The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, September 21, 1928, Image 7

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s0muick i ^ <^newstylf A triumph in individual beauty...a refreshing and radical departure from the tiresome commonplace ... a new style, a richer style, a more alluring style than the world has ever known I Only one completely new motor car style in the past twenty-four mo n l 11 s?o n 1 y one truly original ami beautiful <levelopment I II t SILVER. A N N I V t kS A K\ BUICk With N^uJtrrpleoe Jkxli.-a by Kiaber to genuine good taste. Here is a new style ? a richer style u more alluring style than ti?e motor world has ever known. And here. m ixxiy design? and, as the whole world realizes, it is the Silver Anniversary Buiek with Musterpiece Bodies by Fisher! Here is an entirely new scheme of body lines and contours ? arresting new color combinations?matchless new interiors?new appoint^ merits of comfort and convenience nnapproached by any other automobile of the day! Here is a true distinction wedded' too, is tremendous ineren.sc in power, in flexibility, in responsiveness? ao outstanding as to amaze even those motorists who have long been familiar with Buick's sujierior performance. That is why America is according the Silver Anniversary Buick the most enthusiastic reception ever enjoyed by any fine car. That is why thialieautiful new Buick hasalready become a countrywide voguel LITTLE MOTOR COMPANY CAMDEN, S. C. Some Narrow Escapes pule descending a rocky wall in jowstone canyon Francis Haeback, Milwaukee, dislocated his knee and i forced to hang on a ledge 500 t ir. the air for four hours before was rescued. Svo-year-old Ruth Wolfe, of omsburg, Pa., was swept 50 feet rn a mill race under a plank coverculvert. Her father tore planking n the culvert and saved the girl's p.-r. two autes collided in Baiti'e, Alary Alt, three years old, was >w:: 10 feet into a sewer opening, teen minutes later her cries at|ed passers-by; the manhole cover raised and she was rescued. airplane pilot flying over Long h. Cal., noted that Clarence ki'.on, of Independence, Mo., was ftouble as he swam far out in the v.. The pilot dropped a life Stiver which Wheaton held on K..a boat ie cued him. Bhxr Raid, 10, attempted to resMiw ;* . dog from an 18 foot tube ?*:< . Pa., which carried over mitei from Mill Creek to Lake m J oh: .y fell in and was carried th? cube for three miles. T B. BRUCE V eterinarian ?7 Phone 30?Night Phone 114 CAMDEN, S. C. JO-MO-KORN )R CORNS AND CALLOUSES de in Camden And For Sale By OeKalb Pharmacy-?Phone 95 - / OBT. W. MITCH AM .1 rchitect Crocker Building, Camden, S. C. WORLD'S HOTTEST PLACE Also Its Coldest Point, Named By New York Weather Man "Where is the hottest place on earth?" the reporter for the New York Sun's Rays asked the weather man. "At Azizia, twenty-five miles south of Tripoli, north Africa," responded that wise person. "Azizia is an Italian station, and Italian scientists recently made an observation which stands unchallenged. Their thermometer recorded 136.4 degrees, Fahrenheit, in the shade." "Where is the coldest place?" "Verkhoyansk, Siberia, within the Arctic Circle. Years ago a test made showed the reading of 90.4 degrees I below zero, Fahrenheit, the lowest temperature ever recorded upon the face of the earth. There may, however, be colder spots in the antarctic. Byrd may make observations which will constitute r.ew records. No ^ month of the year has a mean temperature below freezing in the antarctic, and there are only two species ! of flowering plants in the whole vast region. There are 400 species in the j arctic, whose mean temperature is considerably higher than that of the antarctic. It is quite conceivable, therefore, that temperatures of 100 degrees below zero may exist in the region to which Commander Byrd and his men are going." A New Y'orker last Friday drove an automobile from New York to Boston in four hours and 52 minutes, beating the time of the fast ex press train. A part of the distance was done at a speed of 88 miles an hour. Pat Murray, a prominent Cheraw lawyer, was shot and seriously wounded by his former partner, Frank Pargues, in a fight in the office of the latter. Three bulletk struck Mur1 ray out of four shots fired, and then Murray took the gun away from Pargues and hit him over the head with it, so that Pargues also needetf the attention of a surgeon and is confined to his bed. Murray will probably recover. Neither man would tell police or reporters the cause of the fight. Nobody's Business Written for The Chroniclev by Gee McGee, Copyright, VJ'JtH. I ncle Joe .-<|\ - u chain grocey store is a one-way (their way) ?tor. . He eiainis that lu- spent all his inonv in ??ne of'ym the other night for a pound i i coffee and then tried*to bu> :i '"< - worth o! .-ugai on credit t " ' 1 ' 1 ' - i 'dli e w i1 r . an<l t he m<i at him. \ : -t insist- at monkey." "ef.se . ! .11. I . He' ''''' ' ?Um'u\ et ed It.a .n the led 11 ' * ' w ^ n 11 \\ . n me in ?' talking 1 o. al " i:i'! l*. i. arm eating goukm ?>' ' ' i a iiii* lime. I ! .-"am ..in: -c.| or i etit 1 M- '1 i . at h.- afford t i"'Wt I 'I hat .In est nieiit i*' u"1 ie-> ... wait oil tin- nose. ' " kinder like a man with 1 "> cent " >a-h .nher.ting a Twin Six Hack I he lertilizer companies -a\ go\el nment will bu.-.L them it make- eluapei nitrates and the tain-f- swear th<\ will stay hunted l lie gu\ei'hineiit doesn't provide tieaper nitrates, and in the mcan'1"'e the water 'ittinue- to run over '.< Muscle Shoa. dam and the poli.an. draw the:: pay regular.y and '?*i' <?n promising their constituents t.'.at they will look after their in ten-is. 1 he average senator o.fongressnian has ahout as much real Merest ill the wellaie of the farmers a- a bumble bee has in a tad pole. I he City I mm ; 1 of Chicago is ' ''inking of passing an ordinance making it against the- law for a man >r woman, and furthermore?it will be called a misdemeanor hereafter if any person or persons or Bolshevicks or communists or gunmen throws bombs at or under anybody with intent to defraud or otherwise scare them into voting right anso-l forth. (N. B. These laws will notj I become operative until Al. Smith is elected president.) ?Cows.? Our teacher has ast us boys to rite a compersition on a beast of burden now in use in this country on the farms, and I have chose the cow to rite on. The cow is the most famous beast of burden they is onner count of her milk which you gather from her after getting her to "saw" and atop switching her tale and she will give it as long as you feed her. There is two^apeshees of cows, vizzly: the mudey headed and the horns, and alxf the bull which is very dangerous. The mule is also a good j beast, but he don't give milk, but he j can outrun the cow. The famous i past time of the city cows is bawling, j , but country cows eats grass all the [ | time ad don't have no time for bawls. 1 Signed, Willie Rider, (>th. Grade. What other folks think of you don't amount to much. Unless, of course?the "other folks" in questio happen to be Dun and Bradstreet. i They even known how many instalments behind you are, and whether or not your wife is extravagant. They get pay for talking about you behind your back. I-g-n-o-r-a-n-c-e If there is an over-supply of any ; one thing in this world it is ignorance. There are all kinds and forms , of ignorance about us, and to tell I the truth, most all of us are afflicted i with it. Millions upon millions of I people are so ignorant they have to j work for a living. * If you find a family anywhere that does not take a ewspaper of any kind, you can just put it down that family is growing; up in ignorace. There's not any better evidence of it i to be had. Ingorance is not alway- 1 due to a lack of book learning. Som. j men can read Caesar and play Hamlet and recite Plato, yet they are s<? ignorant that they can't hang a window shade or set a clock or fry an egg. j If you eat with a knife, you ar<* ignorant. If you pick \our teeth i . pie.-ence of \\itne>-? \"U'' i^nurar.i' i- too inti nso to talk a!>< ul, and if y<>u happen to belch at anytime, anywhere, under any rendition, you I are then, and there luir.t fur life fiuin^ a social standpoint. If you dont know who is president of the United States, you are ignorant. If you should happen to know, I you are no better off?but you are slightly removed from the throes of dense ignorance. If you say?-"I seen him yestiddy", you are ignorant, and if you tell your doctor that you think you have the "side pleurisy" when you have nothing worse than the belly-ache, you are ignorant, and if he takes your word for it, and treats you accordingly, he's ignorant' too. All the igorant people don't live in the country. Some of the most uncultured folks I ever knew were born and raised in town. They had chances to improve themselves, hut they observed only the doings of the creatures they came in contact with, and made no effort to change their environment. Half of the citizenship of the land votes, hut they don't know what for or why, and therein they are ignorant. Ignorance is easy to overcome i'a man can read a little, anil write fairly well, and will keep his eyes open and his mouth shut, he may be slightly ignorant, but he won't be thut way long. With all the newspapers and magazines and free hooks, etc., that we have today, no person should be an ignoramus, and if he is?it's his fault. Laziness and ignorance and slouthfulness art bed-fellows. I am ignorant and know it. Lots of people are ignorant and don't know it. And you aint as smart as you think you are, either. John Coolidge, son of the president, began working for the New Haven railroad at New Haver.. Conn., on Tuesday. He will draw a salary of $30 per week. An unidentified bandit was killed in Detroit on Monday after he ha.l held up a chain grocery store. The bandit w,%a armed with three revolvers, but that did not prevent the store manager following him outside. Policemen joined in the chase and the man was riddled with bullets. I Death <?1 .Mrs. .1. A. NVIutle\ Mi>. Matt it- W'hitl. >. v, itf ..f .1. A. Whitle\. d:ed ;tI her la>l Thui ? \ day morning. Septemhci ?>th, uft.*r' a lingo-brig illness of about two yeurs. | having passed her fifty-eighth year August 2drd, and her reman s wer laid t<> rest Friday afternoon in tho Laurel eemetery, following funeral services conducted by her pastor, Rev. J. Hawley Byrd. Mrs. Whitley was a consistent member of Center Grove Baptist church, and was a good neighbor and friend. During her long illness she bore her sufferings with patience and Christian fortitude. She is survived by her husband and the following [ children; J. P., T. B., Thomas, Miss Nell Whitley, Mrs. L. W. Reeves and | MM?J??MM? III /-*>,'^yrn-iwiMwaaww?MI Mi'", .1. I.. l?ee\e.-. c! I\i - tin ; Mi-. 'A I! :t< i?. <>:' l'..\nu!, Texas; an 1 Mis. S. I bailey, < !' Lancaster. All of these wcic present al the funeral, except Mrs. \V. \. 111linn.?Kershaw IC i a. Sir Thomas Lipton. English mcrohant and sportsman, arrived in New York thits week. He says he will issue a challenge for a yacht race for the American cup in 1930. The state insurance department has barred the Firemen Insurance company from South Carolina after a hearing, for violation of state statutes. It has been operating chierty in Spartanburg: and is a Northern company. 7"\t the wheel yon will leam something new and better in fine car performance In Buying u Hudson You Save up to Several Hundred Dollars a Car! *1250 AND UP All [triees f. ?. b. Detroit m w Scores of motorists fresh from examining and riding in the latest and hest cars of tlie day declare Hudson the supreme performer of their experience. You will find this Hudson smooth, fast, reliable, brilliant. Its fuel economy is unequalled in cars of its weight and power. But for the story of what Hudson will do that you would not ask other cars to do?will you please take the wheel for any test you desire? Iluyers can pay for cars out of income at lowest availablm charge for interest, handling and insurance. UeLOACHh MOTOR COMPANY West DeKalb Street Camden, S. C. Hera Is beauty and the beaut, but in mis m?:unce beauty is represented by Miss lone Carle, famous wild animal subjugator, and the beaut honors go to "Bombay" and "Cleopatra." two tiger cubs that are recent additions to the menagerie of John Robinson's Clrcuu. John Robinson will bring his famous circus to this vicinity within a few days and spectators will see a performance that is all new from beginning to end A massive and gorgeous spectacle, "King Solomon and Queen of Sheba," will open the program, which contains many new and novel features from all portions of the universe. Columbia, Friday, September 28. DAD AND I By Stafford Talk abouf nesVs1. Isn'fHms a small one? Each egg in it is abouf as large as a pea It's the nest of the Costas Humming Bird. This is the nest, of- tho. Baltimore/? Oriole. It is !.kf a bag m u/ith the three corners fastened to the branches & of the tree, v r Isn't this a % strange nestK The birds thai built it are : called Lpngrailed Titmice they live in Europe< f Here is the nest of t*h.c> /ML African weave rsvjpV They hang /-/' their nests r'-j upside dou/n>^'. it'ith the d entrance st\H' (he bottom lust above u/atcr Nlou/ u/e see the . \L\| Tailor Bird , and his nesr^ V He takes a strand of cotton fibre, tu/ists it into a string,sews tooether fu/o leaves making holes u/ith his sharp beak.draunng leaves topether tofomi a pouch to hold the nest- Jfy/ortZ