The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, November 08, 1929, Image 2

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hi?y? i i .11 1. 1 11 n ? LOOKING BACKWARD Taken From the Filea of The Chronicle Fifteen and Thirty Yearn Ago THIRTY YEA KB AGO November 3, 1H99 Terrific wind and rain storm hits Camden and vicinity, injuring trees and open cotton. The Episcopal Sun day school room under construction was blown down. Rev. A. T. Jamison suffered painful accident when horse run away with him at Flint Hill church, John Sinclair accidentally shot his young daughter while handling a pis tel. An engine arrived to be used in construction work on new Seaboard railroad. Hunter Lang enrolls as a pupil in the Lancaster graded school. Work resumed on OOHbtrucVion cf railroad from Sumter to Camden. * ? Congressman Stunyarne Wilson addresses Center township Sunday school association at Spears creek church in West Wateree. SCorm of great velocity wrought havoc to Carolina beaches. Engagement of Admiral Dewey to Mrs. W. B. Hu7.eh, a wealthy and handsome widow of Washington announced. FIFTEEN YKAKH AGO J November 13, 1914 J G. J. Maker, charged with the murdot of Henry Rod gets, acquitted by Kershaw county jury. A. K. Salley, Jr., found guilty of ' assault and battery of a high and J aggravated nature. Sentenced to pay a line of $300 or serve six month.*, 1 Cattle quarantine lifted on three j hundred farm? in Kershaw county, on j account of tick eradication. Dr. F. S. Hope, federal veterina- ] rian, leaves Camden for Maryland to j direct fight on foot and mouth dm- . ease. j T. I<ee Little moves into his new l bungalow on Laurens street. O. If. Watson declared not guilty 1 by a jury on a charge of murdering ' Ed Gregory. 1 18,140 bales of cotton repotted ginned in Kershaw county by W. F. Ku?- ! sell, Jr. Earl H. Bowen, of Blaney, suffers loss of gin house, saw mill and shin- , gle mill, together with fifteen bales of cotton. Loss estimated at $3,000 with no insurance. , NOVEMBER FARM CALENDAR Things To Be Done ThiH Month Ah Outlined by Clemson College . * ? o Agronomy Plant winter cover crops at once if not already planted. Plant small grains to provide fecc for work stock next spring. Plant Abruzzi rye to be grazed during the winter and early spring. Select seed corn in the field from healthy plants of proper type. Store baled cotton where it wih not be damaged by weather. Dairying Increase the barn feed as pastures are killed by frost. Let the cows clean up the corn and hay silage after these crops have been gathered. Gather about GOO pounds of velvet beans per cow to use in grain ration. Provide warm, dry, clean stalls for fall-born calves. Use a carefully selected purebred dairy bull. Horticulture Prepare land for setting fruit trees in November and December. Order trees and heel them out in ? moist soil until they may be properly transplanted. Make euttings of grapes and ligs and set them out immediately. Plant sweet peas in a well prepared trench, covering the seed five inches deep. Plant strawberry, raspberry and dewberry plants and asparagus roots. Sow lettuce in coldframe for use in .January and February. Make hill selection of sweet potatoes for seed at digging time. Plant Diseases Treat grains for smut before planting using dust or liquid method Select sound strong ears of seed corn in the field to prevent ear rot next season. Avoid diseased sweet potato vines in selecting seed. Save cotton for seed from field? ll I __ _ I t 1 most free of boll rots and from bolls < opening1 und picked under favorable weather conditions. Entomology Clean up grass and weeds in the ' bre yards by plowing. ' 1 Contract entrance to bee hives. Collect and burn branches of pe- 1 can, persimmon and hickory trees ( severed by the ring girdler. Get corn in promptly to prevent a heavy weevil infestation. i Fumigate beans, peas, corn, with ' carbon disulphide for weevils. < Overhaul spray pumps for winter . spraying for scale insects. j Clean up bean vines and garden rubbish to destroy hibernating quarters of Mexican bean beetle. Agricultural Engineering ] Write for blueprint plans for a i rat-proof grain storage building. t Check grain drill to see if you are planting the desired quantity of seedt \ Build an implement shed and see ] that all machinery is properly hous- 1 ed. - Make improvements with some of the cotton money,?running water, a bath room, a small light plant, new paint on the house. Animal Husbandry Wean fall pigs when about eight weeks of age. For cheap health insurance, vaccinate pigs when they weigh about 50 pdunds. Prepare comfortable shelter for ail classes of livestock. Trent sheep for stomach worms, using copper sulphate solution. Do not allow sheep to take the cold rainy _weather, which, may pneumonia. Study feeds on hand and plan to put livestock through the winter cheaply without loss in weight. Poultry Keep the pullets in good flesh for high egg production. Treat for lice, and mites. Make repairs on the house to help prevent colds. ! Get the molting hens in laying condition as soon as possible by lib j oral feeding. Do not neglect the green feed. "The high cost of church membe: ship on the poor people is becoming distressing. The people who have the money should pay the bill," Bishop Edward Mouzon, who is well known in South Carolina, told the Western North Carolina Methodist Conference at its recent convocation TAX NOTICE. TREASURERS OFFICE CAMDEN. S. C. August 14. 1929. Notice is hereby given that all State. County and School taxes for year 1929 shall l>e due and payable between September 15th and December .*11 st. 1929. Any information with reference to taxes will be cheei fully founded upon application. Wher. niak.rg inquiry pleasjc state School District or Township'. Very res p?vt fully, S. W. nor;re, Treasurer, Kershaw County, S. C. PAINFUL INDIGESTION "I buffered from indigestion ? everything 1 ate gave me heartburn," Bays Mrs. Mattie Muilinfl, of Pound, Va. Tor months, I did not seo a well day. I wor nea along, out never lelt weLL **I got a package of Thodford's Black-Draught at the store and began biking it ? a dose every night before going to bed. I had been having an awful pain. After I had taken Black-Draught, this pain entirely stopped. I began to gain in weight, and rested well at night. In a few months I was feeling fine. My health was better than it had been in years. keep Black-Draught in our homo, and wo all take it for constipation and up3et stomach." Insist on Thodford's JBlack Draught CONSTIPATION, INDIGESTION S NIAS WOMEN ate mm* loafc mm mi so imn ?<*> -?v ?T--r~i>?yV'. '?- - v. ... * EYES EXAMINED 1 and Glasses Fitted j THE HOFFER COMPANY I Jewelers and Optometrists j j Negro Jailed on | Assault Charge One of the Mtt(Jde?t onsen on ?*?ord in Lancaster county caine t->' light last week when it develop* <i j that a country girl in one of the re- j mote sections of this county had left home because of the fact that ';< had been outraged by a negro nao.i I . foe Wright who was arrested o> Sheriff IJabney and taken to -Colon oia. The assault took place tinemonths ago, it is said. It seems that the girl whose naii'e is withheld for obvious reasons lef' J b&mc during the latter part of 1**1 week and was seen in the vicinity of Kershaw on Saturday. Sheriff Jjabney after investigating found that she had turned back and was connng in this direction and located her in the vicinity of Heath Springs. After the girl told her pitiful story the sheriff arrested Joe Wright, a I colored man who lived in this county *nd lodged him in jail. Humors of violence started on Tuesday and the sheriff removed Wright to the state ' penitentiary. The negro will be held for criminal assault. 1 The unfortunate girl in this case had been brought up without the advantages of many children in the :ounty as her mother has been in a state institution ever since the cniid ( was small. She has the sympathy 5 >f the community in which she Hive-. < It is said that she will become a ; mother within a few months. While feeling ran high in some sections for a while during the fore ( part of the week the excitement has 1 subsided since the sheriff took tne 1 girl's assailant to Colurribin.?Lan- ! master News. James Harris, 13, crushed in an ' Bptpmobile accident in Union last ( Friday, died of his injuries on Saturday,y ,v ^ i y/an So Nervous Feels < His Stomach Jump u?r''iLfc ~ ' "I got so nervous my stomach felt 1 fJrtrit was jumping. yjnol entirely , elieved the trouble. I feel better than in years."?J. C. Duke. 1 Vinol is a compound of iron, pkoaRjbates, cod liver peptone, etc. The 1 very FIRST bottle makes you sleep better and have a BIO appetite. Nervous, easily tired people are surprised how QUICK the iron, nh.-spJ?*tea; etc., give new life'*ncf'pep. Vmol tastes delicious. W. Robin Zemp, Druggist. supplemental summons State ol South Carolina ( ounty of Kershaw (In the Court of -Common Pk-as) \V. L. Jackson, Guardian, Plaintiff, . against Silvia Jefferson. Doctor Jefferson, Hem \ J. Jefferson, Alice Moss, Minnie Ix>e Griffin and Jacob Jefferson, minor, Ruth Jefferson, minor. .Julia Mocasy, minor, and Essie Jefferson minor, by their Guardian ad litem, I. C. Hough, and John- Doe, denoting-collective-" ly the names of certain minors, children of Hester Jefferson, deceased, whose names are unknown ! to the Plaintiff, Defendants. supplemental S l; m m O N S TO THE DEFENDANTS: ^ ou are hereby summoned and required to answer the complaint in this action, which is this day filed in the office of the Clerk of Court of ( ommon Pleas for the said County, and to serve a copy of your answer to the said, complaint on the subscriber at his office in Camden, S. within twenty days after the service hereof, exclusive of the day of -uch service; and if you fail to' answer the complaint wit+rtn the time aforesaid, the plaintiff in this action will apply to the court for relief demanded in the complaint. JOHN K. deLOACH Plaintiff's Attorney Dated 31st day of October, 192W T.. the minor Defendants, John Doe: 1 he following is a copy of an ord<" appointing Guardian mi Litem to represent you in this cau-e: "It appearing to my entile satis- j ' n"t:on that the minor d. f. ndants, | ' Doe. are without the S ate of | > a:h Carolina, and have a- inter- 1 :n t he real estate descrihi : in the I mplaint, and it further a earing I ' they are necessary p; -;es to | ' action, and it is noct - >-y for m to he represented in cause t guardian ad litem, a- hat i. Hough, attorney at law. Cam- i > < .. is a compete!- uj ,-c. j .-.hie person to so act . guard- ! "i litem of the mi: efendNoW. THEREFORE, I < OR. ED that the said I Hough <1 is hereby appoint ardian i .'.em of the minor ndants' Doe. unless the sa. . do- ! John Doe, or w je I r behalf shall, within ,V5 af. . the service of a Cop;, ,*:s or. I upon them, apply .. rocure < appointment of a . an a,j ! ' *n to represent them : cause ' it is further . ered'. "' ?t the said minor defe- ,t John :,ir. he served with a . ,'f this rrier by a publication same incident with the publh 0'f the summons herein, as prov . ,,y law, and n copy of the sami mailed' to their Grandmother, S , Jefferson, at No. 197-Navy St iv. Brooklyn, New York." J. H. CLYItritN, " haw County* The Hunting Season Is OnJ I Jiave hunting land for sale and lease that furnishes good duck and quail shooting. Large and small tracts located near th^followmg places: I Camdon, S, C., Georgetown, S. C., Charleston, S. C., Beaufort S. C. Also at Moorehead City, N. C., and on Pamplico Sound North Carolina Coast. Hunting Parties taken out by appointment from Hotels at Camden* S. C. Also have for sale two attractive old Southern' plantation homes. Fine old-time residences on each. .... p ? ?? * jMP ' tOs M H B. D. BOYKIN J BOYKIN, S. C. Telephone and Telegraphic Address: ~Camden, S. C. j Junior Judgers Win in Livestock Contest Clemson College, Oct. 28.?Keen ompetition was outstanding in the itate 4-H livestock judging contest it the state fair Wednesday, October 13, when the Piedmont team emerged victorious over two other teams )f three boys each that represented .he Pee Dee and Savannah y alley . xtension districts. Only 193 ppirvts separate the highest and lowest scoring teams. The Piedmont team, composed of I. H, Glenn and Willard Jones of Jreenville county and Joe Patrick of Fairfield county under Ac A. McKeown, < Piedmont extension district agent, won first honors with 3,244. Kenneth Bennett, Marlboro county, 31in Wilder, Georgetown county, and William Epps of Dillon county, the members of the Pee Dee team under :he direction of J. T. Lazar, district agent, took second place with 3,161 points. The Savannah Valley team of Milford Martin, Abbeville county, G. B. Reed, Calhoun county Rutleage Shuler, Orangeburg county, under A. II. Ward, district agent, was a close third with 3,051 points. Tots Are Burned To Death in Barn Columbia, Nov. 2.-?'While in a barn playing with matches, George Andrew, Jr., 4, and Ix>wman, 2, sons of Mr. and Mrs. George A. Swygert, Sr., of Ballentine, were burned to death this afternoon. The terror-stricken parents discovered the barn afire after the children had gone there to play? With flames blazing high on all sides, the father rushed into the main entrance of the structure, but was unable to find the children. They had crawled through a partition separating the stables from the place where hay was stored. Attempts to enter the stables were balked, as the entire building was aflame. Mrs. Swygert said the children had been in the habit of playing with matches, giving this as the reason for the cause of the fire. No inquest will be held. t C. L. Cuttino, lawyer of >Sumterand Mrs. Cuttino, va^e1-injured. in an automobile wreck near Unibn, Sunday night. The Cuttino car, driven by Jamie Ci^tino, ran off the highway and into a low bank. *9* When Eggs Were Cheap In cleaning a store room in fi minster A few days ago a letter found addressed to a former minster man from a former \Y( minster man, who was then work in Greenville for a produce dej The letter bears the date April 1897. The produce dealer was of ing the Westminster man 7 1-2 ? per dozen for eggs and wanted .dozen. He was offering 20 ct apiece for fine hens and did not * any roosters at all.?Tugaloo' bune. j 9 A butterfly in flight beats its wj nine times a secohd. j TRESPASS NOTICE % | All persons are hereby ym | against hunting, Ashing, and oq| wise trespassing on the lands fhd six miles below Camden, known nl W. C. Seagle and H. S. Zeigler Is Persons disregarding this notice l be prosecuted. 1 W. C. SEAGL* H. S. ZEIGLG1 October 16, 1929. ? f 1. 1 .. i1""- y?m NO-MO-KORN FOR CORNS AND CALLOCSH Made. In Camden And For Sale 1 > , Dekalb Pharmacy?Phone 951 r For ^ r Stability andProsperitt/ FEDERAL RESERVE L SYSTEM x. j. For the Security of your money and for all your banking bttdjww? we offer you the safety and service of our bank. I | This bank is for ALL the PEOPLE and whether your deposit i? large or small, you will be welcomed and your deposit appreciated. If you have financial problems we invite you to talk them over with one of our officers. We are here to aid in the upbuilding and prosperity of our community and will welcome those who come within our doors. H MakeOUR bank YOUR bank! 9 The First National Bank j