The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, August 23, 1929, Image 8
' > ,
Our Business
la to supply you with the medicines and sick room
"requisites your physician orders or you may need. To
do this we are constantly adding new items to our
i stock and can usually supply your wants as promptly t
as your order is received. If you are not already one
of our regular customers, try us and let us try to con
vince you that our service is satisfactory *?=- our merchandise
first quality and our dharges fair. Our pre- '
scription work is done by trained Pharmacists. Ouf
stock of Ohemicals and Pharmaceuticals selected with
care. Our Biologicals properly refrigerated at all
times and we stock--Diptheria
Anti-Toxin
Tetanus Anti-toxin
Scarlet Fever Anti-toxin
Typhoid Anti-toxin
Anti Snake Bite Serum
Influenza or Cold Vaccine
Bulgarian Bacillus. Liquid Acidolphus Bacillus Blocks
and others.
Try us for any Drug Store goods and we will appreciate
yotxr business.
W. Robin Zemp's Drug Store I'
Telephone 30 Delivery I
WOMAN FLYER KILLKI)
liody Found Some Distance From The
Plane With Parachute Unopened.
r-?
Phoenix, Arj/.., AUg. 120.?The body
of M iss Marvel , Crosson, San Diego
flyer reported aliasing last night when
other entrunts of the women's air
derby from Santa Monica, Calif., to
Cleveland, landed here, was found
early today six miles north of Wellton,
Ariz.
The body was found some distance
from her wrecked plane, her parachute
released but unopened. The
searching party which found the body
said it was apparent trouble had developed
and that she had leaped in an
attempt to save her life.
Mi?s Crosson, holder of the woman's
altitude record, 33,996 feet, was
flying from San Bernardino to Phoenix.
Fear for her safety had been
expressed upon her failure to arrive,
and searching parties were sent out
when residents of the Wellton area
reported hearing an airplane plunge
into a heavy cottoirwood growth along
the Gila river.
Miss Crosson, 25 years old, was
one of the most colorful of the women
pilots who took off from Cloverfield
Sunday to compete in the $25,.
000 race. From girlhood she had
been fascinated by aviation. She took
up active flying with her brother, Joe,
in 1923, at San Diego, Calif., with a
plane purchased from surplus army
stocks. In the spring of 1923 she
made her first solo flight, and developing
rapidly as an expert pilot, entered
the commercial field.
-i , ??
Chute Failed To Open.
Cleveland^ Ohio, August 18.?While
his wife and two small children looked
on, Jack Donnega, 40, a 'Cleveland
parachute juiyper. plunged 1,800 feet j
to his death at Perry air field, Perry,;
Ohio, near here today. He made a
parachute leap from an airplane and i
the parachute did not oj?en.
I
VISIT DEMONSTRATIONS
Farmers Urged to Attend Crop Experiments
in Their Vicinity.
Clemson College, Aug. 17.?Farmers
can employ a few days of August
and September in no better way than
in visiting fertilizer and crop experiI
merits and demonstrations which are
j being conducted in their vicinity, says
T. S. Buie, head of the agronomy division.
More benefit will be derive 1
from a personal visit than by reading
about the success of a fellow worker.
"The Agronomy Division of Clemson
College has definitely planned
periments in more than two-thirds of
the counties of the state embracing
rotations, fertilizer analyses, and time
and rate application," continues Dr.
Buie. "Each presents a concrete lesson
in soil fertility and improvement.
"In addition to these experiments
there are in each county of the stat-j
carefully planned demonstrations to
illustrate the value of certain practices
such as side applications of nitrogenous
fertilizer to cotton and
com, thick spacing of cotton, eoilbuildlng
crops, and the like. The purpose
of these is to carry to the individual
farmer information about beneficial
practiced that have been developed
by experimental agencies.
"Each county farm agent is in close
touch with these local experiments
and demonstrations, and will gladly
give information concerning them to
any farmer who exhibits interest in
such work."
Four small children of Mars-hall
French were burned to death in their
home at Concord, N. H., late Saturday
night* The father of the children
was seriously burned in attempting
their rescue.
Mrs. Etta Norris, of Rockingham,
N. C? was instantly killed when a
passing car struck, the car she was
riding in and continued on its way
without stopping. The accident happened
on the Gaffney-Blacksburg
highway.
We Do
JOB PRINTING
Let us furnish you with some of the beautiful
IODINE Letter Heads, advertising
South Carolina's Food Products
in your correspondence.
_ THE - CHRONICLE
SLOPING PAIS FORGIVEN
- \ jhi 1 WW
I'rtMher a?4 Choir Winger Return to
Their Maten and All Are Happy
Harrisburg, Pa., Aug. 14.?forgiven
by their respective mates J.
Weeley Gable, former paator of the
Knhaut Church of God, and Mrs. Maul
Miller, choir singer in the church, who
disappeared July 23, were at their old
homes today.
'i They declined to reveal details of
|heir trip but field they made their
headquarters at St. Petersburg, Fla.
Upon their return to the home of
Mr. Gable's son, Paul, in New Cumberland,
a suburb, the former paator
was reunited with his wife und Mrs.
Miller returned to her Knhaut home
with her husband. .
In a statement given to the newspapers
Gable said 'they had become
conscience-stricken when they reached
Florida and wrote to their respec- |
tive mutes asking forgiveness and
permission to return.
''Mrs. Miller thought of her husband
und her four children, ranging
in age from 3 to 11 years," tjie statement
said. "We knew we had no
right to happiness when we were
causing others to suffer."
. , Held
on Serious Charge.
Columbia, Aug. 17,?Parnell Me<*I
han, member of the house of representatives
from Chesterfield county,
has been arrested under a federal
warrant charging interception of a
number of letters addressed to citizens
of Chestterfield county over a
period of two years, and after a preliminary
hearing before United States
Commissioner R. Beverley Sloan, is at
liberty under bond in the amount of
$1,000, it was learned here Saturday.
Held For Heavy Bond.
Spartanburg, Aug. 17?Mrs. Mat - :
tie Cathcart, young widow held here
in connection with the mysterious
killing of her husband, Heyward j
Cathcart, several weeks ago, was still
in the county jail tonight, following
habeas corpus proceedings before
Judge T. S. Sease at whioh bond was
fixed at $6,000.
Mrs. Cathcart claimed she was
awakened about two o'clock on the
night of the killing by a noise that
sounded like a door slammed and she
found her husband with a 38 calibre
bullet wound in the back.
Advertising Man Dead.
Atlanta, Aug. 19.?St. Klmo Massengale,
56, president of the Massengale
advertising agency, died here today.
His wife is a patient at the hospital
where her husband died. Mr.
Massengale was a leader among the
southern advertising men and was the
first president of the Association of
Advertising Agencies of the south.
He aided in organizing the Ad Clubs
of the World ami at one time served
as vice-president of that body.
Chain Gt|ng Boss Held.
Rock Hill, Aug. 19.?Hazel Mobley,
superintendent of the York county
chain gang was bound over to higher
court under $250 bond following a
preliminary hearing today before
Magistrate Herbert Dunlap, Jr., on a
charge of assault of 11 high and aggravated
nature. The charge was
brought by Pelzer Furr of this city.
Furr alleges that while he was serving
a sentence on the chain gang he
was beaten badly by Mobley. The
alleged whipping grew from the es|
cape of John D. Bradley and Pete
Ransom from the gang several weeks
ago in a truck Furr is. alleged to have
been driving and which ho left shortly
before the men jumped into it and
drove off. Bradley's body wns found
later in the Catawba river. Ransom
I
I i9 still at large. Furr denies that he
'assisted in the escape. Mobley is
, quoted as Saying that he gave Furr
j only several licks -and that there was
nothing brutal about it.
T. C. McGe, prominent Williamsburg
county farmer, died Monday
night at the Kelly Sanatorium ' in
Kingstree from wounds said to nave
been inflicted by his son, Walter,
aged sixteen, with an axe handle.
The altercation in which McCh received
fatal injuries occurred when
the older man attempted to < rrect
his young unmarried daughter
William Melvin Campbell, t \.ntyone
years old son of Mr. and Mrs.
Gary Campbell, of Anderson < unty,
was instantly killed ^Wednesday afternoon
at a lumber camp about five
miles from town. , The your.g man
was working for Mr. Asa Hall who
fs getting out & lot of white ash timber
for the Henna Manufacturing
company of Columbia. A tree was
cut and as it fell bounced on to another
tree, hitting him and killing
him instantly. There were a number
of men present and the boy's own
father witnessed the sad accident.
A party of 1203 MiaSisrippjans have
been touring the New Knghnxl and
Middle Atlantic on a get-acquainted
tcrur.
HONB8T MAN POUND
i " Return*
Fruit J?r of Money Found in
Harrell of Corn. ,
Barnwell, Aug.' 16.?Had Diogenes,
the cynical philosopher of aniRlenf
Greece, lived in the year 1D20 he
would have found at least one honest
man in Barnwell county and he
wouldu't have rweded his lantern tp
aid in the search. $
When the personal property of
the late E. H. McDonald was sold at
public auction last week by the administratrix
of his estate ten bushels
of corn went to Lee Lancaster. The
corn was housed in a barn on the
McDonald farm. A few days later
Mr. Lancaster went to move his corn
to his own barn and waa very much
surprised to find a fruit jar containing
between $000 and $700 in money
hidden in the pile, having been placed
there by Mr. McDonald some time
prior to his death.
Being an honest man after Diogenes'
own heart he immediately reported
the find to a local firm of
lawyers, who agreed that a reward
should be given to Mr. Lancaster, not
only for finding the money but also
for his honesty in reporting the find.
Consequently, he waa given $125 and
j the remaining afriount was turned
over to Mrs. McDonald, the adminI
i?tratrix of the estate, for distribution
among the heirs.
|
Taken To Asylum
Anderson, Aug. 14.?Homer F21Hson,
24, who was placed in a hospital
here Monday after his car ran
wild, striking two cars and injuring
; one person slightly, was taken to the
state hospital for the insane at Co;
lumbia late today after he became
| so violent hospital attendants coul 1
not control him. Doctors said Ellison
had been practically "a raving
maniac" since he was placed in the
hospital. He has taken no food and
lis likely to die, they said. He was
so violent that he had to be strapped
to a stretcher in an ambulance in order
to be removed to the Columbia
institution.
The educational building of the
First Baptist Church, at Fort Worth,
Texas, Frank Norris, pastor, was destroyed
by fire Friday.
- . ? 1
Held For Shooting Uncle
Greenwood, Aug. 17.?Cecil Green,
20, lodged in the county jail this
morning on charge* of shooting his
uncle, A. K. Sears, while Sears and
j. H. Green, the youth's father, were
fighting at the Green home near here
laet night, will be held until the condition
of Sears warrants his release,
officers said tonight.
Reports from the hospital where
Green and Scars were taken after the
fight and shooting were that both had
good chances of .recovery. Gteen is
suffering from several broken ribs and
a deep wound on the left temple alleged
to have been inflicted by Sears
with an automobile fepring. Sears is
suffering from a gunshot wound in
the lege. Officers say that young
Green admitted the shooting declaring
that he fired on Sears after the latter
had "picked a fuse" with his father
and then struck him with the spring.
The robbery of the American First
National bank of Oklahoma City,
when $75,000 was secured in a holdup
on May 24, has been solved by n
confession of one of <the five participants,
who was taken into/custody on
suspicion shortly after the robbery.
| A D**li N. J., inventor LJ I
nounced ?n ?Uotrlc device for kiiijP
moequitoeo by electrocution.
? hhm"MH
- Special ExcursioiB
CHARLESTON, s. C. il
Friday, Augu&t 30tfc,
Following Round Trip
Camden ^ $3.00?
Kershaw ?J;I
Lancaster
Tickets good on all regu*
lar trains date of pale, ex<H
cept Crescent Limited trainaB'
Nos. 37 and 38. U]:
Tickets returning *})
regular trains, exce/pt Cres-M
cent Limited trains Nog. 37H
and :sh, to reach original!
starting point by midnigM
of Tuesday, September 3. I
j ,n For further information!
consult ticket agents . j M
I SOUTHERN RAILWAY I
SPECIAL EXCURSION 1
FLORIDA 1
Savannah and Brunswick, Ga., and Havana, Cuba I
Saturday, August* 24th, 1929 I
Following fares will apply from Camden. S. fl.
Savannah, Ga. .... $5.00
Brunswick 7.50
Jacksonville, Fla. 10.50
St. Augustine 12.00
Daytona 13.25
Ocala 13.25 1
Tampa 18.00
St. Petersburg .... 18.00 |i i
Key West .^.tr:.. 27.75
Havana, Cuba .... 45.25
Proportionate fares from other points and to other I j
destinations in Florida.
For schedules, Pullman reservations and other in- 1 I
formation see Ticket Agents H
Southern Railway System
m$y' 1
7%e V "f 1
Greatest success I
Buick history I
More people have purchased New Buicks during the past It
two weeks than in any similar period of any previous yearj^
The New Buick with Body by Fisher has met
with a veritable landslide of public demand,
many purchased before ever seeing the car
?many thousands of others placed their
orders the first few .days it was on display?
other thousands have been taking demonstrations
and then making Buick their choice.
More Buick owners have entered orders ?
more men and women who owned other cars
have turned to Buick?more people who formerly
paid from $1000 to $2000 higher for
their automobiles have purchased Buicks?than
ever before daring a similar period in Buidt'f K,
twenty-six year history.
The total demand during these two weeks ''
from three to five times as great at that jot
other automobile priced above $1200 . I
Popularity so overwhelming carries
mistakable message to every ^rosPc?!
motor car buyer: See the ne*y Brack?
it?compare it ? and you'll quickly discotjj
that it's the greatest dollar-for-dollar vah*
the entire quality field.
BUICK MOTOR COMPANY, FLINT, MICHIGAN 1C
m NEW LOW F I IC B S " E
11^ Wheelbwe Model* #1225 to #12*5 ' 124'WHedtMee Models #1465 to #1495 < .?
152* Wheettww Model* #1525 to #1?95' . H ^ :
Itet *ikN /. fc ftctofr. Sp?cb< I i^binatw. Bold IiIwkI od**> fcdd; ?*r wwoM? dHt
uttije: motor company |
. _ Camden, South Carolina ||
Wh?? UTWK AOTOMOB1LE3 ARE BUtLlTjMtCK WILL BUILD