The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, May 05, 1933, Page PAGE TWO, Image 2

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| TRY BOTTLE OF OUK Grade A GUERNSEY MILK And See The Difference. If you do not find it as N good as any milk you have ever used, the purchase price will be cheerfully refunded. You to be the judge. Prices for May, June, July and August: I Sweet Milk, quarts 10c | Sweet Milk, pints 6c i Buttermilk, quarts 6c Butter at Market Price j ; Cream, h#l'f pint 15c Rock Springs Creamery | LUGOFF, S. C. j * " - I - I Dr. Wimherlv al Girard, (la. j For tin* pa-t ten day-, April '! to 1". inclu-1vc. Dr. <1''. Wimberly, of Camden, S. i .. ha- been conducting leviva! ci'viri's in the Methodist church, of Guard, (!a. Dr. Wimber1_\'? pi eachinyc was -cripturai, force-; fill and inlere-mg and carried the tinging note of earnestness and reality m> needed in all our pulpit- today. Turf . wa- tint* at tendance at all t h?* service-. It was felt that tin- Ifoly. Spirit was present in convictiiig and quickening power. Many wept and prasi'tl their way through to (lod in: old-fashioned altar services, and al.-o I a number reclaimed to the Christian j life. The great stress was put on be-I ing Christian in the church, and the I doors of the church were not oj>ened j for members-hip until the closing ser- j vice. Two young men offered them- I selves for membership and there will Ik* several additional members. Church membership and Christianity means more now than it <lid before the revival and it is felt that the CIirani Methodist church is stronger! spiritually ..tlmil J.L has been in -ome j years. The pastor heartily recommends Brother Wimberly to those desiring an able, earnest spirit led man to do evangelistic work.?Roy Gardner in Southern Christian Advocate. Wisconsin on Tuesday in its constitutional convention composed oT~ 1 1 j men and one woman voted unanimously for the repeal of the 18th amendment, thus making Wisconsin the second state to ratify the repeal of the amendment. Because of decidedly unfavorable weather conditions uil over the belt, cotton planting is far behind and in many section- hu- been practically stopped. . CAMDEN THEATRE P R 0 G RAM ME Week Beginning May 5 Friday JOAN CRAWFORD ?In? Ram Also Comedies and News Saturday JOHN WAYNE "Telegraph Trail" ALSO COMEDY & SERIAL Fourth Chapter of "JUNGLE MYSTERY" Monday and Tuesday RICHARD BARTHELMESS "Central Airport" Also Comedy and News Wednesday "From Hell To Heaven" Also Selected Shorts Thursday and Friday MARY PICKFORD "Secrets" ; Alto Comedy and News i , A | To Check Coccidiosisj i(1lean Up, Feed Milk! Clemen College, May 1 .?For prevention and control of coccodiosix, now developing in chick* f(?ur to eight weeks of age, strict sanitation of quarters and liberal feeding of milk ure suggested by P. H. (iooding, extension poultryman. "The disease is cause<l by tiny jmrasues, or coccidia. that cannot be seen by the naked eye," Mr. Gooding explains. "Those may live in the ! ground from seasor^.to season, and] 1 for this reason fTncks should not Ik* ( allowed to range on the same pound j for two years in succession, nor to (range with the laying dock as most j hens are carriers of Coccidia. | "The symptoms of coccidiosls are usually drooping wings, a sleepy, | pale and anaemic appearance, bloody ( droppings frequently, and rapid low in weight." " ? Upon the least indication of cocci-1 diosU a thorough^cleaning of thehouse immediately and the practicing of strict sanitation is advised. This includes: Removal of all the dirt and refuse from the floor; thorough disinfection of the floor and walls with lye, or a coal tar preparation; clean! litter before the chicks are returned! t?? the house; cleaning and disinfect-j ing the hoppers and fountains; removal of litter every third day for at least two weeks. "A large quantity of milk in some f(,uii should he fed," Mr. (Iooding eon-; tinties. "If enough skimmilk is available to supply all the c.hieks can drink. ( he nvi-h and water may he taken fi, m t lie in for a day and only skimmilk till. After the tir.-t day. niieh may he led in -.mall quantum .0 a few day.-, with the milk before the, chick< at all times. This is ncccs-ar v in order to get enough piilk into the chick- to check tju- di.-ea.-e. If only a limited quantity of milk is ( available, dried buttermilk should be -applied in the ration by adding pounds of milk to each 1 (M? pounds of ma.-h. This milk ration will ur-ual-. ly check the disease in two weeks, and; the usual ration may be resumed. \V. J. McN aught on Dies Willie -1. Mc Naught on who lives1, near this city died on Tuesday, April i 25, following a lingering illness. De- j ceased is survived by the following children: James. O. I-, Leonard, j Mary and Klizaboth McNaughton. all, |of 1 .ancaster. He is also survived by, I the following brothers and sisters: ( Mrs. W. M. Brannon, Mrs. Julia] Blackwell, Mrs. Arthur Small and Mr.( Boyd MeXaughton of I^ancaster. Mr. | > i >. B. MeN'ouyhtim ami?M.r?. X n k . Ray of Kershaw and Mrs. A. R. Shirley of Bethune, Mrs. Braxton Starnos; of Waxhaw and Mr. Alex Si cN a ugh- I tun of Columbia. . Funeral services were conducted at the Shamrock church near Bethune on Tuesday afternoon by Rev. H. P. Bennett of j the Second Baptist church.?Lancas-1 Iter News. j The Federal farm board formally |ended its wheat operations on Satur ! day and chalked up total losses of | $1H4.15d.2d2 since it began dealing on I the wheat markets in May. HMO. I i SUNDAY DINNLR | SUGG LSI IONS i I5> A.N.N I'AOE PKKSIDKNT l.OOSHV KI.T issued u pi\'i.iiinati(in ?.! signanng -Ma- , 1st is Chi.J Hoa.th Day He called upon "all aceii'ii's public and pro vale, and al. ind. "..duals having the I interest of children at heart to j inaugurate cons*rurtn e activities to 1 protect and pri mote the health and 1 | physical vigor of the youth of our nat:on " Although Slav 1st is officially Child Health Dav the health of growing i youngsters is an evorvday problem and 1 can think of no better way to ' protect and promote good health than j by the proper use of nourishing foods i The three Su*ida\ dinner menus for the week sue ires'ed bv the Quaker Maid K.tehen are planned to include food suitable for children vet y \ are e. i: i a ' v a"rac!:ve ami lesirab 1 - gr..-a n up.? a e. k e 'am % : er a ^ c 1 v i' \ ' fre*r: ; . l ow ' .|V( Dinner i er.d r 4 "* . - * " ^ . \ ' Medium Co t " iiht 1 r\ ta ? .,er-v i -r\ C.. - ; ' ? a *" ' T r V ? ' r- *-r~ 7 a r " ee ' o? \ ? Special Dinner C(... 'd T Ot ? . 0 K.h P. oast .f H cf Hl'-e | p d a toes 1 Spinach or Ot t Ire ?n d-g a b e Hrapefru.t Sa.ad t 1". a ten Biscuit i Rut* u ( An Tel Food Cake artth S!ra-vb--rv uc? \fdk for.Children Tea or Cof/ec for Adulti ( Tornadic Winds Kill Many In The West ? Shreveport, l>a.j May 1.?At least f>5 persons were reported killed late today by tornado win<ls that ripped through sections of Arkansas and l/ouisiana. Minden, an important parish seat in northwest Louisiana, reported 65 killei^ there. Arcmdia, la., west of Minden, had at least. four dead. Magnolia, Ark., reported five. Camp, A?rk., Iiad one. Many of the victims at Minden were negroes. The. negro section of that town was leveled by winds and then caught Are. The wiifd tore a half mile swath through Minden before lashing Arcadia, 25 miles away. A national guard company at Minden was mobilised and patrolled -the city. Lights were out and communication lines were down. The confusion made rescue work extremely difficult. Every available nurse, doctor and ambulance from Shreveport was hurried to the town. The storm, the second that has struck the Mississippi valley in two] days, dipped first on the MissouriArkansas border and killed Ed Cain, at Camp, Ark. About 12 others in that vicinity were injured. A tornadic wind, traveling in a, black, funnel-shaped cloud, next j struck at Minden. more than 251); miles south of Camp, and then raced westward. The tornado struck Minden just before I p. m. H swept through the tiiwn :ib hjt five minutes then split and skirted two sides of Arcadia. A national guard company at , Shiivipi rt was called to duty at Minden to aid the company already j mobilised there. Two emergency hospitals were set I up in the main section of Minden. The soldiers tonight made plan? to J barricade the -Shreveport -' Minden highway to clear the road of auto- j mobiles of sightseers who were j blocking the progress of ambulances. Messengers picked their way overj debris-strewn highways to nearby j towns. The tornado stripped the negro section of Minden. Many houses literally burst and their occupants were killed instantly. Fire that swept some of the frame strwtur?s was extinguished without adding any appreciably greater horror to the scene. Honea Path had its own excitenient oil Sunday! when there arrived there about 500 persons in 85 automobiles bearing licenses of a half dozen states, who said they are members of that Watch Tower Bible and Tract society, of Brooklyn. By night 18 of them were in jail charged with selling books on Sunday, and the rest were milling over the town making big protests, and refusing the proposition of the mayor to release all the prisoners, if they all would get out of town and stay out. Meanwhile some of them took possession of a school house between Honea Path and Helton, and the sheriff of Anderson county was called there. The whole thing was a demonstration against the fining of four members j of the cult two years ago in Honea < Path, which was affirmed by the cir- \ cult court on appeal. The license issued in 1926. to the Columbia Railway and Navigation company, to build a water-power in the Cooper and Santee rivers il-wn Charleston way, was not cancelled af-j t< r a hearing by the federal power j commission. Northern sportsmen with! game preserves claimed that the I dams would destroy the feeding i grounds of wild fowl, but the e<>mmis sion found this would not occur. "I am opposed to any .sales tax tinle-s it becomes an absolute necessity, ' which it will not bo. provided 'he < t a t? government is projx-rly handled." declared former Cnited States :-\r.i ., r Cole L. Hlea>e when inter-' viewed at Spartanburg lie al.-o -aid ' r. ( bee!" *111VS < P -H.C is slop. and if A. ,t r.<- going to have bt er. it right . ,, 11 g 1 ;>< e r a r.ii r.< >t a - ub-1 .1 * e .. * he : ? re -1 - ( f : r.e t> d'egg? ! - M H. Ha nr. on. !* <ila--> M-- .n . n . Ai.-n p. < I rcer.i '.!! ooiily, die<: r. ( 1 r.p.'a 1 a .t n four :? . 1 ... h.m. and H. Ho "a e r -. who adol r.e -h. '. Hanr.on. wa - .r. :\ Try on. N. < hospital be.r.g tiiat <1 r : ; It t wounds ,n h.- ( n< -t. a- "he rc.-u.i ?it a tight on Sunday, w.t.n trie father .ir. : a fr end "f w?r.- :n 'he , eurty ja.l. Har.r.or. tn fore he oicd sa.d r.e wa.-, waylaid while walking towar<i Squirrel Hill. "1 am looking for the man that, is r.oi looking for a new way to tax the people and t<? gel more taxes. I am !(>okirg f',r '-he man who wants to lake off ?K>me of the taxes we now have, and go back to a ca~sh has-is and ! a solid foundation for financing the [ state government," former iSenetor Blea.se told a Spartanburg interviewer. President of Peru Assassin's Victim Id ma, Peru, April 30.?Luis M. Sanchez Oerro, president of Peru since December, 1991, wmi? assassinated today a short time after he had reviewed a parade of 20,000 young1 men in Jorge Chavez Park. His assassin, Abelardo Hurtado do Mcndoza, tired several shots into the president's body as the executive's party starte<i .to drive uwtly from the park and then himself was slain by presidential guards. Two soldiers were killed and one officer, tive soldiers and a civilian wounded during a melee which followed the assassination. The attack was so sudden,, elaborate precautions which had been made to protect the preeident's life were unavailing. A captain of the civil guards leaped on the presidential oar and attempted to shield Senor Sanchez Cerro, but without success. Soldiers who lined the sidewalk down which the president and his suite walked also were unable to stop the assassin before the president was mortally wounded. The chauffeur of the presidential automobile put on full speed as soon as the shots were fired and drove to the Italian hospital while Premier Manzanilla held the unconscious president's body in his arms. The biggest and juries! plum on the Palmetto political tree goes to State Senator R. M. Cooj>er, of Lee county, who will be collector of interr.;i! revenue. Senators Smith and l?\rnts agreed on him for the place, after a long deadlock between them, with a baker's dozen of candidates wanting it. Cooper was ?a delegate to the last state convention and to the national convention, and is the treasurer of the state Democratic executive committee. He succeeds Victor Q. jlumbright of Clover who resigned Apiil 1 o, with Chief Deputy Wannamakcr acting in the interim. The lit -1 Democrat in that office was former Governor I). C. Heyward, who "ctved during the Wilson administration and was succeeded by Major John F. Jones, who went out over a year ago. Several persons are reported to have been killed in Bowie county, Texas, late lust -Wednesday evening as the result of a tornado which swept over the county, says a dispatch from Texarkana, Texas. STRANGE STORY More is h believe it or not story as related by the Yorkville Wwjulrer: "When J. C. Wallace, Jr., started ! from home Saturday evening- just {after tlark, to walk to the Tirjsah | store, he left his little di>g in the yard, but in the road not far from i home thought the dog had followed j him. "He etooped and patted the animal on the head and rubbed its neck ?and the animal instantly tore the palm of the hand and a couple of fingers almost to shreds. It was not the little dog, and Mr. Wallace was mystified about what sort of animal it was. "Ho hurried home and had Mrs. Wallace put a ligature on the arm above the wound nnd then , I a neighbor'? to bo driven to ft m I K?on. On his second trip, his |jU? H dog oaipe across the tU*ld. 1^ I chasing wamething which came I fl where Mr. Wallace was standi^ v I the road. Ho jumped on the of the dog and killed it by trampijj ] 4U was (he same animal which hot I bitten htm, and it was u mu*kr?t,v I In the senate vote, Senator Byron I of *South Carolina, voted for the pi*. I ident'a farm reHef bill and Sentfc. I E. D. Smith did not vote, although I chairman of the committee on 1^. H culture, and he woe appointed one of H the six. senate members of the cob- fl ference committee on the bill, I "17 for H SALE Wilson Bros. SHIRTS *1 I* > remarkable to yet i ,, , this excellent quality white broadcloth in shirts at One Dollar. It is oven mure remarkable to get i \\'il>(?n's 17 features of superior shirt making at anywhere near the price. Guaranteed by us and Wilson Brothers W. SHEORN & SON * TIRE PRICES GOING UP# I Equip Your Car NOW! 1 i ?,tthTlre^#?ne I Never before have you been able to buy I Firestone Extra Quality Tires at these tire "war" M prices. You will probably never have the chance to M do so again* since raw material prices are rapidly j increasing. Advanced tire prices must follow. | THE MASTERPIECE I of TIRE CONSTRUCTION fl Used almost exclusively by j master race drivers?they will , not take chances or risk their j lives on ordinary tires. Road speeds of today are the racinj I speeds of yesterday. H Firestone High Speed Tirta ! arc made nitli the Extra /'?j. .B turea of Gum-Dipping and Tuv I Extra Gum-Dipped Cord Pliet I under the Scientifically be- I signed Tread. '^B We will give , you a liberal ' allowance to apply 011 a act of j Firestone High Speed Tire*? ! B the s(\fcst tires in the icorld. REMEMBER?your brakra j can stop your whecls^bpt your tires must stop your carl j " 9/e GOLD STANDARD of Tire Values Sa cz_ the New &xtva xiluaiity, Tire ttr*$ton* super Oldfield Type i Equal in quality to standard brand, first line tires. Deep cut, thick, wide treadrugged dependability nnd striking appearance. Value unequaled at prices that afford real savings. : 4.50-21 .. $5.65 : 4.75-19 6.15 5.oo-2o 6.79 I 5.25-18. 7.43 Other Sizes Proportionately Ix>to FIRESTONE OLDFIELD TYPE H Superior in Quality and Construction to first Hne> a Special brand tires, ofTered for sale by departnMot Stores, oil companies, and mail order catalog hoQMS This is "The Tire That Taught Thrift to Millionth' Hj 4.50-21 $4.95 5.00-19.. $5.95 i 4.75-19 . 5.50 5.25-18.. S.M --B I I .1 -9 Other Sixes Proportionately Low a FIRESTONE SENTINEL TYPE A Better Quality, Construction and Workmanship m than second line special brand tires offered for sale by mail order houses and others. 4.50-21.. $4*48 5.00-19.. $5.37 4.75-19.. 4.95 5.25-18.. 5.95 Other Sizes Proportionately Ix*to EiRESTONE COURIER TYPE B Q,la''ty and orknianshlp?carries the nan# I *lonc nn<* full guarantee. Sold as lo* as man/ cncap BpcClal hrand tirc8 manufactured to a price. mx.V/jCI. [$3.35 4.50-21 $4.W H 3-45 4.75-19 4.4S I Compare Quality?Construction? Dependable Firestone B atteries $|g 4Q Jp and your old boH?fy All maken i>/ flat tcrien te*te<I Free M A G N E X $i?5 yea BAT I E R F S tUko??Y Ffr?stone 5p j Plugs Save ^ Gasoline 1 Each In Sdl u4l! t4>at your Spark Plug* ^ fl 3 I" " I ' ' 1 CITY FILLING STATION! C. E. DAVIS FILLING STATION!