The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, June 11, 1926, Image 2

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

THE CAMDEN CHRONICLE H. D. Nile* . .' Editor *n4 l'?bli?fa?r PublUhod every Friday at No. 1100 Broad .Street and entered at the Cam den, South Carolina, postoffice as second class mail matter. Price per annum $2.00. _____ Camden,.8. C\. I riday, June 4, 1026. 1 I I ....! < " " ' *>' 1 ' The Young Man's (fiance You ok man, the world'* population is increasing ?t the rate of 2,000,000 a year, 00(1 it h> a fundamental lav/ of economics that population gives value to land. VVhelt Peter BtUyvcv?ant traded lovyer Manhattan inland to an Iroquois chief for. a barrel rum the obi Dutch governor could not have had vision* of 20th century skycrapers flanking both ' .side* of -what is conceded to be the busiest thoroughfare in the world. Land along this street sells for as much as $.'100,000 a front foot and some of it is not for sale at any price. Land in your home town may not become as valuable as lower Brouaiway property,- but if you live in a healthy, progix^aiye town property! that you pass several times a day] wj.ij some day be worth many times the present vulu^. The best investment a young man can make is to buy with a part of his weekly oarn" Jngs a piece of town or country real estate, Investments in real property made with judgment and conservatism art* absolutely safe. When the population Of the world begins to decrease the human family will not have any use for property or money. --Dillon Herald. A Near Call The folks out in Walnut Grove school district had an alarmingly ( lose call last Wednesday night, when gathered in the schoylhouso to wit- I ness the closing exercises. As in the j feaiful tragedy near Camden an oil lamp got out of place and instantly oil-fed flumes leaped high toward the ceiling. Also instantly a stampede began, but fortunately some man present had the wit to smother the lamp at once under his coat, thereby j checking the fire, while others were cool enough to see that the fire was not going to get away from control and managed JLu, ai rest tin- wild stampede for exits. This story ought to.be circulated throughout the stab* with the warning it gives. A crowded school auditorium lit by oil lamps is dangerous. There is no disputing this after two dnuotHtra;i.onrv such as we have had. V\ lu r.o better lighting ,js to _ be had. then specific precautions' relatives to oil lamps and the tiling lb be done in case of trouble should be definite'y 'charged upon some trustworthy committee, set to keep alert watch as the program goes forward. I'psct an oil lamp or nave trouble with one so as lo s'avt flames in a crowded ha!! an 1 you may set it down that a dangctous stampede will be started : u thirty seconds. Walnut Grove was ixt homely fortunate to escape an agonizing ?.c:ne.- Spartanhutg Herald. People Have H'ffcritit. .Ta-U s I'm e a:e ?\-w orn?v,'.:r.:tre? that :tr. withe'", cvntiks ;>r p!/ f .ont some i * r, r?k;e?v of the trouble nly 'It : '.'he I as having a screw loos" in '!< h.-.i: i the fat", t.neri fore, that ?>nly :.b u: .-:\ ?> c':lht in t i l ei b , >am <i to h-i specially eo?uvi.ud ..b >ut .nv'.tieg ('last see Harrow there t > .-.peak and hobnobbing \v:?h hint he iam> may speak wci. for the M.-untabs City. There's no account ir-g fov . - tastes; and there's hardly a community in the land that- would r?-n turn out en masse if it were announced that Jack Pempsey was gbing t pass through v.tt a certain .U'inn and w-?uUi' eondesct nd t> show himself on the i i, av platform ? Chester lb porter. Fruit of Parole Ti.o rea n: killing by a par <lcd a".- . lomobiif* thief of ai; officer of the :aw who nan gone b. arrest him oh tV eh.argi '. further cranio, his In eg kill, .i hna-..!', ar.t killing on" the Scrub- > be r\ ?' i-i fsflU tV?- fi >:e p;?: o. o? pa rd n now sn re.war. : "He v a sited. p*. -i ? ." ei. > : d :n evplanat. >;; i ! . i11 ' ,, t ,! ^ < > ic? t l n ->e ciu mit - f : i-' ::ms . sues a ntc ,< :s of no value. Tilt* nv.-t d&ng r ?. eisii . ai,> kr...\vr. frequent y to' be movies pri> meJ>. The professional er urinal almost always is. It is part of h .- ; las ,f up? rations. Kill ana s'ps . ?r-rd ' prison, be a midol pri.s.ne ;. M \ -.u some little sob stuff Stag a <h c'.ine in health. Get paroled to dii at home, or some such purp"-t. Sua i t out on the old game again.- N. w bcriy Observer. Ira Blackwood, Esq., of Spartanburg. has definitely announced himself as a candidate for the governorship of South Carolina in the coming p nary election. I THIS WEEK By Arthur Brisbane wmmmmmmmmmmtmmmmmrnm i 4 u 1 Mr. lirisbane's editorials are published as expressions of opinions of the world's highest-salaried editor and The Chronicle does not necessarily endorse all of his views and conclusions. Tim po-d offitt- uiifKJurwch thai fifty eitjca in the United States increased their postal receipts in April more than 15 per cent over the same month a year ago. Unfortunately, figures concerning use of air mail would be discouraging. It is necessary to warn ambitious Cities anxious for air mail service that to get it they must support it. If not they will lose it. The government cannot run an expensive air mail service merely because cities desire it. I'ostmasterGeneral New arid President Coolidgo are anxious to encourage profitable commercial flying through development of the air mail. Hut cities and citizens must do their pari. One air route recently established in. the South, for instance, serving four important cities, started off magnificently, with receipts in the filst brief period exceeding $2,000, ample to cover expenses. On the tenth day the receipts had dropped to $70, to meet an expense of $400. The financial solution will be found eventually in carrying passengers as will as mail, an arrangement to which the .administration would gladly consent; The first problem would be to find the passengers. Americans largely support flying routes in Kurope, occupying more than half the | seat in flying machines between Lonj don and Paris in the season. Bui i they seem less inclined to patronize I flying in their own land. i Kxuemel.x important is the test for jcancer ' recently presented at the [ French Academy of Medicine. If its discoverers do not exaggerate, this j U .st, providing a reliable reaction in I cancer cases, will enable doctors to ,-rtVc thousands annually that now die by diagnosing caivrer at the very : start. A This year 10(1,OOP more automobiles are registered in California than in 11'25. I hat shows prosperity and, i what is more- Important, happiness. S one time ago. when all the world used fewer automobile*?thtnTi there we now in California alone. men talked about automobile "saturation." There never will he saturation until every lamily lias at least one automobim, as it should ha\r, and then it will be necessary every few years to. 'm .ntrlacturv twenty-five, or thirtv V * " i new em s to repis.ee the old. Cot y>ur , ir : u. 'k. . .-ate: vnee '<l be Methodist !-:;i C'.uuli South invites sill c- - i.i i'-. : ou:'.- That applies . i-peiia!;\ liergymen who do o. . .:;!ty of ,)csu> t in :st and the vg u birth." ' MC.ib Tho.c is plenty " outside of any church for any beliet in :he>t tiiiy?. Churches, loo i sub-, should have the right to eont?el their own membership and rules, while carefully abstaining from 'any attempt to control other people and other things. In British coal mines where men arc nothing, the aristocratic owner never sees the inside of a mine or the face oi a miner. Only a few years since, Unglishw open, working in shafts too low ; v? ;. : r mules or donkeys, dragged, nut the .if. e oji! carts, slowly, pain. l.me.-. A it> chain aio.und the <?. . .s- n.; an i r the breast, wa. : ! ft the ear im-hind them. ' l--".g ag. a regular bus.Unglr.r.l v : - starving little 0 that they at.gh: rem a m small 1 ' f ir > wa 'cf' >w chimneys i ear. tht in. Tm > v. ? :c beaten f i aught secretly eslvrit, They ritri Noting, but tin m.if.t is provide.! ylt p.t y morc. 1 h:s earth wih die as men and animals die. gradually going to pieces, the fragment.- helping to build other planets,M*s animals d;e and feed other animals, as tries live on mould made of dead trees. That day, fortunately, is millions of years away, according to scientists. ( Only twelve thousand years from the Stone Age, the human race has scores of millions of years ahead, years of ceaselessly increasing knowledge. And H?'? An Atbf^t A well-dressed stranger, Intelligent, apparently highly educated, atood in the office doorway, and, ere he apoke, a cursory glance at the face of the man gave riae to the thought that there was lacking in hia nature?in hia very life-some aoftening, cornforting influence which almost all other men feel. The atranger apoke, telling hia name and saying he waa an nthciat. His mental attitude, aa he outlined it in well-rounded aenti noes, aroused a feeling of sympathy. He talked as perhaps would a man whose heart is torn by an unutterable. l0nging, and, finding no surcease, he turns to an effort at destroying what others hold most sacred. The man, II. rS. England, of Detjoit, explained that he hud come here to engage in a debute and waa ready to depart the* city, feeling his work ut an end. His conversation gave the impression thut he was as a man . who is stepping doubtfully into the dark, his hands groping ut frail nothings, his mind beset by torturing imaginings, his eyes staring into that darkness which he admitted meant for him an eternity of oblivion. He spoke of the courtesy which had been shown the stranger within the gate, of the kindness of the people here and of "Jesus and the other superstitions" and the only mental reaction of his . hearer jvas the thought, how sad a world would .this be if God and Jesus should go away, and, brought thus into so impressive a contrast, the Christian faith became a still sweeter blessing.?^-Charlotte News. Ham "Wizard" Pays Fine. As a result of the decision in the Res-order's Cotwd. last Friday, John Elbridge Ferry, the ham- wizard of high finance paid over into the coffers of the city a hundred dollars, and also all of his stock of "fresh country cured hams" which he had not yet disposed of to the trusting housewives of the city. Twenty odd of the housewives appeared before the Recorder and made claims of shortage, and were reimbursed the amounts which they had lost in the deal, and Perry and his wife were allowed to take their car and seek other more congenial climes. It was not known how many more of the good ladies.of! the city had suffered from this slick salesman, but the balance preferred j to lose than to "tell their troubles to a policeman". Some of tfie sterner sex who had been involved in the trouble thought the ladies should not be.too hard on their teacher, as the lesson was a good, wholesome one and will not.be easily forgotten. Some of! I the grocers offered for their week-end sales hams guaranteed to be the Ar-j J mour brand, same, as the 'ones sold' earlier in the week, at a cut price of! i ?4 cents.?Sumter Herald. I Davidson-Cook Miss Ruth Belle Davidson, daugh-1 j tor of Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Davidson, I j)>l Clinton, and Henry B. Cook, of j Kershaw, were married in Columbia ! last Friday, May 28, by Rev. W. A. j Sheppard. of that city. After a t short honeymoon trip to Charleston, I they arrived in Kershaw Monday I ! evening to make this their home. Mrs. Cook is not a stranger,, in Ker-1 ;s:ia\\. She was at one time an effi-j ty. tvacher irr the schools of Kcr haw made many friends while U!e. who wili he pleased that she is v.> hv.;*o;iH a permanent resident of the invent Mr. ("<>uk T? a prominent ; young- business man,?being engaged in business with his father, J. C. 'took. He is also proprietor of the Kershaw 1 neptre, and has many j friends both in KershavV and the sur rounding country.?Kershaw Era. ? i The third trial of Edmund Bigham, j on the charge of having murdered his | brother, Simicjr Higham. in 11)21, will | begin at Conway this week, probrrbtv on Friday, with Special Judge Samuel ! T. I.anhnm, presiding. ! ? CITATION J State of South Carolina, ^ County (if Kershaw B\ \Y. E. McDowell, Esq.. Probate I udgev i \\ htreas, Eethia Rodgers made suit t to me to grant her Letters of Admin-: jistration of JLhit Estate ul and eiiecU. ' of ci. \\ . Haidin. Tiuse are. therefore, to c:to and | .admonish all and singular the kin-1 ;die<l and creditors of the said (i. W. Hardin, deceased, that they he and , appear before me. in the Court of Probate, to he held at Camden. South ( arolina on Wednesday. June 2d. next | after publication thereof, at 11 o'clock n the fort noon, to show cause, if anv they have, why the said Administra- j t:en shouai not beogttinted. ti.vcn under my hand, this Mb day : "t June. \;,n<> Domini 11)26 w. \ McDowell", ; u-lge i?f Prooate for Kershaw County | i Published on the 11th and 18th day's I of June, 1P26. in the Camden Chronj Kle, and posted at the Court House j door for the time prescribed by law.' ! 666 is a prescription for i Malaria, t hills and Fever, Dengue or Bilious Fever. , kills the germs. OFFICER KXONKRATKD In Virginia of Killing South Carolina Man at Petersburg Petersburg, Va., June 4.?Ralph Kindel of Columbia, S. C? who was ah<jt fatally by patrolman R. B. Tucker of the Petersburg police force in a gun duel early yeaterday, haa been identified as au escaped convict Wanted in Lynchburg, Richmond and several other places, police declared tonight. I v A coroner's jury tonight practically : exonerated the officer of all blamo i when the dead man's record was j placed before it. Kindel, a special,officer of the Seaboard Air Line railroad testified, was sentenced to serve sixteen months on the North Carolina'roads but hj^d escaped, he declared, about four months of the sentence. The officer also testified that when he arrested Kindel on a freight train the man had attempted gun play, Howard Jarrett, of Charlotte, N. C., who was arrested when Kindal was shot yesterday and who has been held as a material witness, proba/bly will be released tomorrow, it was indicated tohight. Jarratt claims h<? knows nothing about Kindel, other than that he met him several days ago in Charlotte. Fisld Marshal Kageakira Kawamura, v<i, hero of the Russo-Japanese war, is reported as dying at Tokyo. Wants-For Sale On account of our inability to collect for advertisements appearing in this column all Want Ads in the future must be accompanied by-cash. The rates of the ads are 25c each insertion of 26 words or less. Each, additional line 5c. Please do not ask j us to credit classified ads unless you ' run an account with this company. FOB SALE?One solid rosewood I antique piano one hundred fifty years old; also one piano stool hand carved, over two hundred years old. j Can furnish pictures. Mrs. John E.! Sudler, Anderson, S. C. ll-pd VISfr TlfE SINGER STORE?Bring your hemstitching and picoting j here. Sewing machines sold and ' repaired; electric fans, for sale.' R, A. Purser, proprietor, 943 Main Street, Camden, S. C. 11-13-pd HELP WANTED?Man,, age twenty- j five to thirty-five^ with store experience, looking for opportunity, willing to work and steady^ : Splendid permanent opportunity f6r man that can and will deliver. Give age, experience, how long present position, bank, doctor, drug, grocer and church reference, and when can go to work. No sport or drinker neevl j apply. Kilgore Seed Co., Plant City, Fla. 11-12-sb SITUATION W A N T E B?Young married man wauts job driving truck. Call for Fred Wilson, Wilson Filling Station, Corner DeKalb and Mill streets, Camden, S. C. U-13-pd MY PIANO Suutly sounds good Q since having it tuned, regulated and voiced by Lewis L. Moore. ll-13-sb LOST?About two months ago one red spotted milch cow strayed front the pasture of Dr. 8. F. Brasington. Finder please notify, Zeke Jones, Rte. 8, Camden, B.C. 11-pd ? MEMORIAL SALESMAN WANTED Part time. Work easy and pleasant. Remunerative. One of the largest and boat concerns ip the south. Only high-class representatives desired. Charlotte Marble & Granite Works.. Box 1046, Char, loiic, N. ('. mil i, FOR SALE?Baby carriage, brown reed, brown corduroy lining, excellent condition, $16.00; cost $35., very little used. Also Kiddy-Kopp, fair condition, $5. Address Mrs. Henry Boykin, Boykin, S. C. 10-pd FOR RENT?Two-story house bn Broad Street, opposite the Court House. Apply to Ls A. Wittkowsky, Camden, S. C. 9-tf FOR SALE?A few hundred bushels of corn in ear at Camden, $1.00 per (bushel. Apply to James H, Burns, ; Camden, S. C. 10sb FOR SALE?One "Majestic" double oven range, center fire, double water backs, insures plenty of hot water. Suitable for cafe, boarding house or hotel. In excellent condition. Apply to A. A. Shanks, Camden, S. C. PEACHES?Good fresh Georgia peaches, $2.50 per bushel crate. Much lower prices in 5 bushel lota. Now shipping Elbertas end Carmens. Buy a crate for your summer ice cream. Write for quantity prices to Grimes Brokerage Company, Room 429, Kimball House, Atlanta, Georgia. ,8-28-sb FOR RENT?Completely furnished bungalow in desirable location. Reasonable. Callc.at the Chronicle Office. FOR SALE-*-Good sound corn, $1.00 per bushel at the barn. W. R. Outlaw, Loekhart Farms, R.f.d. No. S, Camden, S. C. 7-tf ROOMS FOR RENT?Four unfurn, ished rooms, second floor, very reasonable, Apply 1203 Lyttleton Street. 7-tf FOR SALE?Pure Improved Big Boil Blight-proof Dixie Triumph cotton seed first year from pedigreed breeder. Planted, handled and ginned to preserve its purity, 30 pounds to bushel recleaned $1.00 per bushel F. O. B., .check with order. Reference, City National Bank, Sumter, S. C. E. S. Booth, Sumter, S. C. 1-tf-sb WANTED?No. 1 pine logs. Highest cash prices paid; year round demand. Sumter Planing Mills and Lumber Co., Attention E. S. Booth, Sumter, S. C. 1-tf-sb EXCURSI ON Richmond. Norfolk, Virginia Beach, Portsmouth, Va. SATURDAY, JUNE 12 Round Trip p A liiir\I71VT (Proportional Fare From W^ML/?JN Other Points) Richmond . $ 9.50 Norfolk $ 9.50 Virginia Beach . . ... $10.00 Portsmouth . . . . $ 9.50 Return limit June 16 Tickets and information from any A. C. L. Agent or T. V. WALSH, General Agent, CAMDEN, SJ. C. Atlantic Coast Line READ THE TRUTH ABOUT KILLING INSECT PESTS In the first place? don't pay a Biq Price MM for an insecticide XX7HY pay a big price for an insecticide v or buy expensive spraying apparatus when so little as 25c buys a generous size of Bee Brand Insect Powder?sufficient to rid your home of insects, or to prevent insects invading it for a longtime to come. Bee Brand Infeect Powder is not only a most effective insecticide, but It is also the least expensive. Bee Brand Won't Explode You can use Bee Brand Insect Powder anywhere, near an open fire or flame of any sort, without danger. It ? will not explode nor is it easily JLinflammable. An insecticide that is explosive, or highly in- &SsT\ flammable is a menace ? a Mg\\ A firo risk. /KJLv /' What of the Plants? Dare you apply your present insecticide to plants? If you wish to remove insects from plants or flowers, or if you wish to use Bee Brand in a room where plants and flowers are, have no fear. It will not harm them. Bee Brand is non-poisonous* Dust it or sprinkle it on your pets and domestic animals. It will not .g harm them. Eat it if you wish ?it will not hurt you. How Much Apparatus S/T None is necessary. If you prefer to use the little puffer gun* the cost ia only 10c. "* Blow Bee Brand Insect Powder from a piece of paper. It floats in the air and its fine pas* tides kill Flies. Mosquitoes,..anil..Moths. Dust It in cracks and crevices, or abopt the furniture.it kills Roaches, Water Bugs, Plee% Lice and Bedbugs. Settle It Once and for All /You know what kind of soap.-^ serves you bast. Modern san* itation has made insect powder - as necessary as soap. II you have nevar used Bee Brand you have not yet found the 7 most effective and least erptmit by n&mo and insist ^ Hfe. Th? on getting it* In red, sifting-top cans at your ^ grocer's or druggist's. Hoaaa- 4 bold sitM 10c and 25c. Othar j sii?s 50c and $1.00. M If your daaler cannot supply you, sand us # 25c for larga household air a. Give * dealer's name and ask for our free booklet, "It Kills Them", a guide for killing House and Qardao Insects. McConxuck & Co., Bsltiinora, MJ,