University of South Carolina Libraries
lu>vu pl?nt> to preserve the oWest railroad afcation built wesi- c.f the Mis>iUsij>pL It i> an historic -build* V?v# it. Dan , mcupit*! foimcrij by (I. jtioii'.i' i aIx. Im-iT turned it over j a^ a ?talif>nT | I Like Old friends 1 -They Wear Well BUY GOOD SHOES When worn, have them re built at the RED BOOT SHOP ABRAM M. JONES, Prop. 619 Rutledge St., CAMDEN, S. C. THEY KEEP GOOD COMPANY Whenever you see a car equip ped wit h^ftood^ ears you recog nize a c;?rJ owner who ha* real C ideas of sound economy. The fact of the matter is. whether you want regular tires or balloons, clincher or straight side, medium priced or low priced ? you can't Intat a Good year. That's why more people ride on Goodyear tires than on any other kind. BROAD STREET FILLING STATION l*. N\ MYKRS, Proprietor I hv MtMcrv Snlvrd 'Saturday uigbt a demented man] wi?V obitViVtfd vvrtfi lvt ii'v ground the pjisiuijgei . rU;. ' ? ' ' , v- ?(. ( htf <.f J'<di(e J. \Y7. .**> > ?!) placed him in jftil uhtil ?>miivunin,iji(>? erAiid be hud j wfth jcla.'ivts, Cflfif. W A. Lafle, , lij-Ot; *%<. ,i' I '?:*? iu;i|| CUOU' to Mortis f( m Atiuhta i ?s.lay morning no.t*rd tin* ( thfc jn'tvd qiuetly, The ma n provt-ij u? jbc ;3*hHi () ? KrOiki H, ()l j Norftdk, \ It. At ( j v\ ociti, S. (.., ?Friday. !-m up . hills and traveler* cheques c-tfimated t{>be of the value <,i ..ut fM.UOO \v<?ri found along the raihuad tracks. Press dispatches tin I'JiVvopd .->tat?d that the mon ' ey. estiiuated t<> have been worth as m.jih .>!,<n?0 wajM t^und by 'three buys upon their return home from '? swtrjuni.ng hole undei a Seaboard ;n -Uo. They picked ug several hun d i id pieces, most of the bills having -bee-it iorri ?'i three parts, and scat tered for a < distance of a half mile along the tracks. The "mystery" was ?reported to officers and a further srr.rch revealed that a bill-fold with the flap torn off and several pieces t>f' three travelers' eheques for $10 each al.su had been thrown from the train. A *maU army of volunteers .assisted in trying to solve the strange" prob lem, but it is understood that less than ?'>'? worth Of the money was patched together so that it was ne* gotiabie. Relatives came for Kroslin Monday and carried him to Norfolk. ' Chief Spoon, when he heard that the i man was a Jew and had torn up and scattered a thousand -dollars to the four winds said "Me certainly is crazy." ? Monroe Enquirer. Mystert Surrounds Worker's Hurt Hock Hill, July ? Albeit iNIad clox, derrick operator at the South fin I lower Company dam near here, was Ttill unconscious late today as the result of mysterious injuries he suffered yesterday at the site where the dam is under construction,- and no progress had been made, officers said, toward ascertaining how he had been hurt. Maddox was found lying near the derrick < f which ho was operator, with a wi.und, a/ if from a club, on the back of his neck. Little hope for his recovery was held out. by physicians today ^ The injury to |iaddox was the sec ond tragic occurrence yesterday in t ennection ? with building of the dam. liennie Wynn, of Union, died last night of injuries, he received" when crushed by a moving crane. Two .Negroes Executed Huntsville, Texas, July .'J. ? Frank and Lorerwso Noel, negro brothers, were executed at the state peniten tiary shortly before midnight for criminally assaulting a white Woman near Dallas last April. Frank Noel also was charged with the murder of W. L. Milestead, with criminal assault on a second white woman and robbery of a young whito woman and her two escorts. An attempt by a mob on May 20 to take the negroes from the Dallas jail failed when extra officers and firemen were called out. One ma* was shot and killed during the dis turbance. By charting the tremors resulting from an explosion of 182 tons of dy namite near Pasadena, California, it is now thought that the source of future earth tremor.f may be detect ed. Protect Your Crops Kershaw County with the healthiest croups wen in many years may yet be forced to ask the Legislature to remit its farmers taxes if hail visits as in the past ? and finds you uninsured. / The only way in which you can gain protection from loss of your crop from h-ail is by insurance. Insure before you need help. The rates are figured on the growing season and the cost per acre is the same whether taken now or later. LET IS WRITE YOUR POLICY TODAY Williams Insurance Agency R. M. JCennedy, Jr., Pres. Jas. DeLoache, JrM Mgr. HOOTLKGCiKR tfSCAI'KS Roach Hall l.eads Monroe ( hi** t a Mi f I > ( !?.??.? .Moii!' i, >*x?,, One h^n<ired.' h*li' y,.<. ?.i. u.: jai v*. t;;u<l 'with liquor, and a brand nevV^Ford coupe Was .-i-iz ? ed yesterday (Sunday) afternoon fou> mioa e.aH of on the high way. man ('. N. Gregory, of land, < to. Monroe in the after nooft ..).?! u ported to ('Kief J. W. Spoon that a Ford filled with whis 1 key had , paasod through Pageland headed toward Monroe. IjMr, Spoon and Mi, Gregory started toward : South Carolina to ate if the cargo could he spotted. They met the au* i tomobile suspected on the Pageland n ail ?!x mil?* of Monroe near .1. W. ' Crook'* home. The officers proceed ed down the load and then turned and trailed the ear to the .highway just in front of X. H,- McLarty's. The men in the F&rd coupe were re I quested to alight, and the officers I proceeded to search the little car. No key could be found with which to . . ? r.i ? f >0 pen the compartment under the scat. Chief Spoon got 6n the run ning board and oggled the car with .his UOO pound weight. The sound issuing forth was bogle-oogle gurgle gu: gle. The bux was theli opened ,and there were an even one hundred half-gallon fruit jars filled with hootch, apparently fresh from the <t ill. On the automobile with the liquor cm go were' Roach B. Hall, of Char lotte and Mcfiee, S. C., and Joe I.., On, a young man of about 21 years Orr, when arrested, claimed the car and whiskey to be his property, and attempted to run, but was captured by Officer Gregory, The men were placed in an auto mobile, with Chief Spoon between them On a rear seat and started to ward ,Monrt>e. When at Lee's Mill, Hall, who is a fat man, suddenly threw open the car door and ran, the chief in hot pursuit. Around the mill house and up the creek they went, Charles Ayscue, who is with the road force and has charge of the pumping station at the creek, assist ing in the chase. Charles, who is rather .small compared with the fu gitive, remembered that he was need ed on his job when (ire gory threaten ed him with a big' stick. But Chief Spoon, .despite the hot day, was fast overtaking Hall, whereupon the lat <? i ter jumped into the creek. He ? floundered around and was soon on the opposite bank where he laid him self down to rest, the chief the while shooting bullets into the bank of the. creek, in the immediate vicinity. But Chief Spoon didn't want to muddy f up his Sunday clothes by going across and laying his hands on Hall. He demanded the Megger to proceed down the crick where he might be appre hended at a more convenient cross ing. But Hall soon found some bushes between himself and the offi cer so he made his getaway. Chief Spoon not desiring to shoot the fleeing man. Orr was brought to town and placed in jail. This morning before Judge Lemmond he was required to give $1,000 bond for his appearance at court which so far he has been un able to find a bondsman. When Hall made his escape Orr promptly de nied ownership of the car or whis key, and according to his tale, only a companion of Hall's. . The whiskey and Ford coupe of course, now belong to the .state. ? M onroe Enquirer. Bob Gets Eight Men Columbia, July 3. ? Eight negroes, said to be wanted in North Carolina for alleged attack upon a federal pro hibition officer in September, 1923, were brought to Columbia today from upper South Carolina, and placed in the Richland county jail. A. J. Bobolsky, deputy United States marshal of Columbia, who made the arrests, said all the ne groes were taken near the North Carolina-South Carolina line, during the' last few days. They are charged with attacking D. F. Widenhouse, and forcing the latter to free a prisoner he had arrested on a charge of vio lating the national prohibition act. The prisoners are: Be Ik Funder burk, Laney Kunderburk, Kennie Funderburk, Shan Robinson, Will Doster, Ranhom Butler. Will Doose, and Zfcke C rowder. The best-paying profes*ron :n Italv ;?? that of surgeon. Epelepsy Hysteria and Nervousness Hobo has been highly esteemed in Epelepsy and Hysteria. Your druggist will sell you a treat ment of 6 Ibottles of Hobo Kidney and Bladder Remedy for $6.00. After taking the treatment you are not entirely satisfied with the results obtained we will gladly refund your Hobo Medicine Co., Beaamont, Texas Death of .Mr*. Outfit Mi\ Kihel Out* !i, wif? pi U. W. Out eh, of PayaUknd, died at the Uap? tUt hospital in Columbia Monday | mommy about eight oYtock, follow ing several month's IUnes*? and her remains were brought to Kershaw by hoarse Monday 'afternoon, Mr?, Outen, who before roarHagii u.v- Mi-- Lthcl Cools,- daughter ot Mr. and Mrs. G. Frank Cook, w u* in In r -7th year.. She reeei'ved hor pre paratory education in the Kershaw fciaifcmar and high schools, and enter ed Winthrop College in the fall of lit 1^, graduating hrthe class of li?19. Following her graduation she served a little more than two years a* assist, ant postmaster in the Kershaw post office, and on Thursday, December 22, l&Jl, she was happily married to 11. \V. Outen, of Pageland, and , that town then because her future resi dence.* Several month- aj go Mrs, Outer/ health began to fail,' a nil much of the time, since she was here at the resi dence t? f her parents, under medical treatment. She also spent a short time at Cleveland Springs, but her decline continuing she was brought back to Kershaw. A few weeks ago she was taken to the Baptist hospital in Columbia in the hope that she might obtain treatment there to im prove her condition, but life contin ued to ebb until the' end came on Monday morning. ? Kershaw Era. Jesse Price, seventeen year old youth was found dead in the woods near his home tin the Motlow Creek section of Spartanburg county last week with the top of his head blown off, and a shotgun lying beside the body. Trice is believed to have been accidentally shot while hunting. CITATION The State of South Carolina. County of Kershaw. By \V. L. McDowell, Esquire, Pro bate Judge. Whereas, Hampton Sutton mado suit to me to grant him Letters of Administration of the Estate of and effects of George Boyd. These are, therefore, to cite and admonish all and singular the kin dretLand creditors of the said George Boydr-4eeeas?d, that they be and ap pear before me, . in the Court of Probate, ot be held at Camden, South Carolina, on Saturday, July 11th, next after publication therebf, at 11 o'clock in the forenoon, to show cause, if any they have,, why the said admin istration should not be^jranted. Given under my hana, this 26th dav of June A. D. 1925. w. l. Mcdowell. Judge of Probate for Kershaw County Published on the 3rd and 10th days of July, 1925, in the Camden Chron icle and posted at the Court House door for the time prescribed by law. CITATION State of South Carolina, County of Kershaw. By W. L. McDowell, Esquire, Pro bate Judge. Whereas, D. L. Phillips made suit to me to grant him Letters of Ad ministration of the Estate of and effects of Rebecca A. Phillips. These are, therefore, to cite and admonish all and singular the kin dred and creditors of the said Re becca A. Phillips deceased, that they be and appear before me, in the Court of Probate, to be held at Cam CAMDEN TAILORING CO. 4. ' ? ? " ' ' . . You'll really | like our Work and Service I " .? I . . ? ' ?' v ? i " . /v ; a** . '? : ARTHUR HOUGH ROY HOUGH TELEPHONE 13- J den. South Carolina, on Saturday, July *llth next after publication thereof, at lF*b'clock in the forenoon, to sHow cause, if any they have, why the said Administration should not be granted. Given under my hand, thjs '26th ?day of June, A. D. 1925. w. l. Mcdowell, Judge of Probate for Kershaw County Published on the 3rd and 10th days of July, 1U25, in the Camden Chron icle and posted at the Court House door for the time prescribed :fcy law. FINAL DISCHARGE Notice is hereby gifren that one month fromi this date, on Monday, August 3rd, 1925, I will make to the Probate Court of Kershaw County my final return as Guardian of the estate of Elizabeth Brisbane Work man, and on the same date I will apply- to the said Court for a final discharge from my trust as said Guardian. D. A. BOYKIN. Camdeq, S. C., July 1st, 1925. GRAYS VACATION TOUR All Expense, Personally Conducted TO NIAGARA FALLS, TORONTO, CANADA, NEW YORK CITY AND WASHINGTON August 5th to August 16th Ffom Various South Carolina Points . / 'i Most -economical. A wonderful vacation t<?ur without- worry. Everything pre-arranged. Splendid chance for psrontft to give their children an educational trip during this vacation period. Write for descriptive folder, ihowing cost, etc. S. H. McLEAN D. P. A., Southern Railway Company Columbia, \ World's Greatest Buy $I250 r Freight *md T?x lclr? for tfef HUDSON COACH ' j Throughout Hudson's toni'lWc polky of fifing greatest value for the motoeV, this is the lowest price, the ftstst Hudson; the greatest value Hudson ever offered. Only Hudson's exclusive advantages of the timous patented Super -Sii principle com' bined with die world's largest production of'6?cylindefr tars make it possible. By greater margifts than ever before It 1s today the ^World's Greatest Btiy." 'f' ? Hudson Essex World's Largest Selling 6 -Cylinder Cars LITTLE T.uium& .