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ORDINANCE (Coii<loued m* tWO> retail Hlld Wholo ri*"' rtl 50.00 Kt* oi bu'bB. or shrubbery l1^ M tiiiiK ? l"'ace of buBl" r1" ,, !"? <;uy?"?" ?uch *?? or shrubbery are not lu i >y tho seller within ft, y0f South (Carolina 25.00 I10 b " bulbs, or shrubbery maintaining a plaeo of l?L"ss in the City of CamIu w.hcn such bulbB or Klbb rv are not raised by W iellcr Within the State Kso.i h Carolina, per week 10.00 W. . tellers, palmists, clair, r ,r.... 100.00 ?'' I,;,,,. leu. or home or K.m riilloK Bullorlee, ?or ^ ## Edrr.'i-or^ar w.w lnK stations not in connec 1 with n?y. other business Wf year, one pump 16.00 K.i additional pump 5.00 Kit; station in connection E? storage of cars, per ^ n? station in connection ith storage of cars and Rung agencies or garages, r selling gasoline 30.00 R anil produce dealers, not King on the street, per ^ ^ K, see page 8. Rge and storage 50.00 Kfes, not more than two K employed, per annum. . 25.00 Kre than two men 50.00 Rdrcseers 10.00 Rm-resldent 25.00 Rls, Inntf, Tourist homes, RvertdBing for transients .. 5.00 Re tu Ten rooms, for first ^ Rm each additional, per K from 10 to 25 rooms, R 'year 20.00 Rls, from 25 to 75 rooms, R year 40.00 Rls, from 75 rooms upward, year 75.00 Re painters, paper hangers, Rertor decorators taking Rttracts, per year 10.00 Resident house painters, year 25.00 Rsters or peddlers of fruit Rotables, etc.. Including Rdy Rolling Stores, if pedRg goods, wares and other Rrcbandise, manufactured Rcles, fruits, vegetables, Rons, eggs, and other farm Rdtfots (not raised by the / Rer within the State of / Rth Carolina), per year . . 50.00 R license to be prorated.) \ Rd hucksters or peddlers not to K stand, and not to sell on proRd streets hereinafter mentioned. Rh wagon or truck used by said Rters or peddlers to constitute a Rite business. Each huckster or ^Rr to be furnished with a badge taking out license. Rters or peddlers selling Rh meats of any kind on ^nms, trucks, each per Rllcense to be prorated.) Rhuckster or person selling fresh R fowls, fruits, vegetables, merRse, manufactured articles, melRges or other farm produce may Ranie on DeKalb street from: Ri street to Market street or on R street from LaFayette street to Rstreer on Rutledge street from ^R> street to Lyttleton street. Rlcsale deliveries of meats and Rto re'ail meat markets may be on said prohibitive areas. All aaimns from which said fSCeshj I may be sold during every I of the year except December, Ry. February to keep the meats ^^ d wagons in refrigerators of Rtnt capacity to carry the said ^fend all portions of said wagons i ^Rkf-n up by refrigerator to be Red and said refrigerator at all in a sanitary condition subR all times to inspection by the office, or any one designated R No license for sale of such in wagons on streets Is to be R by the City without the appllR first being submitted and npI bv the health officer of the Camden. Rr". Fire. Every comI or association doing ess directly or through Rent or broker, shall pay ^ "oss amount of prem collected in tho City, 2 ! lco dealers, not delivering . . 5.00 lee dealers, delivering 10.00 lee manufacturers, each factory 25.00 Itinerant streot advertisers using -the public streets of the Olty to advertise inerehandlso, regardless of whether such wares shall be sold by such Itinerant street advertisers or by some other Individual or corporation with whom such udvertiser shall have entered into some trade agreement, per day 25.00 Labor agents, por year 250.00 Per day 50.00 Laundries, steam or agents for laundries, trucks soliciting business for laundries, not maintaining plant In city . . 100.00 Laundries maintaining a place of business within the city.. 15.00 Laundry service, engaged in supplying firms or individuals with fresh linen under contract, per year 100.00 lawyers, .each 10.00 Firms of lawyers, each addl- ' tional member 5 00 Lenders of money, on personal property or wages, whether in connection with other business or not except such as are otherwise specified in this ordinance 1,000.00 Lumber dealers or brbkers, re" tail, whether resident or not other than lumber or shingles from tlmbor on land owned by sellers wltihin the State of South Carolina .... 20.00 Machine shops and repairs or either 10.00 Marble yard 0 00 Meat cases, electric or otherwise, 3 feet or over 10.00 Monument and tombstone erectors, transient, per year . . 50.00 Moving picture shows, for each place of business .... 50.00 i That there is hereby created a Hoard of Inspection for Moving Picture operators; said board to consist of the City Electrician and the iChief of the Fire Department. That each moving picture machine while In operation shall be in charge of an experienced operator holding a certificate of fitness from said board and <no person shall operate any such moving picture machine in the City of Camden without first obtaining a certificate of fitness from said board as herein provided, neither shall any person, firm, corporation permit the operation of any such moving picture machipes owned by such person, firm or corporation by any one other than tv-person holding a certificate of fit'ness as herein provided. Said Board shall have full power and authority to prescribe rules and regulations governing the conduct of the operators and the operation of all moving picture machines and said board from a fire standponit is hereby authorized and empowered to make such rules and regulations for the enforcement of the powers and authority given it herein as in their discretion they may deem necessary. Manufacturers or bottlers of sodawater, Coca-Cola, ginger ale and BUch 1Ike soft drinks 25 00 Musical instruments, not connected with other business 15.00 Manufacturers of Ice cream, not in connection with ice cream parlors, per year .... 10.00 Meat markets, green groceries, per year 30.00 (No license to be prorated). All markets to be screened In accordance with the directions of the Board of Health and subject at all times to inspection by the Board of Health and kept in sanitary condition. Mutual fire insurance companies 50.00 Newspapers,'whether connected with job work or not 15.00 Oculists or opticians 10.00 Paint shops for autos, furniture. etc 15.00 Peddlers or agents soliciting or delivering photographs, lithographs, pictures miniatures. statuettes, etc., for copying or enlarging, per day 6-0? Peddlers or venders selling merchandise of any description, per week 100.00 Per day ' 20.00 Physicians and surgeons, or either 15.00 Physician and surgeon, or either,, in firms, for first member 16,f For ea-ch additional member 5.00 Piano tuners, repairers of musical instruments, per year.. 5.00 Planing, moulding and luinbor mills, whether paying lumher dealer's license or not .. 25.00 Popcorn and peanyt parchers each not In connection with other business Per day *00 Printer#, Job in connection with newspaper* 6.00 Printers, soliciting and delivering business 'J Photographers io.ou Plumbore, gas fitters, heating contractors, tinners and steam fitters, or other repairmen or either, taking contracts, local, pw yejpji JJi Transient, per year That no such license shklMjiP issued until the approwP^< shall first stand a sattMMK^ tory examination before the Inspector of sewerage. Botrn^ Y\ required in accordance wlth^AV ordinance. Pulp wood deulers 50.00 Kent agents or collectors, per year 10.00 Heal estate agents 15.00 Hestaurants, cafes, tea rooms and lunch stands, each .... 25-00 Repairers of typewriters, adding machines, etc., not maintaining shop, per year 26.00 Per day 1.00 Salvage companies or persons taking charge oCv mercantile stock, or other stock, per day 5.00 Selling or erecting awningH or tents 15.00 Shoe, harness and boot repairers 10.00 Shooting galleries, per month 6.00 Sign painters 10.0Q Per day 1-M Skating rinks, per month .... 5.00 Per year ....' 10.00 Stove repairers, Itinerant, per day, $1.00; per year 6.00 Stallion or Jack for service . . 10.00 Tailors or agents for tailors . . 26.00 Undertakers 25.00 Vulcanizing 10.00 Veterinary surgeon, each .... 15.00 Veterinary surgeon firms, each additional member 10.00 Watchmakers, whether connected with other business or not &-00 Warehouse, charging storage. 25.00 Class No. 2 Business or income basis, $1,000 on each additional $1,000, ten cents per $1,000. Where the gross annual income from the business, callings or profession enumerated in the following schedule, shall be One Thousand Dollars or less, the license ehall be at the rate set forth in said schedule and where the gross annual Income exceeds One Thousand Dollars the license shall be Increased from the amount set forth in said schedule at the rate of ten cents for each One Thousand Dollars of gross Income in excess of One Thousand Dollars. Express Companies or agencies of business done exclusively In tho City of Camden and not Including any business done to or from points without the State, and not Including any business done for the government of the -United States, its officers or agents 60.00 Railroads for business done exclusively within the City of Camden, and not including any business done to or from points without the State, and not including any business done for tho government of the United States, its officers or agents, for each railroad entering the city 100.00 Telegraph companies or agencies, each, for business done within the City of Camden with points within the State, not inclyding any business done for the government of tho United States. Gross revenues not exceeding $250.00 10-00 Gross revenues not exceeding $500.00 . ..'. 25.00 Gross revenues not exceeding $1,000.00 50^00 Gross revenues in excess of $1,000.00 60.00 And $5.00 per $100.00 revenue over $1,000.00. Telephone companies, or agencies, each, for business done within the City of Camden, with points within the State and not including any business done for the government of the United States.. 150.00 Seasonable gift shops or sport shops selling merchandise not a charitable organisation, per year 25.00 Each Hue Terminal within the city 26.00 ! Motor transportation companies maintaining n terminal ? within the city 60.00 Class No. 3 Wholesale Groceries On gross sales $50,000.00 or less, per year 50.00 For each additional $60,000.00 gross sales, or fractional part thereof, $25.00 extra. Retail Merchants On gross sales $6,000.00 or less per year 10.00 On gross sales up to $6,000.00 per year 10 00 On gross sales from $6,000.00 up to $20,000.00 per year, $1.00 on the thousand. On gross sales from $20,000.00 to $40,000.00 per year, $1.50 on tho thousand. On gross sales over $40,000.00 per year, $2.00 on the thousand. License to be based on previous year's sales. On now business sales to be estimated and adjustment made at end of the license year. Accident, Automobile, Casualty, Fidelity, Guarantee, Plate Glass or other like Insurance company, each company represented 25.00 Lifo Insurance companies, each 25.00 All Life Insurance companies doing Industrial Insurance business, per annum, First agent 50.00 For each additional representative . . . : 5.00 Insurauce, live stock, (each company) 5.00 Finance companies, doing business in Camden, per year . . 50.00 Section VII. The license on any business or occupation not named in the foregoing schedule shall be fixed by the Mayor and Clerk. Section VIII. The license on any ordinance, the terms, ''persons, firm, company, corporation, or party"' are used, the same shall include not only the principles, but In their absence shall Include any agent, clerk or employee having charge, management or control of the business, calling, occupation, or profession referred to and such agent, clerk or employee shall be subject to the penalties herein imposed for failure to comply with tho terms and requirements of this ordinance, in the same manner as if he she or they were principals or proprietors. Section IX. This ordinance shall go into effect on and from the first day of May, A. D. 1943, and all ordinances or parts of ordinances in conflict herewith are hereby repealed. Done and ratified in the Council assembled, under the corporate seal of the City of Camden, S. C., this the 12th day of April, 1943. FRANCES N. McCORKLE, Mayor. LOUISE W. ROYKIN, City Clerk. JAMES D. MONTGOMERY PROMOTED TO FIRST LIEUT. I Seymour J oh neon F|eld4 N. L\ See 1 oiul Lieutenant Juntos I). Montgomery, j eon of Mr. nml Mrs. J It. Montgomery,! Itox Camden, S. C , Iihh been promoted to the grade of First Lieutenant at this airplane mechanics school of lire Army Air Forces Technical Training Command, Colonel Donald H. Smith. Commanding Ofllcor, announced this week. Lt. Montgomery, a graduate of tin* University of Florida and the Washington College of Law. was commissioned on June 20. 1942. at Lowery Flejd, -l>enver, Col. Before entering service Lt. Montgomery was the bank cashier for the Library of Congress. Soil Conservation News (By V. T. Mullen M I,. Duval, of (he Doykln community, has atM><lo<i eight acres of imrtnaneut pasture this spring. The mixture <-ons|atod of four pounds While Dutch ami Hup clover, ten lbs. Imported Dalits grass and 1 f> pounds of mixed Kobe and Korean lesp^ieta. A natural stand of Bermuda Is present-.in most places. 'IMtls, area was treated with one ton of lime and 400 pounds of IK per cent acid phosphate per acre prior to seeding. The location of this pasture Is desirable since running water and shade are convenient. Terrace lines were recently run by the Lynches River Soil Conservation district on Eugene Watts' farm near Lugoff. Mr. Watts marked IiIh linos so that they will not become obliterated by cultivation and rains and plans to build his tefraces this fall with turn plow and V ij^ug. R. S. Kirk, farmer of the Lugoff section, bus Heeded 7 acres of Serlcea, Lospedeza this spring. This plot is adjacent to his pasture and muy bo used for supplementary grazing when pastures are usually abort during mid-summer. Mr. Kirk applied 1,000; pounds of basLc slag per acre and seeded 30 pounds of scarified Serlcea per acre on a well settled seed bed. Serlcea lias a long top-root and has proven to be very effective in controlling soil erosion. Your Victory Garden Suggestions for Week of April 18-24 Plant now. Beans: Giant Stringless (ireen Pod and Tendergreen. Sow in open 1 1-2 Inches deep, one quart to 100 feet. Rowb 2 1-2 feet apart. Three to four beans to every eight to 10 inches. Pole Beans: Kentucky Wonder. McCaslan. Sow in hills three by three. Lima Beans: Henderson Buah Lima or Wood's Prolific, (pole) Carolina Pole or Sleva Bean. One pint to 100 feet. Rowh 2 1-2 feet. Seed sown thinly in drill. Pole Lima, one-half pint to 100 feet. Seed sown 1 1-2 inches deep In hills two feet by three feet. Squash: Yellow Crookneck, Early White Bush and Early Prolific Straightneck. Hills four feet by four feet. Cucumber: Early Fortune, Stays Green, Boston Pickling. Hills five feet by five feet. Okra: Clemsori Spineless, Perkins Long Green. Sow seed one inch deep, two ounces to 100 feet. Rows 2 1-2 feet apart. Plant six inches to 10 inches apart in drill. Corn: Trucker's Favorite. Stowell's Evergreen, Golden Cross BanOem. Sow seed one Inch deep, rows 2 1-2 feet apart. Seed sown In either hills or thinly in drill. Transplant: Tomatoes, Sweet Potatoes, Eggplant, Pepper to open field after April 16. Fertilizer: Nitrate of Soda, 5-7-6 or 4-8-6. Well-rotted stable manure. Remarks: Do not allow tomato plants to grow long legged. Transplant. them to other boxes or frames and give each plant room to become stout-stemmed and stocky. If well hardened they may be set In the open ten days earlier. A good tomato plant, is about 8 inches from the root to tho top, and about as large as a lead pencil. Set the plants so that half the stem is below the surface of tho ground. In order that un unbroken supply may bo had, make another planting of tho. vegetables planted during March, such as beets, cabbage, carrots, cauliflower, kale, lettuce. But natural beauty, clothes and cosmetics ea?n't make 'her seem attrac-j five when she squalls angrily at her brat ^ *\*ml War Job Workers Eye Sumter Matter With Much Concern Several Cunulon residents who ha vo returned from big contracting Jobs where they have been employed for the past several months are casting Interesting eyes at a situation which has developed In Sumter county and which is now being considered by the attorney general's office. The question that was raised by (leorge L. Mabry, sheriff of Sumter county was whether unemployed persons who have funds to meet their expenses may be arrested under the South Carolina vagrancy law anjl be forced to work on farms?It seems that quite a delegation I of Sumter men went to a location where a big naval base contract was being carried out and got Jobs which paid big salaries. That Job has been completed, the men are back and all have well padded purees. The Sumter sheriff sayH that farm ! workers are in dire need in Summer county and ho has requested the men Just returned from the naval base Job j to work on tho farms but they have refused. He has now asked the ati torney general if he has tho power j to arrest thoso men on vagruncy charges and force them to go to the fa rms. Governor Johnston recently ordered the sheriffs and police chiefs to pick up all men out of work but who ore in good health or book them on vagrancy charges. In tho Interval the Camden men who were out of town on government work and are now Idle ajne having an Attack of the Jitters for fear the attorney general will give the Sumter sheriff the "go ahead" signal, for they realise that they may have to Join the march of the future farmers. During the days of the open cattlo range in western United States, there | gradually grew up a body of unwritten j laws aptly called "Cow Cuetoms." Some of these laws were hammered out in Informal hearings before Justices of the peace, and others at the business er^d of a Coit .44. Your physician and our pharmacy are partners in the important task of keeping this community well and strong?ready to fight the battles of democracy. The first step is to consult your doctor?promptly. The second step: bring his prescription here, where skilled pharmacists v. :U compound it exactly as he ' cts. It costs no more at k icription Headquarters^ DeKalb Pharmacy Phone 95 BRING the entire family 11 FOR A GRAND I i luncheon or dinner | I To take the Mrs. and family out for one of our ^ DeLuxe Dinners will make your home life happier." ' X 9 We'll Be Looking For You. | AT I B>euen Seas Cafe I PHONE 9117 ' J\: c . DeKalb Street ' < > I iiinnuotuoioGooooiouuuuoQonnnflnnnnin i - 1 ** ? Send Your Easter Cleaning Early so that you can be sure of a careful cleaning job. I Avoid the last minute rush.' Remember, DeLuxe Quality Work. ?, / ^''; DeLuxe Cleaners i .* i Rutledge Street FlMM 183 , ? - / THE SEASON S RIPE for VICTORY GARDENING It's plain ration economy?and a help to Uncle Sam?to plant your own ,/ & vegetables! Now is the time to start FtJLa if you want a rich harvest! Come in and let us advise you how to plan iff your garden for best results and rely on us to supply you with dependable Victory O&rden needs! PLANT V&sstXigr : BARRINGER HARDWARE CO. Victory Garden Headquarters For Camden 4 Phone 21 ~ ' Camden, S. C .