The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, October 17, 1924, Image 8

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

Baby Cried and Fretted All Day ? Thi?i Tt-f'tliin i, the wonderful lax* alive and M("in ,?oh corrective, I* tho I r . ? I; . 4- 1 ? ) n JV babtet and 'children b<jnlthy in conclusively proved by the hundreds of letters con stantly 1m iitK received from happy and grateful mothers who have given it tp their liitle OQOS* Anionic other* praising It is Mr* A A Hair, Route 2, Clayton, Ala., who writes:"! began giving Teethlnu to my hahy at & months and kept It up nil through teething time. "Ife miRlit be crying and fritting all day, and at bed time I'd give him a dose of Teethlna and he would sleep line and waku up in the tnorn tnff With a smile." Teethina Ih Hold by all drVKKl0t*> or ?cnd 30c to ldoffett laboratories ColultibUB, Qtt,, for pockafe and FREE BOOKLET XbOUT BABIES TEETH I NA Builds better Babies SILK FROM YOKOHAMA Value of a Consignment Runs Well Into the Millions. Uncle Sam has been winning heats in one of the most dramatic races V'ver staged by trade? -the raw silk transport race. The course is 8, MO miles. Swiftest steamship#, special trains for which 8 peed limitH are waived, seaplanes and airplanes participate. Hut there is no cheering crowd in the stands, because every mile of the race is concealed with the. closest secrecy. The stake* are millions. In 1D18, HI per cent of the United States' huge silk imports from Japan] came in foreign steamers hut within two years steamers flying the Ameri can flag in the Pacific have obtained an important share of this valuable' trade. COLUMBIA LUMBER & MANUFACTURING CO. MILL WORK SASH, DOORS, BLINDS AND LUMBER PLAIN & HU s. ER STS. Phone 71 COLUMBIA, S C. Dr. C. F. Sowell DENTIST * (Office Over Bruce's Store) CAMDEN, S. C. TRANTHAM TIST Crocker Building NE 450 0 TUNING is L. Moore -W PHONE or 46 CAMDEN, S. C. T. B. BRUCE Veterinarian Day Phono .''>0 ? -Nijfht Phone 111 CAMDEN, S. C. Hayes Bus Line CAMDEN TO Columbia, j Bishopville, Hartsville? Kershaw, Lancaster, Charlotte. For information Phone 181, Camden Hotel A. R. COLLINS Undertaker and Embalmer AMBULANCE SERVICE Camden, S. C. Telephone ? Day 41; Nifcht 3*0 ' Why silk is rushed from Yokohnmi t;i Ni'U Yopk at hre?k nrN; speed, out-distancing t lit* l??'st passenger mm? vice, -and the thrilling details of thin j contest against lime over the World'* longest race eour?o ait* told in the I'oU lowing bulletin issued by the Nation at < JeogtaphieV society f.iom its head iju.-iiU'iH at Washington lJ. "L vcep.ting KA'ld uji't silver bullion, siik probably is the. most precious ^omtnodity, weight fur weight* car ried on a large scale by commerce. A sinjrle special train will, bring live million dollars worth of silk. .Just as it tusiM dearly t? ship money, high charged air put on si^k shipment-.. The saving of two days sailing time between Yokohama and Seattle is saixi to make a difference of lift y cunts a bah* at New Yoik. Interest op the millions of dollars tied ; up multiplies at the rate of thousands of dollars u day, an<i(-jH"tuldition. there is costly insurance. In the silk trade time I it orally is money. "The world's record on the Yoko hama-New York silk course was set up a few months ago when the Orient was brought within 1M days, M hours and 8 minutes of Manhattan. Laden with $5,.r>O0#OOO worth of raw silk, the President Jackson made Seattle on the ninth day.- A United States mail seaplane met the liner at Victoria and winged its way to Seattle, 100 miles away. It brought port documents and forwarded cargo papers to New York befyre the President steamship (locked. "Special, port forces moved the rich consignment in three hours to a spe cial train waiting with steam up. The swift Oriental Limited passenger trains take 70 hours to reach Chicago; the 'reefer,' as the silk special is known to railroaders, makes it in 6fx hours. Twelve cars were required for the President Jackson cargo. With Queen Silk goes a heavy cordon of train guards armed to the teeth. When tin- treasure train safely reaches New York the shipment is di vided quickly among the consignees for storage in warehouses or dis-^ patched to mills in such famous silk towns as Paterson, N\ or Woon socket, It. I. "Few people know when the 'reefer' is on tin* rails. Like a ship of war, it virtually runs under sealed orders. TAX NOTICE OH'iot' of Treasurer, Kershaw ('ounty, Camden, S. 0., Sept. 12, ID 24. Notice is hereby given that the hooks will Ik* opened for the collection of State, County and School taxes from October lf>th, 1024, ? to March 1 T? t h , 1 s?2S. A penalty of 1 per cent will be added to all taxes unpaid Jan uary 1st, 1 l?2.r>, 2 per cent February 1st, 102a, and 7 per cent March lath, l!?2f?. The rate per centum for Kershaw County is as follows: Mills State Taxes (> 0-0-1 School 4 County Taxes . 0 VSi Hospital \ School Taxes Total 23 l4, DeKalh Township Uoad Bonds, for DeKalh Township only... 3'.4 Dog Tax $ 1 .2f>. All dog owners are required to make a' return of their dogs to the County Treasurer, who is repaired to furnish a license tag. All dogs caught without the license tag rhe owners will be subject to a fine of Twenty ($20.00) Dollars. The following School Districts have special levies: School District No. 1 2.i School District No. 2 10 Sehm*l Di*triH No. 8. .vv: 2M School District No. 1 la School District No. "> 8 School District No. 7 8 School District No. S 8 School District No. !' 4 School District No. 10 a School Dist rict No. 11 1 ?> School District No. 12 18 School District No. 1 'i 8 School District No. 15 8 School District No. I'< 8 i School Distr ict No. 1 0 8 School District No. 20 4 J School Distr ict No. 2'J 23 School District No. 2^ 11 School District No. 2f? H School District No. 27 ... 8 School Disti i? t No. 2 a 8 hool I 'ist i ict N o. 21' 8 School District No. .'Ut 8 School Dist liit No. .51 8 School District No. 3 J 8 School District No. 3." 1 f> School District No. 37 8 School District No. 38 8 School District No. ?"?i1 14 S< hool I ?ist rii t N o. 10 2 ? School 1 >i < t rict No. -1 1 * Si boo District No. 1*2 8 School District No. Ul 8 S< hooi District No. 47 8 The l ull tax is $1 00. A!! able I * 1 i i i male persons from the age. i f twrntv-one (21) to fifty ( aO ) ycar>. b.-th inclusive. except res ident- ! f mcerperated towns of the court y le<< than J. .*>00 inhabitants, shall pay $.'' 00 a road tax except minister- of trie gospel actually in charge "f Jr congregation. teachers ? ?mp|n\'?'.l i.". public schools, school ?i ?)<'< ?* . .tiai f'c! mi;:- per marwnt!\ . i ? ! disal Vd In the military scrvxc of this Stati and persons who .-eiwd in the. War Between the State*, and all per sons actual \ ' mplc \ ? ?< I ;n ;he oua: nr. tine ?er\ im ? f state and .ill >esi-j dents who maj I ?? attending school i or college at 'he time when said road tax shall become due. Persons claim ing disabilities must present certifi cate from two reputable physicians of this county. All information with reference to taxe.s will be furnished upon applica tion. D. M. McCASKILL, County Treasurer. Railroad divisions seldom know when it is cortSlhg or where it is* going until it and orders arrive. "The previous speed record for .<ilk Jiipments wu? made when the I 'rest- J (lent (ffluu landed a $10,000,000 roi).; ???;gnmen\ at Seattle. The 'infY.'' brought Vii.s production <*f billion* oi t aterpillm s into New York in 1M days, J hour* and ?">;>. minute* out wt' Yoko- j hauva. Night air mail will he a boon : to Uii'sc New York silk merchants. ; Hefore silk shipments can be^release I many papers must he approved and ' iaspectud. Seattle hus one of the two seaplane mail services in the United States,, heme Queen Silk will suffer no embarrassment of, del-ay. 'Night air mail wU) hasten dispatch of silk i shipment papers to New York so there will he no slip when the dusty 'reefer' reaches the Hudson. "Although silk culture originated in China and the very name China finds its birth in a term meaning 'silk people/ the United States looks to Japan for most of this raw mat erial. American mills are weaving nearly 50,000,000 pounds of raw silk annually of whieh about HO per cent corpes from Japanese mulberry or chards, The ugly little silk worm is treated with great respect , in the Orient for it brings to the Far East ern peoples more than $300,000,000 from the United States alone. "Queen Silk's throne is as solid as the year it was set up by a Chinese princess, centuries before the birth of Christ. The western world began to worship her when the crusaders went to the Kast 'to kill the horned devils and returned to imitate the fine gen tlemen they found there.' Th? mer-^ chants of Venice, thriving on the West's new knowledge like the mer chants of New York today guarded Queen Silk wejfl ; this single city-state built 300 men-of-war to convoy its silk fleets." MASTER'S SALE. State of South Carolina County of Kershaw (Court of Common Pleas) David II. Raum, Plaintiff against Henry R. Croft, et. al., Defendants. U ruler an order of His Honor, R. W. Memminger, Presiding Judge <>f Fifth Circuit, dated October 7. 11)21, I will sell to the highest bidder at public auction for cash before the Kershaw County Court House door, in Camden, in said State, during the legal hours of sale on the first Mon day, being* the third day, of Novem ber, 1924, the following described real estate: "All that piece, parcel or tract of land, containing one hundred (100) acres, lying on the waters of Swift Creek, formerly known as part of the Government lands,, bounded north by lands, formerly of Mary E. Rarnes, now of Charley Burrows, and by lands of Manning Reynolds, east by lands of Halley Estate and by little Swift Creek, west by little Swift Creek; being the laiuls conveyed t.) Kllis Croft by John Croft, by deed of date February 5, 1KK5, recorded in the office of the Clerk of Court for Kershaw Countv, in Rook J .J. page 72.V Anyone desiring to bid at such sale shall first deposit with the undersign ed Master a certified check or cash for the sum of One Hundred ($100) Dollars as evidence of good faith, which deposit shall be returned to the unsuccessful bidder at the conclusion of the sale. R. R. CLARKE, Master Kershaw County. October 14, 192-1. . MASTER'S SALE. State of South Carolina. County of Kershaw (Court of Common Pleas) The Rank of Rethune, S. C., Plaintiff against Mary E. Rethune and The Bank of Pageland, S. (\, Defendants. I'nder an older of His Honor, \Y. II. Townsend, Presiding Judge of Fi/th Judicial Circuit, dated June 17, 1924. I will sell to the highest bidder at public auction for cash before the Kershaw County Court House door, in Camden, in said State, during the 1 ? ? K : ? 1 hours of sale on the first Mon day ? being the third day) of Novem ber. 1924. the following described lea! estate: "All that certain piece, parcel or tract of land lying, being and situate in the aforesaid county and state, and contains nine hundred and fifty CJf>0) acres, more or less, and js bounded as follows; On north by the Publi*. Road leading from Camden to Rethune, East by lands of Mrs. Lois McCougan and Mrs. S. J. Davis, south In lands of J. C. Parkei and i>. M. n.irnes. ar.d west by lands of H. B. Stokes nrd .thers," Saving and excepting therefrom one hundred seventy-two (172) acres of land, more or less, bounded as f??|\?w* North by Seaboard Air Line l!;i;!wii\, southeast by Western I'nion Telegraph Road, west bv lands of ('. I Fields, arid being the pr ?perty < : ? ? *d ed 1 ;> Mary F. Rethune to I >. T. ^ a: borough and A. R. M< Laurin ' .i ? on ry 2?>. 1 '.* 1 ?!. \ryr.ne ile-inng to t>i? :i! <a!d sale ? . i ! t first deposit with ' h?* undersign ed Master a certified (heck or ca?h the sum of two hundred (S200) dollars, as evidence of good faith, which deposit shall 1h* returned to the unsuccessful bidder at the con clusion of the sale. R. R. CLARKE. Master Kershaw Giunty. October 14,* 1924. Mr*. Frarteoixe Cafcapreato celr hrated her HKJrd bir,thday at (irant . City, Stuten Island, N. V., Moivlny ,? by danejng an old time wait?. and j j cooking' dinner for eleven person's, in i eluding herself. mm OF 'sale ? ' V '' > S i ; 1 1 ? * of South Carolina. * f County, of Kershaw Arthur Smith, doing busines- as the . v \Camdon Furniture Company, Plain tiff, against 1). Reynold*, Defendant. Under and by virtue* of an t'Xa'iii tion directed to me by J. H. Clyburn, Clerk of Court of Common Pleas for Kershaw County, on the 5th clay of July 1924, in the above entitled case, I have soiled and taken into my pos session the following described prop erty of 1>. Reynolds, defendant above named: One Piedmont Organ and oner Stool oak finish, * Which I will sell to the highest bidder for cash at public outcry dur ing the legal hours of sale on the first Monday of November, being the 3rd day thereof, 1 i>24, in front of the Court House door at Camden, South Carolina. The proceeds of such salt to be disbursed according to law. G. C. WELSH, Sheriff for Kershaw County. October 14, 1924. MASTER'S SALE. State of South Carolina, County of Kershaw (Court of Common Pleas) M. J. ,Reddin, Plaintiff, against Stephen B. Robinson and Kershaw County Country Club, defendants Under an order 'of His Honor, R. \V. Memminger, Presiding Judge of Fifth Circuit, dated October 13, 1024, I will sell to the highest bidder at public auction for cash before the Kershaw County Court House ^loor, i in Camden, in said State, during the l?*gal hours of sale on the first Mon day, being the third day, of Novem ber. 1924, the following described real estate: All that certain piece, parcel or tract of land situate in the County of Kershaw, State of South Carolina, ' near the City of Camden, and known as a part of the A 1 ford Place, con taining three hundred seventy (3.70) acres, more or less, and lying on 'the south side of branch through said Al ford Place known as Camp Hrftnch; hounded north by said Camp Branch, South l>y la rids of (Jeorge T. Little, Henry Savage and Liberty Hill road; and west !\v said Knight's Hill road and Camp Branch. And being the tract of land conveyed to Stephen B. I Rohinsoh by Mary IX Baker by deed , of date February H'?, 1923. B. B. CLARKK, Master Kershaw County. October 14, 1924. MASTER'S SALE. State of South Carolina, County of Kershaw (Court of Common Pleas) M. .1. Reddin, Plaintiff, against Kershaw County Country Club, De fendant. Under an order of His Honor, R. \Y. Memminger, Presiding Judge of Fifth Circuit, dated October 4, 1924, I will sell to the highest bidder at public auction for cash before the Kershaw County Court House door, in Camden, in said State, during the legal hours of sale on the first Mon day, being the third day, of Novem ber, 11)24, the following described real estate: All that certain piece, pnrce] or tract of land lying, being and situate in the County of Kershaw, State aforesaid, about one mile northwest of the City of Camden and bounded and described as follows: One hun dred seventy (170) acres, more or less, known as Springdale, situate on what is known as the Knight's Hill Road, bounded north by said Knight's Hill Road, South and Southeast by land now or formerly of W. H. Haile, and west by that portion of Spring dale retained by tke grantor and rep resented by a plat of same made by A. B. Boykin, surveyor, of date .July 2, 1923, which tract so retained con sists of seven acres, more or less, off of the original tract of the said Springdale property, and being one of the tracts of land conveyed to the said Kershaw County Country Club by Stephen B. Robinson by deed dat ed .July 2, 1923, and recorded in the office nf the Clerk of Court for Ker shaw County in Rook B. (I. page 541. B. B. CLARKE, Master Kershaw Count v. October 14, 1924. MASTER'S SALE. State of South Carolina, County of Kershaw (Court of Common Pica? ? I - a l a h Waddy, et. al.. Plaintiff*, against Ri-rtha Footman and Marie Footman, Defendants. * Cnder an order of Hi* Honor, \V. il Townsend, Judge Fifth Circuit, da'ed Oc tuber 2, 1924, I w.ll sell to th?* highe.-t bidder at public auction f?>r (ash before the Kershaw County Court House Door, in Camden, in >aid Sta'e, during the legal hour* of ^al" Ion the first Monday, being the third day, of November. 1924. the follow ing described real estate; except eleven acres thereof set off to Betsev Reynolds as shown by plat of Ker shaw dp Loach, Surveyor: That tract of land being subdivis ion "A" of lot number ten of the Cy ples Tract, Land Commissioners I>and, being thirty-two (32) acres, more or less, bounded North and East by hinds of the estate of Hubert (.% [ Johnson, South by lltnds now or for merly Kntanuel Moses, west by land* formerly of Adamaon, now in part to VVaturee Power Company. AU<> that tract of land containing eighty (SO) acres, more or less, aiui known as truet number <0) nine of the Cjples Ttytet, Land Commissions Land, ami bounded North by land now 01 formerly of Kmamjel Moses; east ait.i south by lands of the estate of Koheit (\c',lohnson. wikst by lands of Adamsoi) ami Wateree Power Com paq v. rhe land to he Sold exclusive of that cut <?rt' to Betsey Reynolds, con* tains one hundred five and 50-100 ( 1 05.60} acres according to a piai made [>y Kershaw doLoaeh, and dat ed March 29,1 922, Said plat beinj^ uii rtie in thf i econl ??t' this in e. Anyone desiring to hid at said sale shall first deposit with the undersign ed Master a certified check or cash for the sum of , twenty-five ($25.00) dollars, which deposit shall he i r turned to the unsuccessful bidder at the conclusion of the sale H. H. TLAKKK, Master Kershaw County. October 14, 1024. ALL ALIKE We treat our new customers as old customers in the mak ing. Loan & Savings Bank CAPITAL $100, 000.00 4 Per Cent. Paid on Savings Deposits LET US LIFT YOUR TIRE BURDENS by vulcanizing all your old, worn tires and tubus and save you money by so ^oing. No motor car owner or driver cart afford to ignore the economical possibilities afforded by our expert vulcanizing methods. Bring your Balloon tire troubles to me. ~ - T. D. HUGGINS Corner Lyttleton and DeKalb City Filling Station MADAME CAMILLE PALM 1ST Tells Past, Present and Future Tells just what you want to know, without asking a single ques tion. The veil of mystery removed. If in trouble, call and consult this gifted woman. Tells business affairs, love affairs and in fact, everything pertaining to your welfare. The Bible speaks in many places of the power of the palmist to predict the future things and give warnings. She removes all evil influences, tells you how to gain success in Business, Love, Marriage, Health, Law Suits, Spec ulation, and in fact everything. She has helped thousands. She can help you. Satisfaction guaranteed. Open day and night. All readings confidential. IN PARLOR TENT Opposite Kershaw Motor Co. CAMDEN, S. C. KRASNOFF'S IDDY SHOP SUMTER, S. C. The Only Real Exclusive Children's Store in the State Everything for Children and Infants ? Topwear, Un derwear, Headwear, Footwear, Furniture, Bedding. Furnishings, Novelties, Gifts, Playthings, Toys, Nur sery Accessories, Hand-Made Garments, Btc. Everything up to the Best. We Solicit Your Mail Order* and Offer You Very Prompt Service. Write Us. "IF IT IS FOR CHILDREN, WE HAVE IT." KRASNOFF'S KIDDY SHOP SUMTER, SOUTH CAROLINA. i: TV OLE YELLOW PENCIL vv&fa RED BAND tA6LF PENCIL CO. N?WYOBKJJ?k iVa/7* UAAUMKMMII jR.'nac