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IriE CAMDEN CHRONICLE H. NILKH JKditor and Publisher Published every Friday at No. 1 105) IJroad afreet and cute Cod {tt the; Cam den, South Carolina poatoffice a? tftgftlld ? ia ? nut 1 1 matter. I'l ii Q per annum JfcUKl. (.'uimii'ii, S. I'., Friday, .Vl#y 2.1, 1921. The house on Saturday overruled the president# veto of the bonus bill by a vote <>f tfW to 7K, more than the required two-thirds. The hill wau sent to the senate for action on Mon day and it is now a law, it having pissed the senate by a vote uf 50 to 26, The annual meeting of the South C'arolinu Press association is to bo held ill Myrtle He* oh, July '?>. 10, and 11, it was divided at a meeting of the officers and members of the exe cutive committee of the association held in Columbia Tuesday!. William .). Burns has resigned his position as chief of the bureau of in vestigation under the department of justice, which position he has held for the past three years. Burns held his position by virtue of an appointment by DaUgherty, and he has been under; fire for some time. It goes out how ever, that his resignation is volun tary: that he several times asked Daugherty to let him retire and he 18 going b^-ause he is tired, of the service. Director of Public Safety Butler's law enforcement program has result ed in more than 29,000 arrests for va rious offenses in the hist four months, reports submitted to the director Fri day showed. This is approximately 5,000 more tAm were made in the same period last year. Arrests for intoxication led the list with Vtt,869, an increase of more than 4,000. On the -charge of illegally possessing liquor, 1 ,K 1 M persons were arrested; 7H 1 were charged with illegal sale of liquor, and 112 with its illegal trans-1 portatlon. Highway robbery suspects taken into custody ,-nu inhered 1(>4. Forty nine gambling houses were i aided and as many persons held as alleged proprietors, while 021 others were < harged with beinng frequenters of gambling houses. Police also raided lit) alleged disorderly houses and arrested I !"? persons as proprie tors and 1.0(>I its frequenters. They i aided ;I21.? stjlis and made 1 ,7<>T? con li <ca t inns ? ?? t liquor. An A mleri-on man took a drink of >hoe poll vh ' by mistake the other ?lay, and told hi:-. Iriemls it. wa,s the best vhisker h? ? had iasted m two years. When W*' Had Imaginations. Oh. the fun we u.^od to know hi the distant iorig ago! Then a dandelion Held (ioldtii treasure used to yield; Then green apples we could eat. Sure tin- bitterest was sweet, Aral the dog which used to be Didn't need a pedigree. Three <>i I. mi an army made, Kit f.n (>at ties or parade, \nd a sandpile served us well For an armored citadel; <ti\< it- bu? a plank or two Ami we'd tide the iu can blu? . Hravt i> weathering every gale Wit h jilt apr??n for a sail. Wr Iia<! 'but to think of tiling-.. I'irati laves o. eiicus rings, And their jo> was ours to know , W( i nii'i! hunt for buffalo. ( M ii. i-.i ! t b- l?r tng to grief Mar:;. :i grim old Indian chief. Kor w i had, what.' > lost to men. Ki a! tmaginat io" t hen. Vow w ? think .i' .loy is real, Something we tan Touch <o feel And w< cantiot put away All t ).<? ! rials of lin- day. Let ting fa rii \ lie i. to gold All th> . <nii!iii'!i tilings of old; We havs 1 1 > S I l:''> powet to make 1 'lea^.v ? ' ?>. -t f< r pb-H->U! e's sake. \'nw 'XV fvv't prftrrd to ho Saiioi^ mittinu nit to sea. We ::: I ? In ? . U?M S.o t - \*o: it , f 1 1 ? I e i ' 1 1 1 :? ? : 1 1 !s. For t'e I ? : : * ? p \ a : e colli Win ' . I . i ' e.< III i oliM ! ?? I e US Oil , We'v ? * ? I J ? I it . . . d lea Mil ! I. g ; i > - > ? \> ? v.: ;ii:'i )? make bi'!u"\e. Kdgar A. (iue-i ac ' utu:r> Your best answer -to the question of Cement Plaster. ACME See that every sack is branded Carolina Pcctkinl Cement Co. Charleston. SC. MAC'KKY MKRCANTII.K COMPANY C?rr?d?>n, S. C. HOl'TH CAROLINA NKWS J. M. Gardner, Chorokee county farmer and merchant, waa.on Satur day Mentenced to pay a fine of |26 or serve twenty day* on conviction of bavin# mutilated tlrees on thc?landH of hi* mother, who prosecuted him for the alleged offense*. Gardner gave notice of appeal to the circuit court. K. II. M use ley , recently convicted in t hi* Chorokee county circuit court on a charge of violating the liquor laws, has been arrested by Federal officers and bound over to tin* United States Court at Spartanburg to answer to the same charge on which he was con victed in C)itereki<e. b\ L. Adolph, of the Washington, N. ('., chamber of tjommerce, has been elected as necretary of the ('.hestor chamber of commerce which office was made vacant several weeks ago by the resignation of H. B. Branch, who is filling a similar office at Raleigh, N. <'? Mr. Adolph goes to Chester to aa.sume his duties on June 1. Sol Pruitt dangerously wounded K. F. Farley, in (Jaflfney last Friday and then killed himself. Mrs. Pruitt had left her. husband three days before and taken up her abode in a boarding house owned by Farley. Seeing her husband coming with a pistol in his hand, Mrs. Pruitt ran and hid herself. Following some words with Farley, Pruitt fired twice at him and left. Pruitt was later found dead, presum ably as the result of a wound from his own pistol. Farley was taken to the hospital. When two rural policemen, J. H. Dougherty and ilurdene I(. Hatcher attempted to arrest Tom Duprc, a Marlboro negro in his home last Sat urday morning on the' charge of sell ing contraband liquor, Dupre com menced shooting. Daugherty was wounded in the right arm and Hatch er was fatally shot in the abdomen. Hatcher died soon after being taken to the hospital. Dupre escaped in a sedan, being driven to the Pee Dee river swamp by two negroes. Hun dreds of men turned out with rifles, pistols and shot guns to hunt for him. The two negroes who had ac companied him in the sedan were captured without difTieulty and com mittal to jail in Bennettsville. Covering (Me Tornadoes. Says a Columbia wdman writing to The State from Florida of the torna does in South Carolina, April 150: " Vi'in painstaking account was so full and complete that it was a source of great comfort to those who hap pened to "he away from home." Kxtraordinaiy exertion by news paper staffs in time of public disaster, under sense of obligation to serve up the facts as freshly and fully as possible, is a matter of course. Tint The State believes its complement of news-gatherers to be energetic, en terprising and self-sacrificing beyond the general. Many times has its staff risen to emergencies. but in usacmhling The States of May I this year, its own bust records were paralleled if not surpassed. All members labored at I high pr I'ssure without thought of rest as ?lay paled into night and the dark houi> ran *wiftly.-on to day again ? and :i new day meant only continu ance of t i ! . Ho v. the handling of such a "stor> " organ ?7.t?d, the tlow of information from many sources maintained, con trolled and checked, would have made an interesting article in itself, had anyone cognizant of the details had [time or strength left for the writing | of r. Ine best proof of the ingenuity and accuracy with which the work I dene :s that the tunning account j .i iiin handed as opportunities i rtMic foi further inquiry. J Headers of The State are undei j hea\ ier obligation than they can ever j quite know t<> the co'rps of cur I t e.xpondont ?? in storm area.- beyond ? thf Id I'm. salaried full-time ? . .>ta:! The>?- low,!, public-spirited i r i I'- < -i i>: .1 v ? ? business men. law ! ><i*. i ? u -:?,iper nil !!, b.i-y people all j : j ? i i. in<'ant!> pr'\atc . ??ncen. < fT"d - .i inatlej <>f mtv ice in '.he pub ; : i. . ?'<?!( ? . ii? v. ?: e(i t mil . ? 1,01 -gn - ' ar ! 'i- iiii.s ?, covering the new ? tbe ?? ! < ' i in 1:1 their !oca!i ;? ;. undt j al'i i .-la! difficulties <f travel an! ci r l . i r. : ? * : i ?!!. f Si.tne tra\i'??ti n~ . . ? <?!' v\ r 1 1 k j I vi.ev. ? : : i; i.ry afo?it, then ioii?- fur ! jhou.N V) an open wire or other ! nu iiii> of transmitting their dis- I I patches, only to turn l>a. k. ??nee their1 ! "copy" was on th? way. and follow j ; up the casualty lists and hour to-hour I j development >. Pay is with these j faithful friends a minor incidental.' 1 The State has again and again relied on them for emergency service. Its confidence in their response is grounder) m experience ?Columbia State There are boys and girls in < er tain sections of Ohio and even men and women, who have never seen a "movie" show, according to report* from county agents in these remote district*. General News Notes More than 1,000 head of cattle and sheep ami thousand* of tons of hay were destroyed by a fire in the stock yards of Chicago, Saturday afternoon. The )$bb to property aside fron) the cattle loss, was about $100,000. Austin Carter, white, was convicted at Wentworth N. C., Saturday on a charge of murdering his wife and waa sentenced to die in the electric chair on September 20. Prince Erik of Denmark, and his bride, who was Miss Lois F. Booth of Ottawa, Canada, arrived in New York Friday after a European honeymoon. They are on their way to California. Pnnee Viggo another Danish prince, will marry Miss Eleapor M. Green, of New York, in Juni'. Brigadier General Charles M. King, retired, noted as an author of popular stories of army life in the West, has just been cited for gallantry in action against Apache Indians on May! 21, 1H74. The general now lives at Mil waukee, Wisconsin. An infernal machine sent to the home of Dr. Wellington Koo, in Pekin^ China exploded Friday, when three servants ' opened the package. All of the three were wounded by the explosion. Dr. Koo is the Chinese foreign minister. The British house of commons on Friday by a vote of ^264 to 168 re jected the bill proposing nationaliza tion of the coal mines of England. Paul Orlakowski, inmate of the Western Pennsylvania penitentiary, was on Friday convicted of first de gree murder for the killing of two prison guards on February 11 by an explosion of dynamite in an attempt to escape. He will go to the electric chair. . Mrs. Myrtle D. Hayes, who recently ^pleaded guilty to forging* the name of Charles M. Schwab to a $25,000 note, has received a suspended sen tence of one year and three months to two years, pending good behavior. Numerous severe earthquakes have been prevalent throughout Turkish territory during the past several days. One hundred and twenty deaths have been reported. Mount Vesuvius burst into eruption Thursday night and the flames from the volcano could be seen for many miles. It is not believed that there is any special danger incident to the eruption. Statistics gathered by a New York life insurance company show that the deaths from alcoholism for the first quarter of IU24 were 17.4 per cent less than for the same period in 1923 in tliH United States. ANNOUNCEMENTS FOR COUNTY DIRECTOR. To the Voters of DeKalb Township: ! hereby offer my name for re election to the office of Director on the Board of County Dircctors-r-sub ject to the rules of the Democratic primary. H. G. CA PRISON. SR. We hereby announce Victor Ward as a candidate for County Board of Directors from Wateree Township, subject to the rules of the Democratic primary. Friends <il" West Wateree. NOTICE OF SALE. State of .South Carolina, County of Kershaw. VVhereas, one Ford Automobile Touring Car. motor number h2M>0K, used in the illegal transportation of alcoholic liquors, as forbidden by the statute laws in this state, was seized and taken possession of and confis cated by me in the County of Ker shaw, this State, under and by virtu** of section HNf> of the Criminal Code of South Carolina, while same was being used b\ Karl Brazell, Henry T'layer,, Henry Anderson and Kolley Timmons in the transportation of liquor. Therefore, notice is hereby given that I will >ell sa id Ford Touring car, No. A-72-121. under and by virtue of the taw in such eases made ami pro vided, at public outcry to highest bid der for cash, in front of the Court lb-use door, at Camden, S. (*., at 12 o'clock M., on Saturday June 14. 1924, the proceed* I#!' sale will be disposed ! .according to law, S IV \V ATKINS. ' State i nr. -table f?r Kcr-hnw < " ^ * ?. . [ M a \ 22. i ; W K HAN K an unusually good 1 b.i r ga i n .r. a t lose- in residence f< r tt?l'ICK *aW This i> nn attract. v |iro|xw ? t :i >m to ir.ve<tor or hmin ? meeker < amden Real F.-ta;< F\ I i'.angi "We Sell Lots." NVinthmp College SCHOLARSHIP AND ENTRANCE EXAMINATION The examination, for the award of : vacant Scholarships in Winthrop j C.oll?-g?- ami for admission of new! -tudent- will be held at the County! Courthouse on Fridaj, July 4, at 9 a.m. Applicants must, not be less than sixteen years of age. When scholarships are vacant after July 5 they will Ih* awarded to those making the highest average at this examination, providing they meet the conditions governing the award. Applicants for Scholarships should write to President Johnson before the examination for Scholarship examination blanks. Scholarships are worth $100 and free tuition. For further informa tion and catalouge, address Pr?*. D. H. Johnson. Rock Hill South Caroling 6-tf Wants-For Sale ARE YOU a bargain hunter? We have it. It 'h a farm and home proposition a few miles from Cam *l*-n in a good neighborhood, and well worth investigating. See US about thin. Camden Real Kfttftte Exchange. MWe Sell I^ots." FOR SALE? One good milch cow with young calf, price $40. Apply to Mrn. ('. ('. Truesdale, Westville, S. C. 8-pd FOR SALE- Will save you $1,000 on 2 1-2 ? 8 ton Attabury truck or xl 1-2 ton Duplex truck. Just the ' truck for logs or lumber; never been used. Thos. D. Hall, Sumter, S. C. MONEY TO LOAN? I am prepared to negotiate loans 9n approved Real Estate Mortgages. K. 1). Blake ney, Attorney, Camden, S. C. 46tf ? ? ? ' i | ? ? j - FOR RENT.? 'Three unfurnished rooms, close in. No children pre ferred. Call Phone 401. K-lOpd. HEMSTITCHING and Picoting; neat and prompt service, 8 cents per yard for cotton goods. Miss Rebecca Jones, Kershaw, S. C. WANTED ? Partios desiring board at Hender&onville, N. C., this summer should communicate with Mrs. W. R. Hough at Camden until June 1st. vAfter that date at Hendersonville, i N. C. 7-9-sb WANTED ? One second-hand stand for Singer sewing machine. Apply at CKfonicle office. FOR SAl.K ? 1924 model Ford tour ing* p?0 Ford roadster, two tour ings Without starter. Tonus to re sponsible buyers. U. N. Myers at Broad Street Filling Station, Cam den, S. C. 7-sb r - LOST- -Merchants & Farmer? Bank stock certificate No. 24, issued Fell. 8th, 1010, for five shares, par value $250.00. Issued to G. B. Clyburn. Finder please return to Mrs. G. B. Clyburn, Bethune, S. C. 7-l2pd WANTED -Pine, poplar and Cypress logs. We pay caHh and take your log* the year round. Will inspeut logs at shipping point. Address The Zicktfraf Co., Denmark, S. C. . 7-9 ab FOR SALE -New hay, on my farms in West Wateree, unbaled. Buy this hay ami savo money. Address L. 1. Guion, LugofF, S. C. 7-tf WANTED? 7,200 salespeople now make big money selling Watkins nationally . advertised housohold products. You can do it too. Established 1868. Resources $15, 000,000. Branches all over IL S. and Canada. Rare chance just now for city sales dealers, men or women, full or part time, in city of Camden and elsewhere. Write to day for our practical, sure money making plan. J. R. Watkins Co. Dept. 100, 155-150 Pcrrv St., New York, U. Y. 7-8 sb NOTICE ? Money to loan on first mortgages, approved real estate security. Apply to L. A. Witt kowsky. 6-tf | FOR SALE OR ,RENT ? One house corner of Fair and Laurens streets, formerly the Burnet House. Ad I dress Enterprise Building and Loan Association, Camden, S. C. 6-ti ,VjH kalK ? About one thousand corn in the .huek; ?t my pl?oe or delivered. Apply to w. 0- 8e?*le, Camden. 8 WK SELL used part* for all main* of cars. Apply to our yard or nee D. Snyder, Camden, S. C? for in formation, 4-tf j j .. . i . |. . I M> | WK BUY all kinds of scrap iron, braes, copper, lead and inner tube*. We pay spot cash for wrecked auU mobiles. Write or call at the Snyder Store, Camden, S. C. 4-tf ?t* - FOR SALE ? Five thousand rosemary trees on the stump fit for sawmm purposes, within three' miles of the outskirts of Camden, S. C., betweea the Southern and S. A. L. Ral! ways. Apply to B. B. Clarke, Agt ' * a-?h DISAPPEARING Luggage Ca frier* at Burrier's for $2.25. CALL The Kver Heady' Pressing CluJi for cteaning, pressing* altering and repairs. Phone 150-J. Prompt ser vice, reasonable price. J. S. Gam hie, Proprietor, 869 Broad Street, . Camden, S. C. 38tf . * . REWINDING ? Armature rewinding.' Electric irons, fans, etc., repaired I). J. Creed, Carolina Motor Qe., Camden, S. C., day phone 210, nigkt phone 296-J. 50-tf WANTED ? Poplar, Ash, and Cyprqsg standing timber. Wtifl figure you on any size tract. Give fuH details in first letter. Hoffmaa Lumber Company, Columbia, S. C. 36tf NOTICE? A Ford touring car top cover and rear curtain, complete, standard material for $6.00 at Burrier's. Miller Rhoads She took the morning train . ' t to Richmond IT ARRIVED promptly at 9:45. Richmond! The name thrilled Helen to the heart. She almost ran down the ? . ear steps to the station platform and up the easy incline to the great marble concourse of Rroad Street Station! It was not her first visit, but Helen loved Richmond. She loved its beauty, its historical traditions and, most of all, its shops. With impulsive disregard for her conscience, Helen chose a taxi rather than the convenient street car that stopped directlv in front of the station. "Miller & Rhoads," she told the driver, with the air of one who knows exactly where to go in Richmond. In a moment Helen found herself at the entrance to the South's greatest department store. She did not go in di rectly. but walked (Completely around the store, for she loved to "window shop." It was the first time she had seen the windows in the new store, and they were perfectly beautiful with their displays of fashion's newest creations. Inside the store, her first step was to check her traveling bag. Then to a comfortable rest-room to telephone Louise to meet her on the fifth floor for luncheon. That done, Helen sought the elevators, and found them, centrally located, six in a row. each with its neatly uniformed and courteous attendant. Getting ofY at the second floor, she found herself right in the midst of the loveliest display of dresses she had ever laid eyes on These dresses were the kind she could not buy anywhere outside of Richmond, except, of course, in New York and places like that. There were satins and satin crepes, crepe de chines and novelty silks. Some were trimmed in laces in the newest ways, and there were the gayest 'summer colors too. Helen could hardly decide whether she liked the Peggy Paige frock of rose-gray crepe satin or the lovely girdled f roek of green silk crepe. She knew they were all the very latest word in style, for she had learned by expcricnce that Miller & Rhoads are not only Fashion Kight , bftt. Fashion First. She finally selected two dresses, one for afternoon and one for sport wear. . With a feeling of perfect satisfaction in her purchase, Helen looked fit her watch. It was twelve-thirty, and she had promised to meet Louise at twelve for lunch! (Helen is just one of the thousands of women, many of them from your own community, who do their shopping at Miller & Rhoads when in Richmond.) o R I C H M O N D, VA.