The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, September 30, 1932, Page PAGE TWO, Image 2

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rAUB ? n VJ Winners This Year in Nitrate Contest \ ^ *j ColumbiA, Sept. 20.?B. B. Kirkland, Jr.. of Columbia, won first prize of |750 in the 1032 Chilean Nitrate dealer <onU?t, according' to an announcement received by H- E, .Saveiy, state manager, from H. C. Brewer, of New York, director of the Chilean, nitrate educational bureau which! sponsored the eonteat. ,*David ACohen, Islington, won second prije of $500 and R. E. Summer, of New-' berry, won third prize of $250. Other prize Winners in the content were J. I(. Mosaicjr, ItishopviUe; W. P. Roof, Jr., Lexingtop; L. A. Manning, Jr., Latta; J. Ed. Anderson, Timmonsville; W, Frank Sims, Lake City; K. B, Arnold, Honea Path; G. W. Freeman, Bcnnetttsville; F. D. Young, lAke City; M. S. Westbury, MoColl; G. B. Patrick, Bowman; E. M. Graham, Ayrvor; W. A. Folsom, Hartsviiie; M. E. Rutland, Batesburg; F. J. Rodgers, Kngstrec and E. F. McLeod, Manning. The contest this year was the second contest conducted on a Southwide scale, the first prize in each state last year having been a trip to Chile. 0 3Ehe contest is based on originality in sales methods and promotional work in the way of conducting tests to determine best methods for using the product. q????P??? i., i ,..,i j Ousts Union Sheriff; Appoints His Deputy Columbia, Sept. 22. ? Governor I Mack wood today appointed J. G. Faucett, a deputy sheriff, to act as sherj iff of Union poudty in the place of Sheriff J. C. Greer, against whom the county gaartd jury has recommended an indictment for breach of trust be ! drawn. | The office was declared temporarily v*c*alr ;?ei#Ung the outcome of the action of the grand jury, the law I prescribing that in such eases the ! sheriff be removed until the case is 1 hoard. Should Sheriff Greer be convicted. the office becomes permanently vacant, arid in the case of hia acquittal, he will be restored to office. Faucett ha* b^cn deputy sheriff for j a number* of years. An auditor's report on the Union sheriff's office alleges a shortage of I GO in Greer's accounts. On the strength of this, the grand jury took j its action. * j I Several months previously, the; I grand jury charged the sheriff with 1 "official misconduct and immorality" , and asked the governor to remove him, It withdraw the removal request to give Sheriff Greer a chhnea"to reform," it is said, but later renewed the appeal for his removal. The 66th annual reunion of the Grand Army of the Republic is being held this week in Springfield, 111. ^?p . News of Interest in j and Near Bethune Bethune, S. C\. 2Jept. 27.?A group conference of the Presbyterian Wo- j Man's Auxiliary of district number J one which includes Camden, Cassatt,. and Bethune churches was held at llethune last Thursday. Bible study conducted by the Rev. T. P. Wallace. Mrs. McQueen Quattieb.turn, of Johnston, president of the Conjraree l're?byterial. and -Mis. I. M. Keels, of Columbia, addressed the meeting. A number of .reports were; given and matters of business disps- j ed of. A luncheon was served on t.ie 1 ground* at the noon hour. ~ The September meeting of the Ta- j rent Tearhers Association was heldT at the school auditorium Monday evening, with the president, Mrs. JK. E. McC'askil), presiding. Mr. 4- H. McDaniel was elected vice president instead of Mr. A. W. Parker is no longer in Bethune. , Folio wof the" busidesa session the coinmunity fair was presented by Mr. ' H. E. Keisler. .Special music was furnished by JL>r. E. Z. Truesdale and bis daughter. Miss Kathryn Truesdale. ' Alter being suspended during the summer months, the members of the Bethune chapter U. D. C. m#t last P rid ay afternoon at the home of Mrs. D. T. ^ arbrough and Mrs, Margaret Marion. The meeting was called to .order by the president, Mrs. J, E. W illiams.. When the business session had berti concluded a social hour was enjoyed. 'sandwiches and ice tea were served by tne hostesses. State Mission Day was observed at the Baptist church by the Woman's Missionary society .Sunday afternoon. An interesting.x program was well j rendered. Special music was enjuved and an offering for state missions was made. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bethune and cniiuren, of C heraw, have been recent guests of relatives here. * News pt Lugoff Luj&fT. S.' C., Sept. 26.?Rev. G. F. Kirby, presiding elder of the Sumter District Methodist churches, preached at jhe Lugoff Methodist church on Sunday evening, September '25. A business session w^s held immediately befor& the service and a large crowd was in attendance at both meetings. ^ ijr. and Mrs. E. H. Watts had ars rheir guests their son, S. L. Watts, and family, of Blacksburg, on Sunday. They were accompanied by the Misses Putnam. Mrs. J. W. A. Sanders is visiting her sister, Mrs. J. t. McAlister, in Columbia. "Mrs. Sanders' many friends will be glad to learn of her continued improvement from a recent illness. Timmerman Watts, of Great Falls, spent Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. G. F. Watts. Webworm Control Poison sprays or dusts must be applied s6on after the eggs have hatched, as they will give very little control after the webbing is formed and the lar-vae have bored into the stems. The best arsenical spray is made up of 2 pounds lead arsenate and 2 pounds soap in 50 gallons water. The spray should be applied with considerable force and directed downward into the buds. ( alcium arsenate can be applied as a dust, either pure, or diluted with an e<iuai weight of hydrated lime. Leaves heavily coated with arsenicals should not he used for food. If only :i small residue of the poison is on the leaves, thorough washing in several changes of water will remove any danger of poisoning. Badly infested plants and 'crop remnants should be removed and burned at once. Weeds in and around the fields should be kept out out. Crops shouid he well fertilized and frequently cultivated. to insure rapid growth and to break up the pupa cases in the soil. The food plants of the cabbage webworm a-e: Tabbage, turnips, collards, rutabaga, cauliflower, kale, radish, mustard, rape, kohlrabi, horse radish and beets, a ivises Henry I). Green, " our. TV agent. I One Hoi/ Killed in Gridiron Battle New Yak. Sept. 2 1.? Eight, n ba football "huddle" or. * e nth.eta- field of Woodmere Academ y were lolled by light.ning^l'xiay-. <>f them never regained consciou-r- s and died a few hours later. The boys were holding "skull pra tice" with Thomas N. Barrows, headmaster of their school on Ixmg Island and also their coach. Some were backed up against a wire screen and they all had their heads together and their arms around each other, forming a perfect circuit for electric shock. Ambulance surgeons revived Barrows and all of the bo>* but Edward Fox, 18, and John Jacobs. 17. Young Fox died but Jacobs was expected to recover from his> bums. Bids will be opened October 18. to extend the paving of the Kings Mountain road in York county f- m the North Carolina line to Kings Mountain town, by the Tarheel state , highway department. a? Y ear-Round Grazing 1 for Hogs Save Money, . * Clemsoo College, Sept. 20.?Assertin g that by making wise use of forage. crops for grazing, about one-third of the grain feed can be saved, Prof. L. V. Starkey, chief of animal husbandry, lists the grazing crops on which hogs should be grazed during the various months. His outline gives a good idea as to where the hogs should find their grazing throughout the year. January, on barley, rye, oats or rape; February, on barley, rye, oats or rape; March, on barley, rye oat* or rape; April, on rape or alfalfa; May, on rape or alfalfa; June, on soybeans or alfalfa; July, on soybeans or alfalfa; August, on soybeans or alfalfa; September, hogging down corn or grazing on soybeans; October, hogging down corn, or grazing alfalfa1 or soybeans; November, hogging down corn, or grazing alfalfa or soybeans;, December, grazing on alfalfa, barley, ry?, oats or rape. TAX NOTICE Books for collection of School, County and State tikes year 1932 will i open October 15, and stay open until ( December 31, 1932, inclusive, without I any penalty. Any information con- * eerning this office will be given by mail. When inquiring about taxes please state School District in which you live or own property. Following i3 a list of total levies for each School District, for School, County and State taxes: DeKalb Township Mills District No. 1 48*4 District No. 2 , . ? 45 District No. 4 f 48V6 District No. G 48 District No. 25 31 District No. 43 31 Buffalo Township District No. 3 46% District No. 5 28% . District No. 7 37% | District No. 15 28% I District No. 20 V :'. . 28% District No. 22 .... ..... 47 Mr ; District No. 23 .. 28% District No. 27 41% District No.'28 .... 28% District No, 31 ' 36% District No. 40 48Vj District No. 42 28% Flat Rock Township District No. 8 ...M 41% District No. 9 . . . 41% r District No. 10 32% j District No. 13 28% i District No. 19 41% District No. 30 28% District No. 33 41% District No. 37 41% District No. 41 ;.... 41% District No. 46 35% District No. 47 :.... 28% Wateree Township District No. 11 35% District No. 12 46Vi District No. 16 32 District No. 29 34% District No. 38 28% District No. 39 33% t Yours respectfully, S. W. HOGUE, Treasurer Kershaw County, S. C. ~ NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC Because of the fact that persons have from time to time placed in the newspapers of this county advertisements of Citations, Notices of Final Discharge ami Notices to Debtors and Creditors and have not caused the charges for same to be paid with reasonable promptness, it has become necessary for the undersigned papers to change their terms with reference to such advertising. Hereafter such advertising will have to be paid for at the time it is entered for publication. THE WATEREE MESSENGER THE CAMDEN CHRONICLE September 13, 1932. Jealousy Cause Of Church War LaeaviUa, L?., Sept. 25.?Vernon parish authorities said today they believed a gun fight at a rural revjj va) service near here last night in I which two men were killed and a ! sleeping child was wounded was caused by long standing jealousy between two farm youths over a mutual sweetheart. Lee Johnson, 20, and Jesse Perkins, 22, both farmers, were shot and killed as the shooting starting outside j the church door, was carried into the church where preaching was in prof gresa. An eight year old son of Douglas Carroll, another fanner, sleeping in a rear pew, was struck in the head but is expected to recover. Several other members of the congregation were bruised?in the rush for exits. An hour after the shooting Ever-] ett Wisby, 26, surrendered to Sher-i iff D. F. Turner, who quoted him as saying he shot Johnson and Perkins in defense. Bystanders reported the three met outside the revival service and quarrelled. Sheriff Turner said Wisby and Jphnson had been at odds because of attentions paid to the same girl. Wisby declined to comment. A coroner's jury today viewed the bodies of the two victims and then went to Cravens, a community about 25 miles southeast of Leesville, where the families of Perkins and Wisby live. " > W. H. Nicholson, recently nominated for state senator from Greenwood county, was under bond yesterday on a warrant charging embezzlement J sworn out by the receiver of the bank.| of Due West. It is charged that having put up a certificate of stock in | a local insurance company, worth! $1,500, as collateral fot^a loan at the \ bank, Nicholsor; got the certificate, and sold it at par and then claimed j he had lost it. V Safe Pleasant Way To Lose Fat * <5 How would you like to lose fifteen pounds=of fat in a month and at the same time increase your energy and' improve your health ? How would you like to lose your double chin and your prominent hip? and at the same tin>e make your skin so clean and clear that it will compel admiration ? Get on the scales today and see how much you weigh?th?n get a bottle o: Kruschen baits which will last you for 4 \veeks and costs but a trifle. Take one-half teaspoonful in a glass of hot water before breakfast every morning?cut down on the pastry and fatty meats?go light on potatoes, butter, cream and sugar? and when you have finished the contents of the first bottle weigh yourself again. Now you will know the pleasant way to lose unsightly fat and you'll also know that the 6 salts of Kruschen have presented you with glorious health. But be sure for your health's sake that you ask for and get Kruschen Salts. Get them at DeKalb Pharmacy or any drug store in the world and if the results one bottle brings do not delight you?do not joyfully satisfy you?why money back. I Tico Hundred Million 1 Tires By Goodyear , Two hundred million is a lot of j i tires," remarked Hughey Tindal, j (Goodyear dealer at Camden, pointing,! j out that the building of the 200 mil- j i lionth pneumatic casing at the Good- j year factories in Akron, Ohio, was j i without a doubt an all-time tire pro' duetion record. The tire was built in the presence of executives of the company, Septemj ber 12, while news reel and newspaper camera men recorded the outstanding production achievement in pictures. 1 The tire is to be started immediately on a tour of Goodyear branches throughout the country, after which it is to be returned to the tire mu' seum of Goodyear at Akron, where the first tires produced at various other Goodyear factories are on exhibition, along with other products of the company, Mr. Tindal said. Goodyear bad built 100 million tires in the first 25 year? of it* existence, but the second 100 million were built within a period of about five years. The latest 25 million tires manufactured by Goodyear were built under the six-hour day plan, which was inaugurated at Goodyear in October, 1930, to furnish work to as many people as possible. Approximately 3,000 additional wage earners were thus given employment. In the words of President P. W. Litchfield of Goodyear: "If adopted wherever "possible the six-hour day would put millions of men into a poI sition where they would be self-supporting." Mr. Tindal had some interesting comparison figures on this total production. If all of these tires were stacked one on top of another (figuring an average cross section of four and onehalf inches) they would reach 14, 100 miles into the sky, or 1,38# times higher than Profe&sOr Piccard'? bal loon flight into the stratosphere. Laid tangent to oach other, the tires would encircle the earth nearly tour times, or reach two-fifths of the way to the moon. Averaging 10,000 miles per tire, the total mileage produced is two trillion miles, or more than enough to reach to the sun and hack to the earth 10,000 times. These tires would make up a train j of 200,000 box cars, reaching over | one-third the distance across the | United States. Two billion pounds of crude rubber and nearly a billion pounds of cotton were used in the construction of this vast output of tires. FurthermoA, if a single motorist were to attempt to vrear /out this enormous production, it would require about #1 million years of prowent average driving time. . . I OLD AGE I HOLDS NO TERRORS forv-j those who know THE TRUTH /Amazing JVetc Scientific Discovery I Solve8 Health Problems for Aged Thanks to modern Medical Science, literally thousands of elderly men and women, are enjoying, in spite of advanced years, all of tbe joys of youthful health, strength and vitality. Having learned the truth, that most ailments are the result of a deficiency of Minerals and Vitamins in the system, they have discarded, for all time, "patent" medicines, pills, and i harsh laxatives. They have planted their feet firmly on the NATURAL road to health by taking LEE'S MINERAL COMPOUND ?With Vitamins?This remarkable compound is not, in any sense at the word, a "patent" medicine but us a new scientific ("rrrrnln rnntamirj? att nt the essentia} Minerals that make up the human lx*lv ? toii'L'irr with valuable and n?ces.sarv ' luiiiiuis /\hk your mwtor ar><! Itr will tHi you ttiat the fiuman t>o?iy is " 'in|>oscil of Calcium. Sodium, I'.?dme Iron. Mamrsnim, Copper, i'ot.-lvsiiim. Sulphur. I'hosphoro is. S.lica and C-arlx?o. Read the lals-l on LEE'S MINKHAl. f 4 * V? n~rj "V-nj H Tee that Tt I* rr>?pct-rer} nf thew .aiiir i.l< n! i< a! clerri'-n s 1'i.a' ? t ? v. i-n-t of the whole thine ;u*t keeping the lx>dy elements balanced. C.m.pli . isn t it*?And yet, SU Ll'I'KCl 1\ h' HLLPS YOFNG FOLKS, TOO/ Drives out Dangerous "Toxic" Fotsons of Constipation. Strengthens Shaky Serves, firings Kern, Hearty Appetites, Sew Fighting Vigor, Sound, Refreshing Sleep. Feeds and Nourishes the Hones, Muscles and Tissues, liuilds Rich, Red Blood. Makes Life Worth Living. A MAKE THIS 10 DAY TEST Convince Yourself! Stop dosing yoro?!? with "patent medrws," harsh porgatrees, oils and cathartics for just 10 days. Go to yopr nearact Druggist and secure a bottle of LPIE'S MINERAL COMPOUND,/ Take it regularly, and watch the results. You'll be amazed at the fording o< fenewed strength and rigor that soon appears. No narcotics or ileobol to "boost /oa op" bat a natural method of restoring health and energy. For Sale by DeKALB PHARMACY, Camden, S. C. And other good dealers everywhere, ot *end $1.25 to Lee's Laboratories, Inc., 364 Peachtree Arcade Bldg., Atlanta, Ga., for large bottle, postage paid. ? SLIPPERY DRIVING DATS AHEAD! You'll need tire* that GRIP. Eat joy the safety of stout new Goody curs this tell end winter. Sere trouble, time, money?equip your car nee. Look at Tkeso Featuret mfl I Husky, handsome, ^ trmJ' iwt**CBri<>( ? ('.enter Traction Safety. 3 Built with Super |wist tkwd GeuJicw pat, cat. /? Pull OrenUe In all Tl fUmnnltMii 5 Goodyear name and bouaellaA on eldewall. ? Guaranteed for life by woild'a largest rubber fiAmnAfiv. 7NW In ?*y w*jr fthitnu let beoiiM MILLIONS MORE people bay Coodrwr MflCRLOOK tit the? Owh Prico! 1M-21 4.NX ! $?9S . ^io<> Ai?t ? Pn. Each 1411 Each M M Tuba |l.t< Tuba |lm 4.50-21 4.75-19 ! $j47 $e? A Eoch % Eock ^'UPn. a IIPII. Each 14(7 Each If lf Tuba St.? Tuba I1.M 5.99-19 5.25-18 $C 40 $cil a tot*- - Dci<> laftk. . iaPn. Bach 99-9S Each 9* 5# Tuba 99.Xf Tuba 49.XT Other Sixes in Proportion Also the above and larger sizes in 6pmhk*dM 4.75-19 5.54-19 6s* *9" Each In Fair* Each in Ml 9* 97 Each 99-4* Each i "?*> 91-99 Tub# Wjl ' 9.99-29 9.59-19 ll7? *Z3? Each In Pairs Bach in Pahs " 4Sa.*f Each 9X9-99 Each Tube 69.OS Tuba 99-9* Trade Old Tires ?r^X^SS Over 200 Million Tire? Bu!!f by Goodysarl Sept. 12th the200,?90,000th tire was built?<1 Goodyear AIR WHEEL. Every year the public buys MILLIONS MORE Goodyears than any other make. We'll show you why! Carolina Motor Co., OPEN DAY AND NIGHT