The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, October 27, 1933, Page PAGE SEVEN, Image 7
BOOKING BACKWARDI
KL* Krora tio ViU* of Th? Chronicle Flft?? ,nd Thirty Y,?r. .
i fiftbbn ybars ago
H October 25, 1918
p?nnsylv*n>? report? 14,805 deaths
from influen** epidemic for the first
tfhteon (lays of October.
j|r?. Annie ltoykin dies at her home
to the Doykiit section.
Kershaw county over-subscribes its
toot* of $88,000 in fourth Liberty
loin drive.
I Slaughter pen near Seaboard
jreight depot is condemned by city
^alth officer ?? unfit for use.
I Invitations received here to marof
Lieutenant William C. WalKce
to Miss Gladys Qart, of Orange^
George G. Alexander commissioned
u lieutenant, having finished at Camp
Hancock in machine gunners.
I Kerrynmn S. H. Twltty has collar
Km? 'broken in auto accident near
JL J. Mackey, prominent citizen of
Kershaw, dies of pneumonia.
[ W. R- DoLoache receives a carload
ftf Cleveland' tractors.
I Dr. Waller'Sorrell goes to Virginia
tmi Tennessee where he purchases
126,000 worth of fine-blooded steers
for farmers of Kershaw county.
B Fire destroyed $10,825 worth of,j
Kotton of Henry Savage's Westerham;
Rotation in West Watereq.
f Attorney E. D. Blakeney purchases
I the' Sydney Smith home on Chesnut
street.
I Eddfe Davis, well-known and well-!
liked colored lad of Camden, died at I
Camp .Sevier.
Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Davidson move
into Kve bungalow on Mill street af
ttr fire destroyed their home on north
Lyttleton streetv
I Robert GifTord and family move to
Greenville to make their home.
I Dr. Ray Little writes home about
Mr~services with British Medical
corps.
Cablegram received announces that
Kistler (Sinclair was wounded in action
in France.
> Deaths from flu and other causes
include Mrs. Nannie McCoy, Arthur
Outlaw, infant of Robert Outlaw,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lonnie
Watts.
Colored deaths included Harriet
Gaskins, James Richardson, Mose
Nelson, Jr? Susanna Boykin, Mary
Lawson, William Williarfts, Nora
Drakeford, Silla Samuels', Edward
Davis,,'James Richardson, Jr., Mettn
Boykin James, Thomas Whitley, John
Kennedy, Preston Lewis, Lee Robinson,
Rosa Lee Kelly, Daisy Green,
Baby DuiBose, Isaac Boykin, James
Anderson, Henrietta MoKeiver, Edgar
Adamson, David Manego,, Mary Lennix.
THIRTY YRARB AGO
. October 30, 1003
Camden city council puts a ban on
a carnival scheduled to show here.
Work commenced on " Catholic
-church near K. O. McCreight's residence.
K. H. bell, of Westville, dies suddenly
of heart failure.
Frank Young, young man of Rembert,
dies after partially recovering
from typhoid fever.
'Sam Patterson, good colored man,
residing a few miles north of Cam^>
den, found dead in his ibarn.
Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Coleman return
to Camden and occupy their
resi Fair street.
Old Dominion Paper Company at
Norfolk destroyed by fire with loss of
$60,000.
Krnest Kinard, U-year-old son of
John D. H. Kinard, of Newberry,
smothered to death while plying
with other children ij> a pile of cotton.
lit mm I
Acreage Reduction
Campaign To Start
tJolumbia, Octr 23.?Dr. W. WLong,
extension director of Clemson
College, said today the. 1934 South
Cirolina cotton acreage reduction,
campaign probably would be launched
within the next two weeks.
Dr. Long made the statement at
i conference on the campaign here
attended by United States Senator
E. D. Smith and David R. Coker, of
Hartsville. ,
Smith and Coker expressed confidence
that the drive would succeed inkpreventing
< overproduction and " in
bringing higher prices.
Long said sectional conferences to
work out details would%be held soon
it Spartanburg, Aiken and Florence.
District Agents J. H. Ward, of Aiken;
A. A. McGOwan, of Spartanburg and
J. T. Lazar, of Florence* attended the
conference here. ?
Bear Admiral Richard' Byrd on
board his flagship, the ^Jacob Ruppert
piled from Newport News, Va^ Saturday
on the first leg of his journey
to the South Pole. He'expects to be
way for two years.
Jesse Patterson, negro, was hanged
to the jail at Columbus, Miss., Friday
while other prisoners droned spirit's
It was the first legal execution
to the county in thirty years.
Play To Be Presented at Lugoff
The public is invited to attend the
delightful little play, "Mr. Loring's
Aunts," presented by an all-women's
cast at Lugoff school house Friday
night, October 27th, at 8 o'clock.
The cast is composed of Mrs. J. B.
Durham, Mrs. J. C. Team, Mrs. Victor
Ward, Mrs. H. A. Rabon, Mrs. J. B.
Dickson, Mrs. E. T. Truesdale, Mrs.
J. W. A. Sanders, Mrs. Shelby Gardner,
Mrs. -W. iL. .Sanders, Misses
Nancy Pearce, Mary Lee Ward, Juan-ita
Rabon, Lucy McCaa, Alma Ward,
Anna Kate Wjatts, Catherine Jones
and Nina Jone$
The play will be directed by Mr.
Lord, principal of Lugoff school.
Music wilLbe^ Yimiished by Mr. and
Mrs. LordV
Come every body and see what a
predicament ^Mr. Loring's aunts get
into. * '
Miss Betty' Thomas, of Camden,
will dance between acts.
The admission charge will be 15c.
Huey Long told a group in Louisiana
on Saturday that the NRA is
"not* working," and asserted that he
saw*very little hope for national recovery
unless his program for decentralization
of wealth is adopted.
Hail stones of such size fell on the
football Held at Normal, 111., Saturday
during the progress of the last quarter,
thai the game had to be called
off. ^
. 7' " \ . ' ' ' '
Turkeys For Sale
Bourbon Red Turkey farm I
Owned and Operated By I
N. C. BOYKIN, McKEE 6RAHAM- I
I and JOS. M. SMITH I
| TttepJiiuie 2402 f I
f
.i?m ,<t'1~~iue^, I ui wm
Eight Point Buck
Captured in Yard
^ Marion, Oct. 24.?This morning
atoolit 10 o'clock an ^ight point buck
weighing about 300 pounds ran into
Marion and stopped in the poultry
yard of Mrs. J. C. Mace's residence.
His antlers became entangled in the
wire fence juat beneath the south
window of Mrs. Mace's bedroom.
Mts^JMnce phoned for help and Z. L.
Lloyd and A, S. Ivey, assisted by *
Negro, trussed him up, placed him in
a truck and brought him up on Main
street, where he attracted the attention
of large crowds.
6 The capture was made within 350
yards of the poatoffice. The deer had
been run out of Pee l>ee swamp by
do^s that were close on his trail and
was too tired to oflfor much resistance.
He will probably be sent to some zoological
park.
This is the third deex captured or
killed within the town limits of Marion
in recent weeks. '
DOCTORS AND WAGE EARNERS
Atlanta Physician** Will Treat Them
at Monthly Rates
Atlanat, Ga.-?<Serviees of a physician
may be available here soon to
persons of moderate means for the
sum of $1,50 per month, even if the
patient should be attacked successively
by most of the ills known to medical
science.
A group of 13 Atlanta doctors and
surgeons has petitioned the Fulton
county superior court for incorporation
of the "Fulton County Medical
Relief Association." Heads of families
whose income is not over $150 a
month and single persons earning not
more than $75 will be eligible for
membership. They would pay $1.60
each in return for any medical care
they might need. Applicants for
membership will not be required to
undergo a physical examination, but
the doctors will not attempt to treat
afflictions incurred prior to entry into
the association. Neither will x-ray
treatment or hospitalization be available
under the plan.
Subscribing members will be at
| liberty to choose any doctor belonging
to the association to treat them.
An 8ffice will be established where
new members will be assigned to the
doctor they like best. Income of the
association will be divived among the
physicians affiliated, on the basis of
the amount of time they give each
month to the work.
One of the largest and most impressive
religious meetings ever held
in Columbia ended when the Rev. Dr.
George W. Truett, pastor of the First
Baptist church in Dallas, Texas,
preached his final sermon in the town
aipiitorium the other night. Two
meetings were held on the day of the
bigcfootball game at the fair grounds,
and each was the lajjjest of the week.
About 60,000 people attended the 21
services held in- Columbia by Dr.
Truett, with hundreds of conversions.
Samuel Erasmus Wylie, former
Chester county treasurer and a prominent
citizen of Chester, had a large
funeral Sunday afternoon at Wife
A. R. P. church there. He was 59
years old and leaves his widow, nee
Miss Johnny Harrill, two ao^s and
three daughters in Chester, sfnd two
sisters, one in Chester and one in
Gqlnmtya-? _Li? . ??
The number of turkeys being gotten
ready for Thanksgiving dinners
in the United States this year is
estimated at 16,000,000.
; ,
SUNDAY DINNER
i SUGGESTIONS
, By ANN PAC.K
NOT all apples au ideal for both
eating and cooking but the Mcintosh
seems to be It Is green with
close red striping but the effect is
softened by a soft grey bloom. Con
cord and Tokay - grapes are both
plentiful and popular. Italian prune'
are now comir\g from Idaho. That
; delicious pear, the Bartlett, is still
plentiful ' and Inexpensive, though
other varieties are beginning to com*
into market. The only peaches now
available are the big California*,
which are beautiful to look at but no'
distinctively flavored.
The cabbage and its higher caste
relatives are beginning to dominate
the vegetable market. Cauliflower Is
* of high quality and very reasonable.
Broccoli and Brussels Sprouts are
available but will be more plentiful
^ and cheaper later.
The Quaker Maid Kitchen presents
the following menus for your Sunday
dinner. '
Low Cost Dinner
Lamb Shoulder Chops
Mashed Potatoes
Creamed Cabbage
Bread and Butter
Stewed Fresh Prunes
Ted or Coffee , Milk
Medium Cost Dinner
Fried Chicken Baked Tama
Green Beans ,
Tomato Satad wtttr Dressing
c' Bread and Butter >
Floating Island
Coffee Milk
Very Opecial Dtn&er
. Hooeydyw Meign -*
Oven-broiled Chicken Browned Yams
Fried Tomato Slices
Currant Jelly ' Rolls and Butter
Lemon Meringue Pie
Coffee Milk
' y
aSB?au ^-iMssmemaeamammBe^mmaatxmi
Aged Women Found
Dead In New York
New York; Oct. ?Two poorlydrcsscd
elderly women, one of whom
carried a hank book showing deposits
of 16,300, were found dead today on
the jpark bench of a traffic island
on Allen street, in the heart of the
Cihetto.
Both were unidentified. One was
40 years old and carried the bank
book showing deposits to the account
of Katie Cosgrave, in addition to
$87.30 in cash- The other was 6$
and penniless.
Police said the two had been seen
together in the neighborhood recently.
They found no outward marks of
violence on the bodies and said they
wore investigating the possibility the
women had been poisonod.
Gibson Opposes
Columbia, Oct. 20.?Speaker J. B.
Gibson, of the House 'of Representatives,
said today ho does not -favor
calling an extra session of the legislature
this fall to enact public iworks
legislation. The speaker said, "It is
too near the time for the regular
session to cbnvene for a special term."
He pointed out that ai\ extra session
would involve some expense. v
byrnbs"is for better navy
Palmetto Senator Says It Should Be
Built t'p To Tr,e?ty Limits
r> "
Returning from d naval inspection
trip through the Canal Zone and on
the West coast, Senator James F.
Byrnes advocated building up the
United States navy to the 1922 treaty
strength.
He said the present1 navy is well
balanced and- in splendid condition,*
adding that although he was much
encouraged by conditions as he found
them, he believes America ha9 not
the fighting weapons necessary for
naval equality.
"In the last treaty we scrapped
battleships and other nations scrapped
blue prints. In a-ny future agreements,
I will oppose scrapping battleships
until other nations do the same.
"We might just as well have no
navy as a second best navy."
The senator added that even with
the construction of 3& naval vessels
already authorized and on some of
which Work has been started, the
United States will not have the fleet
granted it by the treaty.
Japan, he continued, has- built her^
navy up to the treaty limit while!
Great Britain has almost taken up
her full naval strength.
"The trip demonstrated, however,
that the stablished navy which we
have is in splendid condition," Senator
Byrnes spid. "Certainly as far
as the naval force is concerned
we are superior to any other power."
It was here then the senator declared
that he felt the navy should be
built up to full treaty strength and
that A -second best navy was no better
than none at all. ""Ufttil there is
some further limitation of naval armaments,
we ought to see our navy is
the equal of any other."
The senator said that he was agreeably
surprised at the high type of enlisted
men he found in the naval service.
More than 60 per cent of the
men enlisted wept of the Mississippi
have high school educations or better.
Senator Byrnes, who will be chair"
man of the senate .naval appropriations
committee at the next session of
congress, together with other members
of thg appropriations committee,
made the inspection trip on the transport
Henderson, which was on one of
its regular trips to the west coast
carrying recruits.
The party sailed from Norfolk several
weeks ago, spent some time in
the panal Zone inspecting fortifications'
and proceeded to the coast
through the Manama Canal to witness
the maneuvers of the fleet.
Senhtor Byrnes left the inspection
party at San Francisco and came
back home via Chicago.
While Rev. John B. Adger Mulally
and his wife were absent ministering
to a bedridden woman on an adjoihing
plantation in Anderson county, burglars
broke into^ their home and looted
it of a great many articles, including
two ancient watches, a cherished ring
?other trinkets and jewelry?and
many other prized tokens of the longago,
besides all sorts of household
utensils and furnishings^ and almost
the entire stock of their small store,
besides money in marked envelopes
for paying interest to the Federal
Land Bank, for tax&s, for automobile
license plates, kept in a strong
box in the house, which was jimmied
and contained also invaluable documcnts
of two lives.
The oldest tree in (Scotland is said
to be a yew tree ln GleeTLyonT which
has an estimated age of more than
2,5Q0 years.
The govern nfent of Rumania has
indicated that it will act vigorously to
check a rising wave of anti-Semitism
In Rumania.
Satisfied with the promise of a
"square deal" from Federal conciliators,
1,200 striking coal miners of
Alabama returned to work yesterday.
General News NoCesIKathryn
Kelly, wife of George
"Machine Gun" Kelly, is now in a
woman's prison near Cincinnati, Ohio,
while her mother, Mrs. K. G. Shan- 1
non, is^in a prison neav Memphis, |<
Tenn. . Bbth women are to spend the
balance of their days in prison, i
though Kathryn declares her husband r
will rescue her before Christmas.
A 0-year-old child fired a rltte he I
found in his home at Arlisle, Pa. The
bullet from the rifle hit a stove, split I
and one piece ricocheted and hit a
brother, 11 weeks old, as he lay in hisj
erib, killing him instantly. Another
piece of the bullet narrowly missed a
second brothor as it passecj^luough a I
window. * I
Hugh Hawley, mail carrier from the 1
railway station at Wilson, N, C., re-1
ported Wednesday that in the early
morning he had been held up by a I
lone bandit, forced to drive. into a
body of woods, was tiled to a tree and 1
his mail sacks carried off. Officers I
found the mail sacks intact contain-1
ing $60,000 in currency later in the
day. Hawley was arrested without I
charges pending further investiga- I
tion. .
Higher prices for pork chops,
s?ge, ham bacon and corn meal are in I
store for consumers, through the de-1
cision of the farm administration to |
apply a processing tax on corn and I
hogs for a two year9 period beginning
November 5th. The farm adminis-1
tration lets it be known that under j
the farm act every effort will be made j
to prevent profiteering.
T\vq negroes of Anderson county!
were sentenced to a fine of $50 each I
for stealing jumpers, overalls, part of 1
a tent and gasoline from the county
chain gang camp, 1
Down in Marion county they had a
cake walk and a beauty contest at a
school house. In the beauty contest a
man slipped in dressed in girl's at-1
tire and won Ihe beauty prize.
Irvine Pagan, spinning overseer of
the Republic Cotton Mills, Great!
Palls, was found shot to death on an
island in the Catawba river, after a
search was instituted when he did I
not appear at the mill from a hunt- I
ing trip. He was accidentally shot I
under the heart, and his gun lay beside
his body. ^
Two men stole two cows from a I
pasture near Clinton, in GTcenville
county, hauled them in a truck to I
Spartanburg, had them slaughtered at
the municipal abatoir and sold the J
meat to a butcher there, about a week I
ago, and to date the officers have no
clue as to who they are. -.
D. D. Witcover, of Darlington, hasbeen
re-eleoted president of the (State I
Fair aseociution. Charges of ring
rule were made, but on the showdown,
Mr. Witcover was elected oyer
three opponent#. -There are 1?800
members of the association, bbt only
100 attended the annual meeting.
Geddes E. West, the new chief of
police of Spartanburg, is captain of
the local national guard company of
engineers, und is a veteran of the^
army in the Philippines and in France.
He it a native of White Stone and
joined the Spartanburg police department
in 1926. Sergeant S. Lee Rodger
s has -been promoted to be assistant
chief of police there.
Greenville people, among others,
are all worked up over having to buy
new automobile license plates by
November 1, when, they have, them for
arf of 1933. Several large meetings
have been held there about it, including
one of the automobile dealers who
are enraged because purchasers of a
new car now must pay for its licensing
for the last six months also.
Two textile plants in Horse Creek
valley, in Aiken coupty, were closed
at the week end by n strike Of about
900 workers, who charged that employees
were discharged for joining a
union. Pickets at the mills were
withdrawn when an American Federation
of Labor official arrived, and
th\s official asked Governor Blackwood
to have Senator Wngoner to
send a representative to investigate.
This the "governor did.
Following quick and srtxong protests
to the attorney general and other
state officers about school district
trustees *Yn some counties diverting
part of the recent state payment of
school moneys to counties for pther
purposes, the comptroller general has
written county treasurers' that the
money sent may be used only for
teachers salaries. The comptroller
general gays he will keep in touch
with state aid for schools and see
that the money reaches the teachers
for whom it is intended.
The South Carolina state , relief
council has authorized the employment
of 100 more teachers at $12 to
$14 a week, under the same plan as
obtained for the employment of teachers
of adult classes and continuation
schools in this state. Applicants
must pass the scrutiny of the R. F? C.
as to being really needy, must be unemployed
and must have teaching certificates.
Rut they must teach agriculture,
home economics and other
vocational classes. Moat of the demand
to believed to be for home economics
instruction.
Declares License Law
Cannot Be Enforced
Anderson, Oct. is. -Leon W. Hat*
ris, 10th judicial circuit solicitor, today
said motorists have a right to
operate their cars to December' 31
under licenses bought before May 22
and offered hU legal services gratis
to anyono arrested in this connection.
Harris, former United States senatorial
candidate, expressed opposition
to change in the automobile liLunae
plate year to require renewals
before November 1 and said autoiats
have a legal right to operate machines
to December 81 under licenses bought
prior to May 22, the date the new
act was sighed.
He said car owners wno bought'
tags before May 22 have a contract
with the state that subsequent legislation
cannot alter and said that any'
person, arrested by u highway patrol?
man should demand trial by jury. *
Harris .said it was his opinion that
patrolmen making such arrests would ,
be guilty of making illegal arrest*
for which suits can be brought against
them and their bondsmen.
Meanwhile Anderson 'county citizens
were forming "no tag until
Christmas" association and said they
would usk other counties to join the
movement. ^ *
Not That Kind of a Cow
Pat and Mike were detailed for
scout duty overseas. The commanding
officer ordered them to conceal
themselves in a cow's hide and pre:
tend to graze over toward the German
trenches, making careful observations.
Pat was given the front
legs and Mike the hind legs.
All went well for a'tiipe. Then
Pat received a violent prod from,the
rear. . "Come on, let's get out of ^
herej" hissed Mike.
"What's the matter?" queried Pat.
"Matter?" snorted Mike. . *%ere
comes a German with a milk pail."
The body of a man found dead early
Friday morning in the . rear of the
1,000 block of Gervais street was
identified1 as Leroy S. Oolclough, 85, _ J
of Dalzell. Mr. Colclough, who was
employed at the Citizens Conservation
Corps camp, near Sumter, came to
Columbia Thursday to attend the
State Fair, according to his brother,
H. H. Colclough,owho came to Columbia
and identified the body at McCormick's
mortuary after he had
read a newspaper description of the
dead man. Coroner John A. Sargeant
i investigated the case and after a
physician had declared death wee due .
I to 'natural causes, announced that no
[inquest would be held.
The Mexican government has sent
half a dozen military planes to the
state of Sonora in fear of a Yaqui
Indian uprising.
Renew Your Health
By Purification
Any phyHlcinn will tell you that
"Perfect Purification of the System
is Nature ' Foundation of Perfect
Health." Why not rid yourself of
chronio ailments that are undermining
your vitalityf Purify your
entire system by taking a thorough
course of Calotabs,?once or twice
W week for several weeks?and see
Jit> w Natyre reward# you" with ~
health. '. '
Oalotabs purify the blood by activating
1 the liver, kidneys, stomach
and bowbls. 1* 10 iti. and 85 tf?Tr~
packages. All dealers. (Adv.)
~ 666
Liquid, Tablets, Salve, Nose Drops
Checks Malaria in 3 days, Colds first
day, Hendaches or Neuralgia in 30
minutes.
FINE LAXATIVE AND TONIC
Most Speedy Remedies Known
Extra-Fast
Relief
' ' ? * . .
" Demand and Get ?
GENUINE BAYER
eASPIRIN
BECAUSE of a unique process
in manufacture, Genuine Bayer
Aspirin Tablets are made to dia- ,.
integrate?or dissolve?INSTANTLY
you take them. Thus they start
to work instantly. Start taking
hold" of even a severe headache,
neuralgia, neuritis or rheumatic pain ^
a few minutes after taking.
And . they provide SAFE relief?
for GenuineBAYER ASPIRIN does
not harm the heart. So if you want?t~
^QUICK and SAFE relief see that
you get the real Bayer article. Look ,
for the Bayer cross on every tablet
as .shown above and for the words
GENUINE BAYER ASPIRIN on
every-bottle or package yon buy. j,- -.
,vY?t. Mmbf N.B. A.
. OBMtHNt BAjER - ASPIRI
podS^T 'iuRiFnli tittsr" ;
? 1 . 1
. . .. .-.v.-. ..: