The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, June 02, 1933, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3
I Newberry College To
I Accept Notes At Par
I
I ILi ?< p?r in |w>,"wni M *"
"T **<#>1 billa for the 19SS ?*
.Newberry Oollego. -Or. Umtt
president, said yeeterday.
I C,s u'ny'? distinctive ?eM,"Or.
i .rid "is tlrnt of training
KTVand inquiries reaching our
indicated that many prospectI
mils acre concerned ahout their
'""wihy <" pay summer sohool bills
I 1 i. This matter should give
'LirTno further concern or anxiety.
Wo shall 1? glad to accept these state
obligations from all teachers who
I a!, them, because In this way we
I ii.>iul sunwivw school.'
I 'To NoWbcrny OoUege ^?wm?
School wiU kt*in ?" Jun?, and
Tfmio for six weeks. Instruction
iH be given in all oouroe? *>F a <**
|d"L chosen faculty of experienced
Lr*L? Courses fer teachers are
I T.pprovcd for certification credit.
nr Xinard anticipate? iron* ?th?i mun?
I ber of requests received -bo date lor
I bulletins and other ineoxw?*tio? that
Jh, enrollment thia year will be sat
ijfactory.
taxnotice
I N?T b" Tar fSTpaytaS
irfxes. After that date all taxes
I wfu'iil go into execution with
s'por cent Iienalty and other penalI
Ilia, Proscribed by law^
| ^ Treasurer Kershaw County.
Notice to Debtors and
Creditors
AM h^debtod to the estate
y c \V. r.Vitus, deceased, are
I bv noi'.li'rtl to make payment to the
I 1. and all parties, if any.
I having claims against tho said estate
rill present then, likewise, duly atI
HI within the time prescribed by
tested. ,5 F EVANS,
I lliiin. -r..:..r Instate of C. W. Evans
I "amsen, S. C? April 29, 1938
I "SUMMONS FOR RELIEF
State o! South Caiolina
. County of Kershaw
In Court of Common Pleas
| Marv Hunter, Plaintiff
against
Laura Brmighton, Cynthia Hunter,
I Dora out in, Will Hunter, Leila
Brougham, Sam Hunter, Charlie
Baker. Clyde Baker, Laura McDonald.
Cora Lee Bowers, Tom Hunter,
Tom Baker, Ollie Nicholson, Lem
I Baker. A. J. Hunter, Dock Hunter,
Sallie Hunter, Spofford Hunter, L.
I A. Kirkland, C. O. Willis, W. F.
Rod>rers. Scott Dillingham, Trustees,
doing business at Dixie Bonding
Company, Defendants.
To the Defendants above named:
You are hereby summoned and required
to answer the complaint in "bbis
action, of which a copy is herewith
served upon you, and to serve a copy
of your answer to the said complaint
on the subscriber at this office in tho
City of Camden, S. C., within twenty
days after the service hereof, ; exclusive
of the day of such senMce;
and if you fail to answer the complaint
within the time aforesaid, the
plaintiff in this action will apply to
the Court for the relief demanded in
the complaint.
SMITH & SMITH,
Plaintiff's Attorneys
Dated Camden, S. C., May 8, 1933
To the Defendants above named
Take Notice: That 1he original
Summons, of which the above i? *
copy, together with the original Complaint.
in the above entitled action,
were duly filed in the office of the
Clerk of Court for KershaJw County
at Camden, South Carolina, on the
8th dav of May, 1933.
SMITH & SMITH,
Plaintiff's Attorneys
Canuien, S. C., May 8, 1983
NOTICE
? is hereby given thai pur?Jar.t
order of Hon. E. C. Dennis,
Jurlpo Fourth Circuit, made in the
!'.!!iott Crosland et al., plaintiff
ago r.- Lincoln Reserve Life Insurav.
. ( ompany, defendant, dated
:. ."iOth, .1033, nil policyholders
* ?rs having claims or de.'.vr:st
Lincoln Reserve Life
'"ompany are repaired tc
* i.y \erified with the underh
vi .-.er in J&nnettsville. S. C
.lice i/ given that failure
'..-lims within ninety day?
* first publication of this
i" persons failing to so file
are barred from partirij'a"
* the assets of the said Com.--uth
Carolina.
N. W. BDENiS,
r for Lincoln Reserve Lif<
insurance Company in S. C.
6-t>sb
Renew Your Health
By Purification
! hyjcirian will tell yon that
l'i.rii;<-ation of the System
* 's Foundation of Perfect
tVhy not rid yourself of
ailments that nre under>
1 r vitnlityf Purify your
" 'ci by taking a thorough
1 e a lot .*> V??r,?once or twice
several weckj^-and nco
' v -Mature rcv.>Cdfr' y o t; with
^ tal.a purify the blood by acti?
1,10 hver, kidneys, stomach
1 bowels. In 10 cts. and 35 cts*
All dealers. ~ (Adv.)
4
I SUNDAY DINNER
SUGGESTIONS
Hy ANN 1'AUE
MEMORIAL or. Decoration Day a?
many of us still call it, begins
the out-door season, Fresh air encourages
an appetite to raid the picnic
hamper.
Picnic meals need not bo sandwich
meals when the markets offer all sorts
of Informs ting fresh and (prepared
foods at prices to sul' even lean pocketbooks.
Potato salad and deviled eggs or
cheese offer good cold fj;iro, while
frankfurters or bacon and spaghetti
in tomato snuce cooked over an open
tiro are warming. Peanut butter and
a box of crackers will help to till up
the youngsters.
Among particularly good buys for
this week-end's marketing nro new
potatoes, spinach, and oranges.
The Quaker Maid Kitchen has planed
three Interesting menus which
make use of foods which are plentiful
and In season.
Low Cost Dinner
Pork or Veal Chops with Gravy
Polled Rice
SAuteed Bananas
Sliced Cucumbers
Bread and Butter
8now Pudding Custard Sauce
Tea or Coffee Milk
Medium Cost Dinner
Baked Half Ham
Baked New Potatoes
Buttered String Beans
Prepared Mustard Dill Pickles
-Rjreeul and Butter
Fresh Pineapple Cookies
Tea or Coffee Milk
Very Special Dinner
Cantaloupe
RoaBt Leg of Lamb
New Parsley Potatoes
Mint Jelly Buttered Lima Beans
Rolls and Rutter
Lettuce and Cucumber Salad
French Dressing
Pineapple Shortcnko
Tea or Coffee Milk
??????.__?? ? I
Live Stock Guidance For Summer.
Chl/mson College, May 29.?Important
early summer work with hogs,
sheeip, cattle, ami poultry is suggested
in brief hints by Extension Service
specialists.
Animal Husbandry.?Keep hogs on
forage, and provide shade and water.
Keep y<>prvg pigs on territory not infested
with parasites. Treat sheep for
stomach worms if heavily infested,
and change pastures every two
weeks. Market the fat lambs -when
they weigh 70 to SO pounds. Got beef
cows bred for spring calves. Mow .
pastures to destroy weeds, and repair)
fences at odd times.
Dairying.?'Control flies by keep-!
ing all manure spread on the fields.!
Cool milk and cream immediately after
milking to control bacteria and
undesirable odors and Havers. Mow
the pasture often enough to keep
down obnoxious weeds. , Sow Sudan
grass on a rich plot .close to the barn
to cut and feed green when1 pastures
are dry and short. Keep an abundant
.supply of fresh water before the
cows.
Poultry.?-Keep pullets on clean I
range during summer months. Do not]
push them inito egg production; feed
a lowT>rotein ration made up mostly
of grain. Watch the (birds for lice infestation
and examine the sleeping
quarters occasionally for mites. If
troubled each fall with chicken pox
or sorehead, vaccinate the pullets
when three to four .months of age to
prevent an outbreak this fall.
Columbia will have a ( $550,000
brewery of 100 barodls a day capacity.
Construction will begin within a
mon/th. The corporation's president is
0. Lee Gordon, president? of the
chamber of commerce and manager
of an ice company; it9 treasurer is
Malcolm J. Midler, chairman of the
state sinking fund commission; and
its vice-president and.secretary W. H.
Caugbman, is manager of an ice
cream and candy company. The beer
brand will be Lord Berkeley. The
company invites iSouth Carolina formers
to raise rice, bardey and hops
to sell to it
Barbara Hutton, granddaughter of
the late F. W. Woolrworth, whose fortune
was built on nickels and dimes,
heiress of a fortune of $10,000,000, is
to bo married June 20 to Prince
Alexis Mdivani of the republic of
Georgia, on the Iilack Sea.
Secretary of the Navy Swan.^n
seeks support of the nation for a 31.
ship naval construction program, declaring
that the U. S. navy is drifting
into a "state of obsolescence" and
that unless it is made first-class "it
is useless expense."
A boycott directed against the Chinese
went into effect in the state of
Chihuahua, Mexico, Wednesday and
was accompanied by considerable
rioting, which will probably result in
an exodus of Chinese from that state.
Four companies of national guardsmen
were ordered to Manchester, N.
II., last week by Governor Winant,
after 5,000 striking textile workers
had stormed the gates of the Amoskeag
milk*.
Lincoln Ellsworth, noted explorer,
who has flown pver the North pole,
was married Tuesday in New York tc
Mi.<*s Mary Ixwise Ulrmer of PottsTttte-,
Pa.
New York voted approximately 11
to l"ln favor of repeal of the 18th
amendment.
?* - ??? " *- " -** ' <*
" * ^
?' . mil i ui, w??egaawas
Williamson Cowpea
is Early, Good to Eat
Svpnter, S. d, May 27.?"How far
that little camtlo throws its beam"
is illustrated again in tihe fac5|lui)tf
good done among farmers several
years ago when the Williamson cowpen
was distributed through county
farm agents in various parts of
South Carolina. This variety of pea
was developed by Mr. Mel y or Williamson
bf Darlington, who Was so
pleased Vwith its excellent qualities
that hp generously sent considerable
quantities to courtly farm agents for
froo distribution in small qnuntities
for trial.
Tho story of the result in Sumter
county could be duplicated from many
other count ice. Here i? what J.
M. EleaW, Sumter county farm
agent says about it:
"This pea was brought into Sumter
county from Mr. Mclver Williamson's
four years ago and distributed
free through tlhis office to about 160
far*ner?, a quart to the man. .Since
this it has spread ,to practically every
farm and is the earliest, the surest
cix>p?per, and one of the best eating
peas we have. One large farmer
saidi to me this fall, 'Mr. Mclver Williamson
doesn't know what he really
did when he gave you those new peas
to distribute. Man, 1 fed a dozen
families off a few patches of them
all sumkner. Other peas won't bear
for me. I don't know how I would
have adequately fed all those folios,
through the summer without these
peas!' "
A home gardener at Clem son Collego
who secured two quarts of the
Williamson pea in 1030 through the'
county agent, J. M. Napier, of Darlington,
made two well fruited crops
that year, the second crop from sect!
of tho first crop.
? ?MWI I fll
News of Interest in
and Near Bethune
Bethune, May 80.?A variety prograin
consisting of musical numbers,
both instrumental and vocal, readings
and oW, fashion cake walk was
given ut the school auditorium Friday
evening. Tlve proceeds will be
ustnl for the library.
Miss Mary Alice Baker is .spending 1
siwne time in SumW at. the home of
her uncle, lloyt Johnson. <
Mrs. L. K. YaThrough, Miss Wib
lone Es t ridge and Mary Eetridgo of
Kershaw wore guests during the
week-end of Mrs. C. C. l*ate.
Mrs. Hubert Waters und Mr. and
Mrs. W. II. Dmith attended Uu> graduating
exercises of the Columbia hospital
nurses on Thursday. Misw Loonu
Smith* daughter of Mr. and Mas. W.
H. Smith, received her diploma from
the hospital at this time.
Friendo of Boyd Gi>tburn wiU regret
to learn tihat he Is a patient at
the Camden hospital where he went
last Thursday for an appendicitis
operation.
Miseee Maggie and Rosa Lee Fields
are spending the week with relatives j
in Lamar.
Mrs. J. ^M. Clyhiurn. .spent several
diayw recently visiting relatives in the
Clyde section
Mr. and Mrs. B. E. Keisler have
moved into the May? Davis house recently
occupied by the T. R. Bethune
family and the M. F. Helms family
tyyvo moved into the A. K. McLaurin
house occupied for several years by
the G. E. Parrott family. ,,
Miss Mary Myrtle Raley "oT^Tlt.
Pisgah is spending the week with
Miss Juanita Pate,
Norwood Thomas of Winnsiboro
visited his mother, Mrs. L. D. Robert-1
son, during th<* weekend.
The Hawaiian senate adopted a
resolution condemning an editorial in J
a Honolulu iicwspnpor headed |
'Roosevelt the Wrecker."
Ma ha Irnta Gandhi, fasting in India,
is reported to have reached a stage K
where ho is so weak that he cannot ^ >
turn over in bed. >
' mil 'i|.i , A ?it'Tt i
?l?en mi,, i i j in ii11 ii ii i i i ... ?
LOOKING BACKWARD Taken
From the Files of The Chronicle Fifteen and Thirty Years Ago
FIFTEEN YKAKS AGO
May 31. 1918
Red Crow drive f??r war work, with
M. 1L lleycnan as chairman, doubles
quota of amount to l>e raised. Went
way be yowl aMottment of $8,000.
Repot ltd Cjtpt. W. J. Uurdell severely
wounded in France.
Bdaard Rosey, 80, native of Horse
Shots N. O., dies from injuries when
he 'fell from the high concrete dam
at Watoreo J^ower Comjvany under
construction.
Lor.g-range Cierman gun again
drops sheds on l*ar is.
J. L. Mo so ley, new cotton buyer in
Camden, buys one hundred bales from
S. J. Oonbett, of Lee county, i>aying
150 cents per (pound, representing a
total of $15,000.
Commencement exercises for Camden
schools to tbegin Sunday with
Rev. John H. 'Craves delivering the
sednvon.
Carl Moore, escatped convict from
State Farm, ea<ptured in Lancaster
county by Constables Caskey and
W. O. Rofcers. He stole an automobile
from R. T. Mickile.
Railroad rates raised to 3 cents per
mile for passengers and 26 per cent
iricrease on freight shipments.
Cards received from boys of Company
"M" stato that they had arrived
safely overseas.
Miss Sallic Beard, former Camden
girl, married to Will/km Ketch in at
ITartsiville.
Harry W. MeCreight, of the state
agricultural department, is guest of
Mr. and !MYs. F. D. Cfcropfoell.
Charles W. Dunn, young son of Mr.
and Mrs. 0. \V. Dunn, dies at Ivugoff.
.Sixteen die in fiire at state hospital
in Columbia. ._v
THIRTY YRAKB A(JO ^r|v|
June 5, 1U03
Gainesville, Gu., cotton mill completely
wrecked by storm and probably
one hundred people killed,
Topeka, Kansas, Hooded by waters
from Kansas river ami 160 people
drowned with many more in grave
danger.
Camden people raising funds for
Piedmont sufferers who were victims
of tornado.
Governor Heyrward offers reward
of fifty dollars for capture of parties ?
who set fire to barn and sUtblea of
W. F. 'Brewer in Kershaw county.
Hev. >S. !, < 5a toe accepts call to the
pastorate of Mt. Ziop Baptist church.
I.ove and Kelly sentenced to life
imprisonment for murder of Molton
Clark,
Plummer Mills, graduate of Davidson,
elected to fill a vacancy in Camden
schools.
County Supervisor J. M. Sowell
advertises for todde on rebuilding
road over swamp at Big Pine Tree .
Creek near Camden.
lH'thune school taught as a pay
school by Mise Fannie Johnson closes ?
ami she gives her pupils a picnic at
Big Springs.
1*1
ON SALE FRIDAY, JUNE 2nd :||
i!T 4 :Tqr A challenge to - I
ALL. GASOUNESi
Only the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey |
dares challenge with a new motor fuel that |
SMOOTHER PERFORMANCE |
AT REGULAR GASOLINE PRICE - I]
I
' 7\ awoi m r\c f.ssoij nr, on sale June 2nd, the
Standard <M (Company of New Jersey issues this
challenge a id makes this guarantee of smoother
performance with a full understanding of the
importance of such a statement by this company
? The puhlic is accustomed to fantastic and exaggerated
claims in gasoline advertising. It has
heard of so many "Super" gasolines?seen so
many words piled upon words about "anti-knock"
properties, "mileage," "quick-starting," etc.,
that all such descriptions have, quite properly,
come to mean nothing ? As leader of the industry
the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey recognizes^
double responsibility to the public* First,
the responsibility of more than half a century's
standing of pioneering in improvements and new
developments, at however great expense Second,
that of putting out over its name no product
| until that product has proved its worth, and the
validity of every"statement made about it ? Such
ia the position we take about Essolene. We stand
squarely behind it ns a groat motor fuel improve- .'Til
inent ? Automobile engines have improved rapid- .
ly in the last few years. Gasoline improvement has
not kept pace. I ssolene was developed with present
motor problems and future motor trends in
mind. The result is a fuel in advance of the times,
basically superior to all regular priced and, with
few exceptions, all premium priced gasolines o
Try|Essolene. Get it at any F.sso .Station, Compare
it, in any car, with the performance of any gasoline
you have ever used. Essolene will speak for
itself. You can supply the superlatives.
r ' , - ;?'4
Colored Orange to Prevent Substitution -- .:*7v
"7*4
9 Essolene, Raeo, and KmoIub??tfi*
fr- Star Motor Oil, are sold at Emo Ktat
ion* and Dealers owneif, operated or
supplied by the following companies:
the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey,
the Standard Oil Company of
Pennsylranla, the Standard Oil Company
of Louisiana, and the Colonial
. P?con OH Company, incorporated. J
^^^SfAN DARtT^W
(csso)
STATIONS^^