The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, June 29, 1928, Image 3
A. Brwn, who died ?t
Kyh Saturday ?ged 7? years, oaWH
himwlf to have worked At hi? |
P longer than printer
America He wofj|?d oontimiowiely
1^ he was 17 year* old,, .. j
Ij^VlNL ASSES8M If NTH DUB j
fcotice is hereby given that ell pavK
AMessxtfiits not yiM by July let,
B/x the penalty will U added.
F'Ry order of CITY GCHJNCrL,
I y W. H. HAUUK, <3erk.
|t, 19, ly28- . I
f yiNAL DISCHARGE |
Notice is hereby 'AdYeli that one
nth front this date, on Thursday,
By 5th, l i>28, 1 will make to the
Kbate Court of Kershaw County my
a! return as administratrix of the
ate of Janie Cook, deceased, and
the same date I will apply to the
Ed Court for a final discharge as
Ed administratrix. , * jl
| RACKADD C. BROWN,
|mden, S. C., May rftletM BR,
I FINAL DISCHARGE
Notice is hereby given that one
Enth from this date,.-#* Saturday,
ne 30th, 11*28, I will make 16 the
lobate Court of Kerahaw County my
|al return as administrator of the
|au> of Moses Lomansky. deceased,
don the same date I will apply-to
Blaid Court for a final discharge as
d administrator.
I lewis I/>mamm,
ftmden, S. C\, May 28th, 1928.
| ANNOUNCEMENTS
I FOR CLERK pF COURT
II hereby annpunoe my-self a can ate
for re-election to the office of
Erk of Court for Kerahaw. County
Eject to the rules of the Democratic
J. H. CUVBURN
I FOR MAGISTRATE
|I hereby announce myself as a canBate
for Magiatrate in DeKall
Ewnship, subject to the rules of the
Emocratic primary. "
! B, M, SMITH
I FOR CORONER
Bile re by announce myself a candi b
for re-election to the office of
Bfoner for Kershaw County, and
l appreciate the continued support
B the Democratic voters of the counI
W. F. RUSSELL
FOR CORONER w~
To tho Democratic voters of Ker iw
County: I hereby announce
Eself a candidate for the office of
roner of Kershtfw 1 GoUnty and
Edge hiyself to abide the result of
le primary election.
I S. J. WEST.
I FOR MASTER
II hereby announce myself as a canIdate
f(?r the office of Master in
fcu:ty for Kershaw County and will
prec.ate the support of the voters
I the coming primary,
W. L. DePASS, JR.
FOR M.A.-srry.p _
hereby announce myself as a canHhtc
for the office of Master for
Btaw County and will appreciate
jgpppft of the voters, promising
Bide the result of the Democratic
ET L. REX JONES
haw, S. C., June 13, 1928.
FOR CONGRESS
hereby announce that I am a canm
the Democratic primaries
Ei Carolina,.for the nomination
Representative of the 5th CongresHa
Planet for the 71st Congress,
' we this opportunity to thank
people of the District for their
m'\samr: in the past and to say
B lsha" endeavor to deserve their
port a,ld confidence in the future.
W. F. STEVENSON,
I k, w F()R CONGRESS
E2, lan,,ounce y candidacy as
tkf fr<mi ***? district
he seventy first congresB, subject
the resuit of. the approaching priK
and W"1 appreciate' your supZEB
VANCE DAVIDSON I
FOR magistrate
>,*. ,(i;i,Per Wateree)>
lj;5"eby announce myself'.as a
Btetil r t?r of*<* Of MagiaB
for Lpper Wateree District.
BEN A, RABON. '
ft hp, K0R magistrate '
Bre^L , announce ? a candidate
Kt?'.? t0 the o^ce of Magisi
reVnit h,unl' VromMng to abide
B its of the Democratic print*
? 1 ~
* pate
I hfrebvC0UNTT WWtCTOR
u7or , ; n>y??lf aa a canK.,
f W? 10 th? >?? Ol
Ke if ,r P^K?"> Township and
1 and to u! ?{5C? WEI impartialSi
ability. 04 my Jud?menl
Very reapaetfnUy,
H. G. OARRtSON, JR.
Kd aunlr.y- Munn to the office oa
Ely as he has faithTyOTKRS
t th.F2?, " AG'stratb
Bers If ^qiM?st of many friends and
1% L *v" B?ff?lo TW^Tl
lit, , ?rnn?"o? mjr?lf u
and r.^ulatlona -ftthi
p""' Primary.
J. 'fc CO^ELAND.
Strat. Tzz'smis. tfcojrfflee ol
pi"
T- c. FliETCTrFTR.
.
"Nobody*! Business
'"" i.&.'Sa'.-w
TilEN AND NOW
- wWfCN?
m^Lot No. m in Sub-division
No. 999, fronting 55 ttut on Fifth
Avenue in Normal Height*, i? Ih^
offered for 5 days only ?t the given-way
price of $5,550.00 Now i*
your chance to pick up u bargain
See nae" at once.
* A, Byrd, Owner.
-InotTL
*028?Lot No. $75 in Sub-diviaion
No. 999, fronting 56 feet on lane formerly
known as Fifth Avenue in
.^ fc^ waa . <?nce ? called "Normal
Heights" will be sold next Monday
moving in front of the court house
for accrued taxes amounting to $19.;
Yhis lot will'-sold as the
property of A. Byrd, Bankrupt.
Thee. Sheriff, Collector.
. * 1' U.Hf
.?TMfoL
, Bp^NY L^AKE, JN. C., June 25,
1925. iMr. I; Gotitall of Gotitall Estates,
Miami, Florida, arrived iff
town last ni^ht, and will proceed at
.once to inrdrt' ^ million dollars in
Mountain View property. Mr. Gotitall
owns much valuable property in
Florida, and when he undertakes a
thing it means that that thing 13
going -to be a Buccess. Our town
welcomes , this wealthy gentleman,
and you can lay to that.
-~V7.3*r NOW
BONNY L*AI?E, N?" C, June 27,
1928. Mountain View Estates, formerly
belonging to Gotitall of
Florida and California, was bid in
today by one of the creditors for 5
hundred dollars. The electric light
posts and the sewerage lines were
taken up under attachment papers
some time ago. The present purchaser
who asks that his name be
withheld expects to make a gout pastime
out of this land. Mr. Gotitall's
time will not be out for 2 years yet,
and he has not yet said whether or
not he- will remain in Atlanta, or
go back to Florida, where he is hardly
wanted.
?THEN?
Gentlemen's, Ladies andJ FellowCitizens:
I have been your legislator
for 4. years. ?I wanter be it just
|l more tin^e. It took me the 4 years
I have been down there to know the
| ropes and to get where I can do you
.some good. Now all I ask is foi
J you to gimrme 1 more term and thefi
Jill turn my job over to piy colleegs
ansoforth. Sent me back, please
ma'am, ladies. Vote for old Dock,
the poor man's friend.
| . ?NOW?
Gentermen's, Ladies and FellowjCitisons:
I have been your "legislator
for 6 years. I wanter be it just 1
J more time. It took me the 6 years I
have been doWu there to know the
I ropes and to get where I can do you
some good. Now all I ask is for you
Jto0 gimme 1 more term and then I'll
I turn my job over to my colleegs ansoj
forth. Send me back, please ma'aim,
| ladies. Vote for ola Dock, the poor
man't friend.
I In Day of Old
I Since people got so smart that they
Jean make ice-cream out of something
I besides milk end cream, I don't have
the hankering for ice cream I once
| had. Up till I was 20 years old, there
were 2 things that I never got enough
J of, vizzly: ice cream nnd cheese.
Both of those non-essentials to health
and sobriety "Werev yather "skace"
hack yonder when shirt-tails were
, more plentiful than britches.
But there are many, many things
11 that are too common to he appreciat'
J that were considered luxuries
when I was a kid. About? the biggest
time I ever had was when ?
bunch Of us younguns could slip otl
j on Sabbath (it was Sunday then, i
I was a Baptist) afternoon and go
' I miles to a plum orchard and get a
I bait (that's what we called it then)
of plums, And those plums didn't
have to be so very ripe either to be
i entirely satisfactory.
:Lj|Pb?t l ate jh^ the wsy of_greenep<
. pies and peaches and watermelons
land mush-melons and ^lum-gran;
nies" sjfd goobers and turnips and
I raw potatoes during the morning
?I never seemed to interfere with my
appetite at dinner time. I always
thought a'fallow had to eat his regular
dinner regardless of what he had
II eaten before dinner.
U But when it came to eating in those
' I balmy days of plenty gastric juice
J and no indigestion, I could generally
>|drink a quart of buttermilk and d4vou
2 com dodgurt and after belching
[once or tt^oe, I could'repeat the performance,
Uncle Joe's'hey could ieep
. on repotting the performance just so
f long as he could belch.
*1 X~recsti?that?there?was one-other
j J ,, 'J; .H7 mi ' 1 l!
|tng during my daily teen-age, , and
SBV'-VV..:-',.. .< ... < '
- - -.* ^.r' -< '
- . - *
------- ^ ^
wmmmmmmmmmmmmmmrnmarnmsp.
that was "bought molasses.'* W? *'
ways had plenty ho-made molasses,
and 1 know I have eaten 5 thousand
gallons of them, hut we never got
to hardly smell "bought molasses"
often* r than once every 6 months.
Our old homade "lasses" usually
turned sour or to sugar in 6 weeks,
but we had to eat 'em right on or
eat our ho-caWe* dry j
We had ham and eggs and sausage
at our house a-plenty when 1 was a
boy, but we usually took them things
to the store and swapped them for
jeans cloth and Riverside plaids to
I make our britches and shirte and
dresses and towels and dish-rags and
petticoats and shimmies out of. And
we ate "raised gravy" and liver and
were entirely satisfied. We didn't
know how back then to be dis-aatisfted.
But the world has gone Into ecstatic
hallucinations since I was a boy.
(And I ain't very old either). We are
all having better things to eat, better
times, and better clothes now,
And, I've been thinking?it never
would have done in the world for
dresses to have been up to the girls
1 knees back yonder.-' I couldn't hardly
behave myself as it was?dragging
the ground. (N. B. Old-time grammar
was used altogether In this arti-!
cle).
They tried to clean blankets with
gasoline in a washing machine at the
home of R. W. Gilbert in Charlotte,
and it exploded. ,Mr. Gilbert, who
was running the machine, was very
seriously injured and so was Mrs. V.
W. Andrews, a guest of the family,
of Wilmington, who was standing
nearby. Her husband was ' slightly
burned, and Claudius Gilbert, 47
years old, was badly burned on the
face and neck. The explosion blew
out some of the pillars supporting
the house.
? i > tiTf, T
Hug* Flower Garden*
Planned at Aaheville
Asheville, N. C., Juixu 26.?Rho
dodendron, mountain laurel, azealea,
and other flowers characteristic of
Weateru North Carolina ara to bo
planted in a huge mountain ilowei
garden to be developed this year by
the city of Aaheville, and which in
time ia intended to rival the Magnolia
Gardens of Charleston In its
panaromn of beauty, according to
announcement made by Mayor Gallatin
Roberta. ,
Planting of the elaborate garden
spot will begin this fall, and a city
owned tract of nearly 16 acrea lying
within the city limita will be
utilized for the purpose, Mayor Roberta
said.
The area chosen for the new gurden
ia the Ityeraon tract which borders
the western bank of the French
Broad river at a point wh$re the
river llowa through the city, the opposite
bank of the river marks the
boundary of a part of the 11,000 acre
Vanderbilt estate.
' Hail Falls in Sumter
Pinewood, June 25.?A two weeks
drought was broken here Friday
afternoon about 5 o'clock w,hen this
section was again visited by a severe
wind, rain and hail storm which dam- j
aged crops very much. The farms of
It. C. Richardson, George Rycock and ,
Gary Graham received the full force J
of the hail storm that striped corn,
and cotton of all its foliage. j
A large number or negro farmers I
had their crops badly damaged by ,
the hail and wind.
Larke trees were uprooted and
some twisted off. Tenant houses and
barns were unroofed, some were raz- J
ed. A heavy rain and some hail fell
I here.
The pardon by Governor Richards
of Rev. John N. Wrenn, convicted at
Greenville of borrowing more money
than a bank director should have done ,
and sentenced to four months at hard
labor, has brought a public statement
by Solicitor I>eatherwood that he was
not asked about the pardon and never
heard of it until he saw in the papers
that it had l>een granted, and that
Judge Grimball and Chairman Cre\vs,
of the board of pardone, say the same
thing. The solicitor thinks the state
should have opportunity to be heard
before pardons are granted, while recognising
the constitutional right of
the governor to issue pardons as he
pleases. The defendant put in no
! evidence at his trial and was pradoned
on the* day that the time for an
|uppeal expired.
A negro named Henry Crawford
found an alligator's nest in Pamlico,
North Carolina and set some of tho
eggs under a hen with chicken eggs.
The hen eggs failed to hatch, but four
alligators hatched and are now flvo
Inches long. The foster mother hen
clucked to the little alligators and
made a fuss when the negro took
them away from her. He proved his
story by taking tho alligators to
town.
KERSHAW LODGE No.
A. F. M.
Regular communication of
this lodge is held on the
first Tuesday in each month
at 8 p.m. Vlsittpg Brethren are welcomed.
T. V. WALSH,
J. E. ROSS, Worshipful Master.
Secretary. 1-14-27-tf
I 9*0.
" ' ' " I I
A Used Car
You Can Drive With Pride
Don't get the idea that a used automobile is unworthy,
and to be considered only as a last resort.
Everybody's car is a used car. The only difference is
that some are on the market and some are not. We
have many used cars, at remarkalbly low prices, which
you can drive with pride and satisfaction.
DeLoache Motor Company
West DeKalb Street
jf To save lift and limb
STOP,/
r
Grade oroesing accidents oan bmprevented if you
will approach the mona of danger determined to
exercise oaction For Your Own Protection.
f
The peril of the road crossing has become
a national problem with the mul
tiplication of automobiles.
The Southern Railway System has eliminated
90Q grade crossings, and is eliminating
more evfry year, but nearly 6,000 remain
to be separated on this system alone.' The
total cost to complete the work is a stupen5
dous sum?probably half as much as the
cost to build the railroads,
j . L Even if the money were available, and the
* public willing to pay the increased freight
and passengergrates necessary to provide a
fair return on it, many years would be reauired
to do the work.
H
- ~_2r?
Protection from the peril, for the pic^ent
generation at least must be found in some
other way. Trains cannot stop* at every
crossing if they are to be run at the sustained
speed expected by the public and required
to carry the commerce of the country. The ?: --1
train crone* a highway about every mile.
The motori*t encounters a railroad only
occasionally. ^4
It is necessary, therefore, for the automo'
bile driver to stop in order to avoid trisk* No
one who did this was ever killed.
U is better to save a life than to save a
minute, 7
SOUTHLERN
RAILWAY SYSTEM
r " /' ' ' ' **
"** * . flMB t ho North*rn Qi(tw?n at
- - Waahlncton, Cincinnati and . ii
?' LeuUvllU . . . fr.m t ho Will I
Oatawar a at X Loo la and Mil
** phia . ta tba Oaoaa Paota af
MwfeU, CharlwtoD, tavtka|hr . [
^ /** _ VIIUWM uDHtMin,
' and tha Onlf Forto of ifafcOa a*d
, >' "> Now Orleana . . . tha >irtl|H
i iAJaataft/IJtKT"^ '?s? .
? ?-?*.
* " ' " "i - -
|0UTK
-, "C'?rr?