University of South Carolina Libraries
I Nobody's Business I rhun i*r ^Tbt Obreniclt by Qm I " IlcO?.C??rri?ht, 1928. I JUST A DIME AT A TIME wifo( bless her sweet soul) Is j 10-cent store fanatic. It Is really financially dangerous for her to walk I jnto one. She's -terribly close, exI tremely economical and nearly stingy I ... .everywhere except in 10-cent ^ore*. She wouldn't think of payI ing 86 cents for an article in a reg-| jjjar shoppe, but aht'll buy 12 things at 10 cents apiece without batting an eye.... in '^Nothing above a IHme" I emporium. ..The other day.,,.while out sum Bering.. *she spied a 10-cent store' j tCross the street and made a dive j for it. She needed (only) a. wash rag, but when #he got thru? P"* tol<*( I me to "pay her," meaning the clerk, and here's what I settled for; 3 toy trucks ( for baby), I l toy balloon( for baby), I 2 packages toothpaste, 1 bottle vaseline, 3 palmetto fans, I 2 rag dolls (for baby) , 1 more toy truck( for baby), 1 rubber ball (for baby), ; 1 bow and arrow (for baby), I ' l cake soap (for baby), 1 alcohol lamp (for baby), 1 more truck (for baby), I 3 papers safety pins (for baby), I l wash rag (for me). I ..Why, folks, a view years ago roy I wife and I were up in New York,' j 788 miles from home..?.riding in an upper berth of a Pullman car. ... and I while perambulating Fourth Avenue, her eye caught sight of a 20-story 10-cent store, and we entered therein for the afternoon. i r ..Now, mind you, friends... .we have a 10-cent store at home that I sells-* just exactly what those New York 10-cent stores were selling, but I' when I came out of, that joint 3 j hours later, I looked like a Santa I Claus and whole coveys of children followed me for blocks yelling.... "Lookit old (Suurftver-time Santa I Claus." And did I perspire sweat? j My answer is yes, aVplenty... .toting j, those bundles. I ..I have a touch of 10-cent store-ism myself, especially in fche hardware department. I always want to buy J I everything they have from a carpet; tack to a claw hammer, but as I have to do my own paying, I never purchase but one thing at a time. 1 am strong for screw-drivers and pliers, and think mighty well of electric light cords and cold chisels. (N. iB. 1 do moat of my own wiring and plumbing). Of course, I enjoy (shopping with my wife and never criticise her for trying to unstock the J10-cent stores. That's about the only place she's been able to trade iiufor 10 years. social news from flat rock .. i have benh asked to correct a report i made in this collum last week when i said that a horse had flung mr. jhon green and broke his leg. it was a mule and it only sprung his leg. he wants the records kept straight. ..i am glad to say that all of the candydates usspjrihg to publick offis this summer seem to be verry intelligent they can read and.rite and nearly every one of them can spell and cipher a right smart, this will help the country, as it will be harder for the lolalby-Bters to buy them over. ..my 2 nephews Went to Washington, d. C., after their bonus, they left home a-walking, but kebched a ride up in n. ., at a town that decided to haul them thru rather than feed them, joe says he is going to shake his fist in the face of congress or get his monney. he newer went over, but his tonsils is bad and he draws only 40$ a month now onner count of same. . . n^r. sawyer hurt, the dairyman, lost a nice cow by death last week when she tried to jump a fence made out of pailirigs. this leaves him with 8 nice cows, and with the help of a nearby spring, he will be able to fill all orders for milk as heretofoar. her name was "judie" and she was named after the man's wife who sold her to him. she will bo missed by his customers sooner or later. . .dr. early rizer,. the owner of the druggist at this place, has put in an electric fan and. has taken down the big fly brush over the sody fountain, he will possibly not make his soft drinks verry strong untill after he gets the said fan paid for. it is made like., a squirreljcage and runs so fast that you can't count the spokes in it. the down payment was 5$ with 3$ a month, so the agent said. ?3 I ..a man drove over from the eountyl peat last tuesday trying to sell the farmers in our midst some boll weevil I poisob, but they ran him out of town, the farmers say that it ought to be a lynching1 offense for annybody to! kill a boll 'weevil this year, either malice aforethought or axvidental. i think it would "be best to try to spread them rather than destroy them. *. 4 yorea trulie, mike Clark, rfd. .. I have never had any particular dislike for any kind of doge except the bull type and the washrag models, the latter being lovingly as the tSpitz. ( I simply cant understand why u bull dog was ever invented. ..When 1 lived in Los Angeles.,., where 1 have never been but once and spent only 3 days I had a neighbor whose name was not Bro^n or Smith, and they were the happy owners of a Spitz fiste and every time they hugged and kissed her, my stummick gpt weak. Arid that meant that it stayed weak, week after week. ..The precious little canine in question was imported from Spitsbergen. I have never felt kindly toward! Spitzbergen since they told me that. She was so ugly that my wife cried every trine she looked at her. .She (th? dog) looked exactly like a screech owl that had been spanked in .the face with a coal shovel. .. One dpy I unthoughtedly pitched a small piece of ham to WilhelminaCeleste... . Yep, that was her full n&me....anh before she could swallow it, 4 different Smiths ran out and picked up the "precious-little-darlingangel. . . .old-bad-man give-our-littleo odium-old-mean-ham.., .we-whip-old -mean-man." .. They retrieved that bite of meat and pitched it in the garbage can ....entirely out of reach of Wilhelmina-Celeste, and incidently gave me the look that had been held in reserve for the criminal that might have shot their mother. I felt so cheap I had to go down behind the barn and cuss for( 15 minutes. ( j i /' . .1 didnt see this fine little lady dog for nearly^ a month. ' tt seems that she swallowed enough of that ham gravy to give her intestinal indigestion. ~Mra. Smith was ueeii I feeding her some goat milk' with a dessert spoon in the parlor when I] re-discovered her (the dog). I had hoped that she had been deported^ but no such luck had befallen me. ..Mrs. Smith had 2 other children besides this pup. She paid very little attention to John, Jr., and Rachel. She attended all the. parties in the community and so did the dog. Why, she, meaning MrB. Smith, never felt that she was dressed up unless she had that bunch of fur pressed to her heart. I finally got so disgusted with those folks that I made the man foreclose his mortgage on our house and then we moved in the suburbs where women loved babies as well as dogs. j The South Carolina association of county officers closed its annual meeting at Aiken with the election of Officers. J. H. Sally, Orangeburg coun- j ty treasurer, was elected president to succeed R. C. Williams, Union county clei^k of court. T. H. Williamson, Aiken county treasurer, and J. C. R. Oswald, Lexington county sheriff, were elected new vice-presi-1 dents. j Congress has passed the act providing a commission to commemorate the first settlement of English speaking people on this continent, at Roanoke Island, North Carolina, where Sir Walter Raleigh left the colony which disappeared before the supporting ship from England returned. The! 150th anniversary will be in 1934, and the commission, serving without pay, will have cliaigc ?f nit appropriate celebration of the event. Howard Curtis, a barber, went into nn Atlanta restaurant on Saturday, called for a waitress, Annette Bryant, 20 and pretty, shot her through the heart, killing her instantly, and turned the pistol on Himself, but it snapped several times. When he was grabbed off the dead bo<]y of the girl, he said it made no difference, as he had already taken poison, and on the way to the hospital, he begged the ambulance physicians to let him die from the poison, as he would die anyhow when convicted of murder. Jack Boger, a negro, dropped dead in the court at Charlotte while awaiting trial the second time for Ibooting and killing another man in a fight. Just as the deputy sheriff called the court to order; Boger slumped over in his chair, and when picked up was dead from heart disease. {He was 58 years old. At the first trial he drewa sentence of thaee to five jrears, but his attorney got him a new trial in the supreme court and eras in court ready to defend him again. ? ~ ? r ?. w -*.T .-.TP v.-?. ? ?-.a,m ? ,I,. ?! < ' ~ * Kershaw Lad Dies The hearts of many Kershaw citizens, particularly among the younger folk, woro deeply grieved and peculiarly saddened when it became Known early Friday night that William Gay, eldest son of Mr. and Mrs. W. k. Gay, had died following a very tyr^ef illness of only one day. He returned only last Wednesday from encampment with Kershaw Scout Troop No. 88 at Gamp Barstow near Columbia, was about his home duties as utual on Thursday and it was only on Friday morning- after being awakened by his mother and staking the cow out to graze that he lay 'down on the bed and complained of a severe headache when his mother inquired if there Was anything the matter with him. Mrs, Gay called Dr. Blackmon who administered medicine but instead of improving he grew worse at an alarming rate which continued until he passed away about 8 o'clock at night. William Robert Gay, affectionately called '\SonM Gay, w^uld have reached his fifteenth birthday July 2, had he lived until then. He, was a clean, upright and manly young fellow, of pleasing address and happy disposition. An obedient son and affectionate brother and a favorite young boy with all who knew him. He was a consistent member of the Methodist church and Sunday school and nn active and worthy, member of Scout Troop No. 88. While at Camp Barstow he was promoted to Star Scout and was awarded merit badge* in woodwork and swimming and woodcarving. The large attendance at the funeral and many beautiful floral offerings strikingly evidenced his popularity and the high esteem in which he was held by all who knew him.?Kershaw Era. The North Carolina run-off primary will be held next Saturday, and the campaign for United (States senator between Cam Morrison' and Reynolds growsi/hotter every day. There is less excitement about the campaign for governor, most people believing that Ehringhaus is an easy winner without much talk. * W. A. Knowles, of Matthews, N. C., working at a saw mill near there, was pulled into a circular saw when a strip of wood became entangled with the machinery, and died the next day in the Presbyterian hospital at Charlotte. VISITS ARCTIC BIRTHPLACE Peary I la by, Now a Mother, Going to Sec Ice Where She Wwi Horn Tho "Snow Ruby" daughter of tho I North Pole conquerer-r-ia returning to i her birthplace in the land of eternal anbwa. When the good ship 44Morrissey," with Captain "Bob" llartlett, famous Newfoundland skipper, in command turns its prow northward for Cape York, North Greenland, Marie Agnighito Peary .Stafford wiM be on board. 44The Snow Baby" was the most northerly born white child in the world. Her mother* Josephine l>iebitsch Peary, having accompanied her husband, the late Admiral Robert E. Peary, on his 1801-1892 and 1803-1804 expeditions as far as Greenland was the first white woman to winter with an Arctic expedition.. It was during the long winter amid the snows thnt Marie Agnighito Peary, now Mrs. Edward Stafford, of Washington, D. C., was born. (She is the heroine of the book, 44ThC Snow Baby," written by her mother in 1001. Two sons, now in school at Cambridge, Mass., will accompany their mother. Their destination is Cape York, the snow capped headland at the upper end of Melville Bay, where a monument to Admiral Peary will be erected by the Peary Memorial expedition. On this expedition, for the first time, the flag of the Society of Woman Geographers will flutter from tho masthead. A blue and white pennant with a sphere showing the eastern contour of the western hemisphere and the western contour of the eastern hemisphere, the North Star and the Southern Cross, bears the letters ,S. W. G. Both Mrs. Peary and Mrs. Stafford are active members of the organisation. A Wilmington, N. C., dentist who was not paid for a set of falsC teeth he made for a New Hanover woman got out claim and delivery papers/$tod sent a constable to take the teeth back. 9 The number of banks in Chicago closing in June on account of withdrawal of deposits reached 25 when five closed last Friday. They were small banks in the outskirts pf the city and quit business because the deposits became too small for profitable banking. The senate "has passed a bill to givo the Hod Cross an additional 50,000,000 bushels of farm board wheat for distribution among tho poor. ^ NOTICE OF SALE . Notice Is hereby given, That under and by virtue of tne Decree of the Court of Common Pleas for Kershaw County, State of South Carolina, dated the 14th day of June, 1982, in the cause of J. C. Shavers, plaintiff, ugainst Claburno Dinkins, Monsie James, Augustus Dinkins, Mack Dinkins, Berekeley Dinkins, William Dinkins, Fannie Lewis, Joe Dinkins, a minor over the age of fourteen, Mary Dinkins, Fred Lewis, Ella Lee, Bessie Iawis, Raleigh Lewis, McKinley Lewis, Alma Lewis, Mayfleld LewisK Maud Dinkins, Fannie Dinkins and B, M. Smith, defendants, 1 will sell to the highest bidder or bidders for cash, before the Court House door in the town of Camden, state of South Carolina, during the legal hours of sale on the first 'Monday in July, 11)32, the same Ibeing the fourth* day of said month, the following described property: , , "All that piece, parcel or lot of land, lying, being, and situate in the County* of JCershaw, State of South Carolina, containing eighty-three and one-half (83 1-2) acres, more Or less, and bounded as followsI On the North by landB of .MrB. Kirkland; on the East by lands of Mrs. Nannie Rose; on the South by lands of Mrs. J. S. Trantham, and on the West by lands of Mrs. J. S. Trantham." The purchaser shall pay for the preparation and recording of all papers, including tho requisite revenue .stamps. The highest bidder at the sale, other than the plaintiff, and all other persons, except' tfie plaintiff, who may thereafter raise the 'bid as provided by law, must make, at the time of the acceptance of his ibid, a cash deposit of Three (3) per centum of the total indebtedness adjudged to be due the plaintiff, the deposit of the last high bidder to be applied on the bid should there bo a compliance with the same, but should there (be a failure to comply witn the bid without legal excuse then such deposit shall be paid to the plaintiff as liquidated damages and the premises resold on the next convenient sales day thereafter, and at such bidder's risk. W. L. DoPAJSS, JR., Master for JCershaw County Camden, ?S. C., June 16, 1932. TAX NOTICE Taxes for 1981 will be collected until June 1st, 1932, with two (2) per cent penalty. All taxes unpaid will go into execution after June the 1st, 1982, with all penalties provided by law. Yours very respectfully, S. W. HOOUE, Treasurer Kershaw County, S. C. i .1 ^ . ~ . >, . ." " .:" ? ' / Orange Pekoe?India Ceylon NECTAR TEA 2 oz. pkgs. Vi lb. pkgt. 3 for 25c 2 for 25c I N. B. C. CRACKERS 6 25c I PIPIfl ce Sweet or O 6*>z. AC. ) j rlUIVLtd Sweet Mixed " >?r. "C |[ KNCORE I STUFFED OUVES "jr 15c I ^ Rajah ? ] SALAD DRESSING 2 g 25c Rajah | SANDWICH I SPREAD I _j^J0cj^J5c I PEANUT BUTTER 2a.iar .25c I A&P PURE | J GRAPE JUICE 2 bottle* 25c I I Hi! || ?? White House im. C/% j ! Evaporated wui? GINGER ALE I Clicquot Club j 2 bottles 25c TAX KXTKA Sunnyf ield i 4 bottles 30c I TAX EXTRA If Grandmother's BREADpan^L5c CUT RITE WAX PAPER 3 Pkgs. 25c PAPER NAPKINS 3 pkg?. /5C ^ _ Bananas, ?T lbs 23c Tender Corn, doz 30c. Lge. Watermelons ea. 39c Veal Chops, lb. lSc Pork Chops, lb 15c Pig's Liver, 3 lb*. Celery, 3 stalks tor .. zoc Canteloupes, each 5c L ' Cucumbers, 3 lbs 10c ( Spare Ribs, 3 lbs 25c Fish, 3 lbs 25c Ssgidsr Hams, lb. .... 15c ] " 1 ?My?_ 4 L ^ Atlantic & Pacirc ? K _ - ? r, . s _ . * 1 1 y 1 L 1 So LOW mm COST SO HIGH in VALUE ? So HANDSOME i8 * the Model wKn Kelvinator ? so superbly built ? so finely finished ? that your friends will think you paid more for it than you did. ! Yet despite its low price, I the Model "K" is highest Kelvinator quality throughout. It has the principal features of the highest priced electric refrigerators on the market ! ?eight freezing speeds ? porcelain enclosed cooling | | unit ? one-piece gleaming white porcelain interior with rounded corners?the finest insulation yet discovered ? unusually large ice and food storage capacity, ; ?bar type shelves?ehrome hard? ware, chrome tray fronts?and many others. You can effect no greater economy in 1932 than the purchase of a hand*3 some, capable Model It will save you enough money to keep j up the low monthly payments and it will give you refrigeration satisfaction such as you have never known. - Come in and let us show you this hig, efficient aid to modern house, keeping and explain the low ReDisCo terms. ' The beautiful new low-priced "1C Model is available in four sixes?4. 5, 6 and 7-cubic foot food storage capacity. i Each size may be had in all-porcelain or porcelain in- \ terior and lacquer exterior. The all-porcelain Models heme an snitomatic elyctric light. ? Mackey Hardware Company V' Camden, South Carolina ' ? ,t. ' - , - < <: # - ! -^1 a., - rr""~ i : j ?^?gt|| i ????I m