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Slews of Interest In III And Near Bethune I itoibune. 9th. Mlaa Carrie jj ?JroUgi, was hoatesa to the Wed! B Usv afternoon contruct club last *, fables were arranged on the |j B**;* After cards, eaudwlchea aud Mtfte* *vtv Ht'rved|j Bftn \v. <l??'ttday evening the Con\m ^ |,ridge club met with Mr?. lx>r11 Bfy Davis. During the evening u couitte watt nerved by the host* ' H a dcligtitrul party waa given Frl; J eve?lnK Mrs.* D. M. Best, hou^ VlnK her house guettta, Mr. and Mrs. ^ Jincaid. of CaBtonla, N. C? Card? SM !>rtt enjoyed on the veranda where I Bibles had been placed for the games. Jter the ga;ueu, ice cream and cuke : I?ere served. B Tbe buy Scouts accompanied by the - j t. Keela, John Bethune, Sfton'Severance and Harris Oliver, iHLe gone for an outing near Ani^l^^eiids of Mrs. Z. P. Gordon, who flkit been a patient in the Columbia I llwpita1 f?r 1,10 l)ttBt Ave weeks, will l^lf^gratitied to learn that she was Bible to return home the first of the B Mr "HiU" Smith's friends will be d|)J' l0 know that he is ut home V*L,? after having undergone a ?ermyir operation at the Columbia ho?M. F. Helms has gone on a [^Itriu to New York City. ^B%jss Kate Helms Is visiting in ^ Richmond, Va. K pr ami Mrs. C. L. Mays have gone to Lynch burgh, Va., to visit relatives. H ii," and Mrs. Osborne Graham and children, of Baltimore were guests ^ durinK the week end of Mr. Graham's mother. Mrs. John McDonald. > Mrs Leonard Yarbrough and daughI Iter, of Hartsvllle, were guests of Mrs, t^B Mi bona hi Saturday night and SunH^Miss Myrtle King? who attends l^^Bschool in Spartanburg, is spendingv j^Bfeer vacation with her parents, Mr. ^Rnd Mrs. Wllmer King. > B Miss Cynthia Higby, of Columbia, Is ^Btpending sometime with Miss Frances jB.Mr. aud Mrs. C. E. McLendon, of "^Bj&iopville, were dinner guests of the ^B; E. Severances last Thursday. H'j. M. Clybum, Jr., and Gregg King Bspent several days last week at MyrH Gregg King, who is a member of ^Bthe highway patrol, has been here ^Bor his vacation. I I Mrs. <\ It Cassady has had as her Hious- gin-sts. Misses Inez Horton and jBLois Suvell. of Me Bee. 1 I Miss Annie Belle Mungo Is spendiBingvilie wei-k in Camden with Mrs. ^ Mis- Carri"* Yarbrough is visiting In orangehurg. I I Mi-- Anne- Ktuh Ciller, of Durham, v ( . h;,s been the gii'-st of her aunt, [Biirs. Hamilton Thomas. \Y. A. Me Dowel 1 and daughter, ^ li- c>. I!. McKinnou and children, ^Btoyd. Jr.. and Peggy Ann, are visitBkz relatives in Anderson. B"V J. C. Foster famlljf spent sev, Bmldays last week at Mr. Foster's home. White Stone, Spartancounty, M Mrs. David Holley and sister, Miss j BFrancos Severance, are visiting in bom- of their brother. Dr. Eldon ^ Severance at Andrews. I Mrs. G. H. Brant and little son, ^ George. of Holly Hill, were guests of ^ Mrs. M. o. Ward Thursday and FriI Miss Louise Tiller has gone to Dur^ hm. X,to spend some time with i I Mr, and Mrs. Grier Gordon, of CliarBlotte, have been visiting the former's ^ parents here. 'B Mrs. Jattie Vaughn, of Batesburg, ^B?as a gti.-st during the past week of ^Bfera. J. K. Severance. | I Miss Myitis Mungo is visiting rela^Btives in Lancaster. B L. B. Padgett has gone to Kingstre'e Btogtay time with his brother. B During a severe electrical storm Blast Frii.ix afternoon two splendid i Bmilch ten- were killed in a pasture IB?0* ^ai 1:1 town on a farm belongto t' Rev, W. V. Jerman. The B?>*s w-: the property of the Rev. Bfennan i.?l his brother-in-law, J. jBP^s w lives on the place, After t.>Liifed. ine cows were gone ..ilked and both were found in the pasture, i- been <iulte a thinning - - in Bethune recently on a mad dog scare. From hi police down to the old und. Including pet dogs, few having been spared. > no person has been bitdogs supposed to have had ia. 5MPLETE WAVE FOR 1 CENT can quickly and easily wave at once for one cent or less! roved WildroOt Wave Powder full pint of professional wave : three pints for 25c. You ur own wave set by mixing w,th water. Dries quickly. ^h,je Hakes. Keeps indef"npie directions In every ?ack"gcr waving or resetting your Get a r^ckage today 5/any ~?' " .. .. ?Monkey of the Snow Is Native of Central Asia I A specimen of one of the world's srrutttfost animals. tho kin iseti heou. or monkey of the snow," from the mountains of central Asia, is shown by tho Smithsonian Institution This Is one of tho rarest of all mammals In I selentlc collections, says tho Smithsonian Institute Bulletin. This creature, wnose scientific name la Ithlnoplt hecus, has an ogre-llke, short face, ranging In color from green to turquoise, In which ure set very large, bulging eyes and a po|nte<J, upturned nose. Surrounding the face Is a fringe or beard of orange hair. The real of the body la covered with hair six or seven Inches long and varying In color from gold to silver. The monkey lives In the bamboo forests, Just below the line of perpetual snows. It was first discovered more than sixty years ago by the famous French prlest-naturallst, I'ere David, who was told that It frequented the high mountain forests In vast troops. These troops made up of animals about the size of shepherd dogs, spend almost all their time In the trees, living on fruits and tender shoots of bamboo. The monkey la a close relative of tho Iloonuman monkey of India, one of tho sacred animals of that country. Such an animal Is believed to contain the soul of a dead human being. Something of the same sacred character, It Is said, pertains to Its ogrelike relative of the high mountains. Only Larval Stage Moth Destroys Your Clothing "The instinct that makes us all pursue a flying moth Is probably so deeply ingrained that we are not likely to sit 'Still and Ignore it even on learning -^hat, in this stage of its life cycle, the mbth is Incapable of feeding," Dr. "tjHiude Lillingston says In an article on the clothes moth In Ilygela, the Health Magazine. "It Is In the maggot, or larval, stage that the moth destroys our clothes, furs and feathers. There is another reason for regarding the moth in flight as a comparatively harmless creature. It is almost Invariably a male. . . . ."It may be argued, of course, that killing the male must break an essential link In the chain that constitutes the life cycle of the moth, were It not that the female moth Is not strictly monogamous. -. . With two males to every female, the housewife Is not likely to solve her moth problem by running after an Isolated male here and there." 1 Typical Willow-ware The typical willow pattern on chinaware shows a house near a river on which there is a boat; there is an orange tree beyond the house, which Is enclosed on the land side by a wall and fence. There Is a bridge, with a willow tree on one end and the gardener's cottage at the other; In the upper left Is an Island with a cottage. Two tur- J tledoves are conspicuous In the design, j The large house was the home of a ' mandarLn, whoso daughter loved his j former secretary arid often met him ; under the orange tree. Forbidden to j marry, they eloped first to the garden- i er's cottage, later to the Island cottage | where they lived many years. A former lover of the girl discovered them and set fire to the cottage, whereupon the two were transformed into turtledoves. The legfend has not been traced back farther than 1849, when it appeared In an English magazine, and there Is no proof that It Is of Chinese origin. Bird> Fly High Migrating birds travel at heights of , three, four, and gven five thousand feet. ; It appears that they rise in order to find favorable winds. Wild ducks, geese, and swans have been seen a mile high, but as a rule prefer to tly at about two thousand feet. The vulture j and the turkey buzzard hang up at four to five thousand feet, watching the earth for carrion with their telescopic eyes. The record belongs to the giant condor of the Andes which tlies in the ; thin cold air five miles above the i plains.?Tit-Bits Magazine. I I Earth's Hardest Bump The hardest. recorded . bump this earth ever received came from a meteorite or comet which crashed Into a Siberian forest on June 30, 1908. The mass weighed about 40,000 tons and the explosive violence of Its Impact felled all trees within a 35-mlle circle, a total of 80,000.000 trees in an area of 3,850 square miles. The air waves even reached Washington, D. C., and pictures were taken In Scotland at midnight on July 2 by the light of Its fiery dust.?Collier's Weekly. World's Largest Palace The Vatican In Home, the residence of the pope, Is credited as being the largest and most magnificent palace In the world. It Is said to contain about 11,000 apartments of varying sizes, eight grand staircases and 200 smaller ones, and 20 courtyards. Its collections of objets d art and mnnuscrlpts are counted as. the most famous In the universe.?Pearson's Weekly. City Founded in 1565 St. Augustine, Fla., oldest city in tho United States, was founded by the Spaniards In 1665, and at various times has been the possession of Opftin, France, England, the Confederate States of America and the Belted State*. Thirteen Counties Ban Fishing Kershaw county fishermen who make u habit each summer of going to the Low Country after the elusive red breust and oilier fish should inuke note of (huge count lea in that part of the Htato which. have dosed seasons ou fishing. According to u news story sent out from Columbia closed fishing seasons were declared or extended in thirteen Houth Carolina counties lust Monday by the stale game warden at the request of the delegations from these I counties: I The counties were in all Instances j in tire lower part of the state, where a drought hus dried up many lesser streams and has lowered the water I level of others. J Two counties, Colleton and Dorchester, will observe closed seasons i beginning July 7, und continuing to August 8. | Williamsburg, which declared a pro ' hlbition on ungling May 24, planned to continue it until July 22. McCormiek county halted fishing June 29 until August 27, the longest of the closed seasons. j Orangeburg county will suspend until August 1. Seven other counties extended or put closed seasons into ! effect to continue until July 31. They i i are: Sumter, Marion, Horry, George, town, Florence, Dillon and Darlington. Three women took county offices in Fairfield county ou July first. They are Mrs. Mamie Stevenson, county auditor, who was re-elected; Mrs. Sue Davis, county treasurer, and MTHPauline Williams, the newly elected county superintendent of education. Mrs. Williams succeeds W. W. Turner, who held this office for about 12 | years. Mrs. Davis succeeds her fath; er, Daniel Hall, who had been treasurer for the last 15 years, he having retired on account of poor health. | . !_ ! Mrs. Birdie L. Walker was killed, her brother seriously injured and another brother thrown clear and uninjured when their car was wrecked near Huntsville, Ala. ?? ,1 Farm Diets Need | To Be Improved CletnsoD, July d.?"Many records of farm family (lima lit the 1'UMlmont section of South Carolina wen* found to provide less than the standard amount of one or more of the nutritive elements,1' says Miss Ada Mutter, research specialist in homo economics of the South Carolina' Experiment Statlon. Tltis statement Miss Moser makes in connection with iter study entitled, "Farm Family Diets in the South Carolina Piedmont," published as Circular 53. , This circular is buHod on the study reported in detail in Station Uulletin 300, "Food Consumption and Use of Time for Food Work Among Farm Families in the Soutli Carolina Piedmont." "A shortage of iron was the most frequent deficiency found in white family diets and the deficiency was common in summer because fewer leafy greens, less sorghum syrup, and less lean meat were used thuu at other seasons," Miss Moser poiuts out. For improving the nutritional value of farm family diets Miss Moser recommends; More milk should be produced for home consumption. A quart per person per day is not too much. Whole corn meal and or whole wheat flour should form a jood share of the grain products used. Vegetables and fruits the year remind more than pay their way in improved nutrition. A good share of the sugars should be In the form of sorghum (or cane) syrup, especially in low-cost diets where eggs, lean meat, and vegetables are not plentiful. Some eggs and lean meat should be Included If possible. A well planned food production program is the best way to secure these improvements. Accidental deaths from all sorts of causes totaled more than 225 over the country on July 4th, the largest number being credited to the automobile, the total being 83, with hundreds of others suffering injuries. Deaths from fireworks accidents reported numbered but four. VJ 'Ml 1 - ?? ?1 Associated Charities Report For May Report of the Associated Charities of Cuindcu-Kershuw County for the month of May, 1935: Balance <,.$2,734.83 Receipts this month 160.00 Total $2,894.83 Disbu rsod: Southern Cotton Oil Co $ 5.47 Rent 5.00 Water & Light .. 9.64 Rarber .... .. 3.15 Labor 1.00 Plowing- 2.10 1'ett us Lumber Co 3.59 Plants l.oo J. J. Newberry 9.78 1 Camden Furniture Co 5.00 J Disbursed At Home: Milk ..v 52.85 Groceries 97.16 Dry goods 1.10 School Supplies 1.00 Telephone 3.44 Servant hire 119.50 Total Disbursed $320.73 Balance $2,574.10 A crack train of the Great Northern railway,. 16 coaches, plunged into a washout following a cloudburst near Bainville, Mont., and 24 of the passengers were injured, two seriously. About 1,000 feet of track was washed out. Associated Charities Report For June Report of Associated Charities of CumdouKershaw county for June, 1935: Balance from lust month ..$2,574.10 Receipts this month 50.00 Total $2,624.10 Disbursements: Mackey Hardware Co $19.66 Uuy Dumber Co 2.25 Rent tTriinnal) 6.00 Disbursed At Home: Groceries 75.34 Water & Light 10.21 Milk 40.30 Flowing 1.65 Repairs 1.50 Servant litre 91.00 Total Disbursed $246.90 Balunce .. $2,377.20 W. C. Turner, a former city magistrate of Richmond, Va., and his two sons, were drowned Sundny in a pond near Petersburg. The older of the two boys was drowned while trying to rescue his father, after he himself had been rescued by another swimmer. A masked white bandit is alleged to have held up and robbed two men carrying a construction company's payroll of $1,700 near Albany, Ga., Saturday. The money carriers were . in a light roadster when overtaken by bandits, they say. I Be Peaceable at All Times I > Buy from our stock h good Electric Fan from | $1.55 up. I i j j Keep Cool and Keep Your Temper. I j I DePass' Drug Store I I Phone 10 The Rexall Store ? Quick Delivery j ! ' ?#"' . : A BIO ECONOMY ONLY FORD OWNERS I ENJOY All machinery will ibow wear eventually but instead of an expensive engine ov> erhaul.tne Fordo wner may exchange hia engine for a factory reconditioned motor completely installed, in a few hours, for Jt'.k5,,0. lpU" THESE FEATURES REPRESENT Extra Value IN THE FORD V-8 I AT NO EXTRA COST TO YOU I \ 85-horsepower, V-type, 8-cylinder engine with aluminum cylinder heads and dual, down-draft carburetor. 123-inch springbase for riding ease on aa 112-inch chassis for handling ease. Torque-tube drive. Front seat 50W"wide... ample luggage space hi all models at we extra cost. , o M-steel body welded into one piece. Big, positive brakes with 12" drums and mora braking surface per pound of car ! weight than an/other car under $1095. 4 hydraulic double acting automatic shock absorbers. e 17 plate littery. 6.00 x 16" air-balloon tires. Safety Glass all 'round. j LOW FIRST COST ? LOW MAINTENANCE ? HIGH RESALE VALUE | HENRY FORD is a practical farmer himself. He knows the transportation requirements of the man on the farm and he has built the Ford V-8 to meet them. With all its up-to-date comfort, roominess and beauty,you will find the Ford V-8 a sturdy, dependable, economical car, built to last a long time ?a car the farmer can afford to own and affqrd to operate."' The Ford V-8 is the best car ever produced byv the Ford Motor Company?the biggest value in \ Ford history. It costs less to run than a four cylinder car and delivers more power per gallon of fuel than any Ford ever built before. It is priced even less than the model "T" of ten years ago. . . Thousands of farmers are picking out their Ford V-8's now, arranging to pay for them out of new crop money. We can give you a better trade on your old car right now before the rush season starts. Drive the Ford V-8 and, like your neighbor, you will find that you can't beat a Ford for the farm, F0RDY8 B??t Ttrmi Th rough Univertal Credit Com* A P*i>T?The Authorized f Ford Finance Plan - -if, * xriKAIK ?Fred WaHngfTue*d?y night '?Columbia Network New* Releate 9*45 p.m. daily except Sunday-W3.T. i k REDFEARN MOTOR COMPANY -2 - CAMDEN, SOUTH CAROLINA 1 yv ^ . . .. > js ' ' 22: