The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, January 09, 1931, Image 2
Wound In Fatal
Conway, pec. 27.-?Quint'* Huck*,
middle aged man, died early thib
morning at the *- (Conway hoapital
where he wan taken lute Christmas
night buffering from, gunshot wounda.
Jim ?Sutton, alno white, ia in jad
charged -with having inflicted the fatal
wounda. Both mon were married
und have fan^iliea. They lived at Aynor,
und were near neighbora.
, HI ,m> |*?M" * I" ' ^ ^ ' mmmmmrnmm .mi tm i nwi?
. .Ab a T?
When
BABIES
are Upse?
BAHY ills oiid ailments sec in twice
os serious at nif/ht. \ sudden cry
may mean colic. Or a sunden attack of
diarrhea. I low would you meet this
emergency tonight? Have you a bottle
of Castorta r -ady?
m I'or the pr dcctimrof your wee one
for your own pence of mi id keep this
old, reliable [ reparation always on hand.
Hut don't keep it just for emergencies;
let it be an t\yeryday ail. It's gentle
inlluence will ^ase ami soot lie the infant
who cannot 'sleep It's mild regulation
will help an older child whose tongue is
coated because of si ileitis i bowels. All
druggists have ('.aslfinjj
- t
NO-MO-KORN 'i
FOR CORNS ANI) CALLOUSBS ,
Miide In Camden And For Sale By 1
j DoKnlb Pharmacy?Phone t5 s
^ ?i ..I ^
EYES EXAMINED I :
and Glasses Fitted i
THE HOFFER COMPANY | i
Jewelers nnd Optometrists i
R. E. Chewning & Son
*
General Contractors
and Buildei's
Thnne JHtl Cnmden, 8. C.
Estimates Furnished on All
Classes of Work
Floors Sanded on Request
w ? ?? ? mmmammrgn
|,c<msti^ation|
"I HAD a stubborn case of ::::
::i constipation after a very ::::
j1 severe spell of grip," says |
| Mr. John B. Hutchison, of
Neosho, Mo. "When I would
get constipated, I'd feel so ::::
I sleepy, tired and worn-out.
"When one feels this way, ::::
;? work is much harder to do,
ig especially farm work. I ;;;;
:5 would have dizzy headaches :
;5 when I could hardly see to ::::
:5 work, hut after 1 read of :::
Black-Draught, 1 began tak- g
:| ?ng it. I did not have the |f;
H headaches any more. f|
:g "When I have the sluggish, 5
:g tired feeling, I take a few -?1
:? doses of Black-Draught, and K3
:S it seems to carry oflf the j|t|]
|| poison and I feel just line. I
use Black-Draught at regular
intervals. It is easy to
B44-T take and I know it helps me." ::::
if This medicine is compoa:
I ed of pure botanical roots and ill:
: | herbs. Contains no chemi- j
:: J cals. In 26-cent packages.
Womkv who no*<l a tontc should tak*
Camum. Uml over SO year*.
What Brazil
la Like-^sl
'
?i /?
Scene at a Coffee Warehouse In 8antos, Brazil. "
I I'reiuir 4 .1. |#y t|,? Xtttlufittl (Jung ruphtc
Mo* .. n C/)
Far up iti fhi' jungle* Jif French
lu?Jo-( iiinii, Kunic .'fH.t miles from
1 li?? doorstep i\f 1 In1 world us measured
in ilibtitnee. n thousand
,\ears in 1 lie 1111 si, as mcuMirud in Utile*
Utljtffrcolis hack in till* UllkllOMII IIS
measured in history, is Angkor, one of
I he (in isi puzzling works ever coin ri veil
by the hand of mild.
Temple ami town iiit 11 network ol
fiim meI forgotten shrines, it represents
a culture Hull must have bowl
far in advance of anything coeval with
it aiol a power thai must luive been
virtually irreslihle even in Asia, where
men v anus were plentiful and warfare
. a favored business..
Hill the culture <lie<l ami the men
who hail ?' 11111 it (llsappeal Oil, ab.il for i
tiundfeds ut )ear<j llie fon-.A-*. *>L ban?^
ran ami bamboo hbl from the eyes and
ueiiiorv of 1 lie world wliat had been a
netropolis ,,f a million inhabitants.
Tw o general ions ago a l-Tench nntirttlisi
broke through tUv wall of juntie
in a settre|i for specimens of tropeal
life and ennie upon a spectacle
ueli as the slaves pf the lamp might *
111 ve eonirived for Aladdin. Before
11111, in the <(uivcring silence, rose the
Ive towers id' a vast step pvntniid, a
tone tapestry representative of an art
ind architecture like nothing ct>c witliII
the ken of man.
A moated wall surrounded it and a
loistered ante upon a causeway t.hat
ed lv> its rocketing staircases; and,
or all that, jungle growths were,close
ihottt its lower stage and odd clumps
if verdure, grew from its arched roofs,
t seemed that life laid been in its
diadowv galleries only a moment a no.
I'lie temple was virtually inl.-u !
No Trace of Man Except Ruins. I
'J'lle astonished visitor looked about [
for the asbis of altar li.^-es and stood
listening for Hit; footsteps pi returning
priests. It seemed inereoible -1tun a
1 pi'? "uld?ha e ev ul v ed?n?ei v ili/.:r?
( ion such as tiiat tv pitied l>v t lie gica: ;
temple and then have vanished with- '
out any of their neighbors hearing i
of it. I
But there were no human beim. > in
the empty balls, nor was there trace
of man. save in the ruin of Ids works I
in the walled city to ilic north.
It is now more than sivty years since '
tlie stunned eves of Mnuhnr. the nut- :
?> I
uralist, lookeil upon Die nuignilicout |
heights viI Angkor more than sixtv |
years since the greatest det.cTiv. ?tnry j
ill the liistory of tit*? world was laid j
out with its million stony dews to |
pu/./h**- I he savants. Today, with its i
principal rciiiuiu?; classified and ticketed.
its disruptions translated, and its
monuments lifted out of the Jungle,
Angkor is still the ut^i and silent j
mystery that it was in the beginning.'
The world knows more about it now. !
Splendid automobile roads, cut through !
what vvas once n thicket of bamboo J
apd is.in 1 vv an endless rice tleld, bring 1
TtoT Lra\ eler. uii regular schedule Hnd
willi little personal diseoinfort, from |
Saigon, at the foot of Asia, to the bun- |
galow on the edge of the Angkor moat,
in a few hours. Yearly hundreds ? f {
visitors from all parts of the world'
are seeking out I ids odd corner ami J
carrying away with tlicin amazed re- '
ports that will lure other hundreds. j
And vet. were it Hot for the fact
(hat these tremendous /.tkkuriits remain
louohias i hey were w hen they :
were tirst lunlt. di ttani of tune and!
weatle-r. hv the Tonle Si;. (Ureal
I akel. the ill- I'eihhle t..le '! the i ivih
a'h-ii tJ.it Icr.l: them and v.iidshel
vv.. td rat.ix ;iv it 1fcd in Mot:!.? ;'?. time.
:".iii"iirt"" i eve Iv nn cni- ediflvtli.
Discovered by Mcuhc^.
I vv i> generations ago the modem
wo hi had ee.or heard of An.hoi. A 1
dense forest spread across lnd<<-('hiua. 1
1 rctnli traoe was confined to die
coast, and there was no commercial '
trathe on the Mekong river north of
I'lioinpenh tor the reason that ('am
hodla's resotir.es, the same resources
that hnrt given Mils' region a possible *
identity us the (1 olden Chersonese of
legend, were us deeply carpeted with '
useless verdure as the hidden cities !
of the North.
Pnompenh, the capital of die King
dotn of Cam hod in (western portion of
the IndoA'hlnese peninsula). was a
village of nlpa thatch and bamboo, h
comic-opera metropolis, where a des- 1
pot ruled In fenr v?f his life over a
semlsavage. if not completely savage,
people.
Saigon, the present capital of French
enterprise in the Fast, was Just rising
from the marshes south of Anuam.
M hut might llo hidden In the masses
??f foliage "to the north, no one knew.
Inning tlioso troublous times M.
.Mouhot passed up the great river Into
Tonic Sap and made Ids discovery.
Ardu'oluyy, already thrilled hy Lhe
translation of the Hosetta Stone and
the uuhcfiovuhle bit of detective work
which led to the decipherment of the
Assyrian cuneiform inscriptions, turned1
its attention at once to this new held. '
For half a century learned men
toiled here unceasingly to prove tit
length only what had been suspected
from the first, that a highly intellectual
people had built up in this valley
a civilization, and that however Inconceivable
experience might show jtueh
a tiling to be, their marvelous culture
had been sunk without a trace.
Once, and not so long ago, the Journey
to Angkor could be made only by
bent?a tedious passage that took hvo
Uu,\s;--The stories of travelers who
made the pilgrimage in those days nre
long recitals of hardship and continuous
descriptions of impenetrable
jungle. .
There is no reason to believe that
these accounts were at ull Inaccurate.
Hut conditions change rapidly in Indochina.
A ho e pattern of paved roads
h.is been traced till across I this end
of A-in.
Now Easy of Access.
Motor transport, more llexihle and
faster than the typical oriental railroad.
lias brought the upper reaches
of the Mekong \alley to within a few
? hours, of Saigon ; and paddy fields,
spreading ot.i and beyond the old
horizons, ha\e pushed the jungie
steadily northward.'
Today one may ride for hundreds of
miles without seeing any trees save
in far -,;iitrrrd dusters, and it was
only jesiorday that the tiger and elephant
walked here, unmolested^ Ju-ritors
of the physical kingdom of th
l\iiniers\
l'l-yoti't T1 mm., TH water lilies TiT
the stiti ino.it, beyond a cloistered wall
that seems to have neither beginning
nor end. the great hulk of Angkor Vat
drives its stone wedge into the sky.
A pilgrim looks upon it through misty
eyes and with an raid constriction of
the throat, for there is only one Angkor
Vat. There is no such niouuineii;
to a vanished people any u here 'elso
in: the world.
The sun is setting now, and the gold
lias come hack to the minarets. The
iacework of curved rock Is fragile
as cobweb in the gathering shadow,
and with the half light of early evening
the central pyramid lias taken on
an awe-inspiring size, it seems futile
to record its grandeur. One does not
describe an Angkor, lie sits and gazes
at It In silence ami amazement.
Tho name Angkor has been some
what loosely applied to these ruins.
There nre two principal groups: Aug
kor Vat. the temple, and Angkor Thorn,
the town. The word Angkor is believed
to lui a native corruption of the
Sanskrit Nagara, meaning capital.
Thntn is n local word, meaning great
or grand. Vat is an appellation designating
a temple and is generally associated
with Huddiiism.
Wonderful Step Pyramid.
Angkor Vat was the bo-t important
w.<rk of the ktimers and remains today
the JiiieM expression ??f their peculiar
art I'.uilt as ;i shrine to Hindu
-n>'!s iiml npparenth devoted to Vishn.
S \a. and r.mhlha in turn, it h.i* <1,
parted a l.eig distance from the pa:
nt ar< i !e< | nre of the 1 limh'.s. |j s
a st, ;, |-\ i .imid whffli rises thr.it
S
three . h.is'.n-ed ,t;i. rs t?? a en :ip .
five inilerlike towers. ,>f whicii ti.
one in t he < enter is dominant.
, T!ie temple area is about a ipiarle.
of a mile srjnare and is surrmm 'e 1
h\ a ni'iai and a high wall. A < ans
way ? i-iism's the moat and sM ikcs
through a gate pierceil in the middle
of the western wall, whence it leadto
the portico of t,Jn' tirs: stage. Tin
lower galleries measure aua: ly-^Vu IV~.
mi W^iile. The facade Is t'.ve times awide
as that of Notre I>anie of Tari*
It ftT'tbe history of Angkor Vat that
no beholder can Judge accurately how
high it really is. The towers are
ler than the tallest palms of the bin
gle. hut they are lifted still higher h\
tricks of perspective that form tinmost
Interesting part of their design
In tho mass. Angkor is as Impress p..
as the Pyramids of Kgypt. more strik
Ing as an artistic ensemble than o\.-n
the Taj Mahal. But it is not for these
attributes that ftie dnard pilgrim would
classify It as the most fascinating
place Id the world.
?y--- '~ ..
Objected to Shaving
by Monkey Apprentice
. Sir Hurry Lauder Is fund of telling
the following story:
The sailor son of uif Arbroath bur*
ber hud brought home with him u
large, huiry, uud particularly ugly
monkey, which he presented to his
father. The barber truined the monkey
to moilst him in the lutliering of
his customers' chins, much to their t
amusement.
One duy a stranger dropped Into the
shop, ami hud u good look ut the monkey
sitting in a fur coruer staring intelligently
ut u comic paper. By and
by the barber wus culled to the door
to answer some query or other, and
in bis absence (lie monkey seized the
luthering brusli and proceeded to
work diligently on the customer's face.
Afterwards be grabbed u razor and
sturted to strop It with equui diligence,
but in u grossly careless manner.
Then he clambered up on the arm of
~the chair uud mudo us if to'begin
shaving the alarmed customer.
"No, na, ma woe rnannle!" said the
latter, jumping to Ids feet apd pushing
tiie monkey aside. "I've fto objec- <
tlons to ye soapln' mfc, an* yer stroppin'
maybe a' .riclit, but yer father'll
hae to do the ahavin' I"
| t .. i ,
Eskimo Musicians Not
Enthusiastic About Jazz
The Eskimo must be the great
music-lover. It Is said of him that he
will sit on ids native ice fpf hours
listening to tlie graphophone. Ills
own music lie makes on an instrument
which consists of a skin tightly
stretched over the frame of a hoop?half
drum .and half tambourine. Eight
players of eight of these instruments
make an Eskimo orchestra. With each
man striking the one note of ids instrument
with u rod, the eight notes
of the octave ure produced. Also, the
musiciun sings as he plays. Needless
to say, the people nourished on this
music are 'unitized by the more civilized
music, and it is said of them
that they greatly appreciate graphophone
records of singers. Strangely
enough, too, they prefer most other._
music to jazz.
'/?* " _______
Antique Dealers' Tribunal
One of the strangest tribunals in
England sits at regular intervals in a
upper room in St. James' street West,
in the center of the great art world
of London. It is the antique dealers'
"High Court of Justice," to which any
of the 550 members of the British Antique
Dealers' association has the
right to appeal. Its judges, who sometimes
number as many as 20, include
some of the world's greatest experts
on precious stones, old china, tapestries,
pictures and antique furniture.
Disputes arising out of the sale of
an antique of more than ordinary importance
are often referred to the
court for arbitration, and if they think
lit, the Judges have the right to call
in independent art experts. It is to
protect the interests of antique dealers
and safeguard the honor of their
Industry that this tribunal has been
established.?ilariford Courier.
The Prizo "Howler"
The prize "howler" must surely be
attributed to the ooy who suggests
that "the Kodak is the Bible of the
Mohammedans."
Hereothers:
"A Impure is a man who sells fish."
"The dome-of St. Paul's is supported
by eight ' peers, who are unfor*
l tunately cracked."
"A blizzard is the inside of a duck."
"Equinoxes are the inhabitants of
Greenland."
"Bacchus first taught the Greeks to
get drunk."
"Apollo was the king of table waters."
"Sheakespeare lived at Windsor
with his merry wives."
'
. Everybody Pu??y-Footing
As sffeot tratlie noises become worse
and worse in the large cities, the pede&trlan
becomes still quieter In his
movements, by the use of rubber soles
' and heels.
Even In Lancashire quietly padding
rubber and leather steadily replace
the clatter of clogs and wooden shoes.
The silent shoe Is a modern notion
Noisy boots were formerly some
thing to be proud of. The gallants of
Alexandria let people know when they
were coming, the London Macaroni of
the Eighteenth century wore heel-tips
that clinked, and a Northampton boot
manufacturer says that some of Ids
West Indian orders used to stipulate
that the boots must squeak 1
I
Say* Cohn Found Bacteria
That Dr. Ferdinand Colin, the r?ot- ;
nulst, and not Robert Koch, the cheni
1st, was the discoverer of bacteriology,
was brought out In Germany during
the recent celebration of the con
tenary of Koch there. Cohn Is said
to have examined the frontier regions
between plant and mineral. Then
came his investigations of the- hoc
terla. He discovered n number of
mysterious carriers of sickness and
grouped them Into a system. He Influ
enced n young physician to pursue his
scientific studies in bacteriological research.
The young physician was
Koch.
Tonaortal Not*
*"I hear that Louie is going to marry
Joe the barber's daughter. Is there
money in it?"
"Yes. tier old man has beeci scraping
In the money for the last twentyAre
years."
SON GIVES LIFE
TO SAVE MOTHER
,> r r.. "
Lashes Her to Boat, Then He
sTSinks in Lake.
,M. ./r
Plscervllle. Osllf.?To stive'his nged
mother from death .Juiiich K. Moore,
IsOa Angeles contractor, sacrificed his
own life In the storm-swept waters
of lOetao lake. 5 miles east of here.
Mother and son were plunged Into
the lake when their smull\bont \yua
upset hy a sudden squall.
Struggling In the durk, ^ioore
readied IiIh mother's side. With rap*
Idly waning strength he succeeded In
lashing her with a line to the side
of the 'capsized craft.
Then, exhausted hy his efforts in
the chill wuters. he was unahle to
retain his grip and sank.
Meanwhile, hijjf mother, Mrs.
Mary Moore, although she lost consciousness,
was held fast to the boat
throughout the night, and was found
shortly after dawn hy a rescue party
of forest rangers.
Revived, she declared that she was
unaware that her son had drowned
until daylight, when she Regained conscloin-ness
for a time and discovered
he was no longer beside her. Although
suffering frdm exposure, she Is expected
to recover.
The accident occurred as Moore
was bringing his mother across the
lake to Ids summer home, where Ids
wife awaited them.
Rangers and cumpers dragged the
lake, for his body.
Speech Understood Even
if 25 Pet. Inarticulate
t? Los Angeles.? Even when he falls
,to hear correctly 25 per cent of the
sounds In speech, a normal person
understands the conversation. Kxperinieuts
showing this are reported to
the Aceoustleal Society of America by
Vern O. Knudsen, of the University
of CuMfornlu.
"Actual tests," he says, "in a quiet
open space have Indicated that with
average speakers and listeners ttie articulation
will be about J Mi per cent.
~A rating of KM) per cent?that is. perfect
articulation?edii never be attained.
"A few of the consonantal sounds
are sometimes mistaken even under
ideal hearing conditions. We are ordinarily
unaware of this when we listen
to speech, because the connotation facilities
correct interpretations of those
words not beard distinctly. Kyen
when speech articulation is as low as
T.'i per cent, the hearing will he regarded
as acceptable."
The experiments indicated that
speakers should give special attention
t<> the sounds log. d. v, f, ami th.
To Split $100,COO Fund
Among Puyadhlp Indians
Taeoma.? In the eyes of the I'uyalIwp
Indians. Uncle Sam will become a
big melon man.
A. l\ I Uiclois. Unlian superintendent
at Tr.lalip. wirt distribute $100,000
' \
to me:, hers of the I'uyallup tribe, ncci-vdi:
:- n Qu o IV. fi'. Oil LtV SllilS
Cross, member of tin- coiiuniitee which
eompleied tiie l filial roll May 12.
The certilicd roll contains the names
of Min men. women and children, each
of whom will receive a share amounting
to approximately $205.
The total fund amounts to ."MSS.OOO.
tint Sks.tXM) will he reserved for future
distribution. It accumulated from
rental of the Cushionn Indian school
property to the government sis a vetereiis'
hospital site and later as a
hospital for Indian children.
Duck Snared on Wing*
When Angler Casts Line
DubilnrGa.?This is not a tish story.
Boh High tower, while fishing in Turkey
creek with rod and reel, was about to
let go a cast when tie sighted three
ducks flying past him. Swish went
his enst and plop went a duck into
the water, caught hy a leg, according
to Illghfower. who brought home a
IbPo ilnck
Queer Shaped Vegetable
Puzzles Iowa Growers
1 Mibuque. Iowa.?A cone-shaped vegetable
which curls itself Into a letter
S, is about eight Inches In diameter
nt the base, iind grows on a vine,
lias vegetable raisers puzzled here. It
belongs to Richard,Chapman. In whose
yard it bus grown. He vouches for Its
delicacy when stewed.
Good Air Record
I'? nvor.? A record, of having flown
."no.noM miles, transporting thousands
of passengers, without Injury to a slifcgle
passenger, pilot or employee, was
established in September hy Mid-Coje
finent Air Kx press.
J "
% Tests Her Fever at '
| Druggist's Expense !!
% ito-tm irer.v is tvetiig ' ^
J told at Aix-les-Balns of n woin- <>
5 an visitor whose "habit of thrift !?
^ ha* now earned her a name for **
<? meanness. 11
] | She entered a drug store and
;? asked to see soma thermome- X
\ ters. Selecting one. she popped ) J
it In her mouth, held It there < >
i, for several minutes, took It 6tiC J I
J | and ascertalnerf^ier tempera- < ?
< ture. Then ate handed It back. 1
) I saying it wae not the kind the < 1
? wanted. and left tb? shop.
Fire Damages I
Sumter Store* \
' The dtore occupied by Dixi? iu<Jio I
Inc., on NoHh Main street, w?? badly I
damaged by fire of undetermined to I
igtn Sunday night. The fire was <ju! I
Covered shortly after 7:80 o'clock and I
it was an hour later before the blue I
<was finally brought under control*' I
Practically the * entire stock
radios > and electrical fixtures of the B
Dixie Radio company was ruined b.v I
the- t'rei smoke and -water, R, g |
Hultyi? 'proprietor of the company] I
this morning eetlmated hie loss ju J
betweeni $6,000 an<l $45,000, only p?r.
tially covered by insurance. I
The fire started in the sear of ths 1
store and iwas not discovered until I
it had made considerable headway I
Excellent work was done by the fire- I
men inpreventiug'the spread of the I
flames to the adjoining stores..
The unoccupied store to .the south I
of the Dixie Radio building. Was con. I
siderably damaged, -wjplej iSchwsrfr' I
ready-to-wear eetnbliehmeni sustain. 1
ed some damage from smoke. These I.
three stores are owned by the I
Schwartz estate. No estimate of the I
loss to the building has yet been I
made.-?'Monday's 'Sumter Item. (i
I V
Convicts Return From Holiday. I
Mdhtgomery, Ala., Jan. 6.?Keep-1
ing faith with Governor Bibb Grave*,*
more than 300 s^ate prisoners were l|
returning today over roads that lei 1$;
to home and freedom two week8 8f0.
Already a few have entered the I
prisons at Kilby, *Speigner# Atmorc, I
and the road camps, although thoir I
Christmas paroles end officially .fti I
six p. m. tomorrow. .
"Things ain't like they used to. be" fl
said one negro lifer who has bfcen in J
prison more than a decacleT Ke cam?
back to Kilby after only a few' daya I
of freedom. * e
"Folks all changed; town's <aU^fl
changed; friends all gone," he said I
as he appeared for adnryission. Prison. I
officials had made up a purse for him I
to visit home;- m '
In previous years more than nine- B
ty-nine per cent of the convicts pa- I
roled for ^Christmas have returned on I
time and Hamp Draper, head of the ;'B
state convict department, said he ex
pected that ratio to be maintained
this year.
The group released include many *
convicts serving life terms for niur- I
der, some of them with more than*
twenty years in ]^i$miJtabjjnct them.
Rare Equipment Burned., ;
? Rantoul, 111.?Fire destroyed a
war-time wooden hangar housing the I
Army aviation radio school at Chan- ?B
ute Field, with a loss of $500,000. . I
All but $30,000 of the loss was due to I
destruction of radio equipment which rM
was rare'and will be hard to replace.
Thirty-eight, persons, were killej;*: j
and^ll7 injured by trains at grade -
crossings in 1030, the annual reporc
of the South Carolina railroad com- I
mission made public Wednesday
shows. The commission reported pro-/*
greas has been made in elimination of
grade crossings.
^
m DeKALB COUNCIL No 88
Jonior OyderUrA*^ Regular
council second and
' fourth Mondays of each
month at 8 p.m. Visiting Brethren *
are welcomed. A. W. HUMPHRIES,
L. H. JONES, Councillor. .
Recording Secty. ' ,
ii-ii r^i .iV ? !' '*
ROBT. ~W. "MITC
! 0* - -2
Architect |
Crocker Building,
Camden, S. C.
- st
* ? -Mr.
J, A. White Says, "If Ye?
Have An Automobile
Keep Rat-Snap."
"If I knew about RAT-SNAP last
Winter, would have saved $120. Ml ,
car was in the garage for. a fa*
weeks durihg the bad weather; whs#
I went to take it out, found that r*B
had eaten great holes in two ***
tires. Got them later with RATSNAP."
Three sizes, 85c, 65c, $1.26.
Sold and guaranteed by Zemp dt
Pass, Druggists, Camden, S. C.,
Bethune Hardware Co., Camden,
C.
TAX NOTICE
TREASURER'S OFFICE
CAMDfctt.g.
Notice is hereby given that
State, County and Sdbeiot taaea to*~the
year 1030 shall be doe and payable
between October let and De<*to"
ber Slat. 1936. Penalty of dne P?f
cent will be added to all la** hot
paid by January let, 1981. Ahy information
with reference to tare?
will be cheerfully furnished upon ap- a
plication. When muring I
pleeee gtate School District or Town- ri
' V ^agx<3tfullyr