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THE CHRONIC EE OF THE If Eh A Contribution* to this "Column are Will never be printed-unleee d?">? with yuur own name and addroaa. Baruch Starts Racing (By Caldwell Wither* in The Columbia Record.) In recent weeks, the hostile press has dubbed Bernard Baruch, native of Camden, about every official and unofficial office-holder in these United States from that of president to th# -wolf of Wall Street." AH of whuW is in the way of introduction to the fact that the powerful Mr. Baruch is now branching out into another field and one which admirably suits a son of Camden. He i? now racing steeplechase horses and is using the name "Kershaw.. Stables" for sentimental reasons. For Baruch is a very sentimental person. Years ago, when he was very much in the limelight about financial matters, it so happened that an interview with him 1 was one of my assignments. 1 he | outstanding recollection of that interview?aside from a running broad, jump from the moving ferry boat on which he was a passenger to the receding wharf?was his proud boast that he was a native of South Caro-| lina and that his father was a surgeon in the Confederate army. So n?>\v it comes to light from a Camden friend that Baruch may entor some of his horses, in the races at the Kershaw resort next season. ^ Harry l>. Kirkover, the generalissimo of the races and the god-father of the race course there, is still at Camden. He hopes to be able to get Baruch" to enter some of his thoroughbreds. From this same correspondent, 1 learn that Mr. Kirkover has had a large force of men working on the track. A portion of the track has been tiled-drained, which will eliminate any wet spots, even during a damp spring, for the soil there?as many people of the state who have seen the races know?is sandy und porous. Heretofore there had not been enough slope fur a natural drainage. Mr. Kirkover has also enlarged the stables to accommodate 14 more racer!*. Other notes from the steeplechase center of Dixie .-. . Carroll Bassett, one of the best-known riders who ap- j pwtred there, recently won two races, Mn one afternoon riding Annapolitan, a horse that raced at Camden the, past spring. That was an unusual , feat it seems?winning two races in one afternoon on the same horsejn . a big race event. I Bassett also rode "Battleship, a i. horse that received his first school- j ing on the Springdulc course at < am" den, to victory in the 28th running of the National Hunt Cup . . He also | won a recent event, the "Hilly Barton" steeplechase, at Pimlioo . . . Ray-! mond C. Woqlfe, whose riding was, sensational at Camden this spring, | won the Master's cup at the Race-; land course, Framin.'ham. Mass., on! "Drppeau," owned bv Alvin Inter-, pie ye r. ' aniii, ri and lis race course have. bee" w ! . :< r. up :n mhr.y ot tne U ad,, < maca/'.nes ot An t . a a v-.'. - v.. i .l a . up lin e ami m M . , , ;-.v c been a cor ; . . ,, li t'.e . , n k.; ' V e I .at'O- . V ' g ' at 1" 1 A I ' \ . . .. a',-; 'a .',g .? . . ' # . I: ? 1.1 . . . , .... . g:.*. a \v -a : e -ky t' the Si'lit n. ? -- ?mir *f * 1 most welcome. Names of contributors <1. Just *ign "pen name," together the latter for our information only. Little Acted Ah Judge The ItlueAeld. W. Va., Daily Telegraph, of July 5, carried the following in reference to a popular townsman and a good judge of horseflesh: "Judge George T. Little, of Camden, rSr""C,, was the Judge of the events I and it wsa a hard task to pick the i winners from the more than fifty of the finest horses ever shown in the southwest. "The weather was perfect for the show, and there was plenty of parking space, with bands, plenty of eats and a good natured crowd that made the Fourth of July horse sh6w at the "Tazewell fair grounds a perfect day." * * * * Charleston on Memorial Day.... an intemperate sun beating down on holiday pavements .... a few men of middle age sitting on the benches in Iluttery l'ark u group of very j black negro women in light bandana, headdress nearly, making a splendid foil for the clusters "f pink azaleas, sprays of .Mexican rose and Klondike cosmos and delicate little spiral# of eitin kitty-tails' that they are vending. A company of three?-a man, a woman and a fair young girl with comet eyes and the supple, superb carriage of a young Southern gentlewoman, walking over to the little improvised flower mart. Tho man se leifts a modest sheaf of the golden cosmos .... slowly, he walks to the Confederate monument at the edge of the little Park .... For a moment, this son of New York?himself on the rolls in the last war?bows his head and then, as the benchers crane their heads to see, he places his of-j fering, beside a wreath or two already there Quickly he rejoins hisj party and in a moment disappears around a corner. A beau geste ? Yes, and more .... an evidence that the memories of an earlier valor are not dead _. . . . that the North is reappraising the Southern heroism burnt in the tablets of those agonizing days .... that gallantry and the | unspoken sacrifice glow again in unsuspected garden. ? * * Who asked if the sons of the South were forgetting the significance of this day? Was it not the columnist 'in The Statu? May a brother columnist answer? When a son of the ! North bends to this shrine, there, j need be no fear for sons of the South. In changing symbols Southerners revere the sacred memories.? in their books ,that again command the eye: their chivalrous messages that once more engage the heart' .... in the new literature of Jhe New South, brave and decorous and traditional as ever and shining like some unaffrighted beacon in the stress and the mist that, envelop these days of the Kepublie, That son of the North knows something of the historical Southland .... he has been preparing for tnis thru n.r.y quiet and unwitnessed vigils.. ..he <1.m~ not ntlf.rm an attack or r;i'. ate u <: ft r.se i>T u< ej> ru?? et. C' :.\ -i any p.etna; cut ier.t < . ;?v, r. .-'hat; ot t:'.', y t - t < : h.t V . lb kn - the S'.uih ifr.d the - n.. ... . - hi :In h.s a.. > u t a ph'.Oo 1 d : . > -'.lif vn 11 "ty of rb < r. . a". ; i t : ;. . ' p.., < ..n fete am \ at d he ,.f .' o Ac, - ..f r.ailj/s pamphJ ;? t ,v. \ n.t, at ,..n of he t aiv.paigr. :n ' -;sv S-u . ah Lar.iec and I'm ANNOUNCING The removal of our Chevrolet Agency from East DeKalb Street to North Broad Street, the store room I formerly occupied by Stevenson & Whitaker Company. We invite all to come ia and see our display of the .'X? New Chevrolet Cars. Repair Shop for Chevrolet and All Makes of Cars Experienced Mechanics D. M. MAYS SALES /KwWftuW SERVICE Jwsr^ TELEPHONE 180 l_ ; s*Eem*H8e8?*HaHfiewwHBeiBepwee*--K^ rod and Hayne and Father Ryan are moro than word* to him .... and ho ho* too, observe# this day and the North and the South clasp hand* he-, fore that monument at Charleston. The Chronicler News of Interest in and Near Bethune Bethune, July 5.?iMisa Mabel Watts of Madison, Va., Mrs. 11. (1. Hiers and little son of Bamberg, and Mrs. C. C. Austin from near Monroe, N. have been recent guests of Mrs. Maud Watts. Mr. and Mrs. L. M. Rest and children, Mr. and Mrs. Ix>rin^ Davis and little daughter, and MisP Lizzie Davis are spending several weeks at Myrtle Reach. Miss Frances iSaverance and Mrs. Lurid Holley who have been in Morristown, N. J., arc at home for the vacation season. Mrs, C. O. Terry and daughters of Quitman, (la., are spending some time with Mrs. Terry's parents, Mr. and Mrs. John MoCaskill. lyoander Reims has gone to spend his vacation with friends at a camp near Kcnnebunlf Port, Maine. Rorn to Mr. and Mrs. it. E. McMcCa skill, Friday, June 80, a daughter, Elizabeth Gray. Miss Elizabeth Douglas of Winsj boro and Miss Mary Thomas of ! Clyde# are guests of Mrs. L. D. Robertson. I Miss Mary Ellen McLaurin has been visiting at China Grove and elsewhere in North Carolina. It. It. Burn*. and Leroy Burns of ! [.aureus have been visiting friends here. Topsy Hearon who is at a refores-* tation camp near Conway spent the weekend at home. i Miss Ruth Estridgo of Kershaw visited Mrs. Watts and daughters [dui'nt; the weekend. ! Mr. uad Mrs. J. A. Graham and j Miss Sophie Graham of Smoaks and I Mrs. Mary Hanna of China Grove, N. ('., were guests of Mrs. A. B. MeI Laurin one day last week. Mr. and Mrs. L. D. Barr have been visiting relatives in Lexington. A very pleasant social affair of I recent date was the Christian EnI deavor social at the home of Mrs. M. G. King. Jewish Evangelist to Preach The Rev. Jacob Gartenhaus, who is in charge of Jewish work in the Southern Baptist Convention, will preach at the Wateree^ Baptist, church on Sunday evening at eight j ojclock. The public is cordially invit-; ed to hear this great evangelist. Lightning Kills Baxter Gardner | Cheraw, July 1.?A bolt of lightning killed Baxter Gardner, 24, nn a farm nbrth of here today and seriously injured Rob McDougall, 22. The two were in a barn on the Evegett place, on the road to Rockingham. The barn was destroyed. . Death of George H. Davis Friends of George A. Davis, of the Quality Sea Food Market, will be sorry to hear of the death of his 1 father, George H. Davis, in Norfolk, | Va.. last week. 1 Mr. Davis was born in Connecticut and moved to North Carolina with I his father, who opened the first cotton mill in the south, later moving to Chester, S. C., where he opened the cotton mill there. He was the[ clerk of superior court in Charlotte, j N. ('., for two terms, later moving j to Norfolk. Va., where he was C"n nee tod with the wholesale fish bnsi-* jness for twenty s.cwn year-. 1 !(? w a a Mason, a member < f *.he ; K: _ h: - Pyth.as and a memU-i of ; 'he < a i a P?.ip:i-t cb.itvh "f N r * ' K . M >\ I"* \v:d??w. * vn ; I -. Ml V H. -Wil iams . nd j M - G, . . ge 1" Au-u.n. ?.f Norfolk; 'it ? - >'. 11. Da;..-, i.f D..1; .m<>:e, M 1". \. Da; .-, of Not folk, and , A. Davis, of Camden. Ten | g: anueh.aii ? n also .-in ; ;ve. To Serve Fish Fry. The iau.es of th' Lyttleton St met Met ho*l;st church will serve a ii.-h t'ry at the Power H?>u-e, Thursday. July 18. at 7:80. Pr.ce r.f plate will be t nt-. P:evecds f this .-upper I .v 11 go towanis a fund to paint the i r.ti-r.i r of the church. MORE A BO FT BAR I CH (( t.n: uructi 1* m F r?t Page i week in Los Angeios ami 1 wn:.'e< | BaiU h to get ? :r.?- ne in N?-w Y. r\ I to in\e>t that for me 1 w >aid bav< ! -1 <>v ks l:ke 'Aiv r ;>* >; it-. "Baruch a-k??i me how ...ic} n: >ney 1 ?>.v?d. 1 ; id h;m ai?ou: n; i lan?i hmo the m??r:- >?. an ; hi . aai. "Why. my h v. th it would be i M-, -,.y ' - . V : g. | ba--k and pay off \. ... V-1C." I "v 1 a < r.' ha k ' te.. Mrs. Roger- tr.at 11a : uk h w,.u.? n* ...; W my m,..r.i > : .r a;- !' .? t.? x . Cra i.-: mas .?>4t ?..; am u.-ri w.v* I for Fur >;* he -cut nt a w * r.a ; w i r.t like lh..s: '1 gave, vc.u :iu (i.h.;..xt i , rr.a - pr< -ent .as; hpj ;r,g . I Ai. >tl;er prom.n? nt New* F.r.giax publican has tobl fra nds how h went to P.aru h in NJ?>y, lt'2t?. an Baruch to.d him to out of th market. The polit.cian told Barut that he was so far in he couldn't g< out. "Ti>o bad," said Baruch. The Baruch family, of the Jewii B race, tracing back Co Pruaeia, aent ii k, t nhg - . member to America in I1i56. Young Bernard Mannes Baruch spent bis boyhood in Camden, S. C., where be was born 6.S years ago. He wu? the ?on of Dr. Simon Baruch and Belle Wolf, who descended from one of those aristocratic Jewish families which had been South Carolina planters before the Revolution and, with sword and property, had aided the Colonial cause. Bernard < Raruch's father wan ^beloved physician in the Confederate Army. Boyhood friends remember "Burr nie" as a spirited youngster who got the greatest kick out of 'VSkin the CaC'^on a horizontal bar. "Bernie would watch his chances and when he would see a (fellow got about halfway over, give him a chug in the ribs and watch him turn loose," saya one chum of those days. The war impoverished tho Baruch family, as it did so many other Southern families. At the age of 14, the Baruchs moved to New York and now Camden. knows B. B. only as a fond friend who coiner back to his great hunting preserve "Hobcaw" at Georgetown, S. C? .to visit that town and to find that his birthplace is now being used as a funeral home.' In memory of his father, Mr. Baruch has built the handsome Cam-] den Hospital, which has been a godCITATION The State of South Carolina County of KCrshaw By L. Hex Jones, Esquire, Probate Judge. Whereas, Mrs. Mary L. Walsh made suit to me to grant her Letters of Administration of the Estate of and effects of Mrs. C. B. LafTitto These are, therefore, to cite and admonish all and singular the kindred and creditors of the said Mrs. C. B. Laflfitte, deceased, that they be and appear before me, in the Court of Probate, to be held at Camden, Kershaw County, South Carolina, on July] 22, 1933, next after publication there-' of, at 11 o'clock in the forenoon, toi show cause, if any they have, why the said Administration should not be granted. Given under my handr-Hjis 6th day of July. Anno Domini 193?fc>v {L. REX JONES, Judge of Probate for Kershaw1 County Published on the 7th day of July, 1933, in the Camden Chronicle and posted at the Court House door for the "time prescribed by law. r i , uemi to those in this sectioh of the country who have boon unable to pay for hospital care, " Up North young Baruch went to the College of the City of New York, graduated, and started into business. Ilia mother is credited with (the epigram, "Berqie must go wliere the money is," and she insisted that he get out of business and go into banking. He was a quick success. While his father was making a real record as a surgeon, Bernie was piling up money. And the son was only a little over 80 when ho insisted that his father be released from the cares of private medical practices ami be free to devote his long life tf> public health for the majees. 1 . I Thut is the reason Dr. Simon Baruch is still spoken of today in New York as father of the public bathing place idea. Baruch's Southern background made him a natural Democrat. He was always interested in the party ami when he found himself on the Board of Trustees of the College of the City of New York, he met William P. MoOoombs, who was one of the original Wilson boosters. McCoombs interested Baruch in Wilson and when the two were finally brought together they formed an instant attachment. ^ > Wilson saw in him a man who was bringing to public life his big business experience without the pieoccupation of big business. Other Presidents have found that because Baruch has diffused his interests so, it doesn't make him a pleader for any special interests. ( Moreover, his abundance of good , nature and good humor make him a , very easy person to get along with. He was always thoroughly flustered' by Mrs. Wijson and was one of the . few admitted to the sick President's bed chamber. From the beginning Baruch's choice < of roles has always been that of i unofficial consultant. i When the war crisis came, how- 1 ever, the emergency was too definite . and too immediate for any halfway steps, and President Wilson insisted 1 that his friend take perhaps the biggest job of all?to organize American industry as chairman of the War ' Industries Board. i One characteristic/of Mr. Baruch which has baffled observers is his amazing frankness. To those accustomed to the cozy attitude of other men with important information under their ha*ts, it is startling to find Mr. Baruch seemingly ready to discuss the most vital and private Government matters with every Tom, Dick and Harry who carpe his.way. But Mr Baruch has been doing this ; for a great many years and he has apparently found that he doesn't need to change this habit. J Also, Mrv Baruch always deprecates his part in affairs. When somebody stopped him the other day and asked him about this report that he was unofficial head of the whole Administration during President Roosevelt's absence, he replied, "I hung around Washington for 10 days like a back alley cat and no one noticed me until a few days ago-when they heard my yowl and called me in." . Try Our ODORLESS I WAY of Dry I Cleaning I Sec Cor yourself that there it a vast difference in gar* I ment cleaning. Nowhere I can you' find a cleaning I service that give* your I garments the protection I they get with our acienti* I fically correct garment* I cleaning process. Every I particle of soil is gently ; removed and there is no oily film so frequently left on the garment after or* dinary dry cleaning. Use Our Cash and Carry I Prices ' I Dresses 50c I Linen Suits 40c I Woolen Suits .... 50c I Des Champs, Inc. I Tel. 567 E. DeKalb Street 11 is the meeting-pkice for smart j FROCK FASHIONS j ? ; New styles new prints new plain colors? new comI>irial ions ? every da\ llicre are new frock fashions at IVnney's! All the newest materials, Too! They're ^j \, smart, and oh, so very wearable! Right now, just when every word* rol>e needs freshening, you'll discover particularly entrancing new necklines, sleeves, eapeleta, lingerie touches in fact, everything you've been wanting. And just look at the remarkable low price I vr ' / I ALL OF THEM FAST COLOR SHEERS " J' J.C. PENNEY GO.j ' * 'j&M|