The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, July 28, 1939, Page PAGE SIX, Image 6
on all machines?industrial or automotive
GENERAL REPAIRS I
I BICYCLE REPAIRS
We sharpen lawn mowers, kitchen knives
and other cutlery
I I) eh A LB MACHINE
M. H. DEAL, Proprietor '
Inaure Safety. Avoid Highway
Haaaxda, Travel By Train. AirConditionad
Coaehaa on
Through Traina.
81,209 Malaria
Gates reported In the U. 8. In 19381
DON'T DELAY! ?t
Start Today with vJ
606 Checks Malaria In seven days.
NOTICE OF SALE
Notice Is hereby given that In aceordanco
with the terms and provls*
Ioiih of the Docreo of tin; Court of
Common Pleas for Kershaw County.
In the ease of Home Owners' I<oan
Corpornt Ion, plaintiff, ((gainst James
Johnson, defendant. I will sell to the
highest bidder, for cash, before the
Court House door at Camden, S. C.,
during the legal hours of sale on the
first Monday In August. 1939. being
the 71li day thereof, the following described
real estate.: j
"All thill certain piece, parcel or |
lot of land, with the Improvements,
thereon, or to be erected thereon, sit-l
onto, lying and bring Just North of!
the City of Camden, in the Counts' of!
Kershaw, In the State of South Carolina.
in what Is known as the Monroe
Hoykin Park; said lot being In shape
a rectangle measuring on Its Northern
and Southern sides fifty (.10) feet,
more or less, and on Its eastern and
western sides one hundred and eighty!
(ISO) feet, more or less; and being]
shown and delineated as l/>t No. 131 |
on plat of subdivision of Monroe Hoykin
Park, on record In the office of.
1 he Clerk of Court for Kershaw coun-j
fv in Plat Hook "2" at page 12; and,
being bounded on the North by property
of Jeff \Y. Boykln; on the East I
by Ixit No 132. property of G. I). Tillman
: on the South by Third Avenue;
and on the West by Lot No. 130, property
of Amelia Duron; said premises
being that conveyed to James Johnson
by Jeff W. Hokltl. by deed dated
June 2. 192.V and recorded in the of-j
flee of the Clerk of Court for Kershaw
county on June 2. 192,S, In Hook
of Deeds "HY" at page 501
Terms of sale: For cash, the Master
to require of the successful bidder,
other than the plaintiff or the defendants
herein, a deposit of five (.1) per
( nt or his bid. same to be forfeited
in cam- of non-com pita nee; no per-;
nonal or deficiency judgment Is demanded
and the bidding will not remain
opert after the sale but compliance
with the bid may bo made immediately
W. L D. PASS Jr .
Master for Kershaw County
J CARLISLE (INNER and
W! I I'K t i\YSK 1 A \YITTKu\YSKY.
Pi.i int iff '> A: t -rti?-> > i
NOTICE
Notice is hereby given that
the undersigned will apply to
the South Carolina Tax Commission
for ? License to operate
a Retail Liquor Store on
the main highway in Blaney,
South Carolina.
W. D. SANDERS !
July 19, 1939 17-19pd
chetkj
d d d Malaria !
\n 7 days and
\J \J \J relieves
Liquid, Tablets, Colds
Salve, Note symptoms first day
Try "Rub-My-Tism"?a Wonderful
Liniment
Chaoring throngs of Belgians turned
a visit of French President Albert
l,eHrun to France's exhibit ut the
Liege lutoruatlonal exposition Wednesday
Into a demonstration of the
French-Belgian friendship.
FINAL DISCHARGE
Notice Is hereby given that one
month from this date on August 26,
i 1939, I will make to the Probate Court
i of Kershaw County my final return as
| Administrator of the estate of Henry
I Wesley Brooks, deceased, and on the
I same date I will apply to the said
Court for a final discharge as said
i Administrator.
, J. W. BUY KIN,
Administrator
j Camden, S. C , July 26, 1939
FINAL DISCHARGE
! Notice Is hereby given that one
month from this date on August 26,
! 1939, I will make to the Probate Court
of Kershaw County my final return as
Administrator of the estate of Lvelyn
Mary Brooks, deceased, and on the
i same date 1 will apply to the flftld
, Court for a final discharge as said
Administrator.
J. W. BOYKIN.
Adinlnist ralor
i Camden, S. C., July 26, 19.19
FINAL DISCHARGE
Notice Is hereby given that one
month from this date, on August 25,
1939, I will make to the Probate Court
of Kershaw County my final return as
Fx ecu I tlx of the estate of Carrie
Helms, deceased, and on the, same
date I will apply to the said Court for
a final discharge as said Fxecutrix.
SAKA F. WOLFF,
Kxecutrix
Camden, S. C . Jul.v 25, 1939.
FINAL DISCHARGE
Notice Is hereby given that one
month from this date, on August 28, j
1939, I will make to the Probate Court)
of Kershaw county my final return as!
Administratrix C. T. A., of the estate
of Kate Haney, deceased, and on the
same date I will apply to the said!
, Court for a final discharge as said
Administratrix. C T A .
LOl'lSH HAULS' Kit.
Administratrix. C. T. A.
1 Camden. S. C.. July 28, 1939.
FINAL DISCHARGE
Notice Is hereby given that one
month from this date, on August 3,
1939. 1 will mac to the Probate Court
of Kershaw County my final return
as Kxecutor of the estate of Hannah
Rollings, deceased, and on the samoj
data 1 will apply to the said Court
for a final discharge as said Kxecutor.
11. C. HORTON,
Executor.
Camden. S. C., July 1, 1939.
SUMMONS
State of South Carolina,
County of Kershaw.
(In the Court of Common Pleas)
Laura Helton, Plaintiff,
vs.
Maggie Keys. Ivory Keys, Jr. John
Keys, Gobar McI>*od, Ivory McLeod,
Mack Keys, Sumner Keys, Faster J
Cantey, James Keys. Jr., David Bris-,
bane. Frank Williams. Jock Hallo,
Jr., and Richard Johnson, Defend-,
ant3.
To the Defendants Above Named'
You are hereby summoned and re-j
<iuired to answer the complaint in this,
,n ti<ui. of which a copy is herewith
served upon you. and to serve a eopyj
of t he answer to t li?- said complaint ,
on Co- .-ubscribers at their office in I
the City of Camden. ^ C, within
twenty i 2'L days after service^ there-1
of. exclusive of the day of such service.
and if you fail (<> answer the
complaint within the time aforesaid, j
the plaint iff in this action will apply
to the Court for the relief demanded ,
in the complaint.. ,
K I RK LAND & deLOACH,
Attorneys For Plaintiff.
July L\ 1939.
NOTICE
To the Defendants. Maggie Keys.:
Ivory Keys. Jr. Mack Keys. James
Keys. Jr. David Brisbane and Jock!
Halle. Jr *
Notice is hereby given that the orlg- j
inal Summons of which tho foregoing |
is a eopv and the original complaint j
:m the above entitled case was duly
filed in the office ,if the Clerk of Court I
for Kershaw County on the eleventh
(t.iv of July, 1939.
KIRKLAND deliOACH, i
| Attorneys For Plaintiff.
I Sanitary Plumbing and Heating I!
l
TELEPHONE 433-J
Estimates Furnished on Short Notice
ELECTROL OIL BURNERS
!u. S. Maritime Fleet, Now Small,
! Was Once Envy of tlie World
r
American Ships Formerly
Supreme for Speed,
Seaworthiness.
Prepared by National Geographic Society.
Washington, D. C.?WNU Service.
IONG before steamboats
came into use, sailing ships
had already explored the open
waters and inhabited coasts of
practically the whole world.
Profits were enormous, too.
Often on a single voyage to
India for pepper and spice, or
to China for silk and furs, a
ship would enrich its owner for
life.
Colonial American shipping
grew so fast that by 1775 a
third of all vessels engaged in British
trade were American built.
There is little doubt that, during the
last century of sail, American merchant
ships were the world's best for
speed and seaworthiness. Probably
lack of money led to elimination of
the ornate and top-heavy forecastles
and cabins that were characteristic
of foreign-built ships. But simple
superstructures made for trimmer
and handier ships, which were further
improved in speed and maneuvering
by ever developing "stream
lines" and by devising better rigs
aloft, with larger sail area.
Ships Had to Be Good.
Many influences obliged America
to build better ships. Our geographical
position forced us to make very
long voyages; lack of naval protection
meant that we must design
hips speedy enough to show their
heels to sea enemies. Many different
rigs were used, but perhaps the
best-known type, ufttil about 1820,
was the trim armed brig of some
200 tons.
More size and speed came with
the transatlantic packet ship, a trend
accelerated in 1849 by the discovery
of gold in California and Australia.
There followed the enduring glory
of the American clippers, most wondrous
sailing vessels of any age. Unheard-of-speeds,
faster even than
those of many steamers, were attained
by increasing the proportion
of length to beam, by making the
bows concave, and by carrying enormous
spreads of canvas even in
heavy weather. Capable captains
and able seamen "drove" their ships
as ships had never been driven before.
Master designer of Yankee
clippers was Donald McKay, a native
of Nova Scotia, who came to
the United States in 1827. From his
East Boston yard was launched a
succession of history-making ships.
Most talked about and still living
in song and story was the Flying
Cloud. Twice she sailed around the
Horn from New York to San Francisco
in the record for that time of
89 days. During four days of heavy,
favorable gales, she averaged more
than 15 miles per hour.
Mississippi Had Paddle Wheel.
The Mississippi was one of the
earliest naval steamships, at that
period invariably equipped with auxiliary
sail power. She had paddla
wheels instead of a screw propeller.
In 1863 she met her end on the river
for which she was named; Confederate
batteries sank her as she
was following Admiral Farragut in
the Hartford. In the decade before
the American Civil war there wa? a
slow transition from sail to steam
for the motive power of ships, and
from wood to iron for their construction.
England set the pace. In 1859 the
completed the 19,000-ton liner Great
Eastern, a mammoth for her day.
Paddle wheels driven by 5,000-horsepower
engines were designed to give
her 15 knots speed. Forty or fifty
years in advance of her time, she
was unhappily a commercial failure.
Or.cc the Great Eastern's rudder
was disabled during a heavy gale.
The ship fell off into the trough of
a great sea and rolled so violently
as to pitch a cow through a skylight
into the grand saloon, crowded with
passengers! Later this leviathan liner
was used in cable-laying. She
put down the second transatlantic
cable in 1865 and laid four more by
1874.
First Armed Engagement.
Although European navies had already
used armored vessels, the
Monitor-Merrimack duel at Hampton
Roads in March, 1862, was the
first engagement between two such
men-of-war. The Federal Monitor,
"a cheese box on a raft," was an
entirely new type of ship invented
U. S. BUILDS BOAT?Preview*
ing America's largest liner ... a 15foot
working model of the hull of
the America, biggest maritime construction
job in recent United States
history. The design of each shell
plate is marked off in the draughting
room. Here, draughtsmen make
scale drawings of each plate, which,
in turn, are used in the mold loft
for making the full size patterns of
the plates.
by John Ericsson; her revolving gun
turret set a fashion that still remains
a feature of present-day battleships.
The Confederate Merrimack
(sometimes spelled Merrimac)
was originally a wooden steam
frigate whose upper works had been
replaced by a turtle-backed citadel
faced with armor.
On the day before the fight, the
Merrimack had sent a shiver
through the North by easily destroy
FINISHED PRODUCT?Plates,
being designed in top photo, are being
riveted to the bottom erf the
America in this picture. All plates
are temporarily fitted together with
bolts, which are being replaced
here with the rivets, countersunk
flush with plates to prevent resistance.
ing two fine Union frigates in Hampton
Hoads. With dramatic timeliness,
the newly built Monitor arrived
frdm New York at night, and
offered combat early next morning.
Her fantastic outline and tiny bulk
amazed the officers aboard the Cobfederate
ship, which was* greeted
with a 168-pound shot fired from an
11-inch turret gun.
For four hours the action was hot
and lively, the ironclads firing at
close range. For both ships, armor
proved to be almost perfect protection.
No one was killed and only
a few wounded. The battle was virtually
a draw, the Merrimack finally
returning upriver to Norfolk. Its
worth proved, armor thereafter became
as essential as guns for menof-war
of the battleship class; now
they can take as heavy punishment
as they give.
Warspite Withstood 27 Shells.
At the historic naval Battle of Jutland
in May, 1916, the British grand
fleet numbered 28 huge battleships
of the dreadnaught class. Although
struck 27 times by big shells, the
heavily armored dreadnaught Warspite
sustained no vital hurt and
kept her place in the battle line
through many more hours of fighting.
The World war brought about a
temporary revival of the American
mercHftnt marine. There was urgent
need for new ships to supply
the armies in France and to feed
the population of the British isles.
American shipbuilders were called
upon to make a Trojan effort. The
world had never before seen such an
epic of shipbuilding. On a single
day, July 4, 1918, 95 ships were
launched from American ways.
By the wartime effort, America's
merchant marine had been augmented
by nearly 6,000,000 tons, and
once more she was a close second
to Britain on the seas. Then, again,
unhappily, the picture changed, and
our shipping went into the doldrums
?but that's another story, and a
long, sad one.
We still have soma busy lines to
the Orient, South America, and Europe;
and recent legislation favoring
subsidies for our merchant ships
will, it is hoped, revive shipbuilding
in the United States.
Clean Up Lots!I
All parties owning vacant lots I
that have overgrown with weeds and I
brush are hereby notified to have
same cleaned up at once.
By order of the City Board of I
Health. I
DONALD MORRISON, I
Health Officer. I
Many WPA Workers
Over Nation- Strike
A genera] strike of WPA workers
Is spreading throughout tho nation as
this is boing written . . . the strike
is in protest against the new law enacted
by Congress which became effective
July 1. increasing to 130 hours
the work month of those employed
on work, relief projects . . . William
Green, president of the American Federation
of Labor, has ondorsed the
oti Ike . . . all of which appears to
present an issue with the federal government
on one side and organized
labor on the other . . . tho Congress
has enacted that approximately 45
cents an hour shall be the pay for
common laborers employed on WPA
projects, created f.or the express purpose
of providing sustenance for some
of the vast army of unemployed ...
the rate for skilled artisans runs up
to 75 cents to $1.00 per hour . . * the
several different grades of workers
are involved in the strike . . . the
rate of pay seems reasonably fair
considering the government is run[
ning behind by the billions each year
trying to spend itself out of the depression
and creating a national debt
burden that must be paid by this and
future generations far into the future
. . . this strike certainly puts Secretary
of Labor Madam Perkins and the
National Labor Relations Board
squarely on the spot ... in this instance
the federal government is tho
employer . . . Madam Perkins and the
National Labor Relations Board aro
creatures of the government ... in'
every case we have read about up to |
date as coming before the Secretary
of Labor or the board, their decisions
have favored strikers and been adverse
to the employers ... it will be,
interesting to see what they do in this (
case, which will naturally come be-1
fore them as adjudicators of labor disputes
. . . the WPA executives have'
taken the same course as followed by i
many employers?'they have dlscharg-,
ed agitators and others provoking the J
strike . . . citizen employers have been
forced by the decisions of the N. L.!
R. B. to reinstate these agitators . . . |
if the same course is taken with the,
WPA then we have the picture of a
house divided against Itself ... all i
are familiar with the answer to this
situation ... It is not pleasing to con-j
template.?LeRoy News-Gazette.
Police boarded tho American liner,
President Pierce at Kobe, Japan, this |
week, and arrested several passengers
on charges of violating laws restricting
tho amount of Japanese currency
I brought into Japan. It was the first
case of a foreign ship being boarded
for this purpose. The names and na- j
tionalities of those arrested were notj
made known, but the officer who conducted
the examination said tho charges
were not serious.
EXTRA PRICE FOR HOGS
FREE FROM PARASITp?
Florence, July 22.?South CamiiJ
farmers who grow hogs under saultail
conditions will receive a premluni?
the market, according to an unuoun?
ment of A. L. DuUant, extension 1|?
stock specialist. The offer is restrfc?
ed to growers who sell as many ?
twenty hogs at one time. I
Mr. Dullant announces that Kit?
an and Company, of Richmond, vS
has offered to pay a premium ol 9
cents per hundred pounds for
grown in accordance with an effectl?
swine sanitation plan, the carcasi?
of such hogs to show freedom fro?
Internal parasites when slaughter*?
A representative of Kingan has ,9
cently inspected hog sanitation det?
onstrations In the state with Mr. 0?
All applications for parasite inspe?
tion must be approved by a coun?
agent of the Extension Service. V?
rational agricultural teachers, and s?
pervisors of the Farm SecurityAdrni?
istratlon are also being urged to c?
operate in swine sanitation projects?
To qualify for the premium price*?
Mr. DuRant explained, the growe?
must scrub his sow thoroughly wit?
soap and water a few days before far?
rowing time to remove dirt and worn?
eggs; must place the sows on Un?
that has been cultivated since hog?
ranged on it and keep them ther?
from before farrowing time until d?
pigs are weaned; must keep faru^J
ing houses clean; must keep o??
hogs away from the clean paatn^B
and must keep the pigs away frfl?
dirty hog lots and on clean land 4?
til they are at least four months ol?
or average one hundred pounds eid?
Mr. DuRant emphasizes that tfc?
sanitation plan will bring about add?
tionai returns in more pigs weane?
per litter and larger gains per hondrt?
pounds of feed consumed, in addltio?
to the premium of 26 cent9 per hu?
dred pounds.
Farmers interested in the prograa?
should get in touch with the oouat?
agent, who must certify that the hop?
have been produced under a awti?
sanitation program. Hogs will b?
checked when slaughtered, and the 1?
cents premium paid on thotfe hop?
found to be free from parasites. ?
j? Ttoe inintitlnM mommy of nun|
pain and naffer- ;
in?. kMttgeettoa, bilious attacks. .
dkny npella, Derroosncss, bend- ,
I tcit?. niooplceeoem, fatlgne, ,
! ? loan ot pep and energy. POW* H
| ? (HiN wttl relieve this condl
Sold By DeK&lb Pharmacy?
fjCTHTwnni
SAVANNAH
JACKSONVILLE .
Over Sunday \
August 6th /
Lv. 9:40 P. M. Sat. Aug. 5th j
$2.00 ^
^ '
nn^ '
. . . round trip Adult fare in
coaches to Savannah, $1.00
higher to Jacksonville. Children
5 and under 12 half fare.
Enjov a full day at these famous
South Atlantic beaches at these
unusually low fareq via
Seaboard.
Ti<r*?u tood In co*ch?a o^ljr - gofat j
Number 2 arrivift* 8avaaa*b *?d J ,,umu fl