The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, September 11, 1925, Image 2
Hags
AFTER
EVERY
Probably one |
reason for the
nodularity of
WRIGLEY'S U that It lam
so long and return* ?uch
great dividend* for bo imull
an outlay. * It keep* teeth
clean, breath aweet, appetite
keen, digestion good.
Frcvh and full-flavored
alwava la its wax* wrapped
package.
She Knew Lawyers
An old lady, very ill, sent for n
lawyer to make her will, being very
mueh concerned over getting it prop
, erly made out.
"Do not worry about it," said the
lawyer, sympathetically. "Just leave
it all to me."
"Well, I suppose I might just ns
well let you have it now," said the
old lady resignedly. "You'll get most
of it anyway." ? Caper's Weekly.
This year's tobacco crop* in WIU
lianasburg County is estimated to be
worth $3,000,000.
1,
Notice to Debtors and Creditors
All parties indebted to the estate of
C. J. Nunnery, deceased, are hereby
.notified to make payment to the un
dersigned, and all parties, if any,
leaving claims Against tho said estate
will present them duly attested with
in fhe time prescribed by Jaw.
w. l. Mcdowell,
.Judge of Probate
Administrator Estate of C. .1. Nun
nery.
Camden, S. ('., Aug, 17, 1(J25.
Renew Your Health
by Purification
Any physician will toil you that
"Perfect Purification of t ] i e
1cm is Nature's foundation oi'
Per feci Health."- "Why not rid
yourself of chronic, ailments that
are undermining' your vitality T
Purify your entire system by tak
ing a thorough course of Calotabs,
? once or twiec a week for several
weeks ? and see how Nature re
wards you v. it li health.
Calotahs are the greatest of all
system purifiers. Oct a family
package, containing full direc
tions, price- M5 ets. ; trial package.
10 cts. At any drug store. (Adv.>
Is a Prescription tor
Malaria, Chills and Fever,
Dengue or Bilious Fever
It Kills the Germs
MANY ARK TURNED AWAY
More Than 1,000 (iirlx I "liable '? ??
(jalil Admission
; I
More* than 1,000 applicants for ad- ?
mission to Winthrop College for the
192M0 term have bwn turned nway,
it wan stated by )Pf c.sulent l>. 1).
Johnson in announcing the opening: of
the session for Wednesday, Septem
ber 9.
Not one application other than
those of scholarship students has
been considered since last March, l>r.
Johnson stated. There have
2, flS5' application* for admission filed,
while the college has capacity for
only 1,060 students, all of whom have
been enrolled. The freshman class
will consist of approximately 550 to
000 girls while the senior class will
comprise about J>00, although no class
rolls have been made out. No neyv
students have been admitted from
outside the State, while many South
Carolinu girls were among those who
could not be admitted for lack of ac
commodation.
The dormitories will accommodate
but 1,581.
The vanguard of students compris
ing freshmen and old students con
ditioned ?will arrive in the city to
morrow, the main body following on
Monday and Tuesday of the coming
week, ,
A meeting" of the J75 teachers has
been set for noon tomorrow.
A large force of workmen has been
busy repairing and renovating the
buildings and clearing the grounds. ?
Rock Hill Record.
HKARS RECOMK PLENTIFUL
Relieved to Have Come Down Because
Dearth of Water
Moiitreat, Sept. 1. ? The natives are
very much interested in the evidence
of the presence of bears in Montreat.
A neighbor, a few nights ago, heard
a shuffling noise on her porch in the
early morning. Next morn i tig she
investigated and found in the sand,
before her steps, well-defined prints
of a bear's foot.. She called the at
tention of her neighbors to it and
many people have been to see the
bear tracks. It is thought, as it
is so extremely dry' up in the moun
tains. the bears come down to vrci
water. No alarm is l'elt over them,|
as t hey are of a small black bear
family that i< never known to be
ferocious.
To give some idea of the extent of
the drought, Flat creek, Montreat'-*
main stream is running lower thaii
ever known'. T>he leaves of the rhod
odendron, back from the water
courses, are curling up and turning
brown. The forest trees seem to
hold their own pretty, well, they are
more deeply rooted.
During the .peach season in Spar
tanburg County, which cfvme to a
close last, week, 110 carloads of the
'fruit were shipped, not including the
i many truck-loads of fruit that were
hauled as far as Knoxville, Tenn.
The fruit shipped by train went to
northern and eastern markets. The
crop was the largest the county has
had.
DR. HESS STOCK TONIC
25 lb. PAILS $2.50
DR. HESS POULTRY PANACEA
25 lb. PAILS $3.00
Also Stock and Poultry Remedies
in 25c and 50c packages
DeKALB pharmacy
PHONE 95 CAMDEN. S. C.
Great Aid to Thrift
The thrifty man will surely trot ahead.
One of the greatest helps to systematic
thrift is a saving bank account because
it gives you a safe ))lace to keep you'*
savings and enables your money to earn
liberal interest for you.
Loan & Savings Bank
CAPITAL $100,00(UNI
4 Per Cent Paid on Savings Deposits
An application for a position us
teacher in Butte county, South Da
kota, has been received from a woman
in Wyoming. In part it reads as fol*
lOWl : "I Will introduce myself as an
old-fashioned old maid school teacher.
I can ride horseback and am not
afraid of mice., rats or rattlesnakes.
Will bo pleased to accept a position;!
in the wildest section of your country.]
i do not smoke, use .profane language,
nor drink booze. Am so homely that
the ineri stay clear away from me;"
Large families are the rule in the
village of Wueat-Herek, Belgium. All
rocords, however, -were broken at the
recent funeral of Hendrik van Mich
elon when he was followed to his last
resting place by 14 children, 108
grandchildren, and 160 great-grand
children, a total of 272 descendants.
* * * ?
What is probably the oldest and
most famous drug store in the -world
is the Tung Jen T'ang, in China,
which dates from A, D. 1500. It is
situated just outside the Tartar wall
that separates the north f^om the
south section of the city o,f Peking,
and rs still a flourishing business.
The proprietor today is a direct des
cendant of the man who established
the business. Unlike our own drug
gists, this Oriental sells drugs only.
' * # * ?
C. T. Olayton, of Greenville, Fla?
writes of a dining table that has been
in one family for 150 years. His own
grandfather has used the table for 30
years, his grandfather's father had it
for GO years, and his grandfather's
father's father bought and used it for
21 years.
?? ?* </> <?
About to be sentenced in court for
robbery, Frederick Oxley, of White
Plains, N. Y., asked the judge to show
him mercy so he could court a girl he
had just met. The judge did not heed
the plea. He sent Oxley to prison for
five years.
* + 6 #
Wearing a corset especially de
signed for carrying liquor, Mrs. Mar
garet Klommer, aged iM, of Philadel
phia, was arrested for bootlegging.
The corset held a gallon of rum.
Believing ardently in the. ancient
Japanese idea that it is a tragedy to
pass, the marriageable age unwed,
three women recently bade farewell
to the world of unappreciative men.
They leaped to death in the Asana
Vdllano near Tokyo, and were swal
lowed up in the flaming crater. All
were le>s than 25 years old.
+ ?> * *
A man who deserted -from the
French army ten years ago has just
learned that the World War is ended,
lie is Jean Thibaud. The man lived
in a woods in the Alps for ten years,
dressing in skins. He decided to sur
render, so he went to Paris. There
he was told that the war was ended
and all deserters pardoned.
H * * *
Kzra Good is a weather prophet at
Pottsville, Pa. Recently burglars en
tered his house. They made away
with rare astronomical treatises and
jewelry. On the table was a note
from the thieves saying: "This i- <>ne
thinjc >'">i didn't predict."
* ?>
In 2.'? y?a Mr. and Mrs. Wea'ey
Gilbert, ?'f T. \twn, Ky.. haw had 18
children. "1 he last child was born a
few days ago. T.'iere are now 17
Jiving. Mrs. Gilbeit was married when
she \\ as I -5 years ??!<!. She :s now ?'!<>.
<>)>l> ANI> STRANGE
A man i-nnu- to nn offic? yesteiday
and wanted mo to h? dp hiin borrow
$JN7 ?*>(' ri^-ht away. H ?? said he had
pa:d ! I nsta llmen* ? mi h : ^ Kord. 7
in-'t a ! ' men { ? on h;< piano, -1 install- j
merits ?>n his radio m', ! installment!
>t: h : -? new d"iir*r loom sr* which ho J
keeps :t; the kitihen, ) .n^tal'mont!
i ? hi- wife'-. ?umnii i hat, and ho!
owrd hi- irrru't r for mov.ths ration-?. |
ll'd ' "ir 1 'i 1 ? :ik -la!;o:. had, ,i . told,
in check- re>rat in>r Site 7* for uas|
and and informed nic that he had:
h . - job which had b? . r. ; iy:n? :
;? in >' I 7 'ill a week and ur ? ?-- h?- ^ot ,
th" mon?y i > ?? | u * ? > t ? ?? i h< would bo'
sad .mt. I told h:m to k'o baek and'
the i : i - 1 a im< folk- and hoi row
,i little 'v ? ? in them a- ho
>??< i.'. d :?? be a K'o*.)d -tandiiiK with
them and I r.< < ded all the money I
didn't have :? pay for wha* I ex
pectid *?t buy for i .? - h r.cxt w<<k
( 1 e? Mcfi'T -\nder-??n Ma':".
Two banana 1 1 ? ? ? t, Hi-ni ^-' .m:
a i b? a i mn f ? u ;t .
Thi"UK'h : i.? H^rnU. Jurat bu:<.?u,
the < o.umb.a < rniilv'' ? > f C?,mnv re
has inaugurated -Wj.t to encour t>fo
the ttrwing toha(i?? h> Uu hland
County, a numht r of R.chland farm
ers And Columbia business men hav
ing recentiy made a ".See and I^earn"
tour through the Tuo Dee tobacco '
belt, where tobacco i# most ?uccrsi*- ;
fully grown and pro^pertty ha* r?
?ulted.
I Citizens of Lexington will vote
.September 29 on the question of issu
ing $100,000 of bonds for waterworks^
and sewerage.
SUMMONS FOR RELIEF
State of South Carolina,
(\?unty of Kerahaw.
(Court of Common Pleas)
Jasper La whom, Harmon Montgom
, ery, and Lefoixl Montgomery, Ellen
Montgomery, Richard Montgomery
and Jessie Montgomery, by their
Guardian ad litem Mat McLeod and
Mary Jane Lawhorn, Julia Ann
I^awhorn and Ellen. Lawhorn, by
Jasper f>awhorn, tiheir Guardian ad
litem, Plaintiffs,
against
John Hey ward Truesdel, Henry Mont
gomery and Joe Miller, Jr., and
Minnie Miller, minora, Defendants.
To the Defendants John Heyward
Truesdel, Henry Montgomery and Joe
Miller, Jr., and Minnie Miller, minora.
You are hereby summoned and re
quired to answer the complaint in
thi$ action, of which a copy is here
with served upon you, and to serve
a copy of your answer to said com
plaint on the eubscriber at his office
Broad Street, Camden, S. within
twenty days after the service hereof,
exclusive of the day of such service;
and if you fail to answer .the com
plaint within the time aforesaid, the
plaintiff in this action will apply to
the Court for the relief demanded in
the complaint?
I. C. HOUGH,
Plaintiff's Attorney.
August 26, A. D. 1025.
Notice:- ? To the defendants John
Hey ward Truesdel, Henry Montgom
ery and Joe Miller, Jr., and Minnie
Miller, minors, and to Joe Miller and
to Julia Truesdel, the parties with
whom the said minora reside that
the summons and complaint in this
action were filed this the 26th day of
August, 1025, in the office of Clerk
of Court for Kershaw County, S. C.
I. C. HOUGH,
Plaintiffs' Attorneys.
August 2C>, A. D. 1025.
To the minor defendants Joe Miller,
Jr., and Minnie Miller and to Joe
Miller and to Julia Truesdel, the per
sons with whom the -said absent minor
defendants reside, that unless you
apply for the appointment of a
guardian ad litem for said minors,
that the plaintiffs, through the un
dersigned attorney, will apply to the
Clerk of Court for Kershaw County,
S. C., after 20 days (have elapsed,
after the service of this notice ex
clusive of the day of such service,
for the appointment of a Guardian
ad litem to represent said minors in
said action.
I. C. HOUGH,
P taint it* tV A ? t o r n ey s .
August 20, l'J25.
Made a Fine Trade
Jack Whitaker, of the I/oan and
Savings Hank hands us the following
good story on what is being done in
Florida. It is taken from the Ander
son Daily Mail: .
There is a story about Florida go
ing the rounds which may contain
;i whole lot more truth than humor.
It surely applies to some of the real
estate deal* which were made in An
derson when we were all feeling like
millionaires, just before the pinch of
deflation pricked our bubble and
brought us down to real values and
common sense again.
Tho story is that of a negro man,
who having been to Florida returned
to his home in Anderson. Accosted
by a friend, he told of the wonderful
opportunities for money making in
the present meccfc of the world.
"Well, John," his friend asked, "did*
you make ^ny money in Florida?"
"ShoJy did, I make a right smart
little trade. 1 made a thousand dol
lars."
"Naw, I don't believe it."
"Jlonest, I sho did."
"Made a whole thousand dollars?"
"A whole thousand."
"How did you <k> It?"
" 'Member dat yaller dog I uster
have? Well, I taken him down to
Florida and sold him for a thousand
dollars to a white man."
"You sold dat yaller dog for a
thousand dollars," came the incredu
lous reply.
"Sho did." '
"Cash money ? "
"Naw, ifot zactly cash. You see,
I swap dat dog for two five hundred
dollar* cats." ' - ? '
The lit# of Palms is to be developed
into an aM-the-year-round resort.
Kerry boats are now operating acro?*
the bay to the inland and the newly
constructed causeway and re-e*tab
lishment of electrical car a between
Mount' Pleasant and Sullivan's Island
has made it possible for the develop
ment of the Isle of Palms.
! Small grain, stacked Immediately
after cutting, without the labor of
shocking, and cured .l>y electricity,
was successfully tried at Hipon, Wis.
cons in, last year.
SUMMONS FOR RELIEF
( Complaint Served.)
State of South Carolina,
County of Kerehaw.
(Court of Common Pleas)
Clementine Hirseh, Plaintiff,
against
H. J. McManus and C. C. Linden and
Globe Refining Company, Defend
ants.
To the defendants above name4.~
You are hereby summoned; and re*
quired to answer the complaint in this
action, of whicfo a copy is herewith
served upon you, and to serve a copy
of your answer to said complaint on
the subscriber at his office, Camden,
S, C., within twenty days after the
service hereof, exclusive of the day
of such service; and if you fail to
answer the complaint -within the time
aforesaid, the plaintiff in this action
will apply to tihe Court for the relief
demanded in the complaint.
Dated February 28, A. D. 1925..
To the defendant, C. C. Linden: ?
Please take notice that the original
summons and complaint in this mat
ter is filed in the office of the Clerk
of Court for Kershaw County, South.
Carolina.
L. A. WITTKOWSKY,
Plaintiff's Attorney.
August 26, 1925.
Draughon's Business College
COLUMBIA, S. C.
Draughon's Employment Bureau
Places Students
That the vast majority of our graduates are offered positions upon
graduation is proof of the excellence of our courses. Our diligence
in locating positions for graduates and the high regard held by
business men for this institution makes it easier for our students
to secure positions. Draughon's Employment Bureau is an im
portant branch of this school. Yet courses are no mpre expensive
than at unrecognized schools. You owe it to yourself to write for
information without delay. i
VACUUM
TANK
OIACNAM op
YOU*
SYSTEM
H?ff?Y TAtm
"Drain the
petcocks once in awhile
M QOONER or later you are liable to get some water, scale or dirt into
^ your gas tank. You ought to get rid of it before enough'of it collects
to give you trouble with your carburetor. It only takes a moment to drain
the petcocks and clean the gas strainers. There's probably one in the
sump of the gas tank or in the gas line under the car. If you have a vac
uum tank, drain the petcock under it and clean the strainer jn the inlet
pipe. Also open the petcock under the carburetor. The most you'll get
out of them is a few drops of rusty water, but never let it gather if you
want to avoid trouble."
Just a little stunt Worth knowing, but it is the sort of thing the Fleet Boss
has learned in a lifetime of automobile experience. We have been refining
petroleum for two generations so it is natural that we have learned many
things that help us to inake lubricating oils better and better every year.
When you use ''Standard" Motor Oils you are profiting by 55 years of
the accumulated experience of many thousands of expert refiners.
STANDARD OIL COMPANY (New Jersey)
"STAN DARD'
MOTOR OILS
A RESULT OF 55 YEARS' EXPERIENCE IN REFINING