The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, September 18, 1936, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3
r MEET ME
broad street lunch
I ON TOP OF THE HILL
j : The Best Nickel Hamburger Anywhere.
Milk?Bottled Drinks?Beer-?Ice Cream
j f COURTEOUS
! I CURS 8ERVICE
J I
OPEN UNTIL
S A. M.
notice of sale
Notice Is hereby given that In accordance
with the term* and provl*
ions of the Decree of the Court of
Common Pleas for Kershaw County,
dated September 8, 1836, In the case of
The Wateree Building and Ix>an A?goclatlon,
.plaintiff, versus Lohla L.
Block. Pine K. Hlrach and Louise H.
Koaelield, individually and Dlna K.
Hlrsch and Martin K. Rosefleld, administrators
of the Estate of Gustav
Hlrsch, deceased and D. A. Doykin,
Conservator of the Bank of Camden,
defendents, 1 will sell to the highest
bidder, for cash, before the Court
House door at Camden, S. C? during
the legal hours of sale on the first
Monday in October, 1936, being the
5th. day thereof, the following property:
"All that piece, parcel or lot of
land, with buildings thereon, Bitualed
In the City of Camden, County of
Kershaw, State of Sbuth Carolina,
fronting East on Lyttleton Street approximately
one hundred eighty-seven
(187) feet and extending back Westwards
along Hampton Street of a
uniform width, to a depth of two
hundred (200) feet and Is bounded as
follows: North by Hampton Street;
East by Lyttleton Street; South by
property of Henrietta M. Sill, and
West by other property of Ous
Hlrsch and L. L. Block. Being part
of the property conveyed to Gus
Hlrsch and L. L. Block by Alice V.
Zemp, by deed of date the 25th. day
of March, 1910, and recorded in the
office of the Clerk of Court for Kershaw
County In Book "YYY" at Page
715."
Terms of Sale: For cash, the Mas:
ter to require of the successful bidder.
other than the plaintiff herein, a
deposit of five (5) per cent, of hlB
bid, same to be forfeited in case of
non-compliance; the bidding will remain
open for a period of 30 days
after the public sale.
W. L. DePASS, JR.,
Master for Kershaw County.
Wlttkowsky & Wittkowsky,
Plaintiff's Attorneys.
Patience and Time Needed by Doc
Trainers
If you are going to be a dog tralutr,
there are three qualification* you
should have: hunting coat without
game pockets, a good digestive system
and be without a Job
Why are good bird dogs so scarce,
now when I was a boy ?-?u perennial
complaint nowadays. One rea
son is that the average man who
tukea an untrained dog into the field
is game-minded rather than dog-mind
ed, is more concerned with bagging
game than in observing and correcting
the behavior of the dog. The onl/
attitude to take is this: "I'm going
out today to give the puppy a fev?
pointers. Game-killing is incidental
If I get auy birds it will be so much
gravy."
j The
possession of a good digestive
system Is equally important. A dys
peptic is apt to be irritable and shoittempered.
Such a person should not
be entrusted with the training of a
delicate and sensitive young dog. A
nervous man will Inevitably lose his
temper and explode into a tantrum
that may disorganize or cpnfuse a
high-strung dog. Many of us have
seen an otherwise good man fly into
a screaming rage and belabor a young
dog for something quite beyond the
dog's comprehension. A well-bred andlntelligent
dog wants to do what is
right, but training one well requires
infinite tact and forbearance. And it
is worth what it costs.
Perhaps the most important requisite
of all is that a man have plenty
of time and nothing much to do with
it. If a trainor labors under the de
'union that his time is valuable, or if
he worries about the patients who are
waiting for him, the correspondence
that Is piling up on his desk, or the
orders that are to be shipped, he assumes
an insuperable handicap at the
start. A thorough Job is inconsistent
with hurry-up and pressuremethoda.
Why is it that hunters and flsnermen
are in such a hurry anyway7
Hunting and fishing are at best the
most unbusinesslike and profitless undertakings
a man ever went into?
They are pleasant ways of wasting
time, not of saving it. If a man would
train a dog, he should say to himself:
"I am going to loaf away the afternoon
with my dog. For this one day,
the office can go plumb to hell^ Myo
time isn't worthy anything anyway."
The proper attitude to take Is that of
a Georgia farmer.
A government expert had spent the
day Inspecting the Georgian's farm.
When the inspection was over he
turned to the fanner: "I have only
one criticism to offer: Your hogs
have to go too far for water. Takes
up too much time."? ?
"Hell!" snorted the fanner, "'What
is time to a hog!"?Havilah Babcock.
George D. Jefferies, a Gaffney merchant
who ran for the house in the
first primary, has 298 votes in the official
returns, but says there must be
something wrong with them, because
at least 2,000 persons told him later
that they voted for htm, Including fn
one precinct where he says 50 people
told him they voted for him, and he
had only one vote in the returns. He
finally decided not to contest the election
and leave the mystery unsolved,
he said, although there may be a liar
or two in Cherokee county.
Colonel Frank Knox, Republican
vice presidential candidate, interrupted
a brief rest-up triplet hie Chicago
home this week, to issue a statement
urging American war veterans "to
keep government the servant, not the
master of the people."
t*TgirtTnnwnnnwrnrirnrnnnsnMSM?M r
I NOTICE OF SALE
Notice is hereby given that in accordance
with the terms and provisions
of the Decree of the Court of
Comrtjhn Pleas for Kershaw County,
dated July 30, 1936, in the case of
A. L. Ross, J. M. Ross, Mamie R.
Price. Elite " Rr Cupstld, Alice R.
Spencer, B. C. Ross, Lena O. Qehse,
G. W. Ross, Clyburn Ooff, and Laverne
Goff, Herbert Goff, Nonia Ruth Goff,
Mary Matilda Goff, Evelyn Motley,
Buck Motley, Talmadge Motley, by
their guardian ad litem-, A. L. Ross,
plaintiffs, versus Mrs. J. B. Webster,
J. F. Wooten, Mrs. R. A. Gunter, J.
M. Wooten and C. W. Wooten, defendnats,
I will sell to the highest bidder,
for cash, before the Court House door
at Camden, S.- C., during the first
Monday in October, 1936, being the<
5th. day thereof, the following described
property:
"All that piece, parcel or" tract of
land, lying and being situated in
Wateree Township, Kershaw County,
South Carolina, containing 99 acres,
more or less, bounded North by fork
of Kelley Creek, Bast by premises of
S. E. Ross, South by Spears Creek,
and West by premises of C H. Ross;
said premises are the same described
in item two of the last will and testament
of J. S. Ross, filed in the office
of the Probate Court for Kershaw
County."
Terms of Sale: For cash, the Master
to require of the successful bidder
a deposit of five (6) per cent, of
Ma bid, the same to he forfeited in
case of non-compliance; the bidding
will remain open Utter the sale, for
a period of 30 days.
W. L. DePASS, JR.,
Master for Kershaw County.
Kirkland ft deLoach,
Attorneys for Plaintiff.
Secretary of Labor Perkins estimates
that 8,600,000 workers have
found private or government employment
since the lowpoint of the depression
in March 19&SJ
Amazing Cream
Whitens Skin; One
3-Min. Treatment
Now you can hkre a skin as white
pink as a child's. Freckles,
ah&dows, blemishes, quickly lade Into
Nothingness. One three-minute treatment
will prove ' its -merits. This
marvelous skin-whitener is known as
Golden Peacock Bleach Cfeme, and la
Nfed by 600,000 women towhiten and
o'ear their skins and ke?? It SOV?
Zemp's Drug Store, Camden, B*.C,
- V - 4 - t * V
4% 4% checks
666
Liquid, Tablet# first day
BalVS, Noss HEADACHE
*>,.mlntifcss
Try *flub-kljFTIsm**?
World's Beet Liniment
r "
' IIII 11
NOTICE
.
A two per cent discount will be allowed on 1986
taxes paid daring the month of September only,
j J. C. BOYKIN,
City Clark and Tvaaaurar
I l_ 1 g
Elephant Handles
The King Of Beasts
(Frank F, Knight, In OrU)
Bolivar, the huge elephant In the
Adam Forepaugh circus, ' was dozing
In the rays of the late afternoon sun
that slanted through the grimy win*
dowa of the animal house of the circus
winter quarters In Philadelphia.
This was In the winter, so near
Christmas that all the keepers had
slipped out to do some shopping for
the holidays.
So sleepy was the chained Bolivar
that he did not hear the.clink of the
nearby lion cage as Prince, another
recent jungle .importation, sprung the
barred door that he had found un-1
locked.
No one being there to stop him, hel
leaped lightly to the floor. I
While the elephant snoozed, the lion
?curious as to the details of this new
world beyond his cage?prowled on
padded feet. Had Bolivar looked, he I
would have seen the tawny mane of]
the handsome young lion throwing
glints of gold as the sun caught it I
here and there in the semi-gloom. I
Ho would have seen the eyes of the
cat staring from obscurity at him as
his bulk swayed to the rhythm of
sleep. ]
But the first bfjat Bolivar got of
impending battle came when a faint I
crackle of Btraw behind his ten-foot
length of chain awakened him. His I
eyes opened Just in time to see the
killer hurtling at him.
A keeper, entering one split second I
too late, saw the impact of the lion
on the top of the elephant's head. j
The elephant, taken by surprise,
bellowed with rage, churned desperately,
and succeeded In shaking off
his assailant after p. few seconds.
The cat leaped nimbly beyond the
circle of light, crouched in the shad*|
ow, and considered its next move.
The elephant, now keenly alive to
its peril, blinked its little eyes in the I
general direction of the yellow orbs
that glared at him from the edge of I
the dark. Those yellow orbs shifted
as the lion, his tail lashing happily I
In the Joy of battle, crept this way I
and that seeking a new point from
which to attack the elephant. But I
the small eyes of the larger beast
followed his every move. Always the
huge head faced the bulk of the slinking
cat.
Apparently the lion decided to aban- J
don its flanking movement and to I
leap for the eyes of the elephant. J
Bad strategy this proved. The lion,
landing too low, could cling but a
moment. This time, as he was shaken I
off, he narrowly escaped the great
feet that came stomping down while I
he was darting to safety In the gloom. [
Again he crawled, so flat on his
belly that he seemed like a snake
wriggling through the straw, to catch
the elephant on his side if possible.
But Bolivar, snorting, trumpeting,
and swinging his trunk in a wide arc,
made another frontal attack necessary.
The lion landed this time higher on
.the head. His foreclaws tore at the
flapping ears. His lower legs dug in-1
to the flesh below the eyes as he I
scrambled upward to Improve his po-1
sition.. His tail, Instead of lashing,
was tucked tightly to his body as he
threw evfery ounce of his tremendous I
energy Into the t^sk of clambering J
well up on the skull of the elephant. I
? He succeeded, but no sooner had I
his teeth sunk into the wrinkled skin
on the crest of the elephant's baok
than the elephant, now free to pull
his best fighting stunt, swung his]
trunk upward, twining It firmly about!
the throat of The cat Slowly hel
dragged his tormentor ? clawing,
screeching, yowling?to the straw beneath
his feet.
Then, as he loosened his hold and
the half strangled lion was ahont to
crawl back into the gloom, the ele-1
phant reared high. He trumpeted in I
triumph while his huge feet stomped!
down like pistons on the s or earning I
jungle beast.
What had been a moment before!
the king of Beasts became beneath]
the deft trampling a mass of broken
bones and mangled flesh. Here and
there wisps of tawny mane shone j
yellow as it caught the last glints I
of the dying sun.
Contemptuously, as the screams died I
lath moans and as the moans merged I
into silence. Bolivar gathered up I
what was left of the lion end flung I
it away.
-c- Frightened -keepers now massed
^ith fIfles, pitchforks, and lassoes, I
saw the elephant turn and, with his
blocd-stalned trunk, cateh a sheaf of!
hay from his feed bog and calmly
begin eating.
An engine rim on power genereted I
by the rays of the son, and described
as llkhly to enter the commercial Held
in "not so many years," gave world
power experts In session at Washington,
this week, a s tartl 1 ng flirnfrss of
tetnro possibilities.
Because of the activities of cattle
thieves using trucks, farmers In the!
*.l*u ". .. I
* - - - - . ? .. ? ?. , * , ' %
MOW
many Ways aiik suggested
FOR I'UIITKCTIUN*OK
rtiere In m variety of methods for
the preservation of wood which l?
subjected to ubuoruial weather eon*
lltlons and. In some localities. at.
tucka by Insect a. states a writer In
the Detroit Free I'ress.
The effectiveness of any good
wood preservative Is .measured
largely by the depth to which the
preservative penetrates. There ure
various ways of applying preservative?,
but ..(He.. .Digit MUflfftCterj
means Is by Impregnation under
pressure and by the use of pressure
the penetration la subject to control.
The amount of preservation
may be varied to suit the different
requirements, This result* In an
economical use of the preservative
material.
Preservative^. treated wood may
be tested for penetration. Creosote
oil Is indlcuted by u dark discoloration
and can be determined by taking
a sum pie at a point free from
imperfections. Zinc chloride and
other colorless preservatives can be
tested with chemicals.
Preservatives will not make wouk
timbers strong nor restore strength
to timber which has been partially
destroyed by decay. It should ho applied
to sound wood after It Is cut
and , framed, In order that oil exposed
parts may be treated. If some
cutting after treatment Is unavold
able, hot creosote oil may be applied
to the exposed surfaces.
How Lot tor "V" I* Used
for "U" in Inscriptions
The use of V for U In Inscriptions
1* a survival of a custom which begun
when Y and U were merely different
forms of the same letter. The earlle*
form was V. In time U became differentiated
from V and acquired a distinct
sound of Its own. English dictionaries
did no' give V and U sep
arate alphabetical positions un?ll about
1800. According to the United State*
commission of fine arts, V Is regarded
as more artistic than U and lend*
Itself more readily to the chisel of th?
Sculptor, and for that reason it li
still widely used In Inscriptions or
monuments and buildings, as well as or
coins. It ts not, however, used whert
the U sound predominates. For In
stance, It would be regarded as bar
taste to use the V In United States
while it Is frequently used in PVBLK
LIBRARY and IN GOD WE TRVST
When V is used for U it Is tenchnlcul
ly known as the cnnuscript U.?In
diannpolla News.
How Phrtt* "O. K." Started
Webster's jiqw international diction
ary says "O. K." was probably derived
from the Choctaw word "okeh" (pro
nounced O-Kay) meaning "It Is so." An
other explanation is that It was de
rived frqm the name of a port in Halt;
named Aux Cnyes (also pronounced O
Kay) from which very fine tobaccc
and rum were imported. That nam*
. was often written "O. K." and thesr
Initials gradually came to signify gooc
quality. However, no evidence bear*
out either story. Its first recorded us*
Is found In the court records of Sum
ner county, Tentk, for October 6. 1790
In which Andrew Jackson "proved" a
sale of a negro and the record state*
"which was O. K."~Pathfinder Maga
xiqe.
How fto Trace Phons Call
The only way in which a telephone
call can be traced by the police de
partment or by- any one else Is through
the central operator. The rules of tele
phone companies provide that the central
operator cannot] give Information
of this kind except when It Is needed
for official purposes, as by the pollc?
department If a telephone sell Is made
from a dial phone to a manual phom
or from a manual phone to a dial
phone there la a possibility of tracing
the eall through the central operator
although It Is difficult If the call ft
made between two dial telephone*
there Is no possibility of tracing It
How to No?e-Priat Dog
If all dog-owners took nose-prints of
their pets, identification of lost or stolen
dogs would be easy. Tests with
thousands of dogs have shown that, as
with human fingerprints, no two dog*
have. Identical nose patterns. The noa*
of the dog is lightly smeared with
ink and the Impression taken on clean
white absorbent paper. The nose pat
tern of a dog does not alter with age
so that an unwilling pet need submit
but once to the ink sneering.?Pearson's
Weekly.
Hew to Remove Rest
When rust has not penetrated too
deeply into the surface of steel tools,
it can be easily removed with a mTx
tare of fine emery dust and light ma
chine oil, mixed to the consistency ol
_ thin paste. An ordinary cork Is dipped
tnpTtbe paste and rubbed brtikty over
the rusted aress, which, when bright
again, are cleaned with gasoline. The
cork is nsetfcjPrttead of doth because
It is resilient, yet holds the abrasive
firmly against the work.
U **
How to Remove Match Marks
Painted woodwork marred by the
striking of matches can be given new
life. Rub the mark with a lemon peel
then with a doth which has bean
dampened and dipped In powdered
whiting. Rinse thoroughly and wtpe
dry with a soft doth. ?
ffypMl tm Ink: fty hjrMyds.
Till
S *r a ; > ' 1 f
aErir ifnrfrf i/. _
Story of Battle
With Sea is Told
Wilmington. N. C., Sept. 10.?A party
of four toid today of how thoy
buttled the sea In durkuess 12 miles
off Carolina Beach to rescue five persons
from u Hinall boat which bu<l
been disabled and was drifting helplessly.
lx>n Russell of Oreensboro, Juke
Faircloth, operator of the boat; Lonnie
Peck, a lifeguard; MIbh Jesse
Wooten. and L.. J&rinan had set out
in Falrcloth'a boat on a fishing trip.
< Late in the afternoon C. A. Wooten,
father of the girl, became worried
when the Faircloth boat did not return
and he organized a searching
party. Including Captain Carl Winner,
of a fishing boat, Mike Trembly
and Boyd Watson.
The four left in Winner's boat and
after several hours sighted a light
several miles away. Kevn us they
tiped toward tho tiny craft the light
failed and the rescue party was forced
to steer by starlight and guesswork
toward the distressed boaj.
Finally they drew alongside tho
Faircloth boat and found the men had
been burning their clothing on the
end of an oar to keep a slgnul light
aflre. Miss Wooten was hysterical.
Wooten said he will seek a medal
for Captain Winner for the rescue.
At Bonneville Salt FlatB, Utah, Ab
Jenkins, noted speed driver, ou Monday
reclaimed about 40 automobile
speed records for America, until then
held by England's Oeorge Syston. The
stream-lined 12-cyllnder "Mormon
Meteor" broke a universal Joint, after
it had covered 1, 942 miles at the end
of 12 hours of a projected 48-hour
run. He will make another start on
this project today or tomorrow.
Richard Haddon, Jr., was crushed
to death In his home at San Pedro,
C&l., when he was caught in a clothes
wringer, when the mother stepped out
of the house for a moment. Tho child
started the wringer In some way.
Boulder Dam In
Ready For Work
Moulder Dam, Nov., Sept. 12.?Moulder
Dam's $168,000,000 flood control
und power project, man's most ambitious
effort to harness nature, waa
virtually ready today for delivery of
water and electricity to an area of
80,000,000 acres, inhabited by more
thau 8,000,000 people.
The giant outlet valves, last bin
hurdle In the long-term project of the
U. S. Mureau of Reclamation started
nearly a decade ago, today were stilled
after their flrst and last public
demonstration of their ability to control
the Colorado river's floodwaters.
More than 10,000 persops saw the
twelve streams of water gush from
eight foot pipes on the side of Black
Canyon, pouring into the riverbed 300
feet below In a spectacle that exceeded
Niagara Falls, both In volume of
water und height.
Within a few weeks a steady
atream of wuter will begin flowing
through the giant turbines to generate
electric power that will bo carried
over transmission lines to Pacific
coust, Arizona and Nevada consumers.
The outlet vuIvbb were opened and
the turbines started yesterday when
President Roosevelt In Washington,
3,000 tnilos away, pressed a telegraph
key before representatives of fifty-two
nations attending the world power
conference.
Admitting that it was possible that
the bombing of the U. S. 8. Kane in
Spanish winters, (Insurgent Generalissimo
Francisco Franco, oommunloating
personally with the U. 8. Consul
at Seville, said, however, that this had
not been definitely established. The
rebel ehief nevertheless tendered his
regrets to the American government.
A British expert has warned that
the speedy construction of Amarioan
dams?especially the Norris dam in
Tennessee?might cause them to
crack through shrinkage.
TAPP'S
IN COLUMBIA ;
Fashion Leaders
IN THE NEW i
Fall Hats
:
I Here's the Dobbs "Sweep- .
stake." Note the exciting new re- .
verse-edge brim with its exaggerated
foreward extention, and the new j
feather which adds still more importance.
In superior felts; all fall
; colors; graduated he* ad sizes.
' 110.00.
There's real pleasure in selecting your fail
hats here because our millinery section features all
the outstanding Creations of the beet known design- ~ ~
egg. Hats of delightful individuality; designed by Z :ZZZ
Dobbs, Stetson, Howard Hodge, Shalfonte, Cinema,
and-mamy others. Superb quality velours, antelopes,-?fur
felts, velvets and tweeds, featured in all the
new fall shades. Prices start at $2.95 and range
on upward to as high as $20.00.
'
v.
i i m n
James L. Tapp Co.
Styled
'I i ) i i i n
J "
* ,r v;?f* -,+JLi r. V-? ?. :