The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, May 17, 1940, Page PAGE EIGHT, Image 8
Graduation Gifts: Cards |
Gibson's Cards - Sheafiers Pens and Sets
Baton's Stationery IS
Yardley's Perfumes and Toilet Gifts j j
Amity Bill-folds - Kodaks ==
| CITY DRUG COMPANY I
PHONE 130 ? DcKALB ST.
PRESCRIPTIONS and MEDICINES ]
1 ZEMP'S DRUG STORE I
PHONE 30 ? BROAD ST.
Siiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiim
I???WWP??? 1
TRESPASS NOTICE
All persons are strictly forbidden to
trespass In aiiy manner on all lands
of Walter O. Green In Kershaw county,
Buffalo Township, under penalty
p&i>iHT}bad by law.
WAiLTBR 0. GRBDN
DAJ8IE H. GREEN
May 16. 1940 8-9-10pd
NOTICE TO DEBTOR8 AND
CREDITORS
\AU parties Indebted to the estate
<yf Mattlo T. Gottys are hereby notified
to make payment to the undersigned,
and all parties, if any, having claims
against the said estate will present
them likewise, duly attested, within
the time prescribed by law.
J. TEAM GETTYS,
N P. GETTYS,
Executors EBtate Mattle T. Gettys.
Camden, S. C , May 16, 1940.
First Interview
The first presidential interview
was held when George Washington
decided to retire from the presi!
dency. He sent for David C. Claypoole,
editor of the Dally Advertiser
in Philadelphia. After explaining
| his plans to Claypoole, he informed
blm that he had some reflections
upon the occasion which he wished
to communicate to the people of the
United States through the Daily Advertiser.
Claypoole was given a
copy of the Farewell address, which
he published in his paper in the edition
of September 19, 1790. .
Although the feathers of silkieB
may be either white or black, their
skin always is black. They are the
negroes of the fowl race.
Watches still are manufactured
chiefly by hand. Labor comprises 85
per cent of the cost of the product.
100,000 See Jones
Take Long's Seat
Itaion Kouge, l4?.. May 14,?Approximately
100,000 persons, Che greatest
crowd assembled In the state since
the funeral of Huey P. Long) In 8qptember.
1935, gathered here today tor
the Inauguration' as governor of 8am
11. Jones, the man who beat the 12*
year-old Ixxng political dynasty.
Absent from the ceremonies was
out-going Uovernor Karl K. ix>ng,
Huey's brother, who was beaten iu
the Democratic primaries by Jones.
Long excused himself by saying he
didn't want to "embarrass" the new
governor.
' Pet Bull Dog Kills Child
Permit, Texas., May 14.?A bulldog
fatally chewed and mangled three*
i year-old Kaleigh l-eroy Henedrson to(day.
The animal was a pet of the
(family iu whose care the child had
been left.
! "Munich" Gave Britain Time
Swumpscott, Mass., May 14,-?Former
Prime Minister Neville ChamberIain's
* acceptance of "peace in our
time" at Munich gave England vitally
needed time to prepare for*?the pre*
sent war, Lieutenant Colonel Stewart
Koddle, former British Intelligence
officer, asserted today in a speech,
"If it were not for Chamberlain." he
told 3,000 members of the Massachusetts
Federation of Women's Clubs,
"we would not be iu a position today
I to fight at all."
Liner is Heavily Booked
New York, May 14.?'Heavy advance
bookings on the U. S. liner Washington,
scheduled to leave Genoa, Italy,
next Saturday, were announced tonight.
The U. S. Lines said approximately
900 passengers had been booked
thus far and many more were ex- j
peeled.
Graham's dike, which reached from
the Firth of Forth, to the Clyde In
Scotland, was built in the year 209 by
Severus Septimus, the Roman emperor.
A British official admission that the
Allies were inferior to Germany In air
power, has stirred expectations in
Washington of a speed-up of AngloFrench
orders for American-made
warplanes.
Between 1760 and 1765, one wolf In
central France devoured 93 persons
and mangled 30 more. It weighed 168
pounds.
^ >.! ffii'iilWHWBrlllim
1BHWMWWM JPHICHHWDJ-1
Washington, May 16.?-Congressman
Jau. P. Richards of South>Carolina In
a speech today again urgbd Congress
to paaa his bill, H. It. 3598, introduced
at the last session of Congress, providing
that enrollees ot COC camps
be Instructed in military tactics and
drill 6 hours during each week.
Richards stated that for two years
his has been a voice crying In the wilderness
fog one hour per day military
training for enrollees of these camps.
JRe further stated that Hitler has given
bloody evidence to thfe world, with
the mangled remains of women aud
children as exhibits, to prove the utter
folly of uupreparedness in a world
gone mad. Said the South Carolina
Congressman, "During the, last 7
years this Congress has appropriated
about $8,000,000,000 for National Defense,
of which about $7,000,000,000
has b6en ufrd'd ttf VJa'te, ' A lot of this
money has gone Into rat holes while"
admirals and generals have argued
about the relative merits of their
arms of service, about the number
and type of planes the Army and
Navy each should have, or about one
branch of tihe service encroaching upon
the other's prerogatives.* Out of it
lias come a fair kind of Navy wRh
about 3,200 up-to-date planes with one
hundred trained pilots turned out
each month. Still the Navy needs
many more planes and pilots.
The Army has been about doubled
in size, haB added less than onefourth
of the planes needed, less than
one-fifth of the tanks needed, has only
a few hundred anti-tank guns, and
only a few hundred anti-aircraft guns
to protect our almost endless coast
line. The all important Immediate
need is for a central defense planning
board to present a co-ordinated plan
of National Defense, a survey of Industrial
facilities, with a coordinated
and central purchasing office. The
money wasted now through over-lapping
Army, Navy and Airforce agencies
is astounding.
This Is a day of mechanized warfare.
The nation witih the machinery
and facilities for producing it has a
great advantage to start wltli. Germany's
army and airforce prove that.
We must have more airplanes, more
tanks, more mobile artillery, more
anti-aircraft guns; but behind it all
must be trained man-power, and the
COC with its enrollees receiving no
military training is evidence of a
peace-loving nation gone to' sleep.
During the past 7 years over 2,000,000
of our young men have been enrolled
in CCC Camps. The cost to the Government
per enrollee is $1,000 per
year. The annual cost per soldier In
the regular army averages only $853.33.
The OCC canvp enrollees ,other
than war veterans, range between 17
| and 23 years of age. These are the
boys who will first be called to the
service in case of our involvement In
War. We now have approximately
I 276,000 enrollees In our OCC Camps.
! The average length of Bervice In the
COC is 10 months. If we had given
*fhcHcr boys -mrer trotrnntlttary training
f*M' day during their service, we
would have had a nucleus of over 2,000,000
young men already partly
trained in the rudiments of warfare.
Every soldier must be first trained in
ordinary tactics and didII before he
is ready for assignment to a specialized
branch of the service, such as
artillery, airforce. tank service, and
the like. We would thus have saved
this government over $2,000,000,000
in case we become involved in war.
I do not mean that the original purposes
of the COC must be abandoned
?these camps have done a great
work in soil conservation, forestry
r-nd national state parks. This work
should continue to be their primary
duty and the one hour per day military
training, which my bill suggests,
would not detract one whit from the
work they are now doing. In fact,
the increased efficiency of the enroll-'
ees because of this limited military
training and discipline it would bring'
would enhance the value and the volume
of his work in the conservation
field. I do not propose that the CCC
camps should be made military camps
?I do not propose that they should
serve a two-fold purpose?one conservation,
the other a link in our national
defense system. It must be remembered
too that this military training
for CCC enrollees would not cost
our sorely harassed taxpayers an additional
dollar.
The camps are already there, the
[ uniforms are there, the food is there,
[ the reserve officers to train them are
there and the physically fit manhood
' rrf our country is there. All that will
-till he needed are the rifles and the
t United States afmy now has enough
obsolete military rifles to take care
i .if that
The Army General Staff takes the
j position that it wants no part of mil[itftry
training In the OCC They say
soldiering ts a full-time Job. The director
of the OOC wants no part of
military training for the CCC. He says
military training has no place In the
COC camp. They fiddle around with
mutual jealousies while clvilizatRm
burns, while our taxpayers pour ont
additional millions for national defenso,
while our mothers weep for
peace, with no means in sight to preserve
it.
v ?ry
Wants?For Saie
FOR RENT?One small furnished apartment.
Private bath. Phone
376-W., Mrs. R. A. Carpenter, Camr
den, 8. C. 8-lOsb ?
FOR RENT?One small cottage. .Posts
session given June 1. Phone 376-W.,
Mrs. R. A. Carpenter, Camden, S.
C. * 8-lOsb
I FOR RENT ? Desirable four room
apartment with private bath. Furnished
or unfurnished. Best location.
Rent reasonable. For further
information write "XY", Care of
The Camden Chronicle, Camden, S.
C. . 6-3sb.
CURTAIN8 8TRETCHED?At reasonable
prices. ^1 work guaranteed.
Address 904 Campbell Street, Camden,
6. C. 3tf
8HOE8?For shoe rebuilding and repairing
call at the Red Boot Shop,
next door Express Office, 619 Rutledge
street, Abram M. Jones, Pro1
prietor, Camden, S. C. 9eb
BU8INE88 OPPORTUNITY?One of
the country's oldest and largest
wholesale concerns has openings
available for two men in the Camden
district to call on established
I trade. Write Personnel Manager,?
123 W. First Street, Charlotte, K
C., for interview with Field Rep* fl
eentatlve. 8ab "^fl
PAINTER AND PAPER HAftfl
GER-?All work mechaakt^H
Guaranteed. Twenty - fin?
years experience. Telephone
99-J., or address A. R?
; WeIcn? Rt 2* Camden. S. C. I
* 6-8pd
NOTICE ' I
The Rosy Oafs announces that Qajl
Beleos is an longer connected with it fl
in any capacity, he hawing withdrawn
from the copartnership. 6-8sb
NOTICE TO DEBTOR8 AND ~*fl
CREDITORS
All parties Indebted to the estattfl
of W. D. Barrett are hereby notified I
to make payment to the undersigned,
and all parties, if any, having claim* I
against the said estate will present*
them likewise, duly attested, witblf?
the time prescribed by law.
(Mrs.) M. H. RAJt&IT,
^ Executrix.
Camden, S. C., April, 1940. 4
good/Vear tires]
ONLY
II your needa call for a full-size, guaranteed tire j|I||
in the lowest price field, you want the new All- pljjj
American. Now you can get Goodyear Tires
in every price range, for every driving need. |Lb|
pjj \ Y SA FE! Y ?u 0 a n b u y 8 a i e* H
' guaranteed Goodyear
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S- t!11 :i;' f impart! them! You'll want them on
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on all oiktr GooAytar T'rrtt
GOODYEAR
PATHFINDER !
A gucmmtood Goodyear
Tiro at popular prices. A
Only 50c a wook on Easy- m
Pay Terms. W
$TT77
6.00-16 size \
4.75?1 9 or 5.00-19 $5.78 I
5.25?1 8 or 5.50-18 6.75 I
5.25-1 7 or 5.50-17 7.08
6.25?1 6 or 6.50-16 9.37
Cash prices with your old tin. Other
Urn priced in proportion
If
Sate at the sljn of the Goodytar Diamond
r LIFETIME 'A
GUARANTEE7
| ^TirT Goodyear Tire we sell le \
' guaranteed in writing lor its 1
FULL LIFE, without time or M
mileage limit*.
Carolina Motor Company
Phone 210 ... Camden, S. C.
I ATTENTIONFA^MERSTII
? I* I ti^K
I Stop the Boll Weevil NOW II
I Blackstrap Molasses:
In 57 fill. Barrel#, 13 l-2c par pal. Smaller
amount*?you furnishing container?-14
par gal.
. Calcium Arsenate:
In cato lot. or'more, 6 3-4cj
I Smaller amounts, 7c.
- Extra nice lot of Bilqxi Beans.
Priced Right.
I Wejiave installed Machinery for ?
Cleaning and Treating Cottonseed
I Wheat, Rye, Oats, Peas, Beans,
Lespedeza and Crotdlaria Seed. 11
Very Reasonable Prices.
I BAILEY DISTRIBUTING and I
| MILUNG COMPANY I
BLANEY, S. C. I
I I
f^OUN^^RIDEl
I ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES H
v * n
Wear-Ever Aluminum VI
H
Imperial Glass and II
? Stemware tB
, Fiesta Chinaware II
| Universal and Westinghouse ,1
.. Electric Mixers
.. Waffle Irons
.. Toasters
.. Percolators *
.. Irons
.. Hot Plates
v-v I . . |
1 __ Jl
?-|1
Sarringer Hardware |