The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, October 06, 1933, Page PAGE TWO, Image 2
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We Carry a Complete Line of
PRATT'S and HESS'
POULTRY & STOCK TONICS
25c, 50c,. 75c/ $1.00
i DeKALB pharmacy >
TELEPHONE 95
Machine Gun Kellejj
Taken to Oklahoma
Oklol oina Cityi Oct. 1( vu ? !
by machine guns, George Kelly, hulking
former bootlegger, stumbled from
a bi-motored air transport hero today
to face the prospects of trial on capital
charges for the Charles F. Urschel
kidnaping.
*Ilello gang/' Kelly said, as ho
followed a group of federal officers
out of the large nine-passenger ship
which left Memphis at nofcn. "Nice
trip."
Aftor Kelly and bis'slender wife.
Kathryn, were taken in a motorcade
of ten cars from the municipal airport
to the little, brick Oklahoma
county jail. Herbert K. Hyde, federal
district attorney, said he would
recommend the filing of Jitato armed
robbery charges tomorrow against |
both Kelly and Albert Bates, latter
already convicted on federal kidnaping
conspiracy charges. Oklahoma
luw provides a maximum penalty of
death for robbery with firearms.
Two machine gun barrels were
trained on him, another on the crowd
of several hundred behind wire fences
' at the field.
Then his trimly clad wife jumped
to the runway smiling, surrounded by
the half dozen federal men who made
the three and a half hour flight from
Memphis, where the Kelly's freedom
ended in a police trap, last week.
Itoth are under indictment for the
kidnaping of the oil millionaire for
which seven persons were convicted
in federal court here yesterday and
both Prosecutor Hyde said today indicated
their intention of standing
trial beginning October t) on the government's
conspiracy indictment.
Urschel who spent nine days in the
hands of kidnapers last July, watched
Kelly alight, then turned to Hyde
and said:
"That's the man."
Inside her sedan Mrs. Urschel declared:
"That face will haunt me as lorjg
as I live."
She saw two machine-gunners,
identified as Kelly and Bates, rush
her husband from a quiet bridge
game on the suti porch of their town
house here the night of July 22. She
directed negotiations that resultFINAL
DISCHARGE
Notice is heroby given., that one
month from this date, on 10th day
of October, 1033, at 11 o'clock a. m.,
I will make to the Probate Court of
Kershaw County my final return as
Administrator of the estate of Simp;
son Hunter, deceased, and on the
same date I will apply to the said
Court for a final discharge as said
Administrator.
LYNCH 1). BOY KIN,
Administrator
Camden, S. C., Sept. 11, lO.'tCI
6 66 "
Liquid, Tablets, Salve, Nose Drops
Checks Malaria in 3 days, ColdH first
day, Headache** or Neuralgia in 30
minutes.
FINE LAXATIVE AND TONIC]
Most Speedy Remedies Known
I
< i in the payment-of $200,000 for his
freedom.
The airport was under machine gun
guard from tower to runway.
Kslly was ahacklbd hand and foot.
"I oan't walk fust,^. grumbled
a-> the officer-. fQUght to hurry him
u> a waiting car.
His wifo wearing a black silk coat
and black hat was not handcuffed.
She told Prosecutor Hydu she whs
"not guilty" and that she wanted to
. . *.o A*
face a jury.
"I want to see a lawyer first," was
the way Kelly was quoted by Hyde;
who said all indications were that the
accused kidnaper Would not plead
guilty to the federal charge, although
at Memphis federal agents said last
week he acknowledged complicity in
the Urschel ease.
Harvey Hailey, Bates, R. B. (Boss)
Shannon, hi$ wife and his son, Armon
Shannon, Barney Berman and Clifford
Skelley are to be sentenced by
Federal Judge Edgar S. Vaught Saturday
night under tho "Lindbergh
law providing life imprisonment as
the maximum sentence.
Monthly Report of
Associated Charities
Report of Associated. Charities of
Camden and Kershaw* County for the
month of August, 11)33: ?
Balance from last month ..$1,154.15
KoCOfpts this month . . . . . . ." iO.OO
t 1,194.15
Children's Home
Thomas & Howard 117.50
S. S. Heiftley, fruit jars 8.00
C. E. I/amony, groceries 6.46
Miss Kirkland, eggs an<l butter 8.10
J. J. Newberry Co. . 5.71
Ruff Hardware Co., ' 4.75
C. E. Lamony, groceries 4.37
W. G. Wilson, dry goods 8.03
Mrs. B. It. Truesdale, milk 23.42
DeKalb Pharmacy . , 26.22
Bell Telephone Co 3.76
Myers Service Station . 3.11 I
DePass' Drug Store 8.88
City of Camden, water and light 9.75
Walter Price, carpenter work.. 10,75
H. C. Krepps, rent 5.00
Mackey Hardware Co 1 . 41,06
Incidentals, Miss Scott 4.35
Labor and servant hire 64.00
C. E. Lamoy, groceries ...... . 5.21
Termidax Comapny : 12.50
Barber, hair cutting 3-80
Miss Kirkland, eggs and butter 9.50
Myrtle Beach, trip for children 25.00
C. K. Lamoy 5.97
Miss Kirkland;* eggs and butter 6.65
Norman Johnson, rer.t 2.50
Willie Brown, plowing 107
Pritehard Paint and Glass Co.. . 7.29
Stamp tax, 29 checks 58
. $442.79
Balance 751.36
The Associated Charities
W. H. Harris, Treasurer
From November 7 to 11, Oklahoma
hunters will have the first opportunity
they have had in eleven years to
hunt deer in that state. Every hunter
must wear a red coat.
'
Notice To The Public I
Next week will be Fair Week in Camden and the
prublic is notified that if any one is caught jumping |
the fence at the Fair Grounds they will be arrested j
and prosecuted in City Court.
W. D. WHITAKER
Chief of Police
City of Camden
ife ?
REAL ESTATE
RENTS COLLECTED, FARM AND CITY PROPERTY
HUNTING PRESERVES
Repairing and Care-Taking of Property
ALL FORMS OF INSURANCE
DeKALB INSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE CO.
Crocker Building ? Telephone 7
1
Nobody's Business
. .
Written for The Chronicle by Gee
McGee, Copyright, 1W8.
M1KK IS TO QUIT
tint rock, ?. C. aepp. SO, I1K43
lion. henry wallis,
{iecker-terry of agger-culture,
Washington, d. C.,
deer sir:?plese
let me know at once what to
do with my farm, if you cap| finish
some farm relief that will relieve me
Of my farm, i will appreciate the
kindness. with cotton fetching t*8
and Hour casting me 8$ per barrel,
including the protesting taxes Sansoforth,
i have roto bradstreet that i
was dun, and i can't make the grade.
i had a chance to swop my farm
and mule for a good possum dog and
u cl stamp last martch^but fool like,
i turned down the offer, thinking the
govvernment would pull me out of
the hole, anil now the man has backed
out. i Med to get . him to take
the farm and give me the dog or the
postage stamp.
i suggest that you ask the govvernment
to do away with its jails and
penitentiaries and in the future, sentence
all crimmernals to the farm/
and force them to grow cotton at c8
per pound. That is the worst punishment
that can be -ad^-minlstered
to a human being or a mule.
? ?
after paying all of my detts this
year excepp *10$ for guannc^,' i will
have cO and 1 old hickory shirt and
a set of whiskers left, we have benn
able to get plenty watt^er to drink,
but .corn-bread hatf* matfe our Ihrotes
. so rough that stuff lodges in same
and we have to flush it like you do a
sink.
' > .
we have benn in farmed that we
will get some inflation in a fe\V
months, but it dont hepp none to inflate
a corpse, after i have done $c Id
both of my bales of cotton, inflation ;
wont heVp 'no none,' so plese keep the
r. f. c in good shape for us agger- culturists;
our only hope now is for j
you to bored and clothe us till we }
can grow another big crop. .. .to give 1
away. * (
?: t
i Tiseter think a feller had to die to (
go "down yandei'" but he don't, to j
enjoy the warm breezes of fire and
brfmstone, all you have got to do is
....work 12 months in the year and
go half naked and two-thirds hungry, i
and grow 8c cotton, and if that aint ?
h...., there ain't anny. l
yores trulie, * i
mike Clark, rfd f
Cotton farmer t
WELL, WHAT ARE WE GOING ^
TO DO ABOUT IT?
... Four months ago, a bale of cotton
could be sold for $35.00, or <c a
pound, and $35.00 would then buy 10
barrels of flour. Today, a bale of I
cotton can be sold for. $15.00, and 1
$45.00 will buy 6 barrels of flour.
...A cotton mill operative who earns
$14.00 a* week (and that is little e-.
nough) is paid at the rate of 15 bales
of cotton per year. . . . ^'.th no ferti- i
lizer and no feed and plowtools to
buy..which is nearly' twice as much ]
as a farmer-family of 5 (all working) ,
can make in a year.
...A family of 5 working in a cotton 1
mill at $14.00 per week will earn enough
to buy 75 bales of cotton in *
12 months: the same family living
on bread and water and an occasional
slice of fatback meat and a few ,
sops of gravy. . . on a farm, all working.
. can possibly produce 10 bales
of cotton, but must give half of it to
the landlord as rent and pay its living
expenses besides.
...Trying to grow cotton at 8c per <
pound under present conditions ...
with high prices of necessities ..is i
enough to run a Solomon crazy in 10
days. It is about like working Ceo.
Vanderbilt, if there be one by that *
name, and Hetty Green's son, if his
name is John, at 5c per day split* ng
rails and cutting cord wood.
; Selling cottonseed at $12.00 ton 1
and paying $140.00 per tort".-for cotton
seed oil shortening is very s.mi- ;
!ar to selling a fine Jersey cow for
her own horn>. If something .rn't '
I done to help the cotton farmer get
a better price for his product, there
will be bread lines so long in the 1
south during the winter that the census
taker can follow it and not misfc
hut very few farm families. Cotton
mills can't run regularly unless the
farmer does a little buying himself, '
and he will need some cash to do
that with.
...Cotton is all right at Xc if over- i
alls and work shirts were 40c. instead :
of $1.75 and $1.10 respectively. If
the farmer had the processing tax
(which he is now absorbing when he
sells his cotton, and paying it again
when he buys cotton goods) he co uld
possibly see daylight. The entire
cotton crop in my state (S. C.) for
! 1033 wont sell for enough money to <
.
Jay quite one-third of the total taxes.
iVell, our government ain't going to
et agriculture carry all of^thfe burlens,
so, I'm going to be hopeful till
he poorhouse or th$ jail, one beck>ns
to me to enter. ' (Yep, Boys?
['m a farmer and in debt ,too.)
Grange Sponsors Community Booth
The Mt. Pisgah Grange is sponsorng
a community booth at the Kerihaw
County Fair. The entire cpmnunity
is urged to do everything possible
in collecting the exhibits for
;his booth. .Exhibits sdiould be at,
he* high school by Monday night.
Continue Plantings
For Winter Gardens
Clomson College, Sept. 30.?For a
.food winter garden plantings of various
vegetables must be made in Ocober,
says A. E. Schilletter, extension
horticulturist, who says that
tome of the best results are to be
lad from sowings made this month,
[lis suggestions call for the following
plantings:
Onions, seed' or sets?Yellow Globe
Danvers, Prizetaker, White Pearl,
Australian Brown.
Cabbage?For frost-proof cabbage
slants.
Kale?Siberian curled. Sow seed
jne-half inch deep, one ounce to 100
feet, rows 2 1-2 feet; thin plants
:hree to five inches apart in drill.
Radishes?Scarlet Globe and Rapid
Forcing.
Parsley?Moss Curled.
Mustard?Giant Southern Curled.
Turnip?Seven Top and Japanese
Foliage (for salad)
Spinach?Aragon, Virginia Savoy
ind Bloomsdale.
Iyettuce?Sow preferred varieties
in cold frame for late fall crop.
A new trial has been denie^ in the
\nsc of David A. I^amson, under sen- I
tenco of death at San Joes, Cal., following
his conviction on a charge of j
murdering his wife. Umson declares'
himself innocent of the woman's
death.
Only 53 votes were cast for mayor
and other city officers of Greenville
at the election there on Tuesday,
confirming a previous primary election.
The election of Mayor John
McH. Mauldin, a water commissioner j
and six aldermen was unanimous. I
Funeral services for "Ring Gardner,
famous author, humorist and playwright,
who died Monday night, were
held yesterday mornihg at his late
homo at East Hampton, I>ong Island.
His body was cremated.
King Christian of Denmark, celebrated
his 63rd birthday anniversary
on Tuesday. Ruth Bryan Owen, United
-States minister io Denmark, was
the only woman among the dignita>
ries extending felicitations.
An injunction has been issued by a
Tallahnssee, Fla., court to restrain
tho state of Florida from borrowing
money from the federal public works
fund, on the ground that the state
cannot pledge its credit.
State Fair to Hdve,
School Day for Pupils
Columbia, Sept. 30.?-Each year an
increasing number of school children
visit the State fair in Columbia, especially
on Friday, which is .School
Day and on which day children and
their teachers ar$ admitted free. The
State fair inaugurated this polity a
few years ago, feeling that the boys
and girls should see the fair?should
see this condensed picture of Soutb
Carolina, as reflected in the splendid
exhibits.
It ha$ become a custom in many
schools for the boys and girls to
come to Columbia in the school bus.
Teachers and trustees realize that
they will learn more in this day, visiting
Columbia and the fair, than if
at their books.
The State fair, through D. D. Witcover,
the president, has announced
ttfat the policy of free admissions for
schools on Friday will be continued <
this year and that- every child and
accompanying teacher will be most
welcomed.
"Make your plans now" Mr. Witcover
said in a special public message
to the schools of the state "to be
with us Friday, October 20th. We
will be expecting you, and you will
never regret the trip. We are arranging
a fine program for that day
keeping in mind that on that day our
1.1 LJ
grounds will be filled with boys and fl
girls from Horry to Pickens and from I
Jasper to old Marfboro." : |
* I
Whitewash Formula j
Henry D. Green, county agent, fur- B
nishes the following government for- I I
mula for preparing Whitewash: Slak? B
one-half bushel of quicklime or lump fl
lime with boiling water, keeping it I J
covered during the process; strain I |
and add one peck of salt dissolved in H
warm water. iBoil three pounds of I j
ground rice in water to a thin paste, I I
dissolve in warm water one-half I j
pound of ^Spanish whiting and one B
pound of clear glue; mix these well I j
together and let the mixture stahd I ;
for several days. Keep the wash fl
thus prepared in a kettle or portable fl
furnace and when used put it on as B
hot as possible with a brush.
As Mrs. Jerald Ayers Was being I j
hurried to a hospital at Hutchison, I
Kan., in a flivver, the stork, outdis- H
tanced the flivver and M boy, weigh- H
ing 8% pounds, was born in the car. !
[ Sir John Simon, * British foreign I j
secretary, told the League of Nations I j
at Geneva, Wednesday, that a prompt I i
disarmament agreement among the I
nations, is of vital necessity for world I j
political and economic fbcovery. ;/l :
Argentina, and Great Britain have I :
signed a new treaty intended to make I ,
for better trading between the two I j
nations. !
One.
Great Leader Says I
? of Another- I
Essolene leads the Held, I
because Essolene is made <
hy the Industry's Leader"
"Next to baseball 1 know motor fuel best* I've sold it
for years. 1 sell It now?all winter long-*?down in
Memphis, after the season'* over. j
"And let me tell you, folks, it takes a leader to dfcliver
the goods-?in baseball or in motor fucL That's why yon
run depend on Essolene?the largest oil organisation in
the world is behind it. When the Standard Oil Company I
of New Jersey says?' Essolene guarantee* smoother per*
formance* that certainly means you'll get smoother
performance.
"I use nothing but Essolene and Essolube Motor Oil in
I
"You'll get quick starting, smooth pick-up, mileage and ;
economy with Essblene that you never could get in Im
old-fashioned gasolines. Take my word for it.** H
MANAGER OF N. Y. GIANTS -NATIONAL LEAGUE CHAMP10NS-19U !
I
) V^STANDARD^V
( sso)
^^STATIONS
AT REGUL^fe jm GASOLINE PRICE Vl j
Essolene
Uua^a^tZee^ Smoother Performance 1
^ S'? Copr* IMS, Emo, I?c.
STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF NEW JE?9EY# STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF LOUISIANA MK
STANDARDVOIL COMPANY 0F PENNSYLVANIA COLONIAL BEACON OIL COMPANY, INC. I
" ' I
WELCOME I
FAIR WEEK VISITORS! I
a- ;
See our display of i
Chevrolet Cars I
At Fair Grounds and Show Roon~.3
on North Broad Street.
Make our place
Your headquarters
Leave your car with us for safe keeping
Dealer for Chevrolet Cars I
I