The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, August 13, 1943, Page PAGE TWO, Image 2
Soil Conservation
News
(By V. T. Mullen
Crotalaria has convinced 11. VV. Heat
of Bethune, that it has (ho ability to
, Increase cotton and corn yields on the
light Handy soil of his farm. Mr. Heat
hn? 14 acrea of cotton grown behind
(Hani Striata Crotalaria on Norfolk
* Hand and Norfolk loamy Hand land.
Thin cotton waa fertilized with 400
pounds of 4-8-8 fertilizer and 800
poinds of mascot Urae at planting and
hatt had no top-dressing upplled at
all. and according to estimates this
Held will probably yield from threefourths
tofone bale of cotton per acre.
Across the highway and on the same
soil type Mr. Best has 20 acres of coyn
planted behind crotalaria, turned
greeu, with no fertilizer applied under
nor around It, that will probably yield
from 16 to 20 bushels per acre. Mr.
Best says, "this Is the best crop of
corn h n<l cotton I have ever luul on
my sand laud and I consider crotalarla
to be he salvation of light
Handy soil." Thin aectlon Buffer* from
wind eroalon considerably and crotalarla
runrlshes ttood protection from
(h 1h respect.
YV T. Holley, of the Ml. IMsgah section,
huH He vera! acres of Kobe
pedeza, following small grains that la
ready to cut for hay, lly cutting hla
hay crop early, Mr. Holley will be
aide to harvest a need crop thlB fall.
Because leapedeza grows In thick
HtandH, it affords throughout the growing
season un excellent cover for the
prevention of erosion. It affords protection
from eroding rains during summer
and early fall and by adding uitrogon
and organic matter increased
soil fertility.
War Bond* should mean
aomethinf more to you than
Just "a good sound Investment."
Figure it.out yourself.
Bethune Resident
Called By Death
Mr*. Pearl Blackmou Wat ridge, 6S,
died at her home near Bethune at 1
o'clock Saturday afternoon after six
months of falling health. She-was the
wife of the Kev. W. F. Us t ridge, retired
Baptist minister and a former
member of the house of representatives
from Kershaw County.
She was the only daughter of the
lute Mrs. lCleanor 81ms Blackinon of
Lancaster county.
Mrs. Kstrtdge received her education
at Weldh Neck school for girls.
At the time of her death the was a
member of the Timrod Baptist church
whore the funeral waa conducted at
K o'clock Sunday afternoon by her
pastor and a cousin, the 1lev. <0. K.
Blackmou, assisted by the Hot. Mr.
Bunter, a friend of the family^
Besides her husband the to survived
by the following children: Mre. Hoyt
C. Brookey, t>etrolt, Mich.; Mre. Na?
' i i iw1?al
Instructors Upset
By Lowly KeDymen;
Battle WasHoney
Pepper Martin's Single In Dying
Minute Gives Maintenance
Win
*
v With two down lu the last of the
seventh and Deme Nature preuarlng
to stage the daily blackout,
Pepper" Martin, the elongated center
flel(^r of the Maintenance team
dropped a Texas leaguer Into short
left Held, scoring Roland with the run
that won the game from the he^ofor
unbeaten Instructor team Ihurs
day night.
The game was the playover of the
extra-Inning deadlock of the proceeding
Tuesday night when darkness put
an end to a titanic scrap with the
The^hursday night fracas started
out In a drlxxllng rain which drove
spectators under trees and
However, In the third inning th
skies cleared, aad despite a
ed diamond surface, the conditions
were ideal for players and spectators.
The winners were outhit by the Itn
structors 11 to 9 but the Maintenance
gang took advantage of a defensive
collapse of the Flyers to do some effective
club swinging and pull their
rivals down into a tie with the army
for the jeague leadership.
The game started out as if the. instructors
were going to stage one
their usual blitx presentations.
Stowe's single, followed by Reynold s
triple and Munger's foxzllng of
Beebe's grounder to third netted them
two runs. They pushed over two
more in the third on Taylors double,
a single by Reynolds and Roland's error
at first. \ ,.
The Maintenance boys opened the
last of the third with Moseley drawing
a walk. Joe was out when Brown
hit to Stowe who tossed to Reynolds
at second. Stafford, however, came
through In the clutch with a single
and was followed by Jennings and
Roland and Kelly, all hitting the bail
hard with the resultant score of four
runs and a tie up of the game.
In the fourth the Maintenance forged
ahead when Plyler walked and
scored on MOgeley a single.
But the Instructors came back in
the fifth and took the lead when Reynolds
walked and came home ahead
of Beebe whpn the latter crashed out
a circuit clout..
The Maintenance rooters went wild
in the last of the seventh when their
favorites tied up the score after two
were down. Whether over-confidence
resulted In carelessness In the Instructors
defense Is a question, hut
the lads who teach other lads how to
aavigate like birds, fell apart. Stafford
opened the last of the final
round by getting a life on Mackey s
error. But Scott died a few minutes
later In an attempted steal. Jennings
struck out. Roland was safe on Reynolds
bobble and Kelly crashed into
the hit column for the second time of
the pastime, sending Roland In with
the tying rurt. Brown was walked and
then "Pepper" Martin cracked out the
blow that put Kelly home with the
run that won the game.
The score:
Instructors 7 9 3
Instructors: 6 11 3
Batteries: H. Brown and Jennings;
Reynolds, Taylor and Nabor.
than Brown, Kingstree; Mrs. B. J.
Jones, Spartanburg; Mrs. R. K. Jernigan,
Georgetown; Mrs. Leon Jones,
Bethune; William and Boyce Estridge
of Bethune. and Tech. Sgt. Edwin
Estridge, Army Air corps, overseas;
| also three brothers, W. T. and J. J.
Blackmon of Lancaster, and M. S.
Blackmon of Alters, Okla.
FINAL DISCHARGE
Notice is hereby given that one
month from this date, on September
7. 1943, Robert S. Carmichael will
make to the Probate Court of Kershaw
County his final return as Executor
of the estate of Frank E. Cour-i
sen, deceased, and on the same date
he will apply to the said Court for a
final discharge as said Executor.
N. C. ARNETT,
Judge of Probate for Kershaw County
Camden, S. C., August 7, 1943 21-24.
War ^Bondii ^nd^St?Bapa^ ^
?'~ ???? ??
Chronicle Want Ads Get ResqJtjl
II J.I ; ~
Alv?rtlMtn?nti un4?r tftia w11
0. charged tor ml ths rate of I oe?t
p?r word. Minimum charge "M om?tm.
Ads set In 10 point type iUutele
Oaeh must *ocoi]9pnnT order eac??>t
where customer hA? Ledger Account.
FOR SALE?I'lg8, e?Kht *<*k? ?ld*
B. H. Young, Westvllle, S. C. 20-31pj
FRIERS FOR 8ALE?Phone 3T3.
George A. Creed, 311 DeKalb 8*. |
FOR SALE?Barred Hock frlera,
Fresh killed or alive. Camden Fur.,
niture Co. Phone 166. J
FOR SALE?BUck 1941 Special DeLuxe
Chevrolet. Can be seen at
12Ql*Mlll street. Mrs. Wade Stpkes,
8r " 20-22pd
M ' I,,* j 1 1 1
FOR 8ALE?6 Ft. refrigerator, flOO
cash, excellent ooudltlon. EJddle
I Hum, Thomas & Howard, Gamden,
| 8. O. ' 21cg
FOR SALE?21 Ring Neck Pheasants,
16 Silvers, 8 Golden Birds, 4 Amherst
Birds, 7 Ring Neck Doves. Apply
Camden Machine Works. Fast
DeKalb Street. 21-22.
FOR SALE?Four-room house and lot
pupose Park, mile and half from
Camden. Reason for selling, leaving
town. Reasonable. Apply Mrs. Inez
Hudson, 307 Kendall Street, Wateree
Mill, Camden. 21-22p.
? "s ?
FOR 8ALE?40Ajgcres close to CamK
' den. Tennant house, barn, etc. Several
Jjlce home .sites, ample wood,
some timber. Live stream, suitable
for developing fish and bathing
i pond. Address "Homeland" care of
Camden Chronicle. 21-23p
W ANTE D?Ref Ined, dependable white
girl to look after |iome and two
children. $6 week, room and board.
Mrs. T. W, Hornsby, 2608 Duncan
street, Columbia, 8. C., Zone 62.
WANTED?Cdpable, experienced stenographer
and office worker. Prefer
one that understands bookkeep.
lng and general office routine.
Good, permanent position for reliable,-efficient
person. Apply D-91,
cfo Camden Chronicle. bf.
- , I.. _r- 1 - ? ^ tr ^
WANTED?work, by ihan In 60tte?.
Strictly? gpbar, reliable. Experience
in gropel-y store and filling station
sales and collections. Will consider
pny honest work you may offer now
or by 8ept. 15th. Route 2, box 182,
Camden Chronicle,' 20-22
WANTED?Pulp
wood, hard wood,
timber. We also buy land. Help
your government by selling your
wood now. See D. J. Creed or call
321, Camden. Mailing address P. O.
Box 214, Camden, S. C. lOtf
WANTED TO BUY?Second hand
teWiog machines in good Working
condition. Call 268-J. 20-21cg
WANTED TO By V?Several good
used trucks. No Junk wanted. Contact
D. J. Creed, Camden, S. C.
FOUND?Yellow mare mule, about 10
years old.-* Owner can have the
mule by- paying me for its keep.
Eugene Wheeler, Camden, S. O.,
route 2. box 161. 21pd
LOST?Food ration book issued to
James McLeod, 810 Campbell St.
21p.
LOST?A "C" gasoline book, issued
to A. P. McCormick, Camden, S. C..
716 Littleton Street. 21p
LOST ? Sugar Rationing Book issued
to James M. Brazell, Rt. 1. - Box 5
Caipden, S. C. Pd 20
LOST?Kerosene ration book, issued
to Smith CauTley, route one, box 170,
Camden, S. C. 21pd
LOST?In downtown section, ladies'
yellow gold wrist watch, initials R.
? a< m- to ^ P- m- Phone
658-J. Reward. 21cg
LOST?Gentleman's wrist watch,
somewhere between Broad and
Chesnut streets. Mohaw make, 17
jewels. Watch was a gift Highly
valued. Liberal reward if returned
to Chronicle office. 21p
'STRAYED?Male, Llewellyn setter,
' blue and white face, named Pat.
seen at rbsidmu-TtfvM
Harris, Hermitage Mills u t^H
return or notify ofllce, HeraSH
Mills Store. Reward 0f Slu
Harrlp, ' ,
C.08T?Gasoline 1) Hook,
William Thompson, route 3 lB
Camden, ?. C. ' **B
* 1 "1 ?
EGOS FOR HATCHING ~ |2|
lectqd Triple A blood tested aB
$1.00 per setting of 15 9
Rooks, Hftrred RockB, New ?3
shire Reds.?The Camden M
Compan/, Poultry r*,psrt?^9
oated West Laureup street.
CHICK FEED?Get a bag of tkMafl
Spartan All-Mash Starter (ofJB
chicks and fiTe them the 'ViflB
Only the one feed la all you ittJB
carry them through the trirt^B
weeks Buy Sp&rtau today B
chaste your chick worries twS
Whltaker 4k Company, Ctns^j
NOTICE TO DEBTOKSAH
CREDITORS J
All parties indebted to the mB
of John Porter, deceased, are kS
notified to make payment to tfcffl
dereigned, and all parties, If aay.lfl
ing' claims agaluBt the said eststi^H
present them likewise, duly stta^l
within the time prescribed by lirm
Mrs. I/ouiso C, ltoct<B
Camden, 8. C., Aug. 3, 1913. |9
Subscribe To The Chronid^
Pulpwood Cutting Declared
Essential Activity By Order
/ S Of
General Hershey
?> 1 ,7 ,
NATIONAL HEADQUARTERS
SELECTIVE SERVICE $YSTEM
Washington, D. C.
July 24, 1943
i TRANSMITTAL MEMO NO. 49
SUBJECT: SUPPLEMENT TO ACTIVITY AND j
i OCCUPATION BULLETINS
1. We are transmitting herewith a Supplement to Activity and
Occupation Bulletin*. This Supplement list* the additions, deletions,
end modifications to Activity and Occupation Bulletins which -have
been made by the Essential Activities Committee of the War Manpower
Commission.
2. This Supplement should be inserted in your, book of Local
Board Memoranda immediately following the Table of Activity and
Occupation Bulletins.
3. The Activity and Occupation Bulletins referred to in this
Supplement will not be reprinted at this time.
I
4. Transmittal Memos Nos. 47 and 48, concerning DSS Forms,
were distributed only to agencies of the Selective Service System. ^ r
(SIGNED) LEWIS B. HERSHEY
Director
*********
SUPPLEMENT TO ACTIVITY AND OCCUPATION BULLETINS
ISSUED: 7-24-43
SUBJECT: AMENDMENTS TO ACTIVITY AND OCCUPATION
BULLETINS.
The Activity and Occupation Bulletins enumerated below have
been amended by the additions, deletions, and modifications shown
under each Activity and Occupation Bulletin. In the use of the Activity
and Occupation Bulletins, reference should be made to this Supplement.
The Activity and Occupation Bulletins which have been amended
and the amendments thereto are as follows:
ACTIVITY AND OCCUPATION BULLETIN NO. 7.
Part II-B.
Add "PULPWOOD, CUTTING OF."
Bulletin No. 7 as revised above will now read as follows:
ACTIVITY AND OCCUPATION BULLETIN NO. 7
ISSUED 3-1-43
SUBJECT: FORESTRY, LOGGING, LUMBERING
AND PRODUCTION OF PULPWOOD
Part I Policies that Apply to This Activity
General policies govern this activity.
Part II Essential Activities. i
B
Engaging in:
Balsam gum or needle*, gathering
of
Bark, gathering of
Fire-fighting and prevention service*
(forestry)
Forest nurseries
Forestry services
Gums, gathering of
PULP WOOD, CUTTING OF
>1
Logging Camp (operation)
Lumbering N
Nurseries, forest
Pest-control Services
Rcforestrntsou serv ice
Timber tracts (operated for tbe i
purpose of selling standard
timber)
Tung-oil tree raising. r
The above bulletin now pieces the cutting of Pulpwood on the
seme besis as agriculture end other War Industries. The serious shortage
of Paper said Paper products has made the above action of the
Selective Service System necessary.
Since Pulpwood is considered one of the most critical raw ma- (
terials, mainly due to labor shortage, employees in this industry may
justly feel that they are contributing toward winning the war.
INTERNATIONAL PAPER CO.
Southern Kraft Division
Camden, Arkansas Mobile, Alabama
Bastrop, Louisiana . Moss Point, Miss.
Spnnghill, Louisiana Panama City, Florida
Georgetown, S. C.
I'
NOTICE
j\ i < *
There will be an interruption of cur?
i * ." 1 . '
rent on our lines from
7 p. m. to 8 p. m. on
Sunday, August 15,1943
account necessary maintenance
C. P. & L. Company
MUNICIPAL UTILITIES
*
f r v * - ; 1
y ,
WBTCX PAY TOol
EXCELLENT 1
PRICE fl
For- Your Gtf; J
CASH WAfnNGl
SHAW MOTOR J
COMPANY?
Phone 46 Kcrshawf S>,?
,. ryt fL^^
For Yon T? F^V<fl
24 hour. every day, 7day? <
week, never etopplnf, the IddWi^
waste matter from the blood.
If more people were ?wareclljoe
kidam araet otmetoady .wyj
plus fluid, exeeee ecids and eto* Q
be better underaUndlnf <** tfl
whole OMUpt { upeet wMo
to luaeaoH ptvpeny. .
&?^pl
, noticeJ
w**11
Camden, S. C. V
?Higaedt
, W. C. UdtPfi
NOTICEJ
Liquor liciMf to mU Ah*1
No. 627 KuMf**** I
' - # 3
w.^fc
UOVP J|