The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, May 31, 1935, Page PAGE SIX, Image 6

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LOOKING BACKWARD Taken From the Filea of The Chronicle Fifteen and Thirty Yearn Ago THIRTY YKARH AGO June 2, 1905 The ('ttimlitn Hasobull and Amusement Park AaaociatIon hits been givrsn a commission. Capital slock will be $1 ,000 and corporator*! arte John H. Lindsay, W J. I*. Weeks and R. H Clarke. Mr. and M^. I* T. VilloplKue lose Infant nop,'Paul Villeplguc. Funeral services will he today, June 2nd. Dr. and Mrs A. A. Moon* leave today for New York to vlall their boii, Dr. Albertus Moore, Preparations are being made for a musicale and drill at the Opera House on June 27th. The best talent of Camden will take part. Or. Henry Cowl* Smith, prcHldeut of Davidson College will be orator at tilt; commencement exercises of the Camden schools t.hih year Inman Kldredge left Sunday for Florida, where he has a position, Tint Hummer Bwallows are making ready for Hitting to cooler climes. Am^mTihoHe who will soon have are. Mr. and Mrs. 1). It. Williams, Jr.. and daughter, Miss Man ning ami I). It. Williams, Sr.. Mr. ofld Mrs. K. (J. Whistler, Mrs. C. J. Shannon, Jr. Miss l.ella Shannon, Mrs. Frank Zemp and daughters. Mrs. J.I W. Corhett and daughter, Miss Alice. Corbet t. Fdltoriul. "Open your heart and your pocketbook and encourage money making, labor employing, wealth producing industries to come to your town." Oil Mill Assessments by Stiito Hoard for the. Kershaw Mill is $27.0.00. E. II. Auli, of Newberry, president of the State Press Association accepts invitation to Join the North Carolina Association at Kenllworth Inn. AsheVllle. Chief Henry L. Watkins was In Columbia at a meeting or fire chiefs of the state, for the purpose of forming a state association. Extract from Itock Hill Herald: "Col. F. H. Harbor, says the wet' weather is doing what the New Or-' leans Cotton Convention adopted resolutions to do?-reducing the cotton : acreage 2.7 per cent. FIFTKKN YKAKH AGO May 28, 1920 Dig Springs, near liethuno to have formal opening on J uric 4 th, with banquet and dance. Mrs Hroadus Thompson dies at her ' ho.ije In the Boykin community, alter Hhort Illness. JainoM VV. Plukenoy, wljo hag been residing in Birmingham for the past seven yours, baa been appointed Special Agent of the 1'b'Melphla Underwriters with Camden as his headi quarters The Ilea til Lumber Company, a North Carolina concern bus bought up rights on a large acreage in West Watcree and will erect a mill near I aigofT. William 1>. Trantham, who has been pained to succeed Charles J. Shannon an postmaster In Camden, took charge of the office thin week. T. Kdmund Krumbholz, manager of The Kirk wood Motel, announces an addition of forty rooms will be* made this summer, it. \V. Mitcham is architect. .Iesse L. Lanky presents iloudinl in "Terror Island" at The Majestic. Mrs. Henry O. Strohecker and children, of Charleston, are visiting Mrs. Htrohecker's parents, Mr. and Mrs. .I 1$. Wallace. President Venustiano Carra^iza, of Mexico, lias been killed, uudlntf' another death to Mexico's stormy history. 12,000 of approximately 00.000 French brides of American soldiers have returned to France. Cause most generally given is "incompatibility of Arnerieun and French customs." "The wheat crop is 34 per cent short. Help the situation out Mr. Farmer. Plant more corn." Winthrop College offers ten day short course to Home Demonstration women and girls. Those from Kershaw county going are: Mrs Paul Drown, Miss LCthe^ Howell, Mrs. Kuth Morton, Miss Gertrude McLeod, Mrs. K. H Watts, Kvu Sinclair, Julia Peak, j Itessic Young, Kuth McNuughlon and I Mamie Lou 11 ilton. Typical! Foreman: Hey? Want a job? Loiterer: Sure, but I can only work mornings. Foreman Why ? Loiterer: 1 have to carry a banner In the Unemployed I'arade in the afternoon. C. C. C. Camp For Lee Washington. May 27.?Senator Smith of South Carolina, today was notified a civilian conservation camp will be estahlished near Hishopville, . S. for development of a state park in Lee county. /' EVERY ^ ONE! * in SPORT DRES SES $2-77 Lots of Style?Plenty of Free Swing Washable All Silk Crepe ? Pastel shades. Ideal for Sport wear in hot weather. Sizes 14 to 44 If you are planning a vacation be sure to take at least one of these with you. : I Old Farms Now Thing Of The Past Albert M. Li rial, editor of The York vllle inquirer, conducts a feature in ' his paper each week entitled "Just A Rolling Along" In which he takes up thingH and places of interest. What he has to say about the farina in York county applies the uahie to Kershaw county uiul makes interesting reading. His comments follow: Almost every man or woman, fifty years and over In age, can look backwards a couple of generations and re member the time when all over York Chester. Fairfield, Union, Spartanburg, Greenville and what is now Cherokee counties, there were farm homesteads peopled by a happy, contented people who lived and enjoyed life?every one of them a veritable little principality. There wus wealth, culture, Independence, confidence, .Joy, happiness to be found on our big plantations Those people lived like lords proprietors. Every plantation establishment wus complete in itself. The owner of these separate plantations could w#lk out on his front porch, and looking In uny direction he pleased, see spread before him u couple of hundreds, &0b, or a thousand acrea and say within his soul, "Mine, and I am beholden to no man." 'Today, how different the picture: IMIng very familiar with the past history of York county?and the same condition exists in the other counties mentioned above?I can see in all sectipns of the county the remains of once highly valuublo, prosperous estates, now in ruins. Their once happy and contented white owners have passed away; their castles huve fallen Into disrepair; their great establishments. including barns, cribs, smokehouses, granaries, carriage houses, pasture fences and so forth, have disappeared before the ravages of time. The "big house" In many, many instances is now all but in ruins?it leaks, the buildings need repairs and paintings; the foundations even have deteriorated, and instead of well-todo "white folks" the "mansion" is now tenanted by negro families?and this is ny jspecial reflection on the negro tenants. It all makes a terribly d<pressing picture. * * Even the remnants?descendants of those once wealthy farm folks oi two generations ago have disappear ! ed, have been swallowed up in "whit*- j collar jobs" in nearby towns and dis ! tant cities, where many (if them ai< j just managing to exist and wishing j tor the day to return whv-n they j could live as "grandpaw" did back on ! tlie old plantation No. gentle reader, this picture is J not overdrawn. Rather the plctun is not as vivid, not as forlorn, as it might bo painted were I more of a word artist and could use my words more effectively to make you see the picture of happy farm and plantation life in these counties half a century and more ago, in contrast with many of today. ? I am more familiar with York county than with the other counties mentioned. but like conditions have existed elsewhere and like conditions exist today in the other counties, and in tact all over South Carolina, the proudest state with the proudest people on the face of God's footstool. In my mind's eye I can see back a hair century ago plantation establishments all over this county that were veritable little principalities. No need to call names, but in Bethel. Bethesda. Broad Itiver. Bullocks Creek. Catawba. Ebenezer, Fort Mill Kings Mountain and York townships were farm homes where their owners enjoyed (he best of everything there was to he had in that day-? comfortable. commodious homes, carriages, fine horses, sows, sheep, chickens, barns filled with feedstuff for the best mules that money could buy; fine cartinges and buggies, good farm equip- \ tnent. The granaries were always full of corn, the smokehouses packed with hams and bacon and lard. When "big meeting day" came around at the neighborhood church you could see a real turnout of people ?happy, social, intelligent, contented, dressed In silks and satins and broadcloth the equal of any like number ot people to be found anywhere. Hospitable? These people knew the meaning of the word and practiced it to the 'steenth degree. Their word for an obligation was as good as a government bond. How different today! And what has brought about the change.. Well, ttrst I would say that our farm lands have been worn out. The cureless, reckless. wanton way in which our farming has been done, has brought much of the deterioration. Lands have been recklessly abused. The idea seemed to be that the land will always he here, it will not yvear out What an awful mistake! The foundation of the land, the subsoil, red, or black, gummy, stilT, unproductive, will always tie there perhaps?some of It will; but under our system of taking everything that the soil will give, without ever putting anything back into the soil, and not even knowing enough to try to keep the soil in Its place; we have thrown away our God-given birthright and let the soil leech away, erode away, and bo carried off from the productive fields to the branches, and creeks, and rivers and on to the sea. It Is gone. Naturally, and of course, when the farms became unproductive because of the loss of the productive soils, great gushes und slushes appeared lu (he fields, and owners begun to see ihut the "rurin doe?n't pay"?that tt would not support them In the Htyle in which they supported "grundpuw" ami "urandmaw," and they begun to look lu other directions for uuetenutice. Over the hill they hhw an eusler exlMtonce. a softer place In which to abide, and these places they are still looking for. A new kind of agriculture was born. Men took over the farina, many of them, and began a system of single cropping?Cotton. That was the one thing, as they saw It, that could be produced profitably?that would bring in the dollars. Tenants were put on the lunds, high-pressure methods were udopted, huge amounts of commercial fertilizers were used to produce cotton?our only Money Crop. Yes, It was and is a money crop, but the fact remuins that most of the money made from cotton crops has gone to others than the producers. Proof, There's plenty of It. Cook ut the recorded land mortgages In your county clerk's office; turn your eyes toward New York where 'tis said many millions are invested in skyscrapers?millions that have been made directly and Indirect ly from Southern grown cotton. * * * Hiding over a section of the Fishing Creek Soil Conservation area with Messrs. Huff, Brissie and Brown, lust week, as I passed by quite a number of old time plantation sites, especially in Hethesda, Fbenezer and Catawba townships, It made me feel sad, as I recalled the days of my youth when these places were occupied and owned by outstanding, cultured, prosperous York county families, people who were proud of their possessions and wlio showed that pride by the way they ordered things about their home sites. Yes, I was saddened as 1 saw many of these stately old mansions gone to wrack and ruin, their former owners and their descendants gone from the communities, and the "big house" occupied by negro families, with rickety, | rackety tenant houses here und there over the old plantation. Then, as 1 noticed the tremendous Object lesson in the matter of rebuilding and protecting the remaining soil on the lands, the plans being made to again rebuild the lands and protect it from further devastation by their qtiict, silent, persistent enemy, soil erosion, the plans for bringing about a new kind of agriculture?rotation of crops, diversification?I looked down the aisles of time not so many years ahead, and I could see the time when York county farms, and the farms of other counties, benefitting by the actual work being (lorn- by the Soil Conservation Service and by individual land owners using the methods of Cntlc Sam's agency, the land will be brought back to a state of productivity that will again make farming, as a business, a real business, paying as big dividends on the money invested, the tittle put in the work, as will any other business?and if, and when this comes to pass, we will see a happy, contented, independent white population on the lands again, not just existing. hut realty living the lives of people who will feel that it is good to live instead of just exist. * * * The most valuable material asset on any farm is the soil?that element of the earth that really produces the growth of the crops. No one will dispute that fact. The only other element entering into tlie production of crops that is more valuable than the soil, is the energy and brain of the owm-r of the land. Rut .with our Ostein of farming, in vogue for the last fifty years or more, of driving the soil to produce the utmost possible, year after year, and with no effort being made to retain that soil on the land, or little effort to add to it. we have impoverished the soil to the point where it will no longer produce crops profitably?certainly not of itself?and it is doubtful even with the aid of highly concentrated and expensive commercial fertilizers, applied year after year, while the soil eroded away-?several tons per acre per year. An again I would emphasize the fuel that the farms have not been profitable and point you to the thousands upon thousands of acres of once valuable lands now under mortgage, with the mortgagee fn many Instances unable to pay the taxes, to snv nothing of the Interest on his borrowings. * * Given time, energy, work and the adoption of a new and more modern system of farming, added to the definite plans now being demonstrated in the Fishing Creek area of protecting the soil against erosion, keeping the water on the land by having crops that will prevent erosion and nt the same time prevent the water rushing off down the hill, because there's nothing there to make its progress slower, and give it a chance to sink into the earth to supply moisture for crop sustenance in dry periods, a new day will surely come to the agricultural class. This one-crop system is not peculiar to the cotton growers of the old or new South. The same plan has been practiced by the wheat and-the corn growers of the middle west and the far west; the same applies to the New Knglnnd and Middle Atlantic states where they too are paying the price, the terrific price, of lands eroded away until productive soil has all but disappeared from millions upon millions of acres. * + Before me I have a bulletin from the Soil Conservation Service of the Department of Agriculture, that tells me that In Pennsylvania there are 14,650,123 acres of farm lauds from which sheet erosion has taken 50.9 per cent of the topsoil, and in that state there are more than 8,000,000 acres affected by "occasional gullying, severe gullying and destroyed by gullies." All these things can be prevented and if they are not prevented, it is not so hard to believe that Secretary Ickes of the Interior Department, is nearly right when he predicts that within 100 years most of this country of ours?the whole United States?will be a DESERT. * * * No, I do not want to be fanatical. I dont' think that I am; but again I will say, and I really believe it, that this Soil Conservation Service, though it. cannot possibly be carried to every man's acres all over the land, is reallly the greatest service that the federal government has ever offered to farmers and land owners, but to get the most from it, every land owner must cooperate with the service and not put up his superficial knowledge against the knowledge that has been and is being proven by scientific study and practical experience. Up to Wednesday night President Roosevelt had received more than 600 telegrams lauding his veto message to congress. Only a dozen or so were in opposition to his views. i I When Dennis Chaves, of New Me^B co, was sworn in as the successor rfB the late Senator Bronson Cutting tB the United States senate, six seatlfl liberals strode out of the chamber,>B a scornful protest against the admitfl 11stration's efforts to drive Cuttiri|o<B j of office following his election Itffl ! November. | | j A Belmont, N. C., man lost a tffl ! against the Cocoa Cola compufB ! which claimed damages for alleffl | finding of an insect in a bottle, NOTICE TO CREDITORS | In the District Court of the UnflrfB States for the Eastern District South Carolina. In Bankrupt?* In the matter of W. Sheora 4 &*B Camden, S. C. Alleged Bankrupt fl Notice is hereby given that flfl above named bankrupt has petition for discharge and thslj hearing has been ordered to be 1H upon the same" on the June, A. D. 1935, before this Cs* at Charleston, S. C., at 10 o'clock* the forenoon; at which time place, all known creditors and wjB persons in interest may appear it"! said time and place, and show <** if any they have, why the p tlie said petition should not beg?* RICHARD W. JlUTi(? 9 10 sb. /Both theue plots of tobacco received fertilizer of exa/tly the \ 1 same analysis. The difference Is this! The mixture used at V \ the left was made from old style natural materials; at the/ .9 ( rlnht. from pure materials.,, J >9 LOOK...COMPARE I Camera sees all... tells all I ... better than words J This season more crops than for many a year will be side-dreSSed with Natural Chilean Soda. It came from the ground; now it's going back to the ground to give health and vigor to your crops. Once we believed crops needed only phosphate, potash and nitrogen. Now we know they require many other elements. Once wc thought of the old-time natural fertilizers only as sources of phosphate, potash and nitrogen. Now we know they contain other equally necessary elements. All these years we have been following Nature's laws?and only realized what that meant after trying substitute materials. There was a difference. Crops showed it. "m They did not deem to get what the; | needed?what the old-time naturi \ fertilizers supplied. What is the difference? Soot people think it is the extra element! ?the "vital impurities." Othenbelieve it is the natural origin, the | centuries of blending and curing Probably it is both. The main point is that the difference is there, audit means much to you. "J Be sure to say "Chilean" whea 1 ordering your side dresser. Justthct 1 one word?but what a difference! | See your dealer for Chilean Nat ural Nitrate. Two j kinds C h arnpioa | (granulated), OldStyk (crystals). They are | both genuine. Bothsrt ' natural. And both girt J to your crops tho* vital impurities. Chilean Natural Nitrate?the only nitrogen that comes from the ground?the ideal side dresser /or your crops. Chilean NATURAL NITRATE THE OLD ORIGINAL SODA fv* got those natural IMPURITIES! ^HSKmooogHom iniff 31 Mil I City Business Licenses! I All 1935 City Licenses on Busi'B I nesses not paid by June 15, 1935^^1 I will be subject to a penalty I fifteen (15) per cent. I J. C. BOYKIN, ; M I City Clerk-Treasurer of Camden