The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, July 13, 1928, Image 3
i<?r? In Rubber Bull
ills, N. Y., July 4.-rFor
ie in history* man cogmighty
NfcgSra today
. I,ussier of Springtold,
>v?r the Horseshoe Fall#
iian side in a specially
ik)?!y?r h*ll whii* J50,OOO
g the river banks on
cheered and applauded
irt was made from Caybout
three miles above
2:30 o'clock, standard
ssier was rescued from
Jdy below the falls at
by William (Red) Hill,
nan, alone in a rowboat.
iH feared the giant ball
ried down stream into
.ussier plunged over the
lock.
iller rieada Guilty
io, July 6.?Charles J
leaded guilty today to
of 7-year-old Dorothy
whom he confessed ho
acked after abducting
r home here several
Judges of the Lucas
in court will hear testie
whether he is insane.
i the death penalty;
inflicted. If insane he
t to the state hospital
nally insane at lima,
p miii - j
: Now In Operation
ar route mail between
leath Springs began its
ds Monday morning,
Camden at 7 o'clock a.
at Heath Springs at 8
j return trip .it leaves
j at 6:80 p. m. and is
at Camden at 6:30 p.
e serves the Kershaw
ng and coming, passing
a. m., on the way to
js, and returning .'.to
is here at 5:46. This
& great convenience in
Columbia State at an
and much letter mail.
i opportunity 'for sendafter
arrival of tfye
aw Era.
er, racing automobile
led at Milwaukee, Wedthree
cars pile^d up in
F FINAL DISCHARGE
otiee is hereby given that one
th from this date, on Tuesday,
rn 24, 1928, we win/ipst* tp the
Bite Court or Kershaw County our
[return as administrator ox the
ml of Mary E. "Watts, deceased)
w the same date we will apply
Hfcaid Court for a final discharge
Bui administrator.
F. E. WATTS.
S. B. KELLY.
^Ben, S, June 19, 1928.
B FINAL DISCHARGE
Btice is hereby given that one
Bb itom this date, on Tuesday,
24, we will make to the
Bjte Court of Kershaw County
Bfinaj return as administrators of
Mtite of Sydney J. Watts, deBm,
and on the same date we will
W said court for a final
B4r?e as said administrators.
F. E. WATTS
B. S. B. KELLY.
C., June 19, 1928.
O-MO-KORN
I CORNS AND CALLOU8B8
gje to Camden And For Sale By
BDeKalb Phaimaef^honwJ*?
M ? -V
^ i i l wmmmimkMrnfmrnmrnmamm
Buffering
With
SICK HEADACHES
I Mr. Charles F. Todd, of Bate*
B"* near Waynaabur? Ky.,s*ys:
[1 was suffering with nervoua
"Bwdachea. About once a week '
w?uld have thoso headaches,
have to quit work, and go to
B"1for "bout twenty-four houra. R
B would have paina in mv necki
B?dright behind my right ear. x]
b merchant at Flfli^jy^ d
B^t relieved me. From that
on, I would BlackW^Ught
as eoon aa I felt like I
Bas 8?ing to harve one of thoaa
B??daches and they wouldn't
?m? on.
M "E^ry few weeks, I taka three
''our doses of BlacMfeiught,
Wd I feel so WeU, anddo wST
?r - and don't loaa any foot#
B^ with headache."
B*** a package today.
?bm
Nobody's Business
Written fof Tb? Chronic)* by (iM
McGee, Copyright, 102b.
Th? worm h?* turned. A lawabiding
citizen shot a gunman in Chicago
lit* other day.
Frof. Wptewitch found * chimpanzie
in the heart 'of Africa whose
head was ? solid bone. The little
devil ought po be (aught bow to make
a speech and then come over her#
and run for congress pn the itepub'
lican ticket , f|fr ''*
The difference between a man who
knows he knows and a man who
thinks he knows is about 2 hundred
and 76 dollars a month.
Folks in France eat snails and
folks in America eat frogs legs und
folks in China eat rats and folks in
Germany eat limberger cheese. !
Wonder- where all the sensible people
live? t ? f
An exchange says: "Women will
wear dresses longer." Wei), if any
woman can wear a dress longer than
old Mrs. Bud Wiser has worn that
old brown worsted dress, I'd like to
meet her. And that dress looks just
about as good as it did 14 years ago,except
the pert that drags on the
ground seems slightly frazzled.
r They are going to notify Hoover
of his nomination for president some
time in August. If those birds dont
keep newspapers and politicians away
from that man, he's going to find it
out before August. Then it won't
be no surprise to him a-tall.
A man told Uncle Joe that he saved
6 hundred dollars by holding his.
cotton last year and Uncle Joe said:
"Pshaw, that ain't nothing. I saved"
my life last night by holding my
tongue."
The Pay-As-You Go law is working
fine in South Carolina, but it applies
only to road building. Wouldn't,
it be wonderful if it could be made
to cover grocery bills and doctor
bills and coat bills and preacher bills ?
Then all of us would be happy.
A1 Smith is a Catholic. Herb,
Hoover is a Quaker. Nearly half
the voters in the country are hypocrites.
The balance of them have no
religion at all. ICongress votes dry
even when its drunk. And both parties
have a dry plank in their platforms.
One wants to turn out the
rascals and the other wants to keep
the honest men. It's going to be n
mighty hard job to vote for the right
man next November: he don't seem
io be running.
Saving Things
When it comes to saving things,
my wife is in Class "AA," and if
there is any other class that represents
perfection in that line, she'*
in that too. , tShe's got the boxes our
six wedding presents came in. She's
still saving her old school satchel.
Somebody gave her a little wooden
whistle at a picnic in 1905, and she's
got that thing in the sewing machine
drawer. O
Every bureau-drawer, every closet
(and we have 7 in the house), every
shelf, every nook and every corner in
our entire residence is chock full of
stuff she's saving. When she goes to
the 10-cdnt store and buys anything,
she folds up the paper it came wrapped
in and tucks it away somewhere.
The bando (ribbon) she wore when
she graduated Is in my drifter-robe,
* And the clock she taught school by
ia on the mantel, but it won't run,
The old frying pan we wore out -IJ
r years ago is in the pantry along with
a dozen pans and boilers that have
b you can; throw, a cat through
And the old^Umbr^lla she carried dur
hall rack. She has 14 different empty
corsets'boxes on top of the liner
i "Presenting the 14 years she
wore corsets.
Everything everywhere is chock
full of this and that, and I wouldn't
throw away anything for all the
World. One day I pitched a little old
rumpled-up ft)manic out the window,
and she tuned up and began to cry
and told me that that almanac is the
same almanac one of her schoolmates
gave her at the charade they
had back yonder when cotton was
fetching only 5 cents a pound. <1
retrieved it and she's still saving It.)
She's got the little dress she was
born in, and the first pair of shoes
she ever went barefooted in is in
the trunk in the uttic.
She's got all the twine that she
ever unwrapped from a bundle. The
tiny handkerchief she uster cry plumb
wet because I didnt write her every
day is in her jewelry box on the
dresser. All of her old clothes are
in an old chest up stairs, all of mine
are in Armenia and Wung Chu. (She
saves everything except my clotheB
and my money. She even saves her
money and spends mine.)
She saves the butter till It gets too
old to eat. The cheese spoils because
it is generally hid somewhere so's it'
can be saved. The apples and the.
oranges rot locked up in her private
closet. But she never remembers
where she put anything that she's
saving. iShe has found pocketbooks
and dollar bills' and lace embroidery
stuck around in places that were
selected by herself 6 to 20 years ago.
But she's all right and possibly this
saving habit has kept me and her
both out of the poorhouse.
Three Hundred Lives Lost
Santiago, Ohile, July 8.?Upwards
of 300 lives were lost when the army
transport Angainos crashed on the
rocks at Punta Chhnlel, near the
south. Chilean coast town of Lebu Friday
night. The exact number may
never be known as the vessel had
made several stops enroute and its
passenger list had been changed.
Only four survivors have been
found and they tell a terrible tale of
a three hour struggle for life preserves,
places in the boats or even
hand holds on bits of floating wreckage
which followed the crash.
The ship lost her rudder in a storm
and when the commander, Ismael
Suarez, found himself unable to prevent
the catastrophe, he committed
suicide on the bridge.
Chilean naval vessels and tugs,
summoned by wireless, rushed to
the scene but by the time they arrived,
there was nothing for them to
save. Eight bodies' were found on
the beach near Cononel.
The transport left Punta Arenas
southernmost city in the world in
the Straits of Magellan, with 2f>l
persons on board. Of these 216 wete
crew and 76 passepgers. The latter
included a number of women and
children.
Death of Colored Woman
Westville, S. C., July 10.?Last
Thursday morning Aunt Laura Gaskin,
a beloved and highly respected
colored woman, known to all of this
section, died at her home near here.
She was the wife of Uncle Billie Ga<kip
and was regarded as a good w0man
in every sense. She was a member
of Behnont Baptist church and
live<t a consistent Christian life, loji
ing her neighbors and she was loved
by everybody, both white and color,
ed. iHer life was quiet and unpref
tentlous and won the faith and respect
of all her friends and neighbors.
' Her later years wore spent in ill
r health but she bore her affliction with
1 patience. iShe was the last one of
i the family of the late John Wright
i and spent her entire life here. When
r death came she was in her sixty
ninth year. She is survived bV . he*
i, husband and seven children and all
r the community joins them in sympai
thy in^their bereavement. The funers
al and burial occurred at Belmont on
Friday four o'clock, services
: ing conducted by her pastor, R#v.
: J. W. Boykin. The large attendance
> at the funeral and the many floral
I tributes testified to the esteem - in
- which she was held.
J
Hickman Beats Up
Cellmate Over Game
i r San Quentin, Calif., July 5.?William
Edward TEckinan'a skill or lu4V
at dominoes caused the fight :M
^condemned row" at San Quentlr
prison Monday between him and h
fellow prisoner, Joseph'Troche, an expugilist.
Hickman not only won 4ht
domino game, but won the fight ai
well.
Hickman and Troche, cellmates
both awaii the hangman's noose?
Hickman for the murder of 12-year
old <M*rtaA Parker in Los Angeles
and Troche for the kiHing of a Sai
Francisco girl.
Guards heard a racket Mondav it
the c*H and found Troche, despib
his pugilistic pdwesa, beaten an<3
scratched and Hickman unscathed
Both rafuaad to explain. Prison bf
th?n
'
V.
> WEEK-END TRIPS
Round Trip Reduced Fares fromj
CAMDEN
Fares from Ofche Points in
Proportion
Wrigrhtsville Beach ....$8.20Beaufort
7.55
Charleston 6.20
Tybee $.30
-Tickets on sale Fridays and
Saturdays, good until midnightrfollowing
Tuesday.
; Round trip Summer Excursion
Tickets on safe daily to
resorts in Canada and the
United States, good until
October 31.
We are prepared to
serve you
T. V. WALSH JRn Cm A|ml
: C?Cumiem, 6. C, Pltone 1*S Atlantic
cmemim
' r 4~-.
in nil?HI??M 1111 niwinni"nrii iii"
Cany stern Funeral ^
Cost Small Fortune ,
New York, July 5.~~Gangland dii j
it.M-lf proud today beside the. grave
of Frankie Yule, Beau Brummel of j
Brooklyn'* underworld, who was
"buried down" by assassins' guns (
on a quiet street last Sunday. Hi*
stalwart mortal romaius were encased
in a $15,0(K) silver caaket.
Fifty thousand dollars was expended
to see that Frankie "Kid"
went out in style. There were tons
of flowers and hundreds of automobiles
in the procession that looked
more like a parade than a funeral.
Ten thousand persons?mourners and
thrill seekers?crowded about the
gangster's bier, while one hundred detectives
and policemen hemmed in the
entire show.
Behind the glittering display,
lurked the hushed vengennce of gangland,
the promise to "square* the
killing of Frankie Yale. One floral
wreath bore the sinister message,
"we'll see them, Kid," and all gangland
knew what that meant.
Some time soon, the crackling guns
will sing a song of retribution for
Frankies Yale; some time soon, perhaps,
there will be another swell
funeral.
Gangsters crowded about the silver
casket during the final hours of the
wake, good killers known to be handy
at "smearing" and shooting down the
ambush of a fleet automobile. The
police knew them, but today they
were beyond the reach of the law, for
they had come to pay court to one
of their kind who had been glorified
by death. Perhaps, in the hundreds
that tramped by the casket were the
very ones yho had slain him, for the
time for the police to Btrike had not
come.
Frankie's two wives were there,
the one he had recently divorced
without her knowing it, and the one
he had espoused to take her place.
The Aurora Boreal!#, or Northern
ights, caused one of the mont widei
p read interruptions to telegraph
ines known in years on Saturday
light. Telegraphic Ofunvpanie# reported
main trunk line# functioning
ntermittently for several hour*.
The hundaome Kuiumer home of VV/
L\ Cleveland on l'aris mountain was
raided by thieve# la#t week and
ihei iff'a forces from Greenville found
fine furniture and other furnishing#
in the residence of a noted character
on tjueen street where it had been
carted there in truck#. It ia estimated
the loss to the house owner
will be around $5,000.
Twelve persona Hre reported to
have been drowned when a boat capsized
at Estral Beach on Lake Erjie,
16 miles from Hock wood, Mich., Wednesday.
The natioal Democratic headquartera
for the direction of the presi- \ V >
dential campaign will bo established V \ '
at Washington, with four of five re- V \
gional headquarters scattered over \ 1
the country at strategical points. \
Notice to Debtor* and Creditors
All parties indebted to the estate
of Mrs. Mary H. McGraw, deceased,
are hereby notified to make payment
to the undersigned, and all parties, if
any, having claims against the said
estate will present them duly attested
within the time prescribed by
law.
MARY E. GARDNER, Qualified
Administrator Estate of Mary H. McGraw.
Camden, S. C., July 9th, 1928.
LOST CERTIFICATE
Notice is hereby given that certificate
of deposit Number 478 issued
to Camden Fire Department by the
Bank of Camden dated March 16,
1926, for $300 has been lost ana
finder will please return to J. D.
Zemp, foreman. If not found after
due notice of advertisement a duplicate
of said certificate of deposit will
be applied for.
J. D. ZEMP,
Foreman Camden Fire Department
July 6, 1928.
SUMMONS FOR RELIEF
State of South Carolina,
County of Kershaw.
(Court of Common Pleas)
Henry Savaige, Plaintiff,
against.
Judith Williams, Frances. Hart, Rosa
Deas, Abram <M. 7Jone?, Jessie
Adamson, Essie Adamson and Lizzio
Adamson, Defendants.
=TO - THE DEFENDANTS : Jessie
' Adamson, Essie Adamson and Lizzie
Adamson.
WOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED
and required to answer the.complaint
in this action, of which a copy is
> herewith served, upon you, artd to
serve a copy of ydur answer to the
Mid complaint on the subsdftper at
my office in Camden, S. <$?a within
twenty days after the aervi<f<J hereof,
exculsive of - the day of sucli service;
and if . you fail to fmswer the complaint
within the time aforesaid, the
plaintiff in this action will apply to
r, the Court for the relief demanded in
I the complaint.
HENRY SAVAGE, JR.,
D ^ PleinUtTs Attorney
TO THE DEFENDANT, Jessie
Adamson, Essie Adamson and Lizzie
, Adamson:
Please take notice that the original
Summons and Complaint in the above
entitled action is on file In the Office
: of the Clerk of Court* Kershaw
[ County, Staterof South Carolina.
1 HENRY SAVAGE; JR.,
i ? Plaintiff's Attorney
. 1
COLUMBIA LUMBER & 1
MANUFACTURING CO.
Mill. WORK
SASH, DOORS, BLINDS
AND LUMBER
PLAIN 4kHUGER STS. Pb.?. 71
I
COLUMBIA, S.C.
TLvery Telephone Worker,
is a Service Salesman
P ERHAPS you have been planning
to arrange for telephone service, but
have been too busy to visit the office.
This is not necessary. Any telephone
worker will quote rates, give you detailed
information about the service and take
your order.
Every telephone employee ? operator,
lineman or clerk ? is a telephone salesman,
interested in serving you and in
having your telephone installed promptly.
Telephone service is now quicker, more
dependable, more necessary and more valuable
to the user than ever before.
The cost is small ? only a few cents a day
for twenty?four hour service.
SOUTHERN BELL TELEPHONE
AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY
(Incorporated)
To FLORIDA Also I
SAVANNAH AND HAVANA I,
Saturday, July 14,1928. - j j
Following are the round trip fares: 1
from to 7" 77,
Savannah Jacksonville Tampa Miami |
Caftiden ...$5.00 $10.50 *, $18.00 $20.50 I \
Charleston ............ 5.00 ...S.CM> 10.00 18.60 I
Chearaw 7.00 " li.OO 18.60 , 21.00 i
Columbia 5.00 10.00 17.50 2(1.00 I
Darlington 7.00 10.50 18.00 20.50 I
^Denmark ............. 4.00' 8.50 '16.00 18.50 I
Florence 7.00 10.60 18.00 20.50 t ]
' Georgetown 7.00 10.00 17.50 20.00 I,
Hartsviile 7.00 10.60 18.00 . 20.60 I .
MeBee 7.00 10.60 18.00 20.50 I
To Havana: From Camden, Darlington^ Florence, ; !
Hartsville, McRee, $45.25: From Charleston, Den- I
mark, $43.25; from Cheraw $45.75; from Columbia I
y $44.75.
Proportionate fares to many other Florida points. I
Tickets sold for alltrains July 14. I
Limits: Savannah, July 21; Jacksonville, Jack- I
sonville Beach, Ocala, Daytona, StT~AUgustine, July I
5 22; Key Wea^July 30; Havana, August 2; other desti- B ' '
fr nations July $6, 1928. ?
- All tickets good in Pullman cars upon payment
Pullman .fares.
For further information, apply Ticket Agent.
I SEABOARD AIRJjfNE RAILWAY I
. ? " '? ? "I' "ptWftll gjt .r ^~==z
CAMDEN FOLKS
i i riTiry- ' -
?I? "
. ?By L. A. So well
. ; r-V y.- &F\ -T.
MOTHER, HOW T
OLD WILL 1 >* .: fc
HAVE TO 6E 6EF0RE
* POWPSft.
SrfiVP/KCS^-'T
/4uch older, t
jennie/ almost
)as old as >
mother/ '
) i WON'T BOTHeR
-MS CROWD Wit.I.
U-L BE OLD WUM
W TU4Y TlUft /r
I -lUeRE WAS A I
WTTUB flu. AND
MB HAP A SHINY * f, AfOBB/
FOft.
'OWOER HB Alow r
OB4 WHERE HER. I
*Tr f mother aim ass goes-ft;
TO,
i I__ arsons, ^urttk* *** a-?tor? for the
*V-i r ' > "*:
-fTr ^iai'-'r
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