The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, February 21, 1936, Page PAGE TWO, Image 2

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ETIWAN FERTILIZERS! SINCE 18G8 HAVE BEEN CONSISTENT CROP PRODUCERS I i .1 - -SOLD BY?r : M. FRED E. MOSELEYl I Office and Warehouse at Bob McCaikill't Store j j | (Old Schlosburg Store on Main Street) flj | I , ... , j I CASH PAID FOR CORN AND PEAS I j Two Men Arrested In Counterfeit Case Darlington, Feb. 4.?George 11??<!won I and Colon Truett, charged with hnv- J lug counterfeit money in their pos- j session, were arrested today by Shur- i Iff J. H. Coker, Deputy Sheriff V. A.; Grinnell and Federal Officer Crook after the officers had received a tip that the money had been seen on the public square here. Hudson was arrested at his home near Darlington and officers alleged found in counterfeit half dollars on him. The. money, it is alleged, 1 was made at the home of the men. i Truett was arrested near Hudson's home. Officers have conducted a search into many sections of the county in an effort to locate the machinery used in making the counterfeit half dollars, but their efforts have been t h warted. The money, according to officers, is hardly distinguishable from the real coins except that the pieces are a shade darker and less heavy. Hudson was released from the Federal prison In Atlanta last December ?!. after serving a term for participating in an automobile racket. Ho lias stated, according to local officers, that he bought the counterfeit money from some one else. Darlington ^ifficers during .their investigation into the eounterfe.it racket made two purchases of counterfeit money. Mrs. Huey Long of Louisiana, was sworn into office as a United States senator on Monday. j CARPETBAGGER RULE Days of Good Spending Told of in Old Manuscript Published In 1879. Columbia, S. C\, Fob. 1.7.?One of tlie lurgest committee rooms in the Blute House wus fitted up as a first class restaurant, open from 8 a. m. to 2 a. m., during carpetbagger rule in South Carolina, usserts Dr. J. A. Lol>and, president of the old Laurensvilie Female College, In "A Voice From South Carolina," published In 1X79, a copy of which is in the Uni-' verslty of South Curolina library. Refreshments were free to all members, A "Joint Investigating Committee on Public Frauds" wub created when the people got control of tlie government, and published a 937-page report of its findings. The committee found that in 18711872, contracts were let for $5 clicks, 25-cent hat pegs, $4 looking-glasses, and $2 curtains, but in 1872-1873, contracts were for $600 clocks, $30 hat racks, $600 mirrors, and $600 brocadI ed curtains. Columbia merchants testified to furnishing committee rooms I each year, besides 40 bedroom suites. J Furniture unaccounted for amounted : to $182,385. . Presiding officers of the House and ; Senate were permitted to issue pay I certificates for their respective bod- | ies. Checks were sometimes made out to fictitious persons. The amount fre- 1 <inently had to be raised so that other officials who had to sign them could share equally in the graft. It is reported that 50 per cent of I the 1,500 population of the Lago I Grande district, Brazil, is dead from an unidentified disease. j p? III III III. I Willi | Lights of New York <iby L. L. STEVENSON !'*? ?'?i (i Walt Iter, uiuitre dlodei pf the McAlpln, bus a scrap lunik I lull throw* a lot o' light on tin* rating huht.ts of various gentlemen vvoomo j names appcur in the history lay'lf*. For lm?u?ue, Luil* XIV iiie.on an average. eight Indira u day: Flmrle mugue liked cabbage and prized Ills iahbaiT^ patch so much lm itfmfci'd It only to lila closest friends. Napoleon was mighty Wild or bold chicken. it la ^ little known fact, the owner of Che ael'ap law?k revealed, that thoao who were Invited to dine with Napoleon fortified themselves with u meal beforehand, alnee the emperor Mulshed Ida food In five mlnutea and got tip from the table. Naturally, aa a mark of reapect, everyone elae hud to get up ulong with him, no matter how far behind he happened to abu, Old I.oula I'hllllppe wua the first man to Institute the cuatotn of paying for bunquets, according to the scrap hook which Mr. Walt her haa been building up during 22 years. Louis charged a dollar for a .small banquet and two dollura for. a big one. lie called the charge a "forfeit," and It had to be paid whether or not the guest uttended. Charles \r, of Spain, was extremely fond of pickled herring?so fond, Indeed, that he frequently visited the grave of William Bokeld, the Fleming who first pickled herring. . * In the old days, members of the nobility actually engaged teachers to coach their children In the proper method of dining. Mr. Wulther holds that such schools might he a good thing todav^.Hft. however, la not in favor of tiie mannera of King Monroe of the early Celts. Monroe had two meals served him nt every banquet. One, was placed with the guests, the other behind the king. When the king didn't like the company, he merely turned around and ate with his hack to his guests. ? Hotels go'away hack to the days of Nebuchadnezzar, the tlrst hnvlng been In 'Nineveh. It was run by royalty, hut It seems that didn't help the service much. The Romans were the first to have chain hotels. Travelers, however, had to bring their own food. As late as the Seventeenth cpntury, travelers brought their own beds. * , The Walt her scrap book reveals also that the old custom of serving a few drops of wine to the host first, Instead of to the ladies, had a highly sensible beginning. There was a time when, if the host drank first the appetites of the others nf the table Improved because in those days, a guest | didn't know whether he was Invited to j he dined or poisoned. ? Speaking of wines, it seems that another custom of the past is being revived. In pre-prohihltlou days, wine agents boosted their sales by paying waiters 25 cents for each champagne cork returned to them?provided the cork wns the right kind. Now they are trying the plan again, but not with much success as yet. As for corks, It Is said that a wine connolseur can Judge wine more accurately by the condition of the cork than by tasting the contents of the bottle. The Municipal court of the city of New York Is being moved from Thirtyfifth street to Lafayette street. Not only will the Job take two months, but It Is complicated by the fact that the court must he kept going. Commercial cases and civil suits are heard and the Municipal court Is held to he the bus i lest In the world. The 03 Judges and ! seven referees handle 700,000 cases a 1 year. ? noil Syndicate. ? WNl' Service. ! Man Unknowingly Makes Longest Telephone Call Vancouver. It. i <\ ? A Vancouver 1 business man established a new world's longdistance telephone ^all nv.r! hut ! didn't know it until a mouth |.unit happened ttii- way : The !>nsi lies-; man wanted to speak to a tfiend : In Sydney. Australia, hut S\<! > \ -ole 1 photic otiieln's eon! In't |.<e to film j there, so They tried Perth 1 ~.uu mile* ; away, found him and connected the two men, without informing the Vancouver man about it. After talking tlve minutes over HVooo miles of land and water, the two men hung up. La ter It was revealed that the call from Vancouver to Perth was a new world's record for n commercial call. Unearth Reptile Bones Fort Peck. Mont. ? Fragment. ot Jaws, teeth and other hones of a prehistoric skeleton unearthed here have been Identified as belonging to a ! ingextinct marine reptile, the Mosasauri ? ???I Montana May Boast Gold-Plated Road Malta. Mont.- Recent news stories telling of the vast amount of gold that Is contained in the dirt used In onstrurtion of Forr Peck Hani loaves I'liillipps county residents unmoved. Because it present plans are consummated, there is a strong possibility that the county will have a gold-plated highway that will put the dam to shame. Estimates are tlmt about $5,000,. 4?X> In gold will be contained In the dam?about ft cents per cubic ytrd. ; But the contemplated highway in Phllltpa cotinty would contain aa estimated 30 cent a par yard. ^^ bbebshesqsesbsss^^ Court Upholds T. V. A. Project Washington, pefc, 11 Th<} KOYOm. uu ut won u major victory In tin sn'jpiomo court today when tho justice* by fc to 1 hold the TV A could dispose or surplus power manufactured at Wilson Duiu at Muacle Bhouls. Justice Mcltey nobis dissented. Chief Justice Hughes handed down 4W 4?wd?d ruling-before a orowd oL prominent lawyers and members of congress at 1 p, m, M Only power from Wilson Dam had been sold by the TVA, The Justices held that federal die 1 position of power was a question for I congress to answer, not the courts. The court uphold the right of the government to dispose of all surplus J power made at dams Intended to promote navigation or aid national defense. . The government owned the property, said Hughes, and there was nothin the consHtntTBn to limit the goveminent s disposition of the power. The general purposes of TV A, it decided, present no "Justifiable question." I he i ennessce Hiver is u nuvigu-1 ble stream," said Hughes, developing j the thesis that the constitution reposed powers over navigation in the federal government. ' in Its present condition the river | is not udequate for commercial navi-1 gation." j The only thing involved In the present case, he said, wps validity of a contract for sale of transmission linesj by the Alubama Power Company to! TV A. ' Heading deliberately before a distinguished audience, the chief justice dismissed at the start the contention I tiiat those suing had no right to do so because they were preferred stock| holders of the Alabama Company. Justice H ran dels had by implication questioned their right. A court of equity should not shut its door against such actions," he asserted. i The general purposes of the TVA he proceeded, do not provide a "Justieable question." j It was impossible at the time to tell whether the court upheld or threw out the contract under attack. I The court, by its ruling, upheld a contract for sale by the Alabama I Power Company of transmission lines to the Tennessee Valley Authority. I The court limited its decision to the case before it. i he right of the government to seek wider markets for power than was provided by the Alabama Power company stands- up. Some of the power produced by the federally-built dams la used by the government. "Surplus power" is that J not needed by the government-. j Justices BrandieB, Cardozo, Roberts and Stone presented a concurring opinion saying the case should have been dismissed. I Hughes first reviewed the history of the case. He spoke in a clear, I i firm tone. Fmacted In the "hundred days" ses- j sion of congress in 1933, the TVA was the first governmental venture in the long-time social and economic "planning. TVA took for its nucleus the $137,000,000 war-time power and nitrogen properties at Muscle Shoals, Ala. To this original investment $111,000,000 | was added. Mr. Roosevelt has asked congress tor $43,000,000 more. His budget for 1931 estimated still another $95,000,O00'would be needed to complete projects "started or proposed." Jail Break Occurs At Bamberg J><? in hi. i g, t cb. 17.- ?Oft icers sought today (o pit k up the trail of a white man. Proadns Hoover, and four nogro prisoners who escaped from the Bamberg county juil here early yesterday. Hoover, held on a housebreaking and larceny charge, had been returned here Friday from Tampa, Fla., after a previous jail break. He escaped with seven other prisoners about three months ago. The four prisoners who escaped with him yesterday were George Downs. Clinton Paul. Heffhfin HailHard. all negroes, and another negro .called "Booze." They were all to face trial at a term of court opening today. They heated pieces of metal from the cots and burned holes in the ceiling to give them access to a loft and then esonped by means of a rope made of blankets. The delivery left a single prisoner, Duther Donald, white in the jail He said he refused to join the others in the getaway and that Hoover, armed with a window weight, prevented him from giving an alarm. 001 F *~Knox, Chicago newspaP?r owner and candidate for the Republican presidential nomination, in an address at Philadelphia, likened government under the present administration to that under Mosaollnl, Stalin and Hitler. Fertilizer Needs Of fteans and Tom aloes Charleston, Feb. 15.?Results of fertilizer experiments with beans and tomatoes at $e South Carolina Truck Experiment Station indicate that changes may profitably be made in present fertilizer practices with these crops, according to J. M. Jenkins, Jr., assistant horticulturist. "Growers of tomatoes frequently use very high applications of potash in the belief that yields will be increased and that a tougher shipping tomato will be obtained, but experiments show that yields are actually decreased when more than five per, cent potash is employed in the fertilizer mixture, while the shipping quality of the product is not improved," > says Mr. Jenkins. Highest yields of tomatoes at the Truck Station have been obtained from fertilizers analyzing 3 to 5 per cent nitrogen, 7 to 10 per cent phosphorus, and 0 to 5 per cent potash, at the rate of 1,000 pounds per acre. . I "Highest yields of snap beans were obtained from plots which had been fertilized with a mixture analyzing 5-7-0," the horticulturist continues.' "Results df further tests, however,' indicate that in many cases 3 per cent nitrogen and 10 per cent phosphorus may prove to be more profitable. Beans failed to respond to potash, and yields decreased with increas. I es in the amount of potash applied.' This behavior may be due in part to the fact that soils for vegetable crops are usually highly fertilized, and that sufficient potash has accumulated in the soil to satisfy the demands of the bean, plant. For a spring crop of beans 800 pounds per acre may be sufficient, or even less if the land is in good condtion and has been prop-1 erly cared for. "The fall crop may usually be successfuly grown with no fertilizer other than a side-dressing of 200 pounds of nitrate of soda, provided the land has previously tifeen fertilized well for a spring crop or planted in a summer cover crop. Where a legume is used as a green manure crop during the summer, higher yields .may be expected than would otherwise be obtained." Large Snake Killed About three weeks ago, Simon Cook, a colored employee of the J. E. Carson Farms, which are located three miles south of Kershaw, killed a rattlesnake four feet in length, which had eleven rattles and a button. Simon was engaged in his duties around the farm at the time, and as he started to climb a bank on the side of the gully, he was attracted by the sound of the rattle, upon investigation the snake was found and killed just as it was ready to spring. Earlier this winter a snake of somewhat milder temperament was killed near Charlotte, and every one was very much excited over finding a reptile of the kind, out at this time of the year. It is rather unusual, but on rare occasions they sometimes come out on sunny days.?Kershaw Era. Because of the long drawn out and^! intense cold weather, that ban lh vailed over the country, and cspeclalffB in the middle and northwestern state*,! an acute coal shortage is threatened,^! both because there Is a shortage it^! the mines and because of inability of H the railroads to handle coal due to I track and other traffic conditions, Is I some sections heo,ds of mining unions^! are rather indisposed to help the eit^! uation by permitting longer hours oil work in the coal mine. Cotton Breeder | pgwai i MI ?mm. . : ; I H A. D. COSGROVE I m COTTON SEED I BE OFFERED HERE I Colonel Cotgroye'ft Marl- I Rose Strain To Be Sold I In County^ ' v;; J. T. Hay Cotton Company, Inc. fl will offer farmers of thia 9 section seed for next year's cotton I planting which promises to solts i some of the problems of the cotton 1 planter. The cottonseed Is that of the fa- H moue Mars-Hlose variety of cotton; 3 developed - by the veteran plant 1 breeder, Col. A. D. Cos grove, who 9 for 40 years has been studying and 1 breeding cotton. The strain yields heavier than average good cotton, 4 Is resistant to the boll weevil and is hardy in varying wetrther. H The local concern will be agent for the Southern Hardware andjii Seed store of Birmingham, whcr^H Is distributing Colonel Cosgrove's -fl improved cotton seed over the belij^^H Tlie Mars Rose variety won first d place and blue ribbon at the Ala?* 1 bama State Fair this year in com* petition over all other well known 1 varieties. * - Colonel Cosgrove, originator and H breeder of the siftaln of Mars-Rosa?* cotton Is a colorful and plcturesqtt* H character. Ho is a clergyman, and 9 has been for many years, but has | found time to delve into the intracacles of plant breeding and col* ture. He has been referred to M 9 the Burbank of Dixie. 9 1 _ I ?INTRODUCING? "Mars-Rose" Cotton ! Colonel A. D. Cosgrove's Remarkable Success After 40 Years Of Experimentation This cotton has produced under test more than four bales per acre?Genuine A. D. Cosgrove Mars-Rote cotton seed are sold only in sealed cartons bearing the personal signature of A. D. Cosgrove, the originator. WHAT SOUTH CAROLINIANS THINK OF "MARS-ROSE" COTTON | Greenville, S. C. December 12, 1935. Southern Hardware and Seed Store, i Birmingham, Ala. j Dear Sirs: | I have had exceptionally good results from my Mars-Rose ! j cotton seed. This cotton has some features that give it a decided advantage over other varieties that I have planted. It 18 at least 10 days earlier, a very heavy fruiter, haB exi ceptlonally large bolls, is wilt resistant, turns out well from the gin and the length of the staple brings a good premium. My yield with Mars-Rose was considerably more per acre than with other varieties, i This cotton cannot be beat for producing under boll weevil conditions. , Yours very truly. I P. O. Box 22. Greenville, S. C. M. E. HUNTER. ?INTRODUCTORY PRICES? II Bushel F. O. B. Birmingham, Ala. $10.00 1-2 Bushel F. O. B. Birmingham, Ala $5.50 1 Peck F. O. B. Birmingham, Ala. v $3.00 Small Trial Package Contains 1,500 to 2,000 Seeds $1.00 A LIMITED AMOUNT OF THESE SEED . FOR SALE THIS SEASON ?Apply? HAY COTTON CO., Inc. ^ J^utledge Street Camden, S^C. I Cotton Seed Meail I FED PROPERLY . Is the cheapest concentrate on the market/ It is al8o the cheapest organic Ammonite for Fertilizing all 7 Consult your nearest County Demonstration Agent or~J Dealer And write f or a copy of pamphlet on Feeding tQ U National Cottonseed Products Association 1 609 Central Union Building COLUMBIA, S. C. | Rain Check ? WHEN YOU HAVE YOUR CAR WASHED WHATfS ASSURANCE HAVE YOU THAT IT Willi NO?? RAIN? ' ' ~1 ~ " SMALL CARS 75c. LARGE CARS $1.00 NOW WITH EVERY WASH JOB i GIVE A RAIN CHECK GOOD FOR ANOTHER WASH IF IT RAINS IN THf^NteXT TWENTY-POUR HOURS. Guzzy s Esso Station