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I GAS A!WI) ELECTRIC WELDING I on all machines?industrial or automotive GENERAL REE AIRS I BICYCLE RECURS ! We sharpen lawn mowers, kitchen kniveI : and other DeKALB MACHINE WORKS I j M. H. DEAL, Proprietor 1 1 p ' I II \ i n r?i tn.ui. B.Uty. Avoid Highway | Haaaxd*. Trsvsl By Train. AirConditionad Coaohaa on Through Tralna. IJuLXXllJUJXI B* WH''i Vmli^Hul 81.209 Malaria Cases reported In the U. 8. In 19381 DON'T DELAY I fj /Z fZ Start Today with f3 13 i 886 Checks Malaria In seven days. On the moon, water would boll In full sunlight. FINAL DISCHARGE Notice Is hereby given that one month from this date, on September 29. 1939. I will make to tho Probate Court of Kershaw county my final return as Executor of the estate of Minnie A Clybum. deceased, and on the same date I will apply to tlia said court for a final discharge as said Executor of said estate. J. H. CLYIHTRN. Executor. Camden, S. C.. AugUBt 29, 1939. TAX NOTICE The tax books for the collection of County and School Taxes for the fiscal year commencing January 1, 1939, will bo open from September 10. 1939. to December 31st inclusive without penalty. When making inquiry about taxes, please state the school district number in which you live or own property The following is a list of tho total levies for the various srhool districts: Situerelv vours. C. J. OCTLAW. Treasurer , Kershaw County. S C De Ka lb Township Mills Schoi I District No. 1 'laVv Schoi i District No 2 "11 Sclioi ' District No. 1 ,39 School Disf ; i? t No <> 11 School Di-'rii t No 2 2a School District No 43 25 | Buffalo Township School District \ o 3 3'J , School I >i -' i: ' No 5 2^ Sehoi 1 Distri." No 2 j School District No. 15 23 | Scboid I Mstri. t No Jo it 11 -a Sc 1 n>oI DisIri t No 22 43 Vi j Si tii'iii Distil'! N o .31 1 ? Si hoi>1 11;-f i. No 27 37 School District N > 2^ 2.? School Dist> i, : No 1 31 School D!.>!rb ! N"o Id School District N'o 42 23 j Flat Rock Township School District No n 3, S Mo, >l Dis' . ; No 9 3. ] School District No lo 22 S. liool I e.stri. * No ] : . 2'"> Si M i I Nstrii : N'o la 37 , Sciio-,. idstri- No ::u . 25 1 S hoel I' - ii ; N ? : t 37 S !; < i? | rl< ' No. 27 37 S h.. i 1 r N > 11 37 !' > N 29 S i I N I . . 23 Watf r?r Township S. ho, : !>: N ? i 1 2s S. ! N > 12 3 1 S 1 | a-' : N ? ! 21 Schoi.l 1 ''.-"ri- I No 2i' 34 s. r : '?! , No ?v .21 \ 59 32 checks /*/*/* Malaria 1*1 l^lk ITl \n 7 days and \W relieves Liquid, Tablets, Colds Salve. Nose Drops 8ymptom# first day Try "Rub-My-Tism"?a Wonderful Liniment (Extensive Plan For Newspapers Columbia. Kept 12 ?A comprehensive program designed to aid weekly and HOtnl weekly newspapers In South Carollnu wan adopted hy the Palmetto Weekly Press Association's executive committee at a meeting at the University of South Carolina Sept. 8. The association's first annual muottnK and institute will he held December N, the executive committee decided. The place of the meeting will be the University campus. The committee approved a program embodying the following points: Conduct of get-together meetings of editors in the several congressional districts at periodic Intervals; Compilation of advertising rate and data booklet to be furnished to national advertising agencies and other potential sources of advertising; Investigation of the possibility of cooperative action In soliciting advertising accounts; Encouragomnt of Job-printing at fair prices through "print at home campaign" and other means; Cooperation in obtaining workers to clean up subscription llstB of mem-j ber papers; Institution of a Htate-wldo effort to Increase community support of newspapers ; Issuance of confidential bulletins warning members about bad avert ising accounts and reporting investigations of dubious advertising and publicity schemes; | issuance of general Information bulletins, carrying suggestions for ! general Improvement of papers, clr1 culatlon and advertising building, accounting, typography and other subjects. Conduct of short-courses for employees and correspondents of papers in the various congressional districts In cooperation with the University's [division of extension; I Conduct of contests to encourage 'excellence in the various phases of; news pa per-making; Tentative approval of .jjiooperative negotiation of encontracts. \V W. Smoak^ president of the assoefcrtfoTi. said- an Intensive effort will be made to .bring papers not now members Into lb***- as! sonat ion "In ord> r that they, too, may profit by the program we are putting lilt i) effect NOTICE state of South Carolina County ef K< r -haw i Court ot Common 1 'leas ) Virginia Ainerson, by her guardian a.I Litem. 1 la: : > L A m? rson, Pla 'nC.f \ V s. Robert Raker. 1 >efendant. Kx Parte. Robert Raker. Petitioner. To The Plaintiff Above Named. And Aip And All Other Creditors Of The Defendant. Robert liaker. Above Named You ar< h-Teb) summoned and required to appear before me at my office in the Kershaw Count) Court Hou.-e at t aunieii. South Carolina, on Moil.!.<y. S'-ptetnb. r 2.">th. ltbtn. at t-n v\ lov k A M . to show cause, if -<n> have, w by the said Robert Raker. r.,.w confined in the Kershaw CouaD ,lat! at C.tin bn. South Carolina, should 'not be dIseb.irged Loin custody. C.inid. n. South Carolina. Kept nth. i ,r n olvrlrn. i n (bu't o? K- r-tiaw County NOTICE TO DEBTORS AND CREDITORS \; 1 parvus imbbt. 1 to the estate ; ; Ho. oti, d<-i i-,i -.ed are herebs no! ito t to make pa> ue at t th>- un' der-sigped and all parties. If any, hav;Mg la.u.s ag.i'.nst tin- said estate will presetr them likewise, duly attest* d, within :J.e tine- prescribed to law 11 R. MORTON K. R MORTON Ad mlnlstrators 1 Camden. S C. Au/ust 2.". 1939. J 1 I Sanitary Plumbing and Heating I TELEPHONE 433-J I Estimate* Furnished on Short Notice I ELECTROL OIL BURNERS I I COMMENT? ON MEN AND THINGS' i (My Spectator) A lot of chaff comes with the f ?!ii ui. And woods grow wherever useful plants flourish. So in life, our ' modern progress brings with it a lot or norve strain and rubbish. Nothing i? capable of giving more pn a n.u than the radio and moyle. j ).i nothing so offends at times us the' inuxe and the radio. If the radio and' tin* movies are giving what the people j want And I assume that they are then our taste and intelligence are not high. What moves me at Hie moment,! however, it the blaring, frequent broadcasting of war announcements ami bulletins, if they don't drive us. Into frenzy we shall at least be "Jumpy" with nerves. And some peo- j pie leave their radios "on" so as to hear ull this. Here we are: LonUou, the children are being moved out. Chamberllan says ho has done his best. The Khrg fogot his tea. Purls, I The French uru holding themselves in. Streets are darkened. No wine is being sold. Berlin, Hitler uddressos a note to Mussolini. Hitler leaves palace. Troops marching. United States Ambassador called on Hitler. Home - President Roosevelt Bonds cable to the King. Nobody knew whore he was. Note Is given to Mussolini for the King. Washington ?President Roosevelt sits up all night reading dispatches from Europe. And this ull duy long and nearly all night. Suppose you had a wife, son or daughter in a hospital and received half-hour bedside broadcasts, like this; Sou a shade better. Temperature rising last fifteen minutes. Slight symptoms of nausea. Nausea developing. Son becoming dlscouruged. Son call nurse. Nurse calls doctor. Doctor comes out looking grave. Nurse rushing about. Hitler has not done anything that might not have been expected. The Germans are armed with every weapon and they know how to use the weapons. Moreover, the Germans are fine soldiers and they, as well as all Germany, are disciplined and j blindly obedient to authority. If Po| land did not expect a swift overrunning by German troops she did not know anything about German tactics In the World War. The Germans will conquer Poland quickly and then turn to meet Britain and France. The World War has begun. Germany invaded Poland and Britain and France declared w?r. If anything can be certain, Italy will Join Germany. What hope have we of keeping out? Britain will drive German and Italian commerce from the seas; German and Italian submarines will prey on British and French ships. American ships, and ships carrying Americans or American goods will be torpedoed and our national indignation will sweep us into the tide, as iu 1'JlT. Adolph Hitler must carry the blame I for all the suffering and slaughter which will come from tills war. That I om- man, with a dream of world empire, will cost Germany more than she can possibly gain. Ho starts a river | of blood that will wash him and his ambition away. G.in the nations make a treaty of peace and settlement which would be pi-rmuneui? Men say that the Treaty of Versailles laid the foundation for ( tins Hitler uprising, but what caused I the Japanese to despyil China? j Spectator must plow up some cot-i ton. And how does it i'eel? Well.) j just exactly as though a housewife] 'had baked a fine fruit cake and then 'had to throw it down a well. And I there you are. Everything agin the ' farmer and many things happening at oik Europe aflame, the United States agog, tile markets nervous and t. and my own cotton land risinup against me. Well. sir. too muen is enough, as Potash used to tell Perl' mm ter. When Chairman John T. SteveiiH of t lie State Highway Commission said -oniething about having no money tor highway construction he probably ne-atit that there was no money for low undertakings All about us we . e highway building and repair work on. so there must be money for tliat. or it would not continue. Mr Stevens is a man of large interests and has tie- habit of dismissing a mat ter when he makes a decision, so he jpiobahly thinks m terms of future 'contracts or entirely new projects wlu-n he says that there is no money 1 [for work. If Spectator is correct in 'this surmise there need not be any ' \ Jiff.-rem o between tile statement of Mr Stevens and that of Govern..; : .May-bank A the snnie time there ino reason why Spec tator should t ur . nuse. It would be interesting for : some one !n authority to tell what the Highway Department is now doing Let us ask that the financial condition I be given also. 1 Spectator observes that the publish . ed statements of gasoltne tax receipts convey the Idea that the Department has full monthly sum at Its disposal tr spend I used to think so. too Bui i recent study of the Bond Act?which i I think clearly unconstitutional, although validated by our Supreme Court -recent study, I repeat, shows that the roads are built by bond is. >11< s and that the law of 1929 expressly and clearly provides. It was a shock to me, but there it is in black and while. And it is (lie law of the laud. At the first of the year the High-J way Commission estimates the probable income and uses that Income. To pay county road bonds which may mature; i Interest oil county and state road bonds; I Complete projects already under j construction; Repair existing roads; Provide for general administration, engineers, superintendents, utc. Spectator lias, then, a more than' casual knowledge of what is being done, but would like to suggest thul a c lea rout statement be giveu the public, so that wo may see exactly what's: what. The war in Europe will create a demand for our foodstuffs. Tho best plan, 1 think, for our farmers is to produce what they consume. Most farms will produce rye and oats, as well as crops for hay. Certainly the yield will bo promoted through the use of lJine. Most of our laud, If limed, will produce wheat. Ordinarily, wheat is not a profitable crop with us, but if flour should skyrocket as it did In 1917 we should find wheat profitable. It Is too early for wheat, but rye may be planted this month, oats next month and wheat In November and December. Raise some hogs, ?too. Remember that when prices advance rapidly we must buy as well as sell. Sinkings, disasters, aud all the horrors of wajf, are being squawked over the radio and shouted through 4he streets day and night. We must grow accustomed to horrors and to avoid hysteria. It was bad enough during the World War to open the paper and find great head lined, telling of the sinking of two or three ships the day before and the bombing1 of a town; but now If we must have i a dozen radio broadcasts for each sinking and a dozen more for each i bombing, with extras yelled all overj town every hour?say, war Itself 1b less nerve-racking than all this. Most of us are, at heart, with the HrTflsh, French and Poles, but we know the power and ruthlessness of Germany. 12 RHODES 8CHOLAR8HIP8 OF U. 8. ARE 8U8PENDED Swarthmore, Pa., Sept. 8.?Suspension of 32 American Rhodes scholarships because of the war was announ-j ced today by Dr. Frank Aydelotte.i American secretary of the Rhodes trustees. The scholars were to sail for England next month. At the same time, Dr. Aydelotte, president of Swarthmore college, announced cancellation of 1940 Rhodes scholarship competition scheduled for December. He said the suspensions were In compliance with a decision of the Rhodes trustees h?. London. All scholars now at Oxford'are being called home. Groups of French workmen gathered at the French consulate in London Wednesday to receive their orders for their return to France. They were the advance contingent of all Frenchmen of .Mobilization age called from England. I NOTICE OF SALE i Under and by virtue of a decree of ! the Court of Common Pleas of KerI shaw County. South Carolina, heretofore made in the case of Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation againet j G. A. Moseley, James H. Duncan and I Wade Potee. I. W. L. DePass, Jr., Master for Kershaw County, will sell i at public auction to the highest bidder for cash. In front of tho Court House door at Camden, S. C., on sales ' day in October. 1939, the same being Monday, tho 2nd day of said month, I during the legal hours of sale, the t following described property, to-wit: J "All that certain tract of land containing two hundred seventy-one and fifty-six hundredths (271.56) acres, In DeKalb Township, of Kershaw County, S C., on the Black River Road, about ten miles southeast of Camden, bounded on the North by lands of Barfield. Delx>ache. Bateman and . Trimnal; East by lands of Davis; South by lands of Moseley, the Black River Road, seperatlng; and West by lands of Moseley, Barfield and DoIyoache " For a further description by courses and distances, reference is made tc the mortgage executed by George G M one lev to the Land Bank Commls sioner recorded in the office of the C. C C IV G S and or R M. C for Lee County, South Carolina, In 'Mortgage P.ook 37. Page 89. and re corded in Kershaw County, South Carolina, in Mortgage Book CI. Page 469. TERMS of sale. CASH. Purchase! 'o pay for all papers and stamps. ' The highest bidder at the sale other than the Plaintiff, is required ! to make a cash deposit of five (5) pet i. centum of the bid as earnest monej or evidence of good faith, and failurt J to make said deposit, the mortgaged premises will be immediately resole 1 j at such bidder's risk, all as provided for in the Decree of said action. ,1 W. L*. DePASS. JR.. , I Master for Kershaw County. S. C. jWM. P BASK IN, JR . ' Plaintiff's Attorney. Child Safety And Motorists "School openings mean something to every driver of an automobile or truck in South Carolina, whether he has a child in school or not," Bald Wilbur S. 8mith, Traffic Engineer of the State Highway Department today. I>aBt year one out of every ten who died in traffic accidents was a child of school age. Four out of every five ! deaths of children of school age resulted from pedestrian accidents. During school months children are exposed to traffic in going to and from j school in addition to exposure from their normal activities. "Safety education to train children how to avoid dangers in traffic is now required in South Carolina schools," said Mr. Smith, "but to the driver is allotted the final responsibility of preventing tragedy if the child does pot follow his safety training." In the hours of school opening and closing, motorists should be particularly careful to observe all signs notifying them of school zones. School buses, in general use now to transport and protect children, were reported in sixteen accidents last year, none of which was fatal. Ten j of the accidents resulted in personal injuries, nine of those injured being children. All motorist are required by law to come to a full stop before passing a school bus which has stopped for the purpose of taking on or discharging children, and to remain stopped until the school bus has moved on. This is required not only of vehicles over-: taking and passing a school bus, but also of vehicles meeting'a bus headed in the opposite direction. "To eliminate most of the deaths in! traffic of children of school age, drivers need only to watch the road, keep control of their vehicles, drive I moderately in order to be able to stop quickly in an emergency. Observance of warning signs and correct driving habits will reduce such accidents to a minimum," said Mr. Smith, i "Your skill and caution can save I the child from injury or death, and yourself from the horror of running over a child." RAIL EQUIPMENT PURCHASES ANNOUNCED BV THE SEABOARD Norfolk, Va., Sept. 12.?Orders for 8,512 gross tons of new 100 pound rail, 495,000 tie plates and approxi-l raately 1.000 tons of rail Joints, frogs, switches, spikes, bolts and the like, have been placed with the Tennessee Coal, Iron and Railroad Company of Birmingham, Ala., and the Bethlehem j Steel Corporation, by the Seaboard I Railway. This material is to be used by the Seaboard in completing their 1939 early months of 1940 rail program, L. R. Powell. Jr., chief executive officer, ! announced this week. $20,000 Fire ' I At Lancaster I Lancaster, Sept. 8.?Lancaster Buffered a big fire loss today when fire broke out in a grist mill located on Gay street Just one block from Main street. The grist mill, a building owned by the estate of R. E. Wylle, and a Btable owned by A. 8. Hairon, I were completely destroyed. Harper's machine shop and a second I building owned by A. S. Barron were damaged. Beckham Motors recently | moved out of one building but had i not moved five cars which were burned. Two bouses were also lost. The damage was estimated at $20,000. Pranksters in Cody, Wyo., used I whitewash' to make a pinto out of '.he bronre horse .bearing a statute of Col. William F. Cody, founder of the town. I Old timers were indignant, particularly 1 because the pranksters whitewashed Buffalo Bill, too. I NOTICE TO DEBTORS AN& CREDITORS I All parties Indebted to the estate of W. D. Whitaker are hereby notified to make payment to the under signed, and all parties, if any, having fl claims against the said estate will present them likewise, duly attested, H within the time prescribed by law. ' LESLIE J. WHITAKER, Administratrix Camden, S. C., Sept. 7, 1989. ISTATE THEATREl 1 KERSHAW, S. C FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 15 I "UNMARRIED" with fl Helen Twelvetrees - Buck Jones SATURDAY, SEPT. 16 "MOUNTAIN RHYTHM" with Gene Autry ? Smiley Burnette . j LATE SHOW, 10:30 P. M. ! "UNDERCOVER DOCTOR" j with j Lloyd Nolan ? Janice Logan j Mon. and Tues. Sept. 18-19 I "ST. LOUIS BLUES" I with / Dorothy Lamour ? Lloyd Nolan WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 20 "HOTEL IMPERIAL" with Ray Milland ? Isa Miranda Thurs. and Fri. Sept. 21-22 "TARZAN FINDS A SON" with Johnny Welssmuller and Maureen O'Sulllv?0 ADMISSION: Matinee, 20c; Night, 25c. Children 10c any time. I FOR QUICK SALE j Three hundred twenty acres, more or less, known as the C. E. Davis farm and located about ten miLs B southeast from the town of Kershaw. It is estimate 1 this place has from one-quarter to one-half million j feet commercial timber. Around one hundred twenty. ; | five acres open land, one dwelling, three tenant houses I and adequate outbuildings. This place suitable foil general farming and cattle raising. Can be bought cn II easy terms at a low rate of interest and a I a reasonable i | price. See, write or telephorifc I j A. C. BRADHAM, Camden, S, C. j j I NOTICE II j ft I I Change in System of Purchases | I for City of Camden 1! I j Notice is hereby given that on and after the first I day of September, 1939, all purchases of goods for the j I City of Camden will be handled by the Purchasing De- I I partment. Mr. Donald Morrison has been elected Pur chasing Agent and will issue purchase orders for all ; I goods to be purchased for the City. The Purchasing I jH Agent's office is located between the City Cleric's of- I fice and the Water and Light office and the hours shall be from 10 A. M. until 1:00 P. M. All invoices for I goods purchased must bear the Purchase Order I H Number. H F. N. McCORKLE, I Mayor "W'J I ?V ' ~ ^ m ~ \ , j a Os V a