The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, December 04, 1925, Image 9

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Tho d.08?Kn of the \\M> Tutor* u!*s's i'hrlatmos Seal as shown above i. aulto , a deparUivo from the S*n,? Cliiu* a:id furuve downs' of iveelt year*, Ita hoiJv, iinlstleto.- hud candles symboh/.r tho .<;;?lrit of Chnntmas and love of humanity. The douMo-barred eros'a, the eniblen of.tho flffht uRahut tuberculosis, links tin' tile ? of health itlt tho\j<l<*n of t'r.' Chrriinuti Spirit in tho conventional ized decorative design. It wits pri.uti&d by ftobrrt G. Kberhard, professor of S.ulptui o at Yale urn Verm ly and at artijt oi flote, and his associates in tho Graph 10 ArU Studio. Now \otk. A b.ll.o ? rml j, qunr'.ev seal.*. have boon printed, leuth Carolina has been challenged to !l throe million flvu hundred thousand. In the days of knights and fairies and three-headed, fire breathing: mon sters, all the strength of the knights and all the magic of the fairies were pitted against the ruthlessness of the fire-breathing beast when he invaded th land and left death in his wake. And yet in the fair state of South Carolina, there stalks a spectre faf more deadly than the three-headed monster of olden times, a spectre whose trail is marked by suffering and desolation and death. This deathly thing that goes so stealthily and fleet-footed through the land is the "Great White Plague." And there is only a half-hearted pitting of forces to stop the ravages of this ghastly monster;. In South Carolina at the present time there are known to be more than 16,000 active cases of tuberculosis, a large per cent of which is among the working people of the state. Of this number, about three-fourths of the cases afe young people between the ages of 20 and 36 years. The tragic part is that less than 200 of these G A. DAVIS announces the opening for_ January First of CAMDEN'S FINEST MARKET for Native and Western Meats *** 2 . .. -43 . Located McLeod-Rusft Bldg. ? ? Telephone 26 Good Service Aids State's Progress T- . ' r ,-v-r I'A r\ 7 HE $13,000,000 telephone construction program which the Southern Bell Company is completing this year is an investment in new and additional plant that South Carolina and other Southern States may have more and better service. As a result of this program, telephone service is now better than ever before, despite the fact that the 'M>erators are handling a larger volume of calls. The service is more valuable to the individual user, as well as to communities at large, and telephone sub scribera now receive more for the money they spend for telephone service than for any comparable service or commodity. '' i 9ft . - ? That telephone rates have not increased anything like the cost. of other services and commodities is due to economical management and efficient workers who have kept the operating expenses at a minimum despite the growing cost of everything which forms a part of tHephone plant and service. MORGAN B. SPEIR, Carolina^ Manager "Bell System"' SOUTHERN BELL TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY . tr- _ S 9Wm$c y? 3 y%4?lmm i/iwrn? i Jin^v * - ? cases are in sanUoria, thus leaving more than 16,800 cases in the homea throughout the state. In moat of these homes, the people are ignorant of the method* of pre vention and cure, and are not ollly losing the fight against tuberculosis, but are greatly endangering the lives of those with whom theywmetn coir tact. Many of these eases are of the ambulatory type, and are to be found j. on the streets, in moving picture ; theatres and other public places where, through ignorance and care lessness, they are jeopardising the lives of those about them. Iu the homes of these cases are more than 20,000 children who are constantly exposed to the disease, somr of whom will develop it later, unless taught to prevent it. Of the 18,000 eases in South Caro lina at least 60 per cent or 9,600 could be cured if proper treatment were available, and a large per cent of the others could' be so improved that they could earn a living and" be perfectly safe 'to themselves and to the public. At the present time the South Carolina Tuberculosis Association, with its related local associations are co-operating with the state and local boards of health in the fight to rid South Carolina of the "Great White Plague." These organizations are principally financed ,by the sale of Christmas seals. All of them are pitifully handicapped fpr lack of money with which to chftyi ort the programs they have already under taken, much less being able to carry out the larger programs they . must adopt if tuberculosis is to be wiped out of South Carolina. A challenge is sounded to all South Carolinians, Whether young or old, I rich or poor, to pit the force of their time, strength and money against the ravages of this disease. : . ; ? ???' '?? Would Have No Interference ~ The train robber was holding up a Pullman car: "Out with your dough, I'll kill all men without money and kiss all women." An elderly gent said: "You shall not touch these ladies!" . An old maid in an upper berth shouted: "You leave him alone; he's robbing this train." With his shirt torn to shreds by the wind, a young hobo was found hanging to the wing of an airplanu piloted by the head of the California National Guard air force who made a trip from Las Vegas, New Mexico, to Los Angeles. SHERIFF'S SALE State of Sooth Carolina, County of Kershaw. (Court of Common Pleas) Toney Green, Plaintiff, against John Branham and one Ford Coupe, bearing motor No. 7,488,892 ana State License No. A-24,237 of S. C., 1925, Defendants. By authority of an order signed by T. S. Sease, presiding judge, on the fifth day of November, 1925, after a verdict rendered in favor of plain tiff, I will offer for sale in front of the Court House, in Camden, Ker shaw County, S. C., during the legal hours of safe oh the first Monday in December, 1925, being the 7th day thereof, one Ford co^ipe attached in this cause bearing motor No. 7,488, 892 and State ? License No. A-24,237 of S. C. 1925. Terms of sale, cash., G. 0. WELSH, Sheriff Kershaw County, S. C. Nov, 25, 1925. JJathfUuUr LOOK ! 36x3 1-2 Full Oversize Card $ 11.se Guaranteed by thr Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. t We are giving you the bene fit of a purchase prior t > ll?e 1 lant fifteen percent adv??re. 30*3 1-2 Fabric $9.65 ~\ J * :-i. IT. It. MY BBS Goodyear ftervke Statiea 4m , Fish caught off Halifax, eent to | St. John, New Brunswick, thence by ordinary paaaenger steamer to Enir land, were delivered in excellent con* dition at marfcets of Liverpool and Londoo in fourteen day*. ? I'OSTRI). All persona are warned ?ot to pass on any property of the estate of W. T. Hall, principally tho place known as the "Holland Place," for any reason whatsoever. If you have any business there nee Sam Baskins first. THOS. D. HALL, Kxecutor. Nov. 13, 1925 34-36pd The miVk of the *oat, the a*s, and the ? camel carried in akina was churned on the hack of beasts of har den from the earliest days of recorded hiatoffiHl Dbiaolutioa Notice. Notice is hereby jrWen that tho Arm of Smith A Taylor, doing a merchan* dtse business at Rabon's Crows Roads, waa dissolved oa October 1. Mr. J. M. Smith is now aole owner and all bills should be made payable to Mr. Smith. All accounts outstanding will, be paid by Mr. Smith. J. M. SMITH, JOHN TAYLOR. Nov. 21, 102&. 37 pd NOTICB Notice is hereby given that ? m^et ing of the undersigned as incorpOra tora of a corporation to be known a> "Camden Jevwlry Company" Will ! meet at the store of M. H. lley nuu> and Company, Camden, Ker?h4w County, South Carolina, on the 8tfc day ox December, 1926 at ii::>o a.m. o'clock, for the purpose of organising aaid incorporation, and filing wtth-tW Secretary of State declaration of ife corporation as required by the Statttt* Lawn of the State of South CaroHna. (Signed) M. H. HEYMAN, C,; B. MOSELEY, D. H. BAUM, Incorporator*. December 1, JU26. I i CARBON KNOCK or motor deton ation aside from being annoying greatly reduces power efficiency ? > combustion taking place before the complete rise of the piston. The mechanical method of correcting such knocks is to retard the spark which again reduces power efficiency. Many gasoline mixtures have been devised which in a way might eliminate the knock but oftimes the remedy is worse* than the ailment. In NO-NOX Motor Fuel we have the remedy without a' single harmful feature* it positively takes the carbon knock out of the motor, and any motorist knows that this means easier &#d * quicker acceleration, smoother running motor and Mdre Power, less gear shifts and generally a more satisfactory operation of the car at a lower repair cost. ? NO-NOX is I Jon- No x :ous, No n- Poisonous , T , . ~ and no more harmful to man or motor than ordinary gasoline. We ask you to try it, after that be your own judge. NO-NOX ts priced only three cents per gallon higher than That Good Gulf Gasoline. GULF REFINING COMPANY ' - ? -r- ."t-s ..? . \ * , i?