The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, August 24, 1928, Image 2

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Bilious? Don't vm.ikiii your t>owU>? with utrontf ikii n< * '1 ?K?> J>ant>'? J^iD to tori? your . ()v? r ttu'i Mart thy bilo flowing. Ft*'l hottor right off. SOLD liV /KMI* A Del'ASS NO I K K TO DEBTORS AM) ( KKDIiOltH JNtn'c ??f Mi-. Hetty H. Kennedy All parlies indebted to the Hatate of Mis. Hetty H Kennedy, deceased, hie hereby notified to make payment to the undei-igned, and ail parties, :f ay, having claims against the aid e-'ate v, i i present them duly atlest' I within l ie time prescribed by t fie .a w. IIKNKY H. KKN'NKDY, Adumu.-tralor of Estate of Mrs. Hetty I', Kennedy hu'o.fi Natiorin Hank. A' anta, (?a . or . T. K TKO'ITIH, \' t < i ney - a t I .aw, < anepn, S. ' < an.' ei , S. ('., A 'gmt I, ! PL'S. jf-Z HOST ( Kit I II K ATE N- .ie hereby given that certifea'* oi 'lepos t Nuinher 47J issued to < amden hire I >e jln rt merit by the Hank of ( amden dated Marc h 1 ?>. for $.''00 has been lost and finder will please return to J. !>. Zernp, foreman. If not found alter due notice of advertiaemcnt a dupli- I cute of said certificate of deposit will be applied for. .J. I). ZKMP, Foreman (amden Fire Department July ?>, 1 [>2H. NOW WITH THE EUREKA We wish to announce that after an ahseme of several years Scipio J. English is again employed at thus bather shop, where he will he pleased to serve his old customers. He is one of Camden's older barbers and ha- been serving the trade here acceptably for many years and will appreciate your patronage. EUREKA BARBER SHOP, I. H. ENGLISH, Proprietor. Will E. Johnson Electrical Contractor till West lk'Kalb Street Camden, S. C. Week End Tickets At very low round trip fares now on sale to mountain and seashore summer resorts. Travel By Train Comfortable?Economical? Safe Southern Railway System wmmmmmmmmKmmmmmrnmmmm COLUMBIA LUMBER & MANUFACTURING CO. MILL WORK SASH, DOORS, BLINDS AND LUMBER PLAIN A HUGER STS. Ph.n* 71 COLUMBIA, S. C. SORE | : Could Not Rett i Mr*. J. H. Nichola, who lives at " i 613 Elm Tree Lane, I^Tingtnn^ " ! Ky-. Myi: ; J Some few years ago, my htalfh * j was bad. I had very severe S * 1? my side*. My nerves wars in J Jj a terrible condition. I could not " j ^ ! a The lower part of my body |J J wtl V*?T sore. I did not feel like J J *nd did not sleep well at 4 D all at night*. j< Jj A friend of mine recommend- * Jj ed CarduL I began taking it and 3 ? aaw quite an improvement in my jj Jj oondition. I kept it up until I ? >< felt strong and well." 3 E About a year ago, Mrs. Nichola J aays, she found herself in a ner- t Jj voua, run-down condition. "I took 3 ft Cardui again," ahe adda, "and it JJ Jj helped me wonderfully. It is a " Jj splendid tonic." C Cardui ia a mild, medicinal jj Jj tonic, made from purely vegeta- " p ble ingredients. J C At all druggists. w e-tftt a : Taste i i OP* IW UtK BY IK SLjwomcn rom onx ktum If Nobody's Business Written fur The Chronicle by Gee MrCtv, Copyright, 19-8. One Kuwd thing about the new ist> 1 eri is -a hen a girl .stands uu jn front of y>u at a baseball g A nipper diets j- so tiiin the view ih not oh nRructed. Nearly everybody who left this pec lion and went to Florida during the booni to get rich has come buck (poorer than ever ) except Uncle Joe'a boy, S?mmie. Ilia time won't be out till next fall ut 1 o'clock, and then he's coming back, too. A friend of mine went off not long ago and bought a bankrupt stock of merchandise, then he put on a -.tie, arul then he busted before he g* ' half ?>f bis stuff sold. Folks ain't buying much now unless thev a. the pleasure of taking on inliirnent privileges. Some men wuu.d buy the moon if they could go* 'ii ms on it. Cotton Letter New Voi k, Aug. 17.? The cotton hopper i? doing some damage - in certain sections, hut the average cotton is so small the hopper hops over it, therefore?"September will ease off until it rains. Spinners takings and underwear were not as heavy last month as they were last year, but A1 Smith says he will examine these things and farm relief the day after he is elected, and if necessary?he will ask the Knights of Columbus to wear cotton BVDs next summer. Curtailment continues in all districts wherp spinnable cotton is hard to get, und the nearby months will not stand much straddling from the shorts, and there ain't any longs any longer. We advise* buying on slumps und hedging on jumps and getting down in the dumps. 1 took a trip through the mountains the other day. The roads were so crooked I ran into myself twice and bent both bumpers. The new concrete highways seem to be holding up pretty well except in places where too much graft was used. It where too much gruft was used. If the states could reduce the graft to about 2 thousand dollars to the mile, and use more cement, the taxpayers would feel better over their money i being wasted. Alabama is j.i ui of Tom Hetlin. He's raising Ileli :in New York and l'ennsy 1, aina anioi.g the Catholics, but the Republicans all say he'; Melt fin llnnvrv nr.d not hurting i Smith. Somehow or other, Tom -eems to be again the 1'upe, and is w ill.ng to "teil trie world" for only do<) dollars per speech. He thinks if Smith is elected that Rome will ship the Vatican to the United States, and that all the Catholics will go into the \jJiiskcv-sellinir business. After alffit looks like Heflin is running >. I political filling station, and getting a fair price for his gas. But there are some bad Methodists and Baptists and Presbyterians, too, Tommie, dear. If we Had Open Saloons j If booze could l>e bought on every coi ner, the government would have to retain First Aid stations and Red Cross nurses ut every mile post on every public highway in the country. Wrecking cars.and crews would line all thoroughfares so's they'd be handy to pull automobiles apart when the> met head-on and tail-on and sideways and cross-wise. F.vcry third man in tie- United States would have to tuin police man, and court houses would have to be so thick over the country that ! they would be in hollering distance [ of one another. Townships would be J fenced in and used for jails. Pedesi trains would never attempt to walk down or up a main road. They would , be provided with little pig paths several hundred yards away from the lines of travel. C ities would of necessity quarantine against all automobiles. It would take 1 thousand plumbers, 10 thousand machinists, and 20 thousand common laborers to clear out streets every Monday morning after the Sunday frolics ?if cars were permitted to enter our towns. Speed limits would have to be abolished. And women would wear shot-guns tied around their waists while milking or chopping cotton. If whiskej could bo hat! with the ease and convenience of 2o years ago, it would require 5 grav?> diggers to c\ ery hundred persons residing in this land of ours?to iay away her victims. Undertakers would he as thick as whiskers on a B-oshevik'.; chin. Ambulances and hearses would run in sections and carry trailers. Embalmcrs would be forced to work over time, and judges and juries would work night and day in order that there might bo standing room at J the chamgangs. j All of these calamities w jiH come J because the times have changed j since the advent of flying machines j and good roads and bone-heads and | -eekless hvinf. and so many people I would get drunk at a time- -th?r? wouldn't be anybody left to nursa the baby or put out the cat. Folks are no worse than they useter be. It's simply the change in our way of living that would make it impossible to compete with John Barleycorn. We are living in a fast age. We run at break neck speed all the time. We trot to our work, we run home to lunch, we don't have time to be resectable, and we think we are getting along in this world. We are as poor as we were when we took things easy. We are all sick half the time. If it ain't indigestion, it's nervous break-downs. There's nothing wrong with us, meaning you and me, except we are a pack of derned I fools from beginning to end. That's all. IM AM FALL GARDEN NOW I Cool IVriod ,lk*fore Fro*t Beat Grow j in% Season for Sonic Vegetable* J ( leni'on College, Aug. 20.?Plant , ingv ror the fall garden should be made :r. .August or Sept*when. Suell veg? aolcs as cabbage, carrots, beets, j;:I*;*. - n, turnips, lettuce, and Um)<4 ihr - U-vt ?n cool weather. The ref i_, 11 'hese vegetable should be plunt ed at -u? h a time thai most of the growing period will be in the coo^ season of the fall before frost. Beans ma> tfe planted in succession until I s.x /.? .k? before frost. Good plants of the Wakefield cab-! bag* ..iiieties, If set nvw? will form! head- before the cold weath. With ' sligh' protection both caibbage and collards will carry through out j s? '.<!<?t winters. K.ut- seed sown during September I wpioduce an abundance of greens! dutiiig the winter and early spring. Sii*-nan Curled is a good fall variety. Sow Big Boston lettuce for a supply of delightful salad during falk and winter. With slight protection firm heads can be produced. \ Mustard will stand any amount of cold, and seed sown during September will furnish greens throughout the fall, winter, and early spring. Though commonly sown for pasturage, rape seed sown in Septemlber will yield excellent winter greens. One of the most delightful vegetables is spinach. Seed sowm the 1st of October will produce greens last of September or the early part throughout the winter until late spring. The turnip is one of the reliable vegetables and will produce both roots and tops for winter and spring use if planted September 1 to September 15. Fossil of Dinosaur Excavated NeAjr Orangeburg. A highly interesting discovery of a number of marine, animal and reptile fossils was unearthed a few days ago by county highway builders excavating with the drag line excavator on the old Columbia road several miles north of the city, says the Orangeburg Times and Democrat. L. C. Boone, county highway engineer, pi-mured an interesting exhibit of these bones, which he said belonged probably to the carboniferous age. The bones, which were embedded in sea shells and other marine farms, were scarcely distinguishable until they were cleansed of the deposits they were embedded in. The bones, he said, were clearly preserved in outline resembling that of the giant dinosaur onu reads about in studying the prehistoric animals of this country. He said that the tieposit was unearthed in a spot about 12 feet deep.- ? - -? - Mr. Boone stated that he had found many interesting relics of bygone days in excavation work over the county, but this find was the most interesting, from a geological standpoint. of any he had found. NOTICE OF DEMOCRATIC PRIMARY ELECTION Notice is hereby given that a Primary Election for tne nomination of Democratic candidates for the United States House of Representatives, Circuit Solicitor, and the various county offices will be held at the respective voting places in Kershaw County on Tuesday, August 28, 1928. No person is entitled to vote in this primary unless duly enrolled in his or her precinct. The polls will be open from eight o'clock in thomorning until four o'clock in the afternoon. Polling precincts hereby estahlish| ed and managers appointed to serve are as follows: Abney?I^ewis Dease. G. R. Crow, |G. C. Gaines. Vote at Kirkley's mill, Antioch?D. K. Stokes, Roykin McCaskill, C. W. Shiver. J. 1). Davis. Vote at Antioch School House. Blaney?-S. E. Ross. F. A. Nelson, J. G. Kelly, Mrs. W. D. Grigsby, Vote at A. K. Rose's Store. Rethune?G. R. Brannon, J. L. Raley. T. R. (_\>peland, Z. P. Gordon. Vote at Town Hall. RufTalo?R. F. Sowell, H. T. Catoe. C. A. Johnson, \V. A. Seegers. Vote at Buffalo School House. Camden?J. S. Halsall, E. L. Moseley, E. C. Zemp. M. L. Smith, Jr., vote at Court House. Cassatt?Henry E. Gardner, J. fa. Davis, J. L. Cooper. Vate at Henry K Gardner's Store. Charlotte Thompson?E. M. "or|t* man, A. G. ^larkrton, J. K. Sowell, Eugene l'earce. Vote at Charlotte Thompson School House. J DeKalb S. C. True?<lale, J. J. Owens, Nye Workman, J. E. Horton. Vote at DeKalb School House. Doby's Mill?A. K. HowenI( Krneat Kitkiunu, Gi-oi'jv A r ledge, A. Li??nctly. Vote at Campbell's Store. Enterprise?R B. Stokes, J. B. Marshall, J. K. L. Brannon. Vote at W M Brannon's Killing Station. dates Ford-?B. A. Brown, S. B. H?,i ???, Kii Buxley, L. S. Brown. \ >>U' at School House. Gumherry?K. B. Da\is, A. G. Bradley. J. K. Goff, G. J. Baker. Vote at (ijmbcrry School House. Harmony?J. M. Butler, 1.. ( . Pas:,al, Kred Bookman. Vote at School House. Hermitage?J. S. West, J. J. Dunn, H O. Bitrnes, W. J. Gardner. Vote at G. W. Harrison's Store. Kershaw?J. A. Whitley, Marion Jones, Ha/el Estridge, Joe Hough. Vote at W. K. Taylor's Store. l.ockhart ?Herbert Owens, 1 am Horton, Clarence Ktters. Vote at J i rdan's Store. l.ugotF ?G. K. Watts, J. A. Roa* borough, Luther Jones, H. A. Rabon. Vote at Roseborough's Store. liberty Hill?K. B. Floyd, R. C. Jones, Jr., W. C. Wardlaw, W. C. I'erry. Vote at Mackey-Jones Store. Ned's Creek?Enoch Roberts, CarD Craig, S. R. Johnson. J. L. Bowers. VOte at New School House. Oakland?L. L. McLaughlin, G. B. McCoy, J. H. Watkins, Wesley Out-1 law. Vote at Oakland School House. Pine Tree?J. E. Brannon," W. W. Horton, Arthur Hyatt, II. H. West. Vote at Midway School House. Roland?D. C. West, L. S. Spears, J. H. Barliekl, Otis West. Vote at West's Mill. Raley's Mill?J. H. Muni:. J. E. Mangum, Carson Rodgers, G. G. West. Vote at Raley's Mill. Rabun's Cross Roads?J. C. Ford, Cary Branham, Latham Gettys, Dannie Rabon. Vote at Rabon's Store. Salt Pond?N. P. Gettys, H, E. Moore, W. L. Branham, J. E. Mcln"tyre. Vote at Dinkin's Gin House. Sandy Grove?H. R. Hall, H. C. Stokes, W. H. Ratcliffe, W. S. Stokes. Vote at Sandy Grove Church. Shamrock?Ira Horton, Lewis E. Elliott, Hasell JJaker, T. J. Baker Vote at Shamrock School House. Shaylor's Hill?L. D. Holland, R. M. Drakeford, J. R. Horn^by, R. L. Smyrl. Vote at School House. Sheppard?C. L. Poison, F. J. Tidwell, Claud West, J. B. Langley. Vote at Langley's Store. Swift Creek?B. C. Truesdale, Willis Boykin, W. A. Boykin, H. D. Boykin. Vote at Truesdale's Store. Three C's? Robert MagMI. T. H. Voting, John M. Croxton, T. B. Fletcher. V ote at Three C's school house. I'.venty Creek?G. G. Gardner, Frank Rabon, A. D. Dowey, R. T. Jackson. Vote at Hinson's Store. Wateree?Frank Murphy. B. F. Robinson, Eldredge Moore. D. F. Barnes. Vote at Club House. Westville?L. C. Clyburn, W. F. McDowell, R. H. Truesdale, H. R. Young. Vote at Westville School House. At dubs having more than fifty voters the Australian Ballot System will be observed. The especial attention of the managers is called to the rules ar.<i regulations governing the conduct of the primary. At precincts where voters from more than one Township ca6t their ballots the voters will give managers the name of Township in which they reside and managers will write the name of such township on the poll list next to the voter's name. Managers are hereby instructed to call at the office of the County Chairman on or before Saturday. August 28, 1928, to receive instructions, ballots, boxes and enrollment books for the purpose of holding the election. Managers and clerks are also instructed to file their official returns with the County Chairman immediately following the election. Payment for services as managers, at the rate of $1.50 per day, will be made only to those whose names appear signed on the official returns blank. Notice :? also given that campaign meetings will be held in Kershaw County as follows: Blaney, Monday, August 20 at 10 a. m. Bethune, Tuesday, August 21 at 10 a. m. ' Kershaw, Wednesday, August 22, at 10 a. in. Camden, Thursday, August 23, at 4 p. m. Buffalo, Friday, August 24 ?fl Camden % Mill School, Situ? August 25 at 8 p J'W Notice is likewise given thitl County Committee w ill meet it I Court House in Cunwlen on Sitw? August 18, at 10 a. m. for the 9 pose of exttinination of and the t*9 t ion of the club rolls. Any ?9 who complains of ei ror will u'19 a hearing before the said com? and thereafter the rolls will b^9 Certified copies of the club I are now <>n file and open to <9 Inspection In the office of the (9 of Court for Kershaw County, M. L. SMITH, JR., Secty. Commander Richard E. Byrf? start on his Antarctic fxploratiijjB from New York next week. T?? I pedition will cost around French police chemists repcdH presence of poison in the stomt^| Capt. Alfred Lowenstein, Btfl Capitalist, who was lost from u9 j plane while flying over the Eifl Channel some weeks ago. Our Prescription Department! IS GIVEN THE I Utmost Care and Attention 1 We Solicit Y our Buiine?? Z E M P .8c D eP A S S> 1 TELEPHONE lO THE REXALL 8fORE| Kill Germ Laden Flies J ? nil Keep incni kwmy. dw Diana iniaci rowder or Liquid kills Flies, Ants, Roaches, Poultry Lice, Mosquitoes, Fleas, Bed Bugs, and otheflnsecta. Won't spot or stain. Use powder on plants and pets. Write us ft FREE insect booklet. If dealer can't supply, we will ship by parcel poet at prices named. McCORMICK ft CO., Baltimore, Md. bee brand Powder LiqtM I 10c & 25c SOcfttt 50c 9 $1.00 $U5 30C {Spray <?*,) JJ, & mie*t Trotylfiorlmtitn ' ' J Come take a Ride - and you will know why Chevrolet isl ^irst Choice of | the Nation frr 1928II One of the most spectacular achievements in automobile history is the manner in which today's Chevrolet is increasing its margin of leadership as the world's largest builder of automobiles. Since January 1st more than 750,000 of these Bigger and Better ChevroletS have been delivered to owners . . . and a single demonstration will tell some of the reasons why Chevrolet is first choice of the nation for 19281 Come take a ride! Experience the effortless handling, the supreme comfort, the high-speed endurance which have been such important factors in the sensational popularity Chevrolet is enjoying In every section of the land* Learn by sitting at the wheel of this great new car what amazing performance is now available liva low-priced automobile! Come take a ride?today 1 TS? COACH jn-W-cWSyi^ $585 u,xr?,20 TV CooTtrtiN* All pricn(?.K light |1 ".f ... *695 CfcMk OiwuM hSww4 Sihw Th?y Induct* tH? low?? Kaiullltg uvl (n*rvcing chargM inltabUi Welsh Motor Company - j North Broad Street Camden, S. C. j Q'U ality at l o w c o sj