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Schlitz in "Steinies" for Old-Time Goodness A TREAT uwaita you when you t a a t c Sell I Hz ill. "Steinie" lirowu Bottle*. Hn'wiul from the worlds lineal malt uiui hojw ... under I'reeiae Knzyme Control ... Sehlitz liringH you, winter tmtl mi miner, that uniformly delieioua, old^ltine flavor. Order u caae today. foil i/on'l /un it lo cultivate |J a t an In fur SchlitM. You II like it on Jirut acquaint- H anca, ami ever ufter JOS. SCHLITZ BREWING CO. MILWAUKEE, WIS. Copyright 1917 Jot Schiltz Brewing Ce. -4I Baron DeKalb Honor Roll Grade 1A?A11 ixI*' Hoone, Betty Morton. Peagy Owens, Betty Twltty, Rebecca Young tirade IB?.lack Henry"-, Carolyn Biislee, Betty Joe Faulkenberry. tirade 2A CurtlH Ogburn, Jr. Cain ilia Owens. Dorothy Sanders, Emily I lornshy. tirade 2B?Barbara Ann Carter. Evelyn Workman, William Morton, Bobbie Jean Hancock. Grade 3 -Norma Eee Morton, Jackie Jones. Douglas Barlleld, Louise Stover. Billy Twittv, Margaret Burrett Grade 4?Edna Louise Catoe, Nettie Mae Catoe, Luelle Catoe, Marguerite Hilton, Barbara Ann Ogburn, Cornelia Self, Louise Twitty, Cecil Anthony, Fred I*ee Thomas, Jr., Marion Young, David Roberts. Grade r>?Dottie Brooine, Betty Morton. Marlowe Burch, Jewel Mornsby, Johnny Sowell. Carolyn Owens, Nancy l^eo Owens, Doris Itabon. Grade 6B?Geneva Ray, W. P. Davis. Grade 7 ? Marjorin Workman. Grade S ?Nina Young. Grade 9? Ruby Young. Grade 1" ?Ruth MacDonald. Grade 11?Willie Belle MacDonald. I';lu11ne Holland. Midway Club NoUm The Midway Home Demonstration club held Its spring meeting on Frl duy, April ?, at the home of Mrs. Lena (.'aloe, with thirty membera and three visitors present. We were welcomed Into the living room which wan beau tlfully decorated. The uioetlflfc wan called to order by the president. The devotional waa given by Mm. U. h. Morton. Then the club repented the Lord's pruyer. The roll wae called and minutes read by the aocretary, Mra. H. C. McCoy. Each member answered the roll with their favorite flower. The prealdent then turned the meeting over to our county agent. Mlaa Margaret Fewell The club Hung "Believe Me, If All Those Endearing Young Charms." Miss Fewell talked to us concerning the county fair and the Kershaw County Council. Then she took up the subject for the month, "Decorative Objects and Pictures in the Home." She told us to be careful in selecting and arranging things In the living room. Also the color and to consider the different objects of decoration such as books, magazines, mirrors, flower containers, cushions, candlesticks, foot stools and many other things that are used to decorate the room. Also to be careful about balancing the mantel and the table; to be sure not to put a large container 011 one end und a small one on the other end Next, she talked 011 what kind of pictures were appropriate for each room of the homo. First, she took the pictures for the living room, such as landscapes, sea views, reproductions of famous portraits and other pictures that are attractive to the eye. Next came the bedroom, pictures of. the family, friends, views of trips, dogs, ships and other pictures of the like were suitable. Also pictures of fiowers of a cheerful color, garden scenes and bunting prints were appropriate tor the dining room. She then talked on grouping pictures to each" other and with the furniture. Also, that pictures should fit the space In which they were hung*, and many other things of interest and help to the home. We then had a flower arrangement contest The prize was won by Mrs. W. C. West. Then the hostess, assisted by her mother. Mrs. (J. S. Kodgers invited the club to the dining room where a beautiful table was spread with delicious food. The song of thanks was sung by all the club members, led b> Miss Fewell. Everyone enjoyed the evening with Joy and interest. OPEN TENNIS TOURNAMENT TO BE HELD AT KERSHAW! The I^mcaster-Kershaw county op-1 en tennis tournament will be run on I the high school courts in Kershaw j May 17 to 2'). Each entrant will pay' a fee of $1.50. By May 5 all playing! in the tournament are requested to notify ('. L. Hasor, Kershaw, S. C. Charles E. Davis, owner of the Standard Drug Store, at Kershaw, will present a handsome trophy to the singles champion. Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday afternoons no admission will be charged the spectators. Tuesday night, May 18. at 8 o'clock, 011 the hardwood court of the school gymnasium, a doubles match and a singles match will be staged, and on the sarno court, Thursday night, May 20, at 8:15 o'clock, the finals match In doubles and In singles will be ruiu off. Large attendance is expected throughout the tournament, especially for the evening matches on Tuesday and Thursday. May 5 names will be drawn from a hat to pair off the players. Each entrant will then be notified of his first match. 1 mmhhhhhmmbmhmmhhbbbmv I TommiintTT^ (By Spectator) Next summer our state will be bub i hllng over with politics. A governor uml a United Hiatus senator, all the elective state officials, the represetitu lives In congress, the representatives , in the legislature and some atate senators. The people, the taxpayera will be the pampered and apoiled darlings of the aeekera ufter office. Verily the people will rule?until after the election, then we ahull huve the usual aurrender to .thoae who call for more and more public money. Do you think, can you imagine a speech like thia; "Fellow citizens. I will not do anything to reduce taxes; I don't want to add anything to your taxee, but I muat take care of this and that program and 1 muat vote more money for our institutions, morei pay for our officials, create more corn* miaaionH and other Jobs* I'd like to reduce your taxea, but I tell you now us man to man that my first duty is to our iiibt It ittfonh and programs and not to the taxpayers." Will anybody make a speech like that? Nay, nay,| my brother, there lives not the man who would tell you that. But how do the gentlemen act? Well, moat of them act Just as though they had made that sort of speech. If there is any man who Is the forgotten man It. la the taxpayer, he Is the fifth wheel to the wagon, the Inflamed vermiform appendix adhering to the body politic?and he feels as though gangrene hail "set in." It is a sad story. A citizen, voter and taxpayer writes suggesting that we publish the record of each member of the general assembly On every Important matter. I frankly don't favor that, strange as It may seem. If all our people were keenly interested in public uffairs I should favor publication of all votes But a few people, very few people, are really willing to participate In public affairs. If they vote?that "let's I them out." They cuss about the legisj lature and politics and politicians? I but they don't do anything about it. The organized minorities make sin h ja noise with a few bugles and drums that the legislature thinks an overwhelming army is approaching. The only chance to get anything done is to. get it done without publicity. Sounds bad, doesn't it? But its the truth. What's wrong with the legislature? Let's be serious. What sort of men compose it? What are the influences that motivate them? Disregarding the order of the questions, let us see: The legislature is a pretty fair sample of the people. There are some fine gentlemen in it who command my respectful regard? in both the senate and the house. There are some economists (take my word for It, whether appearances belle it or not), though they are so few fthat they have lost their courage and feel like strangers in a weary land. Then there are, some ambitious men, "seeking the bauble reputation" not ut the cannon's mouth, but at the spending end of the public purse. Then* there are some?the big majority?who have no plan, no program, who make no speeches, but vote, vote, vote-^overwholmed by the sentiment of the bold and vigorous few who have plans and purposes and resolves ?and whatnot. Some are ready of speech, like Aaron; while others, like Moses, are slow of speech. Now the resemblance stops right there, for though, like Aaron, some may watch the crowd how to the golden calf, 1 doubt if a Moses can be found, though the spirit of the general assembly tends strongly toward getting water front rocks. After all Is said and done, there may bo quite a bit of the Moses in the general assembly, for Moses led his crowd into the wilderness aud the crowd had to he fed on manna from heaven. It looks as though we were in the wilderness (or are we just in the air?) and any help that the taxpayers get will have to come ' fro in above. Charleston. Society Hill. Edgefield, i Chesterfield?are these our most productive places of genius? Charleston '?well. Charleston is Charleston?and | has been all these years. At once the place of historic riches and a forward look iug port under the extraordinur> leadership of a remarkable man ? Burnett Maybank. Edgefield?full of glories of the Civil war and home i of a ruling dynasty after the Civil war. Society Hill produced generals and colonels and majors for the Civil j war and the greatest number of number one men after the war contributed to the state by any place. Then old Cheraw's?shades of Chief Justice Henry Mclver, remembered as lone of Carolina's greatest Jurists and ! most lucid expositors of the law. But within recent yoars old Chesterfield , glories not in her great lawyers or 'statesmen, but In her baseball artists ?and they seem to be all pitchors. Years ago there was Janies McDowell James who starred ^is a pitcher with - tbu famous Ortrrtrs of BftTTTiiiore ancT COMMENCEMENT DRAWS NEAR FOR SARON OoKALb SCHOOL The Huventh annual commencement program of the Jiaron I)eKa!b achool will begin Friday evening, May 7, with the presentation by the grammar achool of the operetta "i'eter Kabbit." . I On .Sunday evening, Muy 23, the baccalaureate aervlcea will be held with Hev. J. I). CJulledge, of Lake View, 8. C? delivering the main address. (iraduation and conclusion of the commencement program will bo on Tuesday evening, May 25. Frof. Henry C. i>uvia, of the University of Houth Carolina, will bo the principal speaker of the evening. All programs will begin at eight o'clock. 'became Illustrious as McJamea. Now the Chesterfield banner of pitching j atardom iu hoid aloft by Vun Llnglo | Muugo of the Bahdhillts. J What la there in or about Society Hill to spur men to great endeavor? : What, Indeed, 1h there in the bald, aand duneu of old Chesterfield to Inspire men to thrill gaping* thousands i | iu New York with the n^gic of a There may be extraordlmiry quantities of Iodine iu the vegetablea, but I beg Senator George Laney, of Cheaterlleld, to tell nie?and the world? what makea a aandhill chap a great pitcher and whether by any chance he gets some of the Band In his craw. I have devoted many hours to a study of economics, but I dou't understand the reasoning of some of our preaent-day experts. In the general assembly of our state moat of the members are either convinced that we are prosperous today ?or that it doesn't matter whether we are prosperous or not. The fact of a tax delinquency of at least twenty-seven million dollars (state, coun-1 ty, school district and municipal taxes unpaid to date); together with an! enormous mortgage debt to the Feder-! a I lending agencies on real and per-j sonal property does not impress them; J nor the fact that congress is being1 besieged by the mayors of the big I cities to appropriate at least two billions for relief for next year carry any lesson. In part the general confusion is intensified by the national government Itself. It strove hard and valiantly to raise commodity prices to the 1926 level. It has not reached that level yet. 13ut the 1926 level was on the gold staudard. We have not reached the 1926 level, even on the standard of a dollar worth sixty-five cents, yet the government now talks against high prices and precipitates a sharp reaction, or reduction in prices. If there are seven million people unemployed the great problem is to absorb at least half of them In Industry. Industry can only absorb them if Industry thrives. Whenever industry thrives prices go up. Now how is industry to thrive and absorb the idle with low demand? One of the strongest reasons for higher prices Is highel wages. Shall the wages be reduced? If not, then just what are we driving at? What makes the appropriation bill so high? Well, sometimes its like tills: ] he national research council toi improving bedbugs tells some man or woman that lie or she has been chosen as chairman of the South Carolina chapter of this council and should put on a drive at once. Straightway, Honorable X, with live or six earnest associates, asks for an initial appropriation of $ 10,000 so as to have a Seci etar\, postage and stationery allowance. office, telephone, association fees and expenses to the annual convention in Miami, Florida, in February and liar Harbor, Maine, in July. The second year, much progress having been made, and it being proved that Georgia is overrun with bedbugs, which are mobilizing on the banks of the Savannah river, fifty thousand dollars is asked, with privilege of supplementary funds from the Contingent Fund of the state. The third year we, having become bug minded, If not actually "buggy," see bedbugs as the great enemy which is sapping the vitality of the children and costing us hundreds of millions in anaemic citizens. Then we get into the bug business in a big way, setting aside one' half the tax on chewing gum as a perpetual bug fund. l? nine some memhers become "buggy." Uiat ia> they think, talk and dream bugs on all occasions. So that's how it is. Contemplate our an commission. What reason was tlu-re tor it? Yet there it is. Our state and The St^ie newspaper have suffered a loss in the passing of Frank (. Withers. Mr. Withers was a quiet man but an effective citizen. Ho was the old-time type of citizen a man of convictions, a modest gentleman. a steadfastMriend. In Columbia Mr. Withers was recognized, and appreciated, for his sense of civic reapoaalblllty and gave his time and aolITFy (o Hie public, without stlnL & REPORT OF CONDITION Of" MERCHANTS ANI) FARMERS BANK LOCATED AT BETHUNE, S. C., AT THE CLOSE OF BUSINESS MARCH 31. 1937 ASSETS 1 Cash, hal.uu s with other banks, anil cash items in process of i..Him 11.MI $ 65.642.49 ! Lnit>-d States Government obligation. direct ami fully guarantoed 1,95P.uo j Corporate stocks 1,275.00 ' I <oaus and discounts 20,918.82 I Overdralts 12,952.57 ; Ranking house owned $ I .068.75, furniture and fixtures* $2.069.47.. 2.138.22 | other teal estate owned, including $8,12332. farm land 10.251.S3 j other assets 295.84 TOTAL $119,424.77 | LIABILITIES AND CAPITAL in pt,sits <if imlividuals. partnerships, and corporations: 1 >emand deposits $ 75,089.01 Time deposits evidenced by savings pass books 3,059.89 Other time deposits 8,835.00 State, county and municipal deposits 4,186 82 Certified and officers' checks, letters of credit and travelers checks sold for cash, and amounts din to Federal Reserve bank i transit account) 394.90 Total deposits $91,565.68 Other liabilit ie> 272.04 Capital a? count Capital -tm K and capital notes and debentures ....$20,000.00 Surplus 6.000 00 Undivided ; r. <t;i s 1.587.05 Total capital account 27.5x7."C, TOTAL LIARILITIKS AN1> CAl'lTAl $1 19.424 77 On March 31, 1937 the required legal reserve against deposits of this bank was $5,900 14 Assets reported above which were eligible as legal reserve amounted .to $65,642 49. 1. F K Kerr. Cashier, of the above named bank, do solemnly swear that the above statement is true, and fully am) correctly represents the true state of the several matters herein contained and set forth, to the best of mv knowledge and belief F K. KERR Correct ?Attest . Ix>ring Davis I John T. Stevens Directors Joe Hough I State of South Carolina, County of Kershaw Sworn to and subscribed before mr. this 19th day of April.' 1937, and I hereby certify that 1 am not an oflicer or director of thl% bank. JOHN A. YOU NO, Magistrate My commission expires at pleasure of Governor. DON'T LET THE MOTHS EAT YOUR CLOTHES UP! ^ * Clotifres that are soiled and full oif dirtv snot* what the moths feast on. 9 1 0CS are As a rule they do not toudh clotheis that are drv ' cleaned. Think of the damage and loss that the moth causes. Compare this with the small cost of having von* * clothes dry cleaned. It is real economy then to have all your winter clothes dry cleaned before hanging them away in your closet until next season. It will save you many a dollar! We are experts. Our rates are exceptionally reasonable. s City Laundry?Camden Dry Cleanery STATE HEADQUARTER8 MAKE REPORT ON CH RI8TMA8 8EAL8 A total of $50,983.38 was raised In the 30th Annual Christmas Seal Sale for the support of the tuberculosis campaign by the South Carolina Tuberculosis Association and Its affiliated county associations according to the final report of the Christmas Seal Sale announced this* week by Bishop K. G. Finlay, state chairman. The highest per capita sales were made by Charleston, 8c; Darlington, 7c; Richland and Georgetwon, 5 cents each, and Florence and Eastern York, 4 cents each. Ninety-five per cent of the funds raised by the tuberculosis seal sale | is spent for work in South Carolina and 5 per cent for the work of the National Tuberculosis Association which includes special services in this state. County tuberculosis associations are spending $30,816.09 of the Notice To Debtor* and Creditors All parties indebted to the e?ty of Dige Brevard are hereby nottfc to make payment to the undersign and all parties, if any, hating clih against the said estate will4 preta them likewise, duly attested, wltH the time prescribed by law. ] MOSES BREVARD, Administrator Camden, S. C., May 7, 1937 returns and the state association |ft 618.12. The programs of the conn and state associations emphasise *i cation on the prevalence, pweni and cure of tuberculosis and the dm onstration and application of mod* methods in tho control of the dli** Charleston raised $8,200;; Kent* county $1,208.71; Lancaster conrij $1,018.00 Fairfield county $SS7J| Chesterfield county $547.60; 8dl county $1,650.81; Lee county | Richland county $4,45 9 6.68. FIRE?AUTOMOBILE?BURGLARY?BONDS Jl ? DeKALB INSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE CO ? 9 "INSURANCE HEADQUARTERS" M u * H CROCKER BUILDING?TELEPHONE 7 . I M. G. MULLER v ELIZABETH CLARKB, Mp. jjjl ^ALL?FORMS?OF?1 MSURA.NCE^^^ M I J. C. COX1 1 Sanitary Plumbing and Heating I I TELEPHONE 433-J H Estimates Furnished on Short Notice I ELECTROL OIL BURNERS ! Ess I MEETMEAT fl I BROAD STREET LUNCHl i I ON YoP OF THE HILL I I The Best Nickel Hamburger Anywhere. | J Milk?Bottled Drinks?Beer?Ice Cream | COURTEOUS OPEN UNTH'^M I CURB SERVICE 3 A. * 1 I BICYCLE REPAIRS I I We have opened a bicycle repair depaftme 8 in connection with our machine shop and Prc* I pared to handle all work promptly and at I able prices. DeKALB MACHINE WORKS M. H. DEAL, Owner , iM ELECTRIC AND OAS WELDING LATHE WO ? BICYCLE AND GENERAL REPAIRS I I We?t DeKalb Street phoo* .. "t i' ia I