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r^MONEY TO LOAN VVe are in position to make immediate Loans on DESIRABLE REAL ESTATE Investigate our easy payment plan Wateree Building and Loan Association First National Bank Building o Camden, S. C. Telephone 62 FIRE?AUTOMOB! LE?BURGLARY?BONDS? a \ DeKALB INSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE CO | jj "INSURANCE HEADQUARTERS" JS j|j CROCKER BUILDING?TELEPHONE 7 j j M (; MULLER ELIZABETH CLARKE, Mfr, j* - fc ^ - 1Z 3 ALL?FORMS ?OF?INSURANCE , O . aa~aas . u. .y 1 "M Good Farming Hints For July Attention Clemson. June 20.?Better farming suggestions for July H7y extension specialists show no let-np for the good farmer. Agronomy?When fteld work slacks uPi haul in grain straw, leaves, swamp grass, and other litter for the compost heap Sow peas, soybeans, or velvet beans now and they will make growth to turn under for soil building. Because of drought damage to early-planted feed crops, sow or plant additional acreages. Horticulture?Remove all broken and diseased limbs from fruit trees immediately after harvesting. Pull sweet corn shortly before meal time; it loses its sugar rapidly. Place fruits and vegetables in the shade at once after harvesting, to hold their quality. Make plantings of tomatoes for a fall crop. Insects and Diseases?Control tomato insects and diseases with Bordeauxlead arsenate spray. Remove and bum corn plants infected with snuit. Kxamin?- banded apple trees every ten days and destroy codling moth larvae Transfer and requeen bees. Control Mexican bean beetle with magnesium arsenate or non-arsenicals. In screw worm territory treat wounds with pine tar and kill maggots with benzol. Agricultural Engineering?H a v e trench silo ready when silage Is ripe. Repair and construct needed farm buildings Plan to install water system and other farm conveniences. Continue the two-horse cultivator, setting sweeps for shallow cultivation. Investigate possibilities of small streams tor irrigating gardens and truck FINAL Dt8CHARGE Notict- is hereby given that one month from this date, on July 30, 1936, Mrs. June Raley will make to the Probate Court of Kershaw County her final return as General Guardian of the persons and Estates of Mary Raley. Faith Raley and June Raley, and on the same date she will apply to the said Court for a final discharge as said Duardian of Mary Raley, Faith Raley and Bernice Raiey. n. c. arnett,. Judge of Probate for Kershaw County Camd -n. S. C., June 30. 1936. ! VETERANS! | ! SAVF. FOR THE FUTURE by | putting the BONUS In A GOOD \ home. !; t If you can make small monthly \ paypients from a steady Income, t we can help you to build or im- | i prove that home. j First Federal Savings and j Loan Association j ? ?,^^^0 DRAYAGE i / p . ' AND STORAG E p. R. CURETON Telephone 233-J .<' _ * Tale Of Fisherman And Curious Bird W. It. Newman, Atlantic Coast Line telegrapher and expert fisherman, has a new one for the book. Mr. Newman was fishing from a boat in a mill pond near here several days ago. He had as his paddler A. A. Boartfleld, and a ten-year-old son of J. L. Mooneyham was along in case anything should happen requiring an additional witness. Mr. Newman was casting his fly expertly, first on one side and then the other of a stump. But the fish would not bite. Mr. Newman noticeed a bee bird perched on the stump taking a great deal of interest in his brilliant display of casting. Mr. Newman decided to catch the curious bee bird. First he dusted him off on the right side and then on the left. As the fly floated by on the left side?remember you fishermen, it must be on the left side?the bird stuck out its head and sucked the barbed bait into his mouth. With a gentle twitch of his .wrist?the exact movement recommended by Mr. Izaak Walton himself?Mr. Newman hooked the bird and forced him to fly into his outstretched hands. After examining the bird and giving him a good lecture on the perils of accepting food offered by persons who have not been formally introduced. Mr. Newman released the hook and allowed Ills feathered friend to fl.v back to his favorite stump. This story is absolutely true. If there are any doubters, let them remain silent, for they may have a fish story sometimes they would like their friends to swallow?Monday's Sumter Item. COMING SOUTHWARD Having made a survey of the hosiery manufacturing industry throughout the country, Dr. George W. Taylor of the University of Pennsylvania made this comment: "What is happening is that new capital is flowing into Southern territory and not into the North." 7? j This is a highly significant statement. It embodies the recognition of [ the facts that the South possesses [ unequaled natural advantagefi'Afor a | variety of industries; that the coun| try has been impressed with the reserve powers shown by the South during the depression, and that it is leading the nation to recovery. Capital in other sections seeking safe as well as profitable investment 1? turning to the South in increasing volume. That this section is on the eve of another period of advance Is indicated by multiplying signs. It is manifestly the part of wisdom for the j Southern states to adjust their legislation, and particularly their system of taxation, to the opportunities and demands of the new era. Capital must be assured of protection by government and not be exposed to the menace of exploitation.?Nashville Banner. * . Farmers of England paraded and demonstrated in the streets of I^ondon last week in protest against payment of church tithes, which they consider exorbitant, and wrote a letter to i'rime Minister Baldwin, threatening to exercise their "constitutional right to approach the king" if he refused to receive a deputation of farmers I MEET ME AT I I broad street lunch I ' ON TOP OF THE HILL j ' ' the Best Nickel Hamburger Anywhere. I Milk?Bottled Drinks?Beer?Ice Cream I I COURTEOUS . OPEN UNT,L | I CURB 8ERVICE ? _ SAM. .. rv. 1 ^ ~ ' * 1' Nobody's Business Written for The Chronicle by Geo MoGee, Copyright, 1U28. THE AFTERMATH ..the payment of the bonnus to our soldier boys passed off very quiet in Mat rock, and no one got hurt in the scuffle, it bus brought^ nbw -life to ns and the old place has changed so, you woulddeu't kuow it. ..Jim fennigen bought hlsself u new suit of clothes with a hat and shoes (o match and wore it home iu the new otter-inobtel he bought Willi Hie. balluuce at the county seat, he is en* Joying his income verry much, it will give him a start in life, he will mortgage his 2-door for monney to run a small stoar with, u little later on, and enjoy both at the same time. ..sevveral detts of long-standing have benn paid and reseats issued, yore eorry spondent, mr. mike' Clark, rfd, got 2$ of 19211 monney that had benu on his books since the battle of the marne. all of. the boys seem to be taking good cure of their spendlngs, and no cash seems to be going to waist. ..the secont and third sons of yore cony spondent, mr. mike Clark, rfd. who sneers to the name of scudd and budd Clark, have benn asked to leave bis bed and bored; they refused to pay annything on their back bored since the bonnus was promised, that is when they moved into our house, they will tuko a long trip out west with their monney to see the camp where they stayed enduring the war. ..josh simkins says he intends to have his monney. he thinks it will be 2 or 3 years befoar the politicians can possibly work up bonnus no. 2 for the vetterans, and he do not expect to be reduced to want again, he hopes bonnus no. 2 will be about 1500$ per soldier instead of only 100$ as heretofoar. he did not go ucrost. ..all of the vetterans who got their payments have benn very sensible with their spendings, and it has hope a large number of them to get on their feets again, if europe and franco and great brittan would pay the u. s. the intrust on their war detts, uncle sain could take up the bonnus bonds with his vest pocket change, but nobuddy is counting on them furriners paying annything to annyboddy. yore eorry spondent has borried 85$ from the bonnus boys, yes sir; the boys have proved theirselves 100 percent with their dough yores trulie, mik6 Clark, rfd, } eorry spondent. FREE WITH EVERY PURCHASE! |..The whole country has gone premium crazy. You are offered a prize or something free with nearly everything you buy nowadays from a cake of soap to a t-bone steak. The public falls heavy for such things. . .When a person gets a present (free) with a 25-cent article, for which he pays a quarter of a dollar, ho gives from 5 to 10 cents more than the 25cent itehi is worth. Folks ain't giving anything away today or tomorrow . . . except the measles, whooping cough, flu and so forth. ..This is a funny old world. When I listen at the radio advertising, I wonder how in the world my daddy and mother ever raised 10 children. We had no cigarettes to help our digestion and no tooth-paste to keep our teeth from falling out before we were 15 years of age. ..We didn't even have shaving soap that would make our whiskers turn loose, nor did we have all kinds of medicines that would stop us from belching, or cure heart-burn, or relieve shooting pains, or kill headaches, and no merchant ever thought of giving up a present with a bag of flour or a pound of soda or a plug of tobacco. ..Merchandising is full of tricks of the trade. All kinds of inducements are offered to the would-be buyer. Buy a 50-cent package of freckle-remover. and if you don't watch out. the fellow will give you, absolutely free of charge, a freckle brush, a small box of talcum powder, and possibly a fountain pen, all of which possibly has an actual value of possibly 30 cents, or less, leaving him a net profit of 20 cents. ...They call theso "free goods" trade stimulators. It does stimulate a guy to buy something he doesn't need (lor which he pays an extra 10 or 15 per cent) for what he possibly found use for. It won't he long now before department stores will be giving a husband with every rayon dress, a liquor store will throw in a pardon for assault and battery with every pint of com, and a ticket to glory will be offered with every casket sold for cash.-^Yep?this free stuff is certainly' a great racket, and the best of us tumble for It. _ 'V.W - < Search For Beauty Feeds Big Industry I I hut beauty has been commercial* ized to hucIi an extent that It i* now one of tho greatest industries in this country in an accepted fact, it bus grown up and expanded until from the woman of wealth, to the house* maid all women are conscious of it and men too. No magaziue la without advertisement pointing to belter to heauty. No newspaper or woman's publication Is without its heality hints. Every movie star has some spuria! beauty trick to talk about. Everywhere one goes there is evidence of this ever expanding industry of beauty. And beauty, as defined by the industry, refers not Just to the faco or features alone, but also to the hair, figure, arms and legs. So thoroughly have the beauticians and plastic surgoons of this era developed their trade that virtually no bit of remodeling, sculpturing, or erusiug is Impossible, Milady may wish a facial,. Howover facials no longer come under the category of ordinary treatments, since under the larger establishments they have become extremely complicated. Hut every woman bus at some time or other, through the magazines, newspapers, or inovieB, been introduced to some of these aids to beauty as practiced in the ordinary beauty shop. But to return to the finer points of this new industry. It is a well known fact that the beauty doctor can transform milady into whichever type she prefers or can Just alter a few features distasteful to her. Tuke, for instance, the hair. No woman who does not care for it need' have straight locks any more. She I can either have a kink put in her (tresses by means of a finger wave or a permanent. True, she suffers for her curls, but usually she finds the pain and torture well worth the trouble. What matter the long hours of sweltering in the heat or having her hair pulled if, in the long run, busband and friends tell her the new coiffure makes her look younger bv years, her young man declares it makes her the most beautiful girl in the world, or she upsets the next meeting of the sewing club with it? Beauty research workers are takingthe torture out of permanents now with new methods that do not re-1 quire so much heat, yet the waves appear more natural and the hair softer and glossier. Beauty culturlsts are leaving no stone unturned to per* feet their industry. They are meeting the demands of women in an old hut hitherto comparatively undeveloped field with swiftness, efficiency, and satisfaction. As for that quest for youth, the beauticians now seek not only to keep the akin soft and smooth with the legulap facial, but also to give the patient a young-looking skin. Numerous creams have been compounded for this purpose. Swifter in this function is the poultice. There are several types of these. One is the mud poultice?not just common ordinary garden hiud. but a certain type of clay, it is smeared on the face, and as it dries it draws the skin tight, erasing the wrinkles and leaving the patient with a fresh, smooth complexion. Unfortunately, the effects of the poultice last but a few hours, so that the woman who depends upon this method to appear youthful continuously must spend most of her time beneath a clay mask Newer yet is the paraffin mask. I he wax is usually heated Co a rather warm degree and then applied to the face. As it .cools it acts upon the skin much as the inud, leaving the face smooth. Those who have tried it say it is not nearly so messy as tho mud and peels off much easier with satisfactory results. Still another discovery in this line is the vegetable and herb poultice. It would seem the beauty specialists have taken a leaf from the book of the Indians and pioneers for this. A concoction of vegetables and mediclnal herbs are stewed together much In the fashion of a soup until the mixture has reached the proper consistency. Thdn it is smeared overbite patient's face. . For the women of advancing years, still Intent on possessing schoolgirl looks or something akin to it, there Is the plastic surgeon. To erase the wrinkles of age these women will undergo what is known as a "frfoe lifting. This is a delicate operation In which the surgeon cuts an incision in the cheek where the hair m^ets fthe ears, near the jawbone. He then | pulls-the skin until the surface of j the face is smooth, cuts the skin, and sews the Incision. At the conclusion of this rejuvenation pro( i^rmTimfy must revisit her hairdresser and have him evolve a new coiffure to hide her scars. While on the subject of plastic surgeons. it might be well to note that not only do they eradicate wrinkles but on request will even give the patlent a Roman nose, an aquiline nose, a Stnsslc nose, or whatsoever nose sh0 may desire. Large ears can also be made over into "tiny shell like" ap I pendagea. Prlae fighters have boon known to ti^Ke advantage of the moat remodeling, and cauliflower oars hove ulao undergone u change for the better under the skillful handling of a plastic surgeon's knife, targe arms and legs can also bo reduced to a | semblance of Hlimness, and fat has j also been removed from the hips in ! thlH fashion by plastic surgeons. No, it Is not always the women who consult,, thosq surgeons and beaut!* elons. Actors, advancing in years, have sought their methods to keep ft young face before the cameras or to alter an offensive profile. Some yours ' ago Johnny Weissmuller, of a<|uuUc fame, had his rather ugly proboscis refashioned into a very handsome one in preparation for his screen debut in Hollywood. Municurists are a necessary feuturo of a barber shop, and there are other indications that all men do not scoff at this bounty fud as much as they are credited. Then theft) is the problem of makeup, or cosmetics. 'The beauticians have put on the market every conceivable shade of powder to blehd with every type of skin. In summer they vie with the sun by putting out darker shades for that "sun-tanned" look. There Is little excuse those days for any woman to appear with the wrong shade of rouge, what with the varying shades and the little books on "how to use" distributed by the manufacturers. That goes for lipsticks too. Not content with Just those aids, the beauty specialists have developed j eye-shadow for the blonde, the brun-J ette, the red-head, for evening, and for daytime. So women may have j long sweeping eyelashes they have concocted an eyelash grower and have' even manufactured sets of eyelashes that may be pasted on the eyelids. Eyebrows, too, are reshaped to enhance the charm or glamour of milady's face. tl seems there is no limit to the extent the experts have gone in their , determination to further the cause of beauty. One look at a cosmetics counter in a department store or drug store will give a pretty coinpre- j henslve idea of what Is being done In this lino. The beauty culturists have spared no pains and have gone to great i lengths to preserve and make beauty.1 Some of the larger establishments have even built Immense salons that resemble hospitals or sanatoriums. Beauty seekers may undergo treatments in them that occupy a period of a week or longer. They may consist of specially prepared diets, a series of reducing exercises, or other treatments which make It necesary for the patients to take up residence In these institutes much as they would in a sanatorium until the result desired has been effected. While there they follow a daily routine under the watchful eyes of the attendants, eat a strictly prepared menu, or perhaps have nothing more than a liquid diet, a glass of specially prepared vegetable or fruit Juices, at various intervals of the day. There are even special baths evolved by these experts guaranteed to soothe tired nerves, to relax stiff, overworked muscles, and to aid In removing extra pounds from the beauty seeker. Each and every beauty doctor has his or her methods, and well developed though they may be these beautlliers know there is much more work to be done. It is because of their efforts in this field that the United States has become the beauty mecca ?truly a "Fountain of Youth"?for In no other part of the world haa so much time, research1,' and experimentation been expended on the quest for beauty as in this country.?And still search goes on. Ghouls Cut Off 'Doctor's' Hands H<imore, June 22,?For many years John I). Johnson aged, bent noRro?rubbed the hurts of his race. UIh strong, confident hands and his home-made herb salvos . eased many a pain. From' all pacta of Maryland, from pnrtH of Pennsylvania, came hls'putientH. After ids treatmenta aome profesBcri themselves permanently cured, lit* was called "doctor," "professor," "reverend," btu he laid claim to no title. Then Johnson died, last February. An undertaker crossed his sinewy black hands on his chest and burlod him. lint his fame lived on. They told of his powers ? "All he did was rub them with his hands. . ." A eemptory workman, u few days ago found his grave opened. The coffin had been dug up?opened . . . Johnson's hands, cut off at the wrist, wore missing. Huge Gold Hoard Seized At N. Y. New York, June 23.?Federal agents seized $1,250,000 in gold double eagles at the Standard Safe Deposit Company at 26 Broad street late today". The coin, acquired by a Swiss corporation owned in Germany before the date of President Roosevelt's order requiring the surrender of all gold coin hud been the subjoct of extensive litigation. The agents acted on Information from Washington communicated through Francis H. Horan, chief of the civil division of lite United States Attorney's office. The Ubersec Finanz Korporation Aktlon Gesellschart had acquired gold through leading Lndenburg Thalmnnn and Company, private bankers. The corporation lost appeals for a temporary injunction to prevent the bankers from turning It over to the government. The University of Heidelberg, Germany, 1h now celebrating its 550th anniversary. CITATION County of Kershaw The State of South Carolina (By N. C| Arnett, Probate Judge) "WhereaB, Loretta Truesdalo made suit to me to grant her Letters of Administration of the Estate and effects of Elizabeth Truesdale. These are, therefore, to cite and admonish all and singular the Kindred and Creditors Of the said Elizar beth Truesdale, deceased, that they be and appear before me, In the Court of l*robate, to be held at Camden, 8. C., on Monday, July 6th, next, after publication hereof, at 11 o'clock in the forenoon, to show cause, if any they Have, why the *aid Administration should not be granted. Given under ray hand this 17th day of June, Anno Domini, 1936. N. C. ARNETT. Judge of Probate for Kershaw County CITATION The State of South Carolina, County of Kershaw. By N. C. Arnett, Probate Judge: Whereas, Mrs. M. C. Campbell made suit to me to grant R. L. McCasklll Letters of Administration of the Estate and effects of Burrel Campbell. These are, therefore, to cite and admonish all and singular the Kindred and Creditors of the said Burrel Campbell deceased, that they be and' appear before me, in the Court of Probate, to be held at Camden, S. C., on Wednesday, July 8th next, after publication hereof, 'at 11 o'clock in the forenoon, to show cause, if any they have, why the said Administration should not be granted. Given under my hand this 23rd day of June Anno Domini 1936. N. C. ARNETT, Judge of Probate for Kershaw County. RADIO SERVICE ELECTRICAL REPAIRING CITY ELECTRIC COMPANY Refrigerators RADIOS Vacuum Cleaners SALES and SERVICE 703 West DeKalb Street Telephone 194 ?v- ^ ; i I Now is the time I H ^ ? ^H__ I to buy a tarm^ I I I HAVE SOME FOR SALE AT A BARGAIN, AND | SMALL RATE OF INTEREST. A GOOD WAY TO J INVEST YOUR BO^IUS. 1 J . See me at Hotel Camden any Tuesday j ] I H.G. BATES, Sr. I | i.j.71 j |