University of South Carolina Libraries
^ PINAL MHCHAIMJK Notice is ticrotiy tfveu that one mouth from I IiIh date, on Saturduy. February 2(ftla. 1D21, I will make to tho Probate Court of Kershaw County mv final return iih (immlian of the ottf&tft ?r TidweJl, minor, he hav ing attiilneil his majority, n net on th* <nt?e d*U> i wilt apply to the Wild <>,>0 rt for u final UiaoharKo from my trust hh waUl OuardUui. . - W. I. .1 \( KSON. OiiuuU?a, S.'C,. Jauuary 2<lth. 1021. Trespass No'tU-c. rutting wood, hunting *nvotj>erwlse i ri'sjKissl^K ou land* of o, C. Coater iiositlvWy forbidden, . ? \y - C. c. co.S!lvfett. t ,uude:i. S. C. 1- i> ? 7 S|!M.M0N8 FOli iTkIJUI * ?Hate "I' South Carolina , miiiii > of Kershaw ? i 'i >m 1 1 mi Ooniaion rii , riic I'rti uk of ( 'a union. PlalniiiT. against r?'U?es Team, Joseph KucluuaW, King) Hardware Company, Oh met Carter < iiiiwny. I'ltt^luiiK Steel Qompauy. Llpfert Scale Company, Oritur u, Hill.' iv company, n. Mohr A Sons. i>. ,t. Oregory, Hancock Hros, 10. A. Well A. Company, Southern Cotton 011 < 'oinpany. Jofwpb tHofleQNtq Shoe ( 'uimnjny, Zone Oil Company, Kor -yhavv < Ooonly Alanufactur tog < Hotntimy*Shvt> Company .1 Itli MS II. Well & ( '()iripau\ , r.laek, -non -Morris & ( 'ompuiiy. National "sii.iv Special! y tVlUIWIIiy, Old Ken ' ; (i 'ky M.iiiuI'.m luting Company. (Jon I J > ? r i i. . 1 1 Oofiuixj ny, Comnipree Tru^i Ckanpanyv Ifdwnrd C. Park: id Pjr^t National Hank of Kansas) .M Issoui'ia. Defendants. ' SUMMONS FOK KKJUKF ..." (Complaint Ni>i Served) I i The l>efehd?h.ts Above Naiuod; Yon nr?' hereby summoned and' re- 1 mired (o answer the complaint In this . i -Melt whh'li has been filed in the of fice ef the Clerk of Court for Common Pleas for the said County, and to M*rve ii copy of your answer to the said eoin.pinint on the sut)Horll>er lit Ids office :i i Camden. S, C. within hventy day* after t1i? service thereof. ?j\clusive of tin- day of pitch service; and If yon fail to answer ilf*- cdp. plaint within tile time afoiyssiid. the plaintiff in this action will apply |e rhc Court h>r the relief demanded Jn i he complaint. HuJed .Fanuiiry 26th. 11>21, W. M. SHANNON. 1 ? I j\ 1 N'l'I F F'S ATI'l >1 1 NK Y . I\> lite dotjortdants ahove named: Take notice that lite complaint in ? his notion was filed In the office of i he Clerk of ?Court of Common Pleas for Kersiiajf County, South Carolina, I it Cnimlen? S. C.. rhls 2(>tli day of ?limitary, 1021. W. M. SHANNON, PI 'A IN TIFF'S ATTOIlNlO Y Dr. C. F. Sowell DENTIST (Office Over Bruce's Store) CAMDEN, S C. ? ? T. B. BRUCE Veterinarian * Ly diet on St., Phone 114 CAMDEN, S. C. ] Collins Brothers Undertakers for Colored People Telephone 41 714 W. DeKalb St. DR. R. E. STEVENSON DENTIST Crocker Building Camden, 8. C. COLUMBIA LUPER & MANUFACTURING CO. MILL WORK SASH, DOORS, BLINDS AND LUMBER PLAIN & HUGER STS. Ph.ne 71 COLUMBIA, S.C. EYES EXAMINED AND GLASSES FITTED M. H. HEYMAN & ?0. Jewelers and Optometrists PALESTINE) PIGMY LANO WITH A GIANT HISTORY 'l lit' historic Holy l.and when- tUOVtHl the N ti /.n ivne whose lorih will I eoj i moiuorated around flu* world tikis ween, Is characterized uk "a liny |jt? tie country," l?y Viscount junto** llryco, in m cuEuruiinlcatlou to ilio N'uiIoimI Geography society : "Though i he traveler's hand books i>i?i?iiiv 1 1 1 nt to Hud Palestine small, it surprises bitu by belils smaller than he expected. Taking It as the region between the Mediterranean on the west unci the Jordan and Dead sea on the east, f^oui th<; spurs of Lebanon and Herinon on the uurib i?? the ?ieStfrt nt in-ershebu on t:.o .south, it i.^ only 1 10 inih's Jjoiig and ,.<> to <.U broad ilml Is to say,' It Is smaller limn .New Jersey. ? ut' this region lar.^e part.-, did not really belong to aueiem Isi'ael. Their bold oii the soutUt-r.i ami northern dis trict, s was but slight, while in tVo southwest, a wide and rich plain along the Mediterranean was -occupied by the warlike Philistines, who w.ere sometimes more than a nuUeh^for the Hebrew armies. Isniel had. lit fact, .little more tlmp the hill country, which lay between the Jordan on the east and the maritime plain on the west. Ring David, in the days of his power. j looked down from the hill cities of Benjamin, Just north of Jerusalem, up on Pliillstlnd enemies, only 25 miles oil, on the oue side, and looked across tlu; Jordan to Moabite enemies, about as far off, ou tlie other. "N^jirly all tbs eveiHtf* in the history* ot' Israel that are recorded in the ..Old Testament happened within a territory no bigger than the state of Connecti cut, whose area Is 4 ,*<00 square miles; and Into hardly any other country has there been crowded from the days of Abraltaiu Jill our own. so much history ? tli at is to say, so many events that ha ve been recorded and deserve to be recorded in the annals of mankind. "Nor is It only that Palestine is really a small country. The traveler Constantly feels as he moves about that It is a small country. From the heights, a few miles north of Jeru salem, he sees, looking northward, a far-off summit carrying snow for eight uioutlts in the year. It is Hernaon. i9early 10,000 feet A high ? Harmon, whose fountains . feed the rivers of Damascus. z "But HeriuoS Ts ~6UtSU|6 the terri tory of Israel altogether, standing In the land of the Syrians; so, too,. It is of Lebanon. We are apt to think of that mountain mass as within the country, because it also is frequently meottoned in the Psalms and the Prophets ; but the two ranges of Leb anon also rise beyond the frontiers of farael, lying between the Syrian* of Damascus and the Phoenicians ef the Wait. ? "Ferbaps it Is because the maps from which children used to learn Bible geography, were on s large scalp, that most of us have failed to realize bow narrow were I lie limits within, which took place, all tlioae great do ings that fill the books of Samuel and Kings. Jnst In the same way the classical scholar who visits Greece Is surprised to And that so small a ter ritory sufficed for no many striking In cidents and for the c&reers of so many famous men." "ENCHANTED ISLAND" Cyprus, fairy laud of 'the Mediter ranean. which Greeks have beeu urging J Great Britain lo tutu over to them, has | a hiitory no l?#s strange than (he lie- j tion of Shakeapeare's "Othello," for which tit* island, in part, la the net tin*. Richard Coenr da Lion wreated it j froqi a ruler wto had won It b y for g liijr letter* la hj* monarch's name af- j tar that ruler, Isaac Coranenm#, had refused to let the Qrusader'a ship- j wrecked aud seasick lady-love land there the first time she asked. Richard married Berengarla there and went his wgy, after tnrnlng arar the island to a penniless adventurer, Gny <j? Tivsignsn, who founded n "feudal state amongst spice gardens and silken luxury," and thus establish ed s dynssty which has hecn described as tHe most romantic European his tory. Cyprus bulks large in the croteL of ! Asia Minor, like a hug#* fist with a leun finger pointing straight st Au ttocb. Historically, one may imagine, the flnger should he crooked a bit more, In perpetual accusation of the sultan, the degenerate ftolim TI, whose j ^literal* captured (he Island. Impelled In part, at least, by the fact that j I 8eHm"s fav*>rlt? wine c am* from thefe. ) Geographically. the promontory mark* j the?ilne of Qypru"' prehistoric eonnec- | tion with Asia'.* mainland. There too. reigned the beautiful -<jTTeeTT f*atherftrr ('omnro, adopted "danghtar of Venice," who. thonch grief -stricken by her husband'* d??ath. struggled agnlnst Intrigue that' the throne might be saved for his unborn rttMd - Karty cmnp tn Cyprus thos/' "Yan kees of the f.evant," the Plmmi^Mii*. Harg?n tfK* king of Assyria who, as Isaiah bad proplisMfrd. M "the Kgyp' Hans jrlaoner* and the Kihlopieans .aptlwV also conquer* d * Gypru". tCsurhudrion. the Guetmr and Carneglv Of A**>ria. WllO I |?f t III NitieVvh HUk Indexed tttmifv of < f)?>ii?:??Ml? of elay tubk'lM, received lrM< te* (hill* ten ' *> I I ?U UIJUJS J'tiU^inllls, Uvtiedlet Ai'r; >ld u't SjLiiu li|>oi*uit ,|( j>|?r n> i.?? , rcr-iun dominion, ?in1 l?vutinr a*. one of the Island kln^s. hoTo (?f 'he World's lt??l j knowii I.I. .. M Mill,. \ j^mwl I.SOi' TH'I1 - who united ? T: * * m\. tiered wmm ?les. Is the Kitu: .Uthur of talutid t ? u ditlon. v ' Thus Cyprus reeks w ) ( I ? eouipositn j hieiuorics of eastern, tire* Ian, Uomau j ; Hid t?vrn \ 11,-fu >!t UM riv I I. -irfim.- N" j ? ? was It h foral |toin( for . it'llgioii* j At KoulJ.n. wher? r i ? i t < tides w< ft! j pile masses uf finuu UlOti? I he shote Aphrodite Is gu(ipOM>d to have been luH*W tOf lUu vvuviia. Here are ruin* of a temple for her worship, whefv originally fete* weiv hold whleh. as owe writer puts it, "were the scenes, of a too llterui worship of Venn*," utvtl where until recently it was the cus nun to liuutersc maidens in honor of the godded birth. Kouklht is on 1 1 ? ? ? site of the an rient l'apho?. The 1'nphos of today Wfijf tho OHO -Mine Ncapiii'liins, where St. Paul struck blind the *t?refcror, ttlyiua'A, aiid eotiycrted Ser^ius I'aiilus, the lto until deputy? TUti (li'\ l.ani.ilvH ts on the ?die of the jblbUi'al ('iiluini. whose .ships are uientiuui.il hy Daniel. and u hose ''ivory Is referred to by RzekieU. in' Ltirnakn Is tiie tomb of I.h/jhius <vho, after btihig raised from (foe dead. . ? ; < ' have bcenine bishop ^ the/ renowned eit y. The area of' Cyprus is about eqviuj vto the combined areas of Delaware mill lthode Island, while i|s total popula tion Is about half that of the latter vtate. .t AZORES: MAY BE AERIAL HALF-WAY HOUSE The Azores island*. in yciti's to come. i any Ixi hii established mid-At lniuic rest station f(?r airplane flights across the ncoaiv. Farthest frotp a ??ontinent of any Atlantic Inland group, the Islands llo 880 miles west of Cape tin It oca, Portu gal, ami more than a thousand miles southeast of Newfoundland, nearest North American land. Volcanic eruptions and earthquakes. whil6 the former were active, made lhe Azores objects of scientific Inter est. j)k in to that evinced In the now fatuous Mount Katmal region In Alas ka. Suboceanie eruptions, sometimes filing up islands which soon disappear ed. were characteristic phenomena. One early description of mich an event tells how the earth and waters were rocked for eight (lays by earthquakes, followed by a vast cablron of tire that .seemed to sweep the sea's surface anil consume the clouds, spewing enormous masses of earth and rock. Ihen thcie appeared a group of rocks, ever grow ! lug higher and wider urttll an area of I several square miles was contained In this "do man's land." Later It was shattered, ami subsided, as the result of more earthquakes. The Azores5 compose three groups of islands. Their total area Is less than that of Rhode Island ; their popn latlon**ahout equal to that of Kansas City. Mo. Most of the* Inhabitants are. Portuguese. The resit are Fleroish and Moorish, with a few tmmlgranti from the United Kingdom. Fruits and fish constitute the prin cipal exports. Oranges ar* supplant ing pineapples, but the other products ?lemon, citron, Japanese medlar, and "Tinjiannsr? maintain their popularity. The principal fish are the mullet, tun ny. awl honlto. Saint Michaels, largest Island of the group, has lava beds, caves which may be traversed for miles, and> a mam moth crater with two Jeweled lakes one azure, the other emerald? at its bottom. On Santa Maria Is the church where Columbus knelt. Oft Tercerla a sub murine volofcnc^ Its as recently as half a century ago. On Corvo have been unearthed coins which suggest Carthaginian visits, and "an Arabian geographer of the twelfth century described Wands of the ' West ern Ocean" thought to have been the Azores. * About the middle of the Afteentli century the Portuguese sent expedi tions to settle upon them. One Island. Fayal. was presented by Alpbonso V of Portugal, to his aunt, Isabella, duchess of Burfundy. It was upon Iter marriage to Philip the Good, duke of Burgundy, that he founded the fa mons knightly order of the Golden Fleece. In 1829 supporters of Msrla da Gloria against Miguel, in the tftruggU for the Portuguese crown, established themselves 011 the Islands, and for the three,, years following Queen Maria lived at Angra. one of the seaports -of ! importance. Others nr.- Ponta Oelgndu > and Hortn. ^ BESSARABIA: A CONEY j ISLAND OF HISTORY Bessarabia, recently assigned to the suzerainty of Routnania. hns long be< n n racial catch basin. Her population was nn?re than. 2. <*>0,000 before the war. .and Included - Moldavians, Little Russians.- Jews. Bnt L'nrlans, Creeks. Armenian-, Tartar | Hermans, and Gypsies; but that 11*1 Is short compared with the enryrtn pedlc procession of Oetae. Goths Avars, Han*, Bc*sl (whence her J name), Ugrlans. Humans and Mongols J to mention but a few. sine#, the day* of the original Cimmerians. P.c*xarabla, sloping southward . frot^ ibe westwaM foothills ef the f *arp4Tt\lr,ns. between the l>ntr*ter nml Prutb. down t* the Black sea and r^nube delta, lay in the normal graphical pathway of tribes puuldn* ' wMtwurU froui Ajwla and southward from the hlenk ftuKsluQ steppe* toward the wiirmor *<\acojtst lands, Moreover. BVt lllHtUli 1* Ul tin* iiMln i.. . ,.rc of Hi.' ? t \y v i'omoi ? i ?!>?( i ?>.> | ?fi v I ? ? ? inn) ntan,\ tt elawh iio.uvl to deLlde whit h group n|(Vm|I*I pflstf Ihroimh- tin "Ui'tjk 01 tlic hot|lo" toward lOuiiYpo'b iMiitl ? of milk and honc> A I . tin* nur-l linri;v^'"< 0fWw >" \ai?loiis vvuh dial of the Mongol* in ihe ? ? ?? !?*( -n 1 1? i *M ? ? u ry . Tl.ev CU*V.e urjH^s 4 lie Volgu iiiuliM' Mala grandson of that Mongol I'harlomague. .lenghm ( Kaliii, any though iher.e to no complete atory of tl*?lr in lies. I su PtiM'a. thill region probably suiTe'red u< roci tk*w similar to other* wlneh-are I nit <? i ? ? i in Harrow fan detail At Kyiiiuu women and children were used ms targets In hQW-a? d-urrQ\> wpjexi**; allvers of wood worn driven under the nalUs oi ihtf men; (lien they were cor rolled In churches to wquIi their worn- j en being toYiurud, aad finally roasied I alive'. Another city; Kojelsk, *ya* re- j named Mobullg. "City of Woe." and Kiev was laid woMe after tuvr people hud been mulined aud murdered. A picture of peaceful. paMoral lu>s ?surahia prior to the renewed ravages of the World war, i'uintvliys a pleading coutiast. A delight to il>e few tour |at? who. went Utrougl) thti legluu.-yyoio the Moldavian hemes A Moldavian Interior was iinu? neli l:\ie and vivid. lit lghtl> -t'olorod curtains anil hangings wore . tt-sod. An inevitable decoration w a'" row* of yellow _ 1 golinb . the ,ot WldCh is Qfctt dt the minor Hossawl Um industries. The people ate deeply religion*. IC'u.ch ortho odox home had U-. altar. lacing east ward; tiered biVad be heath 'Hit. icon, ami eoiiisdnlhs placed in the >hade of a cross ' before ii liven Jho altars We're* eolorftil Ijecuitfo of their draper* l.cii and candies, ami many timeii ihey were laden with '.lowers. The |Ves suraivla.o women ale .sprightly, bright-, eyed, mid pretty. - ?Moldavian*: con* J lulled ahout half i he Inhabitants of Itessarahia. llou-l mania, it will be recalled. wa* formed by the union of Moldavia ami Wal- ! Ijichia ; hence the adjoining Hes sariihia. with its large Moldavian pop ulation. long has been the "Irredenta" of Koamanln. THE BERMUDAS The Bermuda islands suggest the ad veil lu res of Bob In son Crusoe in their colonization a ad present in their later chronology u Curious parallel to United States history, with the events" pre dated by a number of years. The Kohlnson Crusoe comparison obtrudes because the Island was tftB i covered and later settled as the direct result of shipwrecks, and the Settlers bad to build themselves a bark to set *ail apt in. As l'or i he anticipation of American fflstory on a miniature scale, it may he noted that the colonization took place sevep, year* before the Pilgrim# landed at Plymouth, Mass. ; that witch es were burned, Quakers were- perse cuted, antj, luiacfoauta vvar? ducked before similar occurrence* are recorded In New Knglaud, and that alavery was*, abolished in 18S4. The Bermudians protested long before 1776 against the mother country's rule, until the island prisons were overfull ; but relief catue in their case not through a dec laration of freedom, but , by the ac cession of Cromwell. Hut thor essential point of contact of ; (lie American > with -the Beriuudiau arises from, the all-but-forgotlen fact that while the-immortaM.afaye!te gal- ' lantly helped the colonies conclude | t Heir war of indepeudeuee, the Bermu dians supplied tW ammunition to be gin it. Ho acute was the need for powder in 1775 that (ieorgo Washington wrote to the governor of Khode Island that "no quantity, however small, is beneath notice." Learning that there was a store in Bermuda, and that the island ers were anxious to have the embargo lifted upon shipment of food supplies /rum the colonies. Washington address ed a letter to the people of the island, who had shown themselves sympa thetic with the American revolution ists, promising them ample supply of | provisions and "every other mark of affection and friendship which the grateful citJeens of a free country can bestow on its brethren and benefac tors" if they would make this ammu nition available for the Continental grrny. It so happened that the powder had been procured befora the letter was delivered, and with it the Continental army compelled the British ta evacu- i ate Boston. Not only the sale of the powder, but the fact that Bermuda allowed- the colonies to have *alt, so incensed Its governor that be upbraided the citisens for treason, and feeling ran so high that lie was removed. Ills successor was a native of Salem, Mns?r, whose loyalty to the mother country was such that he gave up Inrse estate* in the colonies rather than Join the revolu tionists'. lie wr>? connected, both by blood ?nd by imtiTiuge, with 'be Win throp family. Under Ids rule the Is land's full allegiance to Ivngland was restored. Browne was uuc<-?*eded 1?> Henry Hamilton, during whose atbuuiist ration the town of Hamilton was A^ded snd named for him. ? This t?wii^^bi> Lhc scat Of tlie ialaud nove.mineKfci It ? Has a population of les* than < Tt did not become the cnpltal of the islands until the time of Sir* James Cockburn. lord chief Justice of Kng land, and before that time one of It* most fainoiiK l?wwr?>. Cookburn, near ly thrtre <?tiarters of a ventnry ago, mnti* (I)* plea of insanity, which saved the life of I tan lei McNaugbten. who ahM Hir 4W>wt Paal's ?k rvtary. . BuiMers Attention awi. lannbri has about hit bottom anil if \ou anticipate buiUl : ; " ? . .. . ,f ' . " \\ . ' ? ' . inyc ill tlu< ni'iir future now i U good time. Wi' liavi' a i? sl'K-k ( ? 1" higrh tfj'ude building material on ,V< ' ?s r '? - ? - W,.A^ . . ? ? ' *V '?> -? ' V . . V hand and JirjCOS are right ? ( 'I'lno or phone p ybiVi* onK i fdi anything for the house 1 "" ? Kershaw Lumber Co. Phono 340 D. H.'BEI K. M(t, CamJen, S. C. It'ft sole of a maif wt keep in view For wc ai'o Doctors of Boot* 'and Shoes ; We serve ihe living. &i*d not the dead, With the best of leather, wax, nailn and thread We can sew you a sole or nail it fast Wo can do you "a job and make it last. We can give you a lift also in life, Not only you, but you family and jvife. We do not use porous plasters or pills, But cure the sick shoes, no matter how ill. / T. A. BELTON ELECTRIC SHOE SHOP 539 E. DeKalb St. Phone 53 Camden, S. C I ? ? ? . ? p ? " . . Have your Plumbing and Steam Fitting looked over and put in firgt class shape before the cold weather sets in. All work will be promptly attended to. Estimates cheerfully given on all work. JOSEPH E. BERKMAN LICENSED PLUMBER 535 DeKalb St. Phone 362 Camden, S. C. JUST RECEIVED CAR LOAD OF CHEVROLET L~ ? Touring Cars ?