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Cdrayage f and stor age p. R. CURETON phoneIio L-? 'i' "J^recLosure notice Fjfotice is hereby given that In accordance with the terras and provlsfgi of the Decree of the Court of JJoion l'leutj for Kershaw County, ated September 5th, 1935, In the case rThe Fe<l e fa I Land Dank of Columy plain'Iff. against M. L. Stover and i t prldges & Company, defendants, I vlll sell to the highest bidder for totb before tlte Court House door at vndeu, >s Cm duriug the legal hours igale on the first Monday in October, ijl5, being the 7th day thereof, the allowing described property: All that certain lot, tract or parcel j land containing two hundred and 'jgty-nlne acres, more or less, locat^ lying and being In Flat Rock fownxUip. County of Kershaw, State fl squtn Carolina, being bounded on North by lands of Alex Boone; East and South by lands of Hamp fruesdal; and West by lands of Alex ooue; and having such shape, metes, jourees and distances as will more billy appear by reference to a plat hereof made by W. B. Twltty, Sur?yor, April 22-23, 1909, which plat is jtcorded In the Clerk of Court's Office br Kershaw County In Plat Book 1, 117. This land was conveyed to M. L. Stover by W. 8. Walters by fced dated 11-1-1919 and recorded tome day in the Registry of Kershaw founty, to which reference Is made." Terms of Sale: For cash, the MaSier to require of the successful bidjer, a deposit of five (5) per cent of lit bid. same to be forfeited in case rf noncompliance; the bidding will ttnaln open for a period of 30 days iter the public sale. W. L. DePASS. Jr., Master for Kershaw County, lirkland A- deLoachf Plaintiff's Attorneys., TAX NOTICE Tax hooks for the collection ot State. County and School Taxes for the year r.?:5.r> will open September 15, 1535. and will remain open until December 31. 1935, inclusive without penalty, IMcase state school district 'in which you live or own property when inquiring about taxes. The following is a list of total levies for each School District for School, County and State Taxes: DeKalb Township Mills District No. 1 , 42% mtrict No. 2 35% strict No. 4 38% Itrlct No. 6 40% Itrfct No. 25 24% strict No. 43 24% Buffalo Township Mstrict No. 3 .. . .. 38% District No. 5 22% District No. 7 .. .7.. . 31% District No. 15 22*% District No. 20 28% District No. 22 40% District No. 23 .... . ? . .. 28% District No. 27 33 % totrict No. 28 ! .. .. 22% District No. 31 30% District No. 40 42% District No. 42 .. . 22% Flat Rock Township District No. 8 33% District No. 9 33% District No. 10 26% District No. 13 .. .7" .7" .T".~\ . 25% District No. 19 33% Ptstrtct No. 30 22% Strict No. 33 33% District No. 37 33% District No. 41 33% District No. 46 26 % District No. 47 22% Wateree Township District No. 11 25% | District No. 12 36 (District No. 16 25% ; -Nfr . . . . . . . . . . . _ ftAIA j (District No. 38 . . . . . . 22% j [District No. 39 27% Yours respectfully, ('., J. OUTLAW, Treasurer Kershaw County, S. C. Old John Don't Get Up Nights He Made This 25c Test . ?ld J >lin says, "I had to get up 5 or Mime- ..v?.ry night. This bladder IrTOularwy was accompanied with wnty flow, burning and backache. I ashed out excess acids With little Rsen t.drifts containing buchu leaves. Jtuper oil. etc.. called BUKETS. They or* on the bladder similar to castor 11 on Me- bowels. After four days not pieased any druggist will rend vmii 25c.. I sleep good now."? _ 1)1 Ih'Kalb Pharmacy. and Mrs. Herbert D. Peters of ilniiiigton. Del., were drowned when eir oar slipped off the road into a tOMsid" canal 10 miles west of Miami, ria Searching Out the Hidden Enemy It is estimated that 9,000,000 children in the United States under 16 years of age are infected with the germs of tuberculosis. One of the most Important weapons used to protect them is the tuberculin test, which shows whether any tubercle bacilli are in a child's body. The boy above is receiving the test, which is harmless and painless. If the test is positive the child's chest should be X-rayed to be certain no hanp has been done in the lungs. V; A similar test for Tuberculosis in an effort to try to detect those persons infected by the germ causing the disease is being made on children of the high school age as well as persons who are contacts of known cases in Kershaw county. To date the Midway and Bethune high schools have been visited. On September 30 the Blaney high school; on October 2, Charlotte Thomson high school and on October 7, Antiocli high school will be visited. All contacts of cases in the vacinity of these schools are urged to be present at the respective school at 10 a. m. on the above mentioned date. Thus far excellent cooperation has been accorded the workers. The Bethune high school 100 per cent and it is hoped that everyone will avail themselves of the opportunity in aiding the detection of Tuberculosis in his community. Carl Gordon Killed Driving his car ofT the road into a ditch and then up an embankment and turning over two or three times, Carl Gordon of the panhandle section of this county died three hours later in the Lancaster hospital as he was pinned beneath the machine and crushed. Three witnesses who saw the accident said he was driving up and down the road in a somewhat reckless manner and blowing his horn. Cordon was alone at the time of the accident. He was unconscious when picked up from beneath the machine and taken to the hospital. He died without gaining consciousness. 1 Deceased was employed at the Springs Cotton Mills but lived in the section where the accident occurred. He was driving an old Chevrolet car. ?Lancaster News. Both Arms Cut Off Orangeburg, Sept. 19.?Injuries sustained by C. K. Brandenberg, of CamL eron today necessitated the amputa, tion of both arms at the Tri-county hospital this afternoon. Working at a ginnery, Brandenberg had one of his arms caught in the gin. In a. frantic effort to disengage the entangled hand and arm, the other was caught in the gin saws. At the hospital here it was found necessary to amputate both arms about the elbow. Brandenberg is 26 years of age. I MEN'S SOCKS I INTERWOVEN I Newest Patterns 50c I W. Sheorn & Son J., c. cox Sanitary Plumbing and Heating TELEPHONE 433-J Estimate* Furnished on Short Notice ELECTROL OIL BURNERS _ ___ r5555 =arasa==a==aac?=gsag General News Notes Senator King, Dfiuturttt, of lruth. member ??f ili?? senate foreign reflations commltte. declares: "Italy bus committed wholly indefensible viola tloiiH of the treaties. Italy seems to be determined to go forward. The only thing that tan restrain her apparently i.s for France to aupport Great Britain." Howard Hugus, niitllonaire movie producer and Itler, attained a speed of about 35u in I leu per hour In a series' of flight* over a cloued course near Santa Ana, Cal., breaking the world's upued record for land plane*, formerly held by Hulinond Dwuette of France, 314 milea per hour. Commander Jamea F. Van Zandt of the Veterans of Foreign Warn charged at Now Orleane, that ucoreu of vet* erana who Iohi their Uvea in the Florida key* storm, were men who bad been sent to the camp* to got them out of Wushlngtou to foreatall another bonua march in the nation'* capital. Concluding a three day aeauion of the executive council of the United Textile Workera, hold in New York, President Thomas F. McMahon unnounced that the organization would demand higher wugea for textile worker* hecau*e of tile increasing cost of llvlug. Report* from Baton Houge are to the efTect that an extra *oaaion of the Louisiana legislature may be called, to undo uome of the dictatorial legislation pushed through by Senator Ixmg, in order that the state may again come into line with the policies of President Roosevelt. In an address at Nurnberg, Adolf Hitler declared that Germany ha* regained her military freedom and is "no Jonger a football." Incidentally he made a vigorous attack on the famous 14 point* of Woodrow Wilson. The 14 pointB of Wilson formed the basis of the treaty of Versailles. Henry H. Rogers, 2nd, 29, sou of the late Standard Oil magnate, i* held under 12,500 bail bond at West Chester, Pa., while the police investigate the death of Evelyn Hoey, actress, alleged suicide, while a gue*t at Rogers' -homo near that place. Too much booze-is probably at the bottom of the tragedy, but Roger* i* in a bad spot. 'i'he University of Mexico, the oldest on the American continent, now 400 years old, i* threatened with the end of its Independent existence because of lack of funds. President Cardenas has promised the Institution $840,000, provided it would agree not to furnish instruction contrary to the government's socialistic education program. Mrs. Carl Austin Weiss, widow of the killer of Huey Long, declares that her husband wag-not in any plot to kill Long. She is quoted as saying: "Furtherpiore, had there been a plot, Dr. Weiss would have carried a better lSy?apon. The pistol he used was a small, off-brand that was not in good condition." Boulder Dam postage stamps will be Issued by the post office department on September 30. Jules Cambon, 90, former French ambassador to Washington, and a leading French statesman, is dead. The supreme court of Nebraska has declared unconstitutional the state's Teller" and Old ~fige pension programs. The cabinet of Spain resigned on Friday and a new cabinet is in process of formation. The stock markets of Ixmdon are being much agitated by uneasiness over the Italo-Ethiopian situation. An Egyptian store is advertising gas maBks for sale in a newspaper at Alexandria. The price quoted is about >4, ? Fire swept through a portion of the stockyards of St. Louis, Mo., Friday and did damage of about $72,000. Three armed bandits held up a New York jewelry store in broad daylight on Saturday and made Way with $20,000 of loot. Two men and a woman were found guilty in a juvenile court at Denver, Col., on a charge of allowing children to attend a nude party. Rebellious members of the Young Democrats of Texas are preparing to leave the organization?"not bolters, just constitutional Democrats." Jouett Shouse, president of the American Liberty League, declares that Secretary of Interior Ickes is a "persistent denouncer." Because ho Is behind with his rent to the amount of $28, Solomon Rickner, aged 114 years, is facing eviction from his home at St. Paul, Neb. Dr. George S. Long, a brother of the late Huey Long of Louisiana, has announced his candidacy for the United States senate' from Oklahoma. The seventh national eucharlst congress of the Catholic church Is in session at Cleveland, Ohio, this week, opening yesterday. Senator J. Hamilton Lewis, Democrat of Illinois, Is critically 111 In Moscow, Russia, with bronchial pneumonia in his right lung. His doctors say he has an even chance to recover. During the two year period ending , August 31, a total of $1,187,500 was contributed by Jews of the world to aid the settlement of German Jews in Palestine. ^ * v JSl^ k - - - - - - ?V. ?? v - |c A M D E N I FRIDAY, OCTOBER 4 BARNETT BROTHERS h"6 CIRCUS3"1"6 B ,, > I STREET PARADE " AT NOON NEW LOW PRICES! Children 25c Adults 35c Under 12 [NEW ACTS THRILLS SENSATIONS HOStS OF I FUNNY CLOWNS I HUGE MENAGERIE OF ANIMALS TEXAS TED LEWIS (in person) WITH HIS RODEO ROUGH RIDERS I CHILDREN^ Clip this Coupon CHILD'S SPECIAL COUPON ! # ?r -pi r % T* will admit one child 14 years 1 his Coupon I kp 0f age or under, to Barnett and Brothers' Circua. STREET PARADE AT NOON ! I ONE DAY ONLY ^ SOUTH CAROLINA'S OWN CIRCUS! " THE SHOW YOU ALL KNOW" News of Interest In And Near Bethune Bethune, Sept. 24.?The Rev. J. A. Graluim, Mrs. Graham ami daughter. Miss .Jo Graham, were guests of Mrs. John McDonald during the past week. The Grahams were on their way to Mt. Pisgah to take Miss Jo Graham who is a member of the Mt. Pisgah school faculty. Mrs. T. J. Burley and little daughter, Melita, and Mrs. W. H. Hearon spent t'he past week in Winnsboro at the home of Mr. Burley's mother. Mrs. W. R. Rozier and Mrs. Y. T. Bird visited relatives in Greensboro, N. C., during the week end. Mrs. John McSween, of Darlington, and her sister, Mrs. Clara Brunson, were guests of Mrs. W. E. Davis last week. Mrs. T. C. Langley with her three children, of High Point, N. C., spent the weofc end with her father, Henry West, and other relatives here. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Fellers, of Columbia, stopped by Saturday to visit the latter's aunt, Mrs. M. O. Ward, on their honeymoon trip to New York and other places of interest. Before her marriage Saturday morning, Mrs. Fellers was Miss Dorle Clarke \y_ho wfiT be pleasantly remembered here, she having frequently been a visitor to relatives in Bethune. W. A. McDowell, Jr., left Saturday for Bailey Military Institute, adding another to the long list of boys and girls who have gone away to school. A severe electrical storm, accompanied by wind and rain visited this section early Monday morning. Sid Watkins of the Timrod section is reported to have lost several hogs by Four Yet Camps Ordered Abandoned Columbia, Sept. 23.?J. D. Fulp, state relief administrator, announced today that the national administration had definitely decided to carry out its plan for the abandonment of four veterans' camps in South Carolina despite a storm of local protest. Fulp returned from Washington that morning with a statement that the original plan for enrolling eligible veterans at CCC camps and sending others to transient cainps or their homes would be followed without digression. Some 115 veterans from the Kingstree camp, he said, left for Fort McPherson, Ga., near Atlanta to stand CCC camp examinations and will be distributed through several] southern states if acceptod. Approximately 104 men at the Blaney camp have signed up for the Civilian Conservation Corps, from reports received here. There were 910 veterans in the four South Carolina camps, many of them former bonus marchers. The work of dismantling the camps was said here to have begun at sevoral of them. Aged Veteran Dies Chester, Sept. 21?William Kandolph Sims, 95-year-old Confederate veteran who heard the first shot of the Civil i war at Fort Sumter and was with Lee j when he surrendered af Annonintox. i was burled here today. When Davidson college opened last weelc it had an enrollment of 669 students. i . - ' -- Proposed Truck Line Meets Opposition Columbia, Sept. 24.?The Stute Tublie Service commission began the first of a series of eight hearings upon application of the New South Kxpress Lines, Inc., of Columbia, to extend motor freight service today with strong opposition from railroad attorneys. The commission expected to conclude during the day a hearing on an application to operate freight trucks between Columbia and Sumter by way of Dentsville, Pontiac, Blaney, Camden, Rembert and Dalzell, and'to take up an application for a ColumbiaFlorence line tomorrow. Representative J. B. Britton, Sumter lumberman and legislator, was the first witness of the opposition today testifying that the proposed truck operations would injure highways and make traffic unsafe. W. W. Goodman, director of motor transport for the commission, said the hearings might occupy the entire week. Three Killed Near McBee Mciiee, Sept. 22.?Clyde Mel^eod, 20, and "Sonnle" Cavlnor, 25, both of McUon, olod at 5 o'clock Sunday morning in a Florence hospital from injuriea received in a truck accident Saturday night at 8 o'clock. Their companion and driver of the truck, Charles Holley, 35, of the Mount Pisgall section was instantly killed. The accident occurred about one mile north of Mciiee on highway No. 1 at the E. C. crossing of the Seaboard railway. The truck which was going north, drove directly into the slowly moving freight train. Mr. McLeod is survived by his widow and three sons. Mr. Uolley is survived by his widow and one baby. Mr. Ijaviner was not married. Four sailors were crushed to death when two steamers collided on an Argentine river. One boat was a cattle carrier and the other was a passenger ship. |?DAY AND NIGHT SERVICE~ ^ TELEPHONE 148 k i \ % THERE'S A REASON * Proof of its merit is the fact that SINCLAIR For the FIFTH CONSECUTIVE YEAR has been awarded the UNITED STATES NAVY CONTRACT for OILS and GREASES. If Uncle Sam's Navy likes it you w'll too. CENTRAL SERVICE STATION . 4! : - rWASHING ? SIMONIZING ? GREASING BILL OWENS V Day Manager L . ... .. r_. ?_ , ANDREW GOODALE I Night Manager I .... .J -r A.- . v~