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I [ buy goodyears-get1 MORE TOR I I YOUR MONEY 1 I 3 COOD REASONS WHY: (I) Goodyear not only j I builds die best but the most tires by millions I ?(?)Goodvear is the industry's lowest cost proI . jduoer-(l) We Goodyear dealers do the largest tirfe business in America. ; ! j j 4 7) V ,i(((j|^^^^B 111JB ?| Jil B11 |l ' ^Bmammmm^L? Here's America's ^^^1 biggest seller ?by ^ millions! Look it ^|j? over ? let us show \K you why "G-3" j|| beads the list. fl GOODIE,MR/flr ALL-WEATHER Compared with previous All-Weathers "G-3 ' GIVES YOU 43% more miles of real non-skid safety (we have customer records to prove this a mild statement) Quicker-stopping grip Av^eNage of 2 pounds more rubber per tire Mo Extra Price / \ MUD MEANS NOTHING to the NEW | STUDDED TIRE Surest grip ? for pulling ahead or baoking up. No grooves to fill up ? husky big buttons throw off the mud on ^very turn. We say it's the best mud tire and so will you when you see^t. Get our prices ? you'll find it easy to buy a whole new set I Backed by our alt-year service, Goodyear* are the best buy in towau CAROLINA MOTOR COMPANY CAMDEN, S. C. ^ wt--? - i *=== WEEKLY BULLETIN ==r?? . S.C.GAME {JFlSH ASSOCIATION ^ftru Statewide dope rat ion Came Jish Jorest can be Materiality (Increased for ike Benefit of Jul. *" ' ' * , 4 V > 1 } DO YOU KNOW THAT" This is (he year for the return to ^ th Carolina of the 17-vear locust "sadat? And do they make excel1*' ' halt for the bream and redbreast, iml the rat? \ll American eels migrate to the '""in south of Bermuda to spawn ad spawn only once. The tiny life term floats back to American fresh liters in about a year's time, while their European cousins take three years for the journey via the Gulf St ream. The Gambusia. the little top water minnow, which also feeds on the mos tuito larva, is a live bearer?giving birth to live fish? Many good fishermen turn their mitalpa worms inside out, finding 'heir catches prefer the white color and the sweet meat? (Don't ask how know the morsel to be sweet.) While the salmon, shad, trout, and rtain other species, are successfully propagated artificially, the same cannot he done with the sunftsh family? 'he hass. bream, perch and their oth-] ' kinsfish? Wl.de speaking of kin. that tlie well v>" carp, the common sucker and Hiring goldfish, are ' sisters un" skin." : lt>'v. Doctor John Bachn.an, picture hangs in Burnham ' ...imherlain's ofTice iji the Charles-1 l?n Museum (and 1n many other placand is there because he did not-! able work with Audubon, especially j Ir> writing the text for the American Tiadruped8, was the first one in this country to successfully artificially propagate fish. His experiments were (oadu^t*) near Charleston in 1804. V ' * * ^ w e H1_ i We bet the Rood Lutherans of that day had many sermons preached to tlwin favoring wildlife). Many negroes claim, with a very positive shake of the head, that the t el is the male catfish? There are approximately 3,000 vatieties of fish In the I'nited States, lti.'i of which are edible, yet eighty per cent of all fisli'eaten in this country are taken from twelve species? The female seahorse (the funny, looking little tip-right fish you often see in home aquariums) deposits her eggs in a sack or pouch of the male, j who carries the eggs until hatched, I and then acts as nursemaid? ' The salmon, both male and female/ die after spawning once? Yes. But i did you know they never feed after entering fresh water? Perhaps you did. Again that th?"Alaskan salmon will ascend a fresh water stream at time of migration for 100 to 3,000 j I miles! < We had better stop with this next one: The grundy of the Pacific coast j rides the highest wave of the high > tide of the full moon and deposits i 'her eggs In the sand. On the recur-j ring highest wavo, of the high tide: of the next full moon, her young are j swept into the ocean? ? For further information \vrite head-1 [quarters enclosing "application for an-| jnttal membership in our fine organ!-1 /.at ion. I Between February 12 and 29, Oscar Johnston, manager of the government cotton pool, announces that 129,000 bales of cotton were sold, reducing the spot cotton pool holdings to 400,000 bales. French and Gemiansj Gather At The Rhine Pari>c March s. Finnc pound and and air reinforcement* to h.*r eastern frontier Sunday in the wrnk.* <>f Adoif 11 If U- r's militant scrapping or a not h? r treaty b) remilitarizing lit" Rhiiioluml. Giily a rivor separated two groat wiiUin. ilrJjuui,4llauua; virtual*.. ly for t li * * first lime since the end of Ihc great war. The. French cabinet, in what unjouut-! cd to a "war count:!," denouut ed Gi rnuut> a action, gave the army and air ministers a free hand to make emergency preparations and told the navy to clear decks. Informed quarters said the Italian ambassador to Paris had asst.red I ranie Jtal> wus ready to assume its obligations under the Locarno treaty, provided tin- League of Nations adopts u "sensible" attitude toward' the Ethiopian war. The League council called a meet-' ing for Friday to act on France's up- j peal against Germany's action. 1,1 Ge rnufify's crack army,! through General Werner von Ilium-J herg, minister of war, thanked 1 filler for his action and pledged its devo-! tion to him and Nazism. Hitler, having taken |iis drastic step, sat hac k to see what the former allies are going to do about it. Premier Albert Sarraut, of France, denounc ed Germany's action in an address to the nation, and announced he would refjtke to examine Germany's proposal of a peace pact because ! ram-e has no confidence"in Berlin's word. riie Belgian cabinet, meeting in a I special session, asked an immediate I session of the League council to consider Germany's violation. War-scarred Alsace-Lorraine heard tin* tramp of more than 50,000 sobertaeed French troops marching to the border to take up positions with 100,000 brothers already there. But barring unforeseen incidents, it was indicated the crisis caused by Hitler's violation of the Ix>carno treaty would be dealt with by diplomatic maneuvering?not bullets. The traditional calm In European chancellories was broken as diplo* mats hastily conferred. Britain takes a serious view of Germany's step, it was indicated, but Italy is believed secretly to approve Hitler's move. 1 he ltulo-Eihiopian war and sanctions have made "bed-fellows" of Premier Mussolini and Hitler?despite reports they dislike each other in-! tensely, Italy, which Saturday Sent a qual- ' Hied acceptance to Geneva of the J la-ague's plea for pe ace, is convinced j that this fact, coupled with Hitler's I violation of Locarno, has killed sanctions once and for all. Liberty Hill Boy Wins Hay Contest Winners in the hay, corn and cot. ton crop contests sponsored jointly by the state department of education . were announced yesterday by W. H. Garrison, assistant state supervisor of vocational agriculture oducatiou. The hay contest was won by Billy Cartee of Liberty Hill school; Hie corn contest by Ransom Rogers of Keowee school, Oconee county, and the cotton contest by Raymond Ferris, Orangeburg high school. Cartee made twelve tons of hay on two acres, planting two crops during the year, a winter hay crop of vetch and oats followed by a crop of cow peas and cane. His net profit was *132.70. He used 250 pounds of 8-3-3 fertilizer and 200 pounds of nitrate of soila per acre. Rogers made 89 bushels of corn on a one-acre project, using the prolific variety, and cleared a net profit of *48.60. He used 200 pounds of 7-5-5 fertilizer and loo pounds of soda, j Ferris made 895 pounds of lint per acre on a two-acre project and his j profit - was *289.10. He used 350 j pounds of 7-5-5 fertilizer and. 150 pounds oLiihTatff per acre. Each of the winners will get a nineday trip to some Important and scenic point in the United States. All contestants who made over 400 pounds of lint or 40 bushels of corn, or two tons of hay, per acre will be the guests at dinners to be held as follows: Greenville, March 24; Florence, March 17; and Orangeburg, | March 19. Judges of the contest were: W. H. Garrison and J. C. Pridemore. educational director for tho Barrett [company of New York.?Kershaw Era The biological survey of the United States government has sot up a bird sanctuary along the North Carolina coast on what is known as "The Banks," a narrow strip on tho coast ten miles long. Migratory water fowl are to be protected there. Chairman Smith of the senate agricultural committee, is in favor of ban| nlng government estimates of Ah? cotton crop. He declares that the estimates "serve no useful purpose, are merely guesses and have a demoralising effect on the market." Tractor Smashes Tons Of Old Drugs I Kb si it irink loads hi old drugs and |>ati'ii! nu dii iiii?k weighing more j than ii<ii? w? 11 >ft .mis hauled i<>! IH?* i its dumping giituud at It,i>l.iK, 1 I '.x t !.< r?? ;i )At-tiMi 11a?-1or run oierj I 111 III Ui.t ll ,1; I SM'lr ill ft IMS I d I !iis was tin- !arg< st ipiaifet\ of | r*??r iifirrnyptt tv Tnxru;! food an tiding officials, who lire dooperating wnti ttuv FiMef al Food and Drug Administration in trying to stop thl' actisiticH of unsc rupulous salvage drug dealors. It included drugs and medicines bearing Spanish American war tax sitiin|>s. Some were made in Indian Territory before Oklahoma wns admitted as a State in 1907. kI.n-' beds on bottles of "Scientific Fled ric Fluid" guaranteed this product to cure 97 different diseases. "Recommended tor all the chief ailments , known in the human system" was I printed on packages containing Dr. Gary's vegetable ointment. Although bettor class druggists keep tdd products from their shelves, the salvage drug business became unusually active last year in Texas and other Southern States. Much of the old material picked up at auctions of bankrupt, lire-damaged, or, distressed stocks found its way into Interstate commerce. Cooperation of State authorities with the Federal Food and Drug Administration has made it possible} to confiscate and destroy largo; quantities of these worthless drugs. Successful experiments with televis- j ion between Berlin and Leipzig, Gor-1 many, having been completed, the promoters now plan a net work of the system all over Germany. NOTICE OF SALt I'tuier and by virtue of the authority contained in that certain collateral note executed by M. A. Clyhurn to the Bank of Camden, Camden, S. C., on January 14. 1932, 1 will sell at public auction, for ( ash, before the Court House door in the City of Camden,! S. C., at 12 o'clock noon, on the 16th j day of March, 1936, the following described chattels, to wit: "Two shares of common stock of I the Hermitage Cotton Mills of the pari value of $100.00 each represented by j stock certificate No. 88 of said'eorpo-t ration. D. A. BOYKIN, | Conservator of The Bank of Camden, j Camden, S. C. . J ' I 'I L' Says Need Of Fishing Laws Columhlfi, March I Charles K. Jackson, of Washington, assistant <llrot tor of tho Federal Bureau of Fishtrios, deplored tho luck of fishing laws in South Carolina today in an address before the legislature. lie said South Carolina was tho only state in the nation that had no closed season on fishing, in which game fish could ho offered for sale, and in which no bU? nor bag limits were specified. Jackson, a native of South Carolina, said the lack of regulations in the state were "embarrassing" and added : "Were It not for the natural ad vantages in the lower state, and the grace of God who protects our llsh, there would he virtually none In the state today." lie urged, "not as a Federal official, but as a South Carolinian" the, enactment of a fishing license law.j catch limits, dosed seasons on game ' llsh, and closing of the Ashepoo river 10 shad fishers as a permanent shad J sanctuary. James F. Hurley, ty>^_L;Uitor of the lOvening Post, Salisbury, N. C., died suddenly on a Southern Hallway train Thursday night south of Jacksonville, as he was en route homo after wintering in Florida. Bronchial trouble caused heart failure. Miss Elsie Thurber, 30, a Boston woman, was found at Hull. Mass., after having disappeared'from home on February 18. She declared that she lived two weeks under the porch of a summer home on a diet of snow. She was sent to a sanatorium. A REQUEST Ranger Perry of the Kershaw County Forest Association requests ttiat all jThrsons fn Kershaw county having occasion to burn brush, new ground, i ightB of way, or for any reason nut a tiro that might result in the woods burning notify either by mail or tele pltmn one of the men whose names appear below: \Y (\ Perry, County Ranger, Cam(It'll. Telephone Hid; W. E. Cunninglinni. Warden. Flat Rock District, Lib ert> Hill. Telephone 20ttri; L. Mi Kinnon, Warden, Buffalo District, lie thune; 1>, <1 NJrLcod. Warden. Wu tetee District. Mam > ; W. C Williams. 'Tow ertnait. Camden; Charles Mark. Towerlnan,. Liberty Hill. Telephone 2oo0. When the county organization, whose work consists of preventing and suppressing tires in Kershaw county, is not notified of the date ami location of tires intentionally set, they Investigate them all as soon as possible after they have been located by. towt rtnen. This results in much unnecessary travel and sometimes results in valuable woodlands, on which a wild tire occurs simultaneously, being burned while the warden or fanner is investigating a tire intentionally set The ranger requests that those who have occasion to set any tire, which may result In the woods burning, exercise every necessary precaution to insure this not occuring.-r-Adv. M i REGISTRATION NOTICE-" Notice is hereby given, that the books of Registration for the purpose of registering qualified votora of the City of Camden, South Carolina, will be open in the office of the City Clerk on the lkth day of March, 1930, and will remain open for a period of ten days for the purpose of registering all voters for the election of a Mayor and six Aldermen; said election to be held on the 7th day of April, 1936. LOUISE W. ROYKIN. Supervisor of Kegistration ' Camden, S. C\, March 2, 1936. ? .... ... ..1.1.1.. .II ?% ' ' ' ' " Vr1 ?, i i Removal Notice I wish to remind toy friends an.! customers that I have moved my Meat Market from south Main street to the store building formerly occupied by J. K. l.ang. Same line of Good Meats and modern equipment. We deliver goods. J. K. LEE, Camden, S. C. . I T i i i Mil J333jEHEElHrffl /^Tget through with my washing in no time at all with my wonderful new \washer - but how i do hate to stand over the ironing - board for hours .' THAT'S THE WAY I USED TO FEEL ? BUT SINCE I GOT MY NEW IRONER IT'S REALLY FUN TO V SIT DOWN AND DO \ THE IRONING " i \ WHY DON'T I 1 YOU TRY ONE? SAVE YOUR YOUTH LET ELECTRICITY DO YOUR WORK WITH EASE AND SPEED It's so unnecessary for you to tire yourself out and grow prematurely old doing the weekly washing with inadequate equipment. The new electric washers and ironers will save you ever so much time and effort, and do a better job. You'll have more time for the things you'd like to do. Bring your home laundry up to date and ehfoy life. Save Your Youth! Let Electricity dov< till "that hard work for you. THE NEW ELECTRIC IRONERS and WASHERS ARE GRAND The 1936 vaihtn g t cloth** cleaner, save wear and tear, .and pare you all thai hard work. And with the hew electric iron era, yon just SIT DOWN and feed in the clothes. Their firm. even preesur* gives a smoothnoss and iinish you cannot-got by hand ? and they do work in hall the time) ELECTRICAL ASSOCIATES OF CAMDEN D. M. MAYS ' W. F. NETTLfeS & SON HOME FURNISHING CO. PAUL D. LEWIS & CO. CAMDEN FURNITURE CO. . .. R. R. KIRK LAND ^ a 3T ' ?^ IN COOPERATION WITH MUNICIPAL WATER AND UGHT DEPARTMENT lllw^l ^ j " ' a * ?L