The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, May 29, 1936, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3
Don't cover the dish In which apples
are being baked.
NOTICE OF TAX SALE
To Alice A. RuBsell.
You are hereby notified that under
a certain tax execution to me directHi.
the real estate hereinafter described
was sold at public outcry tor
taxes, on the 3rd day of June, 1936,
to Forfeited Land Commission, they
beinu' the highest bidder therefor, and
unless you, being the owner or holder
of a mortgage covering the said premises.
redeem the said real estate within
thirty (30) days after service of
this notice upon you, title to the same
will be delivered to the purchaser.
The said real estate was levied-upon
us the property of Wm. Grant and Ed.
'ones and is described as follows:
l"n acres land bounded on all sides
b> land now or formerly of J. M.
Martin, known as Chesnut Lands."
Dated at Camden, South Carolina,
this TDi day of May, 1936.
J. H. McLEOD,
Sheriff tor Kershaw County, South)
Carolina.
CITATION
Stat" .if South Carolina,
County of Kershaw. ^ 1
by X C. Arnett, Probate Judge: i
l
Whereas, Callie H. Williams made
-nit to me to grant her Letters of
Administration de Bonis non of the
Kstat.- and effects of John C. Wil-,
hams
These are, therefore, to cite and
admonish all and singular the Kind-1
r?ld and Creditors of the said John
C. Williams deceased, that they be
and appear before me, in the Court of
i'rohafe, to be hold at Camden, S. C?
"it Wednesday, June 3rd next, after
jmh!?i. ation hereof, at 11 o'clock in
'h" fun-noon, to show cause, if any
'h. \ have, why. the said Admini^jra:|un
should not'be granted.
Liven under my hand this twentieth
day of May Anno Domini 1936.
N. C. ARNETT,
luuin of Probate for Kershaw County.
FINAL DISCHARGE
'i? - is hereby given that one
:i'l. from this date, on June 25,
i will make to the Probate Court
< '! K.rshaw County my final return
Administratrix of the estate of J.
' ''illis deceased, and on the same
I win apply to the said Court
: ' final discharge as said Adminix.
MRS. MAMIE SMITH,
Administratrix.
' -'"Ml-n S c? May 25, 1936.
Urges Farmers Study
Use Of Strip Crops
Spartanburg, May 23^ Every farmer
in the South Carolina Piedmont
haa at thin season an opportunity to
see how strip crops control erosion
on the demonstration and camp arena
of the Soil Conservation Service. The
demonstration areas are located in
Spartanburg, Greenville. York, Anderson,
Newberry and Lancaster counties.
Alternate strips of green close-growing
crops and cultivated crops plantled
on the contour now present a vivid
picture of this erosion control measure.
Strip-cropping, according to EriiVst
Carnes, state coordinator of the Soil
I Conservation Service, is a form of
crop rotation which minimizes sheet
erosion, insures terraces against
breaks, and improves the condition
and fertility of the soil by furnishing
a basis for crop rotation.
Any close-growing or soil-binding
crop that makes its maximum growth
in the spring when the most Intense
rainfall may result in erosion should
be used for strip cropping, Mr. Carnes
suggests, naming among such crops
adaptable to Piedmont South Carolina
the small grains, lespedeza, sorghum,
sudan grass, sweet clover, soybeans,
cowpeas, millet, vetch, alfalfa and
sericea.
STEVENS' REELECTION
TO ROAD BODY FORESEEN
Hock Hill, May 24.?A source here,
close to state political affairs, predicted
today that John T. Stevens of Kershaw.
will be placed again on the
State Highway commission under the
new law which calls for election by
the legislative delegations of the sevierjil
counties composing this judicial
! district.
| The source pointed out. that there
I are 10 representatives aud four sen'ators
in the four counties in the district
and that of the total 14 only 5
' will stand by Governor Johnston,
: leaving the remainder to favor the
old commission of which Mr Stevens
j is a member.
| Reports from all sections of Georgia
j are to the effect that the planted
I crops of cotton and corn are in a bad
j way. with poor stands of both crops
Jin all sections and farming operations
are virtually at a standstill because
'of dry weather.
| A man at Bradentown, Fla , threatening
to jump from an eight story
building, climbed down to safety af.
ter he had been promised a prison
I sentence of six months, the negotiations
being made by a policeman
1 shouting from the ground.
birds great travelers
St Haul, M Inn.?Northward over
sky ways that span two rontlnoius. na
tire's in. pj,| navigators of the air
swing on,.* more in cororful parade.
Along Minn.'solas, Mississippi flight
nut'. tlx- annual migration reaches
"b height in May Restless and eager
to trav? | on, iii?. birds Haunt brilliant
t'Uptlal plumage; lavish, song wells
from liny throats
Weighing loss than an English penny.
tlx* humming bird lilt's aiross the
Gulf ?f Mexico in a single night on
out.' 10 Minnesota. The s.oidlug
house wren, familiar to all, tomes
t'om distant Mexican provinces.
Purple martins take hIx weeks to
j speed to Minnesota from Hrasil. The
<la li?t y Baltimore oriole, a rugged
| traveler, wings from far oft Columbia
| and l'tdru to hang its neat in Minnosotii
trees.
Hocking merrily on a re.-d or fas
"ock. tin. Mobiink is a common sumresident
of fields. It teams with
ihe barn swallow in Patagonia and
Paraguay, South America, to cover
[the Caribbean sea and scoot north
| via the West Indies and rioridu to
[ Minnesota.
Scientists have tried to explain migration,
What prompts the birds to
start from South America? How does
the same wren return to the same
house year after year? These and
countless other questions are unsolved.
The migration began last month
with the robins, bluebirds, blackbirds
and waterfowl. These species winter
principally in the Culled States Just
below the frozen water line.
In late April and early May came
the seed-eaters?the same 30 varieties
of sparrows that trek through Minnesota.
The duck flight, was in full
swing then.
Hut the climax came in early May
when the brilliant warblers, their
gaud> forms glistening like jewels in
the sunlight, fluttered north from
points as far distant as South America.
Shorebirds Join the northward tide
in May. I .ate hawks ride the air currents,
spiraling upward on a circular
| staircase of the sky.
Through Minnesota in tuid-May
conies the golden plover that \ ios
I with the world's record flyers. Every
twelve months adults of this species
i traverse an s.000 miles clips,, from
the frozen arctic to the open pampas
of Argentina.
In early January they set out from
South America. After nesting in the
arctic, the old birds return, hopping
off from Nova Scotia and flying 2,000
miles over the open Atlantic to the
tii> of South America. The immature
plovers go south as they came,
through the Mississippi valley. Why?
Nobody knows.
Chimney swifts, birds with a tailless
appearance seen commonly over city
dwelling in the summer, come from
no-one-knows-where.
I heir winter flight has been traced
to South America, but there the Jungle
verdure "swallows. up" the birds for
still another migration mystery.
Early Summer Hints
For Home Gardners
Clemson. May 25.?June work in the
home garden should emphasize two
important features, according to the
recommendations of A. E. Schilletter,
extension horticulturist. These are
preparations for a supply of vegetables
in the lute summer and fall, and
an active campaign against insects
and diseases that might otherwise cut
short the present supply.
To be ready for the next season the
specialist advises that the home gardener:
Secure seed of lookout Mountain
Irish potatoes for planting in July.
and prepare the soil as early as
possible to conserve moisture; make
successive plantings of corfi?Stowell's
Evergreen or Country Gentleman.
beans (snap> ( bunch) ?Bountiful
and Strangles* Green I'od, bean
(pole)?Kentucky Wonder and McCaslan;
transplant tomatoes, sweet
potatoes, eggplant and pepper; make
plantings of seed for later transplanting
of collards?Georgia or Georgia
Southern, cabbage?Succession and
Gate Flat Dutch, tomatoes?New
Stone, Greater Baltimore or Marglobe.
To guard against loss by insects
and diseases Mr. Schilletter recommends
control measures as follows:
Spray with six level leaspoonfulH
of load arsenate in one gallon of water
or Bordeaux mixture for striped
eufttmber beetles; or dust with one
part of calcium arsenate and twenty
parts of hydra fed Bme.
The same spray for tomato fruit
wvfrms. but if water is used, add two
teaspoonfuls of Kayso or six teaspoon
fills of hydrated lime. Dust with one
part of calcium, arsenate and six party
of hydrated lime.
Spray with 4-4-50 Bordeaux mixture
to control fungus leaf spots of toina
to, and late blight of Irish potatoes
and tomatoes.
The specialist concludes with the
suggestion that Ly mulching tomatc
plants with straw, leaves, or litter
moisture will be conserved, resulting
in a longer fruiting season.
Pine May Replace
Cotton In South ]
I Anyone predicting, prior to a year
[ago, ili,?t King Cotton would mhui be
I replaced its the chief money crop of
In- South, would huv e boon laughed'
at
One your ago tit ti oonforoiioo of
scientists. Iii<lustriali>is and fanners
In (H'urhorn. Mich., various new in(lustiial
outlets Wore proposed fop
products of the soil, th<' Object being
to offset limiting production by plowing
under crops or otherwise us a national
policy. At that meeting Dr.
Charles II Herty, research director
of u savannah, (?a., laboratory, predicted
that papermaklng from slash
pine was destined to replace cotton
as Dixieland s most profitable product
1 he doctor's prediction was received
with considerable skepticism then
but be was hack again at the second
annual conference last week with
more reports and more good proof
that he was right and that this new
industry already was developing rapidly
tfinee last year, Dr Herty re
ported, ?10.000,t?0t) had been spent oils
being spent on paper mills in (ho
South And mills, equipped to make
pape;- out of slash pine, is all thut has
been lacking to get (his Industry under
way-there.
Nearly all paper used in the United
Stales has been coming from Canada
and ^Sweden. Because of the high
cost of transporting paper from across
the Atlantic, ( anada has had utmost
a monopoly in our paper business. It
has been worth hundreds of millious
annually to the Canadians. Some
paper is made from wood pulp on this
side of the line in Minnesota and
Wisconsin, but this constitutes only
a very small per cent of our needs.
The slash-pine of the South will
grow to a size large enough to produce
wood pulp for pfiper in ten
years. The growth in Canada requires
twenty to thirty years. Millions
of acres of cutover lands are
lying idle and unproductive down
South that can grow this species of
pine tree in great abundance.
Dr. H K. Barnard, director of the
"farm chemurglc council," created by '
the Dearborn conference, which seeks I
to find more outlets for farm products
through the chemical industry, snys
a Southern farmer could make a living
with 40 acres of slash pine mere- j
ly by cutting 4 acres a year. By the'
time he reached the last l uc re plot j
the stand of pine on the first would ;
be ready to cut again. And there is
growth large enough right now to
be cut without waiting ten years for
a first crop.
Dr. Barnard reports that thousands
of acres of slash-pine, marginal land,
one thought worthless, is being
bought up in the South in anticipation
of the new paper-making industry
which is threatening to topple
King Cotton from his throne.
So That's How It Started
III 1X79 the late Melville K. Stone,
founder of the Associated Cress, decided
that Chicago should have a
-penny paper to compete with the
nickel ones. The stumbling block
was that there were no pennies in
circulation there. So Stone, then
2S. went to merchants to argue that |
in the average person's mind 99 cents:
was a much smaller sum than one
dollar. He begged and pleaded and ]
finally convinced them that odd prices
would increase their business, and Incidentally
start pennies circulating
which would buy his paper. He sent
to the Philadelphia mint for several
barrels of pennies and became Chicago's
first penny Importer. The idea
took hold, his Daily News was a success
and odd price bargains were
born ?News-Week.
J. B. ("happen of the Birmingham.
Ala., News and Age-Herald, has been
elected president of the Southern
Newspaper Publishers association, in
session at Asheville. N. C.
Bahson Issues
Warning To Students
Conway, Ark., May 26.?Roger W.
Rubson, envisaging another World
War before 1950. which might bring
destruction to the great aeubourd
cities, advised college graduates today
to plan their futures in interior
America.
The Massachusetts economist and
statistician said in an address for delivery
before Joint commencement exexercises
of Hendrlx and Arkansas
State Teachers' colloge.fi: "Frankly, I
believe that you are to see very perilous
times."
"There will be no Kuropeun war
this year, or perhaps for several
years; but only a spiritual uwakenIng
can prevent another great world
war before 1960, into which the United
States will necessarily be drawn," he
said. "In this coming world conflict
I should not be surprised to see destructions
of the great dlles of our
Atlantic and Pacific seacoasts. . ."
Hab.son spoke on "Lesson I Have
Learned from Hard Knocks." His advice
to the graduates included:
"Remain in the stute of Arkansas.
Do not go to any seaboard city,
whether it is located oti the. Atlantic
or Pacific coast. Keep fairly well In
the Interior of the country.
"Avoid large cities. If a revolution
lakes place, it will not be between
capitalists and Socialists per se, but
it will be between the people living
in the cities and the people living in
the country. If such a conflict comes,
those living in small cities will have
a great advantage. In such u conflict,
the large cities have, not a chance.
They could be starved into submission
within a week."
ITging acquisition of a time "with
u patch of land sufficient to support
yourself und family In an emergency,"
the learning of a profession or trade,
emphasis on character und health,
large families and "Interest in some
church," llabson suid:
"1 wish there was some way my
words could be put in permanent form
and stored away by you to be taken
j down about the year 1960. Then you
| will be wishing that you had taken
j the advice of this old fogy who la
j talking to you tonight."
Harry P. Williams, millionaire avia|
tor. fell to his death in a plane crash
| near Haton Rouge, La., Tuesday night,
'land with him Johnnie "Red" Worthen,
' a veteran pilot. The plane crashe,d
1 after getting into a wooded swampI
land.
A reciprocal trade treaty between
: the United States and Finland, do1
signed to expand their commercial relations,
has been signed by both governments
! Blease Teases Other
Office Seekers
Colutnhiu. Mit 2y.'* Cole I*. Blouse,
who has boon both governor und senutor,
aaUl today he wa? undocidod
whether to oppose Senator James K.
Byrnes for renoinlnatton this summer.
Hut ho suggested:
"Some rooj good-looking woman
should run, one who does not believe
In social equality between white people
and negroes."
He commented that "there'll probI
ubly be others in the race against
Byrnes."
Blouse criticized Hyrnes' policies in
the Honate, but praised Senior Senator
E. I). Smith because he had "stood
by the true principles of domocrary."
"Any time Ed Smith runs," he added,
"he Iiuh the vote and Influence of
Cole Blouse."
Hyrnes defeated Blease for reuomInatlon
six years ago.
ODD ACCIDENT8~
Stories of freak accidents followed
the recent Southern tornado. W, T.
l'orter lay gravely 111 in his Alabama
home. The storm wrecked four of
the five rooms, the one in which he
lay escaping undamaged. In the same
state, high winds knocked the home
of Robert Elmore off its foundation
but didn't break an egg In a bucket
containing ten dozen. Over In Georgia,
VV. P. Sleigh, his wife and baby
crouched against a wall in their home
as the storm struck. The wall beside
which they''Knelt was the only one
of their home left standing.
Two old cronies, William Maurer
and Alexander Mahoney, aged 81 and
91, respectively, were walking about
Soldiers Homo in Washington in the
early morning hours. They bumped
together and Maurer fractured a hip,
subsequently dying from pneumonia.
A coroner's vertdct read accidental
death.
A South Carolina night watchman
In a lumber yard hid his whisky bottle
under a pile of boards whon he
reported for work. After dark he
pulled out the bottle and took a long
drink. But he got the wrong bottle,
one containing poisonous soldering
fluid, and died a few hours later.
A small boy stood looking longingly
into a candy show-case In a California
grocery store. A large dog leaped
playfully on the small chap knocking
him through the glass into the middle
of the case. Not a scratch was received
from the splintered glass.?The
Pathfinder.
There has been a wholesale exodus
of Christian and Jewish families out
of Jerusalem the past week or ten
<luyH because of the tenseness exislting
between Arabs and Jews.
I MONEY TO LOAN
We are in position to make immediate Loans on
DESIRABLE REAL ESTATE
Investigate our easy payment plan
Wateree Building and Loan Association
First National Bank Buildiny
Camden, S. C. Telephone 62
^^^^sssssssmmmmsssssssssmmsmmsssssssssssssssssssssss '1
I Newberry College Summer Session
! JUNE 16?JULY 25, 1936
j TEA'-HKKS: CouraeH approved for ceriifiejuo.
j Intermediate and High School grades. " * * <n ,>r,,nury'
C()I.;j:OE STUDENTS: Courses ror (leare.. ,r
| students to make up work. 1 t,|lakle
I .\>wla-rry offers the services of a well-trained faeultv ?
! comfortable dormitory aocomodaUooJ.
j I rare, recreational features. Total oxnoii . f nt
it., lading tuition, room and board, only |42.oo. H,X
| For catalog write
I JAMES C. KINARD, President, Newberry S. C.
I ^ f>
H __ i ^i
[YOURSAVINGS !;
s 1 .
{Invested in our shares are Insured
against loss up to $5,000.00. We |
J have MONEY TO LOAN for <i
{ BUILDING, REPAIRING, ![
| IMPROVING J
Homes In Camden
j First Federal Savings and
Loan Association
[ !|
Greatly Improved Service
Between
Charleston-Columbia-Atlanta
Effective, Tuesday, April 7, 1936
Nos. 11-17-35 NosT 136-18-12
Read down Read up
' 20 I'M I.v^ Charleston Ar. 10:30 AM
?:15 I'M " Branchvlile . . .T " 8:36 AM
!,:r>0 I'M " Columbia " 6:10 AM
'-'36 AM " Greenwood " 3:20 AM
3 25 AM " Anderson " 1:15 AM
x ' .''0 AM Ar. Atlanta Rv. 7:30 I'M
x Remain In Pullman until 7:30 AM
Air conditioned Pullman cars between Charleston-ColumbiaAtlatita.
?
Air-conditioned dining car trains 11 nnd 12 betwoen Columbia
and Oharlestfin. Modern day coaches.
Passenger faros are now lowest in history,
t onsult ticket agents.
W. E. McGee. Asst. General Passenger Agent
Southern Railway System
i
? * - o * * .
1MEETMEAT I
I BROAD STREET LUNCH I
ON TOP OF THE HILL I
I The Best Nickel Hamburger Anywhere. '
Milk?Bottled Drinks?Beer?Ice Cream I
I COURTEOUS OPEN UNTIE I
! CURB SERVICE 3 A. M. '
I /
FIRE?AUTOMOBILE?BURGLARY?BONDS ?
3
3 DeKALB INSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE CO I
H U
"INSURANCE HEADQUARTERS" i
iA ?
h CROCK Kit lil' I l.DINCi;?TKLKi'HON K 7 |
5 m. (i. MILLER ELIZABETH CLARKE, Mgr. (X
* r a
ALL?FORMS ?OF^-INSURANCE ?
CQ
I IMPORTANT NOTICE I
Allen Brothers Milling Company I
8041 Gervais Street, Columbia, S. C. I
Is better prepared this year than ever before to buy 1
local wheat in any quantity, or exchange II
Flour and Feed for same j
South Carolina's Largest and Columbia's I
Only Flour Mill |