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DINE AND DANCE I , ; ? *. f C\i ?AT T.*i Sunset Club TWO MILES EAST OF CAMDEN On CflLjnden?Blshopville Highway STEAKS DINNERS j ! .1 I i Sunset Orchestra Playing BENEFIT BALL MONDAY, JAN. 20 i All Proceeds will go to Wa|rm Springs Foundation ! and Crippled Children of This Community j , i - / Haiglar Theatre Corner Hroad und It tit ledge St?. ~FRIDAY,- JANUARY 17 Tin* dazzling co-slnr ??I' three smash li i I s . marred on her own I u a t-(o( ; ,ir* dclighttui a.s * It 1 lappem-d One Nichl and hv the f?ainc author "IN PERSON" With GINGER Iff }( EltS and < ; t m m?Brent. Of course stio shifts and dam is EXTRA: Mfeliey Mouse in "MICKEY'S GARDEN" SAYURDAY, JANUARY 18 | \ New Hopaloim Cassidv Western "BAR 20 RIDES AGAIN" With William Boyd and Jimmy - EIIIBOII. Also thri'i' Comedies and Muck Jones Serial. LATE 10:30 SHOW ('ail UrisHon and Arline Judge in "SHIP CAFE" MONDAY,' TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 20, 21 and 22 The Biggest Picture Silica "Bin Parade" and "llen llur." Electrifying and Still Sweeping the Country "Mutiny On The Bounty" With CLARK GABLE, Charles KatiKhton and Era ne hot Tone. j Two million dollars to produce the j ft 1 in Honsatiftn of the century. Two yearn in the making. j YhURSDAY,'JXN UARY23 She may not be a lady, hut ahe'a all woman from the heart out! JEAN HARLOW with "honey* j brown" ha.lr in a new thrill i romance! I "RIFFRAFF" With Spencer Tracy. lTna Merkel and Joaeph Callera. COMING: "8plendor" with Miriam Hopkins, "So Rod The Rose," "Harmony Lane" and "Rose of Rancho." * | News Of Interest In And Near Bethune j H.-l linn.-, -'iMJU 1"? Mrs .J. li. Mulljiirds. (i| K;i N. lias I?? * I? i 11 < J 1 icectil ^ih si oL'hor parents, Mr. and .Mis I A Mil 'ask i 11 Mrs .1 L Knn;, .Jr.. and Mrs. \\J It Kozu r witi1 joint hostesses to l In-j afternoon bridge club Ihsi Weducs j ila> at tli?' lioino of tlm former. At [ I In * romlusion of the games a ?I? I i ehnis sv\e<-( eoiirse was served. ! lil'llce I'l aril, of till* I Tilted St a' es I Arm> . w ho is stationed at Fort MouiII lie. is spending several weeks with: .Misses All. .. and l'< ssie Jtozier and l Arthur Ko/.ier. | Mr and Mrs. 15 'I'hreatt and Mrs. K. II Moore, of Lancaster, and H 15 Mtulson, of (iastonia, N. have! been recent quests of their sister,! Mrs Ripley Copeland. Friends of Dr. K. Truesdell are glad that lie has returned from a trip to New York and Chicago to resume his practice. The Missionary Society of the Hap list church held the last meeting with Mrs M. O. Ward. Officers were elected for lldtfi as follows: Mrs. David Holley, president, Mrs iiattie ileustiss, vice president; Miss Margaret Fields, secretary; Miss Lee Hilton, treasurer; Miss Eunice Sevarance. chairman of personal service; leaders of circles one ami two, Mrs. M. (). Ward and Mrs. L. I). Robertson, respectively. A vote of thanks wus given Mrs. W. R. Rozier who resigned after ten years service, for her faithful and efficient work all these years. The members of the society very reluctantly accepted her resignation. Card Of Thankc We wish to express to our many friendB and acquaintances our sincere thanks and deep appreciation for the many kindnesses to the husband and father, Thomas Ripley Copeland, during his long illness and at the time of his death. We greatly appreciate the beautiful flowers and all other tokens of sympathy. Especially would we express our gratitude to Dr. E. Z. Truesdale and Dr. J. H. Stokes, of McBee, for their professional aid so unstintingly given at all times. Mrs. Thomas Ripley Copeland and Children. Hethune, S. C. Many hundreds of people throughout France were driven from their homes the tlrst of the week by flood conditions in rivers and smaller streams. Streams reached the highest levels since 1910. Politician?I've brought that last pair of trouaers to be reseated. Vou know I've had to Bit a lot. Tailor?Yea, and" I hope you have brought your bill to be receipted. You know I've had to utand a lot. Four bandits held up a New York Jewelry store on Monday and inado their escape with Jewelry valued at $100,000 or more. re ^ !. .5. .8. r.g BENEFIT DANCE I vl > 1WOOOO < 0i?i?OO?OOOCO?OOOOOOOO0?OOOOOi?O?OO??OO< I SUNSET CLUB CAMDEN, S. C. | Monday Night, Jan. 20 ' Sponsored By CAMDEN RED FEZ CLUB ! ! and; j SUNSET CLUB MANAGEMENT j Entire Proceeds to go for Benefit of j WARM SPRINGS FOUNDATION FOR CRIPPLED j! CHILDREN AND CRIPPLED CHILDREN OF 11... THIS COMMUNITY | I . So# J. H. McLeod, President Camden Red Fern Club, j 11 Foe Ticket*?$1.00 | "$25.00-a-Month" Buys a New Ford Deafborn, Mich., Jun. 3,?A new "25-a-month" plun for financing retail purchases ?>f new Kord V-8 curs Jh to he put into effect Immediately throughout the United Slates, Edsei Kord, president of the Kord Motor -company, announced hero today. The plan, involving substantially reduced tlnap< ij, charges and broad insurance protection for the car purchaser, Is to toe offered through Ford doulers by the IJnlyersal Credit Company, authorized Kord finance company. The plun has three important features: Maximum monthly puyments of $25, plus the usual low down payment. Finance charges at the rate of onehalf of one per cent per month, six per cent for 12 months, computed upon the total of the original unpaid balance plus Insurance cost. Insurance protection at regular conference rates, including not only lire and theft covereuge, but also fifty dollars deductible collision insurance and protection against other accidental physical damage to the car. The number of monthly payments may be reduced, or monthly payments less than $25 may be arranged, ii a larger down payment is made or if a late model car, valued at more tliah the usual down payment, is turned in fur exchange.- The account also may la- discharged at any time by filll payment of the balance due, in which vent a rebate ot a portion of the credit ? Marge will be allowed. How To Prevent Spread Of Disease Mow can we keep down the spread of t uLm reulosis in Kershaw couuty? iln the last six weeks there have been 1 ;* ! three deaths, young women, between 'the ages of seventeen and twenty-, three. From the history of thyiq individuals we find no tuberculosis in their immediate families hut they were contacts with individuals who j were stricken with "tho captain of I tiie men of death." Thus, we find it ' a social disease which could be stamped out if everybody took public health seriously and did everything to the I best .of his knowledge and his family physician's knowledge to safe-guard himself and his neighbors. Public health has been described ! by a seventh grade boy as "being a | good neighbor." To be a good neighbor in tiiis sense we must beepme educated through being taught and discussed in our schools, churches, clubs, associations with those about us and the reading of authoritative literature on Health Education. Since Health Education necessarily includes instructions as to t^e prevention and the control of tuberculosis it is of the utmost importance that we not only learn but put into dally practice this information. Thomas R. Copeland Passes at Bethune Bethune, Jan. 14.?Thomas Ripley Copeland, 53, died at his home here last Thursday, January 9, after an illness of about eighteen months. Ho was a member of Pleasant Hill Baptist church, and also a member of the Junior Order U. A. M. He was a man of quiet, gentle manners and kind disposition and bore his long illness patiently and calmly. Funeral services were held at Pleasant Hill church Friday morning, conducted by the Rev. J. T. N. Keels, the Rev. W. V. Jerrnan, the Rev. ,J. E. Williams and .tile Rev. C. S. Floyd. Interment was in the church cemetery beneath lovely flowers. Pallbearers were: B. W. Best, J. M. Clyburn. S. E. Holland. Homer Fields, A. K. Mtl.aurin and Steve Lane, all members of the Junior Order U. A. M. Mr. Copeland is susvived by his widow, who was before marriage. Miss llernice Hudson, of Lancaster; five children: Thomas Ripley. Jr., Curtis. Katherine. Bobbie and Fred Hudson. Several nieces and nephews also survive. Liquor Store Blown Up at Myrtle Beach Myrtle Beach, Jan. 15.?The Kentucky liquor store, owned by Jerry Page, was practically demolished early today by a charge of dynamite, the explosion of which blew out plate glass windows of nearly every store in a block of the business section here. Officers Investigating the dynamiting said they knew of no motive for it. Monroe Jackson White, middle-aged night watchman sleeping in the small stucco building housing the liquor establishment, suffered a broken leg and other injuries in the blast and was taken to a hospital at Conway. The explosion occurred about 4 a. m. Page also operates another liquor store here. Page estimated the damage to the store stock at around $2,000 and that to the building at about $3,000. Several hundred dollars damage was done to other stores which lost windows. Murderer Qeta Life Sentence Greenville, Jan. 13.?Ray Batley, North Carolina desperado, pleaded guilty when arraigned in general sessions court today on a charge of Murder of A. B. Hunt, a Greenville polloeman, and was sentenced to life- imprison m en t E3S' .iSsa Campaign Brings Interesting Facts fti'iuleru of this newspaper will be particularly interested In h new type of educational advertising campaign which the Chilean Nitrate people have JuhI began and which will be published over the pext six months In select ed good papers through the &outh. The first "chapter" in the new CftJtWpaign, features the famous race horse, Man O'War, admittedly the greatest runner of all t/inb and the foremost sire. Ills .progany today are winning important stake races while Man O'War, "Big Red," as he is affectionately known, grazes contentedly on Kentucky blue grass at his ? Owner's estate near Lexington. The advertisement points out that Man O.'War is one of Nature's miracles?one perfect1 horse to which Mother Nature guve ^e vital spark?the perfect natural | balance of all the elements that make a champion of champions. An interesting analogy is drawn between M^un O'War and natural Chilean Nitrate. The famous horse, it is pointed out, is what he is because of this natural balance of all elements, and natural Chilean Nitrate, with its natural balance of major elements and minor ones us well?tlie highly im* j port ant "vital impurities"?is shown | to rank with Man O'War as one of j Nature's miraculous accomplishments. I The vital impurities in natuVal Chll-j can Nitrate have grown in importance' as scientific agricultural knowledge has advanced from year to year. Today it is commonfy accepted that a natural balance of these vital impurities which Chilean Soda contains elements suc h as boron, rmmgaut-se. magnesium, Calcium, Potassium, etc.,' is extremely important in proper fer-j tihzutiou of cotton and other crops. Hogs To The Front : In Williamsburg; Kingstree, Jan. 11.?Hog feeding' work has gained considerably over] depression years and Williamsburg j farmers are again garnering nice profits front hogs as an additional income, says County Agent It. A. Jackson,, whose records show that 1,827 hogs [ weighing 318,339 pounds, or an av-j era go weight of 170 pounds, were soldi from the county front December 1. j 193-1. to November 30, 193a. At an j average price of $8.9a per hundred pounds, the sales through the agent's office netted 170 growers $28,504.94. Interesting as an example of development in hog farming is the sto-1 ry of the rise of Laverne Minis, Greeleyville. from a school boy to one of Williamsburg county's best hog growers. Young Mims started feeding hogs for market soon after this successful enterprise was started in the county in 1927. Since that time he has participated In a variety of good hog production practices including the use of supplementary protein, grazing crops, ton litters and "hogging down corn." _ His early record as hog raiser was made on his mother's farm, though he has recently purchased a farm adjoining. The entire farm, excepting a small tobacco and cotton acreage, is planted to corn, grain, grazing crops, and improved pastures. Mims learned long ago that livestock furnishes a good supplementary Income to regular cash crops. Sales records kept in the county agent's office show that 333 hogs weighing 65,310 pounds have been sold from the farms operated by him during the past six years. The sale of these finished hogs, which avfernged 190 pounds each, netted $5,291.81, or an average of $861.46 per year.Kidney Worm Injury; Source of Great Loss! Greenville.. Jan. 11.--That 85 per cent of the livers and frequently other portions of the hog carcass must he condemned as unfit for foood because of parasites was the opinion of Dr. F. E. Kitchen, Greenville meat inspector, expressed at a gathering of hog growers and extension workers at Ilallentine Packing Company's plant recently. The chief offending parasite, Dr. Kitchen pointed out, is the kidney worm, which evidently pauses losses to South Carolina farmers totaling tens of thousands of dollars annually. "In the last analysis," says J. R. Hawkins, extension livestock specialist, "the producing farmer pays this big bill since eventually the cost must be deducted from the price paid for live hogs. "Still a greater loss, however, must be borne by farmers who produce parasite-Infested hogs, for because of these parasites there is a heavy loss In death of many young pigs and in uneconomic- development of others. Either they succumb to attacks of disease or they develop * slowly and unevenly taking four to eight weeks more time to reach market weight. "The remedy lies in producing hogs under such sanitary conditions as will result In hogs free from parasites. Proper sanitation Is a simple efficient . . . - ' - Hogging4*>?!fcCon> Pays DiJMh Farmer Dillon, Jau^^Ur Uog# ttV* orage daily KWii ojf HI <*>#* ? HU(I returned an avera|jfi># $1-3$ w bUHh" (,l of torn Jn hogKjri#-dowi? U 32-ftcre field of corn onf tfw of A George. Dillon wjutfy furmer. The yield of corn - bualtftfg.. per acre, or % Mff 634 hogged down. *(l ditional were fed meal and cottobaeed *!3>eftl were fed as concentrate#. George'* feeding record as given by County Agent S. W. Eppa ahowa the following cpata of feed conaumed by the 121 hog*: 696 bdtrtiela of corn at 76 ceuta per bushel, ,$522.00; 7,:i00 pounds of flab meal at $43 per ton, $79.55; 7,400 DQtU^jft J$)f cottonseed meal at $22.40 pe^jrQlb f*2.88,~a total coat of $684.42/^ The hoga weighed 8,656 pounda when turned on the corn and 20,132 pounds at the close of the record- -a gain of 11,487 pounds. This gain at 9.5 cents per pound gave a return of $1,091.26. Deducting the total feed cost from this return leaves a feeding profit of $406.83 on the 121 hogs. A petition for transference of the Sjottriboro cases, on trial at Decatur, Ala., to the United States district court of northern Alabama, has been denied by Judge Callahan. NOTICE OF SALE Stall- or South Carolina County of Kershaw Court of Common I'leas The First National Hank of Cam^n. iMuintiff against H. L Schlosburg, Anna Schlosburg. et al.. Defendants. Under and by virtue of an execution in the above entitled case, issued against tin* defendant. Anna Schl.osburg, on the 13th day of January, 1936. 1 have levied upon and will offer for sale, to the highest bidder, for cash, before the court house door, in the City of Camden, County of Kershaw, State of South Carolina, within the legal hours of sale, on the first Monday in February. 19$6, being the 3rd day thereof, the following described real estate: "All that piece, parcel or lot of land, with the improvements thereon, situate, lying and being in the City of Camden, County of Kershaw, State of South Carolina, on the West side of Broad Street, the store house on said lot b?1ng the northern storehouse on what is known as the "Clyburn BJoek" of buildings, fronting thirty-one (31 > feet and some inches and extending back with a uniform width to a depth of, thirty-eight (38) feet and from that point westward of a uniform width of forty-six (46) feet for a distance of two hundred twentysix (226) feet, and bounded North by Street known as Clyburn Street; East by Broad Street; South by property now or formerly of Anna Schlosburg and by property now or formerly of Baum and Lipscomb and West by I property formerly of Clyburn." That at the conclusion of the bidding, the purchaser will be required to deposit with the Sheriff of Kershaw County, South Carolina, cash, or certified check on some responsible bank for three (3) per cent of the amount of the judgment idebtedness herein, and that the Sheriff shall require a like deposit from any oiher person or persons entering a higher bid on said property within thirty (30) days from the date of sale; that i upon default of the successful bidder to comply with the terms of sale, said property to be resold on some subse: quent salesday thereafter at the risk of the former purchaser; that all | checks from unsuccessful bidders to be at once returned to them. J. H. McLEOD. Sheriff Kershaw County, S. C. I Camden. S. C., January 14. 1936 | I fLOW FARES*! Usually dollar* leu than any other \ first class transportation. A definite v saving on every trip. Extra reductions on round trip tickets. DEPENDABILITY A great, nationwide organisation offering the same fin* service to all America. Actual records prove 0 Greyhound more than uven time* as safe as private car travel. COMFORT The finest* most modern motor coaches. Tropic- Aira-conditioned for comfort in any weather. Dsepcushioned scats thdt recline to any desired angle. Wide windows, CONVENIENCE Frequent schedules, conveniently spaced. Liberal stopover privileges and wide choice of routes. Terminals j located, right downtown in the heart of hotel and theatre districts. greyhound terminal East DeKalb St. Telephone 249 CAMDEN, S. C7~ NOTICE OF SALtf I Notice is hereby given that in ac* cordance with the terms and provii-fl ions ot' t lie Decree of the Court oI^9 Common Pleas for Kershaw County,* dated January 10, 1936, in the caseol* 1). A. Hoykjn, Conservator of TN* Hank of Camden, Camden, 8. C.,fl Plaintiff, versus John Doby, Defend- H ant, I will sell to the highest bidder* tor cash, before the Court House door* at Camden, S. C., during the ligiH houra of sale on the fltst Monday ft* February. 1936, being the third day* thereof, the following described pro-* "All that piece, parcel or tract of* land in Kershaw County, State of* South Carolina, on the western side* of the Wateree River, and being sit* uated on the Smyrna road about two* miles from Rabon's Cross Roads, coa-l taining ninety-eight and twentj-fotfH hundredths (98.24) acres, mvt <** less, and being bounded as follows:* North ahd East by lands of Hsnta* and by lands of Wood; South by the* Smyrna Road separating this ty from lands of Wood and W$st by lands of Harris. Said property is more partieulwfr* described on a plat of A. B. Boykit, Surveyor, of dslte December 19#-Wfl.* and is the property conveyed to tbi* grantor herein by May E. Under byH deed of date February 14, 1966,'t*9 corded in the office of the Clsrt *fl Court for Kershaw County in Boot* "WW" at page 596." Terms of Sale: For cash, the Mu* ter to require of the successful bM der, a deposit of five (5) per cent c'l his bid, same to be forfeited in case of non-compliance; no personal or de* ftciency judgment is (Remanded, M** the bidding will not retnain opeaattu* the sale, but compliance with the bll^H may be made immediately. W. L. DeP^SS. JSIJ* Master for Kershaw County. * KIRK LAND & deLOACH Attorneys for Plaintiff A Penney Super Value|l Printed Silk I CREPES I Right No*! A January 4 7 ?Z? II We're proud aa can be . . because we're able to pre*1 ! 1 sent this colorful iine-up of ~ brand hew Spring printi " i at such a low price ! A perfect crepe to sew on?d# I drapes beautifully Small and medium florals, mono- ^ tones, stripes. plaid^S^^ on medium and datkj grounds. 39 inch wtdtkr^^^ m _^L^ ^Tm 111 lm Br ^r m ^B I