The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, July 01, 1927, Image 7
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H jay Buickwill be their next car I
Ifi general and impartial survey of automobile owners
recently conducted by a great organization, shows that
344,679 owners of other cars intend to change to Buick
next time they buy a car.
These owners have compared their cars with Buick ?in
performance, in economy, in comfort, luxury and dependability.
And they have decided that Buick offers greater value.
Examine a Buick at your earliest opportunity. Find out
why so many owners of other cars are changing to Buick
everyday. a-4815
PHEN BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARE BUILT,
BUICK WU.L BJJILD THEM
tUTTLE MOTOR COMPANY
TILE LITTLE, MANAGER. CAMDEN. S. C.
WBtir To Millions Killed
fcn'/e, Pa., June 24.?James
w* Walker of St. Louis, heir
?,000,000 estate was killed and
uin, G. L. Lambert, son of the
of the Lambert Pharmaceutical
iy, St. Louis, was injured in an
' crash near here today,
were graduated from Princeceisity
this week and were on
ay home when the accident
d.
ur airplane service between
| and' the Congo for passengds,
and mail is being consid
Negroes Killed in Crash
Sumter, June 24.?Robert Rose and
Colonel Davis, negroes, were instantly
killed at 7 o'clock Wednesday
night when the Ford in which they
were riding collided with the Darlington-Sumter
freight train at the
Calhoun street crossing of the Atlantic
Coast Line here. The? Ford,
j which was coming into town hit the
train just back of the tender and
was overturned, both negroes being
thrown under the wheels. The inquest
was postponed by Coroner Seal
until Friday evening, so that the crew
on the train may be present for examination.
P I N E A P r LE PIE IS '
REALLY EXCELLENT
!| pic-crust,, so light
I melts . in the mouth,
I with fruits and topped
meringue, is as good
I as for grown-ups. If
R are combined with
Hie pie affords not onI
taste that is so well
s, but also properties
I as a digestive. Tho
Homelin, contained j. in
Hids in the digestion of
B and delightful recipes
devised for pineapple
Iplain and in combine-1
Bother fruits. The foln
Hi pes have been tested)
His economical and simHe^as
they are pleasing .
Bo? AppU and Pin*'
H Heat one cup crushed
I pineapple and add to
Hof tart apples, spared,
I in eighths ana cooked
or one cup of
^ *PPloRaUee may be used
J*1- 11 ix three-fourths cup
.or Mirrhtly less if using the
aPplesauce, one-eighth tea-'
r sa't Rncj two tablespoons
the hot pineapple and
boiling point, stirring
ur"? an<* add one teaspoon
- Cool slightly, add one
^ .*** *nd two tablespoons
JrJ** four into pasttyLp
and arrange strips of
to* top. Put Into *
land after ten mlnatea
, r, ?V;. .^W- ,
ity minutes longer.
Banana Pineapple Pie: Mix
one-half "cup each hot "water
and syrup drained from crushed
Hawaiian pineapple and bring to
the boiling. point* Add one-half
cup sugar, stirring constantly and
remote from the Are. Add one
teaspoon butter, three-fourths cup
well-drained, crushed Hawaiian
pineapple, two beaten egg yolks^ and
two; medium-sized bananas (sliced
thin.) Pour into pastry-linsfd pie
pan. Bake until pastry ift well
browned. Remove from ov/n, cool
slightly and cover with a ineringue .
made from-two stiffly-beaten egg
whites and two tablespoons powdered
augar. Return to oven and
hrown meringue slightly.
Pineapple Cocoanut Mcringue j
Pie: Heat one and one-haly
i cups milk. Mix four tabfal
' spoons flour, one-eighth teaspoon
(salt, one-half cup augar, add tne
hct milk and coo* in double-bc^Ier
about twenty minutes or until
mixture is thick and flour thoroughly
cooked. 'Stir into two
Jb aUm egg yolks, return to double
boiler and cook until mixture
thickens. Cool, add one cup ,
well-drained, crushed Hawaiian
pineapple, one-half tup shredded;
cocoanut and^ one-half teaspoon
vanilla and pour into baked-pis
crost, Add two tablespoons j>owdered
S'lgnr to two stiffly-beaten
*fg whites end spread oh top.
Sprinkle with cocoanut arid brown
| Young Muii Dies ut Spring Hill
.Spring Hill, June 27.?One of the
saddest deaths that huts ever occurred
in the Kgypt section uf Iu*e county
waa that uf Ernest Auron White, the
IH-yeur-uld son of Mr. and Mrs. W. A.
White, who died Saturday morning'
uhout 6 o'clock ut his home.
The youth was taken sick ut a mill
pond, where he and a few companions
had gone for a swim. Me was taken
home immediately, whore medical aid
wus given, but after suffering for
about 18 I iouis the end came as a
great shock to the entire community, j
He is survived by his parents and
three- sin>11 platers.
Krntfst White wus a promising
young man. He was u member of
the young people's class of St. John's
Sunday school and also a member
of the Kpworth league. He was in
the tenth grade in Central high
school, a member of the baseball
team, and wus very popular in his
class, .
His funeral services, conducted by
hi* pastor, the Rev. W. L. Parker,
assisted by the Rev. Peter Stokes
of Sumter, presiding elder of the
Sumter district, were held Sunday
morning, 11 o'clock, in St. John's
Methodist church at Spring Hill.
' Interment was made in the church
cemetery in the presence of a lurge
crowd of sorrowing friends und relatives.
Many Are Millionaires
Washington, June 27.?More Americans
paid taxes on incomes of $1,000,000
and over for the calendar
year of 1025 than ever before in the
government's tax history, a treasury
analysis shows. The millionaires
total 207 compared with 75 in 1924
and 200 in 1010, the previous high
mark.
HOW A FARMING
COMMUNITY WAS
REBUILT AGAIN
Glass factories and coal mines had
kept the butcher, the baker, the
candlestick maker and the banker
busy the year round In Point Marion.
Pennsylvania. Hired men left the
farms followed by the farm owners to
get their share of the attractive
wanes.
Suddenly labor saving machinery
was brought in to the old hand meth
od window glass factories. The coal
business took a drop and hundreds
of people had to find new employment.
Savings accounts dwludled. Deposits
of the two banks dropped off almost
a million dollars.
"Bring in more industries," was being
sung at luncheon clubs all over
the land, every town seemed to be
advertising unlimited water supply,,
cheap fuel and free factory sites
Competition was keen and the reward
doubtful
The <; teslion came, "Why not
stimulate the agricultural pursuits
of the community which have lain
dormant so long." Farm income
might be increased and production
costs lowered in many Instances.
The first move of one of the banks
was the purchase of healthy chicks
These were furnished by the bank
at wholesale to interested farmers,
payment to be made by note payable
m six months. The bank followed
hrough by aiding In the disseminaion
of culling and feeding knowledge
md by helping to market the cockerels
which in most instances paid
he Initial cost of all the chicks.
When the pumpkins began to turn
yellow, plans were laid for a great
community exhibit. Besides the poultry
display, &rm produce exhibits
from the surrounding country were
entered. Altogether it made an impressive
exhibit, bringing home the
lesson to Point Marion people -that
there were great undeveloped opportunities
within their own dooryards
which they-had overlooked.
The annual exhibit will he continued
In the future by the bank. A horse
show Is sponsored, better seed corn
and seed potatoes are made available
to the farmers for planting and the
bank will continue to build agriculture
in the community as a sound basis on
which to work. "It will probably be
some time before we Bhall see larger
fruits of our endeavors," tbe banker
says, "but we are looking ahead ten
to fifteen years."
THE NEW MENACE
Hitch-biking its way towards the
nation's comcrib, the European ,corn
borer is threatening to destroy crops
to the y*lue of billions of dollars anu
chase skyward the cost of produc
tion. If it worms its wfiy Intp the
Wabash/and Mississippi Valleys, It
can readily float downstream, spread
out and, become more difficult lo con
i trol. Proper cooperation of all con
ccrned will, no doubt, enable ue itcontinue
to grow corn profitably.Agricultural
Bulletin, America
Bankers ^Association.
A corn and apple show Is to^e n?
annual feature at a bank in Haitimur*
* .County, Maryland. Another banket
has been able to get Ms county t?
"thinking torn," over 600 farmerr
L planting improved torn Many othe
bankers In "the state are giving morn
support and funds to this work.
| o< nc^Jir r> :rt /.:<? Lire
<f Heal Salesmanship
N.iU* it..,i : jp u ;ir*?ui g.um. I'.n
'<? ?? in tin?n (liu |>tM?<UlulU.VMtl?l
1 " n?.:n H 4hf window-corner *?>nt >f
! ?e a..inker. "1 Juki hold $ I ,1H Kl
north oY uruvy ladles to un Omuhu
I o'i | enmpijiiy, yud how I'm going lo
be uiuiU* a vice president ,,f our con
Mid Koj a ulcr fat tionuH an well."
I hut's good." said Ins \ Is a vis. Tin
always glad in mo- a fellow doing well.
1 sold liulf a million dollars' worth In
m> line this trip. Now I'm going to
retire ami sr.. the world. titles* I II
Jo Home and I'arls first." "Excuse
me, gents," apologised the passenger
In (he corner near the cuspidor. "I
couldn't help overhearing your conversations,
because when 1 hears sales
mCfighlp" being talked on I got to
listen, and I see as how you gents Is
perfect salesmen in your own way.
Hut 1 now tell you whut Is real honest
to-Uod salesmanship, like as what I
got to know In my business; which I
tell you now Is Jusj a small retail,
Kood-ua-new, misfit purlor, second
|handed rments on Hester street ;
muybe you know the place, ulreudy,
eh? Well, last week she come to me,
Mrs. Klkelsteln, what her husband died
of being killed by an uulomoblle, and
| she says she'i a widow hut that Elkelstein
wasn't much good; but all the
same, If she gets It cheap, she likes
maybe to buy a new suit for to bury
him In. Well, gents, I tell you 1 sells
her the extra pair of pants with thut
suit. Now, thut's what I calls salesmanship,"?San
Francisco Argonuut.
Botanist Recalled as
Ben Franklin's Friend
When llciijamlft. Franklin returned
from his long stay In England, where
he hud spent much time with 1'eter
Colllnson, the English botanist, he became
highly unpopular with the Americans
for a time, and his treatment
cuused Colllnson to write warning
letters to the English government, expressing
the belief that America might
attempt u revolution for independence
from the mother country.
It was Collinson's information and
encouragement that first Induced
Frankliu to interest himself in electricity
und Colllnson published Ills
friend's experiments to the Itoyal society,
defended hlui against their criticism,
and secured his election as a
fellow, says a writer In the Christian
Science Monitor.
As u botanist Colllnson obtained
many native plants from the early colonists
in America und?distributed them
among landowners In England.
Sailors' Gold
One of the most curious treasures
hunted by sailors In tropical waters Ih
umbergrJg. .
This has nothing to do with amber.
It is a secretion shed Into the water
by certain sperm whales, and is, metaphorically
speaking, worth Its weight
In gold.
Curiously enough, although when
taken from the wlmle It has ? most
unpleasant smell, when exposed to the
air Its odor becomes pleasant, and It
Is used largely in the perfumery trade.
By ol ! tradition, ambergris is treasure
trove, and the skipper and crew
who have the luck to find It may divide
the proceeds of Its sale.
Fabulous tales are told of beachcombers
who dozed in rags on tropical
seashores to find on awakening a
lump of ambergris washed to their
feet by the waves.
Monarch Put Above Law
"The king can do no wrong," is a
legal axiom that still holds good In
England. James I so firmly believed
In this principle thut he carried It to
the extent of claiming divine right -fob
everything lie did. Even how the
king s person Is absolutely exempt
from arrest. He never can he sued In
a court of law, nor Is he required to
attend and give evidence* says the
Montreal Family Herald. As he Is
ahoye tlie Judges, he has the power of
remitting any punishment imposed on
a subject.
A curious resuft of the king's fegnl
position Is that he Is debarred from
aiwsUiyr or giving Information that
Will lead to the arrest of a criminal,
since nobody can be both Judge and
prosecutor.1 '
The WorMfj oo Much *
It seems to me that everybody needs
occasionally to get nifray from people
and -things. They crowd In on you.
so that you can't think things out,
quietly and surely. Life gets all muddled
up. You can't see where you are
going. You don't know whether you
are thinking your own thoughts or
merely thinking the echoes of other
people's. I
I believe n place of escape keeps
you from losing yourself. If you get
away nod 4lnd out whether the thing
you are doing Is what you really Intended
to do.?Glenn Hunter. In the
American Magazine.
: . ..? Government
and Liberty L
The peoplo who exercise the power
are n?f always the same people over
whom h Is exorcised: and the se'lfgovernntetrfctspoken
of Is not the government^
of each himself, hut of
each by iill the rest. The will of the
people, moreover, practically moans
the will of The most numerous or the
most nctlve part of the people: the
majority, or those who succeed In
making themselves accepted as the
majority; the people, consequently,
may desire to oppress a part of their
number fund precaution* are as much
nerded against this as against anv
other abuse of power.?John Stuart
UUI.
KILLED ON HIGHWAY
Two Buys Riding Motorcycle Kun
Down by Drunken Driver
York, June 26.?Oary Brock, 17,
and Williutn Howell, IS, both uf
Union were killed when the motor-]
cycle on which they were riding whv
Vun into by uii automobile driven by
t . K, Jame.s, of Columbia, half a
mile south of Filbert, at 1 o'clock
this afternoon. Howell was killed instantly,
and Brock died while on the
way to a hospital in Guatonia. James
suffered a broken arm. He was taken
to a hospital in Rock Hill.
The accident was due to the drunkenness
of James, according to officers
investigating the affair. He appeared
badly intoxicated, they state, and
whiskey was found in his car. Just
before the accident persons who had
seen him had reported to officers here
thut u drunk man was driving reck|
lessly on Kings Mountain street, leading
toward Filbert.
Brock and Howell were riding
double on the same motorcycle.
Brock was a son of W. N. Brock,
prominent resident of Union and was
a brother of Curtis Brock, cheer lender
ut the University of South Carolina.
Mrs. M. H. Howard, mother of the
other dead boy, is teaching at Winthrop
college summer school. She is
a member of the high school faculty
at Union.
Late tonight it was reported from
Rock Hill that James would be removed
from the hospital and locked
i ,.
in prison pending a coroner s inquest.
Wife Succeeds Husband as Sheriff
Paris, Tenn., June 24.?Mrs. Betty
Caldwell was unanimously elected
sheriff of Henry county by the. county
court in an extraordinary session today
to succeed her husband, T. P.
Caldwell, who was shot to death by
un insane negro last Friday. She
will serve until September 1, 1928,
and will be the first woman sheriff in
Tennessee.
Job For The Jobless
Columbia, June 24.?James N.
Pearman of Honea Path, Anderson
county, formerly a member of the
South Carolina railroad commission,
has been appointed a member of the
law enforcement squad of the governor's
office, announcement of the
appointment having been made yesterday
by Governor John G. Richards.
The new member of the governor's
constabulary was a member of the
railroad commission along with Governor
Richards and at the last session
of the legislature offered for reelection,
but was defeated, R. H. McAdams
of Due West being elected
to the post.
Testing Them
"Tell the janitor to put up notices
that no book agents are to be admitted
to the building," .said the publisher.
"But you have just advertised for
applicants to sell our new works,"
protested the secretary.
"Of course. I want to try the applicants
out. If a man could be
stopped by a little thing like that,
what good would he be to u??" -
W. ('. KOI NTRKE. M. I).
IVIIagru A Specialty
Tt-xai kaiiM, Texas.
If you have any of the following
symptoms, I have the remedy, uw
matter what your trouble haw been
diagnosed: Nervousness, stomach
trouble, loss of weight, Iohh of sleep,
aore mouth, pains in the hack and
shoulders peculiar nwimniinR in the
head, frothy like phlegm in the
throat, passing mucua from the
bowel, especially after taking purgative,
hurniiiR feet, brown, rough or
yellow akin, burning or itching akin,
rash on the hands, face and arms resembling
sunburn, habitual constipation
(sometimes alternating with
diurrhoea), copper or metallic tuate,
skin sensitive to sun heat, forgetful,
despondent and thoughts that you
might lose your mind, gums u fiery
red and falling away from the teeth,
general weakness with loss of energy.
If you have these symptoms and have
tgken all kinds of medicine and still
sick 1 especially want you to write
for my free booklet, Questionnaire
and FREE Diagnosis.
W. C. ROUNTKEE, M. I>.
Texarkana, Texas.
RESOLUTIONS
Submitted in behalf of Camden Gems
Court No. 150, Camden, 8. C? June
13, 1927, in recognition of the death
of Sister Janie Cook, whose soul
was called to its rest Thursday
night, 12:30, June 9, 1927, at Glen
Cove, N. Y.
Whereas the great and Supreme
Ruler of the Universe has in His Infinite
wisdom- removed from among
us one of our worthy and esteemed
charter members, Sister Jnnie Cook,
a nd,
Whereas, the long relation held
with her in the faithful discharge of
her duties in the Society make it befitting
that we record our appreciation
of her, therefore, be it
Resolved, First, that the wisdom
and ability which she has exercised
in' the aid of our organization by
service and contribution will be held
in grateful remembrance;
Second, that the sudden removal of
such a life from among us leaves a
vacancy and a shadow that will be
deeply realized by all of the members
of this organization;
Third, that with deep sympathy
with the bereaved relatives of the deceased
we express our hope that even'
so great a loss to us all may be overruled
for good by Him "who doeth
all things well."
Be it further resolved, that a copy
of these resolutions be spread upon
the records of this organization, a
copy be forwarded to the bereaved
I family and n copy be printed in the ,
i local papers.
| All of which we respectfully submit.?Camden
Gems Court, No. 150,
| Camden, S. C., June 13, 1927.
| Committee: D. C. Shropshire,
j Chairman; Judieth B. Foster, Jenette
(Curtain. _? _ __
EXCURSION |
; to - w
WASHINGTON, D. C. I
Friday, July 1st, 1927 I
Southern Railway Systeixt I
Extremely Low Round Trip Fare* a* Follow*: j
Columbia $12.50 ,
Camden 11.50
Rock Hill 11.50 |
? Chester 12,80-... " kM
Fort Mill 11.50
Proportionate excursion fares from intermediate and
other points. r
Excursion tickets good going on all regular trains |
July 1st and good returning on all trains to reach Qrig- |
inal starting point by midnight Wednesday, July 6,<
1927, except Crescent Limited.
Good in Putfitian cars upon payment Pulfman fares.
Celebrate July 4th in the Capital"
MAJOR LEAGUE B&EBALL GAMES
Senators vs. AtHleiies July 2d I
v Senators vs. Yankees July 3rd
i? ??^
Every minute profitable and pleasurable.
Reservations, etc., apply to Ticket Agents or:
*-*- ?' ~ % ,, V iT ' iff* ^
W. & McGEE, IXP.A., COLUMBIA, S. C. T ~