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f Nobody's Business *ritum for Tho ChrontcU by Ge? 1 MoGeo. Copyright, 1PJ58. hon. hols^ moore 18 in the l n . hospital ihe town of fiat rock wuh I* ihofketi plumb dowu to her pillars \en the news wus spread last night . t j,uii hoUum moore had heun took t0 tho hos--spittle at tbp county Beat l0 have uppehder-ceetus cut out. he r0de I" a big amberlance which was furnished free of charge by the rise ^ shine undertaking parlors ansol forth. ____ inr. moore had benn complaining Iround the house as usual for sevveral days, but his wife didden't take jjjpj yorry serious till he wouldden't eat no supper, then she realized that ' something was bad wrong when mr. moore failed to eat a meal, she foam| ed for dr. green, he got there in about 4 hours, thus taking his time to look after his patience, this wab j 3 night ago. ,,dr. hubbert green treated mr. moore at once for the side plurisy, hut the next morning, ho found that the misery was a little bit too far down to NOTICE . Notice is herebygiven, that the undersigned will on the 7th. day of September, 1937, apply to The Wateree Building & Loan Association of Camden, South Carolina, for a new certificate of stock to take the place of the following lost certificate: Certificate No. 149. of date June 20, 1935, for six (6) full paid shares, each In the sum of one hundred (1100.00) dollars, Issued to Rosalie C. Block. ROSALIE C. BLOCK SUMMONS FOR RELIEF State of South Carolina, County of Kershaw. (In Court Common Pleas) Henry West, Emma Catoe, Delia Dillon, Leila Vincent, William West, Henry West, the younger, Eliper West and Mary Bush, plaintiffs, against Llzzie Faulkenberry, James E. Faulkenberry, Inez Ferguson, Ruth West, Harry West and Mrs. Belle West, defendants. To the Defendants Lizzie Faulkenberry and Inez Ferguson: You are hereby summoned and required to answer the complaint In this action, which has this day been filed in the office of Clerk of Court of Common Pleas for said County, and to serve a copy of your answer to the said complaint on the subscriber at his office, Broad Street, Camden, S. C., within twenty days after the service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service; and if you fail to answer the complaint within the time aforesaid, the plaintiffs in this action will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in xhfe complaint. I. C. HOUGH, T. Plaintiff's Attorney. Rated at Camden, S. C.f this the 30th day of July 1937. 21-23 DR. 0. R. FUNDERBURK (Palmer Graduate) Chiropractor CAMDEN, S. C. - . majmLria ODD colds Liquid, Tablet* flr,t *** Salve, Note headache Drops 30 minutes Try "RUB-MY-TI8M" World's Best Liniment * ; Wo Food 'em All? I V/atcf66 LllilCn TRY USI i I ! i ^ ** ???????f i Summer Time RADIO - 1 Poor reception during the warm weather is not always due to climatic conditions let us check your set . probably It's a had tube looae connection . . broken serial . . . or sA out of bajmnc*. 4 .. call for ben team at (Sty Electric Co. I ?t. BiiMM 1#4 1 i * ? * , ? iii jax. . . . TT1"' be the plurUy, ho he switched over to guided stones und livver complaint, he used soiue new faugle modlsun but it dldden't furnish verry much relief, So ho dubbled hie doses and inr inooi'u dozed olT to bleep. ..dr. green Anally dog nosed thia case us uppeuder-ceetus. ho luiu opporatod on a large number or patience in the past and a few of them have got well ok, but ua his tools were verry dull and hib supply of guuzus uud buniterry cotton wus verry skacc, lie decided to carry him to the hos-spittle for attention, ho he foamed In for the amberlance. ? ..if he dies under thfc Influence of ether and the knife and bculpol, ho will be berried at rehober by the Bide of hib Hrbt wife who paaaed on be* foar to rebt on that beautiful bliore 6 yr. ago with tho flu. hib polo bearorb will bo aa folio worn: the mayor, tho poleesman, torn head, art square, yoro corry spondent, hon. mike Lark, and 2 of hia son-in-laws. mra. moore picked therfe out Jubt after they drove off with hib remulna for the opperatlon. " . .If he pubbeu, he will bo badly mlaaed by ull concerned, he haa newer benn cut into, ao Bhe bays, and she do not believe he haa one chance in GO. he was a faithful member of rehober church up to 1 yr. ago. he hope with everthing of a religious nature, bueh aa: taking up colloctlona, cleaning off the graveyards and fixing the btove flues ansoforth. we are all hoping for the best, but his case looks bad at this rlting. FLAT ROCK HAD A BIG FIRE LAST WEEK ..what started out to be a serious fire like they had In chicargo Beveral yet^rs ago took place in mrs. art square's cow-stall where she was milking a cow which gives only a small quantity of milk when she suddenly kicked over a lantern . . . that she wub being milked by and everthing in the stall, including the cow, ketched on flr&. ..mrs. square jumped thru a crack in the wall In time to save hersfelf from serious injury to limb and boddy. she suffered a few small burns, 3 cuts on her forehead, a black eye, and a skint nose, the cow got out allso, but her milk was badly strained, her tall was swinged and and it Is not fit to fight flies and insects as heretofoar. she was later ketched 22 miles from her abode ansoforth, and returned back by lowing hands. . . ther flames spread quickly to the pig pea and burnt it up, but as the pig was not at home, she did not gfet burnt, help arrived, and everthing else was saved except a small outhouse and the ford which was under the buggy shelter where It had benn setting ever Bince mr. square had a blowout in apull on his way from the count seat while verry drunk. t ..the cltty ball and the drug stoar were saved, as theyi-were located on the other side of town, 'the house acrost, yie street did not ketch on fire as the lot on which it should of benn Is-vacant, sparks flew 25 feet high, and the only thing that saved the scholl building was the wind was blowing the wrong way* and it is cowered with mettle shingles and it was too far off ansoforth. ..the fire department, which'consists of a bucket briggade, went the wrong way, as they mistook the rising moon for the fire, when they finally at last arrived, it had gone out. it is hard for them to take time to decide in what direction the fire is emma-natlng from, they get verry excited, two of them forgot to fetch their buckets, and the other one failed to put on his clothes ansoforth. ..the p. w. a. will be informed of this hollocast, and solicited for funds to put watter-worka in our town, flat rock is at the mercy of the dreadful Are hazards, and needs a watter system verry bad indeed. it will cost over 1000$, so the poleesman says, but by just sarvlng 2 or 3 houses in a year, It would soon pay for itself, we are glad it was no worse, and she Is back home now and being milked as usual under the shade of a tree befokf night cornea, on, THE APPLE HAS ARRIVED IN FLAT ROCK .. ever boddy is dancing the apple In our community at this tim^Tand It las took the minds of the publfck off of the suppreme coart and congress generally, miss jennle Veere smith, >ur Efficient scholl principle, Is teaching a large crowd of add-mirlng blends how to do'this dance. , T. ' ' ' , ;the apple dance aeema to be a mixtry of the 1895 cotillion, and the 1897 1 iqnare dance, and the 1915 Charleston \ ind the 1995 tap, and the 1917 hoola, tnd the 1918 rumba, and the 1917 lootchy-kootchy. ft la not Terry Tfo' ., . f, V Gas Truck Bums On Monroe Road A 2,t>00 gallon gasoline truck was destroyed by lire Bix miles east ,/pf here on Statu Highway No. U3 about 1 o'clock Tuesday afternoon when the back axle of the trailer broke. The driver, Ben Wilson, of Fuguay Springs, N. C\, escaped without injury, und the cab of the truck was unharmed, but the tank trailer was burned to the ground. The intense heut of the lire burned the macadam highwuy badly for a distance of thirty feet, baked the shoulders of the road, und sot lire to the woods on either side. The woods Urea didn't get far, due to a cornUeld on one Bide und a swamp on the other. Wilson wus headed towurd Lancaster with u full load when his rear axle broke, lie managed to hold the truck in the road as it grated 150 feet to a stop on the left side of the highway. The Uames started about 100 feet before the truck stopped. Several 50-foot trees on the left side of the road were burnt ull the way to their tops. Wilson said that one time Haines were leaping ten or ilfteen feet ubove the tree-tops. Wilson hud Chief of Police H. A. Montgomery to go out and shoot holes in the tank and allow the gas to leak out, so that the fire-might burn out more Quickly. , However it burned from 1:30 'til night fall. The load of gus, out of Wilmington, N. C., was consigned to W. C. Wylie of Chester, Wilson said. The truck was owned by K. B. Johnson & Sons of Fuquay SpringB. The dual wheels on the left rear of the trailer came off and ran by the burning truck, then sprinted 200 feet down the highway before running off into the swamp.?Lancaster News. NOT "HILLY" BUT STUMPY We read somewhere these lines of, doggerel poetry:" "Boston is a hilly place; People all are brothers-in-law. If you or I want something done, They treat us then like mothers-inlaw." That was written many years ago before everybody rode in automobiles. 'Before the glorious, holy World War. Before radios, government farming, and white-collar Jobs for the downand-outs as well as the ups-and-golng. Before the Black-Coftnor or Connery, or some such bill to put all on easy street. Except the hills, that poetry will apply to us once in the '('slough of despond" but now sailing on smooth waters with head up and tail over the dash board). However prompt your debts are paid, if beyond the confines of the government crib, what is your experience in securing labor for little outside Jobs? The answer invariably Is: "Wukking for the guvment." This spirit invades all ranks. The four winds blow in agents from every direction to sell you something. Never to buy. Not even allowed to get you out of a hole when a nut jolts lopse Or a wire gets crossed. "Against the rules of the company." All brothersin-law on the sales but mothers-inlaw on the rebound.?Calhoun Times. lent exercise to dance the apple when a feller is sober. ..torn head's son, puddin, who went off to college last September and got back home in October, is trying to start a new dance, which he calls the, peach, and expects it to take the place of the apple, he learnt the peach dance In the mess hall at college, but newer ketched on to all of their steps. ..the apple dance has manny friends, so miss smith Bays. some of the dancers reppersents the peeling, others the stem, and siiii ornerB take the place of the seeds and the core, while the rest of the folks seem to be the apple Itself, a fiddle is used for musslck but it is accompanied by a gtttar and a mouth organ. ..art square's fifth son, tri. square, calls the apple dances, but as he is tongue-tied, it is right hard for the dancers to find out what he is saying most of the time, he sounds like he has his mouth full of soap with a chicken forky-bone betwixt his l&rnyx and thqrax, or better described as resting on his wind passage at the throte. v ? . .the apple is as popular as the yo-yo when it first arrived and everboddy is doing it that has anny idea how It is done. rev. will waite is a-feared that it will be the ruin-atlon of rehober church and he has alreddy preached a hole sermont against it he says the young folks is dancing their way to perdition where the Wfrm dieth not and the fire is newer sqninched. bat it rolls right on regard lees, yoree trulie, mike Lark, rfd, apple leader. * : \ Community Farm 'lour Held Thursday A community farm tour was hold In tlio Charlotte Thompson commuui?ty Thursday, Aiikusi 6. This tour started at the live-acre cotton Improve mour demonstration of J. M. I Uluith s. H. K. Savoly, educational manager for tho Chilean Nitrate of fiodu, offered a prize of |6.U0 to the man who estimated the nearest to' what this cotton will make por aero. Tho lowest estimate was 1,150 pounds) ami the highest was 2,760 pounds of i seed cotton per acre. This demon* strat Ions is planted to Coker loo va-1 rlety which has very small follago, hut} it is fruited good for the year. It i was fertilized with 300 pounds of Agrico and 200 pounds of soda along. with 25 tons of stuble manure per acre. v On tho farm- of D. L. Sowell we suw a modern poultry farm with tho ; most up-to-date houses, whore the poultry are fed the proper kinds of feed front day old chicks to maturity. ' In addition to his chickens ho also has 2a0 turkeys that are kept on fenced range. Mr. Sowell hatches his own turkeys and chickens in his lncubutor. He grades his eggs and sells them according to weight. On tho farm of E. T. Pearce we saw cotton following crotalarla with only 100 pounds of soda per acre that looked much better than cotton adjoining with 175 pounds of soda per acre. Wo went from there to E. C. Pearce's and saw 60 hogs grazing on Hiloxi soybeans that looked good. The only other feed they were getting was a limited amount of oats. Mr. Pearce hus corn, velvet beans, soybeuns and cowpeas that no will turn these h ;gs on to finish them out in approximately 3 weeks. On Zemp und Trotter's farm we saw twelve acres of good corn following Austrian Winter peas with a limited amount of fertilizer. We also saw a good five-acre Improvement Demonstration on this farm. One of the most striking things we saw on the tour was the corn of Dr. K. E. Stevenson's following crotalarla on sand hill lands that had no fertilizer either under it or as a side dresser. People estimated on the yields per acre from thirty to fifty bushels. After this a picnic lunch wu served at Charlotte Thompson school. Appeal To Measure ! All Tallest Corn _ Tall tales of taller Corn have quite gotten the goat of the publicist of the Camden chamber of commerce and Mr. Heath has issued an appeal to all corn growers of Kershaw county to j get out the yard stick or tape line and get the height of some of the tall corn growing in Kershaw county. For whisper it?Mr. Heath Is going to wrlto to Governor Phil LaFollette, of Wisconsin, and Governor Nelson G. Kraschel, of Iowa, and challenge them to the tall corn honors. The Camden publicist comes from Wisconsin where the com growB to a height of 16 to 17 feet, but in his travels about the country here, he has looked upon some stalks that are close to being 15 feet, if not taller. As long as Iowana sang their state Bong in rousing boast of being from the state "where the tall corn grows," and let It go at that, sister states in the midwest were content to let It go at that but when Governor Kraschel went so fair as to challenge the sister states to show some corn, he sure stuck his chin out. Even Goverpor Horner, of Illinois, has horned In on the argument, but com experts declare that while the Illinois com is "some com" it dods not grow to the height attained by the Iowa and Wisconsin product. Stories of skyscmping -talks grcwas the zero hour approaches, fid far Iowa has submitted the tallest Specimen, a Davenport farmer claiming to have a cloud scraper that measures 18 feet and 5 1-2 inches. (Governor Horner,' of Illinois puts forth the claim that in his own backyard he has twelve different* varieties of corn that arc from 12 to 14 feet high. Wisconsin in reply has told the Illinois executive thfct th|s is a cornstalk and not a turnip contest. Wisconsin and Iowa will settle their differences when the two governors gather at a political rally this week. Now, the Camden publicist will ask for reports on Sooth Carolina sky scrapers and if we have any to offer competition to the midwest states, Mr. Heath will immediately notify the winner of the Wisconsin-Illinois corn contest and challenge for national honon. Come on you sons of Dixie., The state department at Washington, estimates that there are now 1,300 American cttisens, Including ma* on duty there. In Peiping, China. The American embassy there hflui 76 I1!!!?* dtlsens registered, lnhtid* mtn* *** women, and Its .3*"? ; v '> V I The appropriation bill for the interior department, currying $130.oou,UOO, U now in the hands of the i'reaident. Judge S W. t?. Shlpp Ih critically ' sick In a Florence hospital. lie wus j taken there, at the week end, from hia home at Ocean Drive Meuch, in Horry county, whore he had been rocuperaV | ing from a hciIoum llliteua, and where j he had a relupao. SectiooH of West Virginia oil Wodncxduy hud teiupcrutui eg hh low us 40 and 42 dttgreea. IMuiih uro boing considered by the brat couunla?ionor of public worka lu Kngland, that would inuko ahelters about the house of commons, Westminster Abbey and HucklnKham palace in Ixnidou bomb and gas proof In case of war. i&it? In dining rooms of famous hotels and -? exclusive clubs *. . . and wherever smart people gather . . . Why is if that you see upon so many tables familiar brown ^ bottles bearing the proud name of .. . y? # Igf}J In the palatial homes of families who can afford the very finest of everything . . . Why is it that the beer which the butler brings you on his silver tray is usually . . . . Wheli you meet a world traveler who hat sampled all the famous old-world brews .. N and really knows one fine beer from another...' Why is it such a person so often prefers . . . j WHY IS IT? . . . The answer is that SCHUTZ is a better beer .. . the finest that men and science brew. Each drop is brought to the peak of meiiow perfection under the famous SCHLITZ Precise Enzyme Control and is fully aged summer or winter... SCHUTZ is always good and good for you . . Each bottle and can contains Sunshine Vitamin D. ^ ~ I * Mombor of Unltod Browofo Industrial Foundation ^ .- -