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Garden Club Met at Von Tresckow Home The Camden Garden Club met Mou day afternoon. January IT with Mrs ,K. C. V<>nTr? Hrkow and th" Mis. rs Yail'H iis ('OhoHt i'siki's Following "if business Ki M-miii IV. C. MoCarloy. Kershaw cu.uns'- li m UkOttLKflLVU U very tMll.tSa*1 V?MIi"tnlk "it 1 till) <llffl'p?lll I >!?< ? "I "Jill .Hill till' | plants b??ai adapted t<> a li A tu" i outline 11!' "lis talk will I" r?>uii<l mi dor "Garden Null's Garden Notep The to) low ilig 1< outline <?!' I lie, talk before tin- cjub b> coiiiiiy agent, 1 W. C. M< CaVh > Ho bugan by too i UK. . that plants nui\ ln< arliltrarll.v guiped | into three < I.ism s and named them as follows. Group A l'.ant ^ ^ii efiTi lug soils approximately neutral, wiili a pit range1 from t? *: Abella. .">s?inn nnemo e'\ miter, begonia, In li (lower, box cum | mou. bittersivt'" I. < b#> >.ini Icinnui clematis, dahlia, geranium, gladiuAiH, ; honeysuckle, h> drang< a. lilac, nan is huh, pansy, peony, poppy, primrose, privet, rose, /.inula. i Group It plants pfefei lug mod or- , ately add ho|Is, with a pM range from fi-6: aster, several varietieH; azalea, : heathers, lily of-the valley, orchid, 1 r 1m, | holly, Juniper, philox, lily. Group C- -Plants requiring add hoIIh, with a pH range from 4-f?: Ar-j nicai, wild callu, pink ludyslipper, hum- | dew, pHchorplant. venue fly trap, Band myrtle. trailing arbutus, trillium, fernH?nioHt varlties, rose bogonla, rhododendron. l>o not apply too much lime, wood aHhos or fertilizer to flower gulden BOll. I>o not apply Bodlum nitrate or ammonium Hulphatu to wet plants. IX) not put plants In Group C on too rich hoIIh. Those plants are accustoinod to poor soils atid may be injur< <1 by high fertility. IX) not be afraid to fertilize plants in Group A JllxM-uJIy. These plants are accustomed to fertile soils. IX) not apply lime or wood ashes to many of the evergreen shrybs, how- I ever, such plants as oodurs and arbor-' vltae may often respond to lime. Tho following mixtures of grasses are tvest for the sandy soils of Caindon: Italian rye grass, white Dutch clover, Bermuda grass root cuttings. Hiwiik should be fertilized with a complete fertilizer such as 4-X-tl, u.'so where the pfl of our soil Is less than (! the above mixture will respond very good to the application of from 1 000 to 2,000 iMHinds of limestone per acre. Program at Trinity The Men's Business Club of Trinity Methodist church will give a program at their church Sunday evening. Jan uary 20. at 7 o'clock. Connected with this program will be a pew rally. Mush' will he furnished by Mather Academy singers. Prof. .1 Pons, the principal of Waverly school, Columbia. will be the guest speaker. Tho public Is cordially Invited. J.L. 'i! 1 ?? KERSHAW COUNTY TEACHERS ALLOCATED CASH REFUND 1 *I"h? Kki'mIiuw County Kdmanon ( iiKMK'iuilon bus just been allocated w $.'M 2"? < ash n?fuinl by the South Carolina KdUCHtiOU HHiitH llll ion, I Jut a mount icpi eseut :ug 1? I- per ceil I i.i'ilif 11* id ii state association dues ;;f l? ,e le t's in "i" rounr> whn joined b> I infrmlwr ! 1 lit* t' 01111 V ilhhi'l'iillloil held 1111 IP (<<!)i ini in 11 11It i 11 in ihf state group by lie* i|. a 111 i 11 in 1111 a i) I > lor liit* refund I .a fa fly responsible f.u- ill ? vtM'*! ! lit ji'ti ril nl' ilit* Kfi'sliiuv angu lation worn M Iss.-s I nielli" 11?>.\\ ii-l I of W't'sl* J viili', | > i f.sitlfoi . Mi a I'Ji loT M ill cli iiioii j ' o!' Camden. iiiL'iiibi rsljlp i hainnnn. and j 1 ('onmy Snpc.rin11 in 11 111 Mrs. KathlH'll j M. Walls. 1 Forty iln'i'o iiMiniy assoi la I ions 1 (|iialil|i'd for refunds. whieii lottied 1 ILM'.H; IF. I'll.. Kershaw association has !() >! p?<i- Cciit no inl?? i'hIii|i in lln* stale association Thin y-four countygroups have perfect. aueiuberanlp,'( I'l'Cni i|h. while tho hUUo total U?i\V J ai in ids at 9.700. Just 12 00 short of tho*1 lllll per relit goal The South Carolina associatlou lilts I had I0h per cent membership amonx [ tlm state's teachers for the past throe years, and Is rapidly approaching ft ' ; | perfect record for tho fourth conseeu-? live year. j ' In addition to public school te&chera 1 and honorary life members, tho state 1 association numbers many college pro-, fussoi H and others In Its membership, j PARENT-TEACHERS MEETING 1 AT BARON DeKALB 8CHCOL' I; The Pa rent-Teacher Assoc latin of the Baron DeKalb schools met Thurs-j day evening, January 16, 1941, at' seven-thirty o'clock. The mooting was' called to order by Mrs. T. C. Fletcher, ( president. Mr. Christie ^ed tho j devotional. ' Tho program, under the direction of Mrs. C. 13. IJusobee, Mrs. Li. J. Jordan, i and MIhs Jones, was In tho form of a ( ! musicale. During tho evoning. Carolyn Ruse bee. Edna Ix>nlso Catoo, Mar. garet Young. Marlowe Rlrch, and 'Johnnie Sowell rendered piano spies, , I and the gle o club sang several num' bers. Mrs. M. U Stover gave a humorous reading, "How to Keep Your Husband." In the homo economics room, guests were served apples und oranges, and later enjoyed a recreational hour led by Misses lireedlovo ami Johnson. MORE THAN A MILLION PAID FOR COTTON SEED Columbia. Jnn. 17?$1,032.37a was the amount received by South Carolina cotton growers from the sale of cotton seed to oil mills during the month of December, it whs announced here today by D M. Lipscomb. Secretary of ! the South Carolina^ Cottonseed CrushI ers' Association. Th4S estimate was based upon tho reports of two Federal agencies, the Bureau of the Census and the Agricultural Marketing Service. Growers' cash income from sissl during December was $2u().ooo greater this year than last. During the first five months of the current season, bo j ginning August 1. South Carolina j mills have paid growers $:?,930.000 for (cottonseed. This is about $."iU,nOO .ess than during the same period last year. The difference is due to tho fact that less seed have been sold. With the South Carolina cotton crop 11 per cent larger than a } ear ago. s<hm1 receipts by the mills to date are approximately equal to those of last year. This indicates that considerable seed remain to be sold. THE GREEN HAND FILM" 0 BE 8HOWN AT BARON DeKALB ''Tho Green Hand", drat full featureength motion picture ever to be film* il in the South with an ull-Soutuern uh(. will he the load attraction on a wo hour movie program to be present d fro? to the people of Kershaw ountv at 7:30 o'clock p m Tuesday, lanuary 2X, in thu Huron UeKalb icliool Auditorium. IV N. C'ulller, lonelier of vocational igrlculturo at Huron DeKalb school, vho in in charge of arrangements for liis spvclal comimjnlty program, stntil tli.it tho people of Keahaw county no very fortuiuatc in having tills opportunity to view "The Green Hand" t\ hicii has been in constant demand dmntuhoiii the nation over since its production in Georgia some tew months aco. The program, Mr. Cullicr announc<1. will include an educational short iUhJoct tilruod In natural color, cpt 111*3<I Southern Sunrise" and a cartoon omedy. Admission Is to be free and no colectlon of any kind will ho taken, Mr, ['ulller declared. "The Green Hand", adapted from the book of the same name by Ihuin I'aul W. Chapman of tho College of Agriculture. University of Georgia, la the story of a Southern farm boy who Is expelled from school as an Incorrigible but who is reclaimed by a teacher of vocational agriculture and tleveloped Into a powerful leader. The film had Its premiere before 1,000 Southern civic and political notables and 6,000 F. F. A. boys lu Athens, Georgia, and ever since then has been receiving the plaudits of educantional and agricultural leaders wherever It has shown. CARSON-DAVI8 Kershaw, Jan. 15?MIsb Mary Welsh Larson of Kershaw and Richard Harding Ihivls of Marshville, N. C., were married In Saint Matthews, Thursday, January 9, by Rev. M. L. Banks, father of Mrs. James Carson, who Is a dster-in-law of tho bride. After the ceremony Mr. and Mrs. Davis left for x trip to Florida and Cuba. The bridge's costume was an ensemble of won gold with brown acctssor\oa.jr Her flowers were amber orchhK. Mrs-Y^-vis Is a daughter of the late James J^acKlhaney Carson and the late Cora'Welsh Carson of Kershaw. She attended\^ershaw High school, Randolph-Macon institute, and was graduated from Chlcora college. Mr. Davis is a son of the late Victor (\ Davis and the late Rose Hunnlcutt Davis of Monroe, N. C. He was graduated from the Monroe High school and afterwards received training in a number of schools, specializing in cotion. He Is now a cotton buyer in Marshville, N. C.. where the couple will make their homo. Softball, originally called indoor baseball, originated in 1^H7. Nobody's Business Written for The Chronlole by Gee McGee, Copyright, 1028. , ^ THE ITALIAN ARMY IN REVERSE - At tho tlmo this la writ ton, 11 Dtico la planning to visit the Greek-Italian buttlofront in Albania. You recall that Albania I* tho little helpless uouutty that thla KHHtl lUftDU r?Q.W . known us the "ill duoo," annexed to his bin country because he wanted to do something smart like Hitler. Ethiopia Is another piece of property that be took by force. Hallo Selassie will got his country back, tho, at tho end of the war, or perhaps sooner. We wish Mussolini a pleasant trip to tho war area. He will of course carry his running shoes with him so's he won't got caught betwiat a rock and a hard place. We would not advise him to go too close to the actual battle lines. ^ Being low and dump.v like he is going to make it mighty hard for him to foot It fast enough to keep from being poked in the back by a bayonet. As a matter of fact, he should venture forward In a good V-8 and he'd better be sure that it can run in reverse down hill and up hill faster than a Greek soldier can run. As a matter of fact, It looks liko the battle front will come to him in Italy within a few weeks and thus save him the trouble of going to it. ?Now it is possible that by tho time this article appears in print that 11 Duco will have his soldiers fighting with their facos toward the enemy and the whole picture might be changed. He has about 15 Italian soldiers (or marathon hikers) to I Greek fighter. If he can whip Greece with numbers, the picture will of course be changod. But he had better not get up too close to his brave men: they might turn around suddenly in an effort to retreat and "tnomp" him to death. ?Poor old II Duce! He used about the same amount of sense in the matter of getting into this war as a mouse puts out when he nibbles cheese on a mouse-trap trigger. He had to do something. Other countries (tho democracies) had all of the wealth and he thought It was a good time to take part of It or all of It away from them. His troubles have Just started. Hitler possibly regards him as a gumboll by now: he can't help II Dace very much. In fact, his hands are full also. * FLAT ROCK MUSINGS ..it pays to advertise. rar. slim chance, jr., lost his dog last week and it looked like she was lost for keeps, he put a "ad" in the paper on tuesday p.m.. and the next morning he heard .something rubbing against his front door; when he opened it there stood his dog with his newspaper In her mouth, we won't say that "slssie" actually read about herself, but she had a Idea that she was advertised fur. when the paper boy flung the. paper in the front yard, she picked it up and carried it in to her master. ..another young man has vollunteered and gone to the army, his name is useter work, lie got it into his head that In- was needed at tho front, so he left everything behind and went forward, he wants to get into the flying corpse if possible, he has never flew except in a ford, but he knows his machinery, he wants to commeifce at the ground and work up. ho will clean planes when they light on terra fir ma and expects later on to be allowed to do a little bit of solo-ing by hisself. he could not wait on the draft, the works aro all fine people and have lived here 2 yr. ....there have been sevveral repossessions in our midst since xmus. the moores lost their baby grand, the squares are shy a raddio and a walnut bedstead. tho waites returned 2 mattresses of their own free will and accord, they had counted on getting holllday gifts of monney to pay for same, but noLhing better than a dressed rooster in value was glvven to them, the all-nlte garrage permitted his 2 gas pumps and his garrage tools to be took back, sevveral first, second and third hand cars have returned home. ....the weather has bonn so bad In flat rock foy the past 25 days nothing has benn Indulged in except setting around the fire, somo government chocks trickled In last week to the joy of all concerned, including the grocer and dr. hubbert green, farm work will start in martoh If It alnt snowing then, no new building is in progress, but some Is being talked, vizzly: torn head is thinking of enlarging Ills kitchen and making it serve as a dining-room. his famlley has bonn enlarged by the marriadge of his darter, "frizzley" head. Russia has advised Turkery to "resist strongly" any German menaces, j according to rumors in Vichy. Backed by Moscow, these reports said, Turkey has informed Germany that tho dls- J patch of troops thru Bulgaria would ] be considered a cause for war. MORE DAIRY CATTLE IN STATE BIG NEED Clemson, Jan. 18.."There Is a large outlet for dairy products In South Car* olina which if supplied with reasonable adequacy would require many more milk cows than we now have", says O. M. Clark, extension agricultural economist, discussing the general outlook for dairying and the need for more dairy cows In South Carolina. "A recent survey indicates that about 44 percent of the farm families of the state do not have a mik cow, and only 36 percent have an adequate supply of milk". Mr*. Clark explains. "An increase in dairy cattle numbers in this state is desirable for the purpose of correcting this deficiency regardless of the national outlook for dairy products." Regarding the dairying prospects in; the country as a whole Mr. Clark' points out that the number of milk cows on farms has been increasing during the last few years and will probably continue to increase over the next two or three years. The production of dairy products will quite likely be greater in 1941 than in 1940, but the demand fs expected to bo stronger, and prices of dairy products will probably average a little higher in 1941 than in 1940. The total income from dairy products will be higher in 1941 than the year before. i The areas in which the fresh or fluid milk is produced for markets in 1 South Carolina are so separated and ! independent of each other that the j national outlook with respect to dairy ; products may not apply in any great degree to the fluid milk markets of this state. However, the national situation does influence the prices of other dairy products of this state and of milk cows themselves. Made Member of Firm Frank L. Campbell, who has been cotton buyer for Oliphant and Company, Rock Hillfand will be a member of the firm. Mr. Campbell will continue to live in Chester, and will have an ofTice here! Mr. Campbell and family came here from Camden in 1931. . Their many Chester friends are delighted to know that Mr. Campbell's new connection will not take them away from Chester. The Selective Service system is designed as an orderly^just and demoocratic method by whreh the military manpower of the United States is made available for training and service in the nation's armed forces. FINAL DISCHARGE Notice is hereby given that cne month from this date, on February 14, 1941, William H. Stokes and Mrs. Lizzie McCaskill, Administrator and Adminiatratix de bonis non, will make to the Probate Court of Kershaw County their final return as Adminitrator and Administratrix de bonis non of the estate of Rosa Ratcliff, deceased, and on the same date they will apply to the said Court for a final discharge as saJd Administrator and Administratrix de bonis non. N. C. ARNETT Judge of Probate for Kershaw County Camden, S. C., January 14, 1941. FINAL DISCHARGE Notice is hereby given that one month from this date, on February 18, 1941,1 will make to the Probate Court of Kershaw County my final return as Administrator of the estate of W. M. IvOllls, deceased, and on th(e same date I will apply to the said Court for a final discharge as said Administrator. WILLIAM B. 1XJLLIS, Administrator Camden, S. C., January 18, 1941. \ FINAL DISCHARGE Notice is hereby given that one I month from this ...e, on February 17, 1941, I will inako to the Probate Court of Kershaw County my fliTal return as Administrator of the estate of Bessie T. Boineau, deceased, and on the same (late I will apply to the said Court for a final discharge as said Administrator. CHARUSS E. BOINEAU, Administrator Camden, S. . January 16, 1941. NOTICE TO DEBTORS AND CREDITORS All parties Indebted to the estate of George Hendrick Hodge are hereby notified to make payment to the undersigned, and all parties, if any, having claims against the said estate will present them likewise, duly attested, within the time prescribed by law. JOHN K. de LOACH, Executor Camden, S. C. January 13, 1941. NOTICE OF MEETING I The annual meeting of the Kershaw , County chapter of the American Red Croaa will be held in the American ! Legion hall Monday, January 20, at 8:00 P. M. New officers for the year ! will be elected. Complete reports of the past year's work will 'be mads and our program this year planned. All members of the Red Cross are invited and urged to attend. Let us make . this a worth while meeting by a large attendance.?Gertrude B. Harris, Chairman. LEMOCC PAI NT Ytttsy PRODUCTS \ offc / Camden Hardware and Supply ^^ompan>^^^| V>... -v.*-. * ' ;*- * -* " : " v * DO YOU KNOW HOW MUCH POTASH WENT OFF YOUR FARM IN LAST YEAR'S HARVEST? ' r. K EVERYTHING sold off the farm reduces its fertility. Most crops remove as much or more potash than any other plant food and a great many of them remove more potash than nitrogen and phosphoric acid combined. Unless care has been taken to replace this necessary plant food each year, chances are the potash now in your soil together with what you apply in ordinary fertilization is not enough to get you the yields and quality which mean most profit. Consult your county agent or experiment station about the amounts of potash needed to grow the crops you plan for 1941 and how much your soil will supply. See your fertilizer dealer early. He will tell you that there is plenty of potash on the market and show you how little extra it will cost to apply enough for greater returns on your investment. Make more money in 1941. Write us for our tree illustrated booklet on how much plant food A crops use. AMERICAN POTASH INSTITUTE, INC. / INVESTMENT BUILDING . WASHINGTON. D. C. ^ SOUTHERNOFFlCKi MORTGAGE GUARANTEE BLDO.. ATLANTA, GEORGIA Stage, Radio, Film Stars Campaign to Aid 'Bundles' Joan Crawford signs up for Bundles for Britain campaign with Mrs* Wales Latham, National President. NEW YORK?Stars of the radio, stage and screen are doing their part in Bundles for Britain's campaign to aid the war-sufferers of gallant Britain. Eddie Cantor, Joan Crawford, Madeleine Carroll, Marion Marsh, and Vera Zorina are the latest of a$ - long list of first-rank artists to lend their support. Miss Crawford, glamorous movie actress, appealed to the thousands of her fans who annually send her Christmas presents to give them to Bundles for Britain Instead this year. Mrs. Wales Latham, national president', enrolled Miss Crawford as a Bundles for Britain volunteer, presenting her with a gold emblem at a ceremony In New York. Cantor, who made such a hit as the master of ceremonies ror m? Bundles ball' in November, also contributed to the work of the Merrle Market in New York where books, toys, food and other holidfST^ gifts and essentials are sold. Zorlna, now starring on Broadway in "Louisiana Purchase," deoorated a window and sold Bundles emblems in a New York store. Miss Carroll enlisted in the Bundles campaign, offering her services in any way she could help her native land. | J. M. 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