ?b demandedB the bidding will not remain ok.jH ter the sale, but compliance wSjJ bid may be made Immediately, WL.DePA88.JlL* Master for Kershaw Co^H Henry Savage, Jr., Attorney for Plaintiff. Camden, S. C., May 13, 1936, CITATION The State of South Carolina B County of Kershaw. ' N C. Arnett, Probate Judge! Whereas, Augustus Curios * , suit to me to grant hJa LetterM Administration of the frtate mil fects of Lola Carlos. ' I These are, therefore, to cite ? admonish all and singular the Kl^^H rod and Creditors of the said Carlos deceased, that they be indfl pear before me, In the Court o(? bate, to be held at Camdei, kfl Carolina, on Monday, May 27tkl^| after publication hereof, at 11 in the forenoon, to show cant* any they have, why tho said Ahlfl I istratlon should not be graotd* I Given under my hand teenth day of May Anno DomiiUH N. C. ARNBM Judge NOTICE TO DEBTORS AB CREDITORS Estate of Gustav Hlrsch, decefl^^B All persons having claims M . mands against said Estate sent them, duly attested, and ill* ons Indebted to said Estate wiB?? ' payment to the undersigned. DINA K. HIRSCH MARTIN K. ROSEFll^H Camden, S. C., May 24, 1935. ~ Mi HOUSE FORSAf 409 CHE8NUT STREET|^M? Deairable Location Terms Reasonable j^H| y Address Communications'? Box 243, Camden, S ^j^H 11 " i u ii hi i . > mi HI I DAVIDSON INSURANCE AGENC^I j | ANNE STEVENS DAVIDSON : GENERAL INSURANCE | j 522 K. l)fKALII STREET CAMDRN * J | Office Rhone 190 BeuUh D Ut l \ j Residence Rhone 515 phnu l j ! We Jet The Standard For Insurance Service ' Pay Your Taxes Now The Treasurer s office has turned over^Hp me a large number of delinquent tax tions which 1 am forced to collect at an date. All parties owing State and taxes are requested to call and PaY before we are forced to adverti8Cj^^^B0 -tj* H property for sale. J.H.McLEOD.jg Sheriff Kershaw May 3, 1935 :