The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, November 06, 1925, Image 7

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

Soon Felt Improvement "The first time I tpek curdul I w?? in an awful bad way," says Mrs. Ora Car 111?. K. P. I). 5, Troup, Texas "I went fishing one dsy. A heavy storm came up and \ got soaking wet in the rain. I wan afflicted with awful smothering spells. I could not get my breath. My mothtf had sojfce In the house thai she was taking, bo ahe Immediately began giving It to ale. la a few day* I get all right "Laat tall I got run-dpwn In health. I w?? weak and puny and I began to suffer. 1 would get so I could hardly walk. Having taken Oafdul before. I seat to the store (or a bottle of it. Almost (rem the first d9se I could feel an improvement. ?'Oardul has helped me a lot and 1 am glad to reoom meud It. I don't (4el like the same woman I was last fall. My appetite Is good now, and I'm sure It's Csrdnl that's made it pick np." All Druggists' fe-nsl The Bureau of Engraving and Printing turns out approximately 1,000,000 notes daily, amounting to at least $10,000,000. .> r - . '?? : ? - Manslaughter Verdict For (a&ntt Aiken, Oct SO.-^Afi^r an eight hour deliberation in the ease of the *tate against J. Elliott Gantt, charged with the murder of Michael Knotts, chief of police of Wagener, Septem ber 20, the jury brought in a verdict of manslaughter. It is believed that' the case will be appealed. Practically the entire week has been consumed in this trial. A number af minor cases have been tried today. Eight! or nine murder cases and 75 or 80 ] others are being carried over. Court will adjourn Saturday mid-day. iii. I ? j Notice To Debtors and Creditors All parties indebted to the estate Charlotte Caldwell, deceased, are bareby notified to make payment to (he undersigned, and all partes if a tor Having claims against the estate will present them duly attested within the &ime prescribed by law. W. J. POBTBR, Administrator Estate of Obartotte Caldwell, deceased. Camden, S. C., Oct. 16, 1925. ?? ? - How Doctors Treat Golds and the?Flu - A To break up a cold overnight or to cut short ari attack of grippe, in* ifoenzn, sore throat or tonsillitis, phy sicians and druggists are now recom mending CalotaBST tHe purified and refined calomel compound tablet that gives you the effects of calomel and Its combined, without the unpleas ant. cffects of either. One or two CalotabB at bed-time with a mviOIow of water, ? thnl'i nil. "Nfo .'-.alts, no" nausea nor the slightest interference with your eating, work or pleasure. Next morning your cold has vanish'xl, your syr.tem is. thor ough! / purified and you are feeling fine with a hearty appetite fr-r break- | fact. Eat what you plenre. ? no dan ger. ! j Cc f. a family package, containing, fall directions, only 35 cents. At any drug store. ' (adv) Ambulance Service Day or Night Motor Equipment of the Best ^ ? ? C. W.EVANS MORTICIAN Telephones 535 DeKalb St. 91 and 28.1 Camden, S. C. COLUMBIA LUMBER & MANUFACTURING CO. MILL WORK SASH, DOORS, BLINDS AND LUMBER PLAIN 3c HULER STS. Phone 71 COLUMBIA, S. C. T. B. BRUCE Veterinarian Day Phone 30 ? Night Phoiw 114 f&H - CAMDEN, A THOUGHT FOR ARMISTICE DAY? Have We Kept Faith T? By A. B. Chauin ? ll ? . ? M. _ NOTORIOUS BANDIT SLAIN ' - Michigan Detective Kills Anderson With Latters Own (iun j . Muskegon, Mich., Nov. 2.- ? The in- j exorable hand of the law has cut the last notch in the gun of the notorious George "Dutch" Anderson; the notch stands for Anderson himself . V Anderson, gunman, pal of the "super-criminal," Gerald Chapman, the man whose face stares from thousands of "Wanted" placards in postoffices and jails across the? con tinent, was dropped by a bullet from hiR own revolver, wrested from him by Detective Charles Hammond. Death overtook Anderson Saturday night but it was not until today that be was Identified. It Was not a clear victory for the law, because Anderson, With liis last shot, mortally wounded Debective Hammond and died with the blood of his last victim oozing into the dirt of an alley a few feet from the heart of downtown Muskegon. Even as he lay in the morgue Sat urday night -with his Identity un known he was shrouded in a ghoulish glamor not wasted on a thug of lesser record of crime. Police for several] hour* believed the dead man was Mar tin Durkin, Chicago's "steel vest", slayepy. Identification of Anderson was made positive today, however, when it was -found iH&t the finger . prints and bertillion measurements of the dead man tallied with those of Ander son. A federal operative from Toledo, j Ohio, who knew Anderson personally was expected here tonight to com plete the identification. _ _ i A box of candy, a $20 bank note that was "queer," an astute store- j keeper and a straight shooting detec tive played roles in the tragic^ climax j of Anderson's life. It was a strange jest of fate that Anderson, who, with Chapman made a nation gasp four years ago with a daring mail tiuck holdup in New York City and who j had been sought everywhere by the crack sleuths of the secret service, should die in a small Michigan city at the hands of a small city detective. Anderson sealed his doom late Sat urday ?ft?M noon when he . ..entered, ,a, Muskegon confectionery store and purchased a box of candy. He ten dered a $20 bill in payment, received his change and sauntered out. It was the same procedure he had followed in Flint, Lansing. Saginaw and other Michigan cities during the last months, always escaping detection. He tried the trick once too often, however. The shopkeeper, skeptical of the bill's genuineness, crossed the street to a bank, where the cashier confirmed his suspicions. He called the police and with Detrctive Ham mond walked into the afternoon j crowds on Western avenue. "There's the man," he said, point- j ing to' Anderson. Hammond coi arcd Anderson and started toward the. police station with him. When they had goiie a short distance Anderson jeflfced away, pulled a^ revolver ami began firing. The first two shots went wild as Anderson ran into ah alley. Hammond's own weapon wa rn its holster, buttoned beneath his coat, but he followed his man into the alley in the face of the gunfire. As he grabbed Anderson the latter fired, the bullet penetrating the detective's longs and liver. jr'; JM ? .V ? Mortally \younded, Hammond wristled with Anderson and jerked the weapon from Anderson'* hand. He fired one shot. The men fell, -al most together. Patrolman George Thompson, attracted by the shoCfc, ran up then. "Get him he got me," Hammond gasped, whereupon Thompson fired a shot into Anderson's body. It was the shot fired by Hammond, however, that killed the gumhpn, the bullet striking near the heart. Hammond, assisted by two officers, Walked to police headquarters, where he turned in Anderson's revolver. He then was taken to a hospital, where he died two hours later. He was 42 years old and the father of four chil dren. Anderson died five minutes after he was shot without making a statement. ?His body is being held pending un questionable identification, after which it will be buried here, unless claimed by relatives. A reward has been offered for An derson's capture, dead or alive, in. connection with the slaying August 14, last, of Ben Hance and hisjvife at | Muncie, Ind. Hance was a star.wifcr j ness against ' Gerald Chapman ill Chapman's trial for the murder of a 'New Britain, Conn., policeman ? -a trial at which Chapman was^found guilty and sentenced to ldeath% It has been a theory of detectives ?that the Ilances were killed by An derson in revenge for the conviction of Chapman, who now is awaiting the outcome of his appeal from the death sentence. In Anderson's clothing was found a card bearing the name,- James P. Davis, and the address, Argonne hotel, Lima, Ohio. Police learned he had stayed for a time at Lima, where he was known as "Curley" Anderson. A*enge Boy's Death Douglas, Ga., Oct. 28. ? Davis, hunter and trailer of snakes, has scored again. Crawling through a dense thicket and roping with a shoe string a five and a half foot rattler that was thought to have caused the death of jx boy, Lewis Adams, C. M. Davis, the youthful foeman of snakes, added an" other skin to his collection. The snake was identified a* the one Which struck young Adams through the finding of double fangs on the right side and none on the left. These tallied with the wound. The Adams boy had gone int*> t ho woods with a sling shot with which to hunt birds. He was bitten and died that night. Hearing of the inci dent, Davis started on the trail of the reptile, and after considerable hunt ing found it in a hedge near a fence. ! A university professor from Aus tralia traveled 12,000 miles to attend the Empire Universities Congress at London only to find that he was a year ahead of time, the Congre-*^ not opening until the summer of 1926. A typist's error in the year of the Congress caused the misunderstand ing. 666 iff a prescription for Colds, Grippe, Flu, Daafot, Bilious Fever and Malaria - It KIM the Germs. WRKilYS NATURAL BRIDGE SOLD Richmond Business Men Plan To. Ac quire Show Place. ? Itichmi/nd, Va., Oct. 29. ? If nego tiations arc successful, Natural Bridge, one of the wonders of Amer ica, will be purchased by a group of Virginia business men, principally of Richmond, Oliver J. >Sands, of this city, one of those interested, an nounces. The purchase price of the Rock Bridge county, Virginia, resort is said to be in the neighborhood of $500,000. An option is held on the property which , consists of the natural lime stone strata 'bridge, the hotel, and an acreage, and the deal is expected to go through within a fortnight, it was said. The deed to the property, which dates back to its conveyance to Thomas Jefferson July 5, 1774, is being examined and surveyors are it work plotting the grounds. Plans of the new purchasers call for the modernizing and improving of the property with an idea to mak ing it one of the most beautiful spots In the country nnd mwrH-fon tourist*. The property is now owned -by the Natural Bridge company and is near a small* village that bears its name. The bridge, one of the show places of Virginia, is 1)0 feet ion^, from 50 to 1 50 feet wide, and 215 feet above the creek which runs beneath it. In the group with Mr. Saftris art* four other Richmond business men and several others of Staunton and Lync hburg. Catholic Church Services Saint Mary's Catholic Church, lo cated at Lyttleton and Pine streets, will observe services as follows for the twenty-third Sunday after Pente cost: Sunday school, for children, at 9 a.m.; celebration of the Holy Eu charist followed by discourse, 10 a.m. No night services are scheduled. Non-Catholics are always welcome at the services in this church. Strang ers will confer a favor by making themselves known. The church is open every day from 7:30 a.m., until nightfall. Everybody in this com munity should feel free to enter the church smffiny time for rest and prayer. The natives of Burma never leave their houses after dark because of a fa?r of "tpifid." ti it. Tf-i ^naararr-' if ? i ?* Chicago passed the 3,000,000 mark not long ago hik) now has only 26,000 l\tw? i population than Paris. whuh ranks fourth in the world. In Norway ioul . IVomm K a ?m?U stick fastened to a airing six inches or so in length is t umJ to package ? to mnktf thom cabtar to rtmy. FOR SALE Nine-room residence adjoining tourist hotel property; 3 baths, laundry and furnace, good condition, South east exposure, lot 100 x 250. For good reasons owner will sacrifice for a quick sale at $10,000.00 Eight-room, new brick bungalow; two baths hardwood floors, tile porches and terraces, lot 75 x 246, beautiful outlook between town and winter home section. Can't be duplicated for $9,000.00 Nine-room residence completely furnished; first class condition, lot &5 x 300, ?lose to businessi section. A good which you can pay for renting rooms. Rapidly in creasing in value. Worth investigating $10,000.00 Six-rooms, North Fair street, No. 1 condition, large lot. A good buy for home or investment at ;v .. ..... $5, 000.00 Four-rooms, South Fair on a large lot. The house needs some repairs hut it is good value at | $1,250.00 Seven-room house on large lot in business block of De Kalb Street where values are advancing steadily. Nothihg like it can be bought for $8,500.00 WE HAVE SOME CHOICE BUSINESS PROPERTY, BUILDING LOTS AND FARMS FOR SALE. C P. DuBOSE & GO. TELEPHONE 43 & After 7 p.m. call N. C.> Arnett, Phone 321 I)on9t forget us when you need fire insurance SIX CHRYSLER four - - ? ; ? ? J* o . '? [ *{j . . V . ? \ J WE ARE NOW DEALERS IN KERSHAW COUNTY ' For The New * Chrysler Automobiles ?' ?' m .7- ^ . ' ' Right now is the best time in 1925 to select and pur chase a new automobile ? . i ? - Alt the new models are defb : ? ? <? ' nitely in the market and you can get immediate delivery It is our daily pleasure to, show and> demonstrate the new Chrysler Models to those interested in fine ears Come in and see them at your earliest convenience v . *? * ' * * 4 *' ** ' ' "Some of these cars are just rearm* to go" ?? ?,V VtA*. :?*r\ ->>tm //<".' ' '-^O Smiths' Garage CAMDEN, S.C. Systematic Saving We have seen such wonders wrought by systematic saving that we sincerely be lieve that you are making a great mis - ** * i take if you arc not making some such plan a part of your life.