The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, August 06, 1926, Image 6
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Officers Nab Bootleggers.
Deputy Sheriff H. A. .Montgomery
and other local officer* captured a
Buick aedan and twelve gallons of
whiskey near Antiocb at an early hour
Saturday morning. Three white men,
Oscar MoNaughton, of Kershaw county,
atid two others who place of
residence was not given, but whose
names are said to be.05'W. Scott and
Carson Langley, werfe 'taken prisoners,
and lodged iu the Lancaster jail
where thejr are still being held. The
car and the liquor is now in the posession
of ,the sheriff's office. On MoNaughton
was found a . 45 caliber
magazine pistol loaded with steel
bullets, it was said.?Lancaster News.
The opal is now one of the most
popular gems, the old superstition
surrounding it having largely disappeared.
T: B. BRUCE
Veterinarian
Day Phone 30?Night Phone 114
CAMDEN, S. C.
J. P. PICKETT. M.E>.
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
949 Bread St. Camden, S. C.
Physiotherapeutic Treatment with
Alpine Sunlight and Medical
and Sunglcal Dldthermy.
J. K. GOODALE
PAINTING, PAPERHANGING
AND KALSOMINING
ALL WORK GUARANTEED
Estimates Furnished Free
409 Rutledge St. Phone 433-J
CAMDEN, S. C.
r >
Ambulance Service Day or Night
Motor Equipment of the Best
C. W.EVANS
MORTICIAN
Telephones 535 DeKalb St.
91 and 283 CamHen, S. C.
? I
[COLUMBIA LUMBER & ,
MANUFACTURING CO.
MILL WORK
SASH, DOORS, BLINDS
AND LUMBER
PLAIN A HUCF.R STS. Ph.o. 71
COLUMBIA. S.C.
NO-MO-KORN
FOR C4RNS AND CALLOUSES
> y i. . . .?
'Made la Camden and For Sale By
DeK. Pharmacy?Phone 98
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Bagalai Cwt<ty?t4Mt
Bathuna, 8, C., August i?NiiMi
Carrie Yarbrough and Stella Bet bone
who joined a University of California
Tours Company in June, have completed
their course of study in the
summer school of the University at
Berkeley. The party started on their
return trip Saturday, stopping at
Yellowstone Park, S?lt Lake City,
Denver and Chicago and expect to
arrive in Atlanta August 12.
Mrs. A. B. McLsurin end little
daughter, Mary Ellen, and Misses
Ruth Watte and tMary Arthur and
Mr. Percy .Mayes left Wednesday
morning by automobile for a visit of
three weeks to friends at Niagara
Falls. While away they will visit
many other places of interest.
Mrs. A. K. McLsurin and Misses
Helen Pope Ward and- Mary McLaurin
returned Monday from an extended
trip North.
Mr. and Mrs. C. L. McKinnon entertained
with a dinner Wednesday
evening the following guests: Mr, and
Mrs. J. S. Rosier of Opp, Alabama,
Mr. and Mrs. D. J. Clyburn and Mrs.
C. C. Oxrdner.
Mrs. J. D. Laffltte and Miss Dorothy
Psrrott are guests of relatives
and friends at Cope.
Miss Emma Bradley has returned
from a visit of several weeks to her
sister, Mrs. Annie Bradley in Cheraw.
Miss Willine Estridge is the guest
of her sister, Mrs. L. K. Yarbrough,
in Kershaw .
Mr. Mayo Davis complimented
members of his Stlnday school clam of
the Methodist church with a picnic
at Big Springs Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. G. B. McKinnon returned
to thejr home in Lancaster1
Monday after spending the week end
with relatives here.
Mrs. W. M. Stevens and children,
Harriet and Welter, and Mr. and MrsRice
of Lancaster were guests in the
home of Dr. E. Z. Truesdell Sunday.
Misses Margie Parrott and Maxcy
Best spent last week with their
grandmother, Mrs. Crave Best in
Hartsville.
Miss Kathleen Hyatt is the guest of
relatives in Bishopville.
Miss Sara Hammond is spending
some time with her uncle, Mr. Grove
Hammond, in Charlotte.
Mrs. H. C. Wall of Andrews is visiting
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. O.
Ward .
Dr. E. Z. Truesdell made a business
trip to Chester Saturday.
Miss Hetty Hough who is ir^ training
at the Columbia Hospital, is at
home on a three weeks' vacation.
Mr. Tom Clyburn returned to Saratosa,
Florida, Saturday, where he is
engaged in business, after a visit of
several weeks to his mother, Mrs.
Dana ClybUrn.
Mrs. Margaret Marion and little
daughter, Robbie Newton, and Messrs.
D. T. Yaibrough and Jim Rozier Bpent
Tuesday at the Confederate Home in
Columbia with their uncle, Mr. Eben
Yarbrough.
Miss Fay Bethune of Hartsville is
the guest of her aunt, Mrs. L. D.
Robertson.
Charles W. Bryan, former governor,
has announced as a candidate for
the Democratic nomination for governor
of Nebraska in the primaries to
be held August 10th. He is the only
Democratic candidate for the nomination.
/""Henry Ford of Detroit celebrated
his 63rd birthday anniversary last
Friday.
Mrs. Frances Stevens Hall, arrested
last week and placed in the Somerset
county, New Jersey jail, on "a
charge of murdering her husband and
his paramour, has been released on
bond of $15,000.
The known death list ^incident to
the recent hurricane in the Bahama
Islands, totals 126, with 200 still missing.
IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF
THE UNITED STATES?EASTERN
DISTRICT OF SOUTH
CAROLINA.
In Re J. G. Cunningham, Bankrupt.
In pursuance of an order of H. N.
Ed rriUCida..Referee, of det-ey-August 2,
T026, f -will Offer for sale to the highest
bidders, for cash, at the storehouse
recently conducted by J. (J.
Cunningham of the City of Camden,
County of Kershaw, and State of
South Carolina, the stock of goods,
fixtures, accounts, and other assets
of the above named bankrupt, at
eleven o'clock, a.m., Wednesday,
August 18, 1926. Said stock of goods
and fixtures will bo sold in such parcels
or lots as may seem to me best,
and thereafter said stock of goods,
fixtures, accounts and other assets
Will be offered for sale as a whole,
such bid or bids to be accepted from
which the largest amount will be
realized for the bankrupt estate. The
property of said bankrupt to be sold
free of liens. The appraised value
of the property to be aold amounting
to Twenty-seven Hundred Sixty-seven
and 80-100 Dollars ($2,767.30).
L. A. WITTKOWSKY,
^rupt* Cunningh^^^^
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CImuw CoU*t*> Au*. ? M,ny induiriM
Aii tkMihti nf Jimiltfunii
^ TTTw |fvw?w ^
are kpiag directed to the early hatched
ptUlet and ?mm of bringing her
into production to lay her share of
fall and winter egg*. Graded market#
will not pay an mqah for email
pullet egg* a# they will for a standard
product. A email pullet cannot lay a
large else egg.
Early batched pullets mutt be held
back by taking the meat scrap or
animal protein out of the math, and
allowing the body to obtain a large
growth. This will enable the pullet
to lay a large else egg and at the
same timfe lay over a longer period
of time. Leghorn pulleta should begin
laying at 5 or 5 1-2 months of
age and not earlier. Pulleta of
heavier breeds should not ley until
they are 6 1-2 or 7 montha old.
An ampla supply of green feed
should be furnished. Where miik is
available it ia very good to force
growth of undersized pulleta. The
big problem is developing a large
body so that th4 pullets can hold up
udder the heavy atrain of laying.
n rnniii i i __ii *
Senator Rogers Deed
Spartanburg, July gl*?"Senatqr
William Simpson Rogers, 41, who had
for 14 years represented this county
in the state legislature first as a
representative and fof 10 yeats as
senator, died at 2:40 ' o'elock this
afternoon at a local hospital.
His death followed an illness which
had' lasted for 4 number of weeks.
A bloOd transfusion, which was administered
to him Thursday, failed to
bring a rally. A
Train Robbers Get Big Haul,
Salisbury, Mass., July 29<-~Train
robbers obtained $65,000 in cash from
the baggage master of a Boston and
Maine train at the Salisbury Point
station today. The money had been
sent by the Federal Reserve Bank in
Boston to the Power River National
Bank of Amesfbury. . .
Egyptians believe the crocodile
brings luck, and one of the first lessons
taught children is to gaze intently
upon every crocodile that they
are fortunate enough to come acrosB.
ffTff TTiiimf Fir Trail 1
Greenwood, August It?Two local
moving picture tbsuters were closed'
by padlock early thU afternoon whan
the furniture and fixture* of botfc
bid in by an agent of the 8outh Caro- j
Una Tax Commission at a sheriff's
| pals. The aale waf for approximately
12,700 in amuaement taxes owed by
the theaters and alleged not to have
been paid.
Two aale# of the equipment, including
practically v everything in the
houses, were necessary due .to the inability
of the first purchasers to meet
their bide with cash or a certified
check. At the first sale, B. M.Hum
phrays of Gaffney, and Don N. Eaves,
of Union, the letter said to be the
owner of the two theaters, were the
successful bidders, for approximately
$2,300. Thej^dailed to put up caih
money and SflPnff White, who conducted
the sale, reopened the case
after waiting forty minutes on the
bidders to arrangfc for the cash, which
they did not do. On the second sale
W. C. Schenck, representing the tax
commission, bid in both theaters for
approximately $2,400. The two theaters
involved are the only moving
picture shows in the city.
Evangelist and Singer Killed
Morganton, Ky., Aug. 3.?The Rev.
Mr. Moss, an evangelist, and .Mrs.
Jerome Robinson, of Butler, county,
were shot and killed fast night in a
church near here while the opening
hymn of revival services was being
sung.
The preacher toppled from the pulpit
dead and Mrs. Robinson, wife of
a .farmer, who was sitting on the
front row pf the choir died an hour
later. Several persons < narrowly
missed being struck by the shots
which were fired through an open
window. . c
Clifford Wilson was arrested and
held for investigation after a 14year-old
>girl told officers she saw
him. fire the shots. Such excitement
reigned' that county authorities were
unable to tell how many shots were
fired. The first theory was that the
evangelist's stand against bootleggers
had caused the shooting.
Normil C, Moorae, 87, t a national
bank clerk of Philadelphia took $5,060
from the bank and wdnt to New York
to "see the bright lights." Ho ha#
been arrested and half the money recovered.
He will probably eee the
lighta in Atlanta, Oa neat.
More than one billion pencils a year
are manufactured in America.
. .. ? I. .1 *1 I .1 ! Hi ? 1 ' I ? '
Notice of Meeting of Subscribers of
Stock of "The Leader."
State of South Carolina,
County of KershaW.
Notice is hereby given that a meeting
pf the subscribers of stock of
"The Leader" will be held at the lj
storehouse, No. 1022, on the East
side of Broad street, Camden, Kershaw
County, South Carolina, at ten
o'clock on Tuesday, the 10th day of
August 1926. for the purpose of otr
ganizing said company, bjtjhe election
of officers and directors, and for the
further purpose of filing with the Secretary
of State of South Carolina,-* declaration
in accordance with requirements
of Chapter XLVir, Article
1, Civil Code at South Carolina, 1912,
and all amendments thereto.
HENRY EICHEL,
DAVID WOLFE,
L. L. WALLNAU
t .
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 my >
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.
Jean Young, 2-year-oId mist, fell 1
out of a third story window at St
Paul, Minn., Monday and wss unhurt J
after her 40 foot drop.
. x* r J
to THE PUBLIC "
Voo are her*y notified that the J
Bethune Drug Company, of Bethune.
i % wfeis rt"sau?
both of the said Town of Bethune
has this day been dissolved by the
withdrawal therefrom of the under,
signed E. Z. Twwsdeib
E, Z. TRUBSDEUi.
l July 28th, 1 92oL^ -r^rrztr-.c: ^ ^ T
fl " " "j'l ' J I 'J ' '
K . Citation
State of South Carolina,
County of Kershaw.
' i 11
By W. L. McDowell, Esquire, Probate
Judge.
Whereas, Hattie Gambles made suit I
to me to grant her Letters of Admin.
istration of the Estate of and effects
of George Baker.
These are, therefore, to cite and
admonish all and singular the kindred
and creditors of the said George
Baker, deceased," that they be and appear
before me> in the Cflrurt of Probate,
tp be held at Camden, South '
Carolina on Thursday, August 12th,
next after publication thereof, !*t 11
o'clock in the forenoon; to show cause,
if sny they have. why the said Administration
should not be granted.
Given under my hand, this 29th day
of July, Anno Domini 1926.
Judge of Probate for Ketshaw County
Published on the 80th day of July
and the 6th day of August, 1926. in
The Camden Chronicle, 'and posted st
the Court House door for the time
prescribed by law.
' ' 1-1
..Ill III. I - I 11 "11'tIW..
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