The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, October 02, 1936, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3
MEET ME AT
broad street lunch i
ON TOP OF THE HILL
The Bett Nickel Hamburger Anywhere.
Milk?Bottled Drinks?Beer?Ice Cre?un
I C0URT?OU? OPEN UNTIL
! I CURB ?RV?CR 3 A. M.
notice of sale
Notice u hereby give* that Id ac
mrdauce with the terms and provisions
Of the Decree of the Court ol
rnmmon Pleas for Kershaw County,
if recent date In the ' case
of James 8. Edmunds and Arthur
h Helns, as surviving directors and
i- Btstutory trustees of Chaa. p. Wray
i Company, in liquidation, plaintiffs,
versus Charlotte Thomas, Pearl
steadman. Bell West, Mildred Wil
uaroswCleola Williams, Lpls Williams,
Rosle * Bright, Joseph Williams,
Brooks Williams, Shannon Williams,
Hack Williams, Nellie B^pherd, 11,
Branhani and j. b. Abbott, defendants,
I will sell t9 the highest biddet
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 6th day
thereof, the following described property:
"All that certain parcel, piece oi
ferret of land, lying and being situate
in the County and State aforesaid,
and containing ninety-two (92) acres,
more or less, and'bounded as follows;
North by lands of Henry Sessions
and Robert Williams, East by lands
of Robert Williams; South by lands ol
Levi Jacobs; West by lands of Rob,
ertson Boyd."
Terms of sale: For Cash, the Mas*
ter to require Of.Jthe successful bidder,
a deposit of five (6) per cent of
hie bid, same to be forfeited in case
of non-compliance; no personal or deficiency
judgment Is demanded and
the bidding will hot remain open after
the sale, but compliance with the
bid may be made immediately.
w. l. depass, jr.,
Master1 iOT Kershaw County
DOUGLAS & DQUQLAS,
Plaintiff's Attorneys
notice of sale
Notice is hereby given that in accordance
with the terms fM provisions
of the Decree of the Court of
Common Pleas for Kershaw County,
dated July 30, 1936, in the cdse of
A. L. Ross, J, M. Ross, Mamie R:
Trice, Ellie "R. Cupstid, Alice R.
Spencer, B. C. Ross, Lena G. Gehse,
G. W. Ross, Clyburn Golf, 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 MrsUJ. B. Webster,
J. F. Wooten, Mrs. R. A.- Gunter, J'.
M. Wooten and C. W. Wooten, defendnats.
1 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
6th. day thereof, the following described
property:
? "All that piece, jphrsej Or tttcE of
land, Jyittfc uhd dew situated in
Wateree ToWiUNhip, Kershaw County,
South Caroline^, containing 99 acres,
more or less, bounded north by fOrh
of Kelley Creek, East by pfdsiises of
S. E. Ross, South by bpidfi Cfeefc;
and West by premises of c h, floras;,
said premises are the same ddfidftbtid
in item two of the last will and tmuk
ment of J. 8. Rose, filed In the offted
of the Probate Court for Kershaw
County."
Terms of Balet. For cash, the'maif
ter to require of the successful bidder
a deposit of five (5) per pent, of
bid. the same to be forfeited 1n!
case of noq-qftmplinnre; th?; bidding"ffHl
remain open after the sale, fori
* Period of 30 days.
'w. u DePASS, >r.,
& tttKerahaw C0UDty;
Attorneys for Plaintiff,
.jaVXt.- - . " -?
if:! jSji i11,?. > . 'i jv \'
FINAL DISCHARGE
. .
-Notice is herb* gtTen that^eim
1w6 r will make to the Biffhate Court
hf Kershaw County my ^final returns
{f Kxecntrlx of the estate bf L. h.
Bmson deceased, and on\tfae same
si *wu1 api>ly to the shilcourt
a final discharge as said exoomtCamden.
S. C? September 14, 1936.
p ' >' '1
WINTER LINNS
See Ui For 'TAUAFTRYE
GRASS
r- CRIMSON CLOVRR "j
BONE MEAL
' "" ~ '|
SHEEP MANURE
' ""ON MEAL
"-.rtwiumo .
,! |
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??i ,i snaggy
McLeod Case Is
Stopped In Court
| After the state had presented their
, case against J. D. McLeod who was
accused of murdey.in connection with
the death of Mac Amerson In the Plat
j Creek section on December 28 of last
year Judge Shipp ordered the Jury
, bring in a verdict of not guilty as
, he claimed that, the state had not
- made out a case against the defend1
ant.
Clyde Miller who* was with McLeod
- on the night that Mac Amerson'*
1 dead body was found In- the fresh
; 8now was called to the stand by the
( state and he told of Ending the
body in the road. MiUer and Mcr
Leod drove a truck down the road
i leading from the Flat Creek schoolhouse
cross roads in the direction
which Amerson was following vwhen
i last observed. They made one trip
i down this road and came back and
travelled down another road. Going
down the first road again which was
the one leading from the school house
to the peach orchard theyfpund tho
dead- body in the snow. This case
was heard Thursday afternoon.
Robert Moody pleaded guilty of
manslaughter in connection with the
killing of Wilbur Taylor in this city
in the first part of July. Taylor was
allegedly killed by being struck over
the head with a broom handle. Moody
was sentenced to serve ten years on
this charge. ? . .
At the Friday morning session Attorney
Allen Sapp asked that the trial
,i of Henry Adams, Jr., be postponed
| on the ground that his brother^ piautj
Sapp, chief counsel for the dofensd,
;Wfti hot able to be present and that
1^0 JOtMlf ffififi Was lii a Rock Hill
hospital suffertflg ftOm fcidtiey colic:
. Attorney Toy Gregory whet is now iri
Washington, D. C., wfig h#r$ to
In the prosecution and Solicitor Fin :
ley "asked that the case be tried, if
possible but Judge Shipp ruled that
It would have to be continued. Henry
Adams Is charged with killing two
I young men of Kershaw by striking
them with an automobile.
I Warren Johnson, a negro youth,'
was tried on a charge of arson in
| connection with the burning of a te<
uant house belonging to Henry Adams
of the Jones Cross Roads section.
Th? jury returned a verdict of
hot SUllty in this case. The house
which .was burned was not occupied
ht the time of the fire and its value
Wto placed atj500.' The
case of Everett Crai# Wild WA$
a&fesed'of shooting yotittl
fttfced Langley in the Flat Creek S6C
ttetf ?f the county was postponed unhe*t
term of court.
Richmond Hammond, a colored man
the Rich Hill section, was accused
of ftflwnnlt and battery with?latent to
kill in connection With a row ai,*]
colored" baseball, game last summer. I
Sato Tenner, a colored Mail, was the I
one who was struck, Twenty broughtI
in a verdict of simple assault audi
the judge sentenced the defendant to I
pay a fine of $60 or serve thirty days. I
. Tom Hunter and BiXf Araht pieaJd- I
ed guilty to violation 6i the l*id<*(
*4tfwa withsHunter drawings # sentence I
of thirty days or a $60 fifl* white I
Arant was sentenced to pay or]
serve thirty days. :P~ --niJ
';"A nagfo named Joe Massey Off tile E
ireit'r rtBttnftd to n
one year after he had piehded CUilt^l
to a charge of larceny. Hud Rutledge fl
was also charged with the same oi It
fense and he stood trial but the fudg |
ordered a directed verdict tor the d< 1,
Spldant after irwae admitted Wtfcil
Stand by Massey that he had told two I!
or three different tales about th*'theft f
and bed implicated an Innocent part^l,
after Ida arrest?Lancaster News. IJ
. _ r' Ingram, JiyO?d |!
Ingramr Jr? of Cheraw; died F
in a Columbia hospital Thursday of
,a?t week after an nines of six years.]1
Mr. Ingram was 26 years old, and]1
was a son of Mr. and Mrs. Tom L.r
Ingram.. J'
at I1
the home Friday at 4 o'clock, the Rev.]
Warren Arlail. pastor of the CkerawP
Methodist church, and the ftev.^. a}1
Caston, of Camden, officiating. He is |1
survived by his parents, one. brother *
and four sisters and his widow, who 1
Mta. Eta Ira Hnrwr ud two'
THERE ARE MANY NEW YORKER*
AND PEOPLE LIVE IN NEW YORK
By George Ross
New York.?The rumor persists that
native l>oru New Yorker* are scarcer
than hens' teeth. That rumor will,
have to be scotched. In evidence, I
submit the people who have never
been outside the metropolitan area
from the day of their birth. And who
rarely, if ever show' themselves in
the Times Square sector. They think
New York is a fine place to live in,
but not to visit.
A *Ci ivt>u?r is likely to get a wrong
ImpressionviKlthe metropolis on holidays
whenNaWtown is crowded with
bronzed vlslttyrsJwko have come here,
apparently. to^nijN a coat of pale.
Last Labor Day -Deohght an unprecedented
influx. Yoor correspondent
peered glumly from his window, viewing
an endless procession of cars
with Michigan, Louisiana, Iowa and
Kansas license plates. And started
with surprise. Yes, actually a car
with a New York number!
Indeed, New York is not composed
entirely of natives who gad about
tn the amusement and financial centers.1:
People really live here, the
same as in Keokuk or Crab Orchard.
And they lead humble and routine
lfves, simple and BmaiHownish.
Proof? Certainly! Lolling in Cetatral
Park, I saw a youngster of eightsen,
or perhaps twenty, playing ball
nearby....Every once in a while, he
advanced to a small Coterie of chess
players, surveyed the board, moved
a piece and returned to his outfielding.
He seemed happier, with _a field.-,
er's glove than with a pawn. Later,
I learned that he was Dake, one of
America's most prominent chess masters.
Baseball on a sandlot is his
hobby.
In the park that day, a small lad
was teaching bis father, a dignified
Individual with considerable beard,
how to play ball. The old man fended
off the pellet with his catcher's
mitt as best he could, missing it often.
His seemed a pathetic attempt
to catch up with the younger generation;
to adapt himself to the ways
of a more youthful world. A And it
might have taken place on. the green
in Hoytsville, Bayonne or Little River.
?Jew Yorkers, ltke denizens of th<j
general store, are notoriously etirlous
and the mere digging of a ditch or 1
main thoroughfare Will/> Of course, attract
its , hundreds of Ohthralled Witnesses.
Last year's New Yeflr'if EVe,
1 saw not less than 10,000 people on
Sixth Avenue?the overflow of Broadway?with
their eyeB focused on a
single window of a men's rooming
house.
At the window stood a man, in his
undershirt, shaving. The huge crowd
followed every stroke of his razor
-with bated breath. He was almost
finished when he saw that he had a
huge audience?an audience Harry
Rich man might have been proud of.
He pulled the shade down hastily;
the crtfwd let up a loud cheer, then
went home.
All right, scoff-if you like. But th5
fact remains that there is a fireside
flavor gbQUt the old establish^ op*,
torn in Brooklyn Heights, just across
the river, oMlflgtilg Christmas Car?
ofa ih the streets .'..&?<! filstf in the
two tftiftffiers at that church iii lower
Fifth Avenue who summon wbf*
shippers evdty fiabbath with beautiful
harmonies . . . fflfrToWn; Ctter whi>
a sedfltftf df FlktbiUh;
clanging his bell nlgbA/,' tMlJttg out
the local news of the da&Aktf receiving
no pay. v . ' . v
I venture to say, and brinV? Concrete
evidence thereof, that if Si#
went about the business of fin if fig
them tn New York and environ*,
there would also be more than a fair
shdre of hog-callers, champion pumpkhvpio
bakers, country fiddlers, hillMiMee,
etc.
Leslie Howard has just come back
to> New York from England to get
hia- tiiNlNay productionvpf "Ha?U1*'
not fearful
otth# competition that another "Hamlet^
John Oeilgud, a London matinee
Idofi plana to pat on thla season. Two
Hdmfafis R out, Howard was saying
the- other afternoon at luncheon,
hould aitouee some lively rivalry at
the bottotte* ,
But at1 the moment, tho wavy-haired,
Mue-eyed- star of stage and movies.
Is dividing hia attention between
Shakespeare and lbs pole ponies. An
:
jwnis an enviable string of polo ponies
ipd keeps theni stabled on hisesLpte
In ^ a ;
secretary, he f^rst made- sore that
lis mmenuensls was fond eC horses
tuft could ride them nanehfr .
53 8o on the first important day of re- s
learsals of hit "Hamlet," Howard
earned hi* players he mtght be mi** pf:
And that he could be found Id he
lower stand* at Weettrary where
he American teem containing Jock,
Whitney, Pete Boetwlck and- Tommy
iltchcock was fighting the Argentine
FACTS ABOUT DIXIE
Now significance la given the Bong
title, "Is It True What They Bay
About 1)1*1? T" by some untaxing figures
recently Issued by the United
States government showing population
gains of e*ch state In the Union \
in the five years 1930-1035.
In this period our fourteen southoru
states gained more population than all
the remaining thirty-four states combined.
The fastest growing section In all
Ajaeptoa was the-ftouth Atlantic
group; second fastest growing, East
South Central; third, West South
Central.
Of the half dosen states making
the greatest gains, all were southern,
and of the doten fastest growing
states eight were southern?South
Carolina, Georgia, Ta&uttsee, Florida,
Virginia, Kentueky, Arkansas and (
North Carolina.
Which promptA the Progressive
Farmer to assert that the South Is
the one yet undeveloped Agricultural
region as well as the most rapidly
increasing in population. That 8outU*
era farm Journal says:
"The South la indeed the Land of
Opportunity?th$ one yet undeveloped
AKriC/ultural region, of America, Of
the total land surface of Iowa, Illinois,
Ohio, Kansas and North Dakota,
for example, more than half is already
growing harvested crops, wixlls as
yet the percentage of land In cultivation
|n vurious 8 out hern states la as
follows: Virginia, 83; North Carolina,
21; South Carolina, 80; Georgta,
38; Florida, 6; Alabama, 25; Mlksis ippl,
28; Arkansas, 20; Tennessee,
28; Texas, 15."
Yes, it is true what they say about
Dixie, when they know the amaslng
facts. But even many southern cltisens
do not know the facts.?Charlotte
Observer.
i' '")ii * I I
- fair Holidays Old Custom
Columbia, Sept. SO.?Fair Weak hoi*
id ay a of the University of &outh Carolina
are a tradition seventy-eight
years old, Dr. Edwin U Green of the
University faculty recently remarked.1
As early as 1868 President Long*
street complained that the annual
Fair In the fall was an annoyance,
he explained, for studeuts secured
permission from home to raise classes
for one, two, or three days, and
one student attended the Falf for fouC
days.
"There were numerous requests to
be with fathers and mothers for a
day or two while they sojourned la
'town/ to escort femj^e relatives to
the Fair who were without a protector
or an adequate number of pro*
tectors. The custom arose of giving
one or two days during Fair Week
as holidays; and the complaint of
1868 has become AhaUal."
Before It subsided, this week, the
Colorado river, In Texas, extended Its
flood reached a record mark of 62
feet, and overflowed many thousands
of acres of land. Many houses and
some towns were inundated, and the
river became five or six mlleB wide In
Some places. In one county, 200,000
acres were flooded. The total loss
suns into many millions of dollars.
Admit* Killing Miss Mulr
San Diego, Cel., Sept It.?Police
Chief Oeorge Sears said yesterday
Donald J. Hasell, 886-pound "gorilla
man" confessed he killed Ruth Mulr.
49-year-old Riverside Y, W. ,0. A. secretary
at La Jolla the night of August
81.
! Haaell, arrested September 4 during
the inquest lpto the death of Miss
Mulr, was sent to the California state
institution tor the Insane fttter hie
capture.
Bears said he was Informed by Police
Officer Ed Stotler and Deputy
Sheriff Walter tilue at Patton that
Hasell had signed the confession.
Hasell was quoted by the offlcern
as saying Miss Mulr was standing
"behind a bojioh" when he struck
her. Then, he said, he dragged gef
Into g nearby ravine. *1
Hasell was said to have added:
"At times these psyohlo spells come
over me and compel me to take a V
life.1' I r .
f
.n .MM ' , j
At He her Springs, ^rk., a Works
Progress administration foreman and
biB four-year-old son died in the accidental
explosion of more than 700
dynamite caps. The foremai^ Moody
Alton Henson, 81, died instantly. The
child; Hugh Weldon Henson, died several-hours
later at a hospital. ?7
j FIRE?AUTOMOBILE?BURGLARY?BONDS fc
| DeKALB INSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE CO ?
"INSURANCE HEADQUARTERS" ^
P CROCK BR BUILDING?TBLBPHONB 7 I
3 i
? M. G. MULLBR KLIZABBTH CLARKBt M*r. g
ALL?FORMS ^OF?INSURANCE
JLnf ssaaaagppBBB^^
in nil mm '
a i ojiMilJi
r ttisuOu,^
' roixow the tad of big tire mere whp Wv
only on proof of performance. ';'.;
, mUe^from Coast to Coait and front Canad? to the
Gulf across deserts and over wixtfUng mountain
, roads* iv?
They have won the National Safety Council's
, highest award in intercity bus operation for. the
past'four years. This U indeed a tribute to careful
, driving, efficient equipment and the rtsefifc
' P,f^S Proi^ QfcJiB^CWpp^gwhSS
prevenu internal frictionMMihoot. JSgEfffckt
V Firestone Gum-Dipped Tires run""*tip to 28?.
Cooler and blowout protection-?the
scientifically designed non-skid tread will stop
I jmtr Oar up to 25% qtikksr and give you 50%
l^laajii non-skid mileage. ^
mmm
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?I FOUfJWwi r,g: ;E * *
>&oo-20;;asi.?. HJ| $
30*5T^TyH... XS.7S
31k6 H. P.;... 40.3H
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