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II NOW! | I I Professional Radio Service I I I Our Service Department is in charge of Ex- \ | j I j perienced Radio Technicians ? Men who Devote I I their Full Time and Energy to Radio Service and I j Repairs. : i PROMPT ? REASONABLE ? RELIABLE I I City Electric Company I I I I Phone 194 703 West DeKalb St, ? foreclosure sale , < Notice Is hereby given that in accordance with the terms and provision. of the Decree of the Court of Common Pleas for Kershaw County, dated August 1, 1985, in the case of The First Carolinas Joint Stock Land Bank of Columbia, plaintiff, against G. Frank Cbok and Cornelia E. Hlngon, as Administrators of the Estate ; of It H. Hinson, deceased, Cornelia K. Hinson, in<*fvid}ually, Robet O. Hinson, Mrs. J. W. Connor, Mrs. M. C. Scruggs, Ruth Hinson, Mrs. E. H. Tarte, and Dank of Kershaw, Ker8haw, S. C., 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 October, 1936,, being the 5th day thereof, the following described property: "All that certain piece, parcel or tract of land situate^ lying and being on tributary waters of Buffalo Creek, containing two hundred thirty-five (235) acres more or less, being bounded on the North by the Public Road, known as the Lawyers Road; East by the Camden Road and lands now or formerly of Bessie Croxton; South by lands now or formerly of Bessie Croxton and lands of Estate of Alexander Mungo; West by Cart Wheel Branch and lands of Estate of AJexander Mungo, being composed of two tracts, the one containing one hundred ten (110) acres, more or less conveyed to Roach (Rochel) Hinson by Cprnelia E. Hinson, by deed dated November 28th. 1916, recorded in Kershaw County and Lancaster County, the other containing one hund)red twenty-five (125) acres more or less, being the same less seventeen (17) acres, conveyed to Roach (Rochel) Hinson by t deed of Elizabeth Gardner, dated Dey cember 21st, 1907, recorded in Lancaster County , in Book "Q", page 8." Term8 of Sale: For cash, the Master to require of the successful bidder, a deposit of five (5) per cent of ' his bid, same to be forfeited in case of non compliance; no personal or deficiency judgment is demanded and the bidding will not remain open after the sale, but compliance with the bid may be made immediately. W. L. DePASS, JR., Master for Kershaw County. Melton & Reiser, ' ; Attorneys for Plaintiff. ' ( FINAL DI8CHARGE Notice is tyerby given that one month from this date, on October 14, L 1936 I will make to the Probate Court J of Kershaw County my final returns as Executrix o? the estate of L. H. Hinson deceased, and on the same ' _ date I will apply to the said Court lor a final discharge as said Executl rix of said estate. MRS. L. H. HINSON, Executrix. i Camden, S. C., September 14, 1936. ! notice <t^idebtors and j [ All parties Indebted to the estate ' of Nathaniel Cunningham are hereby notified to make payment to the undersigned, and all parties, if any, hav- , mg claims against the said estate will Present them likewise, duly attested, : within the time prescribed by law. j j' J. W. CUNNINGHAM, 1 Administrator. Camden, S. C., September- 6, 19?6. *?? : i? Eifty-thre? persons have been in-j i d,cted at Atlantic City, N. J., on [i charges of violating the election law. ' < News Of Interest In And Near Bethune ! '. Bethune, Sept. 10.?MIbb Louise Tiller and Mrs. J. L. King, Jr., were hostesses to their bridge club Wednesday afternoon at the home of the former. A variety of early fall flowers brightened the rooms where the games were played. Those who played other than club members were: Mrs. H. C. Tiller, Mayesville; Mrs. J. N. McLaurin, Jr., Mrs. Vance Morgan, Mrs. L. D. Barr, Mrs. J. L. King, MIbb Sara Gettys. High score prize for bridge was won by Mrs. C. E. Braswell and In monopoly by Mrs. L. D. Barr. Gifts were presented the three brides present, who were: Mrs. McLaurin, Mrs. Morgan and Mrs. Tiller. Miss Margaret Truesdale was also remembered with a gift. Fruit whip an4 oalte were served. Again on Thursday afternoon Miss Louise Tiller delightfully entertained with bridge and monopoly compliment-1 ing the teachers of the town and a few additional guests. High score prize in bridge was awarded MIbb Miriam Smith, while consolation went to MIbb Sara Proctor. Miss Sara Gettys won high score in monoply. Following the games ice cream and angel food cake was served. The matrimonial bee is still buzzing around Bethune. Friends were surprised to learn of the marriage of Miss Janle Hough, daughter of Mrs. Mary Hough, and S. R. Hilton, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Hilton, which was soleminized April 22nd at Lexington, S. C. They are making their home in Hartsville, where Mr. Hilton is employed. Miss Hough has been nursing at State Park for several months. Another marriage coming as quite a surprise was that of Miss Vera Johnson, of Hartsville, and James Baker of this town, which occured in Darlington September 6. Miss Johnson has been engaged in teaching in the schools of the state, while Mr. Baker is a cotton buyer in this town. Reul Lehman, with his mother, of Sarasota, Fla., and Montclalr, N. J., were guests of Mrs. A. B. McLaurin last Tuesday night, Mrs. Eva Morgan has returned from a visit to relatives near Monroe, N. C. The Rev. and Mrs. J. T. N. Keels are visiting the former's parents,>kK pblumbia. Dr. and Mrs. Eldon Severance, of Pampllco, with their little daughter; Mr. and Mrs. W. N. Nichols; Mrs. E. C. Scarborough, of Lamar; and Clifton Severance who* - has been spending his vacation in Columbia, were guests Sunday of the J. E. Severances. . Mrs. John McSween, of Darlington^ has been visiting her daughter, Mrs. W. E. Davis. E. Wendell Clamp, of the high Bchool faculty, went to his home' in Salley for the week end. Miss Pearl Rickenbaker had as recent guests her father and mother, Dr. and Mrs. Rickenbaker, of Cameron, and her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. H. A. So well, of Camien. Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Mitchell, who have been spending the summer at Niagara Falls, are visiting Mrs. Mitchell's parent8t the A. K. McLaurIns. Mrs. L. D. Robertson has returned from a visit to her son, Norwood Thomas in Winnsboro. - The porpoise devours its own weight in other flsh about once In avery forty-eight hours. ' ^^^^elinquenrT^xpayer^l I have been instructed by the Comptroller General ! 3! to colleet ?lf MinqiHBt tam now in my bawls. I wQI ]| 8??n start to advertising property for oale beginning I % ' ^ ' y '' * '. - - ' ? with the oldest years and continue through the list. I Property owners can sare additional expense by callin* at the sheriff's office and mslrim sattlam?t J. H. McLEOD, I Nobody's Business Written for The Chronicle by Gee McGee, Copyright, 1928. CH008E YOUH PARTNERS ..When I was a young man; thai Is, back yonder when 1 waa getting old enough to grow a thin white coat of fuzz on my upper lip, there were cer tain kiiidt) of entertainment, viz: lawn partlea, candy pulliugs, and candybreakings. . Candy breakings" were rather rare, due to the fact that every uport who attended one of them had to be able to buy at least 16 sticks of candy, at a cost of around 10 dents; very few of us had that much cash only 3 or 4 times a year. . \s*? c ..Blind numbers were written on a piece of paper with a charcoal, If no one happened to possess a lead pencil; those things were rare also during the days of long ago. The gentlemen (we were never called that though) pooled their lots of candy and piled it on a table where the numbers were. ..The boys would choose a sweetie and march up to the pile of candy, and each of them would turn up a number, and they had the Joy, and pleasure, and happiness of breaking, as many sticks of candy as the t numbers added; but the numbers never ran over the supply of candy forbade that. ..The damsel in calico would take one end of a stick and sofa lizard the other end, and they would break It. It was bad manners to fall to let the girl get the longest piece of cardy. After this Indulgence, she and he would go somewhere In the lighted room (not outside on the piazza In the dprk) and eat the candy and laugh and talk and say smart things. . .We called that real fun. One night, something made a fuss outside of Mr. Jud Smith's house where we were having a big candy breaking; we all ran out to see what was going on. When we got back, his 7 younguns had done et up every stick of our candy and turned the table over. None of us ever spoke to a Smith after that. Rumble-seats would have been mighty fine back there, but the privatest place a boy and a girl uved was sitting on the front door-steps in the moonlight only about 10 feet from her old man's room, WAR NEW8 " ..a stranger blowed Into flat rock last week and left all of hlB hearers at the drug stoar verry badly worried onner count of a new world war that Is coming on at an early date, so he said, this phrophlt waa selling b. o. soap. ..he said that it would not supprise him to see cuby line up with nlckyraugy, and flght mexico onner count of she has put a high tariff on soap coming In from brazeel which the cubyalns use a right smart, the said soap Is manufactured by his factory in detroit. he gets c6 a cake for same. ..this genterman Is a colledge gradurate, he has 2 diplorifhs in his pocket; andt seemed verry smart otherwise. he told his anxious hearers that germanny was going to whip france at an early date and take back IfffCa Mtf the rfvver rhine. ..he said war betwixt great brittan and the Italy-ana was a sure thing, this war will start when spain gives glbralter to Italy for helping her .do defeat the communists; that v/ifl make rossla mad, and she mought declare war on jappan and take chinna away from the nipponnees. ..It stands to reason that europe mought get offended at poland and austrey and france and declare war oh them, and If she do?the balking states will line np with ethy-opy and a long flght will be hell on the banks of the hellespolnt and thus turkey and greece will be pulled Into the battle. ..the soap agent knows his jeggerfy, allso his current events, he explained that the pressent add-mlnlstratlon would keep us out of war, but they mought have to put landon In the cabblnet after the election, and make hearst seeker-terry of the treassure, and deport aL smith. he thinks ely and reed and talmadge won't amount to verry much In world affairs from now on. he kept them spell-bourtd and sold 9 cakes of soap, yores trnlle, mike Claris rfd, corry spondent. George Andrew McMahon, the man who threw a pistol at King Edward in a ceremonial procession in London last June, was convicted yegterday, of producing a revolver near the with intent to alarm his majesty, and was sentenced to a year in Jail. , Edith Beekmaster West, mother of a lour months old baby, confessed at Coshocton, Ohio, that she and three inoa. ?e of them her brother, attwapUd to wreck a Pennsylvania paa y to get a divorce." ******* -A- jit. \, . . - - iJ . < bhbbh HOG8 TO THE FRONT Many Farmer* Making Thi* a Major 8ource of Farm Income, From many counties, especially In the Coastal Plains, comes encouraging news that farmera are turning more definitely to hogs as u caah crop, with good profits from the use of home-grown feeda in a bulanced ration. Here are bita of evidence to this uffcct from county farm agents. "Dorchester farmers have aold hoga parctically every week this year and are cashing in on the high prices, making this one of the major sources of farm Income. .In August seventeen farmers sold 236 hogs which netted $4,616.21."?-G. C. MeareB, Dorchester. "There will be an unusual number of hnlBhed hogs going on the market In September, We plan un auction sale in connection with the County Fair -hog show, to stimulate Interest in better finished market hogs."?L. B. Massoy, Orangeburg. "We are' coming back in hog production. During August 77 brood sows were placed, and requests have been made for assistance in obtaining a dozen more sows and three purebred boars. We sold two loads of top hogs during the month averaging over 200 pounds each, and topped the Greenville market , at $11.25 per hundred."?T. H. Seabrook, Beaufort. "Increased interest In feeding hogs for market is apparent. This is due largely to the satisfactory prices that prevail, plus abundant rainfall since late July, assuring our farmers of an almost normal yield per acre of corn. We have received several calls recently for advice about purchasing and locating feeding pigs."?C. W. Carraway, Charleston. "Not only is there an Increase in the number of hog feeders this fall but these feeders are doing the best work in finishing out hogs for maiket that has yet been done."?M. M. McCord, Georgetown. "Some of the pigs on feed havC gained more than 2 1-2 pounds per day for the first thirty days of the feeding period. A shipment of demonstration-fed hogs will be made duri ing September."?V. M. Johnston, Horry. I The Spanish rebel radio station at | Seville, sent out word Tuesday night in its broadcast that rebel forces had killed 400 government men north of Toledo. Roy Cobb Captured Wllaon, N. C., Sept. 10.?Roy Cobb Nash county robber who escaped from prison with the lato Coley Cain, Raleigh desperado, was captured near here last night. Trailed for IB miles by blood hounds, Cobb Anally surrendered without a struggle to a posse of 20 officers from Nash, Wilson and Edgecombe counties, and was lodged in the county jail hero. He was suffering from a bullet wound of the right arm.* Deputy J. C. Fulgbum of Wilson county said he admitted he wdb shot Monday in Florence, S. C.f when Cain was tpoftaljy wounded by State Highway Phtrolm&n gharlea, Hennecy. Questioned . fby Fulghum and Deputies J. R. Tanner of Nash and A. C. Hlnton of Wilson, Cobb a<^ initted he and Cain had participated in close to a score of holdups since their break from the Caledonia prison camp at Halifax May 5, Tftnner said. "Coley said If the officers ever killed him to take him to Raleigh and dump him on the street near his mother's house," the officers quoted Cobb as saying. "He said if ever he was shot, not to take him to a doctor." Roger Don Rae, professional parachute jumper and air racer of Alhambra, .Cal., on Tuesday won the final event in the air races at Dos Angeles, by covering the course In the 50-mile Shell cup event, at an average speed of 226.544 miles an hour to take the first prize of $1,350. The Rhode Island Textile association, in a recent statement, said official figures showed that cotton cloth imports from Japan Into this country In 1935, had Increased 682 per cent over 1933. The association says that present tariff barriers are entirely inadequate. ZUNI PRAIRIE DOQ 8HUN8 POISON AND MULTIPLIES The Zunl prairie doge that live in fertile mountain valleys of southwes' tern Colorado have a decided taste for Alfalfa. 80 well is that taste deI veloped that the United States Bureau of Biological Survey estimates that each rodent owes his farmer landlord a board bill of 26 cents at the end of each season. The trouble, of course, Is that tho farmer can't collect. On top of this, the Bureau reports no apparent decrease in numbers of the species as a Whole despite,.thirty years of local at"Tempts to control the burrowing pest. In fact" old settlers in the area say the number has increased and that the prairie dog has extended its range to the high mountain parks, 10.000 feet or more in altitude, where only a few years ago it was not found. The Bureau has found this species most difficult to control, principally because of its scattered distribution over low-value graslng lands and vlr< gin mountain country where control Is not economically feasible, but from which cultivated sections are reinfested. Too, the Zunl prairie dog is a bit particular about accepting poison baits that are used effectively in con| trolling other species. . At Minneapolis, Minn., Louis Larson, a dairy farmer, was fined 960, after conviction of dragging a shepherd dog behind his car until the dog died. iAron explained that he was trying to break the dog from chasing cars when he was supposed to be herding cows. Two Russian aviators reached Moscow on Sunday, after blazing a trail from California to Moscow by way of the Arctic. They left California on August 5. FIRE?AUTOMOBILE?BURGLARY?BONDS ? 2 DeKALB INSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE CO I J U 9 "INSURANCE HEADQUARTERS" < H CROCKER BUILDING?TELEPHONE 7 | 3 2 gj M, G. MULLBR ELIZABETH CLARKE. Mgr. gj : ALU?FORMS ?OF?INSURANCE mm 1-5 X w o : 0 *v M ajjggg M S; ?* :s 1: Hi ic:j| -4 : ?*?; o >? G-E Thrift Unit in both Flatop and Monitor Top Modols _ - .. . \ AS LOW AS $10.00 DOWN Only $5.25 -PM MONTH YOU'LL SAYB MORI ifONSY thl* Mfflmcf with i Gtntral Miitglt Refrigerator kt your kitchen. You can provtfejouflttlf lotto day*. 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