The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, October 17, 1941, Page PAGE SEVEN, Image 7
notice of sale
Notice in hereby givenv that In accordance
with the terrqs and provis
of the Decree? of the Court of
rominon I'leas for Kershaw county
, the case of 8. L. Crolley, Plaintiff,
''lust M. C, Arrants and Allie Arrant*.
Defendants, I will sell to the
hiithcst hJOder before the Court House :
door at Camden. B. C.. during the t
wal fioursPof sale on the first Mon- i
dav in November, 1941, being the 8rd
Ly thereof, the following described
! oropc'ty:
L ah tbut curtain tract or pared of J
laud lying and being situated in the <
Count v of Kershaw, formerly lee,
contain'nH twenty (20) acres, and
bounded North by lands of the Estate '
0f a. A. Haglns; East by landB of '
\M kIh Parker; south by landB of |
,,, McUure, and West by lands of J. ,
V Atlanta; being tract No. 6 on plat
0l V c. Perrln, Surveyor, recorded
l? |,oo County In partition of Mrs. 1
Margaret D. Arrant*. I
IVriita of Sale: For cash, the Mas- ]
ler to require of the successful bid- ,
dcr. other than the plaintiff herein, a
deposit of five (6) per cent of his bid, 1
M,?e to be forfeited In case of non:
compliance. No personal or deflcien- i
cy Judgment Is demanded and the bid- .
d'jnK will not remain open after the
salt, but eomplance with the l)id may '
be made immediately. /
W. L. DePASS, JR., (
Master for Kershaw County ,
KillKI-AND & deLOACH,
1'UUntirnL Attorneys J
finai. discharge .
' \
Notice Is hereby given that one ,
mouth from this date, on October M.
1941 Alfred Tate and Maggie Wylle
will 'make to the Probate Court of i
Kershaw County their final return as i
Guardians of the estate of Frank (
Tato, minor, and on tho same dato
they Will aplly to the said court for
a final discharge as said Guardians. 1
,4 N. C. ARNBTT, .
judge of Probate, Kerohaw County i
Camden, S. C., fiept 29, 1941 ;
notice of tax levy '
11 i
The books for the collection of
State, County and School Taxes for
the fiscal year commencing January 1, 1
1941, will be open from September 16
to December 31, \9il, inclusive without
penalty. When making inquiries
regarding taxes, be sure to state the
school district number in whioh you
live or own property.
The total tax levy tor the various ;
school districts are as follows:
DeKalb Township
Mills
School District No. 1 48
School District No. 2 38
School District No: 4 87
School District No. 6 89
School District No. 26 84
School District No. 43 24
Buffalo Township
School District No. 3 42
School District No. 6 24
School District No. 7 v..... .26
School DlBtrictv No. 16 84
School District No. 20 81
School District No. 22.... 48
School District No. 23 82
School District No. 27 ...35
School District No. 28 26
School District No. 31 34
School District No. 40 47
School District No. 42 .24
Flat Rock Township
School District No. 8 ......85
School District No. 9..V 85
School District No. 10 26
School District No. 13 27
School District No?-19 ..36
School District No. 30 26
^-"School District NO. 88 r: .85
School District No. 37 36
School District No. 41 35
School District No? 46............28
School District No. 47 .....24'
Wateree Township ^
, School District No. ll'f. TV". 7..-... .29
School District No. 12 42
School District No. 16 25
School District No. 29 34
School District No. 38.../. 24
School District No. 39 28
C. J. OUTLAW, Treasurer
Kershaw County, S. C.
notice to debtors anc|
creditors .
All parties indebted, to the estate
of Robert Shropshire 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.
FRANK SHROPSHIRE
?. Executor
Camden, S. C., .Oct.2, 1941
On questions of domestic policy it
is right and proper ,for Americans to
differ, and it Is best for us to^be that
way; but on the foreign situation
there can be no ground for difference.
Hitler must be destroyed, or in a fe(w
years there'lll be no America, or at
best an America along German lines,
a huge war m&chlne, the equal of
Hitler's the boss in the western hemisphere
while he Is boss' In the old
world. The man or woman who Is not
for an all-out policy against Hitler Is
slowing down the defense program
as surely and'wi&a* deadly execution
as the strike leaders in defense order
plants.?Chester. Reporter.
'
v;
Ifamonl
laxatives
all over the South
VHBlAvMflUr
Bulldogs Triumph
/ Over Lancaster
(Continued from first page)
tlful ten yard Hne&k by Tlndal took
the ball to the Lancaster 25. Then it
happened. Some smart quarterbackIng
sent Price around left end on a
loublo revorse and tho lad waltzed
Into pay dirt standing up. The Cain[len
cheering section rose as one-man
*nd fairly tore the roof from the stand
fflth. their clififittu The trve for the
axtra point failed.
Before the Lancaster stands had\e
covered from the . shock of bavlhg
their heavyweight outfit baffled, stop I
t>ed and then headed, the Bulldogs
Jtaged another parade, this time
through the.air with that clever sharpshooter
Tindal really breeding 'em. A
t)eautiful toss to Price again sent the
Icld registering touchdown number 2.
riiulal tossed to Sowell for tho extra I
point. ~ ? ?? J
This department wants to say at
this point that if this Btory is disjointed
and registers errors, please
bear in mind we 'were in a state
where we could not write with nny
tlegree of clarity. We had Joinod tho
thousands of Cafitden maniacs in the J
stands and along the side linos.
To continue?the half ended with
tl^e Bulldogs 13 and the bruisers from
up north, zero. The second half found
the Bulldogs showing alertness in capitalizing
on a blooked punt. The local
speed boys had marched down the
field to the neighborhood of the Lancaster
10 or 12 yard line when they I
were stopped. Lancaster took over J
and when the kicker sought to "punt
out of the danger zone, Parker, Partin
and Bruce combined to block the
punt which rolled back and over the J
goal line where Parker fell on It J
Tlndal tossed to B. Marshall for the
extra point. I
It Is interesting to note that Cam-I
den scored 14 first downs to 7 regis- J
tered by Lancaster. Lancaster made J
frequent substitutions allthrough the
game while Camden, with but a few
exceptions, offered an iron-man squad, I
tl\e Bulldogs doing the 60 minute
Jaunt with freshness. > \
Sneaking of interest and enthusiasm
?we have never wltnesBed'Qnite such
a demonstration on feemp field. Lancaster's
many hundreds of fans with
a fine band never gave up cheering
for their team. They were a badly
disappointed throng. But they gavei
unhesitatingly of their support, even
when it was seen that Camden's precision
and speed were too mtjch for
Lancaster's ' brawn.
Now in closing Just a word about
sbmethlng "that *dld not happen, something
that has caused us a great' deal
of chagrin, as we had publlcllzed It as
one of the attractions for the evening.
We refer to the soccer game
that did not materialize. <Thls department
was given the news of the soccer
game to be played between two
teams of English boys from the aviation
school. What happened to prevent
the exhibition being put on we
do not kndw" It was nb promotlott of
the Camden publlctiy bureau, so we
do not feel we are called upon to offer
any apology. We hope that such an
exhibition can be arranged for some
future evening.
Back to football?the Bulldogs go
to Charlotte tonight to play Harding
High of that city. Harding ,defeated
the Columbia Caps recently and are
reported to have a hard playing heavy
team. $Jext Friday Camden jaunts
to Orangeburg and on October 31 jthey
return to Zemp stadium to play
Chester High.
On October 31 we plan to stage another
drill by the crack Battery E
platoon from the Public Relations
headquarters with the fine 109 Field
Artillery band to play for the drill.
Miss Meta Boykin, Camden band
majorette, will lead the soldier band
in the parade. V; ,
1 * > 1
Ginning* For Lee County
According to William J. Muldrcw,
Bpeclal agent for LOe county the census
report shows that 6,003 bales of
cotton were * ginned in Lee county
from the crop of 1911 prior to October
1, 1941, as compared with 16,188
bales for the crop of 1940.
EiiS |
11 "Ml J
jjrn|
Washington, D. Q. Oct. 10- Assert- Ing
what la In effect absolute control
over all major public and private
building In the United States, the
Supply Priorities and Allocations
Hoard Thursday served notice that
further expansion of the Nation's new
and phenomenal building Boom will be
stopped dead In its tracks.
The Supply Priorities and Allocations
Board policy announcement was
equivalent to an order that henceforth
no new construction?from power
plants, highways and harbor works to
post offices, apartment houses and
-loft buildings?will be permitted to
UBe up vital defense materials unless
the work is deemed by Supply Priorities
and Allocations Board to be In
the interest of national defense or
public health and safety.
Officials had no hesitation In admitting
that the program would be
executed In hard-boiled manner. It ?
was pointed out that since almost all
construction of ' any consequence
utilizes such critical list Items as
steel, copper or brass, it could be effectively
stopped by refusal to grant
priority ratings for those materials.
Clearly spelling out the scope of
the policy decisions, the Supply Priorities
and Allocations* Board announcement
said It applied tp public projects?Federal,
State and local?such
as post offices, court houses, roads
and highways,. navigation improvements,
flood control and power projects.
The ruling also applies to residential
and commercial construction,
such as homes, office buildings, factories,
warehouses and apartment
dwellings, It was announced.
Public health directors from the
American republics TGkirve been invited
to attend the annual conference of the
American Public Health Association
at Atlantic City, N. J., October 14 to
17, as guests of the United ?tates
Government, it was announced October
3 by Nelson A. Rockefeller, Co^
ordinator of Inter-American Affalrj.
Heads of the national departments
of public health or their representatives
from all 20 of the other American
Republics have indicated they will attend.
..
*The House tonight will finish consideration
of the new Lend-Lease Appropriation
Bill, which came to the
Floor from the Appropriations Committee
on Wednesday.
The bill provides almost six billion
dollar^, additional, for the help of
those resisting Hitler in his efforts to
dominate the world. This makes
about thirteen million dollars in actual
has been appropriated by tbo
Congress, under the Lend-Leaae Bill,
passed earlier this year. The amount
first appropriated has not all been
' spent, but has been allocated to various
categories of relief materials, Including
airplanes, tanks, explosives,
medical supplies and' farm commodities.
Millions of pounds of scarce defense
materials, originally consigned to
countries subsequently overrun by
German armies, have been discovered I
at storage points throughout the!
United States and soon will be requisitioned
for American military use,
Vice-President Henry A. Wallace announced
yesterday.
Wallace disclosed that 1,000 carloads
of critical materials were stored
at New York JIarbor._ In a railroad
yard at Hoboken, N. J., he said,
500,X)00 pounds of aluminum, 700,000
pounds of tlnplate, and 1,600 tons of
Iron and steel products were uncovered.
New York Harbor officials acknowledged
the presence of thousands of
pounds of the materials, particularly
ship steel, a product the scarcity of
which is holding up naval construction
in Philadelphia.
President Roosevelt on Thursday
? asked Congress to repeal, with all
speed, restrictions on arming of merchantmen
and also recommended
%
direct delivery of lend-lease supplies
in American flag ships.
Legislation to wipe out the Neutrality
act ban on arming vessels was immediately
introduced. Leaders predicted
short hearings by the House1
and swift passage through that Chamber.
Warning that Hitler's unscrupulous
ambition, if fulfilled, will bring the
war to American homes, the President
asked arming of ships ,as a matter
of immediate necessity and extreme
urgency. .The
President's message, denouncing
the Nazis as madmen who are
crazed with a desire to control the
world, met with majority applause,
but the usual division along war policy
lines. p'
WANT ADS-t-The little fellows with
the Big Pulling Power. I
Kendalls Lose Game
To Battery E Team
Softball fans who witnessed the
game between the Battery E team
from the Public Relations headquarters
and* the Wateree Mill team at the '
high school athletic field Wednesday
were treated to a fine exhibition, the
soldiers defeating the Kendall talent
3<^).
Some brilliant play featured the
content.' (The soldiers presented a
strong defensive group and the usual
powerhouse offensive of the Kendalls
2as throttled in every inning.
A return game is to be played on
$nday afternoon at the high school
field, between the same teams. Later
in the week the Battery E team will
play a team from the Southern Aviation
school.
Cotton Ginning Report
According to O. R. S. Pool, special
agent, the gins of Kershaw county
report 2,026 bales of cotton were ginned
from the crop of 1941 prior to
October 1, as compared with 7,033
bales for the crop of 1940.
Garden Notes
At this season when all other flowers
have succumbed to the heat and
drought we find "spider lilies" In
many yards In Camden to gladden our
eyes. Having known them by this
name all our lives It is surprising to
learn that they are not lilies at >*11,
but belong to the Amaryllis family. *
There are several bulbous plants
whosfe blooms have long stamens or
filaments sticking out beyond the
petals and for this reason called
"spider lilies." They are not lilies at
all, but belong to the Amaryllis family.
The common red spider lily is often
called "Surprise lily" by old gardeners
In this section, because Its
blooms appear so suddenly In September
before the leaves come up. >
The foliage disappears In the spring,
and the bulb rests through the hot
weather. It sends up flowers stalks
and then the leaves which remain |
green all winter. The foliage Is rich
and beautiful, shiny and strapshaped
and graceful like that of all
the Amaryllis family to which it belongs.
The flowers are most striking
with their three-inch filaments.
In catalogs it Is offered In all shades
of mauve and ?ed and their combinations..
It i& listed as Nerlne sarnlensis.
The old name for the nerlne was
"Guernsey Lily,"-because it came from
the island of Guernsey; having been
carried there from its native haunts in
South Africa by some old sea captain
whp found and admired it. ^ - . .
It is grown in pots under glass in
the North and considered an expensive
rarity. In our climate it
thrives out of doors with little or no
attention, remaining in the same location
year after year. But like. aU]
othe/ bulbous plants, it repays care.
A mulch of rotted manure each summer
after it dies down, and occasional
liftings in order to remake the bedfr
with good soil and sifod, will Insure
t finer blooms. They need not be lifted i
I oftener than once in five years.?Elisabeth
Baum, Camden Garden Club|
| Publicity. '
i
W. P. A. Recreation Newa
Saturday night, October 11, eighty
khaki-clad youths gathered at the old
armory for an evening of entertainment.
They all participated In the
dancing to the music of a clarinet
and all ping-pong tables, Chinese
checkers and target practice were in
full swing. They also enjoyed the
radio and reading material. The old
armory will be open every night from
7 to 9, and all day Saturday and Sun-'
day.
The field next to the old armory
is being cleaned up for a horse-shoe
pitching track for the soldiers.
Plans are under way for a dance at
the armory Saturday night. The
Klrkwood Hotel band will furnish the
music. There will be no charge.
Themlghty cuttlefish lras arms lonr ?
enough to encicrle a whale's body.
Islands In a river are constantly
After 40?To Enjoy Life More
GIVE LIVER BILE .
FLOW A BOOSTDo
This Every Morning for 30 Days
To be normal your liver should discharge
about a full quart of digestionaiding
bile Juices every day. A scanty
flow?may mean sick Headaches,
BllUOusness, Poor Digestion, that halfsick,
half-alive feeling.
Snap out of it! Get a bottle of
Kruschen Salts tonight. Start right
in tomorrow morning and take <hat
half teaspoonful in a glass of water
(hot or cold) half an hour before
breakfast and keep this up for thirty
days. Do this and you too may know
what it is to get up feeling fit and
j ready for a real day's work. Try
Kruschen tor the next thirty days on ,
our guarantee of satisfaction or (money
refunded.?Sold in Camden by
DeKalb Pharmacy.
To relieve A T T\ O
Misery of t {] L H 5
^ ^ ? liquid
v/vrvr v nose drops .
cough drops
, Try "Rub-My-Tt?m"-a Wonderful
Liniment
1
U \ V M
IBR INVESTMENT FOR THE YEARS ___
Being Shown
and Demonstrated
Now
With Extiomo Now Economy
In Bu and Oil Cmmi?jUm
tun! in major
owes, c. i. s.,
thursdays, 9 to
10 r. m , e. s. t.
AT NO TIME, EVfit HAVE THOUGHTFUL fEOFLB LOOKED MOM CAREFULLY AT THE VALUE Of MONEY, NEVE* _
HAS DOOOi OflFBtED SO MUCH TO THESE SAME PEOPLE. THtS NEW DODOf IS THE SUPREME ACHIEVEMENT Of
DODGE FACTORIES AND MEN/ IT IS THE TRIUMPH Of THE FLOATING IDEA IN WHICH POWER-PLOW ENGINES, FLOAT.
INQ RE* AND ALL-PURD DRIVE COMBINE R4TO ANEW VALVE WHKH IS AN ENDURING INVESTMENT FOR THE YEARS.
THE BEAUTY Of THE NEW DODGE STEAKS FOR ITSELF. THE FERFORMANCB SURPASSES EVSRYTtRNQ ELSE THAT
HAS COME FROM DODOEj THE NEW ECONOMY tS THE HKIH MEREST RATE ON YOUR LONG-TIME INVESTMENT.
DODM^m^^UL'HUID DRIVE
HMCW AM* MIONIOATIOM MWMT TO CMAMOE WITHOUT MOTOR
* '
f {'
?? # HAY
MOTORS
SOUTH BROAD STREET ^D?N,5.C.
POPEYE, THE RECRUITING OFFICER) QETS AIR-CONDITION ED I
IF SA WANTS A
TD^ET AHEAD,
TH' NAVW A
TEACHES SA j
TO AMOUNT /
Sjro SUMPNy
???=* i .\r
/VD LIKETOBEY
' AN AV1ATIOKJ )
v MECHANIC, <
1 IF POSSIBUEy_- .
?z?L
W W li
J*JN_ Q
VUELU n-L BE HORKHSFOOMEQ
A'GOURSE, rrs "POSSIBLE*x
-TH'NAW ^iVBS SA _Y
TK MOST COMPLETE Y )
IMSTRUCKTOKJS IKJ ) I
AMV ONE OF SOME ;/ V
FORTV-OODr^^
SKILIJED r<^-J ^
- j LJ-#Xjrt-Q . J f _
TRADES
*c*?the >
outdoor
AM AM^/lArioM J
MECHAKUC, NJOW! A
r WELL. BLOW ME DOWN ?
t' PLEN V<y FRESH MR.1 J
You're flying high in the Navy
You live like o king I Free meals. Free
medical and dental care. No rent to
pay. And you get regular raises in pay.
What a life for a man who's young and
ambitious I You get travel and adventure
and you leam a skilled trade that
puts you in line for big pay fobs when
you get out of the Navy.
If you ore 17 or over, get airee copy
of the illustrated booklet, "UFE IN THE i
U. & NAVY/' from the Navy Editor of ,
this ?aper.
VOUR COUNTRV.1
BUILD VDURFUTUR&J tJLf .
>-? . 4m IN 1MB WWW MQitfp .
* - >?** -s- V** * 'y ' v~ '* ?- V