The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, February 01, 1935, Page PAGE EIGHT, Image 8
I Make Every Aci^ 1
I'Do Its Best I
I With the same labor, same muK ?me acreage, I
I and with a good <|iiulity of Grade Fertilizer I
I added, think what a higg* ',rofit W,U eam- I
I Armour's Fertilizers I
I V. C. Co s Fertilizers I
I Swift's STEER Fertilizers I
I Planter's Fertilizers I
I The Fertilizers you buy when you want I
I QUALITV and Most Profitable Results I
I WE HAVE IT! I
I j I
j j ? !
I PLACE YOUR ORDERS NOW WITH I
I McLeod & McLauchlin I
J Telephone 53 " 109 East DcKalb St. I j
I Coal Wood lee Feeds I
W ill Close Mill I
In Massachusetts!
T t v < atnous Hamilton Mills at
-utr.h*. are to be liquidated an<!
-c,:. (ver, so far as its present |
,i e concerned.
TYr.-f...ly, the people pleaded for
tr.gr fMitiuance in operation. The
~:l'U r.ive employed 1,100 hands and
r.jvc made fair profits. It is a matter
industrial record that Mr. Her,r.ihnn,
who has been head of the
Ha-niKon, is a genius in business. He
to. k the mills when thev were almost
worthless as a producer and by a
a holly new method of styling and
selling, he made them active, profitable
and of good standing in the industrial
world.
Hieir closing is one of the mo.-:
^dramatic and definite examples of
destruction of good business, by cr.
4>l?yees of the mill itself, be per cent
whom are sorry today. Thi r. have;
.been examples of destruction ..f going-business
by director- and -t.gk holders.
But this is a ititTeren: rt
of catastrophe. The Ham .'.tor,
been hampered by .- kt after
?.Ov up. arranged and f..st? ?vd by
side agitators, Y< t }'t h a', g
ernment does r.< : ,{.?fugg*. st a
remedy. If the ?a: t a',. ...
there would b. a Id. .. .: ..g g,
tion. But the capital -: ;- ft a , .w;.:
the employee- art' many
Some th-ee strike- have h. . n called
on the Ham or. - . n. < St ptt n it r
(l<abor day ). I. : J T- ? y haw a.l
for the purpose vt a-sert;r.g tr,c
claims of the 1' T. W >. trivial matters,
of un ion k \i11 , . When the
fourth strike .tr.;*
holders.. deemed t y,.?
speaker at the n g Tu?-.iav evening
said. p? r v? r.* , ; h.e'o
were fully -at.-tie.i ami a .. n, v. havr
struck, ha.t they not , r. ft rc.
ed by outside sg tators.
The rejoinder the 1* T W. <;
that the st.vk h. o. g e - < are h.u tT *-g
They \\:;; reopen t e mill v
with a new org* nitration b.t w.th
the same mom y-b.v h g Tu - o'
course, no: ver.he 1. \? . n the meantime,
So;.tnhr:dg, - g p. pulation;
mill worker- a re .* n.g other
jobs; Mr. la.nr.ir.an w . ; - oah.y try
it elsewhere and the n':d Hamilton
will deubtless be b arded up a d sold
in liquidation.
All for what? Miss dear. Gaufhier,1
local president of the U. T. W. says. I
"It will not break up the union." |
Whether it does or not?and it will'
not, unless a thorough investigation
is made of the charges that rang
through the hall?it breaks up South
I
bridge and many happy homes
lt is now a matter : "i ! vat
stockholders of corpo a".oh- a!o a.-"
liable to "un. >r;:ri " . 1 . ; v' v.
business and th* .r. . n a"< ? \
notions of union-. w:.t-.\.: i-uy a-1
vd by !!'.< ? ni: rteM .ea-ier-. Ar. i
bad loadi an- habit- to :'11:1 :
: ir. ongarmatii r.s \\ hioh have >uoh
i l u i.. i a 11. o; .1 a.. y u/i ii'it i <.t.- j.? i? i
, t \ ;.Pt v.v?- a- ;.a?i tr.t union.". I a,or.n
ha . < oota- \ a -1 goaii alio va-t r a* tit
( a>v rd.r p a- t the type of leader.
The otha- .-.ay im-.-.p t r? = -i*y
Fa!. R;\i ta.Kci ' > pe-.-p.e ' .
that lily 1 ;ie i 'hp.tit- : ep'.-rt wapub!s-hod
in. the ha.l River Hera :
It is a warn ' p. t evt-ry:??dy to s'::ve
cooperatively to keep industry a.-e;
to make a- little trouble a- pes-thie:
j to strive that tomorrow the mi.l-be;! ;
will ring. Ar.i espta .ally to.
I ar.."-.\tr the very point that ;s raised'
; Southbiidgc that the Harm-tor. wii:
again. reopen under r.c-w m ney and
[ajar, be subject to outside di.tatiot:..
1 P-"h..p ? a-s -iy sai-1 ir. re-pect to
t h> phase of the situation :r. Fall1
I ; .. , .
. Ami the saol part of it
t' at :- i i a: ? mar.y am . r.g-1 u.-.
nary a o (<Ugr t to know better. *a r.o
it..-. , e ih..t :h:> .a.am. : > - m. ;?
.-'ag-. t .ay. t -.at t r.? i . - r.g : - o. "g
f.r etTevt and t .at :r. g i d.'
a* : ; < r time the-e gates will
. again open. "juration wii: bo resumed.
wage- nga.r. redueed. an i profit rn-.v
n : n* *kc expense cf The w.v k
g man ar.i w,.ma .
"! t-u-t that \ w:l] be It eve me
a ".en i s-ay t*.at this *i..t so. "i.a'
i .i.l K.vt- w .11 be 'orturate if these
g*'?':?t works ever a?a-. resume operat
- a*' i that the ?1>. r. g "ijuadror.s
a- have boasted about closing fao or-os
i and beggaring whole peoples)
may have their boa-ting come urf.irtur.aU
Iv true. . . ."
<ood gran that the words of Bishop
( "a.ssuiy may find e-e h.o ir. Ixw .s- ,
tin ar.i Auburn. We kt.ow thatl
*h<r? a full c ?perat;-v in l*w."
t> ward continuance of the work
' our 'oxtile?.
May it contir.in ' Th - - *uat < r
a . 1 .m. prove in t me T* - 'fur'
' sme of oar mills ha* g? bv a
tr rean. They have ha i a some what
en ecu raping year ir. li'hl. because
they Have not iv.-t so mu n mmr.ey
as they did in lfhv3.
A certain mill ir. Lewis ton was
or.ce saved from liquidation by a man,
| who has beer. abuse<i beyond a!? \
meaaure: hut whose every effort all (
his life has beer, to develop his native 1
state. ,
Today it is doing well. Others will \
Bethune Honor Holl
Grade !! -Eliza Ja*.k>on. A'!-:."
\S :i*_'t - . Nar.r.io Ruth Hilt?>n.
G if:? ! n -< >! ave 11 'n. Ha : 1
V.
<; a.a Ralph Ha!!. Fra
P.. a- :. \S a a Humph-.. -. I!a H M.r
van:. R<bb:c Now ton Mam r..
'. a < (any Da.:-. I M ' a !
Mn'Vait-i Mtl .it U: i';. L< ! ' 0
11..i. r. nit Kat iu-nr 1' > -1 v r. Idu A . r t ;
11 ...mi
'.i.a . Ma g:c Jv?:e>, f .art " C:
H A >r.v H.itar. Juur.ita Ka.Ay.j
M\; Mu!:v . Aivir. K. Kellvy, RT>y i
la h~ r. Lou tot* H:r.-or.. Mar^aa'. ,
Grade ?A!v" M,Da-kill. France!
Hr'.mv Pruc.'.'.a Rat.litT. Dorothy
Watkir.s. \\
Gr ade 5?Dor:.- Lar.e, F.. \V. Tol-1
hurt. Mary Nan*, y MeLaurrr.. B-uce:
Kellt-y. Vera Horton. Margaret Ku- |
bnrk?. Betty Best.
Grade 4?Sarah Gordon, Faiah.
Margaret King. Robert Catc>e, Tie-sieMae
Davis, Betty Hammond. Olin |
Thompson. 1
Grade J?Ralph McCaskill. Vera j
Stewart. John Watt? Smith. Eva Jo--j
.< RatclitT. Wayne H lac km on. Xaravj
H >rton. Violt t Williams. ' '
Gra i- -?N't:. Kelley, ( are yn Be-,
thur.e. To'a Gardner. June William*;}
Ross Hortor.. Ne.l Davis, Evelyn
Ham.rra r,d. Sara Rebecca McKinr.or..
lb'.-a McUoo. 1
tirade 1 ? Ma-garet Braswell. Joyce j
F \sler. Georgia Mildred Squire?.
P'rotry ('a toe. r'arol King. Betty Joe j
H I*, r. J. 'rr Ned Huekabee. Mary
Iyt'i- J< r. es, Joyce Mur.n. Mild reel M - j
r.-jskill. Elizabeth Smith.
. I
Would Have To Be Speed*
Wife (reading): It says here t h * y j
haw found a sheep .r. the Himalaya!
Mountains that can run 40 nv.les an'
hour." j
Her Hubby: Wei!, it would take a
lamb like that to follow Mary r.owa- j
days.
return to reasonable profit. But >ve
must always remember that capital :
invested has control of the ir.du-try j
and must have a fair profit Profit- ;
able concerns pay better wages.
War must cease. If not Fall River*
will be the way of industry as ex- j
ample. It is time that Washington
saw this. It is even now thinking
over the matter. Law should regulate
the right to strike; and re-strict
the strike to definite and well-established
issues, rather than to agitation
a.nd vote of employees. The President
so suggested a day or two ago.
Bring up the standard of the unions;
restrict the ties of the strike.?Lewision
(Blaine), Journal.
.
KcientiiitH Are Puzzled
Home ftfty years ago the owner of
one of the most fertile farms in the
town of Freeport, Maine, chained ?
bull to a stake in a corner of his well- j
grassed pasture. Hull-like, the animal
chatted at his bonds and, in his j
efforts to be free, pawed out a small !
chunk of the tough turf. Sand trickled
from the ragged hole and, when
the farmer came to Utile his sire back
to the tie-up that night, he found a
patch of powdery sand all of 10 yards
across. He also found the hole and
saw the sand slowly pushing out of
it, as though some Gargantuan. subterranean
hand were doing the pushing.
That was the beginning of what
has come to be called Maine's Sahara, j
which now covers more than 200 acres
and has long since swallowed up all of
the once fertile farm with shifting,
wind-blown dunes that, in places, are
00 feet high, it is a mystery, even to
scientists who are supposed to understand
such phenomena, and it is
spreading over a wider area every
year.
Once vigorous pine and fir trees, the
pride pf the farm woodlot, are seared
and weatherl>cuU-n skeletons with
sand piled about their trunks to a
depth of 30 feet. The trees of the
apple orchard fell victims to the
creeping flood of sand years ago and
all but their leafless topmost branches
are inundated by the stuff.
The sand is so powdery that it
swirls and blows up into stifling dust
clouds even in a light breeze. Thus,
borne by the winds, the mysterious
desert is constantly laying down a
deadly dun carpet beyond its present
borders and swallowing up more
and more vegetation.
There are, in Freeport, people who
can remember back to the day when
the desert was a fertile farm and
they sometimes wonder if the little
trickle of sand started by the hoof of
a restive bull may not, some day, engulf
the whole community, unless
something is done to stop the growth
of the earthy octopus.
Many times in the past few years
eastern movie directors have used
Freeport's desert as the convincing
and convenient "location" for screen
stories in the Sahara, in the almost
a^ famous Gobi Desert of Mongolia
and in various and sundry sandy settir.gv.
And movie fans have never i
-u-rcc.ed that the arid dunes over I
whi -h the swarthy shiek pursued the ?
pretty Kngli-h girl, or the Foreign
I.vg:?>nr.aires chased the bold, bad Be- j
hou r- w?->-?' ..nee the ur.adver.turous 1
ctrrt? <..f a Maine farm.
Backward Boys
It is not always the boy who gives
the brightest promise in early life
who reaches the greatest heights, as
many illustrious examples may prove.
In a recent lecture, Or. Tregold, an
eminent British exj>ert on feeblemindedness,
declared that Charles Darwin
and Sir Isaac Newton were both backward
as children, and would probably
have been considered subnormal by
present-day authorities.
We may also be reminded that
Kichurd Brinsley Sheridan, the great
dramatist, was characterized by his
own brilliant mother as an impenetrable
dunce." Similar stories are
told of early dullness on the part of
Sir Walter Scot, Thackeray, Wellington,
Cromwell and even the great
Napoleon.
Our own General Grant, while always
mentally alert, was a ne'er-dowell
during a part of his life and although
he had performed creditable
service in the Mexican war, resigned
from the Army in 1864, and at the
outbreak of the Civil War was a clerk
in a store at Galena, 111. Yet he became
the first ever to hold the rank
of a full general in the United States
Army and was President eight years.
These examples, with many others
which might be cited, should be encouraging
to those who may be considered
below the average during
their school years.
But they do not necessarily indicate
that because a youngster is a dumbell
he is assured of a brilliant future.
? Monroe Enquirer.
Prevoking
Minister: I have brought back the
second-hand car you sold me last
week. I m afraid it's too obstreperous.
Dealer: What's the matter? Can't
> <?u run it ?
Miru.-tei ; Not and stay in the ministry.
I
B. V. Butler, 65, of Cromwell, '1
Conn., and Mrs. Walter Isaacs, ;t , of 9
Eureka, S. I)., were drowned at St 9
Petersburg, Fla., Monday. Bntler at* 9
tempted to rescue Mrs. Isaac-, who 9
went beyond her depth in swimming ?
in the gulf. M
A grocer of Quedlenburg, Saxony, I
Germany, discharged his delivery boy 9
because he stopped to hear a talk by n
Hitler. Townsmen stormed the gro- 9
eery and would have lynched the 9
grocer except for interference of the 9
police.
France has ordered camel troop* 9
and airplanes to the southwest from -9
tier of Somaliland to put down a tri*;r9
bal war which has already cost &?9
lives, including that of M. Bernini, 9
chief of the Gobad region, 16 nativt^9
soldiers and 80 natives.
At Myrtle Beach, in bloody Horry 9
county, Lee Nance was killed by Po- 9
liceman J. F. Hamilton, with a pistol 9
wound through the chest, while _r*_9
sisting arrest and compelling the of* <1
ficer to shoot in self defense. Nance 9
was a Tarheel, who had 'been living at 9
Myrtle Beach for some time.
Where To Find It
Hotel Clerk?Is this $1,000 bill the 9
smallest you have? ;
Departing Guest- -I'm afraid it is. 9
Clerk (to bell-boy)?Here, take this 9
change it. .9
out and get some relief worker to H
Same Alike
Hungry Customer (standing at I
lunch counter)?One roast beef sand- fl
wich. j<9
Polite Waiter?Will you eat it here
or take it with you?
Hungry Customer?I hope to do 1
both.?Newark Advocate. $ fl
"I feel like a Thousand Dollars but only pay 2.00". at the 1
MEDICAL BATHS 1
KIRKWOOD HOTEL
TKl.KPHONK CONNECTION
Electric Cabinet, Massage and Medical Gymnastics, Reducing
Massage and Exercises.
OIL and SALT HUBS, HOT FOMENTATIONS, Etc.
Scientifically done by
Swedish Masseuse .and Medical Gymnast
The above treatments will reflate and restore boti.lv
functions, increase energy of body and mind, wonderful in nervuus
disorders, relieve pains and aches of almost every kind, breaks
up colds, cleans out waste matter, softens stiff joints, congested 1
muscles, pains and aches disappear as in rheumatism, gout,
neuritis, neurajgia, lumbago, arthritis, etc/ Ut -jfl
(fertilizers i
UNDER THE CODE this year all FERTILIZERS 1
I have to be sold at the same price. Therefore, I
i you FARMERS have to be careful of ONE 1
THING, get the BEST FERTILIZERS your i
I money can buy. H
BE SURE what is in your goods, that they are mixed I I
I by a RELIABLE MANUFACTURER, sold by a II
I RELIABLE DEALER, both of whom will stand |9
I behind them. We represent the CATAWBA FER- II
I T1LIZER CO. of Lancaster, S. C., and we ourselves ?
I have been doing business here for over fifty years. H
i We are INTERESTED in what you make, be- 1
I cause we want to buy your COTTON when I
I you make it. COME IN and let US figure with 1
I YOU before you decide ANYTHING. 1
springs & shannon ? |
i RALPH N. SHANNON, Manager 111
i Basic Slag NITRATE OF SODA - ftjiiiB?r?|