The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, July 22, 1932, Page PAGE TWO, Image 2
pmu . .|.i i i i i % 1
STOWAWAY ENJOYS
SIGHTS OF LONDON
Very Simple the Way La
Raviure Tells It.
London.?Strict as ImmlgnUlOn OlRCluls
iiml Ullll'IM'S urt?, it J"
811)1 %|?08.slhle to cross the Atlantic
as ? stowaway, eat not square mortis
daily for sown dayH \\liilt> mingling
with the pnHSdbycr.s and crow, and
/ ilien outer (Leal Hrilnin without *u
hi itch as a (j nosi 1 j mi from the iiuihorl,.
tics.
|l;i\moiiij La linv^rt', twenty eight,
who says he lf\od in Myiqiiotio
road, Chicago. tlUI It.' Trawler* who
have experienced the thoroughness ??t
the Luropeau Invest Igniluna of foreigners
at porta an?L frontiers, pins .the
usual ticket and passport Inspect loos
of stewards and others aboard ship,
merely go through formalities In noway
essential. La Uaviore proved it.
He hoarded the Olympic in New
York 15 hours before the vessel sailed,
made himself comfortable, traveled to
Southampton, landed, trumped to London,
and was going for a walk- with
two newly found girl friends In Drury
Lane some time Liter before the police
called hi in 4to account. Then he was
fined $10 or given one month In Wormwood
Scrubs prison for the offense of
entering ICnglund Illegally./
Set the Sights.
Afterwards he restored himself to
the trust of the ofltclals and spent a
month doing the tower, houses of parliament,
Westminster abbey. Kew gardens.
and other points of Interest.
La Ituvlere was even given a police
registration card such as all Americans
and other foreigners who slay In
F.nghind any length of time must
have.
Ii all sounds easy as he explains
it.
II,. walked up the Olympic gangplank.
.slmcd his luggage in the crew's
ipmrters, and went for a walk, lie
came hack al eight, gol lii.-i Pag, and 1
pa ke,I out an unoccupied third class
Main nolo. Mattresses and other tin
iin >! bedding were stored in the room.
ai,,| <it,i o| these he built a screen to
shield himself from the door. Then ;
he made his lu-d behind and turned in j
for the night Whcli lie Woke Up next j
morning he was at sea.
La Ka\ierr stayed in his stateroom
until e\cuing, when he grew hungry.
So he changed his clothes and went
on deck. Then he learned that the
night crew was about to he fed, so
he dashed hack and got into his seaman's
clothing In time to follow the
crew in to supper, lie helped himself
and nobody asked any questions.
lie made this quick change twice a
day for seven days. He ate - lunch
with the day crew and at night he
feT with a different watch. Nobody
suspected. The rest of the time he
lolled In deck chairs and mingled with
the passengers.
La Uaviore 'mount to debark at Cherbourg,
but found this Impossible be- ,
cause of the landing card necessary j
to board the tender. So he went on |
to Southampton and was unlucky j
eie-ugli to arrive there in mid titter- ,
noon, lie saw two gangplanks taken '
aboard, one for the passengers an I |
the other for the crew, wlm immcdi- i
ntfly began unloading laundry. '1 lien
he did his quick change for the last j
time. He left his bog behind to avoid i
customs officers and walked off the
ship with the er,wv.
On to London.
He was unable to get out of the
dock yards at Southampton because
the only exit Is through a gate In a
high steel wire fence nnd litis is guard
ed by immigration oflleers.
Hut be waited until dark and then
Jumped the fence. the last hurdle of
his crossing tnflen. Then lie walked
to London, a fructlon less than 80
miles away.
He confe.'ised to a policeman guard
Ing the door of an American organization
In Ix>ndon that he entered as a
Htowawuy without a passport. Tlda
policeman. I/a Itaviere claims, refused
to arrest him then, hut when he saw
him on the following day strolling with
two pretty Wngllah girls he put hlro
under arrest and took him to the Immigration
oftlce In How street. lie
was convicted of entering the country
Illegally and on the same day they
to.ik him to Wormwood Scrubs, a
pri^m on the outskirts of I/ondon.
Tl ,. r.. ?... w I-? l.iu tpiiiilnmnl ?v..a
of The best.
ft --r his sentence was finished La j
H.ivP-r,' was s.-nt automatically to '
P.r.\*< n p-is.'ii to await deportation, j
II,, . ... 1 ? > the til.rile oflh-e for r
T Mi d to pel ;sh o'T t is exporl I
r- he \VT? v"o\vr?f? p-s frce-fo-q In 1
11 " s t- 11 ,-rhert S it: to>in?- j
v.. ,r\ " 'I'n-oo .-P.-ut t-is ibtfo u'tics
-y,ia eonsiil ir otthdaN vv. re nnx !
11 > ; ^ in him. hot lliey coult! do
p.,? lung v . thoiit proof of h:s A in erica
n Ct:..'eiisti;p. This lie could llot
supply w tl.oiit a passport, and it was
necessary to write to ('hicago for his
birth ccrt ;f;c:itub
New Yorker Owns Goose
That Lays 11-Inch Egg
Pen Van. N. Y. ?Peggy .T.. owned by
Mrs. J. F. (Soundry. Is no ordinary
goose.
Peggy lays eggs so large that "tie
of them, mixed with two quarts of
milk, will make enough custard for
the family.
Kvery spring Peggy goes on an ec<t?
centrir produetlon schedule On alternate
days she lays a huge doubleyolked
egg weighing ten our\C?s. It
measures 11 Inches around.
When hot weather sets In. she settles
down to one normal egg a day.
Chancellor Must Guard
Great Sei>l of England
Crcat la meaning and great In powor,
the Ureal Seal of Knglaud la yet,
comparatively, a small thing. Made of
'Silver? h tpetal e??y to clean?It In1
shoot aeveil Inches In diameter and
weighs Ii' pound*. The lord chancellor
Is pv eoMtndlun and responsible for
Its safely. and It Ilea within hbt-tHacretlen
to keep It where he thinks lit.
In day* none l?y those in whose
custody It lay have spent anxious momeiits.
Lord ('hancellor Kldun, in lh?i,
reign <?f Heorgo III, used (O sleep with
It under his pillow! One night his
house caught fire and he hurled It in
his garden for safely. Next day he
had litigation where he had hidden It
and eouh! not'recti 11 for some time.
Whenever a new Ureal Seal Is Introduced
a special ceremony take#
place. They new seal U sent from the
mint to the king. The lord elutneellor,
untitled of this hy writ, takes the old
Ureat Seal to the palace and hands It,
In two halves, to the king. The loitertaps
It three times with a small, eggshaped
hammer, thus defacing the
seal, which Is of very soft metal. The
old seal then becomes the perquisite of
the chancellor. In modern. time* It
has.heroine customary for hli^t to send
one-half to his predecessor In ofllee, as
an act Of courtesy.?New York Times
Magazine,
Spaniards Misled as to
New World's Gold Store
The gold which so Inflamed the
Imagination of Spain w hen Columbus
returned from his first voyage to the
New world probably was mined hy the
Indians In Haiti, says Dr. Herbert W.
Krleger, curator of ethnology of the
United States National museum, who
hendeil an expedition conducting an
exploration eft Indian sites on that
Island.
Actually, ho says, gold was scarce.
The natives gave the Spaniards a false
impression l>y hammering It Into thin
plates which then were shaped Into
objects of personal adornment, They
had discovered, lie says, an alloy of
gold -and ropper?known as "pale
gold"? which was used for lance heads.
Ofjminents of gold plate were worn In
the ears and nose and suspended about
the nock.
Uold mining, Krieger says, was very
primitive. A bole was dug In the
sand, the nuggets extracted and then
beaten, into thin plates with stone
hammers.
Queer Old-Tirrtfe'Fiddles
Lord Chesterfield considered It beneath
n gentleman to _Ue seen piping
or fiddling, and advised Ills son If tie
loved music to bear It, to pay fiddlers
to plav for him, but never to fiddle
himself. Quite Contrary to this ad-,
vice, It was the fancy of a certain
fiddler to exercise his musical talent
while Homo burned. Hut not many
musicians are so barbarously inclined.
The fiddles used In the Tenth century <
at the fairs and merrymakings of the
Anglo-Saxons are probably representations
of those queer;looking stringed
Instruments cut upon "the stone of the
Egyptian and 'trecian monuments, or '
of (lu> long pattern inotiocliords which
have existed in India from prehistoric j
limes, according to some commcnta- '
JoJ-s, though it is usually conceded \
that the fiddle dales hack to Hg.vptiat) j
Utiles.
I
Pronunciation Varies
The pronunciation of "slough" varies
with the meaning. When the word
means a hole full of mud or a deep,
miry place it is correctly pronounced
"slou," riming with "now." This 13
the pronunciation of the word as employed
In John Bunyan's "Pilgrim's
Progress," where the Slough of Despond
Ir a deep hog Into which Christian
falls at the beginning of his Journey
and from which Help extricates
hi in. Wheu 'Jtfotigh" refers to a
marshy placengPUa piece of low, wet
land It la pronounced "sloo," to rime
with "too." In this sense the word Is
frequently spelled "slew," "sloo," or
"slue." When "slough" moans the
cast-off skin of an animal of reptile
which sheds It Is pronounced "sluff."?
Pathfinder Magazine.
Feeding Young Alligators
Alligators are first given a diet of
earthworms and minnows. I'pon this
they are kept for two rmmths, when
dead mice are occasionally given them.
As soon as they show an increase in
size (Inequality of fond is correspondingly
I lure.i sci|. Marl )i worms are then I
eX'|i|.|e?! fr-en (]tc 11 * * ? s unite small j
rodents are g \e|i f qq.y. ;j, alter- j
T.at urn with trog* tis)i and s.r.ips of
You re re? and ?r-arrow-; are {
sou!i ad led to the list Tl??-y are iisii- i
ally fed* twice a week, and at in-wt
'firee times a week.
How Negrito* Wed
When two Negritos, a people t)f the
Philippine Islands, are united the
whole tribe is assembled, and the affianced
pair climb two trees growing
near to each other The ciders then j
bend the branches until the heads of
the couple meet. When the heads
have thus come Into contact the marriage
is legally accomplished.
Real Fairy?
An Indianapolis woman had a guest
with beautiful, long. bh>mj hair which
ptu\ed a source of wonder to the !
trostess' little daughter tine duv she
-nl transfixed whtfe the jrucsr tet
down tier hair and began brnsjing It
Never had the child seen a lything
like it. and tlnully said: "Art you
real I) a fair)?"?Indianapolis News.
MEMORIAL TO RISE
ON FORTRESS SITE
Old French Defenses Are Discovered
by Laborers.
a
Har-is*I>uc.?A? excavations for tho
count ruction of an Aiiiertcnu mouument
wore being tuude on tho peak of
Montafucon, In the Argonno, tl?? foundations
of an old fort row a built there
by (iodefroy do Bouillon In 1070 were
discovered,
Tho American monuiuent is tp comtnemorato
tho l.fii- soldiers of the
United Stales army who were killed
there In September. 11)18, when the position
was taken from the (Jormons.
The old fort Is said to have been destroyed
and reeohstrupted In the l\Jevepth,
Thirteenth, Fifteenth, Sixteenth <
and Seventeenth centuries and Anally
burned with the village during the
Thirty Years' war by the Swedes.
(hxlefroy do Bouillon was a young
vassal of Emperor Henry IV, from
whom ho received the title of Mar*
tpilsato of AnverS at the death of
Godefroy-Je-Bossu. The fortress was
dismantled when tho l>uc do Basse
Lorraine left with the Crusaders.
Explorations are being made by
Baron ltenaux, curator of the Verdun
museum and library, under tho auspices
pf the ministry of fine arts, In collaboration
with Canon Almond, hlstorfCal
savant of the Meusp, and other
authorities. Among the tlnds so far
are on entrance stairway, a series of
galleries of different sl/.es, small rooms
In one of which was a stone bench,
and several piles of hufhed wheat, Indicating
tho destruction of 1(530. These
were all discovered at a depth of eight
or ten meters.
The American battle monument Is
to be made of reinforced concrete
faced with Burgundy stone. It will
be 200 feet high, overlooking the entire
battlefield. Dedication ceremonies
are scheduled for this summer, unless
present excavations postpone the work.
Car Breaks Record With
No Oil in Crankcase
Elgin, 111.?A world's motor "dryrun"
record Is chilpipd to have been
established here recently, when an automobile
processed with a new lubricating
fluid was driven 318.7 miles
In 12 hours, 33 minutes, with absolutely
no oil in its crankcase.
Mayor Myron M. Lehman and a
group of Elgin business men witnessed
mechanics drum all of the oil from the
car's crankcnse and padlock the motor
hood i.t the start of the test.
City nnd state officials checked the
car In at the end of the test nnd certified
to the mileage covered. Numbers
r> nnd (5 connecting rod bearings
were burned out but otherwise the
motor was In perfect condition.
Tho fluid used In conditioning tho
car for the test is a concentrated extract,
which when introduced Into a
motor with the regular oil and with
tho gasoline, penetrates tho pores nf
the metal nnd then forms a thin film
over the outer surface of the hearings.
This provides not only a selfluhrlentlng
surface <>n the metal, hut a
built-in supply underneath which, when
released hv fictional heat du* 1o an
Inadequate amount or total absence of
oil, furnishes the necessary lubrication
until Its own reserve hips been drawn
out of the pores and exhausted.
Hospital U. S. Forgot to
Light Now Has Fixtures
San Antonio. Texas.?The $300,000
Ilandolph field hospital, which operated
on a daytime schedule for five
months because the War department'
forget to appropriate funds for lighting
fixtures, is now doing full time
duty.
A full personnel, eight oflicers nnd
32 enlisted men. had been on duty
since the hospital was completed?
with the exception of light's?Inst November.
Emergency treatment was given
from dawn to dark. The chief surgeon,
however, ruled It was too dangerous
for a nurse to try to And the
right patient In the dark.
Scotch Clans, in Feud
200 Years, Sign Truce
London.?The Campbells and the
MaeLeans, two famous Scottish cluna
who have been battling in a feud for
200 years, have agreed to n truce T"h<?
pence was announced In a telegram sent
by the duke of Argyll, chief of 'he
Campbells, to Col. Sir Fitzroy MaoLean.
The occasion was the nim'?
seventh birthday of Colonel Mini.earn
He lives in I mart castle on the Isle i f
Mull.
300-Year-Old Bean
Sprouts in Museum
San Antonio. Texas. ? la rue
white bean, picked up In the rnirw
of Grand Quivir^^ind believed
to be 300 years sprouted
Into n living stnl^^t White Memorial
museum here.
The bean was found In an ex
cavntion 70 feet from the surface
at ruins located 100 tndes
south of Santa Ke, N. M Franciscan
missionaries founded a
mission there In 1020. and prior
to thut time the Plro Indians
maintained a settlement there
called Tsblra.
The bean was soaked in water
for five hours March 10 I.ess
than two weeks later a stall: six
Inches tall had grown fro a the
seed.
J
MAKING ?f HOLLAND
^ Dutch Damsel* Talking Shop.
(Prepared. l>y National OeoKraplilo Socloty,
Washington, L>. C.) ? WNU 8?rvlce.
VKHKTABLICS, not fish, will be
tho products of the broad expanse
of the Zuiderzee, which
now is ' having n complete
change of face. Drttfnage and lining
the Zuiderzee will add move than 1,000
i square miles of fujm land to the
Netherlund's area. The work when
completed, will cost the Dutch government
some $1150,000,000.
Long ago the ocean said to the Hollander,
"You shall have no land here.'1
The Hollander said to the ocean, "We
will have a country here"; and they
have one, In spite of water, winds, and
waves.
In Holland all Is new?the gulfs,
lakes, and Islands have come into existence
under man's observation. He
has seen within historic times sand
close a river's mouth, land converted
: Into water, and hikes dry up and dis!
appear.
! The ordinary agencies of change?
! wind and wave, rain and Hood, and the
( rise and fall of land?have here found
1 a favoring Held for their activities.
Long after the greater part' of the
continent of F.ti'ope had become fixed
and stable, Holland began Its geographic
formation and is still pursuing
processes intended to hold or enlarge
its boundaries.
By the aid of old maps and docuI
nients we can learn what Holland was
I at the time it -first found a place and
1 designation on the world's charts, and
following them in sequence one can
j note the changes that have been
1 wrought by the action of the waters of
! the rivers, the waves of the sea, and
the hands of man?In short, how Hol,
land was made.
The power of the rivers one can see
In the inundations; the action of the
sea In the sand dunes along the coast;
and the transformation by man everywhere.
Before tho birth of the Rhine a
great part of the Netherlands, as we
now see it. was a sea, limited on the
Herman side by a rocky coast which
now shows itself in the Tuotoburgor
! Wald hills. The uplifting of the Ardennes
inclosed a sea in the interior
of Hermany which, shielded by the
Alps on its southern const and pro- j
tooted from the cold winds of the i
north, became full to overflowing from !
the melting ice. Finally tlie pent-up
waters broke through, and in the bed
thus formed the Rhine lias since been
flowing.
How the Land Was Formed.
With tlie rush of tlie waters masses
of rocks were hurried along until the
moving force exhausted itself; smaller
particles were carried fnrther, and
when the sen was reached Its resistance
robbed the river of Its final burden,
and sand dunes formed the northern
boundaries of Holland. The pebbles
and grains of sand on which
rests the soil of CJelderland and
Overyssel and the Island of Texel
show that their primeval home was
the basalt regions of the Rhine.
The result of the conflict between
the waters of the rivers and the sea
Into which they seek to find an outlet
is seen in the deltas of our largest
streams.
Before reaching the Dutch frontier
the Rhine has lost all the beauty of
Its banks, and flows In great, lasy
curves suggestive of approaching old
age. The indecision of senility Is now
?*-*,-u in iiie separation of the Rhine
into two parts. The main branch
shamefully disavows its name and
throws itself Into the Mouse, a river
of French origin ; the other branch,
insulted by the name of Dannehrog
| canal, after going nearly to Arnheim, j
I separate*.into two puri*. one emptying '
| tnto t lie Zuiderzee : t he other, regain- !
I ing Its early name, though qualified as j
the I.ower Rhine, g.-es as far as
Duurstede. where it divides for the
third time.
During the reign of I.ouis Bonaparte
a canal was opened through the dunes
and the Rhine again conducted to the
sea. The mouth of this canal Is protected
by enormous dikes and breakwaters
and the sen Itself is held in
check by locks, or sluice-gates.
When the tide is high these locks
are closed, to prevent the waters of
the'sea from invading the land; when
the tide fnlls they nre opened, to give
passage to the waters of the Rhine
! which have accumulated behind them,
and then .1.000 cubic feet' of water a
minute pass out.
Continual Battle With the 8ea.
The rivers of Holland, like nil
rivers whose lower reaches have tut |
little fall, drop sediment Along th^se
lower levels, especially at their months.
The sea has resisted this encroachment,
and In retreating has conllnun.
ly fought to regain lost territory. ;t
i
; ~ ... .. ?-rj- i?* .
hus thrown barriers across the river
channel to mage the rivers themselves
destroy the land of their creation; it
has burled the rich alluvial soil
fathoms deep under unproductive
sands, and where it does not throw up
sand dunes as a fortress against
Itself, the state must accept the challenge
and wage a royal battle.
The other rivers that have contributed
to the weal and woe of Holland
have been less vacillating In approaching
their outlets, but equal vigilance
hus been needed to keep their waters
from Inundating the land. Dikes must
be built on both banks as high and
as far upstream as experience demands.
Along the North sea there are places
where, owing to changing winds, the
sand cannot accumulate In quantities
sufficient to form protecting dunes.
Here sen-dikes must be built?veritable
fortifications.
They are built of earth, firmly packed
on the sea-face, and partly paved with
dressed Norway granite or Rhine
basalt blocks.
Beginning at the t'op, the dimensions
arc as follows:
Thirty feet across the top, on which
there is a double-track railroad for
the transportation of materials with
which to make repairs.
On the sea-face It Inclines at an
angle of 30 degrees for a distance of
about 40 feet; then the slope is one
in three. Here the stone paving begins
and extends about .10 feet.
From this point for 100 feet a sod
surface is maintained, but beyond that
for 110 feet, where the forces of the
storm-lashed waves beat hardest, the
surface Is faced with stone. This carries
the face to a point about three
feet below high tide; then a flat pavement
is laid out to and beyond the
low-water line.
As a precaution, three rows of plies
are driven in to hotd the facing In
place, and two other rows of larger
plies, with their tops protruding, extend
along the line where the waves
are most aggressive.
Costly But Necessary.
The amount of labor required to
construct such fortifications can hardly
bo Imagined- and the cost is wellnigh
beyond conjecture. The piles, all
of which came from other lands, cost,
in place. $4 each.
This defense Is not an idle precaution.
When the west winds drive the
waters from the English channel to
meet those deflected by Norway's unyielding
shores, they 1111 up the North
sea and seek their old course across
the Netherlands.
The sluggish current of the Zuiderzee
is n weak contestant with the remorseless
tide of the North sea. Consequently
Its shifting sands threatened
to close up the harbor of Amsterdam
and also rendered precarious
the navigation out to and around the
Helder. It was therefore decided
some years ago to construct a ship
canal directly to the ?*orth sea.
This great work was completed In
1870, with the sea terminus at IJmui- ;
den. The sea being higher at high tide
than the water In the harbor at Amsterdam.
It was necessary to have big
locks at that end.
The traffic through this canal is so
great that tha water let through In
the locking would aoon become a
source of danger. The harbor of Amsterfinm
>? therefore, chut off fro
the Zuiderzee by means of dikes, with
a series of locks to i>ermlt: Ingress and
egress.
Protecting OLkes Everywhere.
It is not the sen alone that calls
for the defending dikes. Every outlet
Into the sou must have embankments
bigh enough to overtop the highest
incoming tide, for twice every day j
these outlets become estuaries of the |
sea. and the land would be covered
by the invading brackish water If It
were not for the dike-like -banks.
The farmers frequently build their
dwelling houses under the lee of these
bnnfcs. and front the deck of a passing
steamboat on*.* can literally look down
the ehlmne>, though he may hardly, as
same *have claimed, see what the
farmer' wife is cooking for his dinner.
The Dutch word polder Is a term
applied to any area of land protected
by an encircling dlke*and drained by
its own system of pumps. Some of
these are barely below the general
level and need only a slight cmbnMr^k
1 inent; such are usually of firm soil,
and after the removal of the water
become nrable field*. Others were
originnlly ponds or lakes, or deposits
of muck which have to be Inclosed by
I more substantial embankment*, and
the removal of the water In ihe first
Instance as well as subsequently Is a
serious matter.
Spring Hill N?*a
Mr. and Mrs, M. ft cr\b\ of A*
gust#, Ga., were wpek end gUtMs , I
Mr. and Mm. Lonnie Hancock. LittU I
Marvin Cribfc, Jr., who has been vU I
Hiiig Roan Cannon and Dot Hancock I
returned home with them.
Mr. and Mm. M. M. Player left I
Wednesday for Black stone. yft I
they will apend a t*w days. * I
Revival meeting will begin Sunday I
July 24, at the Methodist church. I
Rev. J. A. Graham will be assisted I
by Rev. Walter Johnson, of Green- I
ville.
Miss Rosa Mcleod has returned I
home after a week's stay in Camden
the guest of Mr. ami Mrs. S. W I
Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Moseley, Jr
nnd son, of Walterboro, spent' last I
week end with tjte farmer's parents, ]
Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Moseley, Sr. J
Mr. Garvice Hancpck returned 1
home Tuesday from Ashoville, N. C. I
where he has been attending sum- I
mer school for the past six weeks.
Miss Genevieve Moseley has gone I
to Walterroro to spend a few weeks. I
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Peeplea I
and Mrs. Fraalbr Mills, of Bishop. I ville,
were visitors here Sunday.
Mr, Gus MdSween gave a swim- I
ming party Wednesday at Hancock's I i
pond. After the swim watermelons I !
were cut. !
The Rev. Carlisle Smiley, of Uke B
City, is the guest this week of Rev, I
and Mrsv J. A. Graham, I ,
Mr. Clatlde Wilson spent Sunday B
in Paxville visiting friends. I
Jules J. Jusserand, former PTench B
ambassador to the United States, died H yesterday
morning, aged 77 years, I
from a chronic kidney disease, iji his I
home in Paris. He was the ambas- 'H
sador of the French government in B;
Washington for 22 years, the longest I
service in the history of the diplo- H
matic corps there. He was highly re- I
spected, known to be very desirous I
for firm friendship between hi| coun- I
try and this; and had the personal 1
friendship of $?he presidents from 1
Roosevelt to Coolidge. His unfailing H.
tact and statesmanship were of great I
value during the trying days of the I
World war before the United States I
became a combatant. |
The Taxpayers League of Gaston' '
county, NrC., Sam A. Roblnson. pres-. B
ident, has addressed a letter to J. H. I
Sapark, chairman of the Gastonia city I
school board, asfkinsg that the city's j
school term be cut from nine to 8?ven
months, j
CapudineJ I
It gives relief by soothing IM .
! nerves ? not deadening I I
I I # them. Contains no opiates. I I
Won't upset stomach. j
Being liquid, it acts quicker W j
y than,pills or powders. .
?mm Sold at drug stores in singe I I
<|<,M, or 10c, 30c, SO* ""Ml j
NO-Mb-KORN I
FOR CORNS AND CALLOUS* J
Made ii Camden Aid Far Sab V1
DeKalb Pharaaey?Pboot H
ROBT. W. MITCH AM I
Architect
Crocker Building, j
Camden, S. C.
ft KBRSHAW LODGE Ne. D I
A* F' M'
Cjr C\o Regular communication * M
A ^' this lodge is held on the
firnt Tuesday in each monto K
?t 8 p.m. Viaiting Brethren are ww*
. orned. W. R. CLYBUKN,
J. E. ROSS, ? Worshipful Maater.' H
Secretary. 1.14-27*"
M DeKALB COUNCIL No S8
Junior Order U. A
Regular council seoopd l*
' ^ * fourth Mondays of
month at 8 p.m. Visiting Brethro j
ire welcomed. J. W. THOMPSON' j
L. H. JONES, Council**
Recording Secty. j
I EYES EXAMINED II
and Glasses Fitted I
THE UOFFER COMPANY I
JeweUra mm4 Opliai^