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ILL.1 7 ~ : ? | L 00 K I N (J IIACKWA R1) . Taken From the File. ?l the Chronicle Fifteen and Thirty Yr?r? A?. ? ? ?- " I u -? ? fjftkkn ykaks ago February IF IW-0 Miss Wane he lauan'., lounty Jlo/ue I >? mulo'.i at i"!- Ag? n? .i... h?-r work for tin- year. Frank I. Z?n.p. meet.* a. cidchta: dent h at iu..wa> ' 'o-"'K I S. < . lb-pry I.' Ib-Hfi. i4f1,1 ''"-'ton Hi art! buy la<k'< gaiag? "ft A lb. " | K a! b 11 < < ' CuninuiUc i" charge of lwnfthj Annual < amdor. H"?-? >h..w : Just.J(b |{ ( kit. f.ini mar.; T. U-e | HPiJ,., - (".an-n i Morgan, j John K lu;,:. WaiiM f White. Gi-orgr T. iatlif. Jii'mi I Nettle?. VS. S jilitz an i Het.iy Savage. Dewey .lain-- ''ire! nr.d Aluriej Ib 'le Williamr. frt ' arrnlen ma-tied til i ( olumbia by Kev. John K (JoocJe, pastor of the Shandnn Baptist church. Mr.-. \S' T Uauskett announces the ciigugemt r.t ef her daughter; Margaret Abbott Bauskct t to Lieutenant iloyt Koekafellow, I'. S. A , of Fas<a ton, Ha. Miss YViida Tate and Kdgar C. Lewis married in St. Ix)uis. Fifty passengers injured when Seahoard passenger truin wrecks near Savannah. Gordon Fawcett Hamby, notorious murderer and bandit, dies in electric chair at Sing Sing, for killing two bunk officials in Brooklyn. Quail season closes Sunday, February 16th. February, 1020, haa five Sundays, first time in forty years. Other years it has occurred are 1756, 1784, 1824, 18.r>2, 1880 and will again occur in 1948. S. McMaster, of Columbia kills larg^* wild turkey on his Good Will Plantation in Richland county and sends it to President Woodrow Wilson for his Christmas dinner. It is against the South Carolina game laws to kill wild turkeys at this season, so Mr. McMaster had to stand trial and was fined $10. I THIRTY YKAKB AGO ji IVInuar) 17, 1905 | A S. /? rnp st* 11 s out bis insurance j jbu-n<t-- to Williams & Steed man. i Junior Aid Society of the Presby- j' ' lu.aii church to give sociable at resj iiitinc of K. Oscar McCreight. Manager I'M die Ashenback, of the j ("harie-ton base ball club announces | he ha-, secured the release from liarrn-y Dreyfus, of Catcher Sid Smith, i aindt-n boy, who will now be with the Sea (Juils. Dr. O. M. Moore, of the South Carolina College to preach in Camden at the Camden Haptist church. II (1 Carri.son, Sr., loses bam and -tables at his Hermitage Plantation, by lire. ... "Shell" Wthst, son of J. F. West has arm broken, when thrown from buggy, by run-away mule. M rs. G. A. Blackburn and O. A. Hamlin, of Columbia were guests of Mr. and Mrs. F. L. Zemp this past week. Douglas Merrit, a winter visitor here writes totter suggesting the replanting of pine woods, to lessen the sweep of the wind over the city. Also thinks the destroying of unsightly advertisements at street corners and the erection of neat street signs will : help greatly in the appearance of the i town's streets. W. Geisenheimer and F. Leslis Zemp attend meeting of Grand Chapter Royal Arch Masons in Charleston. In advertising columns is: "Pianos and Organs thoroughly tuned, cleaned and repaired, R. B. Shaw, Truesdell House." Major Micah J. Jenkins, the gallant South Carolinian, who commanded the first squadron of famous Rough Riders, will be one of the Guard of (Honor to escort his Colonel, President Theodore Roosevelt during the inaugural parade. Man Pictures Death After Heart Stopped Arley, Kng., 'Feb. 8.?England tonight had the word of John Puckering, who liked being dead so well he's uorry they brought him back to life, that everybody is "supremely happy" in the world to come. Puckering's picture of the hereafter, as he saw it during four and one-1 half minutes his heart was stopped ; while he lay on un operating table, was painted in these words: "During those five minutes or so, 1 was worried and disturbed. Suddenly everything cleared and I was filled I with great content. "I knew I was dead because I saw I muny villagers of Arley (where they I were all huppy, und 1 was happy, I too." "There were hundreds of smiling faces in a bank of hazy, shining clouds," Puckering asserted. Dr. C. Perceval Mills, whose massage of Puckering's heart gave the gardener his unusual opportunity to bear witness to the life after death, insisted there was nothing "out of the ordinary" about the matter. The thousands of happy people he saw, among whom were old acquaintances, all "seemed to be in a big hall with pillars of clouds and all mixed up in a sort of hazy light," he said. "I was drifting toward them when suddenly everything went black. They had brought me back to life." "I was never extraordinarily religious," Puckering continued, "nor had I ever any active interest in spiritualism. But now I'm convinced there is another world, for what I saw was as realistic as my back garden. j "Wbat I saw during my brief spell of death made me regret that I ever came back. I was surrounded by thousands of people, all supremely happy xxx. They nodded and smil- I ed, so happily that I was overjoyed to be dead. "The grave has no terrors for me now. I realize that earthly life, sorrowful as it can be is just a training ground for something fuller and better." 1 WITH OTHER .PAPERS Before marriage a man yearns for u woman; after marriage he earns for her.?Columbia State. The car to w^tch is the car behind the car in frfot of you.?Walterboro Preaa and Standard. One blessing of being poor is thai one doesn't suspect an ulterior motive behind every proffered friendship.? Greenville Observer.* The difference between opportunity and a pessimist is that opportunity knocks only once and then quits. The Pathfinder. It's a crime to put poison in another man's stomach, but there is no law against poisoning his mind.? Greenville Observer. The onion crop was bigger than ever last year. We thought so. We didn't believe that all the strong breaths could come from liquor.?The Pathfinder. When he was in Greece, Insull said if he were tried in the United States he wouldn't get justice. P. S.-r-He was right.?Olin Miller in the Thomaston (Ga.) Times. If Ole Doc Townsend's pension plan goes through you are going to be amazed to see how fast some of your middle-aged friends and acquaintances age.?Macon Telegraph. One reason for hard times is that the average family can buy twice as much as the reputed head of the house can pay for.?Orangeburg Times and Democrat. If around the nation's fireside respect for authority, reverence for holy things, and obedience to parental discipline are taught, the surest foundation for peace will be laid.?Calvin Coolidge. It seems at least that we are having government "of the people, for i the people, and by the people." It used to be "everybody works but dad." The plan now is to give dad i an old-age pension. This whole busi; ness, it seems, will never be properly 1 adjusted until nobody is allowed to I work and accumulate, and everybody i urged to ride.?Calhoun Times. The bandits, Robert Mais and Walter Lagennza, electrocuted at Richmond. Saturday, during their crime career as heads of the "Tri-State gang." covering just a year or two. 1 are credited with stealing about $85.fk.ui. three murders and one of more k;dr.apings. And yet, if they had the chance, we dare say they would tell I the world. "Crime doestn't pf^y."? ! Yorkville Enquirer. i Poor, benighted heathen who live I up N'awth, even if no further up the | map than Kentucky, don't know what ; good eatin' is until they come to ; Georgia. 1'hink of not knowing grits! Family from Kentucky drove through Dalton last week and stopped for breakfast. And The Citizen this week prints a letter from the head I of the family to Billy Booth, manager of the Hotel Dalton, enclosing a dol| lar and asking for a dollar's worth J of grits?with the recipe for cooking i it properly.?Glass in Georgian. THE COUNTRY NEWSPAPER Turning fmrn city newspapers to small town pfess exchanges that come to the editor's desk is like stepping i from the slums, full of vice, into an old-fashioned garden sweet with lavender and thyme and the scent of pe-enniai flowers. The pages of the big dailies are so full of murder, thievery, immorality and selfishness that the better news is obscured by these glaring shatterings of the Decalogue. One puts the papers aside with a feeling of depression and heartache that the world is full of terrible and unhappy things. Then picking up the papers that record the happenings of the little towns around us. one gains renewed faith :r. life. Here are set forth only that which uplifts a community?the activities of the businessmen, the church items, the happy social gathering> of the people, the marriages, births and deaths, farmer's items, and all the thousand and one daily occurences that make up the simple annals of the great common people who are really the foundation of this broad country of ours. Sometimes people speak lightly of tthe country newspapers, but it is one of the most potent and uplifting factors in our national existence.?Christian Science Monitor. A thief or thieves stole t.he typewriter out of the office of a branch of a national detective agency in Atlanta, Ga., and the detective in charge asked local police to help him find the machine. Fire started in a warehouse at Frederick. Md., and when firemen chopped holes in the ice of a creek to get water they discovered their water pumps frozen. The property loss was $3,500. Arthur Brisbane in his column Saturday referred to an incident that occurred a few days ago in Chicago, which certainly offers food foi* thought. A crazed mother and her crippled son, when refused aid, killed an investigator, as we remember the incident, and then went to the relief offices and shot three persons there. Failure to secure the help they wanted and thought they should have was at the bottom. Mr. Brisbane speaks about the difficulty of tapering off from a whiskey diet, or the drug habit, and says "easy government money" creates equally as serious a problem. Mr. Brisbane goes on to say: "Multiply that 1,000,000, or 5,000,000, and you would have real trouble." The mushroom growth of the Townsend plan and Huey Long's "share-theli i tion pointed out by Mr. Brisbane already at hand to a certain extent?J Chester Reporter. ~9 ? =?g leading Negro Educator Dies 4 Celia D. Saxon, 77, one of South Carolina's outstanding negro eduet-1 tors, who had been actively engagM in school teaching in Columbia for 55 years, died unexpectedly at her home, 1216 Page street, at 2 o'clock Tuesday morning from a heart ittack. She was bom, reared and spent her life in Columbia. She earned tj degree from South Carolina College now the University of South Carolinir and nine years ago the honorary degree of master of arts was conferred upon her by South Carolina 'Statej College, at Orangeburg, wealth" plan proves that the condi ^ > a ""fr The Camden Hunt i WrtnKt?^}.A? c It! 1*1 !lid-1 V !).,,-I1L ! 11 aMiiugiuii i uii uiudy l\dCCt> f1 SPRINGDALE COURSE | CAMDEN. S. C. Friday, February 22,1935 j 12 P. M. I ? $ i Steeplechases and Flat Races 1| Gate Opens 12:30 O'clock $ ! General Admission One Dollar including Tax. Free Park- | ing Space near Kennels. ^; One Dollar Charge for car inside of Enclosure j| FRONT ROW PARKING SPACE $5.00 Occupants of car, admission charge additional < Those securing tickets in advance will enter through a ,,! special gate, thus avoiding delay. c ALL BADGES MUST BE WORN CONSPICUOUSLY. T 4 WT FOLLOW THE ARROWS j Use Knight's Hill Road for Entrance j Advance Sale of Tickets on and after Monday, February 18th at THE CORNER BOOK STORE HUSKY THRQATS Overtaxed by \ peeklnc.Binc- \ W/ien it comes to feeding.. . YOUR CHILDREN AND YOUR CROPS ! ? ??< are pretty much alike! Strange as it may seem, your own children and your own crops aren't so different. When a child eats too large a proportion of artificially refined foods, there is danger of lack in vitamin B, so essential to growth and health. If he doesn' t get vitamin A, he "catches" infectious diseases. Too little vitamin C, and other growth and normal development Chilean Natural Nitrate sup* plies the vital impurities?in Nature's own balance and proportion. Calcium, iodine, strontium, boron, potassium, sodium, lithium?they're all there, to make your crops healthy apd profitable. Protect yourself by saying "Chilean" when you order your diseases result. And with your crops, the so-called impurities are like vitamins for children ?absolutely necessary to healthy "A Pure Food and Drug Act for plants would be a death warrant to all living creatures." ? Scientific American nitrate. Two kinds? Champion (granulated) and Old Style. Both are genuine. Both are Chilean, and both have the vital impurities. , Chilean NATURAL NITRATE THK OLD ORIGINAL SODA | IVe got those |i | natural 'f ! impurities!^ fe.. . .J 'fl So 1 fl hare I!J j .5;'? fl mules! Ju& received carload of 1 TENNESSEE MULES I Can be seen at the old Clark i 1 Stables on West Rutledge ~i I Street, Camden, S. C. -\ * 1^1 Come and look them over fl Grover C. Welsh |