The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, May 22, 1931, Image 4
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Pellagra
Pellagra is * disease that usually
hows itself by a strange reddening
and scaling of the skin. The person
with pellagra also suffers with loss
* of appetite, indigestion, diarrhoea,
soreness of mouth and tongue, nervousness,
low spirits and more or
less general weakness; ? It is a tier-'
ioun disease because it weakens, may
lead to (mental illness (about one
third of the Inmates of the state hospital
being pellagrins), and it may
kill the patient.
The cause of the condition is evidently
eating wrong food, which does
not contain all that is needed to keep
people in good health. We know this
first, because people who eat the
right food do not have the disease;
second, because when people who have
the disease eat the right kind of
food they get well and remain well
as long as they keep on the right
diet; third, because when pedple are
fed the wrong diet they develop tlio
* disease, . ..
* "YWhen
a person has poor condition
of health, indigestion, sore mouth,
poor sleep and burning of hands and
feet, it at least shows sufficient indication
to consult your family doc'
- tor, even if it be not pellagra, and
be told what to do. The treatment
must be directed by a good doctor,
since medicines are needed to relieve
symptoms and make the patient more
comfortable.
The disease ^hould be prevented by
eating the proper diet composed of
milk daily, -some ~fresh meat, also
salmon, either cheap or expensive
brunds, and as many fresh vegetables,
including some green vegetables, as
-possible, spinach has been found to
contain twice as rmuch preventive vitamins
as the dried brewer's yeast
which is a recognized agent of worth.
Tomatoes and whole wheat products
are especially valuable, advises Dr.
A. W. Humphries, director of the
Kershaw County Health Department.
Twist it and turn it as you please
the one way out for the farmers of
this section is by the cow, hog and
hen route. Ten years of real development
of this program and we will be
wondering why we didn't do it sooner.
?Yorkville Enquirer.
Hard Ones
Great goodness, isn't it hard to
write about the American legion.
N'ext election we hope they will get*
.some officers named Smith and Jones
instead of' Goudelock. Groeschel,
Foushe and Llewellyn. Who in the,
world could remember how to spell
such names??Abbeville Press and
Gunner.
' IP' 11 1 1 ?
* '. ' . .' ' . ,..." '
I", KiDunai, Hoisewife, Sportspu,
Winiefs ia $50,000 Coiteit
i' ) I"1 i 1 > ' ' ? 1 '* " " 1 " " ' '' i1111 " , 1 T
Tap, Jimti Thomas Shsrksy, first priza winner; lowar left, '
Nlty, Walter 8weet, winner of second prise; lower right,
Julius M. Nolte, winner of third prize.
Picture* show the th^ major,prize wlnuers In the Camel cigarette
contest. James Thomas Sharkey, 32, a milkman in Boston, was awarded
first prize of $26,000; Mr*. Walter Sweet, mother of three children and
wife of a Marine Corp* captain stationed at the Brooklyn (N. Y.) Nary
Yard, won second prize of $10,000, and Julius W- Nolte, real estate dealer,
aud former secretary of the Duluth Commercial Club, recelred the third
prise of $5,000. In addition, Ave prizes of $1,000 each, fire prizes of $500
sach and twenty-five prize* of $100 each were awarded.
The three fortunate prize winners will go to Winston-Salem, N. O.,
I where Camel cigarettes are manufactured, to receive their check*. . .
\ "" "I
J Winston-.Salem, May 13.?The R. J.
Reynolds Tobacco Company today announced
James T. Sharkey, 32, of
Boston, Mass., won the $25,000 first
prize in the Camel cigarette contest
for letters on Cellophane.
iSharkey is married and is a milk
route foreman at the South Boston
plant of a milk distributor. He wears
overalls at his work.
Born in County Tipperary, Ireland,
he came to the United States alone
at the age of 10. Landing at Ellis
Island in New York, he went at once
to Boston, where he did odd jobs.
Eight years ago he got a job with
the company delivering milk. He
rose to the rarik of foreman and now
has several milk routes under his supervision.
Two North Carolinij?n? were amon4*
| the other prize winners. W. B. Barker,
Jr., of Winston-JSalem and C. L.
Thomas, at Mount Airy, each won
$100.
Mrs. Walter -Sweet, mother of three
children and wife of a Marine Corps
captain narw stationed at the Brooklyn
Navy Yard, won the second prize
of $10,000.
? Third prizd" of $5,000 went to Julius
M. Nolte, real estate dealer, of
Duluth, Minn., and former secretary
of the Duluth Commercial Club.
In all 38 prizes were awarded, of
'which five were for $1,000 each, five
were for $500 each, and 25 were for
$100 each. Judges of the contest were
i .Roy Howard, chairman of the board
of the Scripp-Howard League of
hewspaj>er; Charles Dana Gibson,
artist and -publisher of Life Maga
zine, and Ray Long, (president of th/e ,
International Magazine Company and >
editor of Cosmopolitan. c
The five prizes of $100 each "were
awarded to the following:
Albert iB. Franklin, 3rd, 22-yearold
graduate student at Harvard,
who 'lives in Cambridge, Mass.; John
R. McCarthy, 38, blind tobacco store
proprietor in Willimantic, Conn.;
Frederick E. Robinson, Latin-American
mining engineer, residing in Ooronada
Beach, Calif.; William A.
Schrader, aerial photographer, of
New Albany, Ind.; Dr. D. H. Soper,
Iowa City, Iowa, an instructor in den-|
tistry at the University of Iowa.
The five prizes of $500 each^were^
awarded to the following: Frank
Cartwright, engineer of Chevy Chase.
Md.; Mrs. Edith Paddlefcrd Cochrane
of Glenvale Avenue, Darien, Conn.,!
housewife, mother and author; Missj
Barbara Lawless, 21-<year-old stenographer
of Ardmore, Pa.; Mrs. Jane
Parsons, of New York City, a former
actress, now married and the mother
of two children; Richard W. ' Vogt,
Green Bay Road, Waukeegan, 111., a
Swiss nurseryman, who has been in
the United States only six months.
Twenty-five prizes of $100 each
were awarded to the following: Miss
Marie Alberts, Chicago, 111.; W. B.
Barker, Jr., 420 Spruce street, Winston-Salem,
employed by an insurance
company; Eugene Barton, El Paso,
Texas, railroad time-keeper; Mrs.
Edward F. Daly, St. Louis, Mo., a
housewife; Miss Kathryn R. Francis,
Baltimore, Md.; William G; Erbacher,
Conway, Ark., meat and cattle
1 . 11 v1 '' 1
iealer; Laroy F?irman, forest Hill#, <
N. Yh advertising imr; Mr?. Aln^
Uodllot, New York City, housewife;
C. W. OrM|?. Bvaneton, lit, nifl*
Bio# apace teller; C. *. CrayMll, of
PaxtoaviUe P?., a farmer who work*
m a foundry foreman during the win- .
ter; John I. .Griffin, Pueblo, Colo.,
employed by a fudl and iron company;
David C. Hill, Peyton and ANinfton
Road*, York* P?., hardware qyedit
manager; Mia* Elisabeth Jarrard.l
Lansing, Mich., secretary of Jthe
vtate board of health; J. W. Keating,
Cleveland, Ohio, salesman; J. H.
Kennedy, Milwaukee, Wis.,, ^ctrieal '
appliance service man; John 'fcilpatsinen,
rfd, West Paris, Maine, Finnish
lumberjack; I>r. Clinton Leech
o( Providence, R. L, heart speciaiiat;
Edward Martin, Buffalo, N. Y., draw
bench operator; Mrs. L. C. Millard,
Norfolk, Va, granddaughter of for- i
mer governor Kemper, of Virginia,
and prominent socially; Eugene Sartini,
Ottawa, 111., chauffeur; Gregory
Luce Stone, Mobile, Ala., welder; C>' ,
L. Thomas, Mount Airy, N. C., dentist;
Lee R. Womack, Amherst, O.,
locomotive fireman; J. Arthur Wood,
Mechanicsville, N. Y., locomotive fireman;
Emery Herbert Young, Painted
Post, N. Y., glass worker.
A total of 952,228 answers were received
in the contest, which was announced
in an eight-day newspaper
advertising campaign in which 1713
dailies, 2130 weeklies and 426 college
and financial newspapers were used.
The only other announcement of the
contest was on the Camel Pleasure
Hour broadcasting net/wo t;U<Uid consisted
merely of an invitation to read
the contest details in the newspaper?.
~ * - v'
\\. \\. Holland, business manager
of the two Spartanburg papers until
March 5, when he was unceremoniously
fired by the new owners, the
Internationa] Paper company, has
sued the Spartanburg newspaper corporations
for $9,205 for salary due under
a contract made when the newspapers
were sold to the more recent
owners, antl $50,000 punitive damages
for the harm done him by the method
used in discharging him. ;.''v
General News Notes
Chief Justice Richard B. Russell of
Georgia and the father of 18 children,
13 of them living, among them being
the governor-elect of that state, will
on May 14 debate birth control with
Mrs. Margaret iSanger, leader of the
birth control movement in the*United
States. ? ?
By a vote of the College of Bishops
at Nashville, Tenn., Saturday, for the
first time in history women will be
admitted as delegates to the economical
conference of World Methodism
when the conference meets in Atlanta,
Gu* on Oct. 116-23.
The college of bishops of ?ihe
Methodist Episcopal church, South,
meeting in Nashville, Tenn.. on Saturday
elected Bisboip Samuel Ross
Hay of San Antonio, Texas, as bead
of the college for the next six months.
?Bryan Untoidt. Colorado school buy hero,
left Washington on Saturday
morning, after being the guest--of
President Hoover in Washington for
four days.
The republican government - of
Spain has ratified a decree authorizing
an eight-hour day and a 48-hour
week.
Nevada's new six-weeks divorce law
wwn?r eixecure on Saturday and by
noon at Reno 179 cases had been filed
in the county cleric's office,. and it
was expected that the total would
be 300 by night.
The Empire State building, New
York's tallest structure, 1/248 feet
high, and built by a corporation
headed by former Governor Alfred E.
Smith, was opened for public inspection
on Friday. The lighting for the
building was turned on by President
Hoover from Washington. The building
has room for 35,000 tenants.
The remains of Dr. Edwin A. Alderman,
president of the University of.
Virginia at Charlottesville, who died
last week in Pennsylvania while en
route west on a shaking tour, were
interred at Charlottesville on Saturday
with many distinguished men in
attendance.
Ra> Broom, alleged by the government
to have made a million dollars
in the bootlegging game at Kansas
City, Mo., has been sentenced to serve
eight months in jail and pay a fine of
$5,000 for failure to file a Federal income
tax return in 1(928.
, Winston-Salem, N. O., on Friday
night experienced its second big tobacco
warehouse fire during the week.
The loss was estimated at approximately
$500,000.
Wante-?For Sale
SBND TO the Southern Cotton Oil
??rnL^il)y I Magnesium Arsenate
for killing the Mexican Bean BeetTWM.
"e
u L??Flower plants, mari?
ff?'ds, zinnias, delphiniums and
candy tuft. Per dozen 20 cents
Address iMiss Jennie Whitaker'
* Hampton Avenue, Camden. S C '
.8sb - 1
- C
:;KT YOUR CWrum Arsenate for I
met poisoning, s?d dusting from
The Southern Cotton Oil Corn pony.
They hove just unloaded a carload,
and con supply you In five pouqd,
packages or Mfrpooad ateel drums.
T%ey are handling the famous 1
Niagara Brand. Phone 64. 7-8sb
POTATO PLANTS?For sale. Native
Porto Rycan from treated seed. Apply
to L. L. KeCaskUl At McCnskitl
A Lollia, Camden, 8. C. 8pd {
THE. SOUTHERN. OOTTON. OIL
COMPANY has unloaded a carload
of Blackstjrap Molasses * for Boll
Weevil Povsonihg, and you can obtain
it in quantities from one gallon
to a barrel. Phone 64. 7-8sb
BABY CHICJ(ti~rPhode Island Redsi
Barred Hoik*. A big hatch this
week and ?so next week. All
from blood-tested stock. The kind
that live and grow. Ten cents
each. Cherryvale Poultry Farm,
1840 Haile Street, telephone 254W, 1
Joe B. GasUin, proprietor, Camden, 1
S. C. , 8sb ]
FOR HALE?Considerable quantity of x
good quality Fodder at $2.50 per j
hundred bundles. Telephone 148.
W. P. McGuirt, at Guignund Farm,
Camden, S. C. 5-10 qb i
; yuj?,
S?^AU^iSb^
CAEfBNTEMiwu-^oun ti. m?9
phone 269, SIS Church S9
Camden, 8. C., will giT?
factory service to all for .11 J
of carpenter work. RuildX
general repairs, screening, c,3?
making mad repairing fur?it51
My workmanship is my r?f?rtS
I solicit your patronage. ThXi
ing you in advance. :|1
Will Johnson, of Patrick, hat|9
arrested charged with aiding Xf
burning of the school house thertXj
May )t, when he kicked over a tofcK
water and kept {ire fighters siB
from the well with a knife, uyw
there was plenty of insurance X
they a'lould let the house burn. Ill
Grandmother's BREAD ll
PAN LOAF
FULL POUND
?C
WHOLE I
WHEAT I
e? 7c i
BUTTER lb. 3Qc' I
PRESERVES Kr, it. 25c I
NUTLEY 2 lb.. 25c |
White House
E vapornted
MILK
7 25c
BOKAR
COFFEE SUPREME
Flavor-tight
Tin M* J W
Scratch '
Feed
2 lbs. 5c
CHEESE "iff lb. 19c
N. B. C. SOCIAL DELIGHTS lb. 27c
SUMTER SPINACH ? ) r 25c
t ill *
OCTAGON, 9 simii f A|i
. SOAP
Isup^sud.s3 P*??. 13c
Fresh Tomatoes lb 1 5c
Fresh Cucumbers lb I Oc
M
Bananas 4 lbs for 25c
.
Beets, per bunch 10c
i Spring Onions bunch 10c *
Celery, bunch 1 5c .
| The Great Atlantic <t Pacific Tea C6. j
, ^
PONCY
BREAD
16 oz Wrapped Loaf
5c
SUNKIST |
LEMONS I
Dozen 1
19c I
Mustard * 15c|
Best American Aged
CHEESE
lb 19c
JEWEL
Shortning
Q ik Q7/?
pail Ult
Blue Ribbon
MALT
Extract
g 55c
CHICKEN
FEED {? 25c
FANCY CREAMERY I
BUTTER ? 29c |
*?ftalBBCractasi. 17t|
Nucoa 17?
I BROKEN SLICE
"PINEAPPLE
t112 19c
American Sweet Mixed j
26 oz JAR II
PICKLES 25c]
ROSE J
Macaroni 9
7 oz C ** I
pk? 5C J
I JLJBBY'S^
* cuun mi
GENTLEMAN
CORN i
2 No. 2 OCa
Cans My 1
IT HOT GUP 1
COFFEE
lb. 15c
PAN ROLLS
dozen
f.
5c
XTRA FANCY]
Rogers No.^
XYZ SALAD DRESSING pt iar - 25t
IN OUR MARKET
Corn Field HAMS lb. - - , 22c
HAMBURGER
lb 20c
PICNIC iHAMS
lb 15c
BEEF ftl
Liver 251
WEKNIE and SMOKED
Sausage lb 20c
SLICED '
HAM lb 35c I
-'v. ?
PURE PORK ;
Sausage lb 20c
DRESSED
HENS lb 25c
i i m*mmmtmm
' ' " ' W : '
? ?
PORK
Tails 2 lbs 25c 1
Bones 3 lbs 25^
%*
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