The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, June 21, 1935, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3
J. c. cox 1
Sanitary Plumbing and Heating
TELEPHONE 433-J
Estimate* Furnished on Short Notice
summons for relief
jjite of South Carolina,
County of Kershaw.
In the Court of Common Pious.
Helfen A. Savage, Plaintiff.
?vs.?
Lilla Maude Banks, Defendant.
To the Defendant above named:
you un hereby summoned and re|Ujred
to a newer the complaint in this
[cijoii. of which a copy is herewith
urved upon you, and to nerve a copy
$ jour answer to the aaid complulnt
)0 die subscriber at his office in the
"rocker Building in Camden, South
"irolina. within twenty daya after
ljt service hereto, exclusive of the
liy of such service; and if you fail
? answer the complaint within the
Hie aforesaid, the plaintiff of this
jtion will apply to the Court for the
jjef demanded in the complaint.
HENRY, SAVAOE, JR.,
Plaintiff's Attorney.
Hted: June 12, 1935, Camden, S. C.
To the non-resident Defendant,
l^ila Maude Ranks:
you will take notice, that the sumbods
in this action of which the foregoing
is a copy, together with the
complaint, were Hied in the office of
the Clerk of Court for Kershaw County
ou the 12th day of June, 1935.
HENRY, SAVAGE, JR.,
Plaintiff's Attorney.
Dated: June 12, 1935, Camden, S. C.
notice of sale
Notice is hereby given that in accordance
with the terms and provisions
of the Decree of the Court of
Common I'b-as for Kershaw County,
dated June 11, 1935, In the case of
M H. Hcyman. Plaintiff, against B*
W. S as port (is and E. C. SaBportas,
Defendants. I will sell to the highest
bidder for cash before the Court |
House door at Camden, South Caro-'
iina. during the legal hours of stile
on the tirst Monday In July, 1935,
being the 1st day thereof, the following
described property;
"Ail that certain piece, parcel or lot
of land, lying and being in the county
of Kershaw. State of South Carolina,
about on.- mile north of the City of
Camden, between the Oamden-Kensbaw
public highway and-the Liberty
Hill-t 'an..let. public highway, fronting
so the East <ui said Camden-Kershaw
public highway fifty-five (55) feet, and
?.endfmr back w->stwardly to a depth
Aiwo hundred fifty (250) feet, and
istounded North by a lot of Sam i
Guirs: East by Canulen-Kershaw
flWic highway; South by lot of Annie
Brovn and West by lot of Sam'
Genes. The parcel of land herein
describe)i and mortgaged is the same
*hich was conveyed to me by Sam
1J26"8 '>V ('ee(^ date February,
Terms of sale: For cash, the Master
to rojuire of the successful bidder.
other than the Plaintiff herein,
ar|d a" other bidders after the public
wle. a deposit of five (5) per cent of
bid. in cash or certified check,
same to be forfeited in case of noncompliance.
Tlie bidding will remain
open for a period of thirty days after
the public sale.
W. L. DePASS, JR.,
Master for Kershaw County,
"ittkowsky & Wittkowsky,
plaintiff's Attorneys
notice to debtors and
creditors
Estate of Gustav Hirsch, deceased.
All persons having claims or demand?
against said Estate will prefont
thcrn. duly attested, and all pers
o Bttiu r^Miaie win iuuae
payment to the undersigned.
IMN'A K. HIRSCH
MARTIN K. ROSEFIELD
taniden. S. c? May 24, 1935.
citation i
Of South Carolina,
bounty oi Kershaw.
X '' Arnett, Probate Judge: |
^hereas. D. m. West and J. M.
i.,f hiade suit to me to grant them
t?ta rs 01 -Administration of the Es-,
?te and effects of S. A. West.
tnnnT ar'' therefore, to cite and adif.j
p i,!l and singular the Kindled
decP ors of the 8ald S. A. West
for? they 1)6 and appear bebo
in tllp Court of Probate, to
dav i li! Camden, S. C., on Monh-;in"
-1th, next, after publication
to ?h '.;it 11 o'clock in the forenoon,
the sin %a,US?' ,f any they have> why
Pstit. (| mi,ilstration should not be
u,u,er my hand this 12th day
Ju,t" Anno Domini, 1935.
Jade.. , f , N- c- ARNETT,
^ 1 fohate for'TCirrfifRaw County.
REAL "HERO OF YPRES" R1EMAIN8
UNSUNG
When Viscount Byng, famous British
wartime troop commander, died
the other day the newspapers were
full of tributes to "the hero of Yprea."
It was Byng who commanded in
tl?e bloody salient about that Belgian
town when the Germans rimmed it
with heavy artillery, drenched it with
poison gas, and poured the flower
of their army into it in a desperate,
vuin effort to smash their wuy to the
sea.
In all its centuries of fighting the
world has seldom if ever seen any
more bloody or determined struggles
than the one which raged about Ypres,
And because we like to personalize
all combats, we speak of how Iiindcnburg
tried to take the place, how Ilaig
parried his thrusts, how Byng heroically
beat him back; and Byng is and
always will be "the hero of Yprea." I
Such a way of speaking la natural.
We seem to be unable to make a
hero out of a whole army. And no
army la ever much stronger than the
man who leads it; if he cannot diffuse
some of his own fire and determination
into it, it will fail, no matter
how brave and sturdy Its individual
member^ may be.
And yet there is a groat deal of
Injustice in this habit of ours.
For the real hero of Ypres, like
((fhe real heroes of all the other great
battles of thj? World war, was not
any bemedaled general. He was a
bowed, weary, dirty, nameless private
soldier; a man who lived in mud and
ate his food, when lie got any, in the
hideous reck of the battlefield, and
endured terror and strain and agony
greater tha nanything even Dante
could imagine for his inferno.
This man has never had his just
dues. Probably he never will get
them, because the only men who can
really understand what lie went
through are the men who stood at
his shoulder and suffered with him,
and they do not talk much about it.
But we must not forget liirn when
we start talking about the "hero"
of this battle or that battle. His
were not the mistakes of command.
He never sacrificed company, or a
battalion, or a whole army, because
of stubborn pride, or misunderstanding
of the conditions of modern war,as
some of the generals did.
He never sent someone else out
to go through a hell that he himself
did not have to enter. He was there,
In .the thick of it, silent and dogged
and heroic with a heroism that passes
all ordinary understating.
It is no use trying to learn his
name, for there were millions of him.
He came from every nation and wore
every uniform; he left his bones at
Ypres and Cambral, at Verdun and
along the Somme, by the Masurian
Bakes hnd on Gallipoli peninsula.
The glory of war passes him by.
The titles and the medals go to the
generals. But the real hero of the
war was and always will be the unsung
and inglorious private soldier,
who let his superiors send him out
to the most horrible of deaths because
he had in him something that was
brave, loyal and deathless.?Sumter
Item.
Mother Of Rivers
Colorado is sometimes called the
mother of rivers. From that state
streams radiate like the spokes of a
wheel. One system reaches the Mississippi
through the streams which
become the Platte and Arkansas rivers.
Others course southward to the
Gulf of Mexico after becoming the
Rio Grande, while the third group of
streams becomes the mighty Colorado
A
cutting a gorge southwestward to the
Gulf of California and the Pacific.?
Pathfinder.
His Duties
Office Manager (to new office boy):
"Has the stenographer told you what
to do in the afternoon?"
New Boy: "Yes, sir; I was to wake
her up when I saw you coming."?
Sheared.
Good (drain Harvest
From (irazed (drain
Clemson College, June 15.-?TUoro
wuk a good crop of grain to harvest
from Bcvuml lota of rye at Clemsou
this season after the rye hud been
grazed by hogs from the middle of
December until the tirat of April or
later, says Prof. L. V. Starkey, head
of the Animal Husbandry Department,
who pointa out that there la an important
leaaon ill thla for the man who
ia intereated in growing cover crops,
raising hoga, and building up the organic
mutter in Uia soil.
1 hla rye served ua a cover crop;
it furniahed ample grazing for a large
number of hoga; it has also produced
a autisfactory yield of grain," Prof.
Starkey atatea. "Some of thoae lota
were grazed until the rye matured
and wua ready for harvest', and a
prominent farmer looking over these
lota ut cutting time estimated that
they would yield about 20 bushels per
acre.
Ah a general rule, the small grains
seeded at the average rate of seeding
will stool after grazing, and as much
grain will be produced as would have
been produced if it had not been grazed.
In some cases the grain crop ia
even increased rather than decreased.
"A few lots of barley gave satisfactory
results when handled us follows:
Planted in October; bogs turned on
ubout the middle of December; burley
grazed continuously until It had
ripened, it furnished green grazing
until ripening time, and after the seed
had matured the hoga made autisfactory
gains on the matured grain."
Pointing out that one udvantuge of
this system is that hogs are furnished
grazing until they may be turned
on soybeans, Prof. Starkey states that
it eliminates the necessity of planting
a crop for grazing between April
1 and June 15. He adds that It is
possible to graze Hiloxi soybeans from
the middle of June until late In November,
provided enough acreage Is
available, so that there may be grazing
the year round by the use of
these two crops?barley and soybeans.
Byrd Family
Held Reunion
Sunday. June "J, brought to reality
the long, looked for occasion when
relatives and friends should meet to
honor the memory of the late John
Hyrd on the day previous to his birth-4
day anniversary, June 10. The large
house and spacious grounds, so often
filled with the presence of this old
pioneer, and the old trees, underneath
whose shade he rested so many times
after a hard day's work, seemed to
bring him back again into close touch
with his children, grandchildren and
friends. String music and quartets
were rendered throughout the morning
until the noon hour when practically
a thousand people enjoyed a
sumptuous meal around the tree-shaded
table that extended across the
front yard. After dinner, talks were
made by the Rev. J. B. Caston, Pastor
of the First Baptist church in
Camden and Roddy Bell, Probate
Judge of Lancaster county, both,
friends of the one whose memory was
commemorated on that day. Hours
were spent renewing acquaintances
and speaking to relatives who had
n6t met in years, and with the parting
day, the vast crowd of people dwindled
to a few as they left for their
homes in Kershaw, Jefferson, Lancaster,
Camden, Cheraw, Bethune.
Great Falls. Blaney, Columbia, Spartanburg,
Mullins, Gastonia, Charlotte
and other places.
Could the founder of this old homeplace,
along with his life companion,
have looked 4n on this celebrated
event which he, too, enjoyed when he
was on this earth, he would have
found that the same love, friendship,
and happiness which his presence instilled
Into the lives and hearts of
those about him, still prevail and
shall endure In generations to come,
a living tribute to his memory.?Contributed.
Another Gold Mine
Another old gold mine has resumed
operations In this county as the
Blackmon mine which Is located about
fifteen miles from Lancaster is again
in operation. The same firm which
is operating the Halle Mine is operating
the Blackmon mine.?Lancaster
News.
County Treasurer Robert M. Swr-itzer,
Cook county, 111., whose accounts
in his recently vacated position of
county clerk are $414,120 short, has
been requested to resign immediately.
HELP KIDNEYS!
STOP GETTING UP NIGHTS
How can you feal bright and spry in the
morning when your sleep is broken because
you hare to get up three or four times during
the night. This is Nature's warning of
\ poorly functioning kidneys?they're not
cleaning your blood of the poisons that cause
Getting Up Nights, Backache, Diaay Spells,
Painful. Scanty Urination.
Your liver and kidneys need a gentle
stimulant?Warner's Compound (formerly
Warner's Safe Kidney A Liver Remedy) originally
a physician's prescription. It's safs?
a doctor's affidavit on top of every package
guarantees it. Warner's Compound (formerly
WARNER'S SAFE KIDNEY A LIVER
REMEDY) coats but little at any good drugrtst
and the flret bottle most help you or
you get roar money hack.
Interest Reduced
On Farm Loans
Columbia, S. C., June 10.?The interest
on all loans made by the Federal
Hand Iiank of Columbia through
national farm loan associations will
bo reduced to- 3*4 per cent for all J
interest payable in the one-year period
^commencing July 1,1935, and to 4
per cent for all interest payable in the
two-year period commencing July 1,
1936. Julian. H.. Scarborough... urealdeat
of the bank, announced today. On
loans made directly by the bank and
not through national farm loan associations
the interest rate will be
one-half per cent higher for these periods.
The temporary reduction of interest
on all Federal land bank loans
having installments due prior to July
1, 1938, Mr. Scarborough said, was
authorized by the Farm Credit Act
of 1935, which has been approved.
Interest payable on installment dates
occurring after June 30, 1938 will be
at the original contract rate, which
is 4% per cent on loans now being
made through national farm loan associations,
and varies from 5 to 6
per cent on loans made prior to April
1, 1935.
The interest rate reduction provided
by the act, Mr. Scarborough said,
will affect only Federal land bank
loans, all of which are first mortgage
loans. The interest rate on land bank
commissioner loans, which are made
on either first or second mortgages
oti farm property, will remain unchanged
at 5 per cent.
Mr. Scarborough said the act extends
until January 1, 1940, the time
in which the land bank commissioner
may make direct loans to farmers on
first or second farm mortgages. The
commissioner, he said, may not loan
more than $7,500 to one farmer; and
the amount of a commissioner's loan
plus any prior encumbrances on the
property may not exceed 75 per cent
of the appraised value. Formerly,
landbank commissioner ^pans could
be made only for the purpose of re2
NO PILLS TODAY
The Columbia Broadcasting company
has announced that after June
30 it will bar gangster and murder
stories from its programs, and will
not allow laxatives, deodorants, and
such to be advertised. There will also
be less advertising and more program.
The Columbia system is to be congratulated.
The radio is a splendid
source of entertainment and education.
It brings into the home news
of the world In sn insiaiTCr, anvt
makes it possible for anyone to enjoy
the master pieces of music and
song by the great artists.
But there is nothing more grating
on the nerves than to hear a lovely
song, and then be reminded that It
comes to you through the courtesy
of Boan's pills. And after hearing
the racket and whinning that is supposed
to be playing and singing, and
the talks on faulty elimination, that
a certain mineral water concern
sponsors, we feel like drinking enough
South Carolina moonshine to make us
unconscious a week. Radio stations
must get money from somewhere' to I
be able to give us entertainment. We
are glad, however, that there will be
more entertainment and less punishment.
After June 30, the Columbia
will be our favorite system.?Pageland
Journal.
Takes Own Life
Columbia, June 11.?James ltex
Graham of Lancaster, described as
a former auditor of the Springs mills,
was found dead with a bed sheet
knotted about his neck today in a
local hotel. Officers said he had committed
suicide.
Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt will be
entertained at the homo of Governor
and Mrs. Talmadge In Atlanta, Ga..
when she visith that city to speak at
the convention of the American Prison
association, October 27 and 28.
financing debts, for repurchasing
farms lost through foreclosure and for
working capital. Under the amended
law, these loans can also be made to
finance the purchase of farms.
General News Notes
It is expected that Finland will pay
the United States her debt installment
of $230,000 due on June IB.
The 36th national encampment of
the Veterans of Foreign Wars is to
be held in September in New Orleans.
Up to the end of May the Atlanta
mule market had done a business
totaling $13,000,000 for the season. It
1b estimated that Atlanta dealers
handled 80,000 mules averaging $160
each.
Flesh colored brassiere were donned
by girls in a rvudiet eoR>sy at the Sam
Diego, Cal., exposition, after the police
had been prodded by women visitors,
who demanded that the girls wear
more clothes.
Just as prison officials were placing
Bud Jones, negro, in the electric
chair at Milledgeville, Ga., a long disI
tanco telephone call from Governor
Talmadge gave the negro a respite of
20 dayB.
Elias Stephenson, 42, gave each of
his three children bags of candy at
Anaconda, Mont., then shot and critically
wounded two of them. He then
committed suicide. He was estranged
from his family and had Just returned
from California.
Field Marshal Julian Hedworth
Byng, "hero of Vlmy Ridge" in the
World war, is dead in Essex, England,
at the age of 72 years. Lord Alienby,
of Jerusalem fame, is the only
great English leader of the World
war now living.
Government agents have discovered
the house at Peshatin, Wash., where
a gang of kidnapers held George
Weyerhauser, D.while they bargained
with his parents for ransom. The
owner of the house was arrested. The
boy identified the housev
[ FOR SALE
DESIRABLE DWELLING
Six Rooms, Bath and SleepI
ing Porch ^
NORTH MILL STREET
Reasonable Terms
I C > *
Enterprise Building and Loan
Association
Camden, S. C.
v
SUMMER SESSION, NEWBERRY COLLEGE
JUNE 11-JULY 20, 1935
Approved courses for renewing and raising teachers* certificates
in Primary, Intermediate and High School grades. Standard courses
for collage degree credit. Special training in Music, Business, Expression.
Al?Uj faculty, varied curriculum, congenial atmosphere, comfortabl<*
'ioniitory accomodation for men and women, excellent table fare.
1 otal cost, including/all expenses, only 142.00.
per catalog write
[_ JAMES C. K1NARD, President, Newberry, South Carolina. j
?S5SS5S**"*
J *
Life Insurance
PROTECTION
<>
at a cast you can afford
Guaranteed never to exceed the maximum premium
shown below.
First three years, 15 per cent less.
Thereafter you pay only net premium (maximum
less dividend). While future dividends cannot be
predicted, on present scales the reduction is more
than 15 per cent.
A li) i (iiiurantrrd Firat 3 Years 4lh Year Net
/ xllllllill iviitC Age Not to Kxceetl 15% I*e?s at Present Scale
This Maximum (Guaranteed) (Subject t'.liaiiga)
tsoon 20 * 74,55 $ 03,35 $ 59,30
^9V/VV 25 85 80 72.95 68.45
MODIFIED 30 100.25 85.20 80.25
WHOLE LIFE 3 35 119.35 101.45 96.05
POLICY 40 144.90 123.15 117.70
Issued at all ages, 45 178.70 151.90 146.25
15 to 66, inclusive. 50 223.40 189.90 183.95
Includes all standard provisions and premium waiver disability benefit.
A VERY PRACTICAL SOLUTION
OF YOUR LIFE INSURANCE NEEDS
GET BOOKLET FROM LOCAL AGENT OR OFFICE, OR HOME OFFICE
> C. R. KIRKLAND, Special Agent
Ordinary Department
305 DeKalb Street Camden, S. C.
.^$rutbnita!
StiHuraurp dnotpamj nf Atnprira
EDWARD D. DUFFIELD Homo Office
President NEWARK, NEW JERSEY