The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, January 08, 1937, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3
Governor Kump of West Virginia,
granted parole* to 7i convicts, in or4?r
to let them get home for Christina*.
Nine of them were women and
eighteen were serving terms for uiauslaughter
or second degree murder.
\
notice to debtors and
creditors
All parties Indebted to the estate
of Carrie Helnnf are hereby notified
to make payment to the undersigned,
and all parties, tf any, having claims
against the said estate will present
them likewise, duly attested, within
the time prescribed by law.
SARA F. WQLFB.
^ KKOcutrU.
Camden, 8. C., December 5, 1930.
TAX^mtcrns
Notice is hereby given that the Auditor's
Office will be open for receiving
Tax Returns from January 1st,
1937, to March 1st, 1937. AU persons
owning real estate or personal properly
must make returns of the same
within said period, as required by
law, or bo- subject to a penalty of 10
per cent.
The auditor will be at the places
and ou the dates mentioned below lu
person for the purpose of taking tax
returns:
Haley's Mill?January 12th.
llethune?January 13th and 14th.
Kershaw?January 19th and 30th.
Liberty Hill?January 21.
Westvllle?January 26.
Blaney?January 28th.
All persons between the sgea of 21
and 60 years, inclusive, are required
to pay a poll tax, and all persons between
the t-ages of 21 and 50 years,
inclusive, are required to pay a Road
tax, unless excused by la#. All
Trustees, Guardians, Hxeoutlyes, Administrators
or Agents holding property
in charge must return same.
Parties sending tax returns by mall
must make oath to same..before some
officer and fill out the same In proper
manuer or they will be rejected.
B. B. SPARROW,
Auditor Kershaw County.
39 8b.
TAX NOTICE "
The books for the collection of
State. County and School Taxes for
the fiscal year commencing January
1, 1936, will be open from September
15th, to December 31, 1936, inclusive
without penalty. When making inquiries
regarding taxes, be sure to
state the District Number In which
ypu live or own property.
The total tax levy for the various
districts are as follows:
DeKalb Township
Mills
District No. 1 46
District No. 2. .. . y ?ir- .. 37%
District No. 4 .. .\ .. '' .. 39%
District No. 6 41%
District No. 25 26%
District No. 43 f? .. [ * 25%
Buffalo Township
District No. 3 39%
District No. 5 23%
District No. 7 . i. .32%
District No. 15 . .* ># 2o%
District No-. 20 " 29%
District No!22 41%
District No. 23 ; 29%
District No. 27 ..34%
District No 28 .. . 20%
District No. 31 .. 31%
District No. 40 .. .*. 43%
District No. 42 .. !! 23%
Flat Rock Township
District No. 8 34%
District No. 9 .. .. .. ;.".".*[ ;84%
District No. 10 . ..*87%
District No. 13 ? .. .[ 26%
District No. 19 .. .. .. .34%
District No. 30 .. .. *.*. 23%
District No. 33 .. .1 ,. 34%
District No. 37 V. '.*. '*,34%
District No. 41 84%
District No. 46 ., .. !! 27%
District No. 47 .. \, f,;.. .. 28% '
Wateree Township '
District No. 11. . -~r.: -- r' . gg% District
No. 13*.. . . ... ... .. \\ 8V
District No. 16 ... tr lT^ri cg% District
No. 29 29%
District No. 38 .. .. .. .. *23%
District No. 39 .. .. [.28%
Yours respectfully,
C. J. OUTLAW,
Treasurer
Kershaw County, S. C.
SIGNS OF ALL KINDS
Camden Sign Shop
Opposite Court Houae
Opposite Court House -
I friends" %..
THOSE comfortable, old
I shoes have served W
I like an "old friend."
There's no need of partI
ing company with them
just because their heels
are run down and the
I soles thin. ^ JUre them?
1 ~? Rclwdlt^ x
I Lomansky's
. .11
Name "AW' Is Derived
From en Ancient Mission
The Mission San Antonio de Valero
stood On the cast bank of the
San Antonio river just across the
stream from the town of San Antonio,
in 1836 a settlement of about
7,000 inhabitants. , The mission,
which was founded in 1718, was in
a grove of Cottonwood (alamo)
trees, hence the name "Alamo." It
had been first a refuse of the Franciscan
order, then a military popt.
The Mexican general Cos had
I abandoned it in 1825, and it had
stood in a bad state of repair until
Pebru^y of ' the following year,
when the Americans at San Antonio
occupied it as a defense on
1 the approach or the Mexican dictator
Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna
with three regiments of horse and
fourteen battalions of foot, an army
estimated at between 7,500 and
8,500 men by Capt. R. M. Potter,
U. S. A., observes a correspondent.
The old mission stood within the
limits of a small village. To the
east and \yest of it ran irr" gating
ditches, and around it, was a grove
of cotton woods.
The strongest part of the defenses
was the old chapel, standing
at the southeastern * corner of the
mission premises. This chapel
was 75 feet long, 62 feet wide, and
22Vfc feet high. Its walls were four
feet thick and of solid masonry.
Most of its interior was open to
the sky in'1836, only a portion of
the west end and the north projection
having the covering of a
roof. In the east end of the chapel
was a platform of earth. Three
guns were mounted in the chapel.
1 i
"Swing Music" Man Is
Allowed Natural Style
The origin of the name "swing
music" has been " ascribed to a
well-known director, who exhorted
his band to "swing it," using the
word in the sense of "give full
swing tp it," or in other words,
"have each player indulge his natural
bent."
According to various leaders of
swing bands, it is music in which
the musician expresses his personality
or his carefree feelings in
rhythm, riding away from the original
melody but never losing sight
of it. The melody is submerged
but not discarded. It is total relaxation,
playing as you feel the music
and not as written by the composer.
vWhen an orchestra swings, it
plays polyphonidally, with every
instrument given an equal voice
and complete freedom within its
possibilities, in contrast to the
symphonic European style in which
the emphasis is placed upon strings
and tradition.
In swing music, equal emphasis
is placed upon melody, harmony,
counterpoint and rhythm. There is
a difference between improvisation <
and swing. "Jam is pure improvisation
by a group; if their col
lective improvisations are rhythmatically
integrated, they swing; 1
or in other words, good jam. j
swings."?Detroit News.
? ? t
Genghis Khan
Temuchin, son of Yesukai Bahadur,
"w^s born in 1162 near the
northern bend of the Hoang - ho :
river, in Mongolia. He. was only
13 when he ascended his father's
throne and announced with youthful
confidence his intention of con- :
quering the "entire world. He did
in 20 years become master of all
Asia and Eastern Europe, destroying?it
is estimated?in his wars ,
and expeditions at least 5,000,000
lives. History knows him by the (
name he gave himself, Genghis :
Khan ("greatest of kings"). He
was great as administrator as well (
as warrior. He was tolerant in
religion, encouraged popular edu- <
catipn and established laws against
crime so rigid that it was said that. j
one might traye/from one end of
his vast, domains to the other with- 1
out molestation.
Romans Used Legal Seals", |
. , The seal played a great part in legal
documents in ancient Rome.
and our own use of seals in legal ^
documents is derived from the Ro- i
man practice. Caesar Augustus i
authenticated his - edicts with one
or another of his signets, a sphinx, <
a head of Alexander or a signet 1
bearing the likeness of his own '
head. Maecenas, the famous pa- *
tron.of literature, uqed as his seal j
a frog, a device then much dread- 'j
ed, as it was associated with fresh
taxis. '
' . 1
1
~ Tobacco Smoker . t
Jean Nicot died in 1600 after hav- l
ing won immortality as the man l
who made ttobacco-smoking popu- i
lar in Europe?under the impression
that the leaves had curative 1
qualities. He. made his "dis- (
covery" while French Ambassador 1
to Portugal/ There, when Oviedo 1
brought over the first tobacco .
plants from the New World, it was (
regarded as merely a kind of pot- l
ted blossom of no practical value.
i . ' ,
? . . - ... . - '
i
Some Drugs Lose Strength j
Many drugs, irrespective of how J
and where they are'kept, loss their ?
strength and efficacy within a few
months. Others.' states Robert J. ?
Wehrle, Norwood, Ohio, in Collier's <
Weekly, ftjfch as Epson salts, soda
niter, keep indefinitely in their J
original condition; while some, .
such as laudanum, actually becomes
stronger with age.
lubbiaro of mountains
Clarksburg, W. Va., Dec. 26.-*
pudgy llulu man?"the Bluebeard of
the Mountains"?eat In the cantor of
a brilliantly lighted stage, the eyea
of more than 1,200 spectators upon
him.
The Aceue was in the opera house
at Clarksburg, in the hills of northern
WeBt Virginia.
lieucath the stage, in the basement,
twelve farmers and small town business
men deliberated over the evidence
in one or the rnokt bUarro murtto1*..
ti'lu|? this state had ever known.
U took them one hour aud 60 minutes
to decide that the-little man on
the stage should go to the gallows for
hilling Mrs. Dorothy Pressler Lemke
of Northboro, Mass.
'1 he details still are vivid in the
minds of many who attended the trial
Ave years ago.. '
i ho state charged Harry P. Powers
44-year-old "Mall Order Koipeo" with
perpetrating the murder of Jive persons
in a weirdly-built, windowless
garage at his farm in lonely quiet
dell, ou the outskirts of Clarksburg.
The "Bluebeard," as his accusers
culled him, was a man of many aliases.
In the summer of 1081, Mrs. Asta
Eicher, a widow, left her three children
in the pare of neighbor^ In Park.1
Ridge, HI., near Chicago, and went
away with a man she knew as Cornelius
O. Pierson. A few days later
Piersou returned alone and disappeared
with the children.
The neighbors, worried, called police.
The officers learned the family
had gone with Piersou to Clarksburg.
So the police of Park IUdge asked the
police of Clarksburg to find Pierson.
Nobody knew bim here. But an investigation
showed that mail addressed
to Pierson was being claimed by
owers, the husband of a woman opiating
a little neighborhood grocery.
Hundreds of letters were being received
for Pierson.
Officers arrested Powers for quesmnring|
h#,B P?ckets they found
more letters from many women?i
martrjjnonial agency "sweetheart"
Z'pZ7onTe- A" were ?dd "d
readil>r acknowledged he
SLf v were the 8ame ma". and
that he had described himself in hiai
nJ?r tter8 as a wealthy civil eng?|
uGor,
hJh,e I)olice wanted to know what
bad happened to Mrs. Eicher.
8aW 8he Kad left him in
burgh8" W a "man from Pat8'
But the officers peered into the
strange garage. Beneath it they found
contaminterranean rooms' wItk trunks
letters maDy m?re matrlmonial
, i?4*\ey a,8? discovered clothing
Powpr?Wa8 ldentlfled as Mrs. Eicher's!
s^.?nipfaV6 *onfllctln& explanations.
kiHed th?US Powers.nilght have
bmw thl Wwran and burIed her
body, the officers called a gang of
prisoners from Harrison county jail to
tseHffimdeiU/arm and transformed J
its solitude Into bustling activity.
The prisoners began digging at a
W,r9 the *??*<>. ?nd
Elrter-abodV ""covered Mrs.)
The digging went on. Thirty minHerJatm9.rKthe
bodles o' Orethe^d
Harry Eicher, the widow's children I
were discovered. ; An hour and fl?ty
Eichi?8 iTl t?e body of Annabelle
rouJd ?f tbe children, was
"ound in the same ditch . I
Crowds gathered at the county Jail
where Powers was a prisoner h,,V
there was no violence P,l8?ner' but
Powers refused to talk for a time
but Anally broke down 9 tln,e'
I did It," he said. "Give me a
^oSrAU;"0 861 a Httle re8t Rnd 1,1 tel1
be aext da>r- August 29, the prls.
8 up the bones of a fifth
>f Mra r i,Identifled a? the body
r> r-^mke. a divorcee.
P?1,c? 8aid they had obtained a
was fn t rod5?rtl Powers, but it never
was introduced ln evidence at his
mit'ln* run,tal" Lothario, while
ioTi ? trial, spent the time fn I
to* tre*lv ^t?a7,S' read,ng and talkhzyth,nK
the
mITlSteor?,ler0nt"1U^ 10 COme from
Jfa" orocr sweethearts," but were
too from m??nvhlnl' Im>ulrle? came,
??.of ,he coua,ry
?H? remaIn?d calm until a shontlneiheHff
g?.thered outside the Jail. The
lomts. tear
|rtng. wee tikei thron^a r"ar door'
it MomidevIHe ""There'8 Pl?n,tent,arv
?rs shunned htm,
:eAt'r,a\a,n"6X ?f tbe destt tte
kooden tetce 'at Urn"* b,gh' A
??s burned by a moh <arm'*
frected a new fenr?Tr* lessee*
>r the mob a few houtaWlate'?A thttS
W went up attd ???
rilU 0ften **** la v&udeihowed
a' typtcVlmMl M
I Chufch was dlUIiSf^ ^_n 8trcetSoZem^S
knlwt a change of v7 had
? ThroughonrZtrt 08^ V
Mrt' WM ttbwn to have had
FACT? ABOUT EEL8
(By L. D. Chapman in Our Dumb
Animals)
Would you bo surprised to learn
that our common fresh water oel goes
to the salt water (o lay its egg* and
thou dies?
The ools, common in all our rivers
and streams, spend their whole adult
life In fresh water, only returning to
their original home in the ocean to
lay their eggs, and then to die. The
common eol, familiar to all of us, has
a remarkably wide distribution, btiug
found on the coast and in the rivers
of western Murope, und in all parts
Of America. In its feeding habits the
eel (s a regular glutton, and somewhat
of a scavenger besides, Its varied diet
including voles, water-birds, small
fish, fish spawn and worms. It is owlliko
in its habits, committing many
of its depredations at night.
A quarter of a century ugo practically
nothing was known of the
breeding habits of the species. The
elucidation of the mystery provided
one of the most fascinating biological
discoveries in recent years.
loward autumn a number of aduit
llsh cease to fbed, lose their normal
I greenish color, and assume a silvery
| livery; at the same time the eyes be|
come larger and other changes occur.
The call of. the sea seems to be ail-1
-powerful, for Individuals living lu remote
ponds will wriggle across
stretches of grassland, on damp
nlghtH, in order to rea^h the nearest
sea-going river. Having reached the
ocean, they make their way to the
nearest spawning grounds, situated
two or three thousand miles away in
the Western Atlantic, south-east of
Bermuda. Having deposited their
eggs, the parents die. |
The following spring the young
hatch out. They are curious little
creatures with flattened leaf-like bodies,
small heads and Jaws provided
with a few long needle-like , teeth.
They feed on minute organisms at or
near the surface of the ocean, and
gradually swim or drift across the
Atlantic, finally approaching the coast
when a little more than two years old.
Having reached the average length
of three inches, they are now ready
to enter fresh water. They run up
the larger rivers by the million, the
ascent of the young eels taking place
in the late winter or early spring.
No obstacle seems too great for the
migrating eels once they start on
their way to the fresh water, till at
last they find some suitable resting
Place in some river, pond or stream,
where they will remain until they
themselves are old enough to set out
on the great Journey that will end
their ljves. /
a large, sum of money, whereas Mrs.
HJicher was comparatively poor, anxl?U8
!?i,2bta*n a home ?or herself and
her children.
Bowers deposited several thousand
dollars, which the state claimed was
Mrs. Lemke s money. Powers said It
at'home" ar?und the kitchen
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Flemmlng of
Worcester, Mass., brother and sister
hi** 8la,n woman. told how they
m? ii? a pIcture ot "Pierson" qn
the divorcee's dresser.
MWe are going to get married," Mrs.
said Dg quoted her sIatdr as having
ml Hre has aJb,g ranch at Cedar Rapids,
Jowa, and he is going to give me
everything my heart desires."
The couple told how "Pierson" had
come and left with Mrs. Lemke. Mrs.
lo.ok?d Powers In the eyes
hll minute, then spoke: ..
That's the man."
The prosecution termed Powers
the WOf8t mass slayers the
world has ever known."
Spectators fought for seats in the
opera house. They surged into seats
imthe orchestra pit and balcony long
before proceedings started. Others unable
to get In milled behind ropes on
the streets outside. ~
#kPoTeZ8'- attorney described him as
victim of an "unseen witness, the
vengeance, which was claiming that
hanging?"lnl?n mU8t b? appeasod *>y
. Leroy C. Goff and Dr. Her
5ftynes asserted Mrs. Lemke,
hla and two of the children
had been strangled, while Harry
tr'i Vh,rd cMld- had be?n gagKed
and struck on the head with a
hammer in the garage that later became
known as the "chamber of horror.
Powers' attorney introduced' pictures
showing his face bruised, an eye
blackened, his back injured. The attorney
insisted the officers had given
iiX S deRree'" hut the polled
saW he had fallen down a stairway.
Powers himself blamed the killings
on' Two other fellows."
t .?U0XL days at the trtal the defh2
X u #tar,n* at the steeple of
X Ami" pa,nt?d on the backdrop
or coolly eyeing the other scenery and
. * . electrician, who sat overhead
at a switchboard. ?
withA.^4 Ue *erd,ct conviction
1931 a murmur on "December 10,
ne*t day he was taken back
1?* ? ' of March 18,
into thb execution ;
An unconcerned smile flickdoor
?*H
death dropped to his
wI7?8 the little grocery store
XT*8' had abe still
"? m>rt comM
house
haT# hlnrrBleased fof
iL ii?uul -^geaeg?>iJ?1.
Goodfellows Aid
In Gift Of Baskets
The following la a list of those contributing
to the Goodfellows Club during
the holidays. Between nluetylive
and one hundred bankets of fruits
and provisions were distributed to the
poor and noody In and around Camden;
Mrs. John Whitaker 1.100
John M. VUleplgue .. ,. .. .. .. 1.00
T. Thorney Trueadalo 1.00
Home Furnishing Company .. .. 1.00
Walter Price 100
Dr. T. B. Bruce 100
Boston Store 100
I^awrence Whitaker Jr. .. 100
Allen Norris 1.00
Mrs. W. H. Bonsai! 1.00
J. Bluke Zemp .. 1 00
Rhame Brothers 100
Fred Ogbuvn 100
A. It. Surratt .. .v * 100
Perry I^ungstou 1.00
Mrs. Binning 100
D. M. Mays 1.00
Bill Nelson 100
Sheriff J. R. Mcleod 1.00
J. D. Watson >50
N. C. Arnett 1.00
C. J. Outlaw 1.00
B. K. Sparrow 1.00
Marlon Williams 1.00
H. O. Carrlson Jr 1.00
H, G, Carrlson, Sr 1.00
Mrs. John Devine 1.00
Mrs. "W. J. Mayfleld ,, .. .. .. 1.00
Bill Nettles 1.00
Henry Suvago 1.00
Frank Curetou 1.00
Dr. J. W. Corbett 1.00
W. H. Harris > + t?iaf 1.00
W. L. Goodale 1.00
C. N. Stogner 1.00
Henry Savago, Jr. 1.00
C. C. Whitaker 1.00
E. D. Drakeford .. .. 1.00
Mrs. Owens ,, .. .. 1.00
C. Q. Kornegay 1.00
Mrs. Zemp 1.00
W. Lambert DePass .. .. .. .. 1.00
T. C. Gladden 1.00
Willis Sheorn 1.00
Dr. R. E. Stevenson 1.00
A. J. Eddlngs 1.00
Barringer Hardware Company .. 1.00
Jack Moore 1.00
Major A. M. Brailsford 1.00
R. M. Kennedy 1.00
R. M. Kennedy, Sr 1.00
Lewis Le? Clyburn .. 1.00
C. J. Shannon, Jr 1.00
J. L. Guy 1.00
C. H. Yates 1.00
W. Robin Zemy 1.00
A. S. Llewellyn .. 1.00
J. Team Gettys 1.00
Mr. Stack .. 1.00
Frank Coursen 5.00
Mr. Knight 1.00
Mr. McKee Graham .. .. .. .1.00
Mrs. McKee Graham .. .. \ . .. 1.00
M. H. Heyman 1.00
Mrs. J. L. Weeks 1.00
George Greswold .. .. .. .. ,, 1.00
Mrs. Douglas Boykin 1.00
Jack Whitaker, Jr 1.00
Mrs. Jack Whitaker, Jr 1.00
Mrs. Edward Stout .. .. .. .. 1.00
Mrs. R. M. Kennedy 1.00
Katherlne Kennedy .. ...... 1.00
F. N. McCorkle r.".. 1.00
A. Sheheen 1.00
Austin Sheheen 1.00
Ernest Sheheen 1,00
R. L. McCasklll 1.00
Water and Light Department .. 6.00
T. Hay .. 1.00
John K. Dupose 1.00
* rrsiMm I nwm
Mule Goes Mad
From Bite Of Fox
Bamberg, Dec. 31.?A mule belougli&K
to Kugene Humph who farms for
N. P. Smoak, near Mldwuy, went mad
a few days ago and had to be killed.
Some weeks ago Humph was riding
the mule, near his home, when a fox
, ran out and ti led to bite the negro.
He kept his legs out of reach, so the
fox took vengeance out on the mute.
This was before so much was known
ubout mud foxes. A few duys ago the
hiule showed signs of hydrophobia,
and a veternarian advised that the
unimul be killed.
Mrs. E, B. Mobley
Kershaw, Jan. 2.?Mrs. 1011a 11. Moblay,
69, one of Kershaw's valuable
citizens, wus found dead in her bed
this morning. Mrs. Mobley had beeu
in declining health for the last few
months and had recently suffered a
heart attack but hud apparently recovered.
Mrs. Mobley is survived by two
sons, J. G. and J. H. Mobley of Kershaw;
one daughter, Mrs. bum Hunter
of Heath Springs, and several
grandchildren. Her husband preceded
her to the grave many yeara ago.
The funeral was conducted by the
Rev. W. J. Bradley, her pastor, assisted
by the He v. Mr. BJlmer from ,
tjio First Baptist church of which she
was a devoted member.
. i
A motorist at Ansonia, Conn., reported
to the police that lut-had
knocked down a pedestrian and broken
a pint bottle of liquor in the man's
hip pocket. The motorist said the man
refused to be taken to a physician,
but Insisted tbat he be paid full price
for the broken pint.
Frank Wooten .. 1.00
Dr. Carl A. West 1.00
John K. delxiach 1.00
R. B. Pitts 1.00
Lee Little 1.00
J. H. Osborne 1.00
R. W. Riegor 1.00
N. P. Gettys 1.00 a
Dr. D. C. Hlnfion 1.00
Selwyn King 1.00
David Wolfe ; 1.00
Thomas Ancrum 1.00
J. G. Richards, Jr 1.00
A. C. McKain 1.00
Ralph Shannon ,, .. 1.00
A. Douglas McArn 1.00
M. M. Johnson .. .. 1.00
Jerome M. Hoffer .'. ? ? 1.00
:H. G. Carrlson, Sr . r 4.00
Sam Karesh .. ,. 1.00
C. P. DuBoso, Sr 1.00
C. P. DuBose, Jr l.Bd
Clarkson Rhame .. .. ?. .. .. 1,00
W. D. McDowell . r .?#... ;. .... 1.00
Miss Lal Blakeney 1.00
Cash (Pittsburgh) 1.00 ^
Mrs. H. Q. Marvin .. .. .. .. 1.00
Mrs. L. 8, Proctor .. ... 1?00;
Harry S. Porter o .. .. .. .; 1.00 v H.
D. Niles ,, .. ?. .? <? 1.00
Mrs. H, D. Nlle? .. ... .. .. 1,00
? " mm
TOTAL .. .. 9122.00
i ^TTTTT?I
I BROAD STREET LUNCH I
ON TOP OF THE HILt, , I
I | The Beet Nickel Hamburger Anywhere.
Milk?Bottled Drinka?Beer?Ice Cream B
I I.- COURTEOUS '< ( ' OPEN UNTIt* ^B^lp
CURB SERVICE > '--3 A. Mr'' '' ' v^l
I j ' >. -v 'W?* Tt
. ! ! ???? I I |
- ?1 ' ' . - I - .. ,. -. - I - ,. I I. I I r * I I .1, _ ..iC
||M ssmbcsv
FIRE?AUTOMOBILE?BURGLARY?BONDS ? .
s%~ ?1 {g? '
| DeKALB INSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE CO ?
9 "INSURANCE HEADQUARTERS'* jj. .
H CROCKER BUILDING?'TELEPHONE 7 s
3 J : . I i -Li - "X 'K ^
2 M. G. MULLER ELIZABETH CLARKE, Mgr. gj ;
???? I I I????????????fjw
ALL?FORMS ?OF?INSURANCE
i I 1 " 1 " II
??? ???? mammmmmm
-
I WARNING! I
I Cold Winter Predicted, I
I A Norge Oil Heater will keep youlf home comfortable I
l~b the coldest whether. Even temperature at all I
? ~~iT ~~; 7 .
I time*. Clean. No more coal to carry in. Terms. ^
I City Electric Company I
I Radios Ranges Radio Repairs I
CAMDBW. 8. C. 'j? \