The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, July 21, 1933, Page PAGE SIX, Image 6
- ?^ ?AH
Postmasters
Under Civil Service
Washington, July 12.?In an executive
order changing regulations for
postmaster appointments, President
Roosevelt yesterday requested Postmaster
General Parley to draft lo^js-1
lation to be submitted to the next j
Congress placing all post masterships !
under civil service
The executive order will permit ull
acting postmasters named since!
March 4?approximately 1,50ft---to:
remain in office without examination.!
Jt also raises the maximum age limit
1 fiion 'io to M years and reduces thej
minimum residence requirements ,
from two years to one.
Rally at Mount Pisgaii Church
oThe third quarterly B. Y. P. U.
rally mooting will bo held with Mt.
Piagah church Sunday afternoon, July
.'10, at 3 o'clock. We are hoping
to have representatives from all the
It. Y. P. U'a. of the Kershaw Association.
'fhe following program will
be rendered, beginning at 3 o'clock:
Song service; devotional by Miss
Annie Turner of Camden; (business
and roll call; reports from delegates
who nttcrdod assembly at Greenville;
special nusic by Mt. Pisgah intermediates;
conference for juniors and intermediates;
"What is Vision," by
Miss Virginia Hill, of Camden; "A
Study of the World's Need Enlarges
Vision" by Miss Annie Jlegler, of
Kershaw; special music; "Service
Enlarges Vision," by Miss Frances
Savors nee, of Bethune.?Otlio Lee
Robinson, Secretary.
The farm credit administration has.
extended its plan to aid in the reopening
of closed banks in Iowa, and
announced that it will undertake to
retinanio $37,715,00s worth of farm
mortgages held by 73* dosed and
rest irted banks. The plan is already
in dpi ration in Illinois and Wisconsin.
The plan is for the purchase for cash
of all farm mortgages eligible for
land bank loans at prices based on
apprai>al value of the mortgaged
lands.
Farmers throughout the South are
being warned not to plow up a single
row of cotton, until officially notified
#to do so, by an agent of Uncle Sam,
f<y>"Kbe cotton destruction plan is not
yrt a finality, and not all offers made
by farmers will be accepted at Washington.
!"
WAKE UP YOUR
LIVER BILE?
WITHOUT CALOMEL
t
And You'll Jump Out of Bed in
tlnj Morning Rarin* to Go
If you foel aour and sunk and the world
looks punk, don't swallow n lot of sulls,
miuernl water, oil, laxative candy or chewing
pim and expect them to make you suddenly
sweet and buoyant and full of sunshine.
For they can't do It. They only move the
bowels and a mere movement dcean't get at
the cjiusc. The reason for your down-and-out
fiehng is ys>ur liver. It should pour out two
pounds of liquid bile into your ooweJintaily.
If this hUe is not flowing freely, your food
doettn'l digest. It just decays in the bowels.
<?un bloats up your stomach. You hiv? a
thick, bad taste and your breath is foul,
skin ofton breaks out in blemishen. Your head
aches and you feel down and out. Your whole
system is poisoned.
It taken those good, old CARTER'S
MTTI.E I-IVKH PILLS to get these two
pounds of bile Rowing freely and make you
feel "up and up." They contain wonderful, .
harm tea, gentle vegetable extracts, amazing
, whan it comer to making the bilo flow freely.
Rat don't ask for liver pills. Ask for Carter's
little I.iver Tills. Ix>ok for the name Carter's
little I.iver Fills on the red label. Resent a
substitute. 26c at all atorea. ? 1931 C. U. Co.
SUNDAY DINNER
SUGGESTIONS
I?y ANN PAGE
Wr, ni Americans, do not realize
Ip.w fortunate we arc to have all
the | wo can on t witnout straining
i i.r ! >1 I nducts. Frequently In
n i t cost a shfllintf apiece,
i I. -i v.i- -h u-h'-rs in the real peach
ie...n an ! is the time to en; y j
' : the vftrn-i v of wars m
\ in t serve.!. U p. e,
." 11 ' i ..r pies. sP.or'cnke,
. ?<! 'oe crenrn 1 h?
. i ' i-iin r a n
r \- P, ! v
, , .. . ., ... i .. ,.
? \ ' v
; . ir. ! -r.. 1: \ <>u pre: -r t >
V. .he . r I - are h ?
:>> ;. ; ... o -n an 1 th-^ir sen ::
1? ?- ' >rt
Here are t'.ic linker M i..l Kitchen
.r.r.cr ni.-.u-i
I.oh' Cost Dinner
W ... Mashed Pot at oa
S alloped Tomatoes
Bread and Hotter
Chocolate Puddinjr
Wh.pped Fvaporat. d M.Ik
Ten or r*i Tee Milk
.Medium Cost Dinner
C. 1 Cats Vegetable Salad
Potato Chips
Currant Jelly
Bread and Butter
Peach Shortc ake
C Tee C~: or jred' Milk ;
Very Special Dinner
\\ .-melon P.alis wjlh MT.t
}1 il -ef Pan-t.rowr.e.l Potatoe*.
M .#i- d S .i.nsh
' rn[>e J' . ;
Bolls nr d 1 tut *rr
Peneh Bavarian
C ."or . r .. J' Milk j
|how===
QUICK IS WINK ANSWERED
IIY rilOTQS Of THE EYES.?
four thousand photographs a second,
with exposures ranging from
! t-100,(XK)ih to 1-0W.000th of a secI
ond, have been made at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology by
means of a unique electrical clr|
cult which produces light of great
Intensity, says a writer In Literary
1 Digest.
The Instantaneous Hash of this
light Is many times more brilliant
than sunlight. This new circuit,
which employs either mercury arc
tubes or sparl< plugs, was developed
by ITof. Harold K. Ihlgerton
and Kennelb J. (Jerinesbaiisen, In
research on methods of highspeed
photography. ?
"The device has already been
used to make striking photographs
in which fainllirtr Tilings aro ^hown
in astonishing new forms." says a
press release from the institute's
newft Arrviee. "The splash of a
drop of milk on a hard surfnee is
revealed In the shape of a miniature
crown tipped with Infinitesimal
pearl-like drops.
"The question, 'How quick Is
quick as a wink?' was answered
by photographs of the human eye
which show that a wink occurs In
approximately Qne-.fortleth of a
second. The photographic image
recorded at the Instant of impact
between a golf club and ball shows
clearly the momentary nattering of
the latter at the point of contact"
How Perforated Postage
Stamps Came to Be Used
When stamps are Issued without any
holes or perforations between them,
they are said to be Imperforate. At
first, of course, all stamps were imperforate.
and even today they are occasionally
Issued this way. Do you
know how perforation came to be
used? Have you ever seen those little
wheels with teeth like a miniature
buz/, saw and lixed fo a handle which
ladies used years ago to mark off dress
patterns? According to one story, an
enterprising son t hern gentleman hecame
tired of cutting stamps apart
with scissors ami on a sudden inspiration
he ' ieked up his wife's pattern
marker and ran it down the rtfxvs between
the stamps, lie found that they
would then tear apart easily. The
idea spread until governments took It
np. Today we llnd most stamps perforated
for us.
v<J4ow Coffee I* Harvested
Coffee Is picked by men. women and
children who carry baskets into which
they put the fruit. When tDo baskets
nre full the coffee is dumped In heaps,
then loaded on wagons and carted
to the drying stations. After the beans j
are thoroughly washed they are spread
in the sun to dry. dther In large shallow
wooden trays, or on modern terraced
concrete drying yards. Rvery
morning after the dew lias disappeared
the co(Tee is raked over to insure n
thorough sunning. After (he coffee has
been properly dried 01 "cured." It Is
repeatedly run through hulling and
fanning machines, which clean It and
remove Hie tough hull. Then the coffee
is ready for shipment.
How Trees Throw Off Moisture ,
The amount of moisture thrown out j
by a large tree daily depends largely
on the type of tree, the number of'
leaves and the situation. A birch tree
with 'joo.ono leaves, standing perfectly
free, would throw off about 10."? gallons
of water on a hot. dry day and about
lf> gallons on a day of average moisture.
A tree, of course, has to replace
through its roots the moisture thrown
ofT by Its leaves, and this gives an
Idea of the daily requirements In water
of a large tree with approximately
the number of leaves mentioned.
How Teaching Jobs Are Found
Application for teaching positions In
the United States detached territories
should he made to the following offices:
Alaska, Department of Interior,
Washington; Hawaii, superintendent
of public instruction. Honolulu, Hawaii.
Panama Canal Zone. Panama
Canal, Washington; Philippine service,
Civil Service commission. F at
Seventh street northwest. Washington;
Puerto it ice. chief of bureau of Insular
affairs. Washington; Virgin Islands,
governor of the Virgin Islands. St.
Thonia-. Virgin I-land-.
How M u c h C a v h Alien M u ? I Have
In i : . i ! -or- pro
\ :, -a. ! > I..! r ' ? ! 'r : !e eat: he
1 .:. | .! i. - to ' e .. o'- t; . nev
a n - '1 . ' I ? e '1 . - ; ? o|i|v
. ,i .. . he I , a, r. : :ri en eh
, . ; ge 1; o : 1 he - 1 " ! 1 ha \ e
. [, p. provi ie for h - n :i< on.ihle
wauls ale! tlu -e oi a.ei nipanying per
iv!o.){ iqion him until such
!:;.? as he is likely to find employnioT.t.
and. when houti 1 tor an Interior
point, railroad tbket or funds with
whicli to purchase the same.
How Bison Herd I* Disappearing
The American Bison society says
that there are IS.oT'J pure blood bison
in North America. The number of
bison in the United States Is .T.ts.Y
About one third of the number In the
United States are located In tiie stnto
of Wyoming The remainder are widely
distributed through various staffs
How Snail Retains Moisture
|p, rrdcr to nrrrmt 'ho r-vrporttflon
of i's !. !.]v rno.^ure ilur.ng extreme
heat the de?er: sua:; . , h-'nmt- a
wall of n o ;-. with two
or three laver-, the n;p?rr;g of
Its Shi 11.
Veteran Editor
Passes To Beyond
Herulerqonville, N. July 16.?
Death yesterday ended the colorful
newspaper career of Dr. Stanhope
Sams, associate editor of The State,
Columbia, ?> ? > which had carried
him into mitny foreign countries.
The 73-year-old editor died in a
hospital here of a stroke he suffered,
Wednesday. I>r. and Mrs. Sams, the i
former Miss Camilla Johnson, had
been spending the summer near here.
Brief funeral services were eonducted
here this morning and the
body was taken to Columbia for;
burial.
Dr. Sams, descendant of an old
Beaufort, S. C., family, was born in
Greenville, S. C., and attended Yanderbilt
University.
During his career he was editor of
The Atlanta Journal for two years,
reported for metropolitan newspapers,
served as Washington corres-1
pondent for the New York Times and)
later was correspondent for it in j
Cuba. Later he did magazine work,,
he joined the staff of The State and
in 1911 went to the Far East as
editor of the Japan Times, Tokyo, a
newspaper published in English. Several
years later ho 'became a com-,
merclal agent in the orient for the
United States department of commerce.
In 1917 he rejoined The
State, where he worked until his
death. H '
\ Dr. Sams was an outstanding linguist
and student of literature. The
honorary degree of Doctor of Laws
was conferred upon him by Newberry
College.
Twenty-four operators of silk
stocking mills in the vicinity of Reading,
Pa., have ended a 1(5 days strike
by recognition of the union rights of I
their more than 5,000 employes.
[Ben Geer Named
| To Head Furmait
Columbia, July 16.?Ben E. Geer, of
Greenville, who quit touching to become
a textile manufacturer, today
was elected president of Furman
University, baptist institution in
Greenville.
Gear's unanimous election and his
acceptance whs announced hero by
J. J. Lawton, of Hurtsville, chairman
of the board of Furman trustees.
The trustees held a long closed seS-(
sion in a local hotel prior to the announcement.
The Greenville man succeeds the
late Dr. VV. J. McGlothlin, who was
president of Furman from 1919 until
his death several weeks ago ill an
automobile accident nedr Kings
Mountain, N. C. When he will talce
up his new duties has r\dt been definitely
decided but probably in time for
the beginning of the new school year
in September.
t>
An intensive investigation by
Pennsylvania legislative committee,
has disclosed the fact that in some of
tho sweat shops of Pittsburgh, girl
workers have earned aa little as two
cents per hour, while others were
forced to make silk dresses for as little
as 20 cents each. A woman witness
testified that hundreds of men
who formerly earned $5 and $6 per
day in the Aluminum Company of
America's plant at. Kensington, had
been displaced by women who were
paid $1.10 per day.. Fear of losidg
their jobs because of their testimony
caused many witnesses to stay away
from tho committee hearings.
President Roosevelt has signed a
full pardon for former Congressman
Francis II. Shoemaker, Farmer-0
Labor of Minnesota, who served a
term in the Leavenworth penitentiary
in 1029.
I ?
| A conference of college heads in
the office of Governor Hlaekwood de-!
eided that scholarships would be i
granted this year at the Citadel and
at Winthrop as usual and that no tuition
would be charged scholarship
students. At the University of South
Carpliiuaj nnd at Clemaon college, the
! scholarships now in for^e will Ibe continued
in 1D33-1D34 but tuition will be
j charged students holding those scholarships.
No new scholarships will be
given this year to these institutions.
The National Lumber Manufacturing
association has filed a proposed
| code of fair competition for th?
lumber industry with the recovery
administration. Hearings on the code
t in Washington will be held next
j week.
John Markle, 75, retired multi-aj1
lionaire, the last of the greet f^u^B
who participated in tin; historic vpM
evators-miners anthracite "war" >1
Pennsylvania in 1002, which was set-fl
tied through the direct interventiosB
of President Theodore Koosevelt, diedB
Monday in his New York homtB
Markle retired from buVium siil
years ago, but beforo he
into practice his life-long belief thatl
though money came to those who d*B
served to win it, it imposed upon then I
a stewardship by which that wealtltl
was placed at the disposal of human-B
ity. Ho established a *3,000,000 foua-B
dation for charities and jt is expect-B
ed that the balance of his fortune oil!
$#0,000,000 or more will go for fu-V
ther human relief and benefactions. B
REAL ESTATE ^1
I """ -PJgv P,?fEm
? Repairing end Care-Taking of Property N. I
ALL FORMS OF INSURANCE
I DeKALB INSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE CO. I
Crocket* Building ? Telephone 7
' , ?? ^ H
NOTICE TO TEACHERS I
: We are accepting State Teacher**^ Notes, maturing ; i
in 1934, at face value, for merchandise and payments I
of accounts. jj
We reserve the right to accept them only direct ij
from the teachers to whom they were issued. || j
STEVENS - SPRINGS CO I
??? ?wmmmmm????. ??
II HOW WILL I
YOU RATED?
*
j
PROMPT PAY J
FAIR PAY I
SLOW PAY 1
OR X I
Your Name Will Be In The I
CAMDEN CREDIT GUIDE I
II f you (i\vo ar.y past duo accounts, pay thorn,
do it now. so you will be well rated. The Credit
Bureau keeps 'he merchants informed at all
times as to just how you pay your bills.
I A
This system is built on constructive fines. It
makes the poor, but honest man's credit as good
as that of the rich. It also prevents the man who
does not pay his bills from getting credit.
If you have a good credit record, your trade
is valuable and any merchant is glad to aecomo- I
date you. |
CREDIT IS A MATTER OF TRUST,
YOUR HONOR IS INVOLVED
It is granted you on a promise to pay, I
you cannot afford to break that promise. The
merchant can better afford to lose the bill than
you can afford not to pay it.
Don't blame the merchant if you are refused credit. You and you alone are to blame, for you are refused
on your record and you built that record yourself.
Camden Credit Bureau J