The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, January 25, 1935, Page PAGE TWO, Image 2
?== WEtXLY BULU1TIN -=*?r _
S.C.Game cjFish Associaiion
^ ^1 Ifiru Statewide Cooperation Game.
nk Jm Alfl %7i t\ loresi Con he Material! ,.i\ ,
Uncreused for ihcticnefit vfAii 2*f*
I
Interest in the program being
sponsored by this Association is
growing in lea pa and bounds. New
chapters arc being organized at the
rate of three or four u week and
membership in the older chapters is
steadily increasing. All of thi> is
very cneouraging and heartening to
the officials of the Association.
Recently a chapter was organized)
in Marion with an initiul membership I
of approximately 100, and organiza-i
tion meetings of new chapters ure
schedule<l for Conway, Georgetown,
Kingstree, Rock Hill and VV'inn-boi o,
with tentative plans made lot trie)
organization of a chapter in Ham
well, Hamberg, Allendale, Waiter
boro, Beaufort, Manning and St.
Matthews. My all indication- theie
will be an active chapter of this Association
in practically every county]
. J
of the before ! ebrua i > l>th
With i h i .-> eoopei a t ion a/nl wi'lej
spread I f 111* i? ?t t h long bout the a lull'i
the t hai.i (jt the .?of our h'g-'
ixlativ? in ;.N vi'iy bright in (
Aj?j>aicii!Iv. i>:?- Miitiimnt hi the
leg1->it t j r r i- moie fav orub.V (bun ever
lii'luii*, and 11.< A -MKiatio/i is exerting
< vt i \ <lfi.i t to the end Ihat
< \< iy iiu uibi f of the legislature will
he fu.'ly n< (miitiic<l with the merits
n!' '.!.r I< gj- atioii w<- are soring
by the !iii.< our bid* mine up for
fiftil! rciriMifrt III H?ll.
A- .it.1 ud If; the beginning the
nix'.<i gaining momentum unci
it hih<.< vi rwi\ member of the Ah-??
.iiit.) talk up the work that we
ai?- ;<>?ng ( < utto/np-'i-h, and enlist
:i,<- n.;-a:hy and good will of the
pi iKia! public in our uims and obj<
<tiV< v
To Make Poultry
Shipment Saturday
Next Saturday, .January 1C>, poultry
will be bought from a m. to INoon
in Kershaw, S. in rear of
the Hank. From 1 p. m. to H:.'HJ p m.
jtoutry will <be bought in Rcthune, S.
C.
All farmers and others interested
in selling their surplus poultry are
requested to bring their poultry eith-1
er to Kershaw or Rethune <iuring the'
hours named above. However, every,
one is requested to bring their poultry )
in coops easy to handle and not tip
bring them in sacks. Also do not tie
feet. |
The price list include- Fat Colored
(
Hens, Colored Hen-. Leghorns. noesters,
Capons. Young Turkey Hens,
Young Turkey 'IVm:-'. CM Tu.'key.s,!
I hicks and (jee-e. and Y- ong (luna-as. ,
I'ri. r !. a-. I ;? tl'e Lank
ai;d Ho t ( Ml i. ;> L. -r,e ar..i Ker- j
-haw i
\? : 11 > \ . ; :i ' y may
. .ha-. . . ' "ey wish
i II !'. L * . County
,\g. t,t.
"lernble" I'm-om renditions Denied.
1 * '1111 I i hr . ;; onditions at
' .? c -a penitentiary are
' '- a oa-; a- have been paint*
' ' he ef Representative
Ma".:- F. A hi a ins. uf Newberry, vice
-L:i: :;lt. use penitentiary!
% < ifn n, * ? r
Aiuau;- ma.ii* tiiis statement toa:';.,*
tin* ommittee had made i
::-i. it.*: the penitentiary and j
a- ueoriii it ions with its superin-]
' del.:. Colonel Malcolm Scarbor- ;
' : g h I
Turn About
Willie? Ma, can I have Tommy
Ckidniere come-over to our house to
play Saturday?
Ma- No;-you make altogether too
much noise and you tear the whole
house to pieces. You'd better go over
to his house to play.
With a nice new seen! catalog and
a good hot stove in the kitchen, this
is almost as good as summer itself.
|
!()d(l Accidents As
Reported In News
L a
Chicago, dan. 7.?Accidents will
happen. Some of the mi?h?pg of 191*4
were the kirkd that "just couldn't occur."
i but they did, and here are a few
oddities collected from the records of
the National Safety council:
Nine-year-old Henri Guyot was
sucked up by a wheat binder in
France. 'He came out unhurt in a
sheaf of grain.
An automobile hit a baby carriage
in Jersey City. Phillip Romano, dnonth-old,
and a pair of pillows flew
hrough the air with the greatest of
.>ase. The infant landed on the pillows;
nobody hurt.
William McFadden, Chicago, started
up a flight of iron stairs. A step
broke. He was bruised, his head
caught in the superstructure.
A dog fell from a 1 Oth story window
in New Jersey, landing on Albert
Barrett. The man's - k m 11 was
fractured.
A. Dayton, <).. woman wa - blind'-d
by smoke from her cookstove. She
ran into the street. A ear killed her.
Mrs. Janet Ward's auto .-hot o.?r
a ITS foot clilT <>r. K.<>nomy mountain,
rolled over 11 times and smacked into
a tree. She wa< bruised a bit.
A I.os Angeles youth decide! to
end it all with gas. 11 * lit a cigarette
and was blown ou! of the house.
John Bisesky sat on his front porch,
A passing car Hipped a stone against
his head. It killed him.
Harvey Pontius, of Kcndallvi-ie,
Ind.. sciatihed a mat. h or; o;l-<oak?'d
trousers. lie required new pant- and
a <1 net?>r.
A dog in Murphyboro. 111., committed
suicide by turning on the ga- jets
of a kitchen stove.
They had to operate on I'seher
Schupack. of Brooklyn. He swallowed
a toothbrush while hic-coughing.
Joseph Pit tie. New Philadelphia, ().,
extricated himself from what was
left of his car. The undamaged radio
blared. "I'll Be Glad When You're
Dead. You Rascal. You."
A practical joker shoved a paint
Poultry and Eggs i
Forecast Given
Clt-mson College, Jan. 19,?Withj
,uj>pl|<!i poultry and eggs expected j
t0 b<* relatively shorter until summer,
prn-fs will be higher until another j
,/t,p i.s made than during the corres-!
po/iding months of the last few years j
tut probably not relatively as high |
as poultry feed prices, says 0. M.
Clark, extension agricultural economist,
summing up the outlook for
poultry producers.
As basis for his opinion Mr. ('lark
gives briefly these facts:
The 19114 Match of baby chicks was
apparently about 11 per cent less
than in 1933. Marketings of old hens
and other chickens during late summer
and fall, particularly from the
drought area of the West, were heavy.
Therefore, the total number on
the farms on October 1, 1934, was
about seven per cent less than on the
corresponding date a year earlier, and
the difference i.s probably greater now
than then. In the South Atlantic
states there has apparently been a
slight increase in the number of chickens.
With fewer layers, production
is expected to be less during the remainder
of the winter than during
last winter, assuming comparable
weather conditions. The spring "flush"
of egg production will not likely be
as heavy as usual, because the relatively
heavy spring egg production
Comes out of the corn belt, and the
reduction in the number of layers has
been greatest in that area.
Srtorage stocks of eggs January 1,
1936, were about 13 per cent less than
on that date last year; storage of
stocks of poultry, however, -were
slightly more.
The number of baby chicks hatched
in commercial hatcheries in the states
east of the Mississippi during October
and November for winter broilers was
much larger thun for the corresponding
months of 1933, the number of
salable chicks hatched being about
150 per cent greater. The demand
for winter broilers lust year was good
and some improvement in the general
economic situation since then seems
to justify the expectation for a good
demand this year. However, there is
a definite limit to the amount of
-ul'.iy pi oduets of this kind that the
'market will take at good prices.
"lire Hunting" 15 \ Indians.
' okimhia. Jan. "File hunting"
was one o! the t hie! methods used by
thi' Indians in the seventeenth centui
\ f..r deer, elk and other larg<
game", deflate- the thesis <>' Ann*.
, K. (Iregorie in the library of the
'University of South Carolina.
After the leaves had fallen, a party
of Indians would fire the woods in a
'circle of five or six miles. The circle
contracted until the Indians could *ee
the game in the middle of the circle.
j punting and terrified. Then the Ire
i win put out and the animals caught
'or killed.
brush under the nose of Gabriel Bernard,
author of "Terror" works, lie
(died of fright.
, i FSorine I.avelle? she scoffed at
'death from a lofty trapeze?fell
I downstairs and was fatally injured.
Hut wait until you read this one:
Heulah Hopkins was taking a bath
i in Gary, Ind. She stepped on the
soap, plunged through a window and
dropped three floors to a sand pile.
She suffered some embarrassment.
| WITH OTHER rAI'KKH j
Someone ha? said: "Following the
lines of least res is la nee makes rivers
and men crooked."?Monroe Enquirer.
1 >id anyone think to have a Republican
stuffed and mounted for exhibition
purposes ??Thomaaton (Ga.)
Times.
1 >" " 1 *
Most anybody else can tell you
what you ought to l>e able to do with
your money.- -Orangeburg TimesDemocrat.
A woman never throws anything
worthless away. She thinks maybe
she can give it away later as a bridge
prize.?Atlanta Constitution.
A professor says the average woman
has only 800 words in her vocabulary.
Yes, but think of the rapid
turnover!?The Pathfinder.
So scientists don't know what
causes thunder? Well, they've never,
slipped in from a poker game at 3
a. m.?Wisconsin State Journal.
People have quit borrowing' from
Peter to pay Paul, as both of them
ure borrowing from the government.
?-Greensboro (Ga.) Herald-Journal.
There are two classes who impose
upon you: The strong who can lick
you and the weak who know you
won't jump on them.?Washington
Post.
An old volcano in Arizona started
erupting and pouring out gas and poison
fumes on the very same day thut
Congress met. Was tihat nice, we ask
you??The Pathfinder.
The following comment was recently
printed in the editorial columns
of the Greenville News, published by
A. S. Hardy & Sons:
"Make no bad news and the News
will print none."
Senator Capper says: "I have always
held that a newspaper really
belongs to its community." Perhaps
that's why we have the delinquent
subscriber.?Springfield (Minn.) Advance-Press.
A seven-year-old Brooklyn boy is
reported to have an intelligence quotient
of 230, but a batting average
around .375 will get him more money
when he grows up.?Rockford (111.)
Register-Tribune. x
An information column recalls that
j Harlem was named by the Dutch
! " who pur.ha-e.I Manhattan
J m t f.i -avage-. and. if their
; - .lad- - -:iou,<i return, they probably
j would think the titw had reverted.?
^Loui-\ ).,? < ourier-.lournal.
A leader in world thought says:
"Destroy those who want strife."
That- sounds like sharp medicine, but
who can say that the disease is so
mild that it doe- not call for a bitter
and drastic do.-e ? ?Hartsville Messenger.
W hue preparing a backbone for
cooking. Mrs. S. Bennett, found a
sharp niece of steel, worn thin on
one end. lodged between two of the
.joints of the backbone, lengthwise.
I he hog, weighing about 225 pounds
before dressing, seemed in no way
affected by this metal in its spine.?
W'alterboro Press and Standard.
I he St. Louis association of manufacturers'
representatives recently
voted -17 to 1 in favor of newspaper
advertising over radio advertising in
deciding a debate on the relative value
of the two types of media argued
by St. Louis university students.?
Wisconsin Press.
A pretty fair indication that prosperity
is on its way back to us is
found in the. fact that deaths in traffic
accidents mounted 4,000 in 1934
above 1933, and reached an all time
high. In 1932, the worst year of the
depression deaths from this cause
were 5.500 less than last year.?Leroy
(N. Y.) News-Gazette.
SOME "FILERS."
Here are some "figgers", we always
liked that English pronunciation
because it was a familiar thing in
childhood, that may he of interest:
One person out of every six in the
United States is receiving some sort
of "relief" in the United States.
Those who work, any sort of work,
are now contributing the equivalent
of one day's work out of every four
in the way of taxes, all kinds of
taxes.
These figures are going the rounds,
having appeared first in the United
States News. Their accuracy has not
been verified but the figures are probably
not far from actual facts.
Many people do not know they are
: paying taxes. They think of taxes as
money paid to an official treasuer,
who issues a receipt, hut the other
I kind are far greater.?Greenwood
j Index-Journal.
And the worst thing about this ter'
rible situation is that Roosevelt and
the biain trusters do not think the
[ "figgers" big enough but are lying
awake at night trying to devise more
Ways in which to increase the army
of those employed at public expense
and to increase the national debt so
as to provide the funds with which
; to pay the tax-eaters.?Greenville
I Observer.
I>r. Thomas Lumsden, of London,
announces he serum which wiii
kill cancer cells but will not harm
healthy tissue. It is not yet ready
for use on humans.
South Carolina
Rice Cooks Best
News And Courier.
South Carolina leads the nation
when it comes to the proper copking
of rice according to a bulletin issued
and distributed by the Ix>uisiana state
department of agriculture and immigration.
The bulletin was :ompiled by J.
Mitchell Jenkins, associate agronomist,
cereal crops and diseases, bureau
of plant industry, United States
department of agriculture, and superintendent
of the rice experiment station
f\t Crowley, l^a. Mr. Jenkins, a
native of' Charleston, has been in
charge of the Crowley station since
i you.
Mr. Jenkin's bulletin? covers practically
every phase of rice growing.
It gives much history about its production.
"Rice production," he says, "began
in the South Carolina colony as a result
of an experimental sowing of
rice in the governor's garden in Charleston
in 1004. During the Colonial
period of our history the population
was too small to consume much of
the crop. There was however, a ready
market for it in England, to which
country the greater crop was exported.
"As late as 1&50 South Carolina,
North Carolina and Georgia produced
90 per cent, and South Carolina alone
produced over 60 per cent of the crop,
"The production of rice in the
South Atlantic states was greatly affected
by the Civil war. On account
of the destruction of property and the
scarcity of money and labor, only a
small part of the old plantations could
be cultivated. In these states the
growing of rice 'became less profitable
each year because of the lack of funds
to finance the new plantation management
which had become necessary
by the changed labor conditions."
Mr. Jenkins explains the rice of
Louisiana to the top as a rice-producing
state. It has been the leading
state since 1889. Now I^ouisiana has
555,000 acres of the 1,055,000 acres
in the United States. The rest is
fairly evenly divided between Texas,
Arkansas and California, with only
15.000 acres in all other states.
Mr. Jenkins" reference to cooking
in South Carolina follows:
"In seeking information on the art
of cooking rue, no mistake is made
. in referring to South Carolina, where
the true value of this cereal has been
appreciated for over two centuries.
| "A Carolina housewife would adjvise
the using of one pint of rice after
thorough washing, which she conI
siders important, to a 'quart and a
pint of water,' and a teaspoonful of
common salt.
"This is boiled over a quick fire
[ for ten minutes, stirring occasionally.
I Then pour off all or nearly all the
j water; cover the vessel and put over
a slow fire, and allow it to steam for
I fifteen minutes at least, stirring oc!
casionally. The rice will be soft or
grainy according to the quantity of
water left on it when put to steam, j
and the length of time allowed in
steaming. The larger the quantity
of water and the shorter the steaming,
the softer will be the rice."
Mr. Jenkins has been responsible
for several of the highest quality
rices now grown. He has always been
interested in the development of varieties
possessing good cooking qualities
and has recently released two varieties,
Rexoro and Shoemed. which
are being grown commercially and
compare favorably with the high
quality varieties once grown in South
Carolina.
Mrs. Skinner Dead
Funeral services for Mrs. T. C.
-Skinner, who died Saturday night at
her home at Stokes Bridge, were held
on the following Monday morning at
II o'clock in Hebron church, with the
pastor, Rev. E. S. Dunbar, assisted by
Rev. Bryce Herbert of Bishopville,
conducting the last sad rites.?Bishopville
Messenger.
Finds Woman's I,egs
laurel, Miss., Jan. 21.?The legs of
a white woman, severed below the
knees and the lower portions missing,
were found by a negro rabbit hunter
12 miles north of here late today.
TV hunter's dogs nosed out the gruesome
find, which was wrapped in a
sugar sack, and were devouring the
flesh when the hunter came upon
them.
Youth Is Executed
Milledgeville, Ga., Jan. 21.?Charlie
Dotson, 17-year-old negro convicted
of killing Policeman Wilbur B. Souther
in Ellaville 28 days ago, was
electrocuted at state prison here today.
He was the ^youngest person
ever to die in the electric chair here.
Not Many Left
Columbia, Jan. 21.?Governor Olin
D. Johnston said today that bo was
closing his first week in office without
having received personally any
application for executive clemency.
The governor discussed prospects
for a busy legislative session atoad
and said that Jie was cutting to a
minimum bis office engagements, giving
his "first consideration" to the
legislature,
i
NOTICE
THE RAILROAD tX)MMISSION no
SOUTH CAROLINA, N ?*
COLUMBIA,
IN RE: Docket No. 1398? I*he
plications of J P WilliumsoH 5
Greenville, South Carolina, for ru.
D Certificates of Public Convenient
and Necessity to render motor freight
service over routes as followsOrangeburg,
iS. C.. ami the inU,
section of Highways Nos. 3 and 3 via
North and Swansea, '
Columbia to Charleston, S. (' vi.
St. Matthews, Orangeburg, Bowing
llarleyville, and Summer v file, S (' 1
Columbia to Charleston, S. C via
Sumter and Manning, S, C.
N. C.-S. C. State Line (Charlotte)
to S. C.-Ga. State Line (Augusta) via
ILancaster, Camden, Lexington, l ee?
ville, Johnston, Trenton, Aiken'and
Hamburg, S. C.
Camden, S. C. to Sumter S. C. via
Bishopville, Hartsville, Darlington to
Florence. '
Bowman, S. C. to Bowman, S Q
via Elloree, Parlor, Eutawville, liolly
Hill, Goosecreek, I^adson, Dorchester
St. George and Branchville, S. C. v
A public hearing in the above en- titled
matter will be held,in the <w
miss-ion's offices, in the State Office
Building, corner Senate and Sumter
Streets, Columbia, South Carolina at
10:00 A. M., Wednesday, January 30
1935, to determine the requirements
of public convenience and necessity in
the promises,
M. W. GOODMAN,
Superintendent Motor Transportation, j
NOTICE
THE RAILROAD COMMISSION OK
SOUTH CAROLINA,
COLUMBIA.
IN RE: Docket No. 1382?The applications
of J. P. Williamson, of
Greenville, South Carolina, for Class
D. Certificates of Public Convenience
and Necessity to render motor freight
service over routes as follows:
Between the N. C.-S. C. State Line
and the S. C.-Ga. State Line, via
Blacksburg, Gaffney, Spartanburg,
Greer, Greenville, Easley, Clemson :
College, .Seneca, Walhalla and Westminister,
iS. C.
I Betwen Greenwood and Union, S.
C., via Laurens, Woodruff, Spartan
burg and Jonesville, S. C.
I Between the N. C.-S. C. State Line
and the S. C.-N. C. State Line via
Landrum, Campobello, Inman, Spartanburg
and Chesnee, S. C.
Between Columbia and Anderson, South
Carolina, via Clinton, Laurens,
Greenville, Piedmont, Pelzer, Williamsburg
and Belton.
Please take notice that the hearing
in the above entitled matter, which I
was scheduled for 10:00 A. M. Wednesday,
January 10, 1935, has been
[postponed until Wednesday, January J
130, 1935, 10:00 A. M.
I ? M. W. GOODMAN.
Superintendent Motor Transportation.
I ?
TAX RETURNS
Notice is hereby given that the Auiditor's
Office will l>e open for receiv- -i
ing Tax Returns from January 1st,?^
1935, to March 1st, 1935. All persons
owning real estate or personal prop- ~
erty must make returns of the same j
within said period, as required by
law, or be subject to a penalty of 10 !
per cent.
1 he Auditor will attend in person
or by deputy at the following places )
in the county on the dates indicated
for receiving returns:
Bethune?January 17th and 18:h. -Kershaw?January
23rd and 24th. ;
Liberty Hill?January 29th.
Westville?.January 30th.
Blaney?January 31st.
All persons between the ages of 21
ar.d 60 years, inclusive, are required
to pay a poll tax, and all persons between
the ages of 21 and 50 years,
inclusive, are required to pay a Road
[tax, unless excused by law. All "
'Trustees., Guardians, Executives, Administrators
or Agents holding property
in charge must return same.
Parties sending tax returns by mail
must make oath to same before some
officer and fill out the same in proper
manner or they will be rejected.
B. E. SPARROW,
Auditor Kershaw County.
39 sb.
SPECIAL TAX NOTICE
After January 31, 1935, one per
cent assessment penalty will be added
to all taxes assessed for the year /
193-1 not paid. This penalty is added
according to law for the month of
r ebruary.
S. W. HOGUE, Treasurer,
of Kershaw County, Camden, S. C. j
. 44-48 sb. J
NOTICE TO DEBTORS AND
CREDITORS < .
parties indebted to the estate
of J. R, Belk are hereby notified to
make payment to the undersigned,
and all parties, if any, having claims -j
against the said estate will present -i
them likewise, duly attested, within
the time prescribed by law. \
Trannie C. Belk
Apnie May Williams
Minnie McDonald
Executrix's of the estate of J. R. Belk - a
Camden, S. C., January 18, 1935.
Highway Commissioner Dead
Florence, Jan. 20.?W. H. Andrews, 4
member of the state highway com- ?
mission from the Eastern district of
South Carolina died tonight at a hospital
here, where he had been ill since ;
December.
He was a member of the staff of
former Governor Cole L. Blease. He J
uas appointed to the state highway
commission by Governor Blackwood'";
a year ago to succeed the late J. I* -vJ
Wheeler. The .town of Andrews was
named for him. ;
~ -
New Kidneys 21
yyttcwltr wygLaa. Nywyw?%
j
| Repair Work
I FOR LESS MONEY I
1 | I Why pay more for your automobile repair work when you can I
I get it done here for less? j |
I THE REASON? I
j j Our shop is one of the best-equipped in this section. In it you will
| ! find every kind of equipment for producing high quality work in the j ,
! j least possible time. Time is money?therefore our prices are less | j
j j than they would be without these machines. Another thing?our re- j
i : pair shop is operated on a cash basis eliminating bad accounts. I i
j And, too, your car or truck is not held in the shop for long periods I
; j: of time causing you the loss of their use. * j
j Consider this when you need that next overhaul or repair job. j
II We Work on All Makes of Cars I
I REDFEARN MOTOR COMPANY
II SALES SERVICE I
II TELEPHONE 140- WEST DeKALB ST. I
M ^ _ ???????????????????8 ]