University of South Carolina Libraries
THE CAMDEN CHRONICLE H. D. Nile#. e?ilor ??< ProprUW lio<t North Broad 8tro?t. and nt?ro?i Ihi Camden. 9outl. Carolina an aacond clans mall ina Jar 1 ''r<H. r;,u; .K? si"1MiiJSif pi?? ? the ?ubw* I I pi Ion price la du? and U*y , in advance. All subscriptions ac*w when subscriber falls to rene Rj .N..."ud In N.w York by th. Am.rt'.*r ,vM7"i/T.iv.V'r.".rA"V'oib,"(u. z? aiiSr "w ppl! Church notices published TM J'rtifU <>f thank* and notU%e? of n^ hai'K?*d w ill he charged for Tributesi ot respect and obituaries will bo 0" *? ?* for All c??u?munlcatlons must be sign . otherwise they will be destroyed. , Friday, August 15. 1941 EDITORS . Moat any man can be an editor. All the editor lias to Is to sit at a dealt hIx days a week, four weeks u month, and 12 mouths a year and edit audi stuff as tills: ' Mrs. Jones, of Cactus Creek, let a can opener slip last week and cut herself in the pantry.. Joe Doe climbed on the roof of his house last week looking for a leak and foil, landltiK on his hack porch While Harold (Jreen was escorting Miss Violet WIbo from the church social last Sunday night. a snvnge dog attacked them and hit Mr. Green on the public square.... Jim Frank, while harnessing u broncho last Saturday, was kicked Just south of his corn crib." WHERE ARE THEY? Where Is Colonel Goerlng now? And Jew Baiter Strelcher and Hliumler, the Oeatapo chief? And C.oebbcls, the lascivious press agent. Ono no longer reads their names In tho public prints. Hitler has commenced to do his own talking ?vl*l dently to himself, which Ih a bad sign. One no longer reads the statements of his buddies !u crime. Ooerlug. thoy suy, Is lu a German concentration camp. The othors may he In boll, whore they ought to be. Anyway, they are not In verbal power In Germany . Abraham himself may be making hell for Strelcher. Himmler may have been out-Gaaiapoed by some treacherous C.estup. And Goebbels may have some flory mistress In some especially hot corner of Hados. And Hitler hlmseir, issuing commu-J nlquea of a million Russians killed today, a billion tanks destroyed, a thousand housand planes annihilated and always two whole divisions entrapped lu an "encircling plncer movement, only ono stop from tho lunatic asylum. All the 80,000.000 Germans of Barnrla and the civilized sections of Germany have to do la to Kill off these madmen, admit their folly lu following them and even Roosevelt and Churchill would forgive aud forget? provided every weapon were taken from tho Germans and every foot of land restored to tho nations overrun by the Prussians hobualls and damages, paid. It's coming anyway, so the German people might as well get rid of their , tyrants now as later, it will cost, more later.?Charlotte Observer. All Wet An Knglisluii.tu visiting in New York On y. iit v it an A m,f i< a n friend to have a drink The American said h< oiiidu t because he was on the w;itt't'-w agon. The Knulish-t in.in diil not g't it at Inst, so ilie Aniericati explained il meant he was not drinking. The englishman, pleased with the phrase, planm d to use it as soon as possible. One day a trioud invited111in to have a drink. lie lunched and shook his lead. 1 , ?n't I 111 III tile bat lifub. > on know " | AUGUST GARDENING JOBS ASSURE BETTER LIVING v Clemson. Aug II. So that there may ho hotter fur in living thin fall and winter from the homo garden A. K, Schllletter. extension hortlcult urIht, suggests many Jobs thut should ho done thIh mouth. "In planting fall vegetables, every day count*", wurna Schllletter. "and one day's delay la one link nearer Jack Front. Therefore, make plantIngH at once of the following crops and varieties: Irish potatoes ? Lookout Mountain Irish Cobbler; turnips Rutabagas; turnips- Extra Fatly I'urple Top. White Kgg; beans? Bountiful, Htrlngloss Green pod; beets ?Crosby's Fgyptlau, Detroit Dark Hod. carrots?Chanteuay, Coreless (Nantes); corn?StoweU's Kvergreen, Trucker's Favorite; lettuce?New York. Mignonette. "Transplant these varieties: Collards-Georgia Southern; celery? Golden Self-Mlanchlng, Giant Paschal; cabbage Succession, Late Flat Dutch, Charleston Wakefield; tomatoes? Greater Baltimore, Marglobe, "Tomato plants set now will mature fruit before frost", the horticulturist emphasizes. "Use strong stocky plants and retain ull the soil possible on the roots. Sot deeply and pour a pint of water around roots and cover with a thick layer of dry soil. If all the fruit falls to ripen before frost, It can be kept far Into the winter wrapped In paper and laid away. In a cool dark place. "Prompt thinning of rutabagas when the plants are not over two inches high will prevent them from becoming shunky", advises Schllletter. "GLve plenty of distance, leaving them 8 to 10 inches apart In tho drill, one in a place. Plants will then be stocky and tho roots well shaped. "Cultivate and clean up ground where vegetables have matured", is Schllletter's final cuutlon. "Decaying Vegetables und vegetable plants are likely to Increase disease and insect damage next season." WOMEN URGED NOT TO STOCK UP HEAVILY ON SILK HOSIERY Washington, Aug. 1?In an appeal to women not to stock up heavily on hosiery, Harriet Elliott, head of the1 consumers division of the Office of Price Administrator and Civilian Supply, said tonight that women who woro buying silk stockings in quantity were conducting a "selfish raid" on the nation's supply. Miss Flliott said reports had reached her from retail ceutors that some customers were stocking up on hosiery. "In the interest of fair play I am asking all consumers voluntarily to ration their hosiery purchases?that fs, to buy today only for current use? In order to give those consumers with limited incomes an opportunity to share in the available supply." She asked hosiery purchasers not to buy from retailers who sell at higher prices than usual, because retailers have been asked not to raise prices on silk stockings. Any store keeper who boosts prices, she added " Is taking advantage of tho national crisis to fill his own pockotbook at tho expense of yours." She suggested four rules for care of hosiery to guide consumers In conserving their own supply. The rules: 1. Wash stockings and socks im- j mediately after taking them off. -. 1'se a luke warm, neutral soap Mids, and don't rub. Press gently to } force soap through the fabric. 8. Dry in the shade. Sunlight and li'-at deteriorate silk. I Take care of runs Immediately. J Carry a small bottle of run preventive or colorless nail polish In your bag. j Put a drop at the top and bottom of il>- run immediately. Renew the | treatment afler each washing or sew' up the run. ( ?????___m. MM , ' I ROXY CAFE SUNDAY MENU ROAST TURKEY DINNER 65c With Cranberry Sauce and Dressing SOL:P: Homemade Chicken or Vegetable or Tomato Juice REGULAR DINNER 50c SOUP Homemade Chicken or Vegetable cr Tomato Juice Choice of one meatRoast Chicken with Dressing Fried Spring Chicken Roast Fresh Pork Ham with Brown Gravy Breaded Veal Cutlets with Tomato Sauce Roast Sirloin of Beef with Gravy Fried Fresh Sea Scallops with Tartar Sauce Fried Fresh Sea Trout Broiled Special Steak I Soft Shell Crabs with Tartar Sauce ;i Fried Fresh Shrimp In Butter Broiled Country Ham Steak Fresh Shrimp Salad ' ' ( The Above Dinners Served with Vegetables Fresh String Beans ? Lettuce and Tomato Salad ? French f Fried Potatoes and Spaghetti with Tomato Sauce < DESSERT: Ice Cream DRINKS: Coffee ? Ice Tea ? Sweet or Butter Milk r I WESTERN SIZZLING STEAKS i THANK YOU, CALL AGAIN . _ 1 thepocketbook of knowtedcenfe1 IWf U. * AlRCKATf iMWTtty tNCKCMCPO* noott *f*c? # ? - AMP HIIPBP NMUy Zl&Txf /9* OOO WUmiMK MO?B cMpLoyeff IM ar A4c**TNS'tvma jrjr^ ftno-mt) VITAMINS /JAW A/0w 3fpo>Me A *i /oo, ooo. ooo /Aspurtey. AAJO/U/K fOOBCC Of jon* wo nnywu*/ carrot //jsv/at/oa/. A RESEARCH .PeVELOPMEtfT HA? NOW PROVEP PRACTICAL IN SUCH VIIPfiy Pi^eRtNtLOCA-nONi Ai -W-WA54 AMP IN TVIL TKW/CS I V Ig-'f St)0MARtr? ilil I/I JR# 7/ 6/ AMfWCAN* r/ I amwjth* / BRmStf IN ' "0* RF&LirflOtWty VJAR / <*nty ****** Mf OV/'-mav affw omuTrp * xv/ sm*xfcf?rf) iue atlas MODI. awnvf TV CHtAA AMP /HP/A OFTfH HAS W/HSS A&er 10H6 KING SNAKE KILLS RATTLER Takes Revenge On Criminal Who Killed Little Child. Lenoir. N. C.. July 31.?When it comes to tracking down a criminal? the FBI has nothing on a Blue Ridge mountain King snake. Last Saturday morning Mabel Coffey. 10-year-old Edgemont girl, was bitten by a rattlesnake, and the following Monday morning the child died. Saddened by the death of his daughter and seeking revenge upon heT assallnnt, the father of the girl.1 Cuba Coffey, and several of his neighbors in the Edgemont section, kept a watch on a hole near the home which, It was believed the snake inhabited. On ono of these visits to the hole the men found the "rattler and a King snake engaged in a violent battle. A King snake, it is said, wfll not i harm a human being, but is a vicious enemy among the reptile creatures of the earth. The battle that followed between the two snakes lasted for seven hours, a struggle in which only the victor could survive. Large numbers of people were attracted to the scene when the word was passed out. and watched the battle. The two snakes matched their strength in a dramatic conflict lashing the ground, hissing, each struggling In the colls of the other. 1 Finally the King snake was victor. I When hours after the battle began, Mr. Coffey looked In upon the affray ^ again, only the 12 rattlers and the last foot of the snake's long four-footed body could ho seen. The king snake had swallowed all but the tail of his opponent. Thus, a King snake tracked <!<>wn a criminal and made him pay w ith Ids life for that of a child, avenging j one death and preventing" a repot it ion | of the horrible fate met by the little girl. LIST OF SELECTED MEN TO BE SENT TO FORT JACKSON SOON Following is a list of young white men who have been ordered by Local Hoards numbers 47 and 46 to report on August 13. to he inducted into the army at Fort Jat kson. ' olutnbi.i (leorge Cecil Jordan. Kershaw.. Alton Dean, Met Itutie; .)ohtt \\ y 1; I .11 man. Kershaw. Bill Edward C.t'oo, Kershaw . John Franklin Truest)ale, Kershaw; Johnny Cook, West\ille, Tillman Faolketiherry, Camden; liar\ ev Lincoln Baker, Bethune; William Law sen Hraiinon. Bethune, Orie Leo K n tg lit. K I'lshaw IB placements Sam Bay. LugofT; llarwy Ervin King. Bethune. Woodrow Wilson, Edward Sm.lh, David Carl Scarborough. Jacob Wilton Davis. William David Porter, George Elmer Unison. Dempsey Stogner. of Camden; William Ma.loy Stokes, of Boy kin. Last seasons catch of lobsters in the three maritime provinces of Canada amounted to 2,653.000 pounds with a valuation of $453,200. The Great Barrier Reef is a chain >f coral formation along the north-,, ms-tern coast of Australia. North Carolina has 294 markers in he srnti explaining important p...?sea >f tit.- state's history. I here are about 30 different types if w arplane models now being proluee<! f,?r Great Britain and Canada >y the Cnited States. Men wore earrings in early Ku#and. ' MAYOR'8 PROCLAMATION Tonight the football teams of Camden and Kershaw will play at the Zemp stadium. This game, arranged as a charity affair to raise a fund to send a group of our boys to the North Carolina mountains for several weeks, Is a worthy afTalr and deserving of the support of every citizen of Camden. I strongly urge all who can to attend this game. The small admission price you pay. added to the fees paid by others, will enable many youths, who would otherwise be unable to go to the camp, to be in the group and enjoy the healthful recreation and training to be accorded the camp group. I urge the cooperation of the good people of Camden in this worthy cause. Signed: P. N. McCORKLE, Mayor of Camden. GARDEN NOTE8 Mr. E. P. Rogers of the Charlotte Observer tells us that the helianthemum or sunrose deserves to be better known and more widely used in our gardens for it is a delightful little plant that fits into various places such as sunny rock garden, low rock wall at the edge of a bed, or a border. "The sunrose is a very dwarf, spreading perennial with delicate evergreen foliage. The flowers resemble the rose somewhat and come in white and many colors?yellow, all shades of pink, red and purple. Some are single, some double. They are small and delicate. It will grow and bloom in almost any soil, poor sandy or rocky, but is much more luxuriant in good soils. It will do with very little water, even in very dry soil, but profits by a liberal supply. It likes to spread over rocks i and find root-holds over ledges and between rocks. It must have a well drained location and must be in a sunny place. Culture of this desirable little plant is easy if these two requirements are kept in mind. lielianthemum can be raised from seed, from divisions and from cut-J tings. It is beet to plant the seed in I the coldframe as soon as ripe in early summer if you are planting your own seed.# which will probably. give hybrids of very interesting colors. If you have never tried growing this lovely little perennial, get plants now from some nurseryman nearby nnd try it out. You can propagate from it by all three methods?cuttings, divisions, and seeds?for a plentiful supply to set out next spring. It is an ornament to any location where low-growing, semitralling shrubs will fit in the picture. The colors blend with almost any plantings. The flowers open only when the sun strikes them and the petals drop usually before the end of the day. As soon as Lho sun is on them next day, the bush is again covered with the delicate bloom."?Elizabeth Raum, Camden Garden Club Publicity. Coming Haiglar: I Mon.?Tues. I AUGUST 25?26 ! j GENEAUTRY I In ; | 'SUNSET IN WYOMING* I ARMY OFFICER SPEAKER AT ROTARY CLUB LUNCHEON Visitors last week were Bud Zetnp and Colouel John A. Brockmau. retired, of Columbia, 8. C. John de Loach suggested that the club take inultable recognition of the able work done In behalf of Boy Bcouta In this community by lieu Team, who has recently left Camden to enter the service of the United States Army. The suggestion, followed by a motion, askled for a gift from the club accompan| led by suitable resolutions. The program next week will be lu the hands of Henry O. Carrlson. This week It was In charge of Beruie Dunlap, with Colonel Brockmau, of Co-i lumbia, his guest speaker and the talk was somewhat vocational. He spoke of the European war aud the ambitions of Mr. Hitler, in order that he may continue to hold his Job as Is the way of all dictators. The colonel told of the tine work the Russians had been doing for the past six weeks, but his guess was the Russian's greatest loss was when they liquidated most of the army brains a few years ago, but "if the Germans could be hold off till wintpr, the Russlans's will win." He also spoke of Japan's attitude of aggression and expansion and the uncertainty of such a step. He then told of the organization of South Carolina defense commission with Dr. Jacobs, of Clinton, as stated chairman, aud John de Loach as chairman for Kershaw County. He then outlined the commission's duties and gave a detailed plan of civilian defense and planning division. Local Man Is Asked To Appear In Fight Louis H. Newklrk, Jr.. executive of the Newkirk Industries here, and fulfilling an extensive government contract in roasting of coffee for Forts Jackson and Bragg and also for the First Army has beeh appointed by the coffee roasters of South Carolina to 1 represent Them kt the maritime commission hearing regarding the ClydeMallory lines curtailment and possible discontinuance of services to Charleston. Mr. Newklrk on Wednesday ' sent telegrams to Senator Roger Peace and Congressman H. P. Fulmer calling attention to the fact that if the application of the Clyde-Mallory line was granted It would allow Georgia and VIrgnia coffees to be sold In South Carolina at prices below the figures quoted by South Carolina concerns. Mr. Newklrk called attention to the fact that South Carolina coffee firms now handle fully 90 per cent of coffee and teas through the port of Charleston, making service through this port of vital concern to them. An Interesting note of the Newklrk protest was to the effect that his company has the contract for roastins six million; ' five hundred thousand pounds of coffee for the government and that the war maneuvers in this area in the fall may tie up car and truck transportation. Discontinuance of the port service at Charleston nilght necessitate coeffeeless days (or the people in this area. Due to additional defense needs over one million pounds per week is anticipated In coffee movements in South Carolina alone. Mr. Newkirk has been asked to appear before the maritime commission ! at a hearing to be held next week at which time he has promised to have all substantiating data with him. He will appear, not only as a representative oi the coffee roasters of the state, but aslo as a representative 'ft Governor Maybank. There are at least 60 stars to every man, woman and child on earth. The galu in motor vehicle regis- 1 tratlons In the period from 1933 to ' 1940 exceeded 7,600,000?an amount greater than the total registrations In the United States In 1919. The average motor vehicle In the United States has an annual burden of federal and state taxes of about $60 as compared with $35 only a decade ago. Messages were pvritten on paper and tied to arrows for delivery to the enemy by "air mail" In ancient * wars, so propaganda Is not a new Idea. j 1 COMING ATTRACTIONS^ At Tba Camden Theatre FRIDAY, AUGUST 15 Final Showing of "SHEPHERD OF OF THE HILLS" With John Wayne?Betty Field lleulah Bondl?Harry Carey mwoooooooooo<mee?Heo< SATURDAY, AUGUSTie Jane Withers?Namy Kelly John Sutton Richard Clayton "A VERY YOUNG LADY' Added: Rldere of Death Valley and Comedlea SATURDAY, AUGUST 16 10:30 SHOW Leon Brrol?Mildred Colea "HURRY CHARLIE HURRY" >eoooooooo0dpooaoooo?)^oc MONDAY AND TUESDAY Techniclor'a Greateat Love Story! "BLOSSOMS IN THE DUST" With Greer Garsou?Walter Pldgeou ^I^n^daT^M Joan Perry?Roger Pryor "BULLETS FOR OHARA" THURSDAY AND FRIDAY AUGUST 21?22 Bob Hope?Dorothy Lainour CAUGHT IN THE DRAFT' V_ ?J R-I-C-Y-C-L-E-S for Men - Women Children Get a bicycle and enjoy the HEALTHFUL EXERCISE * + * See us for prices on a bicycle to suit your purse. Camden Hdw. & Supply Co. Telephone 7 South Broad Street 1?1 _ _ i i ?