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I LOOKING BACKWARD Taken From the Fllee of The Chronicle Twenty and Thirty Yeara Aqo TWENTY YEAW8 AGO February 26^ 1?1? Hotels report largest number of for the season. Clarence Johuaon loses his reason mil Jumps from Southern railway r....tiQ <n?n Tree Creek and Irowus. He was employed by Jobn Ariodge In southern eeetlon of the i-lty. Gainesville*. Fla*, paper carries noice of deatb of Captain James Chesiiut, Sr., a native of Camden. Baptist church and parsonage at Kershaw destroyed by fire. The parsonage was occupied by Rev. Tucker and family. T Kzell Kelly of West Wateree, gets Ms right leg broken When horse rears and falls on him. Mrs, Alice <0. West, widow of Roderick K. West, dies at her home In the Cassatt section. W. J. Drakeford, of Flat Rock section, gets an arm broken when horse I runs away with him. \V\ F. Nettles elected as foreman for the Camden lire department. Nels de Rode, betrayer of Fdtth Cavel. English nurse, executed by Germans. is assassinated In Brussels. Ij. T. Mills announces he will not be a candidate for reelection to the house of representatives. i Clarkson Rhame celebrates his eighth birthday by Inviting twenty of his young friends to a party. J. L. Klrkland, Sr., of Lugoff, butchers hog weighing; 700 pounds. Simon Ross of Lugoff adds several rooms to his house. Leslie Brown of same section, erecting new residence, as does John Bradley. C. P. DuBose reports the sale of Latham property on Lyttleton Street to J. H. Clark, and part of -'Bloomsbury" forest on North Broad street to L. J. Whitaker. ?J THIRTY YEARS AGO 1 ( February 23, 1906 Alice Lee Roosevelt married to Nicholas Uongworth In an elaborate ceremony in the. beautiful white aud gold eaat room of the White House, thfl IIlirlit UkVitrttiuI Umiifv V * W*** *- " "? *? ?*vll 1/ I ? MQlt vI lee, of the Protestant Episcopal church; officiating. ,] BottWl the South Carolina, legislature jidJourtiH after finishing all businew. Union TwtftyOf Union goes luto bankruptcy; \\ The Wachovia Milla at Chattanooga, Tenn., capitalized at fl,GOO,00U organised to manufacture cotton fabrics. Philadelphia Bulletin of January 17 announces engagement of Richard Manning Boykin, formerly of Camden, but now of the Northwestern and Indianapolis Railroad to Miss Caroline J. Morris, of Philadophiu. Mr. Boykin is a son of Mr. and Mrs. B. H. .Boykin, of Boykin. i Willlum Baker, 36, dies In a Columbia hospital after a long illness. I Orlando, Florida, polo team scheduled to play Camden polo team Monday and Wednesday of the following week. Rev. J. U. Moore resigns as pastor I of the Camden BaptiBt church to go ' as traveling secretary to the State Sunday School Board. Mrs. W. L. Arthur, of Columbia, visiting Mrs. John W. Corbett! J. D. Marshall leaves to attend the Georgia-Alabama Business College at Macon, Ga. Ladies of Presbyterian chyrch hold entertainment and realize about 375 for their efforts. I Douglas Van Vlack, convicted at Twin FallB, Idaho, on a charge of killing his former wife, has been sentenced to be hanged on April 3. N0TJCg 1 Notice Is hereby given that the closing date for entries in the Municipal Democratic Election to be held March 3, 1936, for the purpose of (fleeting a Mayor and six Aldermen for the City of Camden, is February 24, 1936. The hooks of enrollment for said election will close February 25, 1936. L. A. W1TTKOWSKY, Chairman. L; H. JONES, Secretary. FINAL DISCHARGE Notice is hereby given that one mouth "from this date, on March 18, 1936, Jessie Bell Ratcliff will make to the Probate Court of Kershaw County her final return as Executrix- of the estate of J. M. A. Ratcliff deceased, and on the same date she will apply to the said Court for a final discharge as said Executrix. N. C. ARNETT, lodge of Probate for Kershaw County. Camden, S. C., February 18, 1936. FINAL DISCHARGE Notlc is hereby " given that one month from this date, on March 16, 1936 Mrs. Mary Deas Boykin will make to the Probate Judge of Kershaw county her final return as Executrix of the estate of Burwell H. Boykin deceased, and on the same date she will apply to the said Court for a final discharge as said Executrix of sai(frestate. * N. C. ARNETT, " Judge of Probate Camden, S. C., February 15, 1936. NOTICE OF* APPLICATION FOR CHARTER Notice is hereby given that after thp expiration of three days from the date hereof the undersigned will apply to the Secretary of State for a ' corporate charter for the Camden Fertilizer Company, Camden, S. C., empowering it to engage in the business of mixing, manufacturing and selling fertilisers. ..I Notice Is also given of a meeting of the subscribers to shares in the Camden Fertilizer Company to be held In the offices of Henry Savage,. lr . in the Crocker Building at Camden. s. C.,*on Tuesday, February ?6, at 10 a. m., the meeting being for the purpose of perfecting the organization of said proposed corporation. ^ J. H. GUTHRIE M. B. BURNS :% ? HENRY SAVAGE R. M. KENNEDY, JR.? Incorporators. -CITATION ? State of South Carolina County of Kent haw (By N. C. Arnett, Probate Judge) Whereas,.1 Bessie Bell Carpenter made suit to mo to grant her Letteraof Administration of the Estate and effects of Robert Allen Carpenter. These are. Therefore, to cite and admonish all and singular the Kindred and Creditors of the said Robert Allen Carpenter, deceased, that .they l?e and Appear before me, In the Court of Probate, to be held at Camden, 8. C.. on Tuesday, March third next, after publication hereof, at 11 o'clock in the 1 forenoon, to show rause. if any they bare, why the uld Administration should pot bo granted. Given under my hand thflftwentleth day of February. Anno Domini, ltitt. N. C. ARNETT. Judge of Probata for Keiahaw County 1 - - \"'JL. .. / . a advertising a few days ago The Qastonia Gazette carried an article reprinted from The Janesville, Wisconsin, Gazette, telling about the values and virtues of advertising. "Advertising took oatmeal out of the barrel in which mice slept and placed It In clean packages. So It did to prunes and pickles. It took the 6rang? from the tee of,the Christmas stocking, and made it a nation's fruit food. It made the public finicky about the kind of bread it bought. It put dresses on the market and took away the uncertainty of what to wear. Advertising raised vthe standard of living in millions of homes. "What made a nation drink tomato juice and aslf for canned pineapple? What made the people want canned soups and freshly baked crackers and cookies in packages? Surely not by making better cakes, cookies and crackers than anyone else but by first making good foods and then telling the stlgmatic world about it in type and picture. But to get back to our mutton this time the sheep is Tug?well. He would go back to the days l of the town crier-if to anything at All. The above two paragraphs quoted from the Janesvillb paper gives an idea of the drift of the article. How any merchant can argue about advertising is beyond us, in the face of such facts as listed above. More potent arguments can.be found nearer home. These are flrtns In Gastonia which have been made by advertising and nothing else. They have outtripped their competitors because they believe in advertising and have practiced It. Their record since coming to Gastonia proves that. There is no other way to account for It. They will tell you so. And yet there are merchants who will argue to the advertising solicitor that advertising does not pay. We have only to point them to certain well established firms and stores which have exploded that idea long ago. There are two kinds of values, says the Janesville paper that which Is Inherent in the article and the mind value. Mind value is the thing which makes two women argue over the respective merits, of cheese, fur coats, or flowers. Advertising Impresses on the mind the certain things in life that may please. There would be no national distribution of a thousand items of merchandise if it were not for advertising. What advertising has done for shaving creams, toilet soaps, razor blades, tooth paste, shirts, collars, shoes, it for any merchandise and any business. ~ Rlghty women are held under bail bonds of 110,000 each in New York, as the result of the drive against vice In that city. totting L'j. Kigbt* OIssUhw^ Heedaohes, i>oee of Pep, bun^ tns, Smarting. Itehlnt AMflity one u . LONDON WILL CURB GROWTH WITH TREES Green Area Would Keep Cily Within Bounds. London. ? Kver-cxpatullug l/ondon will have to submit to rigid "slimming" treatment soon as a result of schemes I to curb the city's outward growth. | City planners now envisage London I ** Tffltjr built itinhywrnwr linos -tu I moderation?to prevent It sprawling I more and tnore over the neighboring I counties. They envisage also creation I within the next year or so ut one or I possibly two greeu belts surrounding the city as a permanent means of holding In greater London's "waistline." The principal drawback In the past I to, development of skyscrapers, even of modest dimensions, has been a thlrtytlve-year-oid law limiting the height of bulldlnga In the metropolis to 100 feet. Resides, the average ilrlfon prefers a small home and garden of his own to living In upnrtmcnt houses. May Remove Restrictions. The London county council will try I ffoon to hnve the restrictive laws on building heights removed. At the same I time, blocks of new apartment houses, I still within the 100-foot limit, are cropI I'Ing up and transforming the appearI ance of some of London's most famous thorough!ares. The space-saving movement has also been prominent in the big slum-clearance schemes In some poorer districts, where huge modern flat houses are taking the place of thousands of small, tumble-down dwellings. Suburban Growth Large, Too. | Despite the erection of apartmeut houses in the heart of the capital, its suburbs are growing monthly at a I prodigious rate, which even' Londoners scarcely have grasped. It is estimated that the population of greater London Is increasing by 70,000 annually, and I that within a comparatively few years London and Its suburbs'and satellite towns will bouse a quarter of the enj tire population of this country. ! Girdle of Open Spaces. j The "greeu belt" scheme, Just proI pounded by Herbert Morrison, LaborIte leader of the London county council, envisages preservation of a girdle of open spaces around London, between the hub and outer ring of the I metropolis, to bo secured permanently against the building tide. Mr. Morrison announced that the council was prepared to spend ?2,000,000 ($10,000,I (KM)) during the next three years in helping local authorities to purchase green land. J It is hoped to create an Inner green belt In approximately a 12-mile radius of Charing Cross and an outer one at a distance of 20 miles. Each belt would be about half a mile wide. ' A survey in 1027 showed that within II miles of Charing Cross some 32,000 acres of land still remained as suitable "lungs," or open spaces. By 1030 that area had dwindled by 5,500 acres, and I In 1933 only 23,500 acres were available. . It Is estimated that In 20 years at I that rate there will he no open spaces within 11 miles of the center of LonI don. Huge Rocket Expected to > Reach Height of 25 Miles 1 Moscow.?A stratosphere rocket which?If It works?will shoot up 25 miles Into the air and then lower Itself ] safely to the ground by a parachute of peculiar design Is the latest project of I Soviet aeronautical engineers. |_ Intent lipon devising new nnd strange schemes for the exploration of the upI per air, the Soviet engineers make for j the rocket the most unusual of claims. I It will travel, according to the planj ners, at almost double the speed of sound ? 700 meters per second as | against 332. Its entire ascent - therefore will be made In 57 seconds. j Principal feature of the rocket will be an apparatus for regulation of the liquid oxygen fuel which will power the machine. Regulnr explosion of I such fuel has been the principal difficulty of all previous rocket flights, j The rocket will have apace for four I or five small scientlflc Instruments. I Large Cemetery Opened for Interment of Pet# I Reading, Pa.?The love of man for | hla dog la represented In a new ceme4 tery established near here, | Dr. Earle B. Romberger, of the Reading Veterinary hospital, had a "cemetery" on the Philadelphia pike for many years, but found that it was Inadequate. Another tract was obtained. The bodlea of more than 400 dogs, cats, a canary and a duck burled in I the original cemetery were disinterred j- and moved. to the new plot Hegdstones for the most part are uniform I In else and arranged In neat rows, a few owners purchased fairly huge stones. Bach has,the.pet's name, year of birth and death.- " $3 Bill I#tfie?4&:4 2& ? It Prized Postetgfon Sullivan. hid.?A $3 bill, issued by the Boone Oounty hank, tabanon. and dated 1820. is owned by John A, Miller of this county. The one-hundredand-flfteen yrfdr-old bill if printed oW only one side, ft has ^orn as thin as tissue paper, but the printing and sljrpassed"d?n inlu^liT^m m h<,? **** <>f the Miller family and Is ope of the oldest specimens of pa'mf 0)1"W ?n this state, having been printed Just four years after Indiana was admitted to Uto Union. [Jt " BMHnEHHHHHfflH Farmers Renewing Interest In Hogs Clemson, Feb. 8.?Hogs are agafu playing au Increasing part in furnishlug farm Income in many South Carolina count leu au muy be aeen from shipping <and feeding data from typical counties. V^even care of hoge were ehlppod from Sumter county In January," says J. M. Kleazer, county farm agent. !"Our bookings of hogs hare again assumed sufficient volume so that we cai\ ship regularly by cars again. Tops in the last 4ve cars have brought 10 1-2 centa in Richmond?that market paying 26 points over the quoted price for carlot hoge. The eighth 1036 car will move in a few days." From Orangeburg, County Agent L. B. Massey reports: "During January; 13,999 pounds of hoge have been sbld ' through the office for Heven growers for .$1,102.54. Thin it) the lurgeut poundage bandied through thin office in several months. Hoge are agaiit occupying a high plate'in contributing to the farm income of Orangeburg county. There arc more hogs on feed now than ut any time in Bovoral years." W. J. Tiller, Chesterfield county agent, reports some profitable individual sales and much increased interest. He says: "Z. B. and T. H. McCoy sold 11 head of hogs that weighed 2,555 pounds for $298.07. Willie filler, u 4-H club boy, sold nine hogs averaging 219 pounds each and brought 3195.52. The price of hogs has caused lots of opr farmers to tuqn their attention to raising a few for the market." ?? ?? Some other agents reporting brief-1 ly regarding hogs are: R. A. Jackson, Williamsburg?"From December 1 to February 1, 71 hog growers have sold cooperatively 481 hogs weighing 95,615 pounds for $8,378.72." S. W. Epps, ^ Dillon?"The indicax tionB now are that we will market more hogs frpm the county this year than ever, before." M. M. McCord, Georgetown?"With a good corn crop last year, more farmers are planning to utilize the Burplus for feeding out hogs for market." Colin McLaurln, Calhoun?D. L. Haigler, H. W. Perrow, H. C. Geiger, and J. M. ltoof are feeding out a totul of 92 hogs, which are showing nice gains." Folks will light harder and spend more money over a disputed strip of land worth a few dollars than almost anything else. In Spartanburg civil court this week, it cost the county $600 to try a case In which the little bit of land in dispute is' not worth over'$10. Judge Johnson, is reported to have sent word to the litigants that if one would make a deed to the other he would pay the $10. - The League to Combat Anti-Semetism, with headquarters in Palrls, is raising funds for the defense of David Frankfurter, confessed slayer of Wilhelm Gustoloff, Nazi leader in Switzerland. Frankfurter is a Yugoslav Jewish medical student. % Two Remedies For Lice On Calves Clemson, Feb. 15, Partners In genoral may benefit from two rtnuedies for lice on calvea given by C. G. Gushinan, extension dairy specialist In answer to an inquiry, "Take one-half pint of what Is commonly known as 'sheep dip,' which Is a certain solution, and add to it two gallons of warm water. Take a stiff brush am* scrub the eaif with this mixture eU over. Thoroughly clean the stalls and put in new beddiug. Repeat the application of this mixture to the calves in two weeks. One objection to this method is that If applied In aevere weather it might give the calves colds. "Take, one-half gallon of light new j cylinder oil. Put in an ordinary 12| quart bucket and All the remainder of the bucket with warm water. Add thereto one pint of kerosene. Buv a small box of ordinary soup washing powder such as is used in the kitchen by housewives, and add enough of this to the mixture while It Is being stirred so (bat the water, oil, and kerosene will be thoroughly mixed together. Apply this with a stilt 'brush. j "Either one of those mixtures is good but If applied in cold weather the eulves should he in a tight, warm stall where there uro no draftB." Newsprint Mill For The South Chattanooga, Tenn., Feb. 17.?With j enough contracts already underwritkeep & mill in operation for five years, southerp manufacturing of newsprint from pine appeared nearer realization tbday. This picture was brought to directors of the Southern Newspaper PubUshers' Association yesterday by [James G. Stahlman, publisher of the Nashville. (Tenn.) Banner. Further information regarding newsprint manufacturing is expected j to be presented to the annuul meeting of the association which the directors set for May 18-20, at Grove Park Inn, Ashevllle, N. C. Although plana are being mndo for jthe erection of a plant as soon as possible, Stahlman did not predict a definite opening time or make public the proposed Hite. Ho explained that newspaper publishers would not participate in the 'organizing and operation of the plant, hut would leave that to private industry. The Nashville publisher is a member of the 8: N. P. A.'s newsprint committee. A.fisherman and a coast guardsman were frozen to death in a boat that had drifted into Lake Michigan Saturday. A third member of the party I made his escape over the ice and reached the cabin of an Indian after walking seven miles across the Ice. He was badly frost bitten. < .< J John Lewis, coal minders' undon president, has refused to accept a boost in his salary from $12,000 per year to $25,000 a year. General News Notes Carl Taylor, magazine writer, was ?li?t to death and robbed tu a lonely mountain cabin near Albuquerque, N. M, His killer, a young boy, arrested, confessed the crime. Two Gustoula, N. C., plants engaged iu making textile mill equipment, were damaged $30,000 or more by a mysterious tire Thursday night. lx>ss covered by insurance. The senate Is expected to vote on the soil-ocnservatlou farin bill today or tonight. This blU is oue Intended to get around the killing of the AAA by the supreme court, and carries an appropriation of $600,000,000 for farm relief. The A. H. P. church at Oreenvllle has called to Its pastorate ltev. C. O. Williams, from the StatesvlUe Avenue church at Charlotte. He told hla congregation he had not decided whether to acept the call, which was unanimous. He hue been at the Charlotte church for 16 years and was Ita first regular pastor, and built it up a great deal. The pastor of the only A. It. P. church in Greenville went to Tampa, Flq., early in January. 0 The state... of South Carolina borrowed $760,000 o*i Its notes at less than three-fifths of one, per cent per annum interest, at the week end. The Citizens and Southern bank branch in Columbia took the loan, the notes to be dated February 10 and payable In 90 days. It la the lowest interest rate ever paid by this stats. A half dozed other banks bid for the notes, all at a little over one per cent, among them being the Peoples National of Rock Hill. A state' lancing tournament will be held at Cameron on February 22, when the days of old will be portrayed by this ancient sport. Everybody is Invited, and. no admission will be ^charged. Lost Stock Certificate Notice Is hereby given that the undersigned will six weeks after the date hereof apply to the corporation for the Issue to him of a Stock Certificate for live shares of the Capital Stock of Kuykendal Chemical Company. iu lieu of Certificate No. 247, Issued February 23, 1924, for five shares in the name of J. L. Morffeley, ! deceased, the original certificate hav' ing been lost. J. L. MOSELBY, JR., Administrator' for Estate of J. I,. Moseloy Camden, S. C., February 20, *1936 Beware Coughs from common colds Thai Hang On Vr- matter how many medicines you hftvo tried for your cougli, chest cold or bronchial irritation, you can got reI lie* now with Crecmulslon. Serious | tiouble may be brewing and you cani not allord to talco a chance with anything Iris than Crcomulaion, which gocj right to tha scat of the trouble > aid nature to soothe and heal the inflamed membranes c.i the germ-laden J phlegm Is loosened and expelled. Even If o titer remedies nave failed, \ don't be discouraged, your druggist i? authorized to guarantee Creomulsion and to refund your money If you are not ' satisfied with results from the very first " bottle. Get Creomul ston right now. (Adv.) HHBMBDEfiOBBBBflBKHBBMBMBMBBMBMBBBBMBBHMBBBMBMMMBBHMBPBMBBMBBBMBBBBBBI C? ' ' * - ' ^ NOW! 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