University of South Carolina Libraries
WEEKLY BULLETIN , S.C. Game cjftsii Association Jhrii Statewide (^operation Ga*te, Jiih A J?rf5J con be Materially* fjncreasedfor ike Benefit ofJlri. i | - * I;T6 ABOUT SHRIMP fish and (lull caught while u ami down tho coastb of id tin' two Carolinaa, intercrully. Hut maybe commonlie well Initiated. The life common shrimp la only The I'nlted Statea bureau i have three biologiata ataween Charleston and New voting all their time to the irimp, and the foregoing la facta they have eatabllahed. crews they trawl for led the healthier apecihein then and there aboard release #guin In the aanie iriinp tagged and released own were retakfen by fishalong the South Atlantic i North Carolina to Capo Florida. s true a shrimp enjoya life little over a year, I aaw a clmeu that la worth- writli weighed a quarter of One shrimp, one-fourth er all a quarter of a pound r ounces, but weigh a etimes. (Your fish dealer >u shrimp ordinarily run ou per pound). South Carolina doean't fficient fish commercially out-falling short of our; states' production, It does appreciable amount of oysters. More pounds of caught than all fish comlyater production is a mil =?I lion pounds ot oyster meat ^renter i than North Carolinu and Georgia coin h Intnl. What l? the lurgest fish that hw1iii?? Largest of all fish. Don't say "whale." You've been taught that the whale Is not u hsh. The largest hsh Is the whale shark, the Khineoden types While a whale In sense of size, It is a true shark. However, the whale shark is a "sissy." Growing to immense size, it attains a length of at least 38 feet, weighing 26,f>94 pounds, and is completely void of light. It .possesses a very small moutlPand tiny teeth,, feeding on small organisms. This immense shark is apparently without any defensive or offensive equipment. It hue been variously reported from flie Mediterranean, the West Indies, the Cape of Good Hope, and the Pacific. Some even claim this fish inhabits great depths and only the babies come to the surface and are caught. Milby Durtpn, curator of tlu* Charleston Museum, is working, really ut odd times for he is so busy making the Museum one of the very best municipal museums in the country, on a splendid collection of South Carolina dishes. When he completes the job he will have assembled invaluable data on the marine life of the state, both fresh and salt water. The diamond back terrapin offers a real delicacy for the Epicurean. A company in Savannah cans the meat and markets an eight-ounce can of iL for one dollar. Yes, 1 have one can. Come dine with me. immer Feeding Of Family Dairy Cow emson, June 19.?Grass alone, i though it be abundant, is handifflcienl to maintain the dairy cow permit her to produce over two Nisof milk daily, says C. G. Gush. extension dairy specialist, owever, permanent pasture is the s of summer-time feeding, for it ilshes the nutrients which are supi by cured hays in winter feeding will permit a minimum of grain ling, the specialist explains, wo acres of an improved perrnanpasture which yields an abund-, e of grazing may be expected to ry the cow six to seven months of yaar with a minimum amount of In feeding. If the pasture is a ir one, grain and even some hay It be fed If it is fair only, then boderate amount of grain should led at milking time, fee best grasses and plants fqr , pueiit pastures are Bermuda |t lespedeza, white Dutch clover , Dallis grass. No plot of land will IWgger dividends in the production feed than two acres of permanent ure for each family cow, a pasture | has been fertilized and seeded h I most of South Carolina we may , feet hot. dry spells during the sum| months when the growth of perm- , p: pasture is severely injured, fey farmers sow a small patch of fel millet or Sudan grass, not Over [half acre per cow. This will furnan abundance of grazing through I dry period or may be cut and jin the stable. It is a good prac- ] Mtructive details on pasture inurement ;u>. given in * Extension jetin 99, Permanent Pastures for lib Carolina, which may be secured I from county farm agents or front , |^"cat'on Department at Cle'm[Philadelphia book collector this 1 p paid Jpi.ooO for a volume two 1 fe Outenhnrg Bible, published in F The bible is in Latin and beau- ; fy illuminated with colored pic- 1 P 'he bible, printed in two volP would be worth about $100,000. EVA, THE YORKVILLE ELEPHANT WAS KILLED BY DIET OF SAND Eva, one of the big elephants of the Wallace Brothers show, died an unnatural death in Detroit, last Sunday, an Associated Press dispatch says. Eva left Yorkville in excellent health, last April, on the long trek north of the show, and had many friends in this old town, the winter quarters of the big show. The dispatch from Detroit, where Wallace Brothers show was exhibiting the first of this week says: Eva, a three and one-half ton elephant belonging to a circus, died Sunday night from an ill-advised snack consisting of a pair of shoes. A week ago, one of her keepers lay down for a nap near Eva. He removed his shoes and when lie awakened they were gone. There was a distressed look in Eva's eyes. Eva's condition became worse as the week wore on. All day yesterday she attempted to free herself and her keepers said she was responding to an instinctive desire to diq alone. The circus sold the carcass to a Detroit reduction company. But, next day, it was determined at the autopsy, that those shoes did not kill Eva after all, and that she had been unjustly accused of eating them. That stain was removed from her reputation at the post mortem examination. The Associated Press, on Wednesday carried another dispatch from Detroit, saying that a barrel of sand, and not a pair of shoes, caused the death of Eva. Officials of the Detroit Rendering company, who examined the carcass, said they found that much said in her stomach. They found no evidence of the shoes which Eva's keeper, Joseph Secastian, believed the elephant ate. John T. Milieu, Detroit zoo director Baid all animals eat sand and dirt but it would appear that Eva over-ate her cjuota.?Yorkville Enquirer. The city of Memphis, Tenn., thl$ week sold $3,000,000 worth of bpptls carrying an interest rate of 3 3-^ per cent, at a premium of $31,800. >Tho money la part of $9,000,000 to be used In constructing an electrical distribution system for TVA electricity. The PWA is expected to supply one-third of the needed nine million. I To the Farmers I of Kershaw County . . . I IF YOU HAVE WHEAT for sale or I for exchange we invite you to bring it I to our Mill at Monroe, North Carolina We offer you the facilities of our most modern I c?mplete Flour Mill, and with our new equipment, I )Te are able to give you speedy exchange ?ervice. The ?ur and feed offered for exchange are of the finest I qua"ty? and we guarantee their absolute satisfaction. I We at all times Pay the Highest Market Price for Wheat and Corn * I The Henderson I Roller Mill Co. MONROE, NORTH CAROLINA __ ^ , -,r iriiYi r :'r-" f 1 ' Nobody's Business Written for The Chronicle by C<? I McCeo, Copyrigfit, lU2b. last hits from flat rock I ho Kame of baseball betwixt Hat 1 (H k ami cedar lane that wu? to have' benn hell last satturduy afternoou aas forfitied to the luttor onner count! <>t the former not showing up. soiuo drinking took place on the way down i there amongst the homo boys, and! they got on the wrong road and I wound up about nightfall at the county seat. f the ladies aid oTrThober church is planning u big social for the near fulure. our inissipuuerry to Jappau or china, our informal dldden't know which, has asked for 5$ to be used for the purpose of buying a suit of Clothes tor wing foo and sing lee. allso some underwear if needed, they hope to raise this sum by selling such stuff I as Ice-cream, sody waiter and goobers. the c.i.o. has not yet finnished its, work here and no set-downs have benn undertook except at the citty hall, the usual 14 loafers of flat rock started this set-down strike blzness about 15 years ago, and it 1ms benn In constant opperation ever since, tne only difference betwixt the c 1 o setdowners and the flat rnck set downers I the flat rockers go home and get their I meals while theV.Lg. is vicy versy ansoforth. ' the new wlrm discovered In the field of yore corry spoudent, nir. mike Lark, rfd, was sent to the farm detn-1 mon-strator at the county seat for inspection, it was setting on a cuekle burr with its feet resting on 2 cotton-' seeds, and was nibbling the tops put of ever stalk of cotton within Us J reach. after eating everthlng in sight, his wife come along and rolled his seat further down the row and I e resumed eating, it mought be a beetle crossed with a boll weevil ansoforth. more later on, if he can bo ' aunerllzed --hon. holsum nioore had the missfortune to get 2 of his front teeth knocked out in front of the post offis. the talk started about the suppreme cpart, then got on to al smith, and finally at last, It ended with a fist coming too close to hon. moore s mouth, he retaliated with a sody watter bottle, but it missed his assailant. and busted the plate glass aerost the street. - the railroad has changed its ache( 'lb' again and now the cannon ball which has heretofore come up on inonday and went down on tuesdays will, in the future, go south on fridav and north on monday. thus givving our little town 2 trains a week, one in each direction, the 2 passengers it hauled last month were strangers, the railroad has about decided to give up its bizness to the busses and trucks; they haul cheaper and run faster and opperate when the publick wants to be opperated on. yores trulfe, mike Lark, rfd, , corry spondent. -,/*f * WEDplNGx BELLS RING ANEW IN VLAT .ROCK - - a marridga of much intrust took Place in flat rock last satturday with nobody pressent to amount to annything except the pasture of rehober church and the bride and a witness from elsewhere. -the contracting parties were miss scoopy simklns and mr. john quill, the widdowow whose wife went on befoar. about 3 weeks ago. they were friends while she was still llvvlng in this old world of weal and whoa, she died of a sudden with hart trubble so he said. It seems thafthiTfove affair taken place about 3 years ago when miss scoopy boarded In their house, she' was a maggy-zeen peddler and liked his home verry much for headquarters. she has come back and fourth with maggy-zeens ever since. ..after she died, meaning his other wife, she commenced to vissit flat rock oftener and oftener. but did "hot sell so manny maggy-zeens. she road s?HUKd WJth mr qUl" a riKht 8mart and he showed her places where she iKht sell maggy-zeens if she ever took it up again. mr. quill told rev. will waite. the pasture who informed the cerrimony that he was marrying verry early after his wife's disease, but he dldden't have noboddy at home to help with the cooking and children and washth?f??whv h ?OW a"d 'he Kardln*' and twt s why he was in a rush ansoforth. to ,of benn ,oveN at flrst o,fn. K r m 8Coopy 8howefi mr. Q?lll her first maggy-zeen and her Httl! arCal wa,V8 her pretty ZL-irc ",d ** pr<""r rtaht th.n k ^7"'. * broke .loose **1 hen bol he bided hU time, then *? of fell m loT, ? [Warns Against | Fraud Insurance I Postiiunrtcr (ieticrul James A Furi ley announced lanight that the Pusj tal Inspection Service lias launched a nationwide drive uguiusi the operators of "fake" mutual benefit life protection organizations which huve h. en conducting their frariulcnt hl hemes through the malls. Compluilith reaching the I'ost Office Department indicate that there are approximately one hundred such fraudulent enterprises now being op orated in various sections of ttic conntry-. which are costing the American public hundreds of thousands of dollars annually. Added impetus hits been given the drive by the eight-year Federal penitentiary sentence meted out to Angus C. Mttlelohn of Springfield, Illinois, and the three-year sentence to Charles h. Hill of Lake Charles. Umijdnnu. both of whom were convicted for using the mails to defraud in connection with these spurious life protection organizations. (1 The promoters of these so-called not for profit" mutual benefit societies, associations and clubs, in order .VL/'i .?""Vent exl8,lnK state laws avoid the use of the word "insurance" and call it "protection." Instead of | policy they use the word "certificate and rather than referring to a premium" they call it "voluntary <ontrihution." They further mislead heir victims by selecting confidence a.h1 o f ??mes such us "National Aid Society" and "Southern Life Club of I byslcians' (Guaranty. Cnion" or other names similar to well known legitimate life insurance companies; I 1 lie promoters take advantage of the fact that very few people read their certificates, 'particularly the fine print on the inside containing many exceptions and limitations. Members are not informed, but beneficiaries soon find out, when the members die that the exceptions In the fine print j wholly nullify any llabilltly or the so| clety. '1 li<? promoters accept persopfl indiscriminately up to the age of eighty-five years, yet they claim the Htiength of the society lies in the membership because it is "so careful> selected." They stress the point that no medical examination is required. and especially appeal to "those who, because of udvanced age or physical infirmities, can not obtuin any form of life protection." Literature ,or these concerns contains many false representations, Including stateimnts of fraternal and benevolent features; and the claim that they are operated on the same basis and plans of the old insurance societies which have been successfully operated in Europe since the year 11(18. i'eople of sixty to eighty-five years of age. many of whom are suffering from some chronic ailment unknown to them, are led to believe that, for a monthly contribution of o?e dollar to one do ar and a half, their benefieiar!Z X, ret'eive 8UIn? ranging from wLl ?i to five thousand dollars. When the member dies, any payment under the policy depends upon a "iost pro m"i; investigation. The promoters make every effort to show he was suffering from some chronic disease m n the cer,'bcate was issued, and they usually find some pretense u emiv '? (Ie"y the Clalm- Conse" honifli n? pavment ,8 made to tho fnr^fl ?r the cla,m ,H nettled tn an L" m 8u,n of from ono dollar to fifteen dollars. It is difficult to estimate the total v2LrUhv fl'c,hed *from the Public each year by this class of promoters but the National Aid Society alone' cost the public upwards of two million dolars in four years, of which only twennf nZ C?.nt XUH paid back ,n the form I hlvmi h ' e r,e8t of that huKe 8UI? having been used for salaries and expenses. n is. therefore, obvious that the amount taken from the public by now in n other similar societies now in operation reaches a staggering sum annually. tnJhe,UMUal Procedure of the operaVPW( e 8chemes Is to Insert advertisements in various newspapers for agents who operate wherever thev deceived11 fromny COInpla,nt8 have been received fiom persons in rural com. I munlties and small towns as well as in large cities. The Associations also secure memberships by mail a? wen as pergonal solicitation by agents and sUprh8?ne ,are 8oiic,ic" bers hv iitoP arsons already memmails. 1,terature sent through the ten year old boy is held killing father hjfllrd?y afternoon an inquest was held by Coroner Davis In the case of the killing of Elliott Ed wartsThe Jtn> was 88 follows: Hilton i'owell foreman w. R. Thomas. Harry Hud' " A* Reynolds, Gerald DuBose wis ,h?ra"; 1ihe Vertllc' "ndered was that Edwards was killed bv nin rol shot from the hands if his son Wesley Edwards. ' The killing occurred May 2Q Tho alom 'So've'a' T""- ? the on fl h ? a?e- had whipped ine son, a boy about 10 years of aire This enraged the boy, who got a nit back1 of th0thh'a f^ther once ,n tbe nsl I n f k,I1,ng hlm a,mo?t ing y conJe88ed the killMnfZui. " On^alceoiint "ieh?U",y " will more than lilo'ly be ' *? formatory for him. The killing took place on the' vlZ Me88Pengernear -Bishopship exceeding 1,000,000. 9 him too. ..a short honey-moon trip to the county seat was took by the happy pair, but jthey returned back home the next day and she took up her duties in his househole with much vivacity she will make him a fine swain, and we wish them and his 7 children and the cow and the wash tub manny happy returns of the day. a yore trnlle, mike Lark, rfd, 4 corry apondent. More Milk Products For Farm Families Clemson, June 26.?If 20 to 25 per cent of the value of the family food supply should he made up of milk and milk products, as all dieticians agree, It seems unmistakable that there Is a critical underconsumption of milk and Its products on South Carolina, farms. This striking statement, made by C. (.}.' Cushman, extension dairy specialist of Clemson College, and Miss Myra Reagan, extension nutritionist of Winthrop College, is based on recent census reports that on 66,3581 farms in South Carolina no cows are j being milked and the acknowledged | fact that on countless other South Carolina farms there Is an Inadequate i upply of milk for the farm family. Towards a better knowledge of the j alue of dairy products in the family diet and an increased use of these )|-oducts Mr. Cuslimau and Miss Reagan have prepared and the Extension Service has published Bulletin 100, The Use of Milk and Its Products on tlie Farm. The publication discusses, with ample illustrations, the production, preparation, and use of milk and milk products for home consumption, an important section being that giving about 75 recipes in which milk and milk products are used. Bulletin 100 may be secured through I county farm agents and county home agents, or from the Publications Department at Clemson Collego. i It is interesting to read of the stilt sentences Judge Cooper handed out to the radicals who attempted to overthrow the-government. What a flne I thing it would be to have some courageous Judge in the United States send a batch of Communists to the penitentiary."?Carolina Free Press, i \nd there are some others not called Communists, but tarred with the same stick, that need a like dose. There might be fewer strikes and other disurbances.?Chester Reporter. Feed Budget For Family Milk Cow Clemson, June 26. ? A simple feed budget for one milk cow for one year is suggested by (\ (J. Cuhsman, extension dairyman, for guidance In the proper feeding of the family milk cow. These feed needs Include: Two to three tons of bright, leafy, green-cured legume hay (peavlne, soybean, lespedeza, hlfalfa, oats and vetch. Two acres of Improved permanent pasture. One-fourth acre annual grazing crop (Bummer: pearl millet; winter: oats, rye, barley or a mixture of all three.) Eighteen bushels of corn or forty bushels of oats or 25 bushels of barley, or J ,250 pounds of all threo. Four sacks of cottonseed meal. Fight sacks If cottonseed meal is fed alone. Mr. Cushman recommends two grain mixtures for the family cow. First, 100 pounds each of corn-andcob meal, ground oats, ground barley, and cottonseed meal, with 4 pounds of salt. Second, 300 pounds of either corn-and-cob meal, ground oats, or ground barley (or a mixture of these in proportions available) and 100 pounds of cottonseed meul, with four pounds of salt. As feeding guides Mr. Cushmati advises: Feed 2 1-2 to 3 quarts of grain mixture daily to each gallon of milk produced. If cottonseed meul is used alone, feed one quart daily to each gallon of milk produced. If pasture or grazing is not abundant, feed all the ledums hay the cow will consume. Provide plenty of fresh clean water. Aubrey Williams, national deputy relief administrator, says that between 425,000 and 450,000 wprkers will be "dropped within two or three nonths" from the WPA rolls. Build or Refinance Your Homo With Our Easy Monthly Payment Plan Interest 6% LOW INITIAL COST ^lEDER AL oAV INGS | TIand loan association CAMDEN, S. C. ' j: III I I 11 ?, 15 BEFORE YOU BUY Printing FROM A PEDDLER j Give Us a Chance | s The salesman for outside printing plants promises you a lot . . . and gets your order I ! j ... then sends you what may be O. K. or may I not be. j: The Chronicle's prices are based on sound and i practical figures. We know our cost and add only a fair and reasonable profit. We invite you to compare prices and quality {; of work. j THE CAMDEN CHRONICLE PHONE 29 a M