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SOCIETY NEWS Club Meetings:. "^b Met With Mr*. Banders I'ne Lugoft iionit? Demous'iiatiuu held its monthly meeting at the me yf Mrs. J. W. A. Sanders, The #ting was ca'^ order by the fiident, Mrs. J. Team Qettys. All Lgted the Lord's prayer in unision. L secretary, Mrs. Kate Gettys callthe roll and read the minutes of t last meeting. All business was Itussed and upproved. The hostess rved delnious sandwiches and tea. |e meeting adjourned to meet the fund Tuesday in Septemlber at the ne of Mrs. A. E. Miller. Miss Uuddin Entertains P,i Wednesday evening Miss Olivia <j<lin entertained with a raas>r?de party at her home on Ches; Street. The costumes were quite final and added much to the Ocj0n. Dancing was enjoyed throughthe evening. Those present lnded, besides the hostess, Misses, ry Jane Mackey, Catherine Little 1 Marie Haile, Dan Lang, Jodie -if, Sam MoCaskill, Jimmie Deiche, Jack Boyd, Elliott Sheorn, i Jenkins, Allan Hardy, and Roy sorn. . . '' Camden Lady Complimented Irs. B. C. Brasington entertained two charming parties, Tuesday rning and Friday morning comnenting her sister, Mrs. S. W. ilandingham, of Camden, S. C. fen glow ahd marigolds were atlively arranged in the rooms. At conclusion of the game Mrs. WalWallace, winner of high score, i given a piefce of china. Low re was won by Mrs. Vanlapdinga and she was also given a gift. e: cards a salad course was red. !' .< - Igain on Friday morning there re seven tables of players presL Miss Cornelia Mayer was winof high score, and given a tea I and low score fell to ^Mrs. Oscar nmer. a handkerchief. At the con>ion a salad course was served.? vberry Observer. Married In Bishopville * omingas a surprise to their many ihds war the marriage' of Miss p Workman, daughter r&f Mr. |Mrs. E. M. Workman, of the ion section to Mr. Sidney rton Zemp, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robin Zemp, of Camden. ! The Iriage took place Sunday after in the Bishopville Methodist Bch and Rev. John H. Graves, a (T pastor of this city officiated. V Wenty-five friends and relabwowpanied the. wedding party Bluhopville. The young couple 'on trip to the mountains of VA Carolina. I Humble Negr9 Was Hero ?ter, Aug. 20.?A South t C*HK f^ro proved himself a.hero last nesday night at Fulleft it was Bed in railway circle^At Past Birmi ngham-Washington ves e of the Seaiboard Air I <as it roared north, at Ll^e river Pe- Engineer John Yates saw1 at P* of the Negro, who was in the torrential rain, waving the 11Jdth great vigor, juat above I<it~ f iver bridge, which war being f y demolished by the apewiily If Water3- There war a baity trence of the locomotive crew. Prst it was decided t# disregard of the Negro, wbose aci^ew more vigorous as the magr"t tram drew nearer and nearer P? scene of disaster. But to be po. the long train was brought to |k fllstop- Aa tl?e big engine drew P fl,l just in front of the bridge ?jed TBe brave deed of the |? no doubt saved the lives of Ift b. ~ 1' - r Babies must <be protected from flies. Besides their torment and torture, fliei transmit over thirty different diseases. Any one of whiclv may Sro*e fatal. , Every fly you see must I e-killed. I&SUT upon and get the scientific product developed at Mellon Institute of Industrial Research by Rea Research Fellowship. It is fragrant and harmless to mankind but sure death to all household insects. Just follow instructions on blue label 0/o?n^^ PLY-TOX ftom tviDSON lNSUl^NCE I I AGENCY I I Annie S. Davideon I Insurance All Fpttn* * I i I Crocker Building Phoneut V 190 ^ ^ No. 515 j rc,NMiflAL NEWS NOTES Mia** Meme Turner is visiting in Tim moils vi 11*. Miss Sarufh DvPass is on u visit to friends in Clinton. Miss Bailie Alexander left lust week for Charleston to visit. Mrs. CarVie M. Davis was the guest Sunday of her sister. M r*. J. B. Kelly in Bishopville. Thorn well Hay is visiting tins week in Columbia as the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hay Gantt. Rev. W. H. Stevenson, of White Oak, was the guest Sunday of Dr. and Mrs. K. E. Stevenson. Mrs. W. F. Tisdale, of Limoua, 1' la., visiting her sister, Mrs. Carrie M. Davis on Mill street. Mrs. R. E. Stevenson and children left Wednesday for u visit to the former's mother in Gastonia. Miss Anna Kate Alford has gone to Augusta to spend her vucation with her aunt, Miss Fannie Alford. -Mr. and Mrs. Hollis Colbb and daughter, of Paw Creek, N. C. spent last week end here with relatives. Mrs. Hubert O. Wilson, who has been spending several weeks in Union with relatives has returned to Camden. Miss Elizalbeth Clarke, of Darlington, is visiting her mother, Mrs. Virginia Clarke, at her home on Fair Street. Misses Etta Nabors and Ruth Naibora, of Clinton, are guests this week at the home of their aunt, Mrs. G. F. Cooley. Mrs. J. B. Gaskins, Mrs. B. W. Marshall and children, and Mr. J. M. Moseley are spending the week at Myrtle Beach. Mr. Taylor Mobley, of Kershaw is a guest at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Mobley, on Hampton street. Mr. and Mrs. Douglas A. Boykin and Mrs. B. H. Boykin left Wednesday for Fairmont, Ga- to spend ten days with relatives. Mr. M. H. Heyman and daughter, Miss Carolyn Heyrman, have gone to New York and Atlantic City for a stay of several weeks. Mr. and Mrs. John Villepigue left the early, part of the week for a visit of several weeks in the mountains of North Carolina. , Mrs. Sam Welborn, left Wednesday afternoon for her home in New Orleans, after a^month's visit to her mother, Mrs. V. W. Clarke. Mrs.^jJaelfc Yfhitaker and daughter Atme, -have returned from Newberry, where thev were guests of Mr. and Kirkland. Miss Gertrude Zemp and Jack Nettles have just returned from Greenville where they were the guests of Miss Gene Gunter of that city. ' ' 4 V Mr. Willie R. L. Drakeford has re-" turned to Wpat Palm Beach, Fla.? ufter visiting,mother, Mrs. Ida Drakeford, 6n North Broad street. Mrs. E. J. McLeod, and daughter Frances McLeod have returned home after a visit to' the former's sister, Mrs. William Rogers in Hickory, V*. Mrs. Ralph Brown, of Barnwell andj Miss Eunice Keel, of Allendale- are guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Kennedy -at Bettyneck Plantation. ' * . Miss Catherine Little, Mary Jane Mackey, Marie Haile and Olivia Boddin, chaperoned by Miss Lee , Per returned home after a week . delightfully 'spent camping at White's Pond. Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Alexander bad ^ ir guem Wt week *.wnd M&M A. Johnson, of Greenville; Mr. W/ it Alexander, Mr. and Mrs. Mack A. Rosich and little daughter Katherihe Mae, of Charlotte. Mr. S/'W. Van Landlftjgham and Mr. and Mr*. E. J. Lewis spent Sunday in Newberry. They were accompanied home by Mrs. Van Landingham and children, who had been visiting in Newberry at the hotaie of Mr. and Mrs. B. C. Brasington. By the cheerful cooperation of the city council and the board of health there, Anderson has attained the distinction of being unsurpassed in the state in the albsenee of contagious diseases and few in America equal it Art- that respects-iFor- the last year, contagious diseases were practically unknown there. * . * . ? - -Mrs; Eferebeth D< Kilgo,-who died in a Charlotte hospital Monday, was the wiis of a minister of Lancaster, S. C., and the sister-in-law of the late Bishop Kilgo. (She was 67 years old and had a host of friends. She loaves her husband, two sons, three daughters, a brother and two sisters. -I'l* JL .-J ' NEGRO DAMAGES CHURCH luiiuuc M*u? Breaks Many Wlndoa# and Turns Over Benchei .Spring Hill, Aug. 20.?The family of Mr. and Mm. J. R. Kirkley was disturbed about 11 o'clock Monday uight by loud noises and crashing of glass in St. J vim's Methodist church about 300 yards distant. Upon investigating, J. H. Kirkley and tho Rev. W. L. Parker, pastor of the church found that some one was in tiie church breaking the windows. Rural Policeman and R. D. Hancock were summoned and a seurdh was made, whereupon an insane negro, Frank Carter, was discovered in the cemetery behind the church preaching. The man told his natru* and said that he lived in Kershaw county near Swift Creek on Mrs. Zeigler's place. On examination it was found that all the windows on the west side of the church had been knocked out, several transoms over doors in the Sunday school rooms were shattered and several benches turned over. When Policeman Huncock questioned the negro as to why he had done this he calmly replied, "The Lord told me to do it. He's right here by my side." The negro then began preaching* praying and shouting and even lay on the ground pretending to swim and said he was "swimming in the Rrver Jordan." He soon got quiet, proved to be perfectly harmless and Mr. Hancock arrested him, took him to BiahopviUo and put him in the county jail. The damage to the church is estimated at $100. PUTS ON TIRE SALE Unusual Opportunity To Purchase Firestone Products The announcement by J. C. .Gillis* well-known local Firestone Tire Dealer, of a great "Lafbor Day" sale will pjrove of more tnap ordinary interest to the many motorists in this city and vicinity who are planning a trip over the annual three-day holiday. / "Prices lower than ever before known," rends the advertisements, and such a statement has especial significance in view of this local dealer's enviafble, long-established^ reputation for conservative manage-*" ment and dependable merchandise. According to the announcement/ the eutire fresh, new stock of tne famous Firestone Gum-Dipped Tires," as well as the standard Oldfteld,} Courier "and Airway casings, wiH<b<?on sale up until the close of.,.to* Labor-Day week-end. x""" .. YThis year's blistering summer, r is also pointed out, has been especial-i ly hard on tires and now wiU be a splendid time not only to insure a holiday x uninterrupted by outworn .casings, but to save money on tires for use the entire year 'round. This newspaper is heartily in ac} cord with the "Buy at Hoifte" movement which is growing in popularity here. It is recognized that the city's welfare is coincident with the progress of the local business men. Undoubtedly the growing patronage of this Fireaftone Dealer is due So increasing appreciation of the advantage of dealing with a firm fully acquainted with local requiremefljAwnd usages. fls TVlg'li announced that despite the amazingly low prices in effect on the Firestone, Oldfield and Courier Tir^s, the famous Firestone unlimited guarantee against defects for the entire life of the tire, will be given oh HSKp)rands, in all sizes and types. . Boy Has'Narrow Escape ** Master W. W. Horton, little son 0* ?Mrf,,:Eva Horton, who is atooht eight ^fohrs old, was sitting astride the | balustrade surrounding the porch of the second story of their-'home last wsole, when he in some way lost his balAnce and fell to the ground below. He - was picked up unconscious a Ad remained in that state for some tirof? but returned to consciousness and ft was found upon examination that he had sustained no serious injury beyond, a terrific jar and severe bruises. His..escape from more serious injury, or death perhaps, Was due no. doubt to the fact that, as he explained to his mother afterward, as he wgs falling he caught hold of the eaves of the porch extension and, while unable to hold tight enough to i prevent falling, the force of the fall was broken thereby and he probalbly hit on* his feet when he struck below. The little fellow is doing very well -fottowing- his-very narrow escape.-^Kershaw Era. About 1,600 rtegro veterans of the World war will gather at Spartanburg on Thursday at the reunion of the 371st regiment, coming from the Carolina*, Georgia, Florida and-Virginia where the regiment was raised chiefly. They will have speeches, a baseball gams, a dance and a war picture. * One negro of a construction gang working on a\highway near Anderson crushed the head of another negro workman with a shovel in a quarrel, driving pieces of bone down into tne brain thus splitting the skull jfar down one ilde. The kille* ia in JhiL I III II ||L|? II? ~~ I n _ _ 1 'Business Houses Close During PearceFuneral Funeral service# fur the late Wil| ham Henry Pearce, who died Thursday afternoon of last week at o'clock, were held fioni the Presbyterian church Fiiday afternoon at four o'clock, in the absence of the pastor, Kev. A. 1). McArn, who is away on his vacation in Tennessee, tne Kev. Jesse C.'. Rowan, former pastor of this church, came down from Concord, N. C., to officiate. Kev. Mo I Arn could not reach here in time on I account of crippled railway service. A large crowd of relatives and I friends from this section and other parts of tiie slate tilled the church. A choir composed of Messrs. W. Go i Wilson, Clifton McKam, R. C?" Zemp" I and Mesdantes. U. C. Welsh, J. B. I Zemp, and K. C. Zemp furnished the I music at the church ami at the grave. The business houses of Canuien" closed during the funeral hour and the members of City Council attended in a body. Twelve Knights Templars in uniform acted as a funeral escort and the j>allbearers wore: W. A. Boykin, H. D. Miles, Herman Baruch, Ben. P. Uelxrache, Ralph N. Shannon and T. V. Walsh, Jr. A great mass of beautiful flowers, sent Dy friends near and far, were carried to the cemetery on a tire department truck, to be placed on his grave. William Henry Rearce Henry Pearce wouldn't want a fulsome eulogy, with the usual banalities written aibout him at his passing. He wasn't that sort of a man. Ho had his faults, and what man, worthy of the appellation has not? But it can be truly said that his faults were all on the surfaee, while many of his virtues were hidden underneath. We want to speak of him as we saw him and as we knew him. In disposition he was retiring and modest to a fault. He was the soul of honor. No higher compliment could be paid 'his intfgrity than the fact that in all these years no whisper was ever heard affecting his character. Strictly just and impartial, he counseled well before coming to a decision, but after the decision was made he stood firm thereon, oftert even to the point of sternness. To his friends he was most, strongly attached, and he bound bhem to him with hoops of steeL His home Ufe was beautiful, in the love and tender kindness showered upon his wife. Without children to divide his affection, it was centered upon her. By his neighbors and those with whom he came in daily contact he was held in the highest esteem. Kind in his deportment and generous in his dealings he held their esteem and regard always. To his equals he was pleasant and dbliging, and no person, "white or black, or however lowly, but to whom he was gracious and kind. ^ . Public spirited he was, giving unjffintingly of his fctane, his talents and 41 his means to any project calculated to be for the piiblic good. His year? of service in the city Council was marked by has zeal for the promotior of Camden and the interests of it* citizens. In the affairs of the County, his counsel was often sought, and always, his quiet spoken advice re flqcted a livejy and intelligent interest in the welfare of its people. He was punctual in the discharge of all of his Church duties, and while he took no part in doctrinal discussions he was the sort of man who tc our mind inculcates the highest principles of philosophy and religion. A useful life has ended. Cut down in the glory of his manhood and in the midst of his service, he sleeps 'neath Kershaw's sod,?and manj there are who mourn the death ol him "Who lived in the house by th< side of the road and was a friend t( man." ... . 1 Doctor Lured ,To His Death ' <m Pittsburgh, Aug. 21.?Lured from hia office in Carrick, a suburb, last night, ostensibly to minister to a sick woman, Dr. Harry R. Dapper, 30, prominent physician, was shot to death, according to the physician's father, by a man who escaped in the doctor's car. Henry J. Dapper, BB, the father, who accompanied his son and the unidentified stranger on the trip, was slugged across the head with a blackjack. He is in a hospital, where his son died early today from a gunshot wound. Police were mystified by the killing because of the fact that the young physician has no known enemies they - were at a loss to ascribe a motive.? For their present, he works? for their future, he saves! ?and like many another young family man, his account is with The Bank of Camden Resources More Than a Million Millie Ljrv !??? " ' " " ON OCTOBER 1,1928 I* '*_ THE CAHDEN BUILDING AND LOAN ASSOCIATION |f". ' WILL RETIRE I SERIES No. 3 ? | JZIZZ^IZ, \ SERIES No. 5 " > * ? II Books will be opened September 1st for I subscriptions to this new stock I Offices at Loan and Savings Bank *' . ^