The Wateree messenger. (Camden, S.C.) 1884-1942, July 02, 1929, Image 3
Yearly Scholarship Honor Roll
(Average above 90 on all subjects.)
Grade 1 (Mills) ? Betty Boineau,
Minnie Belle Cunningham, Annie Mae
'Godwin, Marjorie Hatfield, Martha
Smith, Betty Sowell, Ann Whitaker,
Lewis Fleniken, Lovick Fleniken, Jer
ry Hancock, Jimmy Little, Bill Pitts,
Benton Sheorn.
Grade 1 (Zemp) ? Phyllis Karesh,
Beatrice Kirkland, Herbert Moore,
Robin Zemp, Frances Deborah Ear
uch, Margie Creed, Theresa Roe. I,
Margaret Sinclair, Arthur Brown,
George Partin, Charles Edward
Trapp, David Wolfe Wallnau, Lonnie
Wilson.
Grade 1C (Latham) ? None.
Grade 2A ? Aileen Belk, Kathryn
Boyd, Harriet Foster, Helen Goodale,
Jane Halsall, Dally Jackson, Con
stance Kinney, Neta Kirkland, Mar
garet Munn, Elsie C. Redfearn, Lois
Rhame, Sarah Sheorn, Lottie Smyrl,
Vishti Thigpen, Maggie Trantham,
Betty Whitaker, Mae Whitaker, Mary
Zemp, William Christmas, Ernest
Frietag.
Grade 2B ? Evelyn Trimnal, Caro
line Weldon, Elah Evans.
Grade 3A ? Sophie Creed, Dorothy
Durfee, Carolyn Hill, Betty Holland,
Louise Mickle, Dorothy Moore, Mar
garet Osbowu', Ben Mildred Sowell, i
Wilhelmina Strak, Pauletto West,
Wylie Hogue, Daniel MrCaskill, Jack
Rhame, Jack Richards, Payton Shir
ley, Furman Stewart, Jack Villepigue
Douglas Wooten.
Grade 3B ? 11. T. Lovette, James
Graham, Mendel Truesdale.
Grade .'J (Midyear) ? Sallie Ellis,
Rhetta McLeod, Ada Truesdale, Mar
garet West, Myrtle Williams, William
Baxley, I>eroy Branham, Malcalm
Christmas, Talmadge Dabney, Guy
Mayer, Gilbert Shirley, (leorgo Wil
MYERS SERVICE STA
TION
Coiner DeKalb & Fair Sts
Winthrop College
SCHOLARSHIP AND EXTKANCE
EXAMINATION
The examination for the award of
vacant Scholarships in Winthrop Col
lege. and for admission of new stud
ent will be held at every county Court
house in the State on Friday, July
5, and Saturday, July 6 at 9 a. m.
I This examination will be held Wheth
er there are vacant Scholarships or
not, as vacancies may occur after the
examination. Applicants must not be
Jess than sixteen years of age.
When scholarships are vacant after
July 5, thoy will be awarded to those
making the highest average at this
examination, providing they meet the
conditions governing the award. All
who wish Scholarships should attend
the examinations whether there arc
vacancies reported or not. Appli
cants for Scholarships should write
to president Kinard before the exam
ination for Scholarship blanks.
Scholarships are worth $100 and
free tuition. For further informa
tion and catalogue, also for infor
mation concerning Summer School,
address President J. P. Kinard, Rock
, Hill, South Carolna.
so*.
! Grade 4A ? Francis Chapman, Wil-(
liam I)elx>ache, Basil Munn, Lyles
Munn, Minnie Sue Bruce, Jean Van
Landinghani, Naomi Walker.
1 Grade 4B ? Mary Willie Watkins,
James McKenzl*.
Grade 5A ? Murray Graham, Mar
ion Smith, Robert Shaw, McKain
Richards, Jack Kalsall, Helen Tin
dal, Emily Sheorn, Emily Shannon,
Fannie Mickle, Elizabeth Goodale.
Grade 5B ? None.
Grade 5C ? None.
Grade 6A ? .James Chapman, Ruth
DeLoaehe, Charlotte DuBose, Ruby
Gardner, Estelle Myers, Frances Mc
Leod, Florence Sawyer, Dorothy Van
Landingham.
Grade 6B ? None.
Grade GC ? Liza Jackson.
Grade 7A ? Golda Shirley, Cecil
McCaskill, William Thompson.
Grade 7B ? Troy Godwin.
Grade 7 C ? None.
Grade 8A ? Virginia Drawdy, Nan
cy Brown.
Grade 8B ? Joe Lang, Reuben Pitts,
Grace Love.
Grade 8C ? None.
Grade 8D ? None.
Grade PA ? Margaret Goodale.
Grace Robinson.
Grade 9B ? Donald Barnes, F. Gray
son Shaw, Ruby Burns.
Grade 10A ? Willie Haile, Caroline
Houser, Emily Pitts, Elizabeth Zemp.
Grade 10B ? Evelyn Gettys.
Grade 11 A ? Duncan Lang, Rochelle
Sheorn, Rob Kennedy, Leroy Mason,
Althea Sanders, Grace Sawyer.
Grade lilt ? Caroline Richardson.
NOTICE
Any one wishing curtains stretched
<pply to 904 Campbell Ave Prices
??asonable.
CHRYSLER MOTORS PRODUCT
This ntio t hi ./ nn.ifrn manufacturing plant it JtvoteJ fxclusiirrty to tht
production of I'lunouth motor cart. It it tht largest plant of its kind.
M arking
the First Anniversary
of a ratable SuCCCSS
PL Y MOUTH? One year
old this week? is already a
giant in fact and favor
One year ago, Plymouth was a
brand-new name to the motor
World. In the brief span of twelve
months, Plymouth, now nnr/y
refined and improved , has become
everywhere a c o m m a n (liny
figure in the low-priced field.
Only a year ? and
Plymouth finds itsolf in
thr biggest and most mod
ern plant of its kind in the
world. Only a yesy? and
i$655
| an I upward*
/. o. b. factory
Plymouth production now exceeds
the rate of 1000 cars a day.
Quality ? that's the story of
Plymouth success? quality that re
flocts itself in both appearance and
performance ? quality that says to
the automobile buyer, No longer
does a small investment restrict
you to a car of small dimensions."
See it, drive it? and learn what
Plymouth quality means.
Plymouth J'r icm?Six body
i/ytn, f>ricttt from $655 to
$695. All /trim f. o h. fac
tory. Plymouth titnltrt txttnd
cOHDtnirnt time f>aymtntt.
3 1 2
?m
AM KKICA'S LOWBST-PRICKD KUI.I.-SIZK CAK
CAMDEN MOTOR COMPANY
Camden, S. C.
Dividing
The Cotton Mill Dollar
The following statement for the month of March, 1929, from one of South
Carolina's most substantial wide-print cloth cotton mills, shows the percent
age of expense distributed to various accounts. More than half of the wide
print cloths made in America are produced in South Carolina. A mill of this
type illustrates th? present status of mill operators and operatives, as regards
their shares in each dollar of gross sales.
The amount paid to the operatives absorbs nearly the entire gross profit
after deducting the other necessary expenses of interest, power, depreciation,
cotton, supplies, etc.
This statement is taken from the books of a mill which is
without plant debt. The mill equipment is modern and up
to-date, with upwards of 70,000 spindles and 1.500 looms.
Operatives
Management
Supplies
Sales Cost
Cotton
Taxes
1 n teres t
Plant Maintenance
Power
Miscellaneous :
Telephone, telegrams,
insurance, office sup
plies, auto truck, etc.
Profits
5 51.416.03
3,860.00
14,290.85
5,145.99
149,732.40
4,050.00
2.000.00
8,080.1 3
11,257.69
1,147.41
2,413.03
21.148%
1.5
5.551
2.0
58.105
1.571
.777
3.192
4.375
,446
,939
$257,299.53
100%
Of The Cotton Mill Dollar,
the farmer receives about 58 cents,
the operative receives about 21 cents,
the stockholder receives less than 1 cent.
SB* 3,1* 6* 4# 3# & l? H* |*
AROUND THE WORLD WITH
E. B. JENKINS
Palestine, The Battle Ground of
Nations
All through .the centuries Pales
tine has been the battle ground of
nations. Armies of Egypt, Assyria,
Babylon, Syria, Rome, Greece, Phil -
ista, Canna, Ammon, Moab, Persia,
Moslem, Crusader, and Israel havo
marched across the sacred soil of
Palestine, fought upon its plains, shed
blood upon its mountains. From
early times till the World War, Pal
estine has seen its fair land devas
tated by war, its people captured, car
ried away to strange lands to be
made slaves, its cities destroyed and
the ground on which they stood sow
ed in salt, its women, children slaugh
tered, its fields burned, its cattle
driven away, its wells stopped up, its '
sacred places defiled by the hands of
Persian, Egyptian, Greek, Mohamme
dan, its flocks annihilated, and left
a desert. Truly no other land has
beon ground to pieces under the heavy (
hand of war as Palestine. Where is
the great kingdom of As. yria, Bab- J
ylonin, Persia, Egypt, Greece, nnd (
Rome today? But Palestine each
time arose from its desolation, each (
time renewed its power, each time
grew to greater position. True Pal- ^
estine is a small country: the size
of tho little state of Vermont ? 150
miles long and HO miles wide, con
taining today about 800,000 people.
One might as well try to destroy All
Mighty God as to destroy the land
of Palestine.
Some of the world's greatest mili
tary leaders took part in the cam- (
paigns in Palestine: Joshua, David,
Thutmose III of Egypt, Alexander
the Great, Sennacherib, Titus, Rich
ard the Lion Hearted, General Allenby
and others. Perhaps no city on earth
has been besieged, sacked, and des
troyed as many times as Jerusalem.
The records are that Jerusalem has
been besieged times and its walls
battered down and left to the wild an
imals, bats and owls. Jerusalem saw
the Egyptian army humiliate King
Rehaboam, steal his treasures. It
saw the Assyrian army lay down its
defense and fill up its wells. Long
afterwards it saw .the Syrian army
desecrate its temple. Twice it felt
the ncourge of the Babylonian army.
In our day it aaw the English nrmy
i encamped upon the Mt. of Olives.
Into its gates it saw the victorious
banners of the Allies float as Gen- |
eral Allenby walked in alone on foot
to take charge in the name of the
Allied armies of the world. This cap
ture was far different from any other
capture of Jerusalem for there was
not a gun fired or a shell thrown
upon the city by the invading army.
No doubt that when the Turks saw
the airplanes of the English army
flying over the city they knew it
would be useless to resist, so they
surrendered without a blow in defense.
Perhaps the most romantic cam
paign in Palestine was that of the
Crusaders who came to Palestine in
1099 and were driven out by the
Moslems in 1291. These intrepid
soldiers of Europe filled with holy
zeal, swept into Palestine like a for- |
est fire, and with a power that waj j
irresistible. One of the most ia*n- J
ous of all the battles of the Crusad- |
ers" was out between Tiberias anT
Medjel. For the most part they
were always successful, but in this
case they lost to Saladin, the Turk
leader. On the way over to Tiberias
wo stopped at the Horns of 1 1 a', tin.
the place of the battle. The Horns
of Hattin, are two sumniiis of a long
hill rising some 200 feet abovo the
barren plain below. The hill can be
seen from long distances and easily
from the Sea of Galilee. Here with
in the shadow of the Horns of Hnt
tin, our Ix>rd delivered His sermon
on the Mount. The Crusaders first
captured the city of Jerusalem, and
then set out to capture the surround
ing country. When they came to the
top of the mountain overlooking the
city of Jerusalem, they fell on their
faces and thanked God that H> had
permitted them to see the Holy City.
Then they arose and dashed down the
mountain with swords in hand and
up to the walls of Jerusalem, climbed
its ramparts, killed off tho defenders
and captured the city. From here
they sent out their armies in all di
rections to subdue tho rest of the
country. The Crusader army came
over from Sepphois with a piece of
the "true cross." as they thought and
carried it into battle like unto the
Israelites woro discomforted and de
feated even so were the Crusaders nt
,the Hattle of the Horns of Hattin.
( It was a hot day in July with a ter
rible blast of hot wave from the Kant.
Saladin, the Turk fired the shrubbery
and this proved as much a foe as
the army of the Turks. The knights
were smothered in their armour, they
lost heart, gave way, died, or sur
rendered and were scattered. I saw
the place where the Crusaders were
driren out of Palestine in 1201 out
near Bethlehem by the Moslem
forces. On the Mt. of Olives I saw
the cemetery of the Knglish lads
who were killed in the World War
campaign in Palestine.
Palestine is yet to be the scene
of the world's greatest battle. This
is to take place on the plains of
Meddigo, west of Jordan. I thought
of what Napoleon said when he saw
the plains of Meddigo: "Oh, what a
place for a world's great battle."
This great battle is called the battle
of Armageddon. It is the place of
the battle of the forces of evil under
Satan, and the forces of good under
the Lord Jesus Christ. The Jewish
remnant will be besieged by the Boast
and the False Prophet. The besieg
ers will fall back on Jerusalem when
they see the signs of the Lord's com
ing, and here they will be destroyed.
Read all about this great future bat
tle in Palestine in Revelation 10:17-21.
EXCURSION
TO
Atlantic City, N. J.
AND
Niagia Falls, N. Y.
From To Atlantic City Niagara l-'alls
Camden $2f!.l.r> $.'?ii.O()
Cheraw '"?()
Columbia 27.f?r> :i7.40
Denmark 2'J.20 ;'?!?.()">
McBee 25.00 l.H.r>
Proportionate- fares front other points
Soiling Dates: To Atlantic City and other New Jersey resorts via
Pennsylvania R. R., June IK, .July 2, Hi, !?o, Au^u-I 1!$. 27. Sept. 10,
and via Baltimore &. Ohio R. R , .lune 20, July 10, 21, August 7,
21, Sept. 4, IN. Stop-overs permitted Philadelphia, Wilmington,
rtel., Baltimore, or Washington return trip only within final limit.
Selling Dates: To Niagara Falls via Pennsylvania R. K., June
20. July 10, 24, August 7, 21, Sept. 4, IK, Oct. 2, and via Baltimore
&. Ohio l{. R., June 20, July 4, IK, August l, 1 r, , 2'.>, Sept. 12, 20.
Stop-overs permitted Buffalo, Rochester, (ieneva, Mauch ('hunk,
Harrishurg, Philadelphia, Wilmington, Del., Baltimore and Wash
ington not exceeding 10 days on return trip only within final limit.
All tickets limited 1H clays including date of s?le
For further information consult ticket agent or
C. W. Small, I). P. A., Columbia, S. C.
Phones 3R2I and M87
SEABOARD AIR LINK RAILWAY