The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, May 10, 1929, Image 2
I REDPATH
1 . T-' 1 '! ?
0; NOT A rle lectures
at the
Redpath Chautauqua
j Inspiring and Informing
"the remaking of the &
kentucky mountaineer"
1 Burns of the
I 1 Mountains
"METAL IN THE MOULD" [|
I Capt. T. Dinsmore Upton J
| "shooting the goal" 3
Dr. Frank Gordon
I A ii 'llcket for All the Attraction* of
REDPATH WEEK
5 BIG DAYS
$2.50 (State Tax Extra)
REDPATH
CiHAUTAUQUA HERE BEGINS MAY 13TH
Florida Anti-Vice
Attorney Beaten
St. Petersburg, Fin., April 29.?
.lames F. Pickers, an attorney who
aligned himself against dog racing
and lawlessnoHH in St. Petersburg, today
wus recovering from a inciting
given him yesterday by live men who
kidnaped him from his home.
<" Nickers said he would heed their
warning to leave St. Petersburg not
later than tonight.
Some mystery surrounded the
alTair. Pickers had just returned to
his home from Sunday morning
church services, when he was accosted
by I lie men, who apparently
had awaited his return near his
house. At the point of pistols, hf.?
was forced into an automobile,
handeutfed, gagged and bound.
The men drove some distance from !
St. Petersburg, Pickers said, took
him from the car, removed his clothing,
robbed him of $2,000, and whipped
bun. Then, warning him to
leave town immediately, they drove
away. Pickers said he made his way
to a nearby highway, where a motor
1st picked him up and brought him to I
a hospital here.
His arrival at the hospital ended a
wide search by f>() special police of- j
ficers and two airplanes ordered out 1
: 1
after bis wife, who was ill in her
bed. had notified police of the abduction.
Ooming here several years ago
from Memphis, Tenn., Bickers represented
locnl church interests in
a fight on dog racing tracks which
had been operated during the winter
season. Only recently he sought
the removal of Sheriff Gladstone
Beattie on charges that the officer
had accepted protection money from
bootleggers.
Beattie visited Bickers last night
and told the attorney he would "do
everything In my power" to run down
the kidnapers.
Storm Toll Mount*
Atlanta, Muy 3.?With 3H fatalities
recorded in sdven states, the south
today counted a rising1 death toll
from its second disastrous visitation
by tornadoes in a week.
More than 100 persons were injured
in the storms, which struck
Wednesday and Thursday over a wide
area extending from Arkansas to
Maryland.
While relief work went forward
in all the affected regions undo"
direction of the Red Cross, Virginia,
which suffered greatest, saw its list
of casualties increase to iJb as some
of the injured succumbed and communication
was restored to isolated
communities.
Ix>rd Yo/mg, 77, for years, a bitter
opponent of Lloyd George, leader and
former premier, died suddenly in a
London theatre Monday night.
m DeK ALB COUNCIL No 8fi
Junior Order U. A. H.
^lyMr Regular counail first and
\ third Mondays of each
month at 8 p.m. Visiting Brethren
are welcomed. P. J. CREED, i
L. 11. JONES, Councillor.
Recording Secty.
O KEKSHAW LOIXIR No. 29
A. F. M.
Regular communication 6<
y* this lodge is held on the
first Tuesday in each month
at 8 p.m. Visiting Brethren are welcomed.
T. V. WALSH.
J. E. ROSS, Worshipful Master.
Secretary. l-l-l-27-tf
To The Public
1 desire l?> announce nil milk
hearing the label of th? W il low brook
Dairy i* gr??t??d by Hoard of
Health of the city of < .tinden, S. C.,
and is graded A. t ope the peop!e
of Camden will all know where
they can buy milk, what grade it i*
atul what the gr.??te of the milk
means to the health ?>f the users.
We think that the Board of Health
of Camden ha- at last taken the
right step M safeguard the nii^
used in Camden and see that they afe
treated right. We are in favor of
any sanitation that they- might approve,
and will always work to that
rnti.
Very respectfully,
JOS. M. SMITH, Manager.
WILLOW BROOK DAIRY,
6-8pd, L\l?Off, S. C.
?^BadlyS
Run-Down Jjj
1 ^ol y?n ifo, I ft
wu virjr much n? tf
dpwn,** uyi Mrs. ?
Olympic Kight, of 17 1
Lovett, Oe. ^1 did 4
not alaep WvQ, ?rvd W
wu weak end root 7 |
loo*. I dragged |U(
around the houee do
with not enough rj1
trangth to do rny m (
daily taaka. I wor RSL
jJ ried a lot, end thia r//
H disturbed lUU of ft]
3 mind reacted on my haalth. wr
J "I had often road of CarduL Wl
j io I thought I would try it. I
J soon began to improve after 1 [vl
j had taken Cardui fbr a while. II
( "It was RBtoniahing how
| much I picked up. I slept bet- nf
) ter, my appetite Improved, atvd fl
j that awful d ragging-down feel- nl
j ing left me. nl
J "I waa eo much better that W
! I continued taking Cardui un- Wl
?' til 1 felt perfectly well-" Sty
Cardui haa been need by vk
I women for over 60 year*. DM
i For sale by all druggist*. W\j
CARDUI
Helps Women BR
To Health H
JB\
Take Thadf?r4 ? BUak-Draught fRj
. xrs tor Oenattpation, btfSfMtiW en|uJ
18 ffiljBBI
gHrcflrr iSW..1 .flMiKBaaBB
Z2S3T " ^ -:-Tr-r:r"
(Conducted by Lconird I* Brown
internationally known authority anl
founder of the Brown and Mann
strain of S. C. W. Ixighorna. Enquiries
addressed care of this paper
gladly answered by Mr, Brown.)
Developing the Chick
The second week will see the chicks
starting to feather out and getting
huskier and stronger every day. The
feed ration should be continued as instructed
last week. The circl*
around the hover may he eliminated
by the end of the second week and
the temperature let down to 86 do*
grees. *
Several cautions should be
: tinned at thia time. Be sure n6t tu
frighten the chicks or to allow childrcn
or pets a chance to do it.
('lightened chicks will trample each
other to death.
1 io sure to keep the 'chicks of dir?"
furent ages separated. The chiaf
reason for this is that with two dit?
fere lit ages of chicks together, the
older < hicks crowd the younger ones
i from the feed ^nd drink with the rei
sulfr tin* younger ones become stunted
land lose their chance of ever reaching
complete and normal development.
|
Temperatures must be right and
must W evenly maintained, or a lot
of trouble can result. Be sure the
chicks don't bunch on one side of the
hover. They are comfortable and
right when they are evenly distributed
and form a sleeping ring
within a few inches of the' outer
edge of the hover. Too much heat
will drive them to the corners where
they will suffocate and trample each
other to death. Too little heat will
cause them to "pile" in the warmest
spot, in addition to inducing diarrhea,
pneumonia, etc.
I If the chicks cannot be put out in
the sunshine within the first two or
three weeks, leg weakness must be
carefully guarded against. Cod liver
oil fed in the proportion of 1 quart
to 100 pourids of mash will help very
largely in making up for lack of sunshine.
Feeding eggs, especially the
yolks, with the mash will help. Exposing
the chicks to sunlight through
ordinary glass is not enough, as tne
glass keeps out the essential healthgiving
rays. >
Coccidiosis should be watched for
by the end of the second week, and
due to its very serious and highly infectious
nature should be guarded
against by all possible means. The
best preventative is strictest sanita*.
tion about all the chicks' quarters'.
Cleaning the iloor of the brooder,
house about the hover daily as )oug
as the chicks are droopy, emaciated
and sick, if they once become infected,
is about the best that can be
done, and a temporary all-milk ration
helps.
'I he chicks at this age are normally
peppy and full of lots of "go." As
in the case with humans, normal good
care and common! sense are the great
essentials, and with scrupulous sanitation
and considerate care you stand
every chance of bringing the little
follows through the first few weeks
at least in line condition.
The Third Week
The chicks we have been following
art now beginning their third week
ami the big thing now is to get them
lots of exorcise and to get them off
the real baby chick stage and into
fast and sound development.
The temperature in the brooder
house rhould be let down to 80 degrees
during the third week, and the
chicks be given access to an outside
run for the sake of exercise and fresh
air and sunchine. As mentioned a
few weeks ago it is imperative that
this yard be on fresh ground, ground
that has never been used for poultry ]
before, at least not the previous year, I
or if it is absolutely impossible to I
urrangc this, then bring in fresh
ground from some uncontaminated
place and cover the yard with about
three inches of it, which will give th<?
chicks reasonable protection from the
diseases that old ground is sure to
give them.
Starting gradually about the middle
of the third week the chicks
should be fed a developing mash as
follows: 80 pounds of white bran, j
25 pounds of low grade flour, 32 |
pounds of fine ground corn, 20 pounds
of ground oat groats, 5 pounds o?
alfalfa Irnvcs and blossoms, 10 pounds
of bfeat grade fish meal or meat men!, '
17 pounds of ground bonemeal, 10
pounds of chick sire charcoal.
This developing mash should be
put before the chicks in separate
hoppers, in addition to the chick
starter nm>h used previously. Then
after ab 'Ut the eighth week you w-bf
want to < minute the starter nui.'i
and fill n the hoppers with the developing
m.ish.
In am. to the mash ratio ., be
chick> - : now lie getting lots ,,f
green a* , . ulent feed, green lawn
clipping- -.or, alfalfa, lettuce. ar..l
cabhng. the essential vitam and
m they contain. A Is...
now i,| week) you sln..;.,i
start ng the big cnpa< . v
that ! . will later nfced
into 11 k , g production. lh.-s ,
vigorou-. g honed birdu are u:..,;
you \\ . ?" : layers. Give the ch.
all thc\ cat of the ration^
scrihen hm uTi<T then Tnthe .
iug g .< :hi:n a good grain feed
til the.: . rops are literally bulg.ng
Then, n* 1, >tst Ha goon as thes ;u-e
getting pretty well feathered out,
start them out on the roosts. ;ir.d
until ti)?-\ become'well accustomed to
roost ing through the night, watch
them all closely ench evening to m
them set t led on* the roosts, if
j broker, in right, you-tvM And that]]
[each hird will ~ always occupy the
identical spot on the roosts as long
las it lives. -
Eat Up'Poles
The ravenous appetite of the little
red-headed woodpecker cost the Bell
Telephone Company in one western
sta.te alone last year the sum of
$13,000.
More than 500 poles were condemned
because woodpecker holes
had weakened them below standard
strength, while the woodpecker
feasts compelled the inspection of
737 miles of line.
Increased use of creUsoted poles is
gradually decreasing the damage
done by the red-breasted, bayonetbilled
destroyer, but early spring
must find the lineman carefully on his
job to see that the poles are in goods
condition.?Public Service Magazine. I
Huge Drug Store Chain
Columbia, May 4-.?Harry Cooper
of Cooper & Cooper, New York city,
general organizer of the Carolina
Drug stores, a concern soon to
operate 150 drug stores in the two
Carolinas, has been in Columbia
during the past several days investigating
the units which will make up
this chain.
In South Carolina the chain will
include stores in Columbia, Greenville,
Spartanburg, Laurens, Anderson.
Florence, Sumter, Orangeburg.
Hartsville, Charleston and
other points. A store will also be
operated under this chain in Augusta
and in many points in North Carolina
according to Mr. Cooper.
| Lieut. J. C. Banta, Brooks BioldjH
flyer, was killed near San Antonio,V
Texas, Wednesday, when his plane
went into a tail spin as he was mak- H
ing a turn to land. j
FINAL DISCHARGE
Notice is hereby given that one
month from this date, on Monday,
; June 3rd, 1929, at II o'clock a. m., we
will make to the Probate Court of
| Kershaw County our final return as
Administrators of the.estate of A.M.
McCaskill, deceased, and on the same
date we will apply to the said Court
for a final discharge as said Ad-<ministrators.
*. .
D. M. MoOASKHJL,
B. M. MoOAlSKILL,
* Administrators. *T
Camden, S. Cr, May ist, 1929.
>. . . ^<1
AIRPORT SUB-DIVISION I
. . 1 ^ ' n |
BUY NOW I
BEFORE I
* * v i ^Sg |
BEST LOTS GO I
i?3
v I' -J
? SEE ? I
k ey ::.
Wm. L. GOODALE L. C. SHAW I
TELEPHONE 193 or 136 TELEPHONE 233 : 9
M'fl
CAMDEN BUILDING AND SUPPLY CO. 11
WARREN H. HARRIS, Proprietor - i - : ;|S
| -.4 *r A v? 4*"1 r. i
FARMER 3 J
II III
11 mmm
I WE HAVE ON HAND LARGE STOCKS QF 8-3-3 jJH
I AND 8-4-4 CONGAREE SOIL-BUILDER FERTI-?I]
LIZER. YOU WILL PROBABLY FIND THAT YOU II
| WILL NEED SOME EXTRA FERTILIZER THAT ||
I YOU DID NOT ANTICIPATE. SEE US, WE KEEP 48
I THE STOCK. HI
II * I 11 "J I
I DON'T BUY SODA UNTIL YOU GET OUR .. JH
| PRICES. WE HAVE PLENTY OF IT AT ALL . IB
!j TIMES. YOU CAN COUNT ON US TO HAVE |B
: WHAT YOU WANT. -' ' ?~ - 111
it o o r?i
Springs & Shannon, ,BC. I
"Wf r
IL_ Camden, -S. C.
I I ^? ? t II I I ? I? I ? I S
Kp ; " _ .?
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