The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, August 27, 1920, Image 11

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Tbe police of lifttnpton, V*., are at a li#s i<> locate w trtoe of the p*r ty murdered l?avui H. i. i. 70, in ii*i ?'*'<! w?r vftn-ttu whw mutllrt (ed body w?? found early Friday mo rt?. jyij in Ms *tu?uty near Hampton. The Secret of Beauty j W hy Some Women look Old and Others Lqok 'Young Th<< old-fashioned way of doing iiouaettork makes women ol?t before their Unid P?p?cl#|ly bending over ,, inisojitMrt- tub And scrubbing clothe'4 tii day. .H?d> 4nit||h(ly i -imi.. baok and rheumatism arc" Niire to from t lie old-Uine wash lub. Ami it l*n'A iit't eKsmrj YOU ran do your was.hlnn . qului***, ?a*t*r and economically In tin* cany Clean ? Son i( your clyduis qv?i MghU ahuYC ii bat' tl? L'liAli I.Cnmv Nai'lJwIeintJ, Wash Soap Into a$U j.uii of water. ? I.ei the <Moap dissolve. Hoit t ho clothespin this for 10 minutes*, stjfrMK with a.ftiek. Illnse, blue and dry. Tli" washing is done ? ror only a few t-rrtN' Kvery prnmni Im sterilised, , mui puriiied. There ia no easier or simpler wa>' to wash clothes. 4 Clea" Kasy does not hurt the fabric. y-QU don't have to rub to get the dirt out. This wonderful wash sj>a|? goon right- after all unclean particles and i dissolve* them without assistance. Clean Ra?y also cleans the coarsest doth"- overalls, shirts, etc.. without rubbiii.K. II takes out grease spots. Follow directions on the inside of the wra|M>?>' . ?, Clean IO.ihv may be used In hot or cold hard or soft water. It Is a), ways on the Job and always does the he.it joh. No home should uver ba without It. No woman who has ever aeen il work will pver bo without It. Try it today. Juat notice how differ ent Clean ftaay looks from other soaps I ?and how differently 1J works, too! At your grocer's. WboCVTO THtlAtr o*a*m CCAUO TINS ONLY atwob gwoccas MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE /l COLUMBIA LUMBER & MANUFACTURING CO. MILL WORK SASH, DOORS, BLINDS AND LUMBER PLAIN & HUL.ER STS. Phone 71 COLUMBIA, S. C. Oear and far powers invisibly combined in one lens make indispensable for every occasion We Ex tmine Eyes and Fit Glasses. M. H. HEYMAN & CO. Jewelers and Opticians dr. K. E. STEVENSON DENTIST Crocker Building ( amdm, 8. C. Dr. C. F. Sowell DENTIST ^Office Oyer Bruce's Store) CAMDEN, S. C. (Collins Brothers Undertakers for Colored Ptopke # 714 W. D?K?IW S?. HAD MANY 'HOMES' Woman School Teacher Te Is ol "Boarding 'Round." ' *" 1' ? i, '? ; v* . ??- ' . . ' '? ,j Sun*4y Plartty ofi Changaa In Thoaa Time# for Thoaa Who Had Charge Of tha Education of tha Young ? Enjoyad Ufa. ,? The drat womtfn' teacher who whs ever "boarded 'round" la nOw living la one of the many alinost-forjcotuwi cot new of New York. Her experience was gained 08 years ago In schoolbouse No. 240, on Che plank road In l.ake county, Ohio. # - H?*r name, Frances I,, Oarslde tells the New t Yofk, Post,.. was Kll/mbeth Bartlett, her ago seventeen, and It was her flriu conviction thai she was cre ated to teach, ^ eonvletlon that Im pressed the district hoard; the mem bers appointed her, with many mlsglv Ingrf beca,n*e of her age and her sex, to teach for the summer term. She changed her abiding pugce every Hat- j ttrday as a part of the compensation for her services, the rest of ^htch compensation was $1.50 a week. A textbook of those days stated that the staple products of a certain sec tion of Connecticut were school teaeh ers and onions. "I jus* had to be a school teacher, \ she explains, "with this Information staring mfe In the face In my own school days," She taught three and a half months durlqg that summer and never enjoyed life more. The coming of the teacher was a gala event, andv never before nor since has she kndwn tables that came so literally near groaning under the weight of the repasts. There was an endless profusion of Jams and Jel lies ; there ,Were always fresh vegeta bles and meat, and the latter included game'. Squirrels were plentiful, and very often there wertj "clouds of pigeons" In the sky. sounding like the* roar or the sea. Hunters came from many miles' around to shoot them. Pigeon pie was not a luxury for this little teacher, who was earning $1..%0 a week i neither was pie of any kind, for they always had It for breakfasts Her hostesses took care of her laun dry and mending; and there was al ways a serlCs of festivities for her. such as picnics and parties. She en-^ joyed a room by herself, and though she never saw any ice. or heard of such a thing, Ice betng one of the un known luxuries of those days, she did not miss It, for there Was always a sprlnsrhouse, In which the abundance of milk and cream and butter was kept cool. She tasted her first pork gravy while "hoarding 'round." and hurt to watch to see .Aviiut her ' hostess did with it heforeslie put any o'i her own plate. One of her weekly visits was spent with a German family, and though it was midsummer, she had to sleep between feather beds. When her summer term ended she' came to New York, where fur five years she tmight 111 a private semi nary. She (11(1 not like boarding In the .seminary, and "liviuir. ouiside" consuined so much of h>-r salary that she found-after paxing '"or hoar^[ and rnnii) she had iust t.~ .wiiis u week left. She supplemented this sum by taking private pupils. Miss I'.artletl changed htM* name to OrntThTS after t cinching school five years, but her record of being the "first woman who" hns been - tnaint :i ined in - many and varied ways In tiie 03 years that have elapsed since sin- called her first class to order ^ She was the first woman to own and publish and edit a religious publica tion. She was the first woman to make an appeal for tfie appointment of police matruiis; it was ten years after her appeal was made that the police matron was appointed. C.oing hack to her childhood, she was the first child 1 who ever tauirht in Sunday school, beginning wheh she was .only eleven. Today she Is the last of the fnmnu= survivors of the original woman's rights group that in cluded Susan H. Anthony. Klifcabeth C*ady Stanton and Lueretia Molt. Road Etiquette. We were fairly burnini: up the road* of western Indiana. The fellow who was driving was rather hot-'headed and gave the driver of another car a "piece of his mind" because he hud paid little attention to our clamorous horn. A few miles on our ear stopped dead for lack of gas. The driver and my father started on toward the near est town on foot, but were soon over taken by the man we had bawled out and asked by him to ride. Our driver was very polite and insisted on my father getting In. hut declined to fol low, being rather embarrassed. ? Kx ehange. Safeguarding Airrrten. Mecafise of the possible disa^Bu^ .failure of an airman's oxygen-Ai^MS apparatus nt great altitudes, the I'nited States bureau of standards has devised a reliable method of testing the equipmerit Iti the laboratory. All the conditions <>f high-altitude flights :ire accurately reproduced, says Popu lar Mechanics magazine. Decreased pressure Is obtafned-^y inclosing the equipment In a hell J:i r connected to an air pump. Airplane* for the Chinese. The Chinese are acquiring a large number of airplanes which will be used by the government for various pur poses chiefly in carrying passengers and f.-f !*nt to and from soine rich min ing countries, which ha^'o been here tofore uliooHt lnacc?*Mlble. Constitutional Government the Sure Base of Our American Liberty. By CHARLES EVANS HUGHES. In an appreciation of the dirtioillie* wlueh have accompanied the period after the war, wo mult avoid a distorted vieir and wo must not fail to realize tlnr the great heart of the nation haa not Miauled in a few months, notwithstanding the alwomx? oj a compelling motive xnd the rush of competing interests. Unlet* we have in }>oa?v time t hat ? dominant senti ment ?vJiieh prompts a continuous and solf-sacrifioinjj devotion to public ends, Hie saeriHe.'s of patriotism in WJit will have been tn >ain. Our national ideals are , not bound up in anything short of establishing and maintaining constitutional gQverni))$ni as the sure base of liberty. It i8 a spurious patriotism that in linked to the triumph of anv creed or class, or becomes the vehicle of bigotry. The common good rooted in the essential institutions, of justice and individual liberty that is the natural ideal. We have talked bo much of free institution that we art^apt to think that they will take care of themselves. ? Our reOpQt and current experi ences should disabuse us of this notion. {The motto for democracy must be educate, educate, educate. You can find no othei' security than the intelligent*} and conscience of the peo ple. But you cannot at once educate and stifle opinion. There is hope in the free air, there is tonic in confidence in ultimate success of what you strongly believe to be true, but the policy of denyiug free expression of political opinions is death to tlip republic, for that ex pression is its vital force. "The praetitv of- putting large- diaeretioiiary powerrs at the disposal of officers needs a curb. Thp patriot in peace demands government upon established principles, and he should always be ready t(| contest otllcialism and bureaucracy, with its readiness to suppress individual freedom. THE CONFEDERATE COLLEGE No. , 62 Broad Street diaries ton, S. C. A HOARDING and DAY School for Girls. Begins Its session Septcmt>er-28-1920. Historic Institution situated In a healfcby location. * " Advantages of City life, with large College yard for outdoor sports. A WELT j PLANNED COURSE of studies In u homelike atmosphere. A BUSINESS COURSE open to Sen iors. and TJleetiye courses to Juniors and Seniors. ? ? ' ? ' ? t ? --.-r -y TWO DOMESTIC SOIENOK COUR SES, givtlug practical and theoretic knowledge of Cook lug. A well equipped LIBRARY. For catalog aud further Information iipplv to the College. 13-25 Mr*. Rebecca C-lowder Sua pp. IN). Is reported (lead af Winchester. Va. She leaven <110 direct descendants in live generations. They Include (5 daughter ,*{ son*. 40 ga?U childreiv 57 great grand children and 4 great -great* gra ml chlld | ren. Do you know where your land lies? x ? V ? ' ? ?? ' v . -.". v. . 1 - ' . ? ? . " :?vko. X- ' v : Do you know how much you have? Have you a plat of it? If not see KERSHAW DELOACH SURVEYING AND PIAT MAKING PHONE 351-J ^priCK CWOCKKW BLDG, NEXT KIRKLAND A KIRKLAND ANNOUNCEMENTS. FOB CI.HRK OK COI'RT. I hereby unuoiluoc myself as a caudi* ?late for reelection to the office of Clerk of Ooort for Kern haw County at tbe primary to be held this summer. If (ilti'letl I promise to faithfully perform the duties of the thee in the future as I have iu the past. JAMKH H. Cl.YHUKN FOR SU FT. OF KDl'l ATION . I hereby announce myself as a candi date for Superintendent of ICducation fo* Kershaw Oo unity \n the approaching Democratic primary election to be held iu August. 1 plwdife myself to a strict discharge of all the duties of the office., i AIjLBX B. MURCHISON I hereby announce myself a candi date for the office of County Superin tendent of Education In the approach ing primary, subject to rules governing the same ami pledge ruyseif to support the nomine*' of the party. | Tr M. MeCA^KILL. " I hereby announce to the voters* of Kersiuiw County that I am a candidate for tbe office of Superiuteudent of Edu cation In the approaching primary, sub ject to the rules governing the election. Carefully consider and vx>te for * T. H. YOUNG. For House of Representatives We, the many friends of Mr. Nor man K Richards, hereby announce bitn as a candidate for the House of Rep resentatives for Kerstiaw county sub ject to tbe rules of the Democratic pri? Diary to be held in. August. MANY FRIENDS. t I aunnuneo myself a candidate for the House of Representatives for Ker shaw Oouut.V SUbjeet to the ClllO* of the I >einoera t to primary. J. R JONES. Wo the nmny friends of William 1>. Cook of Kershuw. S. C? hereby an- v n ounce, him as a candidate for the House of Representatives subject to the rules of the Democratic primary. MANY FIUENDS I hereby announce myself as a can didate for the House of Representa tives for Kershaw County, subject to the rules of the Democratic prlintry. U. G, ALEXANDER. We hereby aiuioupce tho name of M. M. Johnson for re-election to the House of Representatives from Ker shaw County and pledge him to abide by the result of the Democratic pri mary. MANY FRIENDS, i -? ? ? ? asg . ' . . . FOR ^OIHTKATE I hereby announce myself a* tt can didate for miotninatiou to the office ef Magistrate of DeKalb Tow us hip, Kor shaw (bounty, subject to the rides of t>h? Democratic Primary. S .\ M r 1 : 1 , N, NICHOI/SON. FOR CORONER. I hereby announce myself as a oahdl'^ date for re-election to the office of kr oner of Kershaw County, subject to the rules of the Democratic primary. 0. Ti. DIXON. JR. John Rogers of tipping. England, was stung by a wasp while mowing gran* last Saturday, lie died wlthing fifteen IlllllUtC?. Serve Bludwine at home! The whole family ? Enjoys this delicious ? Satisfying beverage. They 'love its fruity flavqr? Its faint "gingery" tang ? Let them have ? As much as they like ? ^ Because Can safely be served ? Any time Anywhere ? To anyone ? It's pure and wholesome ? And contains no harmful ingredients ? There's a revelation in store ? For you ? If you haven't yet tried Bludwine. The Blud wi ne formula is owned, protected and guaranteed by Bludwine Company, Athens, Ga. Biudwirte is bottled and distributed in this vicinity bv Merchants Bottling Works - Camden, S. C. ' *