The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, December 09, 1938, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3
ELECTRIC PIJMPS
(Duro Company)
Permanent Water Sy.tern. fQr Farm m/i ? ,
Automatic Electric Water Heater. El t '?T''
Motor., Tank* and Complete Equipm^Tor'w.te"
treatment.
easy terms *
ALFRED GOODALE, Auent
1213 Lyttleton St. ' ^;111
Camden, S. C.
Good Livestock Care
Needed in Winter
Winter calls for good caro of 11 vy.
stock, says County Agent W. C. McCarley,
making these suggestions for
December:
iJiaze hogs on winter forage?hurley,
oatB, or rye. See that the beef
breeding herd has enough cheap
roughage and cottonseed meal to prevent
loss of weight. Olve sheep onehalf
pound of ?raln .and all the hay
they will eat. See that all classes of
livestock, have shelter and bedding,
and provide extra bedding during
i old snaps. Repair fences during spare]
time. Kill hogs for homo use.
Dairying: Protect dairy cattle from
direct drafts and from rains. Feed
J good quality roughages, preferably
I silage and legume hay, to the limit
of milking cow # appetite. Feed grain
in proportion to milk produced by
each cow Give dairy cattle access to
pure fresh drinking water, Graze cowa
'not over two hour# per day on winter
grazing. Watch calves for lice, l'roiluco
quality products. Keep rest barns
\)i| ll bedded for a big supply of manure.
I'oultry? Make the poultry house
free from drafts. Kxamlne the laying
dock for lice and mites as an infestation
of either will lower egg production.
Feed grains liberally to keep
layers in good flesh. Get brooding
equipment in order
Great Britain's railways uso some
14,000,000 tons of coal for fuel annually.
Headed for Barringer Hardware Co.
Headquarters for Sporting Goods and many other Gifts
We Welcome Santa Claus to Visit Our Store on Arrival
Make Our Store Your Headquarters
Bicycles $26.95
We invite you to visit our store
to see our many GIFTS
Ask
about
our
Lay-Away
Plai
SKATES $1.48
Make our store your Headquarters
Barringer
Hardware
Company
Wagons $1.00 to $3.50 PHONE 21 .. I
? I V* jl
Nobody's Business !
Written for Tb? Chronicle by l*o?
NlcOee, Copyright, 19X8.
FLAT ROCK BREVITIES
I . tt nice little play was hell In the
J scholl audy-lorluui last night with
jverry liltlo proceeds. hut a verry full!
house; It seems that someboddy stole
a bunch of tickets out of u?i?s Jennie
l vt'uvt' smith's desk and gave theiu to
i their friends and loved onus free of
charge ansoforlh. tiny mooro, mr audj
mrs. holsum tuooro's darter, done all
of the starring.
j..tho wedding which was to of come
I off last thursday evening at the houie
I of the bride's father and mother did
! not do so. the proposed groom was
on his way to the place of matrlmoney
when he was suddenly overtook by thai
pay ride motor companny of the
county-seat who repossessed his car
'and left him 8 tulles front thence, as
I he has a wooden leg from the world
war when a mulo kicked htm at camp
'jackson, he could not walk the bal-|
lance of the way. it was called oft
indeflei nlte; she wont marry htm I
ho do not own a car.
..our local farmers are commlng to
the post offis 3 or 4 times per day
making inquiries about their 1938 subsidies
and plowing up chocks, they
got their 1937 checks a tow days ago,
which were duly spent, and now they
.want the rest of their hard-earned
inouuoy. they are afread that they
wont gel anny more govverment
checks if the new deal do not hurry
up and pay off It looks like the republicans
will soon take over the rains
of the treassury department, and that
means no help for anyhoddy except
folks who do not need It, as In the
past.
..another mice got in the organ at
rehobor church last sunday and it
seems he et a bole In the bcllowB
which let the wind out and as fast
as the organist could peddle the peddlers,
verry little musick would come
j out of the keys that Bhe was lingering.
she sweated great drops and
'gobs of sweat trying to keep tunes
< pouring therefrom, but the rut seems
j lo of winned the day. it can t be
! played anny more, so she says, till
i the rat dammage Is sowed up, or a
| new bellows Is Installed. she was
i verry much embarrassed and was her
face red? yes. it was.
' ..this little town is tore all to peaces
'about the cut in w. p. a. rolls, some
of our leading citizens got their w. p.
a. discontinued and now they are back
: on their kinfolks again, something
imust bo did at once, rito or foam
! yore congressman, if you have auny,
and tell them to put us back to work
i at' once, or arrange to take care of
I US with direct relief. It come like a
bqlt of thunder, It was so sudden,
verry few families had saved up ann>thlng
for the rainy day; It has not
looked like rain lately, whoever got
up that fine Idea of turning us out
Into the cold, cold world mought as
well leave his name off the ballets in
the next elecktion.
yore trulie,
mike larke, rfd,
corry spondent. j
I NEGRO'S SIGHT RESTORED
BY AN UNUSUAL OPERATION'
An unusual and extremely delicate
' surgical operation?probably the first;
I of Us kind in South Carolina was;
I pel formed in Tourney hospital two j
(weeks ago and Its complete success
demonstrated yesterday. The operation
was a corneal graft to restore
the sight of one eye of Nit a Colcolough.
negro woman, who had been
totally blind for six months. The operation
was performed by eye specialist
members of. the Tourney hospital
stafT. The cornea used for the
graft was obtained from the eye of a
negro man who died In the hospital
rom injuries sustained In an automobile
accident. Permission to use the
eye after death was obtained from the
dying man and with the consent and
approval of his representatives. The
eye was removed from the dead man
within thirty minutes after he feaeed
to breathe and was kept in a norffiST
salt solution at the proper tempertureabout
one hour and a half until
ature about one hour and a half until
eye of the blind woman. The eye was
kept bandaged for ten days and then
the dressings were gradually removed.
Yesterday the eye was freed Of
the last bandage and the woman was
able to see. The operation was a complete
success and Nlta Colclough has
had the eight of one eye restored. .
Sumter Item.
American aircraft* manufacturers
arP seeking means of tripling their
output to keep pace with President
Roosevelt's reported program of acquiring
one of the world's strongest
fleets of warplanes. A mass produotion
goal of 1,000 planes a month to
be attained wltnm a few months if
oosslble. was laid down at a conference
of manufacturers and government
officials, in Washington, say informed
persons. Some of the President's
advisers hope that within two
vears the Industry's capacityftho not
1 actual output) may be stepped up to
2,0 -if planes a month.
Enthusiasm Keen
At Parish Meet
Keen enthusiasm and a most satisfying
dinner featured the annual
meeting of the Grace Church parish,
eld at tho Guild hall Friday evening
and attended by one hundred people.
In addition to the annual address
of l>r. Maurice Clarke, rector of Grace
Church, reports of other officers were
submitted and various group organi-j
zation submitted reviews of tho year's
activities.
The dinner, prepared by the ladies
of the church, was a veritable Thanksgiving
affair, featuring turkey and all
the trimmings and served in a faultess
way by a group of girls.
An episode of tho meeting that was
impressive to a degree was tho spontaneous
outburst of applause when
Dr. Clarke told of the tine work being
done by Miss Artio Dixon, a church
girl and former singor in the choir,
who in now attending Valle Crucia
school at Valle Crucia, N. C.
A report card of the academic standing
of Miaa Dixon since the start of
her schooling showed her to have an
"A" standing in every unit of work.
In the election of Wardens, delegates,
alternates and other officers resulted
as follows:
Senior Warden?D. A. Boy kin; Junior
Warden, W. M. Shannon.
Delegates?I). A. Boykin, W. M.
Shannon, It. B. Clarkson and John
deLoach.
Alternates?Harry Porter, J. W
Cantey, Lawrence Whitaker and
Ralph Shannon.
Treasurer?Mrs C. H. Zemp.
Secretary?A. C. McKain.
Vestrymen?John delxmch, Shannon
Heath, R. B. Clarkson, Harry Porter,
Nettlos Lindsay, Jack Whltaker, Henry
G. Carrison and Ralph N. Shannon.
The meeting voted approval of the
action of the standing committee of
the diocese in voting against the reuniting
of the dioceses of North uud
South Carolina.
DRAMATIC READER^
GIVE^ CHRISTMAS PLAY.
MIrh Marie Joe Browne, notod draI
matic reader, who is to present a program
at Browning Homo cbapol Wednesday
evening, December 14, will
include among her numbers a Christmas
play. Sho will road several
poems from Negro authors, both
humorous and serious selections.
An admission charge of 10 and 25
conts will be charged.
The planet Saturn is lighter than
water.
r ran him
| / CIIKIVimil^ Gifts
Fruit Cake made from
an old, superb recipe!
In an air-proof cellophane.
1 to 5 pounds, at
50c lb.
M ince Meat or Pumpkin
Pi? with delicious flaky
crust. A big 9 inch pi?
only
:*5c
Just place your order,
leave us your gift list of
names and addresses,
and we'll get them delivered
by Christmas I
ELECTRIK MAID BAKE SHOP
CA MDEN, S. C.
f GREATEST OIL HEATER |
I VALUE EVER-OFFERED I
NEW 1939
, _ . __ __
DUO-THERM
Small Down Payments
Easy Terms
I This brand new 1939 Duo-Therm is
. far and away the year's best buy in
fuel oil heatefs!
It's the only heater with the bias-baffle
Dual-Chamber burner?the most
efficient burner made! Gives clean,
silent heat from pilot light to full
flame!
Turn the dial! Get a flood of heat for
zero weather?or just enough to take
the chill off on mild days! Duo^
Therm's exclusive "Floating Flame"
and special "Waste-Stopper" keep
heat from rushing up the chimneysend
more heat into the house-?save
oil! Coordinated Controls insure proper
draft settings?perfect combustion
!
Six handsome models?heat 1 to 6
rooms.
IE E. BEARD
Distributor
Telephone 487^ West DeKalb St.
r.
Camden, South Carolina -