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iff LOOKING BACKWARD Taken From the File* of The Chronicle fifteen and Jhirty 1 W* iff I $ FIFTEKN YKAKS AfiO Februar) ?, I9^U ( umden to /,a.< -ignici : : .11/ of .sofm* hi tor ! a. !a< I < w ' HEj | t. la- j?la< m;U o .' K.i- . tif M ( i..i. o" * J Ik !-!' ?, ajipo.J.t ?"l < hail man of < n m, ' ' > 'of liy : ' wM# ijr ;t Muwr, In in. i .hi;.; f' I' I) a Ik! M M I'wifi f -M. J (jiai tfu-fM..p aii: ai.'I '.j>< ii /to .\?'W blldgi Walefee r 1 ^ 1 oj' < 11? ?1 foi "atr.. A toil of ft (J (( /it.-. js h? ing ? oh' ted oil all IliJ t offlohl .< * : ft fit I livt iai h< a<l for MiU.'e tiain-. Oil to ujpe *\u- wa *> hed av. ay! ^ August, J''l*h I ' l>i. l ail A W ' i:a? in* '! '"| ( a unit fi ' M a '. i ' i |i>! i j mo n. Jit .<? aot! K < a! ' .if j i i. j J o up ' o/n;?afi> t Robert \V Iu.t i ,y ;.;j '.a- * '.ni' | on cor ricr ol H:oad an C?< n, | anil as to make o '? ; ? i < j-aii. * ? -. I Many mnucr./.a ?. a ft . or ? ?! m | Camden and Kef-haw '<<urit> . Robert ( unningharn Johnson, Jr., i I 2 ' and Miss Kacriae! McComb Hew-on, of Hlueiield, Va , married They wiii| make their home at Fort lie nju mi ill Harrison, where he is a First Serg-/ :nff ' eant- /$ ~2t.-L ... Cadets at < 'lemson College are; J-l > I'. Johnson. J. Withers Trotter, A. ERush and H F Nettles, Jr. In New York state the thermoto*- ail , ^ Jl. ter registers from H to 12 degrees Jo below zero. ?Mi I>r J. T Shaw, of l,ee county in HHH sold to i>r. C. VV. llsrria, a is trai t of land for $(>,.r>U0 and thin past ?hJ? week bought the -ame land kick for fo ; '. . $20,000. co ^rrrr?i? TIJ1KTY VKAK8 AGO I rhruarv I". I??5 ,n.iu"id, when , ,^tr >comotive , , .-Ktral railroad ! ,. <1.1 \? 1 ' 1 ' i i - ;<< ? v * .1 |;: -.a/1 *jVeJJ $'J,-r>00 to H(. ! a trustee, H j.iw Stock Asaocit# f , fl y. \1. C. A. hall at Jmbi"' Of. JO ?"<l wth of F?bruI ,> < pupil in the Camj <>?.I wr'O-'i composition on "I 1 : I I.O." Ih ii.a Jr? of lht* U. S. \.fii'. j? n: home on furlough. a* .Nelson I'age, writer is a i> ? af ^'ie Kirkwood Hotel. (,. airount of the severe weather ,;iJ. r]g the week, many social func. |(if , v?rre postponed. Mutant General John I). Frost, ,aj notified the Camden Militia, that trill hold inspection on March 27th. K. F, Cothrenp of Anderson proposj to All Federal Judgship. H, E. Schroder moves his bakery sinesa to Man building opposite essenger office. To complete the Old Three C's ilroad, work will begin at once on i extension from Marion, N. C., to >hnston City, Tenn., to ' the coal Ids, a distance of 100 miles. "Weary Willie Walker," a comedy to be at the Opera House this week. In the advertising columns is the llowing ad: "A complete line of ffins?all prices at T. J. Arrants." Urolher Kill*Jfirother * Martsv,]lc( Jan. >^.-<'l?ud? McK ensue, J"-y?'?r-oyp C(X worker, was *0(1 ay of Mbotpw wounds, and ;?. dea^v,.()t^^ (;,;iespie, was held -mfPrnZ#* ?' "K,u,"t which wi" Sp X K? ^ace at elder Br ,' .'.i the Union section R~ county, 16 miles p!' ". ., .fgtrv. Officers said the fcHT .'i. Mi- vv^en h? intervened ; . v'cen Gillespie and anJjW Ft-ri-na, 69* farmer, was kill#Jf r(.j: ^ kingham, N. C., when his ,', rtrt i-augkt in the trace chains j,tJi neas of the mule that he W ^ '-tfnx to work. Intend To Plead Guilty The Miller brothers and Iveroy Holliday who are in jail awaiting court to answer charges of highway robbery in connection with the theft of the Springs Cotton Mills payroll have told the officers that they intend to plead gujlty and not stand trial. McDow & Hildebrand of York and Attorney Cogswell of Charlotte who were retained are said to have withdrawn from the case when they found that they were pnid with stolen money.?Lancaster News. Harry Levy, Yonkers, N. Y., man secured a job after live months of loafing. His luck was too much for him. His excitement brought on a stroke of apoplexy and caused death. 1 What Does PIGGLY WIGGLYmean? 1 Self-Service? Yos, and moro. You savo time, or you j i i select your favorite food brands at your leisure. Quality I J merchandise at economical pricos? Yes, but more than that. I 1 lore's what PlhOLY M K1C1LY really j means to VOL . I I. Baskets are supplied for your use while in tho Storo. I I Immediately you pass the entrance you begin select ing merchandise. No waiting. j j 2. Once familiar with the locations of various groups ! I I of merchandise you go directly to those you came to buy. Another time saver. ' j 3. You may also shop at your leisure. A prepared | shopping list is unnecessary. You're sure to seo | everything you need as you pass along the wide and spacious aisles. All the stock is visibly within your S i reach. I 4. All the merchandise is systematically arranged in ! groups properly labeled and price tagged. You | ! have a largo variety from which to select your I j favorite brands. j 5. When your purchases are completed, a neat and courteous managor checks them, wraps them for you, and gives you an accurate itemized total price | receipt, a convenience in chocking in your own home. WATPU FOR BIG I 11 H I Ull CONTEST I COMING SOON! PRIZES! j Watch this space for details about | WITH OTHER 1'AI'kRS jj Finally there will be two nartie*?.1 who ??yhth*eh nUb'iC "n<l thc"*' l*y the bill.?!,<>* Angele* Time*. The modern girl adore* ginning wheel*, but she want* four of them ?SUndaTHrV-Wtt,terU>l? ?<> Moral problem; Why will a man ordinarily reliable, catch a fish and e about it* uize ??Orangeburg lime*-Democrat. Thing* work out. A aeason of adth^'ty?KnttbtX. a ru^fed ruce. and thwt * the kipd it take* to pay off the bonds.?Akron Deacon-Journal. A man we know complain* of how ong it take* to get a government loan. Another problem i* how long t will be before the government get* it back. Norfolk Virginian-Pilot. A* crime pile* up, and for the hope of the country, our enthusiasm for birth control 'among the "rip-rflM" i* exceeded by the enthusiasm for wholesale sterilization in the underworld.?-Calhoun Time*. If the Townaend plan goe* through there will be a lot of people, now ii mS?' Wh? wil1 ftn<1 lhe 01(1 family Bible and *how that they are sixty-one year* old.?Orangeburg TimesDemocrat. Gossip writer* *ay "that Mr*, tonne, mother of the quintuplets, expects another arrival next spring. The dazed father can only hope that she doesn't outdo herself.?Boston Globe. That good old southern song, "Way Down on the Sewanee River" came nfctr being "Way Down on the Pee Dee River." It is .said that Stephen roster first wrote it that way, but the rythm or something did not work good, so it was changed, and thereby South Carolina lo*t a lot of good advertising.?Bamberg Herald. The drunk driver who is full of liquor is not *o dangerous as the drinker with only two or three drir.k* under his belt. The over indulgent soon passes out; the more moderate drinker only has enough in him to make him irresponsible, but he keep* on going.?YorkviUe Enquirer. Lady residing in the city telling of a dour bell ringer calling at her! home recently and offering antiques '<>' s<ile. When the salesman was informed that she was not in the market fur antiques, he contiued his' argument by declaring. "But, madam,! these are very unusual. In fact, they'; .ire the very latest thing in antiques." --Orangebu?g Times-Democrat. i Our $3 1 .lifio.ixio.ixio national debt' L equal to a per Capita obligation of i V.'.'1 ak,;i'r'0 every man. woman, and' <*hi,d in the country according t > a! >!a!iclival report. If you wish t<> j kr.uw your total indebtedness, multi-l'c\ the 1 by the number in yen-; tami'y and the >um in dollars is your: bl.gat i->? to cuntry. Could von! l??> up today? -Hart-vilU Me>-\n-j ! Ten Very Rich Men ! Report On Holdings! Washington. Ic-b. 1?Ten very rich | men. among them the richest in the! I M.ed State.-, today led the list of' the nation's business giants who have reported their security holdings to the security and exchange commission. Here they arc with such parts of their fortunes (minor parts in some cases) as were shown by their report - : John D. Rockefeller, Jr., $200,000,ooo in Standard Oil companies. S. S. Kresge. $20,000,000 in his , limited price store chain. C. F. Kettering. $10,000,000 in, General Motors. 1 Eugene dul'ont. $10,325,000 in E. I. dul'ont <le Nemours company. i W. K. Timken. $ 10,22").000 in Timken Roller Bearing company. Fieri e dul'ont. $10,100,000 ir. da' Font and General Motors. t harles A. Cannon. $0,S50,000 in!' Cannon M i 11 > company. ! Harrison Williams. $.">,000,000 in1 North America company and others.\ C. T. Newberry, $4,750,000 in J. J. i Newberry company. Modie Spiegel, $3,105,000 in Spiegel ! May Stern company. j(' This list includes only those who J ( have reported to the commission to 1 date. Further filings undoubtedly! will make important additions. Oth- ' ers who have reported lesser hold- j ings may be entitled to a higher rank! or. the basis of ownership not yet disclosed. Laughs At Judge?Jailed Chicago?Mrs. Benjamin Borstein.charged with running her car through n -ton light, told the judge that she did r.nt have a car. Coming out of the courtroom she laughingly told a bystander that she had "one. hut \va* ' on relief ami could not tell the judge. The bystander was a plain-clothes man and she got twenty-four hours in jail. The New York Daily News print*! a story to the effect that Mrs. Grace . Coolidge, is to marry again, saying that the prospective bridegroom is j Everett Sanders, former secretary to ' President Coolidge. \ s ?-^?=5 ? X 3T? - 11 TIIK FOUNTAIN OF HIOKNKS8 Occasionally tl?? physicians who offer advice through the columns of dully newspapers include in their syndicated remarks a gem of thought which proves that the cultured members of that 'profession are beginning to comprehend the mental cause of physical phenomena ami thus becoming better titled to heal disease* A recent quotation from Dr. William Brady illustrates the point: It is well recognized now that fear, anxiety, worry, fright?all the same emotions essentially ? and envy, jealously, anger, hatred, resentment, contempt-?these, too, are just different degrees of the same emotion ?are a common cause of diabetes and glycosuria. Indeed, the doctor might have lengthened the list of human ailment* caused or aggravated hy fear and kindred emotions to include practically every ill known to mankind, for they have been shown to he an element in all disease?a fact proved hy the recovery of the patient when the unhealthful emotions or lurking errors of mortal, thought are driven out. Sixty years ago, Mary Baker Eddy emphasized this fact which the more advanced medical practioners? Dr. Brady among them?now proclaim. In "Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures," she wrote: "Hatred, envy, dishonesty, fear, and so forth make a man sfck, and neither material medicine nor mind can help him permanently, even in body, unless it makes him better mentally, and so delivers him from his destroyers." Obviously, mental means must be employed to remove a mental condition. Running around the block may, indeed, burn up the fuel for physical energy which the students of metabolism now say the emotions of fear, rage and jealousy generate. But this is attacking the result and not the cause. This is treating the body as if it were the only or governing factor in the case, whereas the cause is mental. It is fundamental reasoning that if fear and other manifestations of what Dr. Brady calls the same emotion cause sickness, the casting out of fear is necessary to prevent as well as to heal disease. A simple (lahlcan fisherman, centuries ago, had an unfailing recipe for this which he embodied in a letter: "Perfect love casteth out fear." And love, he -aid. is synonymous with God. Understanding this because she had discovered a method of putting it into practice, Mrs. Kddy wrote in .'her textbook: "Hatred and its effects on the body are removed by Love."? ( hristian Science Monitor. His Optimism Flood-Proof An example of the unquenchable Ualif'Ttua optimism i> the following dialog between two neighbor suburb-! ani:<> rear Long Beach. Calf., after, the ievent ilood there. "Hello. Hi 1. said the neighbor who I had rowed a boat across for a po.-si- ' blc rescue. "He;;o yonr?e!t\" said Bill olea-ar.'!y. "I suppose all your poultry is washed away." es, but tile dttcks can swim." "Orange tiees gone, too?" "T es\ but everybody said the crop would be a failure anyhow." I see the water's reached above your windows, Bill."' "That's all right," was the reply. "Them windows needed washin'." SPECIAL TAX NOTICE After January 8 1, 1985, one per I cent assessment penalty will be added to all taxes assessed for the year 1984 not paid. This penalty is added according to law for the month of February. S. W. HOGT'E, Treasurer, of Kershaw County. Camden, S. C. 4-1-48 sb. NOTICE An Agon; of the South Carolina Fax Commission Income Tax Division will he located at Camden, S. C., C ounty ( ourt House, February 20-21. 1985. The purpose of this visit is to assist taxpayers in executing State Income Tax Returns for 1984. All persons should avail themselves of this opportunity of securing aid which w;.l be cheerfully given without charge. NOTICE TO DEBTORS AND CREDITORS All 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 against the said estate will present them likewise, duly attested, ^/.ithin the time prescribed by law. Trannie C. Belk Annie May Williams Minr.ie McDonald Executrix's of the estate of J. R. Belk Camden. S. (\. January 18, 1985. Hut The Capital Was Not Moved The recent proposal of the Farmers' Union national convention, at Sioux Falls, S. I)., to remove the national capital from Washington to the Middle West in order to get more recognition for the nation's "bread basket" recalls a similar attempt in the early '70s at such a move to Ft. Kearney, Neb. The arguments used in favor of that plan were that the capital then would be almost in the geographical aenter of the United States, that it would be much safer from attack by foreign enemies than so near the Atlantic seaboard, and that Washington was not appreciative of the privileges and advantages of being the seat of government as it was then in a very poor sanitary condition with muddy streets and swamp lands in the environs full of mosquitoes and malaria germs. With the capital city located on the plains there would be plenty of room to expand, The plan urged by the promoters was for the government to obtain options on a large area to be laid out in building lots and sold to the people who would flock to the new location, the resulting profit to pay for all the government buildngs needed. This scheme reached a point where a national convention was held in St. Louis in 1871. The proposal took hold of the imagination of people all over the country and brought on a boom at this Nebraska site. All sorts of industries and business institutions were planned fo: the new capital city and some actually were built. One apartment house was put up out on the prairie so far from Ft. Kearney that it was not visible to the naked eye. When it was discovered that congress would not take the project seriAus 1 y the whole plan collapsed and went the way of other booms, from which every Western city of any importance suffered in those early days. Lad Kills His Brother Kannapolis, Jan. 2(1.?Karl Gillon. 1*'). of this city, died tonight in a Concord hospital of bullet wounds received when he was accidentally shot by his six-year-old brother. Richard. '>\ith a .22 caliber ritle. The youth was rushed to the Concord hospital immediately after the accident. The bullet entered the roof of the mouth and ranged upward toward the brain. Singing Murderer Hanged New Orleans, f i-b. 1.?Kenneth Neu. singing slayer, dropped through the trap at the Orleans Parish jail at 12:0.") p. m. in payment for the murder of Sheffield Clark, prominent Nashville, Tenn., business man. Youth Spurned; I Shoots Girl; Self I (itilfiityi S. C., 1 cb. 1?Jealousy 9 and anger flared into attempted mur- I der and suicide aS Amzi Bridges, 21, j wounded Mary Sue Ilarrill, 17-year- 9 old high school belle, and shot himself I to death late last night at a dance I here and threw 25 couples, most of I them high school boys and girls, into9 panic. fl Turning the gay party into trag- 9 edy, Bridges pulled an automatic pU- I tol from his pocket after a few words I with the girl and flred twice at her, I then shot himself. fl The first bullet missed Miss Har- 9 rill, but the second struck her left 9 side and passed through her body. 9 Her condition was described at the I Gaffney hospital tonight as serious, 9 but she was said to have an even I chance of recovery. H Bridges shot himself near the heart I and died within five minutes. Piecing together the story of the I tragedy from what the wounded girl, 1 relatives and those at the dance could 1 tell them, officers learned that Bridges had been a frequent caller I upon Miss Harrill during the past I year, but that recently she had re- .9 fused him dates and had gone -with I other young men. i Relatives were quoted as saying I he was reported to have threatened 9 to kill her and himself, but the threats had not been taken seriously. 9 Ambushed as he sat in his home I near St. Matthews, at night, Dufford fl Smith was seriously shot. The load I of shot took effect in the left side of 1 the face, causing the loss of the sight I of the left eye. Smith was rushed to I a hospital at Orangeburg, where he I was given emergency treatment and I his condition is considered hopeful.* OfTieers arreste<l Bill Zeigler a few hours later, that same night, and Zeigler admitted to them that he had H shot Smith, after they had had a hot argument the previous afternoon. New Kidneys I If you could trade your neglected, tired and H lazy Kidneys for new ones, you would auto- H matically get rid of Night Rising, Nervousne^ Dizziness. Rheumatism. Burning, Itching and Acidity. To correct functional kidney disordon try Clio guaranteed Doctor's special preecripHon called CYSTEX (Siss-tox). Must fix yoo | ' up in S days or money bock. Al all Ocuggista Butchers Huge Hog 9 ! Conway, S. CM Feb. 1?-S. -C-. Daviv-9 | well-known farmer of the Jordanvillo H section of the county, recently butch* ered a hog weighing 850 pounds, proj during when dressed 750 pounds of bacon. A foot of the hog measured three inches in diameter. Mrs. Alfred E. Smith, of New York, I is in a West Palm Beach, Fla., hospw? al, sutTering with a fractured right I arm. She fell in the aisle of a train on which she was en route to Florida. I I j. c. cox T 1 Sanitary Plumbing and Heating I | Telephone 433 J [ Estimates Furnished on Short Notice Makoo F?id? Go \ ilJB 25% to 40% FartlMr l Mop* w**t*. M?k*? M?*f? no- W4fjH7ll4l trWJoo*. p?Ut?hl? f > *? Grt*d? I 1 ?J *?wy *t*Ib roo(k**? r**? Wt -J >ir rno MASTUt, ?- ? *? IWJmI *? > ?! nM. Q?v % fhihf t?? wnifi OmtiM trarUo Or?r IlOO# "JAY BKE" >? to MA ?MT| MwmH * t>ynH|, l? l?|. DartMMy, "MT KT BWTIW Wt nMO?T ?> tm fM? trhni iituJim IIIB*I m mi IH IM >nA WrH* far fi?4??f far**. It* pcWo*. Iwt. Ma iMULESl I Juft received carload of M TENNESSEE MULES I I Can be seen at the old Clark II I Stables on West Rutledge II I Street, Camden, S. C. II 1 Come and look them over .jfl | Grover C. Welsh ! j?^ *" ' iH# i 17'' I i