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r MONEY TO LOAN1"""1 | We ace in position to mtke immediate Loans on DESIRABLE REAL ESTATE ?; ' ' Investigate our easy payment plan Wateree Building and loan Association First National Bank Building Camden, S. C. Telephone 62 p. FIRE?AUTOMOBILE?BURGLARY?BONDS < ? _ ? ; ____ uj a DeKALB INSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE CO | g "insurance Headquarters" w CROCKER BUILDING?TELEPHONE 7 3 m G. MULLER ELIZABETH CLARKE, Mgr. OC ? _i a au forms ?of'?insurance 3 CQ psi J? ? * ,. ?*r >?VSCT jjrB, Lydla Anne Browning, a greatgiandmotiut 90 years old, asked lor a swimming pool, as soon as she arrived in Columbia, from Charleston, un a visit to her elderly son. Then she donned a modern bathjqyg suit' and went in swimming for awhile, remarking that bathing suits are not what they used to be, but are all right for the times. She said she felt fine after her swim. She said she was anxious to try fresh water swimming for the first time. NOTICE OF SALE Notice is hereby given that In accordance with the terms and provisions of the decree of the Court of Common Pleas for Kershaw County, dated June 15, 1936, In the case of The Enterprise Building & Loan Association of Camden, S. C., plaintiff, vs. Louise M. Collins, David N, Collins, Charlotte A. McLester, Josle D; Collins, A. It. Collins, J. E. Levy and A. R. Levy, Imperial Casket Company, Sumter Casket Company, Wateree Building & Loan Association, Standard Oil Company of New Jersey, The Palls Rubber Company and the Mldhtlin Tire Company defendants, I will sell to the highest bidder for cash, before the Court House door at Camden. S. C., during the legal hours of sale on the first Monday in August, 1936. being the 3rd day thereof, the following described property and stock: 'All that parcel or lot of land in the City of Camden, County of Kershaw and State of South Carolina, fronting eighty-five (85) feet, more or less, west on Campbell street and extending back east to a uniform width to a depth of one hundred ninety ii!?o) feet, more or less, bounded on the north tyy premises of Harriet 10. Collins, east by property of M. A. Levy, south by property of Elizabeth Collins, and West by Campbell street. ALSO -five (5j shares of the capital stock of The Enterprise Building & Loan Association in Series 7/32, represented by Certificate No. 271." Terms of Sale: For Cash, the Master to require of the successful' bidder, a deposit of five (5) per cent of his bid, the same 'to be forfeited in case of non-compliance; no personal ?r deficiency judgment is demanded ind the bidding will not remain open, ifter the sale but compliance with he bid may be made immediately. W. L DePASS, JR.. Master for Kershaw County Henry Savage, Jr.- i ' . Plaintiff's Attorney. I VETERANS! j! | save FOR THE FUTURE by ' Pitting the BONU8 In A GOOD i home. i If you can make small monthly ' Payments from a steady Income, l we can help you to build or Inv i Pr<>ve that home. i First Federal Savings and Loan Association - :;i DRAYAGE AND STORAGE P. R. CURETON Telephone 233-J ? Carolina Girl In Olympic Track Squad Washington, July 8.?Sixteen year old Kathlyn Kelly, the baby of the woman s Olympic track squad, who learned to high Jump by hopping^ over cotton stalks on her dad's farm, won a birth on Uncle Sam's team in her fiist competition outside her native South Carolina county. A slender, lanky girl, modest and shy, Kathlyn halted her capital sight seeing -tour to |alk of her athletic experiences, in the forthcoming Berlin games and the Providence (R. I.) trials in which she competed last Saturday. Pitted against some of the best in the land?after a tiring motor trip from her farm home near Seneca? Kathlyn soared over the bar at five feet 1 1-8 inches. Annette Rogers of Chicago leaped an inch higher. Kathlyn believes she'll'match that hop at Berlin. A few weeks ago the Olympic games meant nothing to her. She did not consider herself an athlete. Just a girl who "could jump and run a little better than the other Country kids. For five years she had nip and jumped at her county track meet, winning the high and broad jump and theilOO-yard dash every year. She'd never jumped for height?just enough to win, so she'd have strength left for the dashes. Curious to see how high she could jump, Julian Davis, superintendent of her Keowee consolidated rural school, promised her ho would ask the Greenville papers to print her picture if she'd clear the bar at five feet. p She jumped five feet, two Inches. .When Greenville sport writers informed Davis that her jumping revealed outstanding ability, funds were obtained to send her to Providence. Big time competition, hundreds of entrants, were ail new to Kathlyn. She tied with another girl for third place. Her rival wanted to flip a coin for the position and medal. But not Kathlyn. She told officials if she couldn't jump for it she didn't want the medal. She won it, and was named to the team. kathlyn, however, has doubts. "Annette Rogers is older and has had the benefit of training. She's better than me. I think 1 can jump as high as she did at Providence, but she'll do better when she's pressed at Berlin," she said, "I feel that may be I will be^able to give them some real competition in a couple of years* of training." ? The blonde Kathlyn is five feet nine and one half inches tall. She weighs 125 pounds. a . e? k"~? Is Given Divorce Spokane, Wash., July 10.?Superior Judge W. E. Huneke awarded a divorce Thursday to former Senator Clarence C. Dill, of Washington, and decided he need not repay the $40,000 wife, the former "General" Rosalie Gardner Jonee^of New York, gave him during their nine years of married life. Five persons were killed by an explosion at the royal arsenal at Woolwich, England, Wednesday. Cause of explosion unknown. MEET ME AT BROAD STREET LUNCH I ON TOP OF THE HlLL ^ .v ! j jTbe Best wNickel Hamburger Anywhere* Milk?Bettled Drinlci Beer?Ice Crtun 1 COURTEOUS OPEN UNTIL. | curb service ; ;; /f > a.m, j Nobody's Business _____ Written for The Chronicle by Geo MoGee, Copyright, 1928. A CHANGE FOR~THE WORSE ..A fow days ago, old Sol began to bear down upon this ol dearth with all the heat and violet raya at hie disposal. Kveryobody wan peraplrlng and sweating and moppiug facea and foreheads, and 1 was numbered amongst those tbuuly engaged. , 1 Hiring one of my rants and scow)* Inge about the weather, the wife said: ' If you had any gumption, you'd wear white linen suite Instead of those heavy serges and pam-beachea: why don't you try linen for a while?" Well, after she laughed at my wilted collar and wet shirt, I decided to take her udvice. > / ' . . ' v . .My^clothier found 2 nice white suits that fitted me all right, all oxcept the price, but I finally traded with him after Jewing him down to $9.98 per outfit; he threw in a pair of gallusses and a white belt to match the britches ansoforth. They wero so clean and pretty, I hated to put them on. ..Tuesday morning came in at 97 in the shade. I dolled myself up in one of those linen tru-soos, but before leaving my room, I made up my miud that I would keep each suit unspotted, unsoiied, and properly creased for at least 3 days a wdek, and then I would change . . . upon paying the laundryman 75 cents to re-do the worn equipment. ..I looked swell In my spick and span garments. I oozed into the breakfast room for my morning ham and, also coffee, Jelly and blBcuits. I pat down on a very soft banana that our baby had left In the chair. I dropped a forkful of scrambled eggs In my lap, and when *1 Jellied my biscuit, onehalf of it jumped out of my hand and slid down the lapel of my coat and lodged bottom-side up on my coat tall. ..I scraped and rubbed my clothes as much as possible, and got In my car to go to my office. Somebody had JuBt greased the door hinges the day bqfore; I wiped that off nicely with my sleeve. The grease on tlie steering wheel soiled only one of my cuffs. On arriving at my desk. I found my fountain pen empty; I filled it in a jiffy, and succeeded In getting only 5 drops of Ink on my left britches leg while the right one escaped with only 8. Iiy noon, I was the dirtiest man I ever saw, and could easily have been mistaken for a chimney sweeper. I'm thru with white things. Gimme clothes* that won't show .soil and lamp-black and miscelIlaneous spots, and I'll look decent for nearly a whole day at a time, but I can't do that In white linen. NATIONAL POLITICS ARE BEING DISCUSSED IN FLAT ROCK deer mr. edditor:? ; a crowd, of., voters was setting around the citty hall last frlday p. m. talkiqg politics . . . and holsum moore, who has flopped back into the diminer-cratic fold, up and says that the republicans have not a wooden leg to stand on. holsum says that the mllli-narles^ the speckbr-lators, the average manny-factors, the big Investors, and a few other folks are fighting pies, roseyvelt, but none of them have-ever benn able to give a good reason for same except they don't like him. art square, a prominent filling station opperator of flat rock, says - U would not of made anny difference I with the republicans who they nommernated for president Just so he was plastic and could be molded to suit the rich and well-to-do so's they would not havo to pay anny taxes, he thinks that they think their nontaxible ass-sets ^'mought have to be taxed later on. torn head thinks that the dimmercrats ought to sell al smith and talmadge and ely and reed to the republicans Just like baseball leegues sell players to one another, he believes that al. smith would fetch betwixt 6$ and 10$, talmadge would possibly be (Jisposed of at a flgger around c9&, and reed could be farmed out with them for nothing, their heaife are too sore to be used for thinking pupposes, so torn says: they are suffering with a superiority complex, in sympathy with wall street. we will watch, the campane with much interrest and will keep the roller worker# lined up down in these; parts, our cotton mills Is running on full tim&; our labor is being well paid, and our banks is busting because they have too much monney, (they busted enduring hoover because they diddent hare annjr money a-t&ll); our farms aint being foreclosed for taxes and first mortgages; ou> chil-drens are wearing shoes and cl??.n clothes, and our pTicEer~~ihowa Is HT crowded ansoforth. we poor folks nothing to complain about exeep^the weather, and jUI. .w Hljyw ' T5T" FRUIT LIVES LONGER WHEN ITS RESPIRATION IS SLOW An appje doefe not dlo when picked frpin a tree, but failure to control ttu respiration shorten* it* life. Fruit Krowei'H ami handlers *low down the respiration of apples by putting /them In cold storage. ' Harvested fruits and vegetables ? like animal*- -respire by taking oxygen from the air and giving off carbon dioxide, water, and waste products, and generating heat. Other llvlug processes continuing after harvest change th? constituents, flavor and color. Too rapid respiration causes fruits and vegetables to lose their freshness. In cold storage the rate of respiration usually doubles each time the temperature rises 18 degrees Fahrenheit above the temperatures recommended for keeping them fresh, say specialists of th's United States Department of Agriculture. Respiration usually affects thefflavor of fruits by breaking down and exhausting most of the carbohydrates and acids. When Mils occurs in an apple, it becomes overripe, mealy, und practically worthless?succumbing to senility If not- previously destroyed by fungus rots. Too much, or too little humidity in cold storage air ulso affects the quality of fruits and vegetables. Cold Btorage air with 85 to 88 per cent moisture usually gives best results. Tide moisture percentage is about the same as that In the tissues of these products, if the relative humidity of the cold storage air falls lower, fruits and vegetables dry out, wilt, and shrivel. If raised above, they tend to mold and are easily damaged by fungus rots. Celery and onions, how* ever, are exceptions to the general rule. Celery requires a higher humidity to keep It from wilting. Onions must be kept drier to prevent them forming roots. Old Farm Horse Puts Out Cowboy Greenville, July 7.?He rod? the Western plains, he stunted in dare devil rodeos, and iiorses never hurt him, Then he came back South to live ?and an old farm horse frightened by a motor, kicked him ho hard it broke his hip, and retfdered, him . "bora de combat" for the rest or the ' summer. But Alex'' Sinley, former cowboy, who now lives on the Woodruff road near here, says it might have been worse. The hip is healing rapidly, iind he can ride oveT his farm in a wheel chair. that will change in time, we feel sorry for folks who think they are sick and can't dog-nose their trubblos; but even the worHt-off ones have normal financial pulses, their heart-action income is 75 percents better than it was in 1930-33, old imagy-natlon has got them at pressent, but oven tho teller who thinks he's hurting will, find that the pain that he thought was in his stummick is only a thought in his head, but hdre's my flatform: let's elect the best men in the race for the county's sake, be he dem. or pub. yores trulie, mike Clark. 3WI88 CHEESE CHARACTER MAY BE JUDGED BY "EYES" When people ask for Swiss cheese in a store or reataurunt, they expect to get a full-flavored product with the characteristic holes or "eyes" running throughout the piece, lloth domeat U-mudu Swia* stylo cheese and imported Swiss cheese have these tt^cs. They are so distinctive thut Hwiss cheeses are graded and the price Is determined to a considerable degree by the appearance of the eyes. Yet, says Dr. D, A. ltogers, of the United States Department of Agriculture, the terms "doniQBtic" and "imported" Swiss cheese are sometimes misused. When a restaurant patron aaks for "Imported" Swiss cheese, he usually gets the kind with eyea, and it may be either domestic or imported. If ho asks for "domestic" Swiss Cheese, rhe will most likely be served "processed" cheese, an altogether different product?made by grinding up Swiss cheese with Cheddar cheese, melting the mixture, and running it into molds to form a convenient brick or package for marketing, and slicing for sandwiches. This "processed" cheese has no holes or aud differs in flavor from the domestic or Imported Swiss cheese. The methods used in making Swiss cheeae in this country are the same as those used in Switzerland except that in many American factories the gas-forming bacteria which make the "eyes" are controlled by exact amounts of laboratory cultures. Much of this cheese is of excellent quality. If it suffers by comparison with imported Swiss cheese, it Is because all grades of American Swiss cheese are marketed, whereas Switzerland sends only carefully selected cheese to this country. Vet Pays 18-Year-0ld Gambling Debt Spartanburg, S. C., June 20.?It was eighteen years ago, and in the trenches members of the Rainbow division were Indulging in a fast dice game. One soldier, struck with considerable losses, couldn't pny off. He owed another ten bucks. " This week, in the Spartanburg post office, they met, to draw their bonus bonds. Said one to the other, "Here's something I've owed you for eighteen years. May it bring you the same darn luck you h'ad that night inMaychoss." And ho "forked over" a ten spot. Post office clerks laughed at the incident but failed to obtain their juames. % Senator William L?. Hill, recently appointed to the seat of Senator Fletcher of Florida, deceased, says he will not ofTer as a candidate to succeed Senator Fletcher. .. Alvin Karpis Pleads Guilty Of KidnapingSt, Paul. July 14.?Alvln Karpis, dethroned k 1 UK of gangland. pleaded guilty to conspiracy_ in the $100,000 ransom kidnaping of William Hanun, Jr., St. Paul brewer, as his cuso was called for trial in foderal | court today. Federal Judge M. M. .toyce deferred sentence until the conclusion of the trial of Edmund ('. Martholtney, former postmaster of HonsenviUe, 111., and John P. .(Jack) Pilfer, St. Paul night cluh owner whose trial on similar ehargos opened this morning. Thomas <f. Newman, attorney for Karpis, told the court his client, one of the actual kidn^ers of Hamin, desired to plead guilty. Kurpls' plea was the third submission in the ktdnapiug. Previously. Byron Bolton, alleged machine gunner for the Barker-Karpls mob and Charles (Big Flsz) Fitzgerald, of I<os Angeles, pleaded guilty. Their sentences have been deferred until the end of the present trial. Two others were indicted as participants In the Hamm abduction but, because they are serving terms lu Alcatraz prison for the Edward Q. Bremer kidnaping, were not brought to trial. They are Arthur "Doc" Barker, charged as co-leader with Karpis in the two kidnaplngB who 1b serving a life term, and Elmer Farmer, former tavern keeper at Bonsonvllle, 111., sentenced to twenty years' Imprisonment. Bolton, George F. Sullivan, U. S. district attorney said would bo the government's principal witness. The j trial originully was scheduled for November. but because of the "precarious" health of Bolton, suffering from tuberculosis, Judge Joyce advanced the prosecution. I . ' Dead Snake Kills Cat \Vudloy, Ga., July 10.?An inquisitive cat died in the St. John's community near here from the "bite of a rattlesnake's severed head. D. M. Tanner, of St. Johns, said a farm hand killed the reptile Iijl , his yard and burled it in the sand. A moment later the cat came along and began pawing at the freshly turned sand. I The bend clamped Itself on the cat's paw. The animal leaped high Into the air and died In a few seconds. | State constables seized eight slot I machines at Chester and near there, and took them before a magistrate and broke them to, pieces. They contained $30, which went to the state treasury. Chief Jeanes said constables are ordered to continue their raids, until all gambU?g---alQt,JIiachlne8 in the sTRHs^M^^troyed;- - ? ?' ' )i. ii ii .. * ' 1 " : T=3 SS5SS252S555555S5S55555SS53E533S353SSSSSSSS5E&S555SX5S [ RADIO SERVICE ELECTRICAL REPAIRING CITY ELECTRIC COMPANY i Refrigerators RADIOS Vacuum Cleaners SALES and SERVICE I 703 West DeKalb Street Telephone 194 I y i ' * tseacgcsggwHWBMw???? I May we do - II I Your Printing ? II | | XLr/QEimns*. I i. I I II YOUR BUSINESS LETTERS SHOULD BE WRITTEN ON NEATLY II PRINTED STATIONERY? ~ "' ' " j ) THE EXPENSE IS SMALL,.BUT THE ADDITIONAL EFFECTIVE- | I NESS OF YOUR LETTER WOULD BE GREATLY INCREASED? I ! | LET THE CHRONICLE PRINT YOUR STATIONERY, STATEMENTS, I II OFFICE FORMS AND THE LIKE. II II WHAT DO YOU NEED? TELEPHONE US AT.29