The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, July 30, 1926, Image 2

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I MiininigM P I Suffered weak, nervous 1 -r WAS ta ? rery w.ta.i, I rwMlowa condition, fnnlv 1 la need of a tonic and MA1 mtf mam m*. J R. Wtmux. of 1 Anna, Teas, iwaiowak I I 10 *?^axM* ^ [ "I euffered with my buck 00 I JW*ck I WM very XMTKMUL 1 < 1 oouldn't net good at night. I oouldn't eat An/thing-?1 juat J wwn't hungry. "I had read to *""di of ifl Cardui, I thought beat to vae LI it. 1 took aaven or eight botII *** > nd by the time I had 1 taken them I wee stronger 1 > than I had been in aaveral < , M year*. I can highly recorn I mend Cardui." I Ttaouaanda of other women ' ? 1 harra found that tha tonfa ef- < fecta of tha purely vegetable , ingredianta of Cardui wave fuai what they needed to help restore their appetite#, to help < bring them eadly and nate- , r rally back to normal health and strength. IU action hae > been found to be of great I 1 benefit in many common fo> wi* aflmentj, Buy it at your druggiefe. CARDUI Far Female TraaUaa II 1? "< 1 i i ??? Flood of Light For Chimney Rock Chimney Rook, July 21.?When a battery of flood lights are turned on each night to bathe masaive Chimney Rock in the rays of six 1,000-watt electric lamps, it is believed that this will be the first monolith of its size in the country to have such nocturnal splendor added to its charms. These lights, now in process of erection, will be turned on within a very few days, according to officials of Chimney Rock Mountains, Inc., directing this work. Installation of a heavy voltage power cable connecting with I*ake Lure dam circuit has been made to make this novelty possible. > A bale of cotton, the first of the Florida crop for 1920, was sold in Savannah, Ga., Saturday. It weighed 300 pounds and brought 99 1-2 cents a pound. T. B. BRUCE Veterinarian Day Phone 30?Night Phone 114 CAMDEN, S. C J. P. PICKETT, M.B. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON 949 Bread St. Camden, S. C. Physiotherapeutic Treatment with , t Alpine Sunlight and Medical and Sdngicat Didthermy. J. K. GOODALE PAINTING, PAPERHANGING 1 AND KAI.SOMIN-ING | ALL WORK GUARANTEED Estimates Furnished Free 409 Rutledge St. Phone 433-J < CAMDEN, S. C. 1 > 1 Ambulance Service Day or Night 2 > Motor Equipment of the Best 1 < C. W. EVANS MORTICIAN Telephones 535 DeKalb St. 91 and 283 Camden, S. C. - COLUMBIA LUMBER & I MANUFACTURING CO. I MILL WORK SASH, DOORS, BLINDS ? AND LUMBER PLAIN StHUCER STS. Ph.n. 71 1 COLUMBIA, S. C. I NO-MO-KORN FOR C0RNS AND CALLOUSES * ? ?? Hide in Camdea and Per Sale By .FiKelb Pharaacy-Phnki M ' ' >* * i ? i1 TAB NBWS AT KEMHAW. IUm lilirtil Ftmi Tk# Bra Oar NsighWr Tttn. We were shown s picture last week of a Ash cawght by J. EL Jones recently at P*ata Cords, Pis., where heI is sn assistant in the poet ofAee. Thel Ash weighed one hundred sad thirty*! six pounds and Mr. Jones wsf one I hour and forty-six minutes in lending! him. This haul put* President CaVsl little eatch so for in the shade that he | ought to go south if he wants to retch a lure-enough Ash. We are reunited to state that Rev. J E..B. Jenkins, whom all the people off this section know so intimately and wejl, will bein a meeting at Sand Hill I church the second Sunday in August,! which will be the eighth day of Au-1 gust. Rev. Mr. Jenkins has only re-J turned from his trip abroad, and no J doubt his many friends throuhout thtel section will enjoy the opportunity of 1 meeting with him and hearing him preach again,.-,, j While walking about in her yard on last Wednesday Mrs. Dan McDonald! had the miafortune to atrikc her left! foot against a piece of scantling in | the yard, which had a nsil in it, and I the nail penetrated the top of the! foot to a considerable depth, causing a very painful injury which has caus-l ed her to keep closely confined to her I home since. It will be remembered that some time ago Mrs. McDonald J had her left limb broken and was kept laid up with it for a long time. | _CL-T. Horton^aged &9 years, died] at his home at McBee Sunday after-] noon about two o'clock and was buried in the cemetery at McBee Monday ] morning at 10. The funeral services] were conducted by Rev. Mr. Williams, J pastor of the McBee -^Baptist church, I and Rev. J. M. Rogers, pastor of the Methodist church. I Mr. Horton, who resided for several J years in Kershaw in the building for- ] m^rly occupied by W. Z. Hilton, which 1 wak' destroyed by fire about three I years ago, was stricken with apoplexy Thursday, July .8, and his condition] continued to grow steadily worse until | the end came. He is survived by his wife and five children, Ernest, Rich-] ard I,ee, Mrs. Nelle Gunter, Mrs.] Joyce Raley and Miss Elaine Horton. I Explanation. ' It was a negro ball game in Kansas I City. The umpire was a slightly built, small voiced lad. Along toward the seventh inning, with things looking bad for the,home team, the local Babe Ruth came to bat. He was a six-foot three truck driver and beside the umpire, looked IFke Goliath. Over came the first ball, rather wide, and the , umpire called, "One strike.'.' The giant gave the dictator a look, but said nothing. Another wind up, < and here came the second throw. The , batter started but stopped. Mr. Umps called out: "Two?" when the batter < turned, eyed hinv, saying: ' i "Two what, nigger?" Umps gave him the up and down I snd finished his call: "Two high." < When lightning struck Saint Matthews Lutheran church near Granite Falls, N. O., Sunday afternoon, David ITaHman. farmer, was killed, and the pastor of the church, Rev. Paul Sigman, was slightly injured along with jther members of the church, The lightning entered the church on a tvire attached to the bell rope. Rev. Asheley Chappell, recently exonerated of immorality charges in a hurch court trial, preached to a rowded house at Asheville, C., on Sunday, his theme being "The Old [tugged Cross." Kddie Huffman, light-heavyweight, o.st the decision in a t$n-round bout tt Los Alleles, Cal., Saturday afternoon to Tiger Flowers, Georgia negro;, 'hampion, after knocking Tiger down for a nine count. fOltO (Shoes, Have Them Rebuilt at the Red Boot Shop Abram M. Jonea, Prop. Next to Express Office I CAMDEN, S. C. GENERAL NEWS NOTES Charles Wise, It, Is under arrest at Monticcllo, N. Y? on a cfcarge of murdering Nina Vttona, formerly of Fort Lauderdale. Fla. _ William M. Bitter, millionaire lumberman of Washington, D. C., and Columbus, O., was married Tuesday to Miss Anita Owen Bell of Petersburg, Vs., at Bklmoagi Ya. Fire destroyed a /Cotton compress and 8,000 bales of Cotton at Conway, Ark., Tuesday. The loss is estimated at 8850,000. One officer was killed and *ix enlisted men were injured by an explosion of TNT at Fort Oevens, Mass., Wednesday morning. The legislature of New Jersey has , passed laws providing for constitutional amendments to hold biennial sessions of the legislature and extending terms of the governor and members of the general assembly from three to four years. In the first twenty days of the operation of the bridge across the Delaware river at Philadelphia the tolls totaled $169,000 or nearly double the amount estimated. An average of 17,000 cars crossed each day. The grand jury of Jefferson county, Ohio, has handed down indictments against twenty-one persons holding tbfem responsible for the recent crash of the Union Savings bank of Yerkville, Ohio. The indictments include director and the attorney for the the vice-president, the cashier, s bank. An itemized list of the expenditures of the government, issued by the treasury department for the fis- < cal year ending June 30, shows that < the cost of government increased $55,- ' 344,427 over the previous year, the total expenditures for last year being $3,584,987,873. Some of the Georgia banks which closed last week following the crash of the Bankers Trust company of At- , lanta, are being reopened #for busi- < ness. * Two children were killed on the beach at Venice, Cal., Wednesday, by a falling airplane. Ten persons were killed and a score < injured by the overturning of a bus ' near Sparkill, N. Y., yesterday. j Four persons were killed and a j number injured yesterday afternoon I when a bolt of lightning exploded a < charge of dynamite, long forgotten, 1 in a rock quarry at Powhattan, Va. Two convicts were killed by guards of the Kansas state penitentiary Sat- urday night when they tried to make their escape after stabbing a veteran ! prison official. ... A Berlin dispatch says that four persons were killed Sunday whert lightning struck an airplane flying over the North sea. A fifth passen* ger was seriously injured. Five persons were killed and anoth- er probably fatally injured when their automobile went over a 20-foot embankment at Cleveland, Ohio, early Sunday. The wrecked automobile was discovered on the track of the Baltimore and Ohio railway by a train :rew who had to stop and remove the wreckage before the train could clear the track. The Peruvian Congress has passed a law making it mandatory that shower baths be installed in all public school buildings in Peru. Antioch To Hold Rally Day There will be a rally day at Antioch church Sunday, August 1, services be-; ginning at 10 o'clock. A splendid program has been arranged for the day and there will be several good speakers and special music. Every-' body is invited to attend and spread dinner together. TO THE PUBLIC You a re Hereby notified that the Bethupe Drug Company, of Bethune. S. C., a -partnership consisting ot E. Z. Truesdell and L. 0 Johnson, both of the said Town of Bethune, has this day been dissolved by the withdrawal therefrom of the undersigned E. Z. Truesdell. > E. Z. TRUESDELL. July 28th, 1926 CITATION State of South Carolina, County of Kershaw. By W. L. McDowell, Esquire, Probate Judge. ; Whereas, Hattie Gambles made suit 1 to me to grant her Letters of Administration of the Estate Of and effects of George Baker. These are, therefore, to cite and admonish all and singular the kindred r and creditors of the said Georgo Baker, deceased, that they be and appear before me, in the Court of Probate, to be held at Camden, South , Carolina on Thursday, August 12th, next after publication thereof, at 11 o'clock in the forenoon, to show cause, if any they have, why the said Administration should not be granted.? Given under my hand, this 29th day of July, Anno Domini 1926. w. l. Mcdowell, Judge of Probate for Kershaw County Published on the 30th day of July and the 6th day of August, 1926. in The Camden Chronicle, and posted at the Court House door lot the ties# prescribed by law. ? - - * Pimiml hnMf DaO. 1 OlarabU, Jul, Witf?rd, 64-year*-old, Lexington firm?r and civic leader and former member of the General Amenably, died in the Baptist hospital here this morning following an operation for appendicitis performed yesterday. Mr. Wingard, who served in the legislators for the term of 1917-1918 from Lexington and who did hot offer for re-election, waa known as a consistent prise winner at sfata and county fairs whenever he exhibited farm products. He was noted for the great variety of commodities raised on his farm. *" ~ PINAL DISCHARGE Notice is hereby given that' one month from this date, pn Monday, August 2, 1926, 1 will make to the Probate Court of Kershaw County my final return as Administrator of the estate of Edward Brookd, deceased, and on the same date I will apply to the said Court for a final discharge as said Administrator. THOS. J. WILLIAMS. Camden, S, C., July 2, 1926. CITATION. The State of South Carolina, County ,Sff Kershaw. By W. L. McDowell, Esq., Probate Judge. Whereas, C, C. Whitaker made suit to me to grant him Letters of Administration of the Estate of and effects of Andrew G Whitaker. These are therefore, to cite and admonish all and singular the kindred and creditors oty the said Andrew G. Whitaker, deceased, that they be and appear before me, in the Court of Probate, to be held at Camden, South Carolina, on Tuesday, August 3rd, next, after publication thereof, at 11 o'clock in the forenoon, to show cause, if any they have, why the said Administration should not be granted. Given under my hand, this 20th day of July, Anno Domini 1926. w. l. Mcdowell, Judge of Probate for Kershaw County Published on the 23rd and 36th iays of July 1926, in the Camden Chronicle, and posted at the Court House door for the time prescribed by law. Notice of Lost Certificate Notice is hereby given that Certificate No. 1, representing Twenty Shares of the Fidelity Building and Loan Association of Camden, S. C., issued to T. J. Arrants, has. been lost and that after due publication of this notice I will apply to said Association for a duplicate of the above mentioned certificate. a. w. humphries, Administrator. Estate of T. J. Arrants. Camden, S. C., June 26, 1926. ? 13-16-sb H ' 'g FINAL DISCHARGE. Notice is hereby given that one month from this date, on Monday, August 9th, 1926, I will make to the Probate Court of Kershaw County ray final return as Administratrix of the estate of G. W. Broom, deceased, and on the same date I will apply to the said court for a final discharge as saiid Administratrix. MAGGIE DEAS. Camden, S. C., July 7, 1926. wmmmammm?mm FINAL DISCHARGE Notice is hereby given that one month from thia date, on Tuesday, August 3, 1926, I will file with the Probate Court of Kershaw County my final accounting as Guardian of the estate of Martha Workman, minor, and on the same date I will apply to the said Court for a final discharge from my trust as said-Guardian. D. A. BOYKIN. " Camden, S. C., June.30, 1929. WW You Can ShveOur Pride p, In This Big Task TUB big Job which the telephone organisation in South Carol tna Is performing Is of mors than casual interna* to row. This it a ymr of cO*. future. During the five-year period, including ltBO, oar plans require an expenditure of 14,^87,000 in South Oarbjina for additions and renaoemeftt*. Practically all of this is new money, which most be secured Mm investors. Hie interest of the telephone subscriber and of Uu telephone stockholder, in this unoeriaklnir, is praoticatty the same. If we servo the owners of we prOpeefe, wisely and efficiently, we shall render the largest benefit to the public. We must give the best and broadest service possible. We must have rates low enough to enable evmy - peTson who ought to have a telephone to have one, b(ft sufficient to pay the cost of producing the service Afid earn enough to attract new capital. This is what your telephone organization to trying to do. MORGAN a SPEIR, Carolina* Manager " W"Btu. System- a7 SOUTHERN BELL TELEPHONE /CdgW AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY ^ ; : ; ' 1?' t ~r~ r"-. : - ' . - Good Through rp| | cy ^lhrough-r Details tell impressive story of quality standards strictly v ^ maintained r~ Unprecedented sales prove how well the ^ public knows that Dodge Brothers Motor . Car is sturdier and more dependable than / ever before. ' , 9 Delivers more miles at lower cost-per-mile. Stands up under harder going. Calls for fewer ^ repairs. Provides greater safety. Excels in every quality that has earned its good name. \ v In fact, you have only to check any chassis . part against its own past best?engine,, axles, 7 gears, bearings, frame, springs, shafts, electrical equipment?to prove how strictly and consistently Dodge Brothers have preserved and improved the basic goodness of their product -- **jk DeLOACHE MOTOR COMPANY CAMDEN, SOUTH CAROLINA 0066 BRQTM&Ra .. MOTORCARS . "" " :