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THE CAMDEN CHRONICLE H; Itj Nilt-s . luiitiM- and Publisher Puhlilh( Friday nt N'o> 110U Broad Street ami entered at the Cam den, South Carolina, postoff ice as second clw?s a uiil matter.,, Price per annum $2.00. Camden, S. ('., Friday, June 12, 102*? A prohibition officor at Ualeigh, N. (?., hn.s ^>t himself into a lot of trouble by being too handy \Vith his pistol. Two or three days ago a prominent attorney of Smithfield, N. was returning to his home from Raleigh in a oar wjth a party of friends. The officer ordered the ear to stop, hut the driver continued on h )k way, Then the officer fired into the ear, killing the Ihwyer instantly. Now from his jail coll the officer says he thought the ear was loaded with liquor and th;U ho fired at fif UjJ} jCrtf the tires to stop it. That may he true, but . the office! will find it hard to escape responsibility for his rash act with nothing more h? justify H than a defense of that sort. Of course liquor running is had business, and sooner or later the man who per sists in violating the luvv against it almost certainly eomes to grief. J?ui had as liquor running i-, human life is too valuable to be takt n in an effort to stop it. O-ff ire is have no right to shoot ut cars, even if they know the cars are loaded with liquor, to say nothing of" the all too frequent, practice of men employed t<> enforce the law shooting at cars with no better warrant for the act than the mere assumption that the cars were hauling liquor. The trouhk with main peace 'officers js. thai in^uad of try ng to enforce tin laws as t hey should, they undertake to make law for them selves in trying to apprehend Saw violator* and a-Te^ed- law violators. In this country too many men of low mental caliber or vicious instinct-.'* are employed a- pence officer*. ? Kort Mill Times. !.<)< >K I N<; -TO Til K son M Khr Timber Irom Which To Manu facture I ' it 1 1 ? Wood lor Paper W ash , ngtou, \ I a s "J.v " I *. x j ><? r t - ? ? t the paper manufacturing industry arc looking toward the <? >ut h a- the log ical fii'ld fur future expansion but the South will jiot realize this great opportunity unless our people take steps to provide a continuing growth of timber,' said Mr. Lincoln Green, assistant to the president of the Southern Kail way System, in discuss ing the need for permanent forestry work in the South. "The heavy snides of j>aper, such as wrapping paper, hoards and box es, M continued Mr. (J recti, "make up about forts per cent of the paper consumed in the United States and the wood of the Southern pine* i->i well suited for their manufacture. Abundance of water, cheap power, good transportation facilities and proximity to market* are other im j)ortant factors in the paper indus try, all of which the South has." "Paper .manufacturing is now b ihg conducted successfully at several points in the South, waste from lum- j bering operations which otherwise I would be a Una! lo->s being used. The I rapid growth of timber in the South the opportunity to produce naval storey a~ a by-product, and the fur ther opportunity to us?> thinnings un?i waste from lumbering operations in the manufacture of paper all com bine to offer the South the oppor tunity to prcxluce real wealth from land.s which are now lying idle. "If -omr oi e c. f our Southern j>o<'s should raik?' up the provision of a per manent timber supply ;n its- imme diate r.mberiand, there U no re a. so i why it cou'.d not tnak<- paper manu factif r.^ a <? .i? c**vv fu! irdu.?try, along: with th?- p'i 'Im ti<-( ? ' '.u?*ber anJ Hava ! v : e* ." WEEK-END TRIPS CAMDEN ( I'mpor t tonal Kate*- Other I'otntv) to Wriffhtsville Beach - $8.20 Charleston - 6.20 Tybee 8.30 Beaufort 7.55 Tickcts on Sale 1 nda).s aivd Satur day. Final limit midnight ol fol low injj Tucwiay Round trip Summer F,icur*?ofi Tickets on ^alr daily to re nortN in Canada and the Cnited State* good until OcAobtr 31 W> Hff prepared to nerve you PHONE 128 ATLANTIC COAST LINE W&?- : Why Save? (The following one of a bcwi's of a< licit . J<d b> t he Public Kdu eation ( Vmmittee of the American Institute of Hanking, ami i# hero re produce!! ! " order that the bunking public un<lt the bankers, can better understand' o ne the other, and creat ? a cooperative bpiiit between deposi tor and baaker.) Just as by instinct the bee stores its honey and the squirrel stores a surplus of f<?od for the winter months, so .-should the human family store a i*tii plus of wealth to supply ease and comfort in the winter of life when the ii? f i i nr ties of old Hge'.iake away earning ability. . ? However, statistics 'how that only a small percentage of men are self supporting after the age ?f sixty five. Alain, of the?e have saved, but have not saved sufficiently .?*((?r. their needs In later life. _____ In order to save. successfully one must save systematically and in the case of one who-e Income is derived from salary, ther* i> probably no better method than to set aside a certain percentage of one's income every pay day. lii order to save .successfully, one milst Iiavt a definite purpose in view must <av? with tin- idea of accumu lating sufficient funds for the attain ment of a desired goal. if, for instance, a younu man is determined to obtain a college educa tion, his savings toward the accom plishment of this purpose will be I more regular and systematic than won I be the case if he had no par t a n'ai i hjc.et" i n vie w. \ ft e: ( ? i .?.?'??ego education has 1 t i .ecwrVd and 1: is earning capacity has : I'rrea >{".r so that- the next step m h ? development is the desire for (a hofiu o'' hi- own, then in. this de* mh "fin ;? [jcine, a >econd object fori saving presented. With this ob ject accomplished and possibly a family accumulated in ttyc meantime, a reali/at ??'" his respons.ibilit ie '| presents another purpose for which J he w ill w?h to .-ave in the e<lucatio.-i | i>; his rhildren. ? I With th-e responsibilities pYopcily j i a i. e m car? .f through the habit of I - i \ ? n u \\h.< :? ha.-, by this time become a definite part of hi> character, he will i ea'.i7c that the remainder of th> ai ( umulati\ e period of his life must be devoted :<> planning foi hi? own comforts during the latter part of hi.s ?life- \\ he r V.' wi'l no longer havo ejit H'.ng abiity. I /. at til's lime, hi.- income i- suf ficient to iiu.re than take care of his plans for the latter part of his life, then a desire for travel will doubtless I afford an object for which he will I save. . Ail of these arc worthy, purposes lor which the saving habit may woll be formed, but the most important result of saving is the development of character which accompanies the formation of the saving habit. Savings banks have been organized for the purpose of stimulating this sn\ ing habit and furnishing a safe -place for the deposit of the savings of those who have sufficient strength u\ charucter to save. In receiving grtat numbers of small .>avir.gs from the savers and lending them in larger amounts to borrower^, the banks are able to earn a profit, a large part of which is l>ai<l to th?? <avers a? interest on their deposit.-., and these savings will go on working and earning interest v-r noornc '.org after the savor will bv: unable to ?-arn. i by depositing his savings in the bank the aaver is not only looking out "o:- his owl welfare but is, at the t>*rr.c time, rendering a service, to his community booause the^o funds, together with those of o'ther deposi tor^ car. b?? used by the bank in the f.nancirg of homes, >.-hr>o!> and roads, and tv'U-? create employment out of which may grow more payroll- and more -avings. Thu .. a steadily growing .^av.ngs .?ecount not or.'.y accumulates funds special purpose-., builds chaiaiter, .t ?! makes the saver a better and more d< > rable citizen, because of h: ? he : p :o hi? community, but gives ? e ?.wt'r a st n>c of satisfaction :*nd ? ? :mer. t ar.d se'.t'- respect w-hicn ..?> worth more thar the mono;, >a\ ?-d. i European fom pest which Ju-, i.iUse-1 <-uch great damage to l ocks ?a:i.n introduced fnto tho United States ir. by a scientific .n\ gator who let the virus "<??' '"-<m I h m." 1 7H."? 1025 COLLEGE OF CHARLESTON Examinations at the county seat for the Kershaw county scholarship, Friday, July 10, at 9 u. m. Subjects Knglisfh grammar and composition. American history, algebra, and plane geometry. ?Four year courses lead to the de green of A. B. and B. S. Special two-year pre- medic*] course. Courses m commetra and btaineaa administra tion. Expenaea moderate. For term*, catalogue, cad BiutntH folder, ad intt Pr?ik)Mit'? Offtcfc ft Oh?m4fi, 9. C. liU-i4 THIS WEEK r5 SvSSz rj \\ Bv Arthur Brisbane Mr. Brisbane's editorials are pub lishisj Hh v vprc^sioiiH of opinion* of the World's highest-Halaricd editor und The (Chronicle does not necessarily rmlor.se aU of his views and conclusions. l>u You Bt't? Federal income tax officials inve> (?gating1 "hand bookmakers" discover a bookmaker who deposits between $ 113,000.000 ami $UV>00,0(K) a year in Cincinnati banks. A bookmaker oan deposit only what the litt!< betting tools lose. Let them think it over. Forty -One Acres of Hugs ^A zoological garden for insect? only, and occupying forty-pne acres, will furnish a national object les son, It wil show the good done by some insects, the harm done by others. Without insects, for instance, there would be no blackberries?. Without bumble bees, as the Aus tralians discovered, with amazemen', you ennhol have clover for your sht ep. It would be easy to destroy all the insects in an orchard, but if you did that you would ruin the fruit crop. With insects, as with other animals, the dangerous kinds are in a minority. Hut the dangerqus ones ate very dangerous." ' 1 The insect- zoological garden is much more important to human be ing- now than the old fashioned kind. Man's dangerous enemies are no lon ger the" wolves, lions, catamounts and snakes. Where wolves at their worst might kill 500 people in a year, "one little demon of a mieroscopic_li.f<\ ! the colon bacillus, carrying with it Asiatic cholera, will destroy millions of lives. II > ??u Love Your Child liorman scientists, fighting con tauiou* discuses, adopt this motto. "Don't let your children be kissed by strangers." A better motto would be: "Don't let your children be kissed by*a hy body." Kissing children tliat do not be long to you is offensive and danger ous stupidity, and that applies to politicians, and all others. You need not be diseased to be a carrier of disoase. Your own system may resist germs that would be fatal planted on the delicate mucous mem brane of a child. The automobile industry is now greatest in the United States, total-1 ling more than $3,163,000,000. The steel industry comes second about $100,000,000 behind the automobile Thitd conies the business of slaugh* tering and selling animals, more than $.">00,000,000 behind steel. W'e have rcached the age of billions, our first ten industries being above the billion mark. Th is is to be a great automobile! year. April produced 120,373 cars. May is expected to go 20,000 higher. It' you belief that every man's death is fixed in advance, thi<* In terests you. William Frio, working underground in Missouri, might have said that, with all it.s disadvantages, . working in a mine at least kept you ?-afe from lightning. But lightning struck the steam boiler at the top of the mine shaft, knocking over Roy Fenix, followed a steam pipe loO t'?-et into the ground and killed Frie. "No man can escape his fate," says t German proverb, and superstition, uhioh has frequently stimulated cour age, has carried on the theory. The ar.ciert gentleman, warned by lh< oracle that he would be killed by a house falling on him, did not -ave himself by sleeping out of doors. A fi.s.ng eagle dropped a huge turtle, ci-u^hing the man's head. The turtle's ?he!1, was its house. Women ? After Fifty Mi>s Rose Maretta, in private life, Mrs. (Jerbcr, and a grandmother sixty-six years old. recovering from a long illness, returns to bareback and trapere work in the circus. A woman should be healthier at' sixty-six than at any youngcrr age, says this determined grandmother, and she Is right. Women have one advantage, with all the hardships that have followed them since the episode of the apple and the snake. Once they pass fifty their chance of lonf life it much better than that of a man paat fifty. 'For thiv arc several reasons, the most impor tant, that tbsy bahave themselves and thus stra thamsahres a chance to li**. M?.? nil MI M it tk*e NOV WKSTKRN HllI.DKK Dori* Mitcham Drawn IMans For Half Million Dollar Courthouse liovij Mitcham forme 1 resident of Camden and well and ' favorably known here, -is doing big thii*K** architecturally along the Pacific coast. .Mr. Mitcham who is the spn of Mr, ami Mrs, IC. W. Mi tell am of thi.-. city has recently taken a promi nent part in many building projects in and around San Bernadino, Cali fornia, and uuder a pen an<( ink sketch of the young builder The Daily Sun of. that city has the fi?l lowing t<? say; i "Equally energetic in civic life and private practice, is DeWitt Mlkham, well known you ok architect, whose offices are located in the Piatt Realty building, The magnificent permanent home of the Orange Show was designed by Mr. Mitcham and .its erection supervised by him, as one of his patriotic contributions to the community. "Among the buildings recently de signed by this architect are the Dale Gentry building and the Junior High school, Mr. Mitcham acting as asso ciate architect on the latter structure. He is to be associated with Howard E. Jones in the preparation of plans for the new half-million dollar court house to be constructed on Arrow head avenue. I "DeWitt Mitcham was born in Spartanburg, S. C., August 18, 1801. His early studies were in his native state, but in 1911 and the few years following he studied at the Valparaiso University School of Architecture and the Ohio Northern University. ' "Mr. Mitcham first came west in 191<"{, , being associated here with Anthony Biemer, as wdll as serving in the offices of several Los Angeles architects. He returned to Camden,. South Carolina, in 1916 and entered business with his father,- also an ar chitect, ? "In April 1917 Mr. Mitcham en listed in the Engineers, U. S. Army, serving with that organization over seas. IJe was commissioned second lieutenant in April 1919 and spent several months travelling through France, Belgium, and England with the topographical section' of the engineers. This provided an oppor tunity to study old world architecture and many impressions were recorded by him at the time. He was dis charged from the service in San Francisco and returned to San Bern ardino to enter the office of the late Fred T. Harris with whom he was associated until Mr. Harris' death in March 1922. Irf June 1922 Mr. Mitcham received his certificate from the California State Board of Archi tecture and has been in active prac tice for himself since that time." GENERAL NEWS NOTES 4 ? ? I Authority of municipalities to pro hibit by blanket ordinance the opera tion of pool rooms has been again upheld by the South Carolina Su preme T'ourt. <t H. S. Horn, who escaped from the Anderson jail, last week, was captur ed Saturday in Augusta, Ga,, and has bit 11 lodged in tin* federal pen at Atlanta to serve a five year term. . As a result of a collision between an automobile and an A. C. L. train j ? near Charleston in February, 1024, in which two occupants of the auto lost their lives, jury verdicts amount ing to $ <54,500 have been rendered against railroad company. *) j Charged of attacking three young women against .lames Lindsay and Hoy Fowler, made after former was alleged to have been abducted and beaten by t,hree men, dismissed by j Spartanburg magistrate for lack of ~evidt iu < . F. M. Gregory, J. C. Stat iiii'.i S, H. Wyatt, allegt^l f log gers of student, are held under bond for trial. Governor McLeod told the South { Carolina Social Work conference, a. Hartsville last Friday that he is so ?riously considering t lie granting of a blanke t pardon to all women pris oner* held in the state penitentiary for the reason that the legislature has twice ignored his requests that suitable accommodations be provdied for them. ? Five South Carolina students were graduated from the Yale University School of Divinity Monday, this being the largest number of representatives had by any state. Onp of the gradu sites, James 1?. Kerry of Orangeburg, was awarded a scholarship that will take him abroad For study, and an other, .John (J. Smith, of Johnston, won the Mersick Sermonie prize and the Mersick elocution prize, a double honor. Rural Policeman J. U. Snoddy of Spartanburg county was i?hot to death at Cross Anchor last Thursday while attempting to arrest Oliver Harrison, j sought on a charge of violating the j prohibition Jaw. Harrison, who es caped, was sought by a posse and there was talk of lynching. The city of Clinton will spend half a million dollars on .municipal im provements. Spartanburg's new 10-story office building has been completed. It cost $1,250,000. All pool rooms in the city of Green villi- were permanently closed Satyr <tay ni^ht by city ordinance. Now taxes imposed by the last leg ialature result in total of $236,16i>.t>4 being- collected from individual souivrs during May. Manlue (iilliam, It year old son of ?Mis. Holland Gilliam of Convert* drowned when inflated inner tube ho was Using for support broke while fee was in water over hi* lu-ad. Spartanburg police are equipped with gaV bombs, "shooting billies'* and Other improved arms in order to meet any emergency. Sam Price and Sylvester Robinson, > ?>ung men who escaped from the York county jail last Wednesday flight after they, with Frank Crow-' der, had overcome Sheriff Fred Quinii and locked him in a cell, were cap tured by Rock Hill policemen early Thursday morning. Robinson was captured at his home in the Indus trial mill community Where he had gpne tp vISTf his wife anil Price vti found, on tho Southern Railway track* iuar the mill. Her Father Dead Friends in Camden of Mrs. J. H> Osborpe will regret to learn of the death of her father which occurred near Hendersonville, N. C., Wednes day morning. Mr. and Mrs. Osborne we're at his bedside when the end came. WHERE TO WORSHIP .> w At any of the Camden Churches you will be a stranger but once. They extend a cordial welcome to all. First Baptist Church ? Rev. John A. Graham, Pastor. ? Sunday School 10 a. in.; morning services 11:15; even ing sermon at 8:30. Prayer services every Wednesday evening at 8:3Q. E. Y. P. U. meets every Thursday evening aL 8 o'clock. Wateree Baptist Church. ? Rev. J. II. Shiver, Pastor.? Sunday School at 10 a. m.; morning sermon at 11 a. m , and evening worship at 8 p. m. Prayer meeting every Wednesday evening at 8 o'clock. I.yttleton Street M. K. Church. ? Rev. J. T. Peeler, Pastbr. ? Sunday School 10 a. ra.; morning services 11:15; evening sermon at 8 o'clock. Prayer meeting every Wednesday evening at 8 o'clock. 40 Grace Episcopal Church? Rev. I. deL. Brayshaw, pastor ? Early com munion 8 o'clock; Sunday School and Men's Bible class at 10 a.m.; morn ing worship and sermon by the pas tor 11:15; Y. P. S. L. at 7 p.m. Bcthesda Presbyterian Church ? Dr. Kdwin Muller, pastor. Sunday School at 10 a. m. Morning worship and sermon by the pastor at 11 o'clock. BUY Confederate Memorial Coins Minted by the United State* Government, u a tribute to the valour of the Southern Soldier. Certificate* entitling the holder to these rare loyiTemr coins . ? ?n the date of distribution, July 3, 1925, are now available to the public. ? ?*.. ? . Demand for theae Memorial Coina it 1 enormous. Limited quantities have been allotted to ea<h city, in the South. Only holders of Coin Certificates, therefore, can be absolutely sure of obtaining the coins on their release date. Premiums on the coins go toward the completion of the great Confederate Memorial being carved at Stone Mountain, Ga. BUY Coin Certificates NOW! For your children's children. < "V M ?