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] Ctui&ing J I Around J with j Tho Skipper J Now, if you road the paper uua don t read this you won't bo any worse off, but Just the same here goes, and 8et, how it sounds: . While traveling these here parts, enjoying the beautiful scenery, the wonderful roads, an occasional whift of the inviting aroma of Juicy apple orchards, it carries nio back to dear 0lil Camden. Yes, Camden the city of sports, right down there in the true South. Speaking of sports, I wonder how Alderman Jack Nettles and his Palmetto leaguers are getting along? A 1st) 1 miss following that Legion Junior team of Coach Lynwood Smith. Now, there's a team of youngsters that play ball.. While on the subject of baseball, I wonder if a lots of you wouldn't like to be right here with me in those parts enjoying big league ball. As I have followed big league ball for a long time, I see where Joe Cronln Is following what I have been saying all the time?shoot your best pitchers against those Yanks, and always Tteep Joe DeMaggio as lead off man and ho won't be scoring runs ahead of him when he hits those home runs. I don't blame Joe McCarthy for sending Bob Feller in to stop the National league rally In the all-star game. It would have been tough for rookie I>onalds, or some other Yankee pitcher to get their ears pinned back. Yes, sure old Gabby Hartnett couldn't show his face in Philadelphia. The fans gave him some hearty boos for not playing their local idol, Arnovitch. * Well, here's hoping that my friend Donald Morrison Is coming along fine. * * f Does this sound like the Skipper? 1 jumped into my car one afternoon and decided I would see how the cotton, corn, beans, peas and gardens Aad responded to the hot summer days. My first jaunt was out Lugoff way. In that vicinity I saw some mighty 15?e cotton grown by James Roseboro, Mr. Ward, his two sons, James and Victor Ward. That 4 in 1 cotton, Clevewilt and Coker's one hundred looked mighty good. * On my way to Rabon's Cross Roads 1 stopped and chatted with Henry Roulware. He had just finished poisoning the boll weevils. He poisoned eleven acres last year, but decided to poison forty acres this year duo to good results that he got last year, and ; !so the good results ho observed on John Rabon's cotton last year. While chatting at Mitchell Rabon's store a group of farmers were discussing results they observed in the vicinity from the use of mixing fertilizers which a group of them had met and studied several nights back in the spring. Whit Rabon saying that he intends to mix his fertilizer from now on. Province Branham saying one < ould easily see the reults In his cotton. While in this vicinity I saw something very Interesting to our friend, J.dm Mullin. Several farmers observing the results of tests made with Chilean nitrate of soda for cotton on D'-witt Branham's farm. Also the teBt mailt.* on Glenn Rabon's farm for corn. Tht- results are very evident that cotion and corn can use nitraate of soda - r nitrogen in some form. * ? * Yes, sure there's some good cotton around Lugoff. Rabon's Cross Roads and vicinity. A bunch of those farm r? got together, decided to poison Mr. Boll Weevil, and they are doing Knur men and one woman were senitiK' tl to death in Moscow this week f >" thefts from apartments and government offices in Azerbaijan, a SoNil*' Socialist republic. Three others, ir.ruiding a woman, were sentenced to 1" years' imprisonment. M Hoar food-rleinc*. jyfl Moatiaf, dlaay apeUa ia4 bJU[9 owa attack* da* la delayed (ffl atom 1 nation qatckly WMwX 1 th roach Um POV-O-LIN Imt- . mat Towt Mlfkbon raeoaa- 1 H maad It. Belief or stoaey back. | I m I1-2S Size llmvaillSftl 8P*o|al ^i i9 Sold By DeKhlb ffunuiy *" /. ^ . -- - .fr-T'-: t I Jury Orders Death Fur Young Slayer Phoenix, Ariz, July IS ?A stern Jury arreptod 22 year old Robert Burgunder* challenge today and ordered him executed in the lothul gas chum her for tnurder.u\ Without a sign of emotion, Burgunder listened to the verdict, vililch was the Jurors' answer to his assertion that he "should be Riven the death penalty" if his story that an unidentified "pal" killed two automobile salesmen was untrue. The Jury, which sat through an 18duy trial, rejected his story and the 1 plea of his father. Robert M. Burgunder, Seattle, Wash., attorney and associate counsel, that the boy was "born with a defective brain," The poker playing collegian's frail mother, Mrs. Ruth Burgunder, of Alhambra, Calif., was on the verge of collapse after the verdict was read. His gray-haired father sat tight-lipped and weary. Both had tried to assume , blame for their son's waywardness. Burgunder, ^mtll April 29, a sophomore student at Arizona State Teachers College of Temple, was convicted of the murder of Jack Peterson, Phoenix automobile salesman. Still pending against him is a charge of murdering Ellis M. Koury,, another salesman. On the witness stand, Burgunder blamed the slaylngs on a companion whom he refused to Identify because of a "code of criminals" he said he learned while serving 23 months In a 'Washington State reformatory for a Seattle drug store holdup. SOUTH CAROLINA POINTS (By Frank A. Dickson In Charlotte Observer) The three-mile long Cooper river bridge at Charleston, which was com-| pleted in August, 1929, at a cost of approximately $6,000,000, is higher than the famous Brooklyn bridge. The first man to use mules in agriculture was General David R. Williams, of South Carolina. As soldier Edgar Allan Poe, the famous author of "The Gold Bug," was stationed at Fort Moultrie on Sullivan's Island. Colleton county was named In honor of Sir John Colleton, one of the Lords Proprietors of the province of Carolina. Dr. William Alexander Hood, veteran physician of York county, has completed half a century of service in the practice of medicine in the Hoodtown and Hickory Grove comni unities. Approximately 37 per cent of the area of Greenville county is in woodland. The timber consists of shortleaf pine, oak, walnut, black locust, gum, ash, and yellow poplar. Newberry began to be settled by Pennsylvanlans about the year of 1750. Different sections of it were subsequently taken by Scotch, German, and Quaker settlers. J. Austin Uatlmer, Assistant United States Postmaster General, Is a native of South Carolina. It Is claimed that the first game of golf In America was played at Char-j leston In 1788. Marshall P, Orr, of Anderson, president of the South Carolina Cotton Manufacturer's association, Is a grandson of the late James Lawrence Orr, who served as governor of the state, circuit judge and later minister to Russia. The Saluda river, which courses the upper part of South Carolina, rises in North Carolina and drains 300 square miles of that state The house at 1409 Gervals street, In Columbia, is famous as the homo which was visited by LaFayette in | 1825 i Nlnety-flve thousand persons in South Carolina were employed in textiles In 1938 Douglas Jenkins, who has been appointed by President Roosevelt as United States minister to Bolivia, formerly engaged In newspaper work In Greenville Camden, a thriving town even before the Revolution, was laid out In squares In 1760, and chartered nine years later During the War Between the States the work of Furnun university at Greenville was suspended, both because of lack of funds and lack of stndents. It opened again in 1866. Walter Alexander Adams, a native of Greenville who haa distinguished himself as a Foreign Service officer of the United Stateg, was Instrumental In rescuing the Laury-Johansen party.from Manchurlan kidnap bandits in 1934. Around 1820 the South Carolina Legislature made an appropriation of $10,000 to Mrs. Randolph, the daughter of Thomas Jefferson, as a reward foT the great services rendered the American nation by her father. There were eighteen cotton mills In South Carolina at the beginning ot the War Between the Statoe. Only eleven survived the war, all except two Beteff In Greenville and Spartanburg countlee. The first president of Olemson college was H. Aubrey Strode. 4> ' ILLFATED SUB SLIDES BACK TO OCEAN BOTTOM Undaunted by the disastrous mishap which sent the half-flooded sub marine Squalus plunging back to the wean floor just as bucow.s appeared about to cap seven weeks of perilous .salvage work, the l' S Navy valiant ly launched a new effort Friday to raise the craft and her twenty-six' dead. Divers were ordered down to survey how much damage was done late Thursday when the $4,000,000 vessel ripped away from Its net of lifting equipment, danced on Its tall for brief seconds, bow whipping above the surface, and then dove swiftly back to the bottom where It had rested since the first fatal plunge May 23. High naval officials and technical experts conferred all through the night aboard the rescue ship Falcon to map out a new plan of action, but little apparently could be accomplished until the divers determined wheth I or any damage had Neon dune to the! 'Squalu-- h? rself and whether it would t J he possible fv> ;.>e any of the original sah ago prep > at ions. Mertniiing at daybreak Thursday. the delh ale, hut ponderous. task ot j lifting lite submersible proceeded 1 slowly '1 lie flooded alern, which; ! hold* the bodies of the dead- had to 'he tugged for hours before tt broke 1 a way from the sucking mud | The work progressed steadily, however. until surfaee atens indicated the Squalus was suspended S5 feet above the bottom, lau feet below the surface. according to plan, and ready for a shoreward tow. And then something went wrong. Associated Press observers at the scene told of a wild flurry which occurred with all the auddeness and horror of a dynamite blast. Two big lifting pontoons zoomed to the surface. the bow of the submarine between them. Twenty feet of the sub's' pointed straight at the sky. Two of the Falcon's whaloboats, car*. I rylng ten men apiece and assigned iot the "tank of raring to tin bow pontoon( to close valves an soon a a it a ppearod, j wort' a I moat engulfed a a the wildly | w hippie.- bow sent water spouting "(in l?avk. go bark." iiiini' the hot i itioil < rioa from the KaliMn's dork as a geyser tdtIrtv foot in diameter erupt-[ ed not fifty feet from the 2t> foot boats Skillful maneuvering;. spiced with puro lurk, enabled tlto men to get! safely out of harm's way And thou, just as suddenly as It had appeared, tlto bow of the iibO-foot submarine disappeared beneath the surface. Four of the seven big pontoons remained on the water, obviously sheered from the lines which had held them to the Squalus, two of them spouting water. The salvage crew, Including some of the thirty-three men rescued from ttie Squalus the day after she plunged to tragedy off tl^p Isles of Shoals, was so dlaheurted by the failure of the lifting effort, that an officer?one of the thirty-three, survivors?wept as 1 ho announced It. "1 wrote my wife two \vooks ago and told her I'd bo home soon," said one disconsolate diver. ... 11 I Mil -J Camden Chiefs Defeat suniter Camden defeated Sumter hero Suturda>, 7 (o I, In a 1'almetto Joaguo ge mo. Tln> Chiefs under the now iuhuukoin I'll t of II A Small .showed a world of i?t?p Moore for Camden pitched a beautiful game allowing only eight hits and Keeping these well scattered. Camden got fourteen hits off the offerings of Oatoeu and Stoddard. Ilenny Robinson at shortstop for Camden played a brilliant game. Moore, the Camden plteher .secured three hits as did Robinson .lames for Sumter secured three hits. 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