The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, July 28, 1944, Image 12
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CITY TAXES CONTINUED
(ContiQued {rom paf» nl°*)
South Cai^lna, froutlns to tho EMt
on Lyttleton ttreot, nnE houndod
North by Jewish Synscogue. EMt by
Lsrttleton street. Sooth hy property
formerly of H. IL Flowers, snd West
by property of Clybom end othert.
Levied upon sad to be sold ss the
property of A. A. West for nnpsld
City taxes for the year 1941.
All that lot of land in the City of
Camden, County of Kershaw, SUte oi
South Carolina, fronting South <0
feet on Lafayette avenue, and extend
Ing back to a depth of 124 feet, bound
ed North by property now or formerly
of Zemp, Ekst by property of Regers,
Sooth by Lafayette avenue, and West
by Donald A. Campbell. Levied upon
and to be sold as the property of J.
H. Moseley for unpaid City Uxes for
the yea^ 19417194J~aW 194J.
Alse
All that lot of land in the City o:
Camden, County of Kershaw, SUte of
South Carolina, fronting SO feet South
on King street and extending back
to a depth of 148 feet, and is lot N&.
4, block 2, on plat of sub>divialon o !
lands of Henry Savage and George T
Little, said plat being recorded in
Plat Book 2, page 8. Levied upon
and to be sold as the property of
Magnolia Parks for unpaid City taxes
for tbe year 1948.
Also
'All that lot of land in the City oi
Camden, County of Kershaw, SUte of
South Carolina, fronting West on
Campbell street 60 feet and extending
beck to a depth of 150 feet, boundet
North by Bill Wheeler, South by Mary
Jones, North by Hattie Robinson, and
West by Campbell street. Levied upon
and to be sold as the property of
James SUmes for unpaid City taxes
for the year 1948.
Also
All that lot of land In tbe City o!
Camden, County of Kershaw, SUte of
South Carolina, bounded North by
lot No. 8, East by Street A, South by
lot Not 8, and West by lot No. 28, as
shown on snb^livlslon of property of
R. E. Stevenson- and H. B. WhlUker,
of date June 11, 1984, and recordec
In Plat Book 10, page 7. Levied upon
and to be sold as the property of
Estate of Tommy Thompson for un
paid City taxes for the years 1941
1942 and 1948.
Red Cross Notes
Sadia BL vonTrasckow
What' happens to those Red Cross
surgical dressings? Just a scrap of
snowy white gauze, but It is a vlul
mlliUry necessity when the army
surgeon prepares to operate.
Visit the supply tent of an ad
vanced evacuation hosplUl with tbe
Fifth Army in lUly. Big gray and
black packing cases arrive marked
with insignia of the Medical corps and
code numbers to indicate the con^
tenU.
These are unpacked and paper cov
ered packages stacked on supply
shelves. An Army nurse unpacks the
bundles and sorU them Into smaller
parcels. Tbe medical corps man
sterlises them in the auto-clave
Either a nurse or an enlisted man
removes the paper from the packages,
wiwps-the fcdded squaree in «
square of muslin which is tied Into
a bundle with a piece of string, and
puts a pencil mark on the outside of
the cloth wrapper to Indicate the
size of dressings contained in it.
These cloth-wrapped bundles are
then sealed in the large meUl drum
of the auto-clave sterilizing machines
and for between 20 minutes and an
hour the articiM are subjected to
heat, steam and pressure. The pack
ages are stacked In closed cabinets,
where they will be safe from con
tamination.
Ofte hospital behind the Casino line
used 110,000 gauze surgical dressings
in one month, mostly 4x4's.
From early dawn i^tll dawn again
the nurses and doctors operate anc
use thousands of these precious dress
ings that patle'nt loving hands have
fashioned in Red Cross surgical
rooms. Let us keep them rolling. Come
and help. Won’t you?
The following excerpt from a letter
from Miss Ruth Adams, director of
nursing service, in Southeastern di
vision is most complimentary, to Miss
Margaret McCasklll, our instructor ol!
nurses’ aides:
"We appreciate the fine contrlbu
tion you will make to the war etfoii
You will provide the best possible
volunteer service to hospitals by in
structing these women, who will re
turn to their former ways of life after
the emergency is over, equipped with
Information regarding the problems
and needs of the hospital, These wo
men will contribute to a better under,
standing of the hospital by Interpret
ing its heeds to. the citizens of the
various communities.’’
Don’f Delay
Postwar Plans
Babaon OptimUtic On BiaameM
And Politica.
The kapok tree grows 50 feet high
or more, and the base is sometimes
as much as 20 feet In diameter.
All tha^ lot of land in the City of
Camden, Cotmty of Kershaw, Btato of
South Carolina, fronting Weat on
Lyttleton street 104 feet, and extend
ing back to a depth of 264 feet,
bounded North by property of Mlaa
D. E. Brown, East by property of An
nie B. Davidson, South by property of
Mrs. Mary Whitaker, and West by
l.yttleton street. Levied upon and to of Phelps, South by Laurens street
be sold as the.property of Alice W. and West by property of ' Nettles
Tucker for unpaid City taxes for 1942. Levied upon and to be sold as the
Also property of W. R. Zemp and John T.
All that lot of land In the City of Nettles for unpaid City taxes for the
Camden, County of Kerahaw, State of years 1941, 1942 and 1948.
South Carolina, fronting South on Also
York street 39 feet 8 Inches, and ex- All that lot of land, in tbe City of
tending back to a depth of 8Q7 feet. Camden. County,i>f Kershaw, StAte oflwHy
hounded North bv Harris Estate, Blaat South Carolina, fronting West 188
by Phyllis McOirt, South by York feet on Broad street and extending
Street, and Weat by property now or
formerly of Estate Lula A. Ammons.
Levied upon and to be sold as the
property of Ralph Patterson for un
paid City taxes for 1948.
All that lot of land in the City of
Camden, County of Kershaw, State of
South Carolina, known as 806 LytUe-
ton street, fronting East on Lyttleton
street 88 feet, and extending hack to
a depth of 184 feet, bounded North
by property of Stewart, East by Lytp
tleton atre^ South by Wateree B. A
L. Association, and Weat by property
DOST or formerly nf Aithnr. ' •Levied
upon and to be sold aa the property
of Hannah Perry for unpaid City taxes
for the year 1948.
Also
All that lot of land in the City of
Camden, County of Kershaw, Stale of
South Carolina, fronting South 88 feet
on King street and extending back to
a depth of 264 feet, bounded North by
Amelia Boykin, East by Hattie Paul,
South by King street, and West by
Bam Jones. Levied upon and to be
sold as the property of Frances
Pickett tor Uhl^ia CRy taxes for the
year 1943.
Aloo
All that lot of land in the City of
Camden, County of'Kershaw;, State of
South Carolina, fronting - West on
Campbell street 38 feet and extend
ing back to a depth of 150 feet, bound
ad-Jtortk-Ay-Hampton street. Bast by
property of Partin, South by property
now or formerly of Toam. and West
by Campbell street. Levied upon and
to be sold as the property of HannI
bal Stover for unpaid City taxes for
..thf^pani I9i2 and 1948.
Also
All that lot of land in the City of
Camden, County of Kershaw, State of
South Carolina, fronting West 48 feet
on Gordon street, and extending back
to a depth of 811 fe^ bounded North
by property of SHlen Stratford, East
by property of Allen Johnson. South
by property now or formerly of K. S
Villepi^e. and West by Gordon St
Levied upon and to be sold as the
property of Eilaa Frasier Mosqley tor
unpaid City taxes for 1941, 1942 and
1948.
All that lot of land in the City of
Camden. County of Kershaw, State of
Sonth Carolina, fronting Bast on
Broad street 100 feet, and extending
back to a depth of 880 feet, bounded
North by property of Turner, Bast
by Broad street South by property
of Tatee, and' West by property form
erly Team. Levied upon and. to be
•old as the property of Charlotte
Sloan Wlttson for unpaid City taxes
tor 1948.
All that lot of land, in tbe City of
Camden, County of Kershaw, State of
South Carolina, fronting 180 feet East
on Broad street and extending back
to a depth of 880 feet; bounded North
by propw^ formerly of Wlttkowsky,
now of Wlttson, Bast by Broad street
South by property of RhamA and
Weat by propeity formerty of Team.
Levied upon an^ to be sold aa thw
property of Estate of R. L Yates for
unpaid City taxes for 1948.
All that lot of tand. In ^ jCity
Camden, County of Kershaw, State of
Sooth Carolina, fronting 76 feet Sontk
Ni Laurens nttoht and extending hack
to a depth of flt4 feot bounded North
Pr property of Ooaa, Beat by property
back to a depth of 673 feet bounded
North by property formerly 6f Kate
C. Wallace, Bast by property now or
formerly of Etta L Williams, South
by property of Stevenson, and West
by Broiui street. Levied upon and to
be sold aa the property of the Estate
of George H. Wlttkowsky and Cecil
L. Wlttson for unpaid City taxea for
1943.
Babson Park, Mass., July 21.—In
most of its pbasea, American hnaiucss
laa expanded and profited during
the war. Many plants have been
greatly enlarged
while much cor
porate debt baa
been eliminated.
Labor has profited
from increased
wages. * This in
turn has helped re
tail merchants.
Mosl^ indlviduali
also win come
through the war
in fair financial
ihape.
In the immediate postaar era,
business has even greater poasibili-
ties. 'There should be a tremendous
demand for goods and services here
tofore unavailable. With Individuals
holding the largest amount of savings
in the history of the country, there
sboud be plenty of customers. How
ever, business must produce the good;^
and create employment opportunities.
This can be done but necessitates
planning now with the hearty co-
operatleu of employers, labor leaders
and government.
Manufacturers must decide what
new products they must make to take
the place of their present war output.
Most ol them should arrange for the
sale or Junking of obsolete equipment
and the purchase of new machinery.
'They should get rid of surplus Inven
tories no longer needed. They should
now study markets for their new pro
ducts and figure costs and prices. If
different types of workers are to be
employe^y claaaea ^ for their Inatruc-
tioh should now be planned. Tenta
tive production schedules should now
be whipped into shape.
Many uncertainties affecting all
business men await government ac
tion. Such action will include the
okaying of definite plans for re-con
version. postwar taxation and whether
or not controls will continue in effect
after the war on materials, prices
and labor. Furthermore, only the
government can act on the dtspbaal cT
government-owned plants and surplus
government stocks or goods and com
modities. The Baruch-Hancock re
port empbasixes the necessity for
early-govwnment action on all post
war plans. Wise employers, however,
will not wait for the government to
act
The great single problem tbereaten-
Ing American prosperity Is labor
Manufacturers ate already being oblig
ed to drop many employees. By tbe
end of tbe third quarter we may ex
perience a labor surplus. At the end
of tbe war there may be 10,000,000
are quietly trying to get more pamia-'
Dent poettiona. O^niaed labor Is
exerting great political presswe to
prevent the shattisg down of many
planta regardless of tbe tact that war
requirements may already be filled.
Certainly, there will be Ifttle atrcreft
or ship bonding constmetlon after
tbe war. However, chemicals, bnild-
Ing, antomobiiss and Iron and steel
shonld be active. These Indnstries
will employ many mtUtoim Jiany
other# will be employed in road
building and in the oonstroctton of
'public works. Nevertheless, the mat
ter of postwar employment may prove
a serious matter.
Tbe ramifications of cnrrent busi
ness problems snd those of the im
mediate postwar period are so many
I cannot emphasize too strong^ the
need for efficient research and plan
ning departments. Manatements
should give attention first, to broad
■<x«nfn<»y, in details Of
All that lot of land. In the City of
Camden, County of Kershaw, State of
South Carolina, fronting 60 feet West
on Campbell street and extending
Aaclr to a depth of 150 test, twnndefl
North by property of Priscilla Kelley,
Bast and South by property formerly
of M. A. Team, and West by Campb^
street. Levied upon and to be sold as
the property of Louella Thompson for
unpaid City Uxes for 1942 and 1948.
ALVA J. RUSH.
Chief of Pollcs
TO CHECK
1H rDPtrS
^666
Liquid for Malarial SymptosM.
CAW>i‘
livsYJjtt
J
FANS FOR SALE
★
1 have two lO-inch Fans,
in good condition, for im-
mediAte sale ...
ALSO
' We can build Fan Blades
for an7 sixe motor.
★
MAXIE L BERRY
Construction and
General Repairs
(Located In old Bakory Et^ldlnt)
will nsturally keep a large sUnding
Army and Navy, there may be another
10,000,000 demobilised service men,
making a toUI of 30,000,000.
If business Is unable to maintain
a fairly full rate of employment in
the postwar era, asido from the norm
al floating supply of unemployed
whidi might toUl 8,000,000 or 4.000,-
000, we are apt to faea serious ditfi
cultles. Repairs to war-tom Russia,
England, France, North Africa and
other countries will readily absorb
labor there. If, for example, Russia is
able to have full employment after
the war and the United States is not,
will-OUT wortierS thhtlr? ^tih
a situatioa could be the end of labor
unions and their leaders would be
among the unemployed.
Many individual workers already
see the handwrlttog on the wall and
their companiee’ activities following
the end of the war. From Hie stand
point of business, the political sltna-
tkm is now more hopeful than it has
been for years. The Dewey-^lckw
ticket is a definite ‘‘go ahead’’ signal
win or lose.
If we have sound government poli
cies and a greater degree of co-opera-
tion between government and busi
ness snd more co-operstlon between
poanagement snd Isbor, we should
have some good postwar years. Short
sighted business men and merchants
will continue to fail—«s they always
hav^ failed—regardless of wars and
regardless of perioda of prosperity
and periods of depression. Real
krorkers, whether In the executive,
white collar or union groups, will be
able to take care of themselves.
Most of the American birds known
as hawks do not kill poultry or sroall
birds.
RE'ROOF
Roolffig Is
AvaUable
...Within
Your Means!
Roofing material it now
availai>le, at moderate
prices, for those whom
roola need repairing or
tire rw oofing.
LET U8 ESTIMATE
YOUR ROOFING JOBI
M. E. F^ORTE
88xr •
**Your Homstown Man Has Year
Wstfars At Hsart”
When hetions Speak fjouder
Than Words
Tbs patriae iwsiinfT fn wiatli tetephone asenTiid wonea
have carried on since Pearl Harbor H>esks louder
^rds. When war started tdephone workers were alreadjr
ia the oaidst of the greatest construction program ever
undertaken. As war progressed their job grew more ooia-
plicated. However, every war telephone service demand
was met on or ahead of schedule, though it meant wodcr
ing long extra hours day after day.
While doing this tremendous srar job, tbe urgent tele<
pbooe needs of the puhUc wen not forgotten. There at*
today more than 5(X),(XX) moK telephones in service in dto
Southern Bell territory than in 1940, and service is being
nosintsined in spite of the fact that nearly one-tbird od
<wr male emjgloyees are in tbe armed forces. Telephone
operators are now~'completing more than 450,000 mote
calls each month than in tbe summer jazonths of 1940i,
Accepting their responsibilities ss citizens, telephosie
folks have purchased millions of dollars of War Bonds
and are continuing to invest more than ten per cent ol
their regular wages every month in bonds. You will find
them doing Red Cross work—nurse*! aid work—donating
their blood—in fact you’ll find telephone folks in nearly
every civic movement designed to aid in our war efiort
and the betterment of tbe communities in which they live.
Telephone workers have •ooq>ted their wartime re
sponsibilities, appreciating the vital part they bare in tbs
successful prosecution of the war "- shouldering tiieir tasks
cheerfully and unselfishly as the men in arms
timr guns.
E. H. Wassok, OmroHmm Mma§mr.
SmtAem Beii TeUphont amd T^ltgrapA
INCOK FOBAtID
111.11.^
Tocfay'i latm nmw§ tr^m
CAROLINA MOTOR CO.
Wd'vb 19 on llte iwwB—ting
and tiro quotas and ration nilingg.
Aik hore udien lomo tiro quottion
oomoo up. Soo ui Togukolr. Biglit
now, 3 Ipddng lor quedity in
oynthotic nibbor tireOf oomo to TSffi;
BEADQUAHTEBS.
BgST-TiaS-lUADS
'1
'll
rnliara! NOW! tlwtop-
loMm-daap ip synflwticB!
Tim body ol thk tim boa
ftm mono low-airsidb Su-
pwlwial cord emd
corbon stnnl buad wir«
nwd bi Goodyaoi's prs-
warDsLumTIm.
Yon got in thi» tiro o
daftiilB PtOS in parionn-
cmcaw moosnmd bi ndlni
or months or doBom, Ebdra
MTvico and osira vaba,
duo to qzodol dwi^ (md
spoded tbro-buildfaig mtdh
oda dpvoloped by Good<
yoor Bosoareh owtr It
yoon of tbo
Soo US today! IWs&
tfano to buy BEST,
fMit dMw Ibis lim
Ir im la tto ftoMI
Plus Tax
Sizs 8.00-lf
m«/
Go«oiir'>»iciiptioii*'bo-
buo it’s loo lot# lo saws dm
potiont! Hot# ns chock
tko obargOt cloon and
groaso eobloi and tor-
tninals, add wotor if
naodsd. AR at no ood to
TOO.... Wo'm boro to
YOU got tim kmt osnrico
oud Ibo moot sonrico
^tttry, yroV ft yaw
and yow pocMiook
u tmetory^frmh, MX*
WQormr vsoooyocv
Emy cno boB a
ksag-mSoogo
1*8 got to bo
bo a GOODTBMU
NwfC«M|^{X«IMTTEIMKS...rtM,<k«.9*-<S 4
★
AH OFFICIAL Till INSPICTIOH STATI.OS
CAROLINA MOTOR CO.
V
PHONE 210
TWE III WAlT«HD(a»Bii*TPbsStoraod*oSaiW.*
* C^, Humotk, "BOOK, 1 LABMg FQUOA'
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