University of South Carolina Libraries
I Haven't Seen Hint Lately We read again that a Bos toman wu? showing a visiting Briton around. "This is Bunker Hill Monument? where Warren fell, you know." The visitor surveyed the lofty shaft thoughtfully and then said: "Naaty full! Killed him, of course?"?Boaton Transcript. WHEN BABIES W 'I'HERK afe times when f 1? ? T a baby is too fretful or feverish to be sung to sleep. There urc some pains u mother cannot pat uway. Hut there's quick comfort in Custorial For diarrhea, and other infantile ills, give this pure vegetable preparation. Whenever coated tongues tell of constipation; whenever there's any sign ot sluggishness. Castoria has a good taste; children love to take it, liny the genuine -with Chas. II. Fletcher's signature on wrapper. NO-MO-KORN FOR CORNS ANI) CALLOUSES Made in Camden And For Sale By DeKalb Pharmacy?Phone 95 I EYES EXAMINED and Glasses Fitted THE HOFFER COMPANY Jewelers and Optometrists MnMMBHnnBnaanBBi K. E. Chewning & Son General Contractors and Builders Phone Camden, S. C. I Estimates Furnished on All Classes of Work Floors Sanded on Request BURSTING I HEADACHES' My S! vsT. .Mrs. Cora Moshler, 01 CDl jm M North New Orleans Ave., Ijn IJI Brinkley, Ark., writes: | ||| "I was so constipated until llli I was just sick. I could not ?SRj Llf stand to take strong medi- LjjJ 111 cine, so I decided I would take III! Uy Black-Draught, and I found yu II it to he all right. fl ' II "I would have such dizzy I II spells, and such bursting I II headaches, until I could hard- I If ly go. But after taking a few I f doses of Black-Draught, I V would feci just fine. It is a 1 good medicine, and I recom- J mend it to all who suffer as I did. It is very easy to recommend a medicine that has dono ns much for me as Black-Draught hns done," ! THED FORD'S BlackDraught For CONSTIPATION, ||| INDIGESTION. BILIOUSNFSSUJI Women who need a tonio should take | CAaptri. Used ovr 60 years. | Angkor Vat, in Qambodi^. ' < l'rr|'tirc<l |?y (,JiW National 'Jeo?ruphlC Society. Washington. L). C.) BRAZIL is so 1111 ?it is it quurt?M* of it inlllion square miles lurger tliari the United States?iind Is made up of so many diverse regions that the average visitor can do little more tliiiu acquaint himself with a limited area. I Wit modern trav el methods huV? at least greatly stretched the area that can he cov ered |?y a hrlef tour. Now many trav eiers from the United States to South America go Uy airplane. skimmihg along over the Atlantic coast of the great repuhllc. The lirst familiar feature of Bru/.il timt the air traveler .tecs Is the Amazon. At its mouth the hig river, ISP tulles wide between Its capes, colors the sea and dilutes Its salt for "?<> miles otTshore. .Men In small fishing hoats, venturing out of sight of land, figure how far out they are by tuz! iug the water. The rise of the river near I'ara in flood times is often ."<) feet. Then vast areas of forest are completeh ilium dated. Snow In the Andes begins to melt in August, hut this delta does not feel the rise till six months later. With a valley eovering 'J.T'JU.OOO square miles, and containing about l?r>,(xH) miles of navigable water com mitnications, it is easy to see why It takes the big river six months to rise - and sj\ months to fall. Also, the slope of the vast valley from the root of the Amies to'the Atlantic is only about 'Jul) feet. This is why tides from the sea arc felt up the Amazon for 'too miles. Sometimes three or four tides are riding the river at once, like hig waves far apart. Looking at maps, one observes the Ama/.on delta does not run out to sea on land bridges, as do the Nile, the Lunges and the Mississippi. It ' carries prodigious loads, of nutd. and geologists say its delta <> extended .'kxt miles past its present months. Hut now the oeeaic Is rapidly eating into the continent. Ami from the air you see how this goes on. Bv an odd freak of nature, the sea is driving inland huge wttvvs of white sand. These ?hig ilnm-i in?mrrrn?places?lltlVi* htiried the trees. I-'.lsew here you can -see dead trees, once covered with sand and killed, and then exposed again to the advancing sea waves?washing t hem out by t lie foot S. Rush of the Amazon Bore. And the Para, or'soutti coast, of the delta, ,\ou notice, is higher und' drier than the coast 'of Brazilian (Itijana. north of the Amazon delta. Around Maracu island and the mouth of the Araguary river tlte famous Amazon bore is at Its best. When it runs in its roar can he heard six miles Its speed is ten to tlfteen knots an hour, and anything in its path is swept away. Look down on all these mini hunks, rip tides and shallows, and yon see why skippers dread navigation in these waters, Changes in coast outlines ate constant; shoals and tlats form only to bo washed away. Mud batiks which a few years ago barely showed above the sen art! now cov ered W7TT. Irees. Bud lights ami buoys, lack of good charts, ever shifting cur rents bring many ships to grief. Kven the many small native trad ing boats, their caldns thatched over ami their suds made of blue cotton cloth, have their own tronldos here vv i h w ind, tide, and mini. Snn Luis from the air is a com pact, red roofed [,-vvii of in. n,v patios : 11 < I narrow stools It vv.- i:rs| a tort built to the I-rem h and named ifpi I.<>:;:> Nil!. The town - ,,n an . it! 1 d. and a i.nlvvi.v cotum. m it with the mainland It is a I iiriv ,t:g place .?vi soe new loi !d.:i ;s going nt< a' >ng >:de wonderful old Incises w lb fronts of fancy glazed tilo^. and marble statuary lifted above t heir pa I to gu t e* Scenes Along the Co.ist. At the niouth of the Amazon and north of it Brazil i< very damp. But once jolt quit the Amazon delta, and get well on your way down the sloping coast toward the great shoulder northeast Brazil, like magic the soaking Jungles and mud Mats change to a parched and sunburnt land, with mile-long sand dunes bare and forlorn as the shores of Suez. If you placet) a few camels under the lonely clumps of coconut trees?which you see Delqg smothered by sand dunes often 00 *cet high?you would get as good a desert picture aa any from Bagdad to Cairo. ? - A Men kill-in^ u big sen tuvtle on the bench; lonely lighthouses; sandy Arahy scenery, with gouts prowling Hiiml ?Juiies for stray plant life; odd bouts of live spliced logs Iiinl a dirty snir, uwusli from stem to stern so that two fishermen aboard work standing In water; Mali-traps !il:c long picket fences in coastal shallows; grassroofed huts on far apart stretches of coconut -shaded beach, an idyllic Itoblnson Crusoe setting: these sights the air traveler along Brazil's coast sees, while much empty country and a few busy towns that America never heard of, slip under him. Take Fortnlezn. often called ('earn, in the state of that name. It Is one of the many ports scattered down this seaplane path that help consume the ever-growing stream of shop-made things we must export if we are to keep our mills running full time. Walk Its noisy, narrow. cobble-stoned streets and see how American ma chines and methods mark its life. Broadway melodies crooned by Van kee talking machines To soothe ft roomful of hob haired dressmakers; another roomful of girls demonstrating sewing machines; busses, trucks, motor cars, typewriters, cash regis ters. fountain pens, printing presses, corn poppers, vending machines, cam eras, garages with young Brazilian hoys using American tools, ferris wheels, merry-go roiiniTs. gas stoves, elect tie equipment, movie houses? even movie-fan magazines in the nu ( live language hut printed in tinStates; telephones, street cars, wire j less?a city of l(Mi,()()(i whose ver.v name few Americans ever heard. Yet ' a good customer of ours, paying us for what it buys with skins and vege . table wax, or with cash from cotton sold to | ,i v erpoof. j Here, as in all cities which stand along this world transportation route. I American capitfrt and management' j help liiiild up the public utilities. And 1 here the people Mess the Rockefeller foundation for killing their-old cnctuv j the mosquito. j N n t .i l and?Bahia. Rounding the shoulder of South I America one passes ('ape San Roque, which aviators say is their nearest point from which to quit tlifs coast for Kuropc. Below it stands Natal ? the well-known western terminus of Africa-Brazil Mights. Here, too, converges the air-weli of plane paths which collect South American mail for Kurope. which mall is sent from here to l>ukur, Africa, by speedy Drench dispatch boats and there put again on planes for Kurope. The French hope in time to set up a transatlantic air-mall line between Natal and Dak ar. Five air lines now serve this town of 44?.? m m ?. Natql reveals proof of Brazil's interest in air travel. You see hangars for seaplanes, radio towers. Brazil's first civilian school for uvia tors, and a line Mying tield for land planes. Welt around the uortlumstern shoul der of Brazil lies Bnhiu. Between tlds port city and the United States close ties exist, i.'nliforntn mvrs'H Mg" debt to Bahia. In 1871 Richard Kdes, then United States consul at Bahia. sent to the Department of Agriculture in Washington some navel orange trees, a leMer went hack to the cm sul. saving: "Ymi have placed the department lit possession of otto of tin | 11104 desirable varieties of orangeknown: and i>m> which it has 11 |. I, I dt'si red. Y.ui oiiiiiied in j 1 * 11? * voir b'II " From "bis > 1 ' -r w '< h a pi.mo 'i , ( ::> 11 ' I to >1 o v oil solid I - II I : '.1 . s, v ,iv 1.. ,t > o a li r: i. i|| | 1 1 .1 iov orient w i n J, u- .ilel in i inig: :.: ion ?>f frui* 1 n-os, Bahia is ;1 . (|,,. ,,1,?, , ;x ilizatton in S .nth America 1 |;l!f century before t be first white settle ments In the I iiitcd Slates it M iis ,, Bortugiioso eolon.v Named hv Mnorigo Vespucci and his bund, for cctduFc* . it led a lurliuleiu life, assailed bv postiieiM-o. famine. Indians, and I.is 1 lion s old enemies, the Dutch. ' often l lie Indians devoured large tin mis of . j settlers. The military conm-awter an. the whole population of the coton.v a' j t'nyru were butchered while attending 1 church and oaten. Yellow fever wa> - epidemic for tiiree centuries. ntl ?n? II occasion '-*b pirates were tiangod at 1! the same time and place. For gen 11 orations all I,Islam trading ships caim ij to Buhln guarded by gunboats against pirates and other ono-nles. INDIAN TRIBE SUES WHITES FOR MILLION ; ?~ ^ t La?t of Mohicant Take Their < Case to Court. Norwich. Coiiii.?The l"*t of .the Mohicans urc on fhe warpath. They liuve fared forth to fight what they term encroachment of the white' man on their hallowed precluctn and ? they have ariHed tliemaelvea with the t legal weapons of their pale fueed t brethren Instead of with the more de- I Htructlve instruments of their aborlg-* * Inal forehearera. ' The Mohicans, or rather their deacendaniK. have brought null in, Su- ( perlor court against the statu of Con- j nectlcut, Its attorney general, the city , and town of Norwich and others, demanding $1,000,000 for the alleged desecration of a small Indian burial ground near here, in which the body of the great sachem. Chief Cncas, supposedly Is hurled. Burial Ground Suit. Kdylh It. Gray and others, who describe themselves us'heirs of the great Cncas, charge the defendants "'with preventing them from continuing to use the burial ground as a cemetery, that monuments there have heeft destroyed or removed, and that the socalled reservation has been cut up into building lots. All told tlu?ru are not more than 100 descendants of the tribe about which .lames Cenitnoro Cooper wove such fantastic and romantic tales. None of these are full blooded, virtually all being white mixed. They live on what they call "the reservation," u small plot of land at Mohe-, gan, on tlie wist hunk of the Thames river four miles I nun here. In reality, j it Is not a reservation, for it is not | under federal 'or state supervision. 16 Acre Plot. The burial ground involved in the suit is a 1(5 acre plot. It is studded with several gravestones, one of which marks the supposed last resting place of I ncas. The noted chieftain's grave is marked by an obelisk monument about seven feet high. Across the face of one side, is the inscription "Uncus." 'I he obelisk has an interesting history. Its base was laid in in the presence of President Andrew Jackson and a few members of Ids cabinet, who Journeyed by stage coach to Norwich especially for the occasion. Then, it seemed, the Norwichites forgot i about finishing the memorial until the' fall of 1 vjii. when the money to complete it was collected at a Harrison, Tyler campaign meeting. Finally, on July ?. ixi2, the obelisk I was raised over the Imse. Turkish Merchants Find Odd Tribe Living Aloof Tuxtla, Mf.xieo.?W andering Turk- ' lsh merchants, returning hero from the ; Simojovel di-trmr. have reported 'Lis- I covery of a -Hi.ore tribe speaking ai ' language similar to Arabic, which in- ! habits tin nliaosj inaccessible mono- ! tain retreat th.-iv. J The tribe, which calls ilsclf "Ah- j solutan," preserves oriental customs. : (loos not spoil.c Span- .ii nor any In- ! (Man dialect and shows no trace of the j Mayan civilization which is common' In other puns <>| I 'In,upas. 1 he merchants said- that members j of the tribe claitm*i to h."\e inhabited ; the legion for at least four centuries remaining entirely apart from the outside world. t ? i Man Who'll Do Anything Receives Many Offers Ran Francisco.?S'trotigc offers?oue i of them $.r>,(mxi to court the intimacy [ of a man's wife and aid him ln secur- ! ing a divorce?have boon made to ' Robert Rails |n response to his run- ' nlng "personal ad" to do "unythiug ' within the law, regardless of the! risk." "Another offer," Rails adds, "was a j Job as gunman-bodyguard for a local I bootlegger." "tapping the climax, however," he) continued, "was one from a man who offered mo $.-.000 to kill his wife." j Kalis, who is out of work, reiterated ' he would do anything or "bet his life ?STlh any one on the square" for that' , sum. He needs the money, he says, for his family and to go Into business. World's Smallest R. R. Not Hit by Depression Manchester. Iowa. ? The world's ' smallest railroad, operating between Oneida. Iowa, and here, has never missed an interest payment on in. bonds ami has never been for sale In its -in years of operation. Although mly eight miles hmg. and emphwm-' but 12 peojde. it has escape! slump Which ha- erigulfed far larger railroads. nn,| n,,w js jM.t jt j,,,,j,,^ an c\(cti-ioii ,,f jts service. ft win operate a bus daily between here at.d Oneida In the future. The road is owned ami controlled by residents of Manchester. Move to Settle Estate Halted by Man's Return Worcester. Mass. ?Plans for tit*, final accounting of the estate of K. Gustufson. fifty-eight, who disappeared 14 years ago, were upset when Gustnfson reappeared at bis Millburv ! home. The estate was In the hands of an attorney who had been appointed re- I celver. Gustnfson offered no explana- ! tlon for his disappearance or return i The case, which was to have gone through probate^court, is bHng heM up while legal angles are untangled. r i ^. . . . ~ former Governor Carmeron >Morri; ,<m of North Carolina wan ?w<jrn in ( Vc/hiepday a* senator to Bucceed the ate Senator Overman. Morriaon is -he first new senator from North ( Carolina in 28 years. I TAX_NOTICE TKEABIJRBR'S OFFICE CAMDEN, H. C, Notice i* hereby given. that all i itate, County and Scmool taxes for he year 19?0 ahall be due and payable between October lat and December 81?t, 1030. Penalty of one per >ent wilj be added to all taxes not mid by January lat, 1931. Any infur mation with reference bo taxes vill be cheerfully fumlrfhed upon application. When making inquiry please state School pistrict or Township. Very respectfully, S. w. HOGUE, Treasurer, Kershaw County, S. C. December 10, 1030. ~T MASTER'S SALE State of South Carolina ^? C-ounty of Kershaw ' (Court of Common IM^as) The Federal I .and Hank of Columbia, Plaintiff against Hugh McCallum, Jr., The First National Bank of Camden, iS. C., and the Wateree National Farm Loan Association, Defendants Under and by virtu6 of an Order of Court made in the above entitled case and dated the 11th day of December, 1030, the Master for Kershaw County will offer for sale at public auction, before the Kershaw County court houije' door, Camden, South Carolina, during the legal hours of sale on the first Monday, being the 5th day of January, 1031, the following described real estate: , fr, "All that certain piece, parcel' or tract of land containing four hundred and ninety-seven (497) acres, more or less, situate, lying and being about seven miles Bast of the Town of Camden, in Wateree Township, County of Kershaw, State of South Carolina, having such shape, metes, courses ami distances as will more fully appear by reference to a plat of a survey thereof made by J as. C. Covington, Surveyor, October 3rd, 1918, being bounded on the North by lands of Gettys and lands of the Estate of Busrdell; on the East by lands of Burdell; on the South by lands of Ward and lands of Catoe and lands of MoCallum; and on the West by lands of White and lands of Hale; and be in;: the same tract of land conveyed to me the said Hugh McCallum, Jr., by J. L. Guy of his deed dated December 8th, 1913, and recorded in the office of the Clerk of Court for Kershaw County in Deed Book A. K, at pace 7." Terms: One-fifth (1-5) of the accepted bid to be paid in cash, and the balance on credit, payable in seven (7) equal annual installments, with interest thereon from date of sale at the rate of seven (7) per centum per annum. Any one desiring to bid at said sale, other than the plaintiff herein, shall first deposit with the Master as an evidence of good faith, certified check in the sum of Three Hundred and no 100 ($300.00) Dollars. At the conclusion of said sale the Master shall return to the unsuccessful bidder any surruso deposited. -W. L. DbPASS, JR., Masier for Kershaw County December 19th, ^)30. MASTER'S SALE State of South Carolina County of Kershaw G. E. Parrott, as Receiver of the Bank of Bethune, Plaintiff, against W. J. Parker, Defendant, Under and by virtue of an Order of Court made in the above entitled case and dated the 8th day of December, 1930, the Master for Kershaw County will offer for sale at public auction, before the Kershaw* County Courthouse door, Camden, South Carolina, during the legal hours of sale on the first Monday, being the 5th day, of January, 1931, the following described -real estate: (ID- "All that certain bract/ or parcel of land with the buildings thereon in the County of Kersrhaw and State of South Carolina, contaming forty-one (41) "acre?, more or less, and bounded on the North by lands of the estate of L. H. Hall, on the east by lands of Bud DeBruhl; on the South by lands of J. H. Radcliff and lands of the estate of Jamefe Stokes; and on the West by lands of \V. J. Parker, and being the d*act of land conveyed to said W. J. Parker by A. L. Parker by his deed dated November 21st, 1923, and recorded in the office of the Clerk of' Court for Kershaw County in Book B. G., at page 668." <2) "Also that certain tract of land containing sixty-six (66) acres, more ??r less, in the County of Kershaw, State aforesaid, bounder! North by Seaboard Air Line Railway; East by hind of J. T. Hough; South by public mad known as the "Wire Road" and by 'lands oif Lowmai); and West by the town of Cassatt, the said sixty-six aero tract being composed of t^vo parcels of land convened to said W. J. Parker by B. B. Clarke, Master for Kershaw County, by deed dated 28th November, 1923, and recorded in the office of the Clerk of Court for Kershaw County in* Book A. V. at page 243." Any one desiring to bid at said sale, other than the plaintiff herein, shall first deposit with the Master as an evidence of good faith, certified Check in the sum of Fifty ($50.00) I>ollars. At the conclusion of said sale the Master shall return to the t unsuccessful bidder any sums so deposited. W. L. DePAUS, J<R., Master for Kershaw County ? December 19th, 1980. ? , 'yU- - a* tor sst-yB month at 8 p.m. Vl?ltfiL tfhfllB ire welcomed. A. W. Iinun?HRl L. H. JONES, T^SBSI Recording Secty. ROBT.W. Architect Crocker Building; I Camden, 8. C. ? Mi* *f A. White Says, "If~V^Bp|j Have An Automobile, ? Keep Rat-Snap," jj|B "If I knew about RAT-SNap ulll Winter, would have saved $120 lMSf car was in the garage ior \ Mi weeks during the bad weather* J?H I went to take it out, found thit MIf had eaten great holes in two IllStires. Got them later withfc5?fi SNAP." Threo SSo.tc, 9 Sold and guaranteed by Zemn A iSI Pass, Druggists, Camden S C fSI Bethune Hardware Co., Camden, ?f' MASTER'S SALE^^B State of South Carolina County <xf Kershaw i;j|f 0 | Court of ^Common Pleas) ;l| " T?*!? against -fll Laura E. Pea.?, et al., Defendant || Under and by virtue of an OrdK'i of Court made in fcho above crvtitl^?il action and dated the lOtih dav HI December, 1-930, the Master for Kb?*'! Shaw County will offer for sal* public auction, before the Kewiu?':! County Courthouse Door, CamJ J:" South Carolina, during' thel5?$ hours of sale on the first Monda^H being the 5th day, of January, I'j.'iH the following described real estate:?! "All that piece, parcel or tract? -1 land, lying, being and situate in tl^l County and State aforesaid, eontaii^^B mg forty-four (44) acres, more less, and bounded as follows: (?^ the North by public Highway lca<^| ing nearly East and West from Ko^H shaw, S. C.; East by lands of Gt^| Watson, deceased; South by lands ? ' Gus Watson, deceased, and L. ? j Deas; West by lands of A. S. Brooi^H The above described tract of lan^H was sold to L. A. Deas ns of dat? 1 February 16, 1926, and this mor?j gage is given as security for pufl j chase price of the above describe!^? tract of land. Also all that certa^^K piece, parcel or .tract of land, lyin^B nn<J being situate in thfv> Qounty anfll State aforesaid containlVi'g'forty (40? :] acres, more-or less, and bounded a^H follows: On the North by lands thifll day deeded to me by W. L. Black^B; mon and C. H. TYuesdale; East b^B j Lockhart Public road; South b^H binds of L. L. Bradley; West by iand^H of A. S. Broom and J. A. Deas." j The plaintiff or any- other part?-; to this action may become a purchas?;; er at such sale, ?. ? W. I,. DePASS, JR., Master for Kershaw County Hi December 19th, 1930. ,.H: MASTER'S SALE State of Soutih Carolina County of Kershaw H (Court of Common Pleas) H Bank of Kershaw,' Plaintiff, against 5?*? Elizabeth Williams, et al., Defend-? ants. H --^? Under and by virtue qiT an Ordc^B of Court made in the above entitle*? case and dated the 19th day of De? comber, 1930, the Master for KerH shaw County will offer for wale a? public auction, before the Keraha? County Courthouse door, OamdeoH South Caroling/ durii% the lege? hours of sal? on the ftrst Monday? being the 5^h day, of January, i&51? the following described real estate: _? "AH that certain piece, parcel or? tract of land lying, being: and situat? in Kershaw County, .?>tabe aforesaid? containing three hundred (300) acre? more or less, and bounded as fob? lows: North by lands <5f W. E. El?: Iicxtt; Bast by lands of BaxIdyTW?? by McCaskiil kind: and (South by? Lit tie Lynches Creek." I W. L. DePASS, JR., ? Master for Kershaw County I December 19th, 1930. . MASTER'S SALE State of South Carolina County of Kershaw ?:.i_? (n the Court of Common Pleask;? W. L. Blaclcmon, Plaintiff? against B. N. Hoi ley, Defendant Under and by virtue of an Order?? C ourt made in the above entitled ci*? and dated the 10th day of December? 1930, the Master for Kershaw Com#?' will offer for sale at puMte_ auctM? before the Kershaw County ?ff? house door,-Camdew, * South QwtoW? during bhe legal Hours of sale on u*? first Monday, being the 5th day January, 1931, the following deecrib- | ed real estate: . _ "AJ1 that piece, parcel or trart ? I land situate, and being in B?** fl falo Township, County of I and State of South Carolina, eont^O* I ing one hundred thirty-three (1?! I acres, more or less, bounded on tft? I North by lands of Porter and laww I of the Grantor, and by lot upon I Mount Ptooh O&Zol k> I Sooth and East by lands <4 *** I Grantor; and West by lands olI Seegars and a public road kOTtt ?? the Lockhart Road." j? 1 Master for KaSawGoanty I fl