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"i" run nnun . iw \ i, ji hub \m~u*UL*mMSBMuma\ KbERSHATD SS MISS ESTHER LOVE, Representative ??? ?? Copy for thue columns bo In ths hands of ths oornospondsnt not Istsr than Wednesday morning to Insure i publication In our* | x. - rent week's Issua. J" 1?l? i" i . l .11 ??w?meH %25S52ZCSIII55555iiii5wiii*^*eewe~e^*wewwp*i^^" Kershaw Personals Mr. and Mr*. George Davis, of Bishopville, wore Fourth of July visitors at the homo of Mrs. Davis' parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. D. Clyburn. Hov. and Mrs. George B. Smith and daughters, Misses Mary Alice and Mildred, of Greenville, were visitors at the home of llr. and Mrs. IX It. Starling over the week end. Miss Ernestine Shaw, of Jackson> vllle, Fla., Is spending some time with Mrs. Clyde Catoe, of near Kershaw. Mrs. B. -K. I'lyler, of Camden, was a visitor in Kershaw on Saturday. Joe Dodson and Miss Doris Catoe, of Washington, D. C., attended the Dodson family reunion in Salisbury, N. C., on Monday. -r-- Miss Mary Bvans Brasington, who is attending summer school at Win-| throp college, visited her mother, Mrs , K. C. Brasington, over the week end. E. J. Bailey, of Lancaster, was a visitor in Kershaw on Sunday. Miss Blaine Gay left this week for Baltimore, Md., to visit friends. Miss Carolyn Croxton, a student at _the Winthrop college summer school, visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. LoYoy Croxton, over the week end. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Yates and Morgan Simms, of Shawmut, Ala., visited Mrs. Yates' grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Crenshaw, over the week end. Mies Edna Mary Blackmon visited Mr. and Mrs. Oeorge Davis in Bishopville last week. Miss Ernestine Darfleld left Tuesday for New York city, where Bhe will spend some time with her slater and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. George Cooke. Miss Queen Mungo is visiting friends in Charlotte this week. Miss Iteba Taylor has returned to her home from Rock Hill, where she attended the conference at Winthrop college. Among those spending the week end and the Fourth of July at Myrtle Beach were the following: Mr. and Mr a. Curtis Small, Mr. and Mrs. Tommy Clyburn, Mr. and Mra; Olin Williams, Mr. and Mrs. Hagood Klrkland, Mr. and Mrs. Veruice Haglns, Kudy A Id ridge, Mendel Oay, Qulucy dreg ory, Page Oay, Blake Truesdale. Misses Norma and Nellie Booker, of Charlotte, and Mrs. Les Watts, of Pageland, were visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Catoe on Monday. Carl Ltndenswelg, Jr., has returned to Kershaw, after spending some time in Chicago, 111. Mrs. E. B. Truesdale visited ber husband, E. B. Truesdale, in Columbia on Sunday. Mr. truesdale is a patient at the Veteran's hospital In Columbia. > Mrs. L. T. Gregory, Mrs. H. M. Perry amj Mrs. L. P. Truesdale left Wednesday to attend the funeral of their brother, ltett Truesd,ale, of Mucon, Oa. Miss Evelyn Elliott, of Bethune, and Ira Blackmon, of Fort Bragg, N, C., visited their brother and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Hazel Elliott, on Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Horton were week ond visitors at Folly Beach. Mrs. Irene Bateman, of Charlotte, N. C., is visiting Miss OusBle Hough, ttaio w Miss Ruth Canup, of Salisbury, N. C., is visiting her brother, Hurley Canup. Mr. and Mrs. Conway McLane returned to their home In Mulllns on Monday after a visit with Mr. McLane's mother, Mrs. J. B. McLane. Ernest Clyburn, Bill Smith and Boy ; Insley spent the week end in Washington, D. C., and Virginia. Professor and Mrs. W. Hoyt Cooke and son, Vernon, of Charleston, and Professor Vernon Cooke and son, John, of Columbia are visiting at the borne of Mrs. Mplly Hough. Billy Llndenzwelg has returned to his home after visiting relatives in ChoBtor Mrs. John M. Croxton and daughter, Ellen, of Charlotte, N. C., visited relatives and friends in and near Kershaw over the week end. Miss Iqez Hamel visited her mother, Mrs. J. W. Hamel. and her Bister, Mrs. A. B. Hare, of Blackville, on Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Mackey, of Florence. visited at the home of Mr. and Mrs. L. P. Mackey over the week end. Miss Ellen Hamel and Mrs. Edna Sweezy were visitors in Aiken on Monday. Jimmie Earle, of New York, is visiting his friend. B. M. Ellison. Mrs. J. C. Beckham, of Shelby, N. c., and her son, Joe Beckham, of Hartford, Conn., spent some time last l week with Mrs. Beckham's sifter, Mrs. K. C. Braslngton. Mr. and Mrs. Beckham and son, Joe, were former residents of Kershaw. C. A. Blalk, of Birmingham, Ala., Is visiting his mother-in-law, Mrs. J. B. McLane. Mrs. Wado J ones spent Thursday with her mother, Mrs. Nancy Ooff, of Blanoy. Jacquelyn Hefller Celebrates Birthday Mrs. James Hegler entertained with n party at her home Saturday, July 2, celebrating the sixth birthday of her small cfaughter, Jacquelyn. After games had been played the children were taken Into the dining room which was beautifully decorated lu yellow and white. Cake and Ice cream, carrying out the yellow and white color scheme were served. Mrs. Hegler was assisted in entertaining by Mrs. Helen Estrldge and Mrs. Hazel Elliott. The following children enjoyed the occasion: Walter Knight. Bobby Jean. Sonny and Ann Catoe, Sara Cooke, Helen Ann and Patsy Cook, Joan Reeves. I^ena Earle Fletcher. Dale and Toby Clements. Berry Mob STATE THEATRE KERSHAW, S. C. FRIDAY, JULY 8 "BLUEBEARD'S I EIGHTH WIFE" With Claudette Colbert Gary Cooper Also Walt Disney's Academy Award . Revue SATURDAY, JULY 9 "BORN TO THE WEST" With John Mack Brown John Wayne i Late Show?10:30 P. M. I "WISE GIRL" With Ray MUland?Miriam Hopkins MONDAY and TUESDAY JULY 11?12 "SALLY, IRENE AND MARY" With Allco Fay p. Tony Martin WEDNESDAY, JULY 13 "EVERYBODY'S j DOING IT" With Sally Hilars. Preston Foster THURSDAY and FRIDAY JULY 14?15 "OF HUMAN HEARTS" With Walter Huston, James Stuart Admlaalori: Matinee and Night 25o. Children 10c. r ADVERTISING Does Four Things If you conduct a retail store, there are four things you wish to do: (1) You wish to HOLD all of your present custoI mers (2) You wish to sell more goods to your present customers (3) You wish to REPLACE with new customers the old ones who move away ^ (4) You wish to INCREASE THE NUMBER of your customers. Thus you have four objectives. Not one of these objectives can be reached by doing nothing. None of these objectives can be wholly realized without advertising in I The Camden Chronicle Phone 29 ~ Camden, S. C. 1111 ! ' COMMENTS ON MEN ANO THINGS h-? ' - ) *; r?: (fay "spectator) A* the fourth of July gpproaohes I wonder If It is juat au occasion for I blowing off steam or whether a grataifjil people will renew their loyalty to the ppirlt of ttnaelflahneaa aervlco which inaplred the founder* of the Itepiiblic. . Many people in this country wero 100 per cent for the King} they nevor joined the patriotic rebels whom we today recall with suoh ferver. Coihe well, come woe, they stood by (he Kiug. What sort of people were thofco ancestors of ours who fought against the encroachment of the KlngT Had they suffered ? Well, when it comes to government control and taxes our patriots of the Revolution lived in the Golden Age! they knew nothing about taxes. They could have "stood in" with the Kiug and enjoyed prosperity. But they were men of sterner stuff than we. We, in similar circumstances,, wou.d compromise; we would stand in with the others so as to get all we could. This nation became a reality because some meu thought in terms of principle; to them the question was one of right or wrong. I don't like to bear people say "all history teaehes," etc.; for no man of us, however, widely read, has knowledge sufficient to be so categorical, but I think I'm safe in saying that we remember with appreciation those who sacrificed most for a prlnlclple. Woodrow Wilson may have been a poor politician, yei he will live because he threw everything, including himself, into the fight to save humanity. Perhaps he was In error; he was sincere. A practical politician makes trades; he gets what he can; a, statesman clings to his principles and Immortalizes them by his sacrifice. The Son of Qod was the world's greatest failure, as men saw It, yet his sacrifice on Golgotha has been the transforming Influence through nlueten centuries He succeeded through bitter defeat; He exemplified His own teaching. "Ho that would lose his life for my sake shall save it." 1 . i. i There Is something In this senatorial race which makes me wonder. Senator Smith has not always run with the crowd; he has not ?tried to get fall the loaves and the fishes; he has balked at times because he Just couldn't follow the pack. Was he wrong? Did wo elect Cotton Ed six J years ago to follow somebody? Was this great nation built on me-toos? Did the great George Washington try to make this nation a one-man affair of friends, sodb, sycophants, coat-tall swingers and servile flatterers? Let us South Carolinians ask ourley, Frances Broome, Tommy-Gibbons, Dorothy barker,- Barbara and Mary Alice Hllliard, Gloria Brannon, Marlyn Hegler Brown; Buster and 81ster Bell. 8MITH?CASKEY Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Smith, of Cainden. announce the marriage of their daughter, Ida I^ee, to Stanford Caskey, of Kershaw, at 5:30 o'clock, July 4, at Camden. The cerembny took place at the hope of Rev. Mr. Cunningham and was performed by him. Mrs. Caskey Is the attractive daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph M. Smith, of Camden. Mr. Caskey Is the son 6[ Mr. and Mrs. C. T. Caskey, of Camden, and is employed with the Kershaw Market. Mr. and Mrs. Caskey are now residing in Kershaw, at the home of Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Davis, Sr. Mrs. Faulkenberry Dies Mrs. Mary Faulkenberry. 49, wife of John W. Faulkenberry, died at her home at the Haile Gold Mine, near Kershaw on Tuesday, July 5. Mrs. Faulkenberry had been lil ill health for some time. She was well known throughout Lancaster county and has lived at the Haile Mine for some time. Resides her husband, she Is survived by the following: Four sons, Oscar, Heyward, John P., and Kenneth: two daughters, Mrs. Helen Hegler, and Miss Mary Edna Faulkenberry, all of Lancaster county; two sisters, Mrs. John Clay, McBee, and Mrs. Johnnie Roberts, Kershaw; two brothers, Henry and Walter Raker, both of Kershaw, and eight grandchildren. Funeral services were held at 4 p. m., at Buffalo church near Kershaw, Wednesday, July- 6. KERSHAW CHURCHES ANNOUNCE SERVICES i? Baptist Church Rev. Davis M Sanders, pastor. 10 a m. Sunday school, M F. Hawthorne, superintendent. 11 a. m. preaching service with sermon by the pastor. 7 p. m. B. T. IT. 8 p. m. preaching service with sermon by the pastor. 8 p. m. Wednesday, midweek prayer service. Regular meeting of the Ixtdies auxiliary Tuesday artemoon, July 5. at church. Methodist Church Rev. L. D. Hamer, pastor. 10 a. m. Sunday school, D. M. Gibbons, superintendent 11 a. m.. preaching by the pastor. 8 p. nr. Wednesday evening, midweek prayer service. Regular monthly meeting of Missionary Society. Tuesday. July 5. 3:30 p. m., at the home of Mrs. Hubert Sowell. Presbyterian Church ReY. C. M. Brown, pastor. Sunday . school. 10 a. m., H. L. Clyburn, superintendent. Church servtoft* H a in. with sermon by the pastor. 7:00 p. m.. Young People's service. 8:00 p. m., preaching service with sermon by the pastor The public is cordially invited to attend these services. J * - V r - . .? I ? ' > I ^l.U,JU,,. solves whether we have la us the stuff of our fQretyubera/ who through sacrifice made this nation, or whether we condemn a public servant who baa shown some of the spirit we profess to praise on the Fourth of July? Was ho wrong T Well, he was acting like a man, wasn't he? 1 am no negro-hater; X have much consideration for thoae colored men whom I know well; they come to me In trouble and 1 aiu happy to have their confidence; but tbe charge that Senator, Smith Is capitalising the negro Issue unduly Is not true. .We here in South Carolina know that no law of our state will endanger white supremacy hut wa must not be so Ignorant or credulous as to assume that the leaders of the two million negroes now in the Democratic party are not asking for anything. I have no axe to grind; I am hot a candidate; I am not seeking favors from any candidate; I have nothing to gain by speaking the truth soberly except the satisfaction of treating my readers fairly and 1 say as one Carolinian to his fellow . Carolinians that the Northern Democrats have made trades with the negroes and that we' of the South must pay the bill. This is not idle statement. When Smith walked out of the Democratic Convention he did exactly what you would have wished him to! do. Of course the prayer of the colored minister | could be as acceptable to, God as auy-| one else's prayer, made in the proper j spirit; 1 am not raising race issues between men and God; but the colored minister was not Invited for the spiritual blesBing which might come from his prayer; he was Invited because he was a negro and in the effort to Influence negro votes. He wasn't Invited to pray to God, but to the negro voters. Smith did right. Which of us will deny It? The colored minister may have been the Yictim of the political Bchemes of the Northern White Democrats; he may have Invoked the blessing of God In all favor; I am not condemning him; but the white men who put him on the platform tried to make a colored minister and the groat Jehovah bring the negroes Into the Democratic party. And now Methodist brethren; you have been afraid of this in your own church through union with the North, what say you of the big wigs of our Democratic party today? Governflr__jIohD8ton has asked a question which deserves consideration. He asks what would have been our chance to get the Santee-Cooper appropriation if all our senators and congressmen had acted like Senator Smith? Well, if the Santee-Cooper is Just a gift to the other gentlemen then indeed have we a dictatorship in WashI lngton. There are forty-eight states, South Carolina being one; and there are nearly two million South Carolinians in the United States. Are we entitled to anything; or does the gov-1 ernment dish out favors to those who bow and scrape to it? If our men in Congress have taken part in setting up a dictatorship, which owes its existence to Congress, yet ladles out soup to its favorites, 1 say our congressmen have served us badly. Either we are entitled to all we have received or we hhve set up a dictatorship. The truth Is? as I've pointed out before?we have rot received even a fair share. I^ow how much toadying would It take to get us our Just and proportionate part? Arq we choosing a senator to get a few crumb* or to be a senator? The fourth of July might well be made an occasion for asking ^ourselves seriously whether we cherish the institutions of our forefathers and are men enough to preserve them inviolate; or whether we. are cheap traders, men without convictions and principles," with hands held out for I the loaves aud fishes. Are we a sovereign state and proud of it; or a conquered province begging ^the conqueror's favor? > \ ?' - - - ~ Have you heard our candidates speak? Every candidate has certain peculiarities of voice. Among the senatorial group "Cotton Ed" has a voice that was not Intended for oratory. As a speaker the senator has to overcome the drawbacks of a hampering throat. He gdts results, Just the same, though by hard work. Governor Johnston, at his best, has a clear voice, . though not appealing. Edgar Brown has the best voice of the three, Just as he has an attractive appearance of gullelessness and great amiability. I want you to strain your imagination a moment until it hurts?Just imagine Wade Hampton or Ben Tillman or Cole Blease promising to stand In with the Administration for a few hand outs! And from old Souih Carolina came Andrew Jackson, who 'asked favors nobody; and John I Rutledge, who left the chief Justice- i ship of the United States because he [wouldn't ask favors; and John C. Cal- ,< houn who lost the presidency because he wouldn't toady. Yet with a 1 history like that we are told that we ought to stand with bent back and hat In hand, asking for favors?favors J with our own money! Enroll now! Every Democrat must ' enroll this year in order to vote in the primaries. Don't delay; do It i now! Business men, urge your<-employees to enroll. Show your Interest in your citizenship by engaging actively in enrolling all Democrats. FEEDING PROGRAM FOR SUMMER EGG PRODUCTION Clemson, July 2.?Summer eggs usually sell on a rising market following the low point In sprlpg, says P. H. Gooding, of the Clemson College Extension Service, who suggests that flock owners check on their feeding program to Insure as many eggs as i possible during the summer. The us- J I ual rise in egg prices ls^ already takjlng place this summer. Mr. Gooding calls attention to a , four-point program for summer feed- j Ing offered by . H. W. Titus, poultry specialist of the United States De- i partment of Agriculture. County 1 agents and the extension poultrynjen I will help to plan economical summer i rations based on the feeds available. The recommendations from l^tus are general suggestion* on methods: If the henB have been laying well, do not risk changing the diet now. Do not turn them loose to. pick up their living without the supplementary feed that will. keep th9m laying well. If they have not been laying well, improve the ration. If they are laying well, continue the same plan of feeding aad management; if not, Improve the system. If the hens have been getting feed at certain hours, continue feeding at these same hours.' If the hens are on an all-mash diet, give them a little more than they will clean up. Then clean up the hoppers and feed the surplus to non-layers before it gets stale or spoils. Keep up the total protein in the diet. Laying hens need a diet with 16 to 17 per cent protein In summer. The United States mint at San Francisco has Just finished. the Job of minting 10,720,000 coins, dollars and half dollars, for the Chinese government. After four years of litigation, in which the government claimed $3,000,000 in back income taxes, the claim . against the estate of the late Andrew Mellon has been settled for $668,000. ? Secretary Harold Ickes, 64, married In Ireland on May 24, to Miss Jane Dahlman, '25, of Milwaukee, has returned to Washington, aftera honeymoon in England and Europe. Enrollment Slow Reports from the two Camden clubs show that very few would-be voters have enrolled, while reports from*' the rural olubs show many have enrolled. The book for Club No. 1 Is at The Chronicle office, while the book for Club No. 2 Is at the City Oruo Company. Someone Is present at both plaoee each day to help you enroll.. Setter attend to It today and pave the en* rollment committee a lot on uq< neooessary work on the last day. All that a Democrat has to do to qualify to vote In the primary Is to sign the olub roll of the precinct In which he or she resides. "The qualifications for membership In any club pf the party In thle state, shall be as follows, via: The applicant for membership, or voter, shall be St years of age? or shall pnd for voting In the primary become so before the Succeeding general elictlon, and be a white democrat. He shall be a oltjxen of the United 8tatee and of this state. No person shall belong to any club or vote. In any primary unless, he has resided In the statetwo years and In the county six months prior to the succeeding primary following his offer to enroll. Provided that publlo school teachers and ministers of the Gospel In oharge of regular organized church shall be exempt from the provisions of this seotion as to residence! If otherwise qualified." 1 THE WORLD'S GOOD NEWS will come to your home every day through THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR An International Daily Newspaper : | It records for you the ^mrjd's clean, constructive doings. The Monitor does not exploit crime "'or sensation; neither dod$ It Ignore them, 9 but deals correctlvoly with them Features for busy men and a(l the ] family, Including the Weekly Magazine Section. . : ? The Christian Science Publishing Society One, Norway Street, Boston. Massachusetts Please enter my subscription to The Christian Science Monitor for a per.od of 1 year $12 00 6 months $6.00 3 months 13.00 X month $1.00 Wednesday issue, Including Magazine Section: 1 year $2.60, 6 Issues 25c Name Address Sat:pit C py on Request " 1 * ?l 1 1 1 ' ' 1 1 "? I op1 ?v v ?hf u i aa 1 CLEARANCE SAL? ON ALL SPRING AND SIJMER MERCHANDISE | II SHOES I 59c to $1.98 CLOTH 5c to 19c MEN'S SUITS $7.98 to $14.98 MEN'S PANTS r 98c to $1.98 MEN'S HATS / 49c to 98c . 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