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THE CAMDEN CHRONICLE; N. r>. Nile* . ~~E4U*r a?4 ?eiui5?r ] '' Published every Friday at No. 1109 Broad Street tuni entered at tfae Cft* d/en, South Caroling postoffico as second class mail matter. Price par annum $3.06. Camden, 8. Friday. Jan. H, 1926. John l'ratt, 48, farnur of Sharon, while hunting slipped and fell and his gun went off and caused ampu tation of his left ?rro. His condition If aid to be rutua'l. Butler Wallace, 70-year-old farmer of York, suffered a broken leg while hauling logs, hut notwithstanding his injury he climbed aboard his -wagon and drqge some distance to his hom ?. The Fennel! Infirmary, operate*! at Hock Hill by 0r, W. \V. Fennell for . many years, has been leased to I>r. W. B. Ward, his chief assistant tor a good many years, and Dr. Fennel! will take a long rest in an effort to regain his health. The institution bears a state-wide reputation and it is said that no patient has ever, b^en turned away on account of lack of funds. ('aid in Full It is a story worthy of tin- season that comes from Springfield, 111., of the payment in full by the heirs of Jacob Bunn, banker, of the last of the indebtedness that was outstand-. jng against the J. Bunn Bank which failed nearly fifty years ago in 1H7H. The qmount was approximately $k00, 000. It was riot Jacob Buna's fault that J he bank failed. It had to close its doo I :* because a large part of its assets "waslTr~THi^ier of farmers and small traders who /Sti! ? been hit by the panic of I H7.< and r-?uMn-'t pay." Kventually 1572.000 of the $XOO,Ofa' for which the bank failed was real- j ized from the assets. The court t h ? ? . ? ' wound up the bank's affairs but M?. # | Bunn announced that he proposed to J pay every dollar^ of the money th ? ( bank owed. pVincipaJ and interest. He devoted h -i- \ f to 'hs un':\ taking for thirty yeanfr and until hi> ! death in 1NP7. Then he bequeathed ! his obligations to hi.; children, and J they accepted : ' loyally, 'and "fori the honor of thr family n;fin?," treat-! I'd a fund for the pay men * <>f all | (brims, cmp'oying Ihwj :> to search 1 f i htir-s <>f those who Jrei money i in tl.?- bank, and going J i great j trcUble to make .sure thai every dol- j ar that was owing was paid. A story of this .sort i s the best of .sermons. It is pleasant to know thai .Mr. Burin's children have prospered and are prospering. News. and Cour ier. Buys Interest in Hakery Dr. W. R. Clybuin has bought out the interest of Mr. B. (J. Sanders in the Electrik-Maid Bake Shop. Mr. Drawdy will continue with tin- same force as heretofore. Mr. Sainler.s will devote h i k time to his other busine.->3 interests. He is also the efficient secretary and treasurer of the Cam- . den and Kershaw County Chamber of I ( o mmvrce. ' Head of Negro Hank Arrested Klizabeth City, N. C.. Dec. 30. ? , W. H. Holland, cashier of Albemarle J hank, an institution operated by and] for negroes, which closed iLs dfrors on Christmas eve, was arrested this afternoon on a charge of embezzle ment, and was placed in jail in de fault of bond. Holland is being held in connection with an alleged short age of $10,000. The warrant for his Arrest wa.s sworn out b> the bank examiner, who has been investigating the bank accounts since the institu tion was closed. Kngiand and Wales enjoy the dis tinction of having ciosed nearly a third of t ht ir prisons since 1911 Bridge Club Meets The Thursday Afternoon Bridge i ub was charmingly entertained last week hj Mv> White Lenoir in her t r.ii ' . . ? rt-w h >m?'' on Lake view Tt-rracf TaV>*s \vf.- placed .n a bright --citing v* here eehnc ?>f ( hl ist ma> . r.geiid \ f t ? t tr.e games the hos*.? s-. s, : \ . refreshments. The U h s 1 1 tu t e .s tti'ir M;sa Kate Lenoir of Washing: r.. I> ( , M.-- K.tthei ;r,> Turr:. r of W n: i. . - , Mr - M' ' ; m> Mul ? r (?;. | \: . N i * 1 1 Keso*u? son-, <?t I hanks i -I reoogr. n : ? ? . f.t.thi j .mo a pa b ! ? - 1 ? v .? i ? j j , ; a t. r , tiring pr.-s r.err. ? -he < t:ivl.-n ar.d Kerf ha w County < t tmb. ?? .f Com merce, Mr. M H . ih? {?., lowing re -O il:; , *>???? a-:-.;.', i r ( recent meeting ,f the organ iza? ion : Resolved 'nat ; ?? : ? r. - body be extended t > Mr Hrymar * .r h..s untiring effort ; ar.d interest -n beha.f of this organization ,ind that a copy of this resolution be pub.i-hed in the locab^apera. The resolution is signed by H. G. ' Carrison, dr . C. |?. DuBose, and C C WMUker. GKKAT BANK KOBBBD I-ock Cashier in Vault and Kacape With More Than $5,000. | M . ii i ? . , i ' I Chester, Jan. 6.- At a late hour tonight Sheriff James CI. How** and deputjeM have not. been *t>le to find a singly' clue in connection with the sen sational holdup of Cashier J. R. Goul ock last night at Great Kails, Chester County, while he was at work on his bo9ks at "the Merchants' and Farmers' Bank, when, after looting the vault of approximately $6,000 in cash and $000 in Liberty bond* and a $600 diamond ring, they locked him in the vault, he being rescued by friend*. It is altogether likely a finger print expert may be brought Into the case, which may afford a clue. Then, too, Sheriff Howzc thinks that if the Liberty bonds are offered for sale they too may offer a tangible clu?, He and his assistants are vigilantly working on tho case. This is the first time in the history of Chester county that yoggs have entered a bank and looted its vault and it naturally has been the central theme of conversation today. Cashier Gl>ulock's six hours' im prisonment was a terrible ordeal and was a frightful nervous experience to him. By means of> an electric light in the vault he managed to write the vault's combination and Klipcd it un der the door so that his friends were enabled to liberate him; DEATHS PROM TRAFFIC Week Reports 61 Dead and 279 In jured in Southern States _ * Atlanta, Jan. l.?New Year s week ran Christmas week a close second for the number of traffic fatalities in the Southern States/ The death toll for the week ended last night was sixty-one, while the previous week ? witnessed the death of seventy persons in traffic.. There were U79 injured lust week as against upward of 100 the previous week. These fig ures are revealed in a survey today J by thi* Associated Press, in eleven states. North Carolina .t ?; t>e death col umn with fou rt i".* n killed, ner near est competitors being Florida and Mississippi with eight each, Arkan sas and Alabama reported only one fatality each. Virginia led in aceiclen - with forty jr.fH', while Florida .scon I forty-two. Georgia and L,u; followed, With thirty-five va< h. . Alabama had only two. A feature of the week's traffic toll was the heavy loss in three cities. Norfolk, Va., Greensboro, N. C., and Winston-Salem, N. ('., reporting five deaths each. South Carolina reports six dead and three injured. SCKAI*S AND FACTS Interesting Notes Gathered From Many Sources. Tlif Mayo Clinic,- of Rochester, Minnesota, uses a simple diet, high in fat content, for what is claimed to be a successful treatment of epileptic children. Odd 1 \ enough, there has been no magazine in this country devoted en tirely to the interests of singers. Im pressed with the need for such a pub lication, Alfred Human, for nine i years editor of Musical America, is launching a new magazine, Singing. Through arrangement with the American Booksellers' Association, it !?* now possible to telegraph a book to a l'riend at a distance. The buyer give* hi^ order to a local bookshop and *ho book is delivered from the .ihup nearest the person who is to I ? I'VfiVl' it. ( A lock of George Washington's i hair has been inherited by the Mount i Vernon association. I Horseshoes junked in many stations I < t' the United States are being shipped i '. ?> China where mechanics utilize the : chilled iron for knives. In the thirteenth century, Louis ! the Ninth began what was later j known as the Bibliotheque Nationale, the largest library i:i the world. \ .* w as never lighted, during all . t nturies, it was available only ! in '} ?? daytime. \"er\ lately it ha-v wired for electric lighting, much '?"? pleasure of bookworms \\ imr", w th bobbed hair, in i on ' "? ? 1 ? t* barber. eg, are .><? r.uin r I- >.rt !{??:. r.: c. (?e? lgia. that .? bei n issued ?' . a ? . r g t h? j: w nen the> will d ' J the officers' ? a* ' r>?' csmp bai \ ii< ? ? ? . i. of a.j ?.r. an <..? a - rr. > - k > < 1 a \ ? r . J'hicagu has ? 1. I a- htgh 7,1 ?>0 d;r? particle*, i'v ;> ar' mi? < :>?ver in it> windows U .i?h 'X'.o' a;. I fs*abl:."h.r.g t h ? 'he I.J re a u if Knto n -"j ! ??< 1 the nabit.s of the ."?I'. ? and discovered "hat by piart 'K the: r i lover '.en days earlier in : he -pring the farmers would pre ? vent the development ? of the early m id get. THIS WEEK By Arthur ftfWMt Mr. Brisbane'* editorials are pub lished as expressions of opiniona of the world's highest-salaried editor and The Chronicle does not necessarily endorse ail of his views and conclusions. ..I I - ? 1 - 1 ' Mm Kerguaon, Udy governor o( Texas, says evolution must be re moved from Texas public school books. One book actually said that for men to speak of "me* and ani mals is unwarranted egotism, for man is an animal, just as truly as the beast of the field." Some beasts of the field would have something to say about that. MartV of them don't commit whole sale murder and call it patriotism, don't lock the half-developed children of other animals in factories or mills and call it business, or underpay their brothers to increase profits that they don't need. Senators Edge, King and* Bruce agree that the workings of prohibition are enough to make the Demon Rum laugh himself sick, that drunkenness is rampant, and our political life "menaced." , A K"irl, twelve years old, i* found unconscious in the sIVeet. Explana tion, bootleg liquor. The police arc investigating i dance given at a most respectable woman's club. ? Explanation. Too many bottles of bootleg liquor found in the place when the entertainment was over. High finance denounces Governor Pinchbt's suggestion that the coal 1'iMds be declared "a public utility." "A dangerous coal panacea, sa> .spokesmen for "big business. 1 Is the coal business not a public necessity? Can people live without neat? Is it not the business of gov ernment to protect the public welfare, putting that ahead of all othet duties? , The real o ot that (Aovrt ernor Pinchot's wuggestion is a dan gerous panacea," but that it would interfere with the plans and profits of ""big business," which i^ the real government of the United States. Professor Edward S. Morse, noted authority on geology, is dead, buJ still useful. Yesterday, his brain was sent by express tp the Wistar Insti tute of Anatortiy and Biology in Phil adelphia. Professor Morse was "am bidextrous," could use one hand as readily as the other. He had, in ef fect, two right hands. Scientists say an examination of the brain may ex plain that. One thing is certain. If your little boy is left-handed, don't try to make him use his right hand. That stupid ity, which, centuries old, injures a child's mind, is useless. Science might look in the dead man's brain for" things more interest ing that the secgreWof ambidextrous eccentricity. What is it that works in there while the brain i? alive and suddenly van ishes when the braiu dies? In England the body of King Ed ward has been moved so that his corpse, now dead for a long time, may lie beside that of his Queen, Alexandra, recently dead. It is sweet British sentiment, but it is like taking the shells of the eggs from which two chickens have es enped, and putting those shells pious ly side by side. With the eggs it is the chicken that counts. With the human body it is the soul. How close now are Edward's and Alexandra's souls0 That's the question. Pity the poor Duke of Northumber land. His income is $376,000. In come taxes and other taxes take $200,000. The British Government knows how to tax and how to collect taxes. Here, instead of making taxes big %,? r, thanks to President Coolidge and Secretary Mellon, billions are paid off on the war debt and taxes steadily reduced. Happy I*. A. War. *hich is wholesale crime, th?'f* and highway robbery retail | crime, d > not pay. Kmvard K. KeT.ar. famous in crime ' t?-n year? recently let out jf ' prison, went to work in a bank, stole $13,000. took jt tn ft taxx-ab and win foynd dead. The doctor said fear killed him. Crime doesn't pay, or as the striking anti-crime posters say, "You can't win." NATIONAL SHOW WEEK JANUARY 9-16 Exhibiting the Improved Ford Gar* and Featuring the latest Ford Equipment From January 9 to 16, all Ford Dealers Will > hold a National Show ? exhibiting the im proved Ford cart and featuring the latest Ford equipment* This will be the finest display of Ford pas senger cars the public has ever seen. It will gve you an entirely new conception of the ?auty and utility of the various Foftl body ? types. Even if you have already made a careful inspection of the improved Ford cars, you should see this Display ? for it is something entirely new* The Show will begin Saturday morning Jan uary 9, and will last until Saturday night, January 16. Be sure to see it! Sponsored by Car Too Much For Indian Miami, Fla., Dee. .*>0.? Billy Buck, i?5-year-old Seminole Indian, yester day tame out of the Everglades for his first time In many moons. At dusk lie. ambled back to his palm covered hut, out of the pale of the pale-faced hectic civilization. For Billy had just arrived in Miami to gaze at the curious sights when an Automobile breezed by, jammed on -brakes, and excluded a pungeant aroma of burning rubber. -When Billy was fanned into consciousness after his deep whiff of the unfamiliar 6dor, he blinked his eyes and ven tured: ?? {- "Ugh, plenty bad medicine along bad-smell wagon. Look, no see; listen, no hear; but by golly, heap feel." Hogs Attack Hunter. ? Orangeburg, Dec. 31. ? While hunt ing recently, L. O. Berry of Orange burg was attacked and painfully in jured by a drove of hogs which had become infuriated at sight of the dogs with Mr. Berry's party. Knocking the huntsman from his feet before he was aware that the animals intended attacking him, the hogs tore his cap from his head, snapped at his face and painfully bruised his leg. Mr. Berry was saved from more serious injury by a friend in the party who. beat the animals off with a stick. The Kishacoquillas Valley Railroad, in Pennsylvania, is nine miles long, has three locomotives, runs three trains daily and has a woman treas urer. It has never had a deficit. M rs. Annie Hines Dies Mrs. Annie Hamilton Hines, wife of Hugh H. Hines, a native and for many years a resident of Chester and also a resident of Kershaw for a number of years but more recently living at Clinton, N. C., died Thurs day night, last, at a hospital at Ral eigh, Is!, C., after an illness of some time. The body was brought to Ches rday morning from Raleigh r, Mrs. J. E. Dunbar, where the funeral services were conducted at 3 o'clock Saturday afternoon and the interment made at Evergreen cemetery. The Rev. Paul Pressly, pastor of the Associate Reformed Presbyterian church officiated. Mrs Hines was a daughter - of the late James and Mary Hindman Hamilton of Chester. She was educated at the Chester city schools and the Due West Female college? She was a woman of the noblest Christian char acter and possessed a winsome per- 1 sonality that won her many friends, who are greatly saddened by her ' death. She was a devoted member of the Baptist denomination. She was twice marrlfed, first to Chalmers Hor ton of Kershaw, who died many years ago. ? Lancaster News. SI Jim Oglesby and Frank Donald, sixteen-year-old negro youths, of Greenville, have confessed that love of excitement in seeing the fire trucks run and the firemen work, caused them to set fires to Greenville prop erty causing the loss of thousands of dollars. taken to the residence of 1 with at your. DRUGSTORE 'One at Night ? Next Day Bright." Thousands of satisfied users feel that way about l&yca&jL ORDERLIES . stw* , They work naturally and form no habit. Pleasaht to take, easy in ac tion, safe and sore, Good for children as well as adults. . Box of 60 Orderlies 50c. DeKalb Pharmacy CAMDEN, S. C. ENTERPRISE BUILDING & LOAN ASSOCIATION ORGANIZED 1883 CAMDEN, - SOUTH CAROLINA - Fourteenth Series Retired Dec. 31, 1925, at $91.00 Per Share / SEVENTEENTH SERIES Will be organized January I, 1926. One -Dollar pe? Share, payable monthiy, the first Monday in each month. If you are already one of our members, take more stock with us in this new series. If not, start the New Year with us as a member. OFFICERS: \V'WK. ZEMP, President C. H. YATES, Vicc President W. E. JOHNSON, Secty-Troas. L- T. MILLS, Attorney. DIRECTORS: C. H. YATES W. E. JOHNSON DAVID WOLFE S. N. NICHOLSON W. G. WILSON J. B. ZEMP G. A. RHAME J. T. NETTW3S W. R. ZEMP / it.*. , >-"r. <;/.