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I FOR SALE I II LAND?Large Tracts?I ,600 acres?for game, j 2,200 acres?260 acre lake, almost completed, for I, game, fish and fruit. y | i j 3,300 acres?For game or stock. j j 6,000 acres?Splendid property for any purpose. flj | 600 acres?For stock farming. j j 1,200 acres?Coastal country, for game. Price j j very low. J I Shannon Realty Co. I nrntl^TT T rWliwrfTl^ "ifw T*Vrr i.H li'llayi,s1lMr.lOLMCI^aaSMB>ClglBJEBaBMtaS3c^ Petitions hearing r.Ubd names i<? j |)lit< r lib I til Hit' <>! 1*'I'll ll). I ill !> Itoose Veil (Ml lilt- preferential I > li III ii r> 1)01)1 I ination liokfi in Pennsylvania, have I heeH|filed al i iai i islnii'k ^Phe (!. I). C\ meeting In I in 1)iih Texas, dubbed JUiffalo Hill a l.:uioii spy, and (Inclined to place a reproduction of it New York Htatne ot the old time scout, as a part of the state's centennial celebration Edward A Cannon, 27, candy salesmun, has boon convicted at PougltkecpHle, N. Y,, on a charge of murdering Hilda Price, blond waitress, on New Yeur'a ove. The verdict makes the death sentence mandatory. A SIradlvarlus violin, the property of ilronlslaw Huborman noted Polish violinist, was stolen from his dressing room in a New York music hall Friday night, while the violinist was out of the room It is believed the ilistru ment was stolen for a ransom i Cra/y, Eh'/ a poIJMelun who hart Juki. been ?-1? ? ti rt to office paid a \ isit to a state institution for tlio insane, was shown | over tho establishment by oin? of tho | inmates who was so intelligent that I I it was almost impossible to believe that he could he out of his head. "And what are you in here for my. man," asked the politician at length. Immediately a cunning look came Into the man's eyes and he looked about him warily. "I'll tell you if you'll keep it dark," he suld, lowering his voice. 1 have a mania for swearing. I write cuss words all around. It's great sport. Why they have to hire a man Just to follow me around and rub ,'em out, hut," coining a little closer, I'll tell you a secret. I'm four damn's ahead of him and I've got Hell written all over vour back." I ' I AMERICAN MADE "The Southland 1h famous for many things," ha> h the Orlando, Florida, MomiiiK Sentinel. "Hanging from In comparable woman to iface horses, from sun kissed oranges to cotton, from expanding Industrialism to sunshine Of recent date, however, Hopewell, Virginia, has come in for fame because of the air nitrogen Induntry." Thin great nitrate of ttoda industry of the South has oomo in for much 1 attention lately. The Commonwealthl Magazine (Virginia) states "Virginia and the Houth have in the Hopewell plant a treat of which they may well be proud."^ Few farmers fully understand how much the American nitrogen industry means to them. The Orlando paper says, foe example, "Secretary Walluce states that the price of nitratel of soda was redcuced from over $r>0 per ton to its present price of around $;)2 per ton by the presence of domestic ni j trate of soda." In tills way alone, the Aiiicrii an nitrate of soda industry has saved the Southern farmer a substantial part of his "soda" costs. I he Americ an nitrate of soda Industry is also important to the national defense, since nitrate of soda is used in explosives. This industry was first < routed after the War when far-seeing Americans, .including General Pershing, saw the need to prepare for the future in times of peace. A third reason why American nitrate of soda is a boom to the South is the fact that when farmers use Southern products, they are helping build up Southern industry and prosperity. Southern industry is leading the South to great prosperity. I.ust but not least, the American nitrate of soda industry has aided the farmer and fertilizer dealer by being the first to introduce moisture-proof bags and even weight bags. In results. one soda may be said to be as | good i\H the other, but for the reasons stated above many farmers are ask| ing for the American product. I Purvis Tells of 'FaceChanging' Operation Dillinger paid $5,00<) to have ItIm face "changed" by plastic surgery, tut it did no good and ho almost died under the ether, according to Melvin I'urvis, foiyner ace (Lilian, who wuh his nemesis. Revealing for the first time the true Htory of Dillinger's end, Mr. I'urvis writes in Hod book Magazine for March: "Dilllnger, while we were searching desperately for hint, was almost constantly in touch with latuiu 1Mquett, hia attorney. PJquett was wellknown in Chicago as a criminal lawyer. He wuh a former city prosecutor and a North Side political leader. Piquett was an actorish follow, with a great shock of dramatic grey hair, a command of lust) rhetoric and an ex< client Jury presence. While on | trial as a hurborer of Dillingert and [this is a sample of his rhetoric), he d(S(iihcd the prosecution as the biggest frame-up slnl>e the Crqcltixion. "I'iquHt denied that lie had aided Dillinger's es< ape from Crown Point. Two witnesses at Li.-s trial, however, ijuoted IMquelt us saving that lie had ?and lie is paying mo ou tj for | engineering this escape.' Jolin ()' l.eary, young, a flashy dresser, was Piquetl's eoniidential investigator, O'lajury served as go-between for lawyer and client, repeatedly meeting Dillinger by appointment on various Chicago street corners. On one occasion Dillinger and O'Leary talked about the possibility of getting a divorce for Dillinger's girl, Evelyn Frechette, whose husband was in prison. After special agents had arrested Evelyn at a tavern In downtown Chicago, Dilllnger and O'l^ary talked about the expenses of her legal defense. Dillinger paid for it. It cost him $3,000. "During the months following the 'shooting' at Little Bohemia, Dillinger's nerve was badly undermined. The newspapers were filled with pictures of him; a large reward had been offered for his capture; the pursuit was so feverish that lie did not know where to turn for sanctuary. [Even the usual criminal hideouts wore closed to him; they would not hazard his concealment, because he was a marked man, and 'brought organized pursuit with him. In the underworld tliey called him 'bad news.' At this point Dillinger approached t)'l.eary with the proposition that I'iuuett find him a doctor who would perform plastic surgery to change his .ace and obliterate the configurations of his too web-known fingerprints. The arrangements were made. "The chief actors were Dr. Wilholm Looser. Dr. Harold J. Cassidy and the gnome-like Jimmy Probasco, an old man who in 1934 went to Piquett to suggest that his shabby old house on North Crawford avenue was available as a hide-out for crooks. Piquett sent him Dillinger; and Dillinger, for the rude accommodations there, paid $35 a day. Doctor Loeser was in his 50's ?a university graduate who had practiced in Chicago from 1909. In 1931 he was convicted of violating the narcotics laws and sentenced'to prison. He was paroled in 1932 and -violated his parole. He was engaged by Piquett to do the remodeling job on Dillinger. Doctor Cassidy. a young man, was Loeser's assistant on the job. It was Cassidy who almost saved the federal men the trouble of taking Dillinger out of circulation. The price for the remodeling was $5,000. Of this Piquett, O'Leary and Loeser were were each to get one-third. Cassidy was to be paid a $1,000. "Doctor loeser described in detail the curious scene in Jimmy Probasco's house. Dillinger wanted ether, as Looser washed his hands in the bathroom and prepared his instruments. Cassidy began to administer the anesthetic. When Ix>oser entered the parlor, a bit shaken himself by the grim secrecy of the occasion, he found Cassidy wringing his hands. Dillinger had been given too much ether. He lay silent, his face a dark bluish tiiit: His breatfi had stopped; his heart ,had stopped. Dillinger, to all intents and purposes, was dead. Loeser pushed a hypodermic needle straight into the heart. The needle contained adrenalin, a violent stimulent. Then with a hemostat Loeser gripped Dillinger's tongue and pulled, at the same time forcing his elbows savagely into Dillinger's ribs?and the outlaw gasped sharply and began to breathe. For fifteen minues, Loeser continued artificial respiration, and then administered a second hypodermic. Fifteen minutes later Dilllnger was roused from his stupor. There was no more ether that night. "The operation, with Dillinger swallowing morphine tablets was painful and long Looser removed a small scar between the bandit's nose and upper lip, removed two moles from between his eyes and one from his forehead, lifted the downward curve of his mouth, excised a small depression near the bridge of his nose and treated his finger-tips with caustic. "A few days later, In the same dismal house. Homer Van Meter, of Dillinger's gang, underwent the ordeal. While he watched suBpieiou?ly throuKh the dnrk I1<1b ?>f hl? swollen t eyes. Van Meter felt the bridge of | hit* crooked nose pared ofT, the near ' on his forehead removed, and his fut lower lip thinned. An artistically tatooed anchor diwappeured. Van Meter'H beautlflcatlon required three treatinentH. It croat hiin $5,000. Once he threatened lxjoaer with a machine Kim. 'You've not ine looking like I'd been In a dog-fight,' he nald. 'If this Job 1b a failure, I'll bump the whole tot of you/1 "The Job waa a failure, but Van Meter never had his vengence. He waa destined to die a abort time later before police cannonading in the streets of St. Paul. Neither his fingerprints nor Dilllnger's were successfully obliterated, and tho plastic surgery did not essentially change their facial conformations. I had never seen Dillinger before the night he died, but I could not fall to recognize him. No amount of surgical hocuspocus could know anything about Dilllnger's dpep-set and unmistakable < yes." "We knew Dillinger was In town, but we did not know where to llnd him. One day a member of the Kast Chicago, Indiana, police force came to my office and told me that he had j located a woman who had seen Dillinger r^frently, and was familiar with his whereabout. It was arranged that I interview the woman. She was, of course, Mrs. Anna Sage, usually described by the newspaper stylist as 'the Woman in Red.' A special ugent never discloses the source of confidential information, but Mrs. Sage has herself publicized her part in the Dillinger drama, and I am no longer under obligations to remain silent. Mrs. Sage was a woman near middle age, not at all romantic, who was at that time not entirely au courant with the law. She was a native of Romania, and had been in difficulties with the Indiana police, which she feared would result in her deportation. She lias since maintained a legal action that I promised she would not be deported. Tho facts are that I told her that she would share in a liberal cash reward if Dillinger were trapped, and that I wcjuld "recommend that she not i he deported. I could not promise to prevent deportation because I had no power to do so I kept my part of the* bargain, reporting to the proper authorities the- full story of her assistance. I still believe, and have so gone on record, that the deportation proceedings should have been dropped; she had earned the right to stay in this country by reason of great public service."?The State. An apple tree in an orchard in Tapper Xyack, N. Y., despite sub-zero weather in January and very cold, weather since then, came out with full blooms this week. Only one t: ee of 200 in the orchard pulled the early blooming stunt. Getting ftighU If you suffer from Getting Up Nights, Nervousness, Leg Pains. Swollen Jo nts, Dtsmlness, Headaches, Loss of -Pep.'^'Wurntng, Smarting, Itching Acidity due to functional Kidney or Bladdet troubles, try the Doctor'* guaranteed proscription -vCyste*, (Slss-tex).-Must bring new vitality " ??-an <8 hours, abd.-satisfy completely Id days or money back. Guaranteed Cf ooata only 3p a dose at druggists. I'M SOLD It always works Just do what hospitals do, and the doctors insist on. Use a liquid laxat'Ye. and you can bring yourself to ciocklike regularity without strain or ill effect. A liquid can always be taken ia . mdually reduced doses. Reduced fosage is the secret oj any real relief from constipation. Ask a doctor about this. Ask your druogist how very popular Dr. Caldwell s Syrup Pepsin nas become. It gives the right kind of help, and right amount of nclp. Taking a little less each time, gives the bowels a chance to act of their own accord, until they are moving regularly and thoroughly without any help at all. Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin contains senna and cascara?both natural laxatives that form no habit. The action is gentle, but sure. It will relieve any sluggishness or bilious condition due to constipation without upset. Still Coughing? M No matter how many medicJL "'* lief now with Oreoflmlaion. $!i*- I trouble may be brewhjg and Vf?? ** not afford to take a chance wm? *** I thing less than OreomuWon toJRt I Boca right to the seat of the J*'# I to aid nature to soothe and h?*?T I inflamed membrane* as the g.-rSLfi? * phlegm is loosened and expellS^1 I Even if other remedies huvH^n.; ! ffffiS ^-W'SSgwOour druglffi; I authorized to guarantee OnSSJ? I and U> refund yeaameney if satisfied with results from th^er?<Sl tattle.Get Oreomulaionriglxt. The Norfolk aud Western planning to spend $8,000,000 ror ^7 * t,onal rollln? ?toek and track bet fl ments. NOTICEOFSALE State of South Carolina, County of Kershaw. Under and by virtue of th,. HuUl(._, fl ty contained in that certain rollaSSfl not., of Maggie Kaboir to The 9 of Camden, Camden, 8. C., dated i?!?* ruary 24. 1933, I will 8?1, at nubtfl outcry to the highest bidder lor mh at 12 o'clock noon, on the HJth (iftv ".'"9 ALuvh. ,???. tho following One note of W. M. Peako to Maeru J Itabon, dated November 19 in-ii , * the sum of $300.00, payable one yen! fl alter date, with interest at 3 ,,?r fl per annum, interest upon which ha 9 l^-n paid until February 4 i<i33 * One note of W. M. Peake to Maimk"! Kahon, dated November 19 xt43l t I the sum of $300.00, payable two vemfl after date, with interest at 8 per cent* per annum, interest upon which Z fl been paid until February 4, 1933T* One mortgage covering 49 acre* I land in West Wateree Township 8e. | curing the notes aforesaid. * U. A. BOYKIN. * Conservator of the Hank of Camden fl Camden, 8. C. * 50-Glsb. ; NOTICE Take notice that the undersigned I intend on March 9, 1936. to file at> fl plication with' the Secretary of State ! for South Carolina for the incorpora-1 lion of a business to be known ufl Barrmger Hardware Company of Cam-* den. which is to have its principal* place of business at Camden, 3 C* I b<> general nature of the business * of said proposed corporation is the! operation of a general wholesale and * retail hardware store or stores; the* amount of capital stock is i<, he Twen--* IT "Thousand (^O.tWd^UT^njHarsdk* vide.l into Two Thousand (2,000)* shares of the par value of One Hun-* .'r d ($10f>.(i0) Dollars ehth. j Take further notice that a meeting* of (he subscribers to the stock of* said proposed corporation will be heldi* 01 (he offices of Messrs. Uoyall Wright. Florence, 8. C., on Monday,* .larch 9, 1936, at 10:00 o'clock a. m.,* lor the purpose of completing 1110 org-* anization of said corporation and^l tiansacting sucii otiier business all may come before the meeting. *>;* I. L. BARRINGKK, JR. * I3ELVA J. BARRIN'GER H T. R. BARRINGER -1* .. FINAL discharge * Notice is hereby given that 0U* month from this date, on March 18,* 1936, JesBie Bell Ratcliff will maketo* the Probate Court of Kershaw Coon-* ty her final return as Executrix of* the estate of J. M,.. A.. liatcliff de- I ceased, and on the same date she wiff* tvpply to tlie said Court for a 11 nil* discharge as said Executrix, N. C. ARNETT, T* Judge of Probate for Kershaw County' * Camden, 3. C.. February 18, 1936. FINAL DISCHARGE Notic is, hereby given that ootfl month from this date, on March 11,* 1936 Mrs. Mary Deas Boykin will'^B make to the Probate Judge of K6P-S shaw county her final return as Hie* cutrix of the estate of Burwell H.Ror* kin deceased, and on the same dita* she will apply to the said Court for* a final discharge as said Executrix of^B said estate. N. C. ARNETT, * Judge of Probatt Camden, S. C., February 15, 1936. ccd salve! uud colds! Liquid-Tablets price Salve-Nose Drops 5c, 10, 25c S drayage fl and 9 storagei f. r. curetonH Telephone 233-J -J I FIRE?AUTOMOBILE?BURGLARY?BONDS ISfi I iij DeKALB INSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE To] J U "INSURANCE HEADQUARTERS" , IsM U] ~ 'HZ_ " l|H H CROCKER BUILDING?TBLBPHONB 7 | ! j 3 M. G. MUL1.EK ELIZABETH CLARKE* 1 ' ~ " | This policy gives you a FIVE-YEAR START i r on easy terms J Annual Rate for $5,000 Life Insurance I j First 5 years 6th year and thereafter :;| For the first 20 $9i.io 31 *121.50 42$ibo.oo ; 21 93.40 32 125.30 43 188.70 five years 22 95.80 33 120.00 44 190.70 | ! lr 23 98.10 34 134.10 4 5 205.30 n one-hall 24 100.50 35 iss.bo 46 214.50 25 103.00 30 143.80 47 224.1-0 | i the figure in 26 105.10 37 149.10 48 234.50 , . , 1 27 107.90 38 154.70 49 245.50 this table 28 111.10 39 100.70 50 257.20 1 29 114.40 40 107.00 Aho issued at ' I TAV?33Q 7 7Q 4| 173.90 ages 51 to GO COSTS YOU LEAST WHILE NEEDED MOST ASK AN AGENT OH TIIE LOCAL OFFICE OH WRITE THE HOME OFFICE FOR DESCRIPTIVE FOLDER AND A SYNOPSIS ?^<?rutMial I Sitauraurr tT (funttpamj nf Am print J - EDWARD D. DUFF1ELD, President . Home Office, NEWARK, N. J. _ ?fv.. * A