The Wateree messenger. (Camden, S.C.) 1884-1942, May 21, 1929, Image 3
NOTICE
To Dog Owners
Notice is hereby given to all dog owners of
the city of Camden that a state veterinarian will
be in Camden Tuesday and Wednesday, May 21
and May 22, for the purpose of inoculating all
dogs in this city against labies.
Owners of dogs are requested to have their
animals at the office of the city prison where
the state's representative will administer the in
oculations on the above dates.
H. D. HILTON, Chief of Police.
Camden, S. C., May 8, 1929.
Vacation Time
TRY TliE COOL PLACES
In The
SOUTHERN APPALACHIAN MOUNTAINS
Of
WESTERN NORTH CAROLINA
EASTERN TENNESSEE
Or
NORTH GEORGIA
"The Land of the Sky"
Jersey Seashore Resorts
Old Point Comfort
(Including New Chamberlin-Vanderbilt Hotel)
Virginia Beach
(Including New Hotel Cavalier)
Beaches at Ocean View (Norfolk)
Charleston, Savannah, Brunswick,
(Sea Island Beaches on Saint Simons Island)
and Jacksonville
Mountain and Lake Region of New England
Resorts on the Great Lakes
The Black Hills of South Dakota
Michigan, Wisconsin and
Minnesota Lake Resorts
Pacific Northwest Colorado
California Resorts National Parks
Lake Region of Canada Canadian Northwest
REDUCED FARES
To All Summer Tourist Resorts
Tickets on Sale Daily
Beginning May 15tih, Good Until October 31st
Write for List of Summer Resort Hotels and
Hoarding Houses; also Hoys' ('amps and
Girls' ("amps
Consult Ticket Agents
SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYSTEM
WORK!
A mighty Rood prescription for tho
troubles of the times ? ronl or imag
inary ? is that given in tho "Silent
I'artner," and condensed in one word
-??''WORK." It gets right down to
business, in this fashion:
"If you are poor ? WORK.
"If you are rich ? continue to
WORK.
"If you are burdened with seeming
ly unfair responsibilities--- WORK. I
"If you are happy ? keep right 0 r
WORKin*.
"If disappoint mont comes WORK.
"If sorrow overwhelms you and
loved ones seem not true- WORK.
''Who nfaith falters and reason
"W hen faith falters and reason
"When dreams are shattered and
hope seems dead ? WORK.
"No matter what ails you? WORK.
"WORK is the greatest materinl
remedy available.
"WORK will euro both mental and
physical afflictions.' '
i
Advortiso with ur.
HONOR ROLL
Scholarship Honor Roll For 5th Six
Weeks, Camden City Schools
Grade 1 (Mills)? Betty Boineau,
i Minnie Belle Cunningham, Annie Mae
Godwin, Marjorie Hatfield, Martha
Smith, Betty Sowell, Ann Whitaker,
Eugene Campbell, Jerry Hancock,
Jimmy Little, Bill Pitts, Benton She
orn, Follin Watts.
Grade 1. (Zemp) ? Margaret Fischel,
Phyllis Karesh, Jack Marchall, Her
bert Moore, Robin Zemp.
Grade 1 ( Latham)? Willam Brown,
! Hugh Cox, Jack Ellis, Albert Shirley.
| Grade 2 (Midyear) ? Frances D.
Baruch, Margie Creed, Marjorie Rush,
Margaret Sinclair, Dorothy Smith,
Arthur Brown, George Partin.
I Grade 2A ? Harriet Foster, Helen
Goodale, -lane Halsall, Dally Jackson,
Ruby Jackson, Neta Kirkland, Elsie
Redfearn, Lois Rhame, Sarah Sheorn,
Kathleen Smith, Lottie Smyrl, Mag
?ri?> Trantham, Betty Whitaker, Mae
Whitaker, Mary Zemp, Grace Rhoden.
William Christmas, Ernest Frietag,
Massenburg Trotter, Harry Lee Wat
ers, Billy Wilson.
Grade 2B? Elah Evans, Caroline
Wrldon. Evelyn Trimnal, Rubina Hat
field, Inez Brickie. Olive McQuirt.
Grade 3 A ? Sophie Creed, Dorothy
Durfco, Betty Holland, Louise Mick
lr?, Dorothy Moore, Margaret Osborne,
Wilhelmina Strak, Paulette West,
Wvlie Hogue, Daniel McCaskill, Hal
Norman, Jack Richards, Payton Shir
ley, Furman Stewart, Jack Villepiguo,
Douglas Wooten.
Grade 3B? Alva Lee, Katheirne
Mv rs. Bobby Bell, James Graham,
H. T. Lovette, Jr., Ablertus Rush,
Mendel Truesdale.
Grade 3 (Midterm) ? Leroy Bran
ham, Talmadge Dabney, Guy Mayer,
Gilbert Shirley, George Wilson, Rhet
ta McLeod, Ada Truesdale, Ruby Ver
ren. Margaret West.
Grade -1A ? Minnie Sue Bruce, Vir
ginia Davis, Lillie Mae Smith, Willi
Mr.? Smith. Jean VanLandingham,
Naomi Walker"! Nancy Watts, Fran
c's Chapman, William DoLoache, Rob
ert Mayre, Basil Munn, Lyles Munn,
Icaac Pitts.
Grade -IB ? Mary Willie Watkins,
James McKenzie, Emerson Branham,
Frank Oliver.
Grade 5A? Jack Halsall, McKain
Richards, Robert Shaw, Marion Smith
Elizabeth Goodale, Fannie Mickle.
Emily Shannon, Emily Sheorn, Lena
Stevenson, Helen Tindal, Barbara
Zemp.
Grade 5B ? None.
Grade EC ? None.
Grade 6A? Estell; Myers, Flor
ence Sawyer, Dorothy VanLanding
ham, Ruby Gardner, "Frances McLeod,
James Chapman.
Grade 6B ? None.
Grade GC ? Liza Tackson.
Grade 7A ? Golda Shirley, Cecil
McCaskill, Luther Shaw, William
Thompson. Hamilton Osborne.
Grade 7B? Troy Godwin.
Grade 7C ? None.
Hitfh School
Grade 8A? Virginia Drawdy.
Grade 8 B? Reuben Pitts, Margaret
Barnes, Grace Love.
Grade 8C ? None.
Grade 8D ? None.
Grade OA ? Grace Robinson, Har
riet Lorick, Margaret Goodale.
Grade OBf? Grayson .Shaw, Solomon
Minis, Donald BarnQs.
Grade 1 OA? Willie Haile, Emily,
Pitts. Lenora Rhame, Elizabeth Zemp.
Grade 10B ? John Bolin Clayton,
Mattie Shaw.
Grade 11 A ? Arthur Davis, Robert
Kennedy, Duncan Lang, I^?roy Mason,
Althea Sanders, Grace Sawyer, Mc
Lean King.
Grade 1 IB? Caroline Richardson,
Helen Baker, Betty Cureton, Ine*
Gardner, Lucy Kirkland.
WEEK-RNI) EXCURSIONS
SAVANNAH ANI) TYBEE
Proportionate to Tybee from
intermediate points.
Tickets sold for nil trains
Fridays nn<l Saturdays lim
itod midnight Tuesday fol
lowing date of sale.
For further information,
consult ticket nprcnt or C.
W. Small, I). P .A., Colum
bia, S .C. Phones 3821 and
9987.
Sav'h. Tybee
Camden
Chornw
Columbia
Denmark
Estill
$7.r>r? $ 8.30
io.or>
0.10 0.85
3.96 4.70
2.95
2.80 3.55
9.45
5.55
Fairfax
McRee
North
SEABOARD Allt LINE RY.
Wonderful Baked Goods
We have been told our baked goods
are wonderful by so many different
customers thaVwe are telling you the
same thing. We do our utmost to
make them very good ? Phone 429.
Electrik Maid Bake Shop
DeKalb Street Camden, S. C.
To New York Without Change of
Coaches
Announcement is made through the
office of H. E. Pleasants, assistant
general passenger agent of the Sea
board, Savannah, that Seaboard New
York-Florida Limited, train No. 102.
bandies thru coach equipment to New
York City, without change. Passen
gers can now use that train, arriv
ing in New York the following morn
ing without change of coaches. The
railroad believes this feature should
prove very attractive for passengers
desiring, to make the trip to Bait i
mon$t Philadelphia and New York
vithout using Pullman, inasmuch as
it eliminates the necessity of chang
ing coaches at Washington.
The Seaboard also calls the public's
attention to the fact that they can
also go from Savannah thru to West
Palm Beach and Miami without
changing coaches by using Seaboard
'New York-Florida Limited, train No.
191, arriving West Palm Beach (1:20
a. m., and Miami 8:45 a. m., the fol
lowing morning without change.
This arrangement cstiblishes thru
coach service from Miami to Niw
York City without change, and vice
versa.
In line with the activity of the
Ford Motor Company to stimulate in
terest in aviation, the Rapids Motor
Company, Ford dealers of Dell Rap
ids, South Dakota, own and operate
a government licensed airplane land
ing field, equipped with the latest
power night-landing lights.
I
F. H. Merritt, photographer of San 1
Pedro, Calif., has made several trips i
by automobile from his home to Bos
ton, Mass. This year he drove a '
Model A Ford Tudor Sedan and the j
entire round trip cost him $12R. He
traveled 9,101 miles arvl his only j
trouble was one punctured tire. His
daily average was 325 miles. i
Total fuel consumption of the
Rouge Plant of the Ford Motor
Company during the past yoar was
12,700 carloads, enough to make a
coal train 100 miles long.
W. G. Bailey of Wauchula, Fla.,
drove his Model A Ford business
coupe on a 4,000 mile trip carrying
two passengers and heavy baggage,
and the cost of oil and gasoline was
only $40, a rate of one cent per mile.
PONTIAC STATION AIDED BY
BAKUCII
Ton Thousand Dollars For Dairy
Building.
I Bernard Baruch has given $10,000
for the erection of dairy buildings at
Pcntiae experiment station, it was
announced in Columbia yesterday by
the agriculture committee of the
Clemson trustees, which was in ses
; sion during the morning, the meeting
including a visit to the Sandhill pro
ject. This is Mr. Barueh's second
handsome gift for extension wor, he
having given S2.",000 some time ago
; for the poultry plant at Clemson. ^
' Since there was no state appropria
tion available for the building of dairy
buildings at Pontiac, Mr. Baruch gen
erously give his check for the needed
amount. The Pontiac station is co
operative between the state and fed
eral governments.
' Three years ago, when the poultry
interests of the state were in need of
development, Mr. Baruch made his
donation of $25,000 for the plant at
Clemson. The industry has been giv
; en great impetus and as a result over
?$?100,000 worth of poultry has already
been shipped out of the state since
January 1 of this year, besides the
quantity of poultry products con
sumed within the state.
; Mr. Baruch has realized that there
: is great need of further development
of the dairy industry in South Car- |
jolina. And when informed recently by!
i former Governor R. I. Manning that j
I the proposed dairy work at the Sand- |
hill station was at a standstill be- I
[cause of lack of funds for construc- !
; tion of buildings there and matching
| the federal appropriation for the
I state, he came forward and donated '
$10,000 for the purpose.
When Governor Richards learned
'of this gift, he expressed himself as
pleased and grateful that the devel
opment of the dairy project can go
forward uninterrupted until the next
legislature provides funds for the con
tinuance of the important work. ? The
State.
Maybe planes are just as safo as
automobiles, but the auto driver need
watch only in four directions to do.lgo
others.
The lighter is convenient, but it
doesn't seem as worldly and olegant
as the art of striking a match with
tht thumb nail.
Farmers Week, August 5-10.
Clemson College* May 18. ? Fann
ers Week will be held at Clemson
College this year August 5 to 10,
says Dr. W. W. Long, director of
the Extension Service niul chairman
of the Farmers Week committee.
This will be glad news to the scoies
of people who have already inquired
if Clemson will again hold this event
and to hundreds of others interested.
Plans are being made to make this
educational and recreational chautau
qua for farm families ev n better
than those of 1027 and 1028. Nota
bles are being secured for special
addresses, schedules of departmental
discussions ar?d demonstrations are
being framed, and entertainment fea
tures are being planned. The Parris
Island Marine Band, which so great
ly pleased last year, has already been
engaged again.
You get a reputation on th: in
stallment plan, but it isn't yours to
keep up until you're dead.
The most enjoyable place to spend
the summer is just inside you:' in
come.
Even now there are communities
where it is wicked to do anything :>n
Sunday afternoon except lor.g for
Monday.
You can take lessons by nihil to
increase your will power, or yo'.i can
practice getting up at night fir an
other blanket.
higher and higher, if their hnts don't.
America likes to see her heroos g< t
POPULAR EXCURSION
TO
FLORIDA
ANI)
Savannah and Brunswick, Ga., and Havana, Cuba
Via
SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYSTEM
Saturday, May 25th, 1929
FROM
CAMI>EN, S. C.
Chester, S. C. . .
Columbia, S. O. .
Lancaster, S. (*.
5.00
5.75
5.00 1
5.50
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X
7.50 1
9.30 j
7.00;
9.50!
10.50
12.30'
10.001
12.50 1
ll.OOl 12.00T 13.251 1H.50| 19.50] 20.00| 20.50 1 1KXK)| 27.75! 45.25
12. HO) 13.R0| 15.05 1 20.30| 21.30] 21. R0! |2I2.30| 19,S0j 29.05] 47.05
10.50] 1 1 .50 1 12.75] 18.00] 19.00] 19.50] 20.00| . 17/>0 1 27.25| 44.75
1 3.00 j 14.00] 15.25 1 20.50| 21.50| 22.00) 22v50| 20.001 29.75 ] 47.25
For schedules, reservations nnd ojhor information sco Ticket Affonts.