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1 riE CAMDEN CHRONICLE II. D. NILK8 Editor sud PublMy PuMMml t vi'iy Fridlj at No. 1100 Broad-jfrfcrPet and ont*r?<l at the' Camden, Homo Ca rollna pOvtofffd* an secoud cws8 mad matter. Price per annum ri;oo. Csnwjea, 9. 0., WWny, August v%, iwi. ??TV :rv ,y, wrsr 'tho undent clock in the bid fry of ; the Episcopal Ohurcli of PrtikQ* George mi Cenrgetown. is agal>v after the lapse of more than a quarter of u eon tury. tuklllg note of the pausing hour*, iind keephtg goodtlme. Capt. "Hap py" Munn, pilot ami chief engineer of . the yatch IJlana of that elty, who Is Aun expert In mcchaulcs, has accom plished what none t>efore him linve boen able to do in many years. ? name ]y, the putting In motloti of the ma chlnery of the old time keeper of an te-bellum ami colonial days, Captain Munn states that the works are in ex cellent condition, now Unit he has thoroughly cleaned out the rubbish and dust of ages and applied a plentiful quantity of oil. In unison with the Bank of Georgetown. the bell of the church Is pealing off the hours. Miss Lena (Mark, pofltltt Is t re*n -at West Palpi Bench, Ha., is s ihl to have admitted to postofflce Inspectors that slu- stole $?2,000 from the West I'alm Beach postofflce. Some of the money will he recovered. . Krwin J, Clark, of Waco, Texas, former district judge, has received a note signed by "Ahti Ku Klux KJaa of Texas," charging him with helng one of the Ku Klux loaders in the state and warning him to get out of Texas wlthltj thirty days or be ''plant ed." says he Is not going to leave. The Baseball Crooks. Both ttie jury hox and the court room In the case of the trial of the baseball "game- throwers" were appar ently packed. This fact was manifest In the character of the verdict ren dered and In the manner in whjch.it was received by the crowd. Some of the m on on trial had made confessions of guilt, but In time they gained cour age through resort to the court. Be fore the jury selected for their trial the open confessions amounted to naught. The jury acquitted the men who had acknowledged that they were guilty. It Is no wonder that Lan dis, Coinlskey and other baseball au thorities are making contention that their acquittal does not carry "clear *11100." and that In the eyes of the Imse hall world they ntand convicted. It is not at h 1 ! probable that any of the players Involved In the trial will bene fit through their court acquittal, so far as reinstatement In the baseball organizations Is concerned.-- Charlotte Observer. GRAPE JUICE ? O'Je per quart rrt The f'nsh Store. The Story of Our States By JONATHAN BRACE VII. ? MARYLAND 1NI5TAN ar rowH played nn Important l part in the ! founding <>w M u r y 1 a nd. Lord Balti tn ore had born interested in the London company which was financially responsible for the settlement of Virginia. lie became so enthu siastic ovrr |Im? possibilities in the new colonies that he desired to found a colony himself. After exploring fin* < ?nintry just north of tiie 1'otonuie he persuaded Kin;; Charles I to grant him thJs territory. In honor of the queen. Henrietta Muria, this new colony WH-i ?h1I?m! Maryland. The paymenl for this grant was specified as two Indian ar rows a year, together with a fift h pari of All precious metals wbi*-h mieht he mlued. As the colony produced no gold or sil ver the cost of M m r y 1 a n <1 amounted to only the two ar rows each yenr, and Lord Haiti more became to all Intents and purposes an Independent sover eign. As a matter of fact the charter was not issued until just after the death of Lord Balti more. but as the deed was hered itary 11 descended to the second Lord Baltimore, under whom the first settlement was made at St. Mary's in 1C.14. This "hereditary monarchy continued in force un til, under the sixth Lord Balti more, the Declaration of Inde pscle/jce 'n J77fl brought It to an mrf. Jn 1788 Maryland adopted the Constitution and took its place Hfi the seventh state In the Union. Its area totals 12,327 square miles, and It Is thickly populated, so that Maryland is entitled to fclfrht presidential electors. <? by MeClur* N?wsp*p t Syn<Hc?l?> > Koad Cnmpln To Be Put On - < >>iumbla. July 80. ? An lntenalve publicity campaign for good roads Is being plauued by the South Carolina (iooa Itoads association for the near future. The organization will take ad vantage of every method known to ?tres* upon Hit- people of tlie Htate the necessity of permanent highways being built by the state. It was said yesterday. , The newspapers, the billboards, the moving picture and other agencies will he used In the campaign. Already poster* ate being prluted emphasizing the fact that "bad roads cost more than good roads." ? "Had roads mean loin and Isolation ; good roads mean prosperity and coin* munlcatiou," reads one of tho slogans being gotten out by tho association. Another circular calls ntteutlou to the fact that while other states of the tftjiloii are spending enormous sums on state highways, Mouth Carolina is spending practically nothing by com pnrlson. "We arc delighted with the responses ihat ??Ar appeals are meeting with," ?mil President l,. 1?. Jennings yester day. Tin' people of tbe state are send lng in .their membership fees right along. A big membership ill our asso ciation menu* a strong organization and eVery county in the state should littVe a large numbcY of active members. Wo want (la i.uenfbers people who are really Interested In good roads aud who wfcll get out and work when we Chll upon them." * ? President Jennings announced yes terday that B H. Peace, president and editor of the GrenviUe News, lia?l accepted the position of chairman for (Jroonvllle county and will at. once un dertake tho work of organizing that County.. Mr, Peace i^ a good roads enthusiast and has glvyu the associ ation strong support through the columns of bis paper. '"We are very greatly Indebted to the press of the state for tho spllcndld support which It Is giving us.'* said Mr. Jennings yesterday* v'We felt sure that we would have tho support of the newspapers since Hiey always staud for progressive measures,. Without their nid we coukPltVconipllsb nothing in this campaign." - ? ~- ? Fodder Pulling Not Practiced.^ ('letnsori College. August 1.? The old practice of pulling fodder is not fol lowed by the best farmers any more. /They have come to realize that fodder is the most if* pen slve form of forage which they can raise on the farm and have begun to raise cowpeas, soybeans, sorghum and. other things for forage ami to leave their <*>ru alone until (mature. They have stopped this prac tlce because they have found it to be, not only a hot, dirty piece of work, but also that It reduces the yield of corn so greatly that they can not afford to do it. Several different experiments sta tions have carefully tested the matter and have found that tpulling -the fodder reduces * the yield of ear corn by 10 to 111 per cent, says Prof C. P. Blackwell. agronomist. This loss amounts to .'5 bushels on the average. Frequently tile loss to ear corn Is worth as much as the fodder saved and the farmer has had his work for nothing. The leaf is the factory of the corn plant where the raw materials which are taken from the soli and the air are united by the energy of the sun to form starch, oil. proteins, ami fats for the growth of the entire plant and es pecially for storage in the ear. As the loaf dries out. these foods are transfer red. in a large measure, from the leaf to the ear. If the leaf i< pulled before it is thoroughly dry. thi* transfer can not take place and the result Is a loss to the car. ll i< because of this loss 1 1 1. M i the more progressive farmers no longer depend on fodder ji-- forage for I i \ e> t ock . t >ii t Use instead cowj?cas, soy bean-. ve! \ el heaiw. ?orghum. or some other source. Mo>! of those are not only milch cheaper forage l ? m t ;i!so l>et I or. I. el ll- le'J'e tli.it it wjll l?o| !?? 1 ? ? ll g until "fodder pul'ing" \\ iH I?e a relic o!" the I'.'ixf Store*. Closed Yesterd:?> \fternoon A petition \\n- cireiila ted among the tin reliant- of ( 'a inden ycterdaj after poon requesting them to close their I >1 a < - of liii-ities- at 1 p m in order t.i let their employee* -ee the base ball uanie I it- 1 \\ it-ii ('a inden and the Colum bia team of the South Atlantic I.cagU". jljuife a lnrge number of Columbians I mid from other nearby- towns were | here to wiluc** the game, and the at j tendji rnt? wa* nearly ?*? larire a* the Charleston game played here some weeks ago. It wa** ft n off ? I a \ with the Columbia team and the manage men I of f he * 'a mderi t?^ain hiis fortunate I enough to get a f i ! I it; gam* : 1 1 i th" I '? >J ujnbin us. ? The came wn; n onesided affair. [ the ^-ore Wing fi to 0 if) f * vr.r of Co | I iliibla j The Pennsylvania Railroad Com pany ha** pensioned Mrs. Ix?ni-.- Mad VMI. of York. Pa.. aa a reward of her thirty years of faithful service to the company She in now past sixty five yea r? of age. \NOTIHK HOfUUBIJK MLBDKK Murdered Man Ue?td By BwurAt H?verln| Over Body. Colombia, Aug. 1>. With a wide. Jygged wound over the heart and punctures In the utuloweu uud other imrtK, the body of Wlllluiu Hraseil, 19-year-old tailcab driver of Columbia, wan found uear the public highway' lu a i lump of bushes tbree miles east of Leesville, Lexington County, at 9 J o'clock this V; morning by a party of 9e*rch0r?t lu which were Sheriff J. T. lMuukett, of Ulclimoud Couuty, Oa., Sheriff Kuff, of I^exihgtou County ami [ Sheriff T. ^lov Helse, of XUchland ! County. ; ' ?, 7 ? The body was brought to Columbia! i ' 1 ' ' worn lug and taken to a local un dertuktng establishment where It will be prepared for burial from the home of the youth's imreutH, Mr. and Mrs. M. K, Ifrazell, Calboun street, 1'lm burst, this city. Throe men-.-F. J. Klrby, C. O. Fox and Jesse Oappins, all of Columbia- ? are being beld 81 Implicated fu thtt murder. According to an alleged < ??u fesslon made to Sheriff I'luukett lu the Augusta, (la., Jail last night by Klrby, Fox and Capping did the actual kill ing. the latter holding ltrazell and the former stabbing the youth with a pocket knife. Tin* three rented the car driven by JiraKcll to take a trip Into ( I^exlngton County, according to tin- a I Iqged confession, and tin* killing took place near Leesville. Sheriff Plunkett brought Ivlrby with him this morning from Augusta to Identify the spot where the body ot Rrazell was thrown. He was joined by Sheriffs Ruff and Heist* and a number of i>eople In automobiles. , Klrby, said Sheriff Heisc, eould riot exactly Iden tify the spot, and went beyond where j the body was found about a mile. It was finally located by buzzards clrcu- j latlng over It In the air. Sheriff lfclso said that the body was! badly hacked Five stabs were over thr ? heart, he stated, and It . loked as if a knife had been ground around lu the! wounds to eularge them. A place s* j big as a man's fist was gashed out, he said. There were a number of stabs in the abdomen and the hands were lacerated. Sheriff Plunkett told, (Sheriff Helse that In his many years' experience he had never seen such a brutal murder. There was considerable feeling in Lexington County toda v about the murder and, there was much talk that if. Fox and Capplns were brought to the county jail in Lexington that there might be attempts at lynching. Klrby was Incarcerated lu the Lex ington County Jail this morning <and Sheriff Plunkett and Sheriff Ruffj went baCk to Augusta to get Fox and ?Ca/pplns. It Is believed that they will be brought by a circuitous route to Co lumbia and lodged in the State peni tentiary for safe keeping. Sheriff Plunkett said that Fox and (iapplns had confessed to him,? Impli cating themselves with the killing ac cording to a statement by Sheriff Helse. MANY BKKS FOUND DEAD. with I lie The ho . burg ( \>n| I lHOU.S tlt't I A -'flit ! . Btrfl Weevil Poisoning Thought to Bo Responsible. Orangeburg, July 20. ? Farmers all over lower Carolina killed millions of bees this past spring while tbey were trying to kill the boll Weevil, If reports coming to the office of Farm Demon stration Agent C. S. WoLfe, are true. Severul farmers in* Orangeburg County noticed large numbers of dea.d bees around their gums and ujkhi investiga tion they found that the bees had been eating the poisoned syrup mixture put oiwotton .plants In an effort to control the weevil. Where calcium arsenate had been dusted on as recommended by the Culled Stales government there seems to have been no damage t.> the bees; but the syrup-calcium arsenate mixture ja*ems t ? ? have plated havoc it tie honey gatherers. I weevil damage in orange nty will be something enor larcd Farm Demonstration S Wolfe t ? ?? 1 j i \ . He >ays that ' the du magi- to cor ton is spotted, but ! t hat no field" have escaped damage. I i j Some fields have escaped damage. Some j fields won't make a quarter of a bale ! to th?' acre u here last season a bale or I more wjs made It seems as if the I bigger the cotton the greater the dam- j J a gt Mr Wolfe says that broods UOW | hatching will make this damage so great that very little more fruit will be put on cotton. According to best es , Itiinates obtainable it looks as if f Orangeburg county won't make over , ! forty thousand bales tbix year against j '.in average of about eighty seven ' thousand bale* h year. Cight negro prisoners made their je?.?a|?c from the ( Jreenvillc county jail j '.list Wednesday morning after having I fooled the Jailer toy placing a tdock oi ' ? nO'l between the lock and door Jamb in ?uch n way as to prevent the bolt from going home when the key was turned A passer-by who saw the pri ' soners going out. gave the alfttm In time j to hold back eight of the sixteen who .were planning to leave Immediately | after the escape the nlnrm wa* seafter ' ni over the country a ? .???* ? r -"?? 1 "jt: TO BK BROUGHT BACK Laitraaler Negro To Be Trtwl for Murder of W?ikln?. {> >$/' III . I I - - V* - P*jH?r>?, for the return to Houtb < *m rolina of John MtoXIwain. negro \ who Iihh -beou in Detroit for over ft! yt'iir, have been algned ami Mcllwuln can now be (brought back to Lan- < Cfllter 1'inuiiy to f#oe m charge of oaur- j der, according to a letter received J frpin Paul W. Voorshlea. prosecuting | attorney of Detroit, by Attorney (leneral Wolfe. Mdlwaln shot aud killed Kl8(?< Watklns. superintendent <?f the I. an castor oil mills. In Lancaster in M>15. lie escaped and wuk not heard from until his arrest In Detroit over a year ago. Requisition paper* were served upon the governor of Michi gan. but they were not honored duo to a hearing of the eaxo under habeas corpus proceedings. Morris (\ Lump kin, assistant attorney general, and R. S. Stewart of Lancaster weut to Oct rolt and appeared before a Judge, representing tin- state of South Caro lina. This was several months ago, and nothing wax heard from the paiK?rs until yesterday when Mr. Wolfe received the letter from Voor shies. According to the letter Mcllwaln Is in jail and will be turned over to the South Carolina authorities upon the presentation of the prpper papers. The supreme court, according to the letter, has1 decided a case of similar import in reference to the extradl-' ? fci tlon of a negro by ueorgla. Attorney Cenerjtl Wolfe wired the prosecuting 'attorney yesterday that the negro would be sent for immedi ately. It Is provable that Sheriff Hunter of Lancaster will ?o to De troit for Mcllwaln.? ^-Sunday's State. WOMAN WALKED 550 MILKS Wanted to See Sick Sister aud Had No Other Way to Get There. TTow a mother and her two son?. I fourteen and sixteen years old. walk ed nearly tfOQ miles In order that the mother might for the last time, sec her sister, fatally til at Jacksonville, Fla.. was ^revealed Tuesday after the funer al of Mrs. W. C. Chambers, of that city. Mrs. Chambers became ill several i months ago and physicians said it was impossible for her to recover,- Her sister. Mrs. Estelle Morse, of Atallii, Ala., advised of her condition, deter mined to see her once more, but could not afford to make the trip by rail. Three months ago Mrs. Morse and her boys began the journey afoot and ten weeks later finished the approximate ly 550 miles between Atalla and Jack sonville. They were with Mrs. Cham bers two weelcs 'before the end. Ku Klux Klan Parade Florence, Aug. 4. ? Between 9 and 10 o'clock tonight a parade of persons sold to be the Ku Klux Klnn was held In the business section of the city. | About twenty-five or fifty persons, at tired In the gai<b of the Ku Klux Klan. were In the parade. Tlje paraders were In single file. Few people were on the streets and little excitement was caused. This Is the first time that people of the city were aware that the Ku Klux Klan had a chapter ?here. It Is said. There was no dis order of any kind. Because the unexpired term of the late J. K. Stewman. probate judge for , Lancaster, was for more than a year. ! his successor will have to be elected I I Insteadyof appointed. I Of the 182 law students who passed I bar examinations in Kansas this year, I nine wore women. TRADE AT HOME ASK YOUR GROCER FOR GROCERIES v ' . ^ ' t ' v* ?' i ' * .. ?> Made for Southern Merchants To Sell Southern Folks * . And Please Southern Tastes Aft Varieties of Groceries and all the Year Round Service can be Had at ' ? ? ~ ? ? Bruces Pure Food Store 'HONE 66 Member of Chamber of Commerce SHIP STRIKES RKRF Forty-Eight Persons Lost Ufe in Sink ing of Steamer. Kureka. CaL. Aug. / 7. Forty-eight person*. 3ft passengers and 1* of the; crow, were lost last night when the steamer Alaska of the San Francisco j & Portland ''Steamship Co., south bound from Portlaud. Ore.? to Sin Francisco, sank .".o minutes after crashing into the rocks of Binni's reef. 40 miles south of tills city. The survivors, numbering lftft per sons, were brought here today by the rescue ship Anyox. the first ves sel to reach the scene of the wreck in response to the Alaska's signals. The coast guard tug Hanger, dispatched early today from Kureka. returned to port with the bodies of I 'J men. Fight were members of the crew and four were, passengers. Capt. Harry Itobcy. master of the. Alaska is still unaccount ed for and Is believed to have gone down with his ship. Of the survivors landed by the An yox, 30 were more or less Seriously in jured and received medical treatment at local hospitals. The Alaska struck the reef bow on in a dense fog. according* to the sur vivors, and immediately began to list. The work of launching lifu boats was accomplished without delay or disor der. Three of the boats successfully rode the waves, but the fourth boat capsized, throwing its occupants into the sea. The greatest loss of life, the survivors said, resulted from this mis hap A few who wore life belts suc ceeded in keeping afloat until picked up. Captain Hobey, when the last of the life boats had been sent over the side of the. rapidly filling Alaska? went to the' stern of his vessel and he was there when it started its plunge to the bottom. Tennessee's Oldest Man dead. Nashville. Aug. 6. ? Fuller Freeman, aged 101. a veteran of the civil war, and said to be the- oldest resident of Tennessee, died at the Confederate Soldiers' Home here today. Record's kept by the aged veteran showed that he was born In the York I>i strict <>f South Carolina, November LI4, 1810. lie ha<l been an inmate of the soldiers' home since March. 1919. FINAL DISCHARGE I ' J Notice i> hereby given that John , I>odd Miller. Fxecutor of the estate of Addle ('.'Adams, deceased, through his .?ittorney. \V. P>. del, ouch, F<?|.. has this ila.v made application unt?? me for a final discharge as snld Executor, and September 9, 1921. .at It o'clock' in the forenoon, at the Probute iu [pUHufun. *>. C.. lias been appointed an ! t lie time and place Tor the hearing of salt} petition. , m bu McDOWKLL, ; Judge of Probate Kershaw Co. Camden, S. C., August Ot.h, 1921. CITATION State of South Carolina, 1 County of ^Kershaw. By W. I.. McDowell Esquire. Probate Judge. ' Whereas. Handy Caldwell made suit to me to grant him Letters of Adminis it ration of the Estate of and effects of j Hock Caldwell. These are, Therefore, to cite aud ad monish all. and singular the kindred land creditors of the said Ileck Oald i well, deceased, that they be and ap pear before cue. In the Court of Pro bate, to be held at Camden. S. C., on ? August 20th. next after publication ; thereof. at 1.1 o'clock in the forenoon, ! to show cause. If any they have, why ?the said Administration should not be ' gra u ted. # i Given under my Hand, this (5th. day fof August, A. D. 1921'. w. iti Mcdowell, '.Tudge qI Probate for Kershaw County. Published on the 12th and 19th days , of August, 1921. in the Camden Chron I lcle and posted at the Court House jdoor for the time prescribed by law. NOTICJE Notice is hereby given that on Monday. August 19th, 1921, applica tion will be made to officers of The Enterprise Building and Loan Associ ation of Camden, S. C., for tho issu ance of a new Certificate of Stock No. 276 for Ten Shares issued to the un dersigned. Series No. 14 on the 5th day of April, 1920, by said Enterprise j Building and Loafi Association. This ; Certificate of Stock has been lost or j destroyed, and after dilligent search I cannot be fouricf, and same has not I been at any time or in any manitei 1 : disposed of by applicant. B. E. SPARROW,: ; Dated August 12th, 1921. FINAL DISCHARGE Notice is hereby given that one mouth from this date, on August 19th, 1921, I will make to the Probate Ooort ? of Kershaw County my final return as Administrator of the estate of W. - Ceisenheimet- , deceased, and on thfc same date I will apply to the said Court for a final discharge as aaW Administrator. A. L. GEISENIIEIMER. Camden, S. C., July 19th, 1921. FINAL DISCHARGE Notice is hereby give that ooe 1 month from this date. 011 Monday,. I August 29th, 1921, I will make to the I Probate Court of Kershaw County ?/ final return as Administratrix of the estate of John Butler, deceased, and on l be same dat& I will aply to th? s#ld Court for a final discharge as" ?|lil Administratrix. REBECCA BUTLER, I Camden, S. C., July 20th, 1921. TO THE TIRE BUYING PUBLIC We want to tell the public that we have the exclusive control on the sale of Southern Tires and Tubes and that we have prices on same that will open your eyes. These are tires made in the South out of Cotton grown in the South and why should you send your money away when you can buy just as good TIRES here and help build up the South. We can sell you tires at a saving of money and am sure you will say after using Southern Tires that there are none better. Guaranteed fabric 6,000 miles, cords 10, 000 miles. Come in and let us show you *nd quote you prices. Camden Motor Company