The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, October 19, 1928, Image 2
NOTICE OF ELECTION
STATE OF SOUTH CAKOI.INA,
County of Kershaw,
Notice is hereby given that the
Oenei'ttl, Flection for Presidential and
Vice {'residential Electors an<i Representatives
in Congress will be held
at the voting precincts fixed by law
in the County of Kershaw, on Tuesday
November 6, said day being
Tuesday following the first Monday,
as prescribed by tin- State Constitution.
The <tu&)4tk's?tioh for suffrage are
as follows:
Residence in State for two years,
in the County one year, in the polling
prem/iet in which the elector offers to
vote, four months, and the payment
six months before any election" of
any poll tax then due and payable:
Provided, That ministers in charge of
an orgunized church arid teacher# of
public schools shall be entitled to
vote after six months' residence in
tin- State, otherwise qualified.
Registration.?Payment of all taxes,
including poll lax, assessed and collectible
during the previous year.
'1 he production of u certificate or the
receipt of the officer authorized to
collect such taxes shall la' conclusive
proof of the payment thereof.
Before the hour fixed for opening
the polls Managers and Clerks must
take and subscribe to the Constitutional
oath. The Chairman of the
Board of Managers can administer
the oath to the other Managers and
to the Clerk; .1 Notary Public must
administer the oath to Chairman. The
Managers elect their Chan man and
Clerk.
Polls oi each voting place must lie
opera 'I nl 7 o'clock a. hi. and closed
at 1 o'clock |>. m., except in the <Jliy
of Charleston, where they shall be
opened a 7 a. in. and closed at <\ p. m.
The Managers have the power to
lill a vacancy.; am! if mum of l So
1 Managers attend, the citizens < un appoint,
from among the qualified vote-la
the Manager** who, after being
worn, can conduct the election,
i At the Hone of the election the
Managern and Clerks must proceed
publicly to open the ballot box and
count the ballots therein, and continue
without adjournment until the
same in completed, and make a statement
of the results for each office,
arid sign the name. Within three
days thereafter the Chairman of the
Hoard, or nonie one designated by the
JJoard, must.deliver to the Commissioners
of Flection the poll list, the
box containing the ballots and written
i .statements of the results of the elec:
tion.
Managers of Klection
The following Managers of Klection
have been appointed to hold the
election at the various precincts in
it In- said County:
Camden Opera House-?W. R.
Hough, K. Zemp, M. C. West,
Radclifl'T Mill W. 11. Davis, Calj
vim Hall. Mrs. .J. T. McCuskill.
< assatt W. T. Davis, 11. K. Gardner,
J. T. Munn.
Kershaw- IT K. Gregory, Lewis F.
TTuesdalc, A. L. Cook.
Rabun's ( i..-s Roads W. K. Kelly,
. F. II. Watt -, B. '1'. Rabon.
' Hlanry ?A. T. Simpson, H. R. Hoykin,
.J. M. Rlltlcr.
Hethuiie D. 1 Yarbruugh, I). J. i
< lvburii. K T. l'.-tridge.
Wesi-vibe R. I Bell, W. L. Gas- 1
kins, .1. \\ . Voting.
Hutla <i School House?-W. T.
lle'.ie.- e Mung<< Roy .I' hnson.
I.ugotl' -K. T. Truesdel, ILiram j
N't".' k?. I. W. 15: .:!ibam,
'I'hne ("s?J, 11. Young, .J. 11. Bar-.
held, doe Fletcher.
' f iber'y Hill N. S. Richards; W.
('. Wardlaw, W. Z. Hilton.
Beaver Dam Schoolhouse?d. R.
West, C. L MiGuirt, 1). S. Rodgers.
Stockton I'hn e- W. A. Boykin," Sr.,
W. Seagle. I.. W. Boykin, ,Jr.
Gates Ford - B. A. Brown, d. C.
Robinson, Mannie Fletcher.
Raley's Mili - K. S. Rodgers, I*\ L.
Munn, D. S. Hilton.
Shaylor's 11.11 R. I.. Smyrl, R. M.
Drakeford, S. AV Hornsby.
! Stokes' Schoolhouse ? L. L. McLaughlin,
.J. II. Watkins, R. L. Stoker.
Hermitage i o'ton Mill?W. A. Anderson.
d. A. 1 h.s'.y, W. H. Bradley.
1 Pine Creek Miil?\V. L. Sanders,
| M. L. Rab y. M ;. d. Conyers.
("harlotte Tin mpson Schoolhouse?-1
! K. C. Pcarce. D. 1.. S-.well, H. I). Boy
km.
j < antey K. K. Holland, S. ('. Rose,
(' 1' l.orick.
! Brannon's Killing Station??J. B.
; Me('<>\. \Y. L. St d-.c-, W M. Bran-'
mm.
Ned's 1 icck S. R. .) i.nson. d. L,
Bow ei >, G. \\ . Sinn! .
A .tin, U V. t.nolhe.J R 1.. Hat J
I'm!, ( . I\. M I ., ' . . \ 1 bel t M.
R",:. , r . I
I ne Manager- a* mien jo-orinc:
'naiad .,!- ( a: i, < [ a ', d to ilel, i
! g.r- one ' ' !a . numi > t all',
lithe box a: 1 ! ;a .ks t or I be i ec11< 11
J | at 1 tie \\ aM i , Messeiigi j ott'ice,
( Salunlav. N ,v, mber .'5. 1
ij ' i W. B1RCH.MORK.
| I \\ K NKTTLKS.
I R D. WILLIAM-.
!', ('oinmis.-ioners of Federal Flection
for Kershaw I onnty, S. C.
! October Itith, P.'L's.
J rt?iyiiTTTTTyiry?TTinT?ri j
| SORE "|
a Could Not Rest :
? n
|J Mr?. J. H. Nichols, who lives at JJ
K 6 Id Kim Tree Lane, Lexington, m
aKy., wiyB: J
"Some few yearn ngo, my health J
x wuh bud. I luul very uevoro pains ?
U in my Hides. My nerves were in 3
jj a terrible condition. I could not J
? rent. n
? "Tho lower part of my body U
J] wuh very sore. 1 did not feel like J
? eating, and did not sleep well at ?
? all at nights. [
J "A friend of mine recommend- J
x ed Cardui. I began taking it and x
J Haw quite un improvement in my "
J condition. I kept it up until I J
X felt Hireng and well."
About a year ugo, Mra. Nichols *
aays, she found herself in a ner- JJ
fi vous, run-down condition. "I took N
N N
* Cardui again," she adds, "and it *
J helped ine wonderfully. It is a jj
x splendid tonic." n
Cardui is a mild, medicinal *
tonic, tnade from purely vegeta- JJ
X bis ingredients. *
p At all druggists. H
M * '** *
M" 1 H~VSE BY
IjLwOMtM FOR OYER SO VEARS [
wf Igaaafiminimmix
Money Order 70
Years Old Cashed
Deerficld, Maaa., Oct. 10.?A money
order foi $20 sent in 1858 by Aza B.
Munn, "f Chicago to hi* brother,
! I'hilo, ha* been cashed by Uncle 8am
for I'hilo'a heir. Major A. Frank
Hytrhkifis, who found it as a boon
mark in a Bible.
| A I.hw
Blanks for Sale at Thi? Office
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CA MI)EN, S. C.
. ?
W.C.T.U. Executive,
A Republican and
Baptist, for Smith
< i
BIRMINGHAM, Ala.?Not all Bouthera
Drys are so naively credulous
that (hey allow the mug I vo.s to ba
duped by the furtive libel# conceived
by the instigator# of the "wbUperlug
campaign."
Among Influential problbltlonfite*
who are working actively for the election
of Governor Hmlth U Mrs. Mabel
Jom ,t West of thin city, a member of
the State Kxecutlve Committee of
the Women's Christian Temperance
I'ftlOU. '
Ivdarlng In a pufillc statement
thai "Smith Ih a bettor prohibitionist
than Hoover," Mrs. West ha& appealed
to all Alabama women "not to be deceived
by paid Republican propaganda."
Mrs. West In an active worker In
the Baptist church. Until this year
she has been a Republican.
What Borah
Told the Senate '
About Hoover
Panic stricken over the Imminent
loss of all the States which have had
tho opportunity to so? and hear Governor
Smith, the Republican National
Committee has cancelled Senator
Borah's scheduled Kastorn speeches
so that lie can devote his whole time
In a desperate effort to stem the
Smith tide in tho West.
Since the campaign speeches of
this high-powered Republican spell
SENATOR PETER NORRECK, Republican,
of South Dakota, said in
the Senate on Apr.I 20, 1928:
"I have been here for seven years
while Mr. Hoover has hern Secretary
of Commerce, and he is the one man
who has never raised his vo.ee against
agricultural inoquat.ty . . . He should
never be elected President."
binder are purely "political," be, of
course, wHi not divulge his own personal
feelings and opinions. Those who
hear him; however, might bo interested
In the Senator's real estimate
of Herbert Hoover, as gleaned from
his own utterances In the Senate.
In a scathing arraignment of the
former Food Administrator after the
war, Senator Borah said:
"Whatever may he the great abil
lty of Mr. Hoover, there' Is one lndiSENATOR
GERALD P. NYE, Republican,
of North Dakota, said on
June 11, 1928:
This man Hoover, whom some are
frying to drive down our throats, believes
that agriculture is improving:
if agriculture is improving, it is dying
from improvement."
v 1 dual whom he does not know oitfats
In this country, and that is the taxpayer.
lb- seems to think that money
comes fike manna to the children of
Israel from Heavi-n and not foul the
-sweat and toll and sacrifice of the
people."
Declaring th.it TTnover had permitted
disgraceful profiteering by the
meat packers, and charging him a|t
"violatiou of the most fun.i.iuu i.tal
principles <>f our Constitution," S-:iat-?r
Borah exclaimed:
CONGRESSMAN CHARLES
BRAND, Republican of Ohio, asserted
in the Senate on March 13. 1928:
"Mr; Hoover has been the supreme
opponent of agricultural prosperity
for the past ten years. . . . If Mr,
iirtO?ar c? .electccl President of the
V. States .... agriculture is
doomed to eight more years of mis
/ m
"No oihj with such a perverted jj
sense of decency ought to be entrust- S
ed with unlimited power to
$100,0U0,00u." =
The water power lntorests (as well \<
an the meat packers) aro in favor of 5
giving Mr. Hoover as much authority 2
as possible, llut'lf what Senator Borah jj
told the Senate is true, how can he 2
ask thinking voters to place Mr. Hoo- H
ver in a position to control, directly ;
or Indirectly, all tho vast resources of ;
the United States Government?
SENATOR CHARLES CURTIS. R?- p
publican candidate for Vice President,
referring to Herbert Hoover, on June ;
11, 1928, declared: Z
"The convention cannot afford to :
nominate as the head of the ticket, :
any one for whom the party will be Z
on the defensive from the day he is ;
named until the polls close on election f
day." [
OFFICIAL BIGOTRY
G. O. P. Committee Backs Mrs. Wllle- [
brandt's Appeals to Religious !
Hatred.
Dosplto the indignant protests of i
numerous Republican newspapers
throughout the country, the Republican
National Committee has officially j
sanctioned the campaign of bigotry j
and Yilliflcation being waged by Mrs. <
Mabel Walker Wlllebrandt, Assistant I
Attorney General.
Although several United States Senators
have demanded her removal
from office, and the Republican pratf, '
fearing an "American reaction" to bar
un-American appeal to religious latolerance,
continues to insist that abft
be "mutiled," Herbert Hoover !Hdt- "
cates by his silence that he approves
the action of his campaign managers.
ADMIRAL COONTZ, METHODIST
AND MASON, TO AID SMITH
HANNIBAL, Mo. ? Admiral Robert
E. Coontx, retired, former Commander
In Chief of the United States flec^,
has returned to his homo here after a
summer In Europe, to work actively aa
a speaker In his district In behalf of
Governor Smith. The admiral Is a
Methodist and a Masos.
A
Game Ab An Asset
On every farm is a force of workers
who receive no pay, yet, without
their help, crops would be decidedly
smaller?in fuct, it is doubtful il
crops, could be raised if these tireless
workers went on a "strike" for a
few years. These workers are the
birds whose daily bill of fare consists
largely of destructive insects. A
number of the birds are classed a.s
game birds which, besides keeping J
down the insect population, serve]
another useful purpose as food for
! the farm family during the huntin;," i
1 season.
! Aside from the very considerable
j food value of game birds, the ecu- j
] nomie value of the feathered tribe to
; the farmers of a number of the States ]
J can be expressed only in terms of I
millions of dollars because of their
activities in controlling insect pests
(and destroying the seeds of noxious
j weeds.
A. Willis Robertson, Chairman of
I Virginia Commission of Game and In!
land Fisheries, calls attention to a
] statement to the effect that each in-'
jsectivorous bird eats 100 insects each
| day, "which would be 18,250 for a
I six months period," Mr. Robertson
reminds. Rut, obviously, that number
I is really inconsequential compared to
the millions of destructive progeny
Which would spring from the insects
.devoured by a single bird.
| Taking Georgia as an exampl-,
j because of the survey conducted by
Commissioner Peter S. Twitty, of the
; Department of Game and Fish, it
is found the wild life of the State
j taken during the 1027-28 season
j show it was worth $5.250. That
the estimate is conservative is apparent
from con.-.idering that rabbits
i wi re valued at 25 cents each, while
deer were estimated to he worth $30.
The species ot c ?me included quail,
i doves, ducks, snipe, wild geese, woodcock,
turkeys, marsh hens, rabbits,
squirrels and deer. As to numbers
taken by hunters, Commissioner
TwltiyV report lists more thun five
million rabbits and 750 deer anions
the game animals, while the game
birds range from 9,000 wild turkeys
to nearly live million quail. CJame
of all kinds totaled 15,678,750. Naturally,
a very large proportion of the
Georgia game-was found on the farms
[of the State, a situation which holds
I good to even a larger extent in various
other commonwealths.
Another phase of the game situation
which, too often, is overlooked
is the value of good shooting in drawing
strangers to a locality with consequent
spending of large sums of
! money for hotel and other accommo-;
dations, resulting in increased volume
! of purchases of farm products and!
[otherwise putting <%nsiderable money
tin local circulation, a thing from:
which the entire community benefits.
Some idea of the value of attracting
tourists by means of scenic and
fishing and hunting inducements may
be gained from consideration of the
fact that visitors to Minnesota expend
$65,000,000, those who visit
Colorado leave over $60,000,000 and
other States enjoy annual incomes
as follows: Florida, $70,000,000; Wisconsin,
$27,500,000; Michigan $40,000,000;
South Dakota, $22,000c
In parts of Pennsylvania, farmers,
according to a report derive a greater
income from boarding sportsmen
during the hunting seasonthto^Klj
make clear from" the raising of oB
Corn Crop Very Short |M
Clemson College, (Jet,
crop report of October 1 givej iBI
Carolina's estimated corn yjej^B
18,928,000 bushels. This is 5igBi
bushels less than the five.year?|
age yield. It means that mules,
cows, poultry, and humans willK?
to go on short rations early li|
spring unless steps are taken
conserve and supplement
supply, warns R. W. Hamilton,i^B
assistant director of the
Service.
The immediate planting
rye, oats, vetch or Austrian^^V
field peas will give early grauj^B
hay, Mr. Hamilton advises.
two acres of oats or barley
planted and fertilized will.cao^B
work animal from the last of^Hl
through the summer season. Tt^B
four acres of wheat will supply l^Hi
for a family from June an. jiff|
Unless theBe winter feed cropB|
planted now, S<?uth Carolina f&r^B
will be forced to import and pajB
the largest amount of Western K
ever shipped into the state, in
to make another crop. j
Bandits entered a New York jeH
er's office last Monday and got
with diamonds and precious m^Hc
valued at $250,000. B
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