The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, November 01, 1929, Image 7
~R.fi. CHEWN1NG I
I
Contractor mmd Cwnnl I
Builder
: ' s? Y^ fcliit |j
Ut me flfUM an your next I
building job.
Floors Sanded on Request I
r- .1 1 1 ' 1 * \ >" ?
' ! . I I 1 I 'f II J "
gus hayes
Plumbing and Heating
Let us figure with you on
your next job. . New work
or repair work.
PIIONE 158
. .
1 1 * " 1 1 11 t
W H5S'"?:x' 5" si
month at 8 p.m. Visiting Brathren
re welcomed. D. J. CRBBD,
* I, H. JON JDS, _ * Councillor.
Recording Secty.
cuTQts Shoe shop
?27 South Broad Street
Let us rebuild your worn down
Shoes. Complete shoe repair equip*
ment.
The. Standard Hydraulic
Preiser Cementing
Machine
No Nails. No Stitches. No' more
tight, stiff Shoes.
Finished with appearance^ of new
, All Work Guaranteed.
H. C. CARTER, Proprietor
????????? ??
money to loan
on
modern-constructed
homes
and
USPSUS?
No Appraisal Charge
address inquiries
I P.O. Bo* 164, Camden, S. C,
III - ?
\ KHR8HAW LODGB N* SO
first Tuesday in each month
t 8 p.m. Visiting Brethren are wel*
omea. T. V. WALSH.
J. E. ROSS, Worshipful Master.
| Secretary. 1-14-27-tf
T. B. BRUCE
Veterinarisua ,
Day Phone 80?Night Phone 114'
CAMPEN. ? C,
?mmmmmmmmmmmmmmrnmammaMmmtjf
. " i 1 ?' j,.n' i
Automobile
Repairing
1... '
We are now prepared
to do all kinds of automobile
repairing. Good
workmanship and moderate
pricee.
DEMPSTER'S
GARAGE
f*a?i> Littte*. 6i?n
[ p
electrol oil
burner - 5 ? *.
. 7_ ess :.r.. ..
sales and service
phone s4s
E. G. BURKE
Plumbing and Heating
repair work at
[ reasonable prices
, Coraer Daiaib ami Pafar itrMt. 1
r . , ttobt.
w.mitch am
.... -uJ.- :;v'
Architect
Crj&ker Building,
v Camden, s. c.
j-J*" , ? , C . ' *
Caddy Breaks Jaw
of Coif Player
,.ivt.Vv . i- 1,1 *
A?h.?m?, N. C., Oet ?4.?Mitch.l
aulUn?l, Tampa, VUh, <W?W in
atocka anil bonda, wan ?uttering UxJay
.FT/>w< b,,n atlacked
with g golf club on the Municipal
Golf course by a negro caddy
who took offense at a complaint
against hU caddyipg.
Th? negro, Erskine Simpson, fled
<*nd todpy wm# being sought- by city
and county officers who held warranta
charging him with assault with
a deadly weapon with intent to kill.
- .-8tailings was playing with his
brother-in-law, Hoed Kitchin, attorney.
He aaid the negro was warned
several times aboitf not watching tnn
ball and when reprimanded again at
the thirteenth hole became offended
and quit. The attack followed. Stalling?
lost a tooth in addition to re,
solving the fracture of the jaw. *
Hold Chesterfield
Banker in Shortage
. Columbia^ Oct. W. D. Campbell,
acting cashier of the Citizens
Bank of Jefferson, in Chesterfield
county, was arrested, and the bank
closed this afternoon, following ~tfie
discovery of a shortage of *50,000
in the books of the acting cashier,
according to announcement here tonight
by y/. C. Calhoun, examiner of
the state bank examiner's office. Mr.
Calhouh stated that he.swore out the
warrant for the 'bank officer's arrest.
The shortage is twice the amount of
the bank's surplus and undivided profits.
J. W. Miller was president of
the bank," ; ^
The deposits in the bank totalled
I *150,000. The capital stock is $25, P00.
The resources $17,000. The
examiner fears that the institution
will not be able to liquidate.
GREAT LAKES DISASTER
Lake Michigan Steamer Went Down
With Crew of Fifty-Four
] Milwaukee, Oct. 25.?A dozen bodries
today marked the resting place
;of a Lake 'Michigan steamer and re'
vealed the fate of her crew of 54.
, Each encased in a life belt, they
floated among wreckage from their
ill-fated, ship, the Grand Trunk car
ferry Milwaukee op the lake, 16 rpi^
Southeast oi Kenosha, Wis.
A half dozeu boats were detailed
to go to the scene and complete the
work of tfalvage today. Searchers
last night recovered seven bodies and
bit* of wreckage whfch told how the
Milwaukee plunged , to the bottom
when she was unable to make port
at her destination, Grand iHlaven,
Mich., in the face of Tuesday night's
storm.
Cr
?<
' VSLrVIr nM t n
P?/ CHILDREN |
l|/ Need a Laxative ?
h"W? have *i*d
t' \ Thedford't JWaokgiven
it
? 11 six of my churn.
"Whenever
?y complain of
npaet stomachy, or
' TSeirfn to loot pale
||* tea of Black-Draught and
I
I it for colds in winter, for/ba- <
| lieve * way to prevent them
liato keep the ayetem clean."* J
| ?Mr*. Doshie Terry* 1206 K
Fourth Avane, Deoatur, Ale. 5
Two Girts Live On
Hot Water and Rice
Due to stomach trouble, Miss A. H.
and sister lived on hot water and
rice. Now they eat anything and feel
line, they eag. sine# liking. Adlerika.
Even the FIRST spoonful of Adlerike
relieves gas 0n-?(# stomach and
removes astonishing amounts ef old
^^^ST5J,S",tno
matter what you have tried for your
stomach and bowels, Adlerika
surprise you. W^JR. Zeaap, Druggist.
PASTOR TAKES POST
ON "LONELIEST ISLE"
'UN' II Ml * ,
Dauntlew Ftdrt Soot lUii
M Wont Ffofelw.
iJkn,thlunPt^ *Oglaad.-Ajl
usnsrosi'wifS
new station is *tbs world * toMlfMlt
MiUd." Tristan 4* Cuuha.
The dauntless padre?a bacbelsi
already hie suffered the perlUi and
hardship* of frontier poet* la dlftant
South African and South American
field*.
With hi* Bible and Mv**t pocket"
organ, a* Inspiration and aid* to bis
tabor*, Mr. Partridge la taking with
, him to Tristan a bug* supply of rat
poiaoo. For rata ate the fieroeot croe
tores in this lonely ocean oaata. i
The traveling preacher *tlH on
the sunny side of middle ego? hae a
vigorous frame and trim figure. It
we* Just recently that be returned
home to London firotn hi* ministry
In Brtsll. But when he heard that
the chaplain at Tristan da Oaaha ?ms
tick and must be relieved ba voluu
teered at one* for th* uninviting task.
Serve# In Afrlea.
After serving during tbe war in the
British Red Gross, Mr. Partridge entered
the Anglican ministry end eooo
responded to the call for foreign
service in the Society for tbe Propagation
6t the Gospel. He went out to
South Africa and In the Johannesburg
mining districts?rough and unruly as
mining countries are?he took Charge
of three churches, one of these for
natives.
MI had to rush about from one
church to another on my motor bike,"
be 5 said, to relating his adventures,
"and- they called me 'the Plying Parson.*
"One day a native. woman came
running to member face streaming
with blood, Stfl^lfcd been attacked by
some superstitious persons, botb
Christian and non-Christian, who
charged that she had burled d charm
-in front of the church and cfibsed
the death of<* native deacon.
"I put on all my canonical vestments
to overawe the crowd, ^ea
I went out and dug up the ground
myself *to show them there waa no
charm there. I had to excommunicate
the church members who had
' attacked the poor woman,*'
' Santos a Hard Field.
After, other libs trials, Mr, Piartridge
was transferred across the At
1 lanttc to Suntoa, the gnat Brazilian
coffee port , The youa* ileigjimii
'.found this City a strenuous field.
:
nationalities v destroyed,the peace ol
- tbe place and Made Mi life one fight
after another. "
But In this new Island station the
? preach' no to strug.
gle with violent men and mm wmpi
en. Tristan's population im not much
more than 100. Its farmers and fidr
ermen are described as moral and re
itgious, Industrious and hospitable t
they have no alcoholic liquors, and
they have no crime among them.
The new chaplain will have charge
of the education of tile children of
- the Island, who are contented pria<Mera
on the little area of 16 square
miles.
Filipino Students Told
toT-eara Trade?lnvU. 3.
Manila.?The Philippine government
will henceforth tell students who are
sent to the United States what courses
to study. An oversppply of physicians
*nd lawyers in the Islands hai
<2 led CQl a shortage of technically .trained
college, graduates..
In view of the big demand for technologists
and experts In the Industrial
arts tfi^TwIU be permitted to study
only fish, meat and vegetable canning
; and other such industries.
Heretofore government students, oi
penslonades, as they are known locally,
were free to choose their careers.
In most Instances they took up law.
medicine, education and similar academic
courses. Upon returning to the
Philippines they found difficulty In obtaining
work, since those professions
were crowded. Many of them returned
to the United States, thus yielding the
Philippine government no return for
the money spent for their education.
South America Buys j German
Made Planet
Berlin.?Germany's aircraft Industry
will bid high and vigorously for a
lion's share of the South American
demand. The move w|U be aimed it
powerful French competitors.
Germans have done mtich pioneer
work In the development of aerial
transportation in various South American
republics.. Ift the first ten
mshtha of 1038, ten German machines
were shipped to Detail, where the
Condor syndicate maintains a regular
service Bros Rio Janeiro to Rio
Grand# do Sul, with planned extension
to Montevideo and Buenoa AlrsJ*
while a German group In Peru hag
secured a concession for establishing
air services with neighboring couA* I
tries.
' In Bolivia tba Aero Lloyd Volivlano,
s German enterprise operating with
* German staff and German machines,
conducts that country's air serviced
to Look
Milwaukee, ??!*.?Kdt In the haunt*
of tba underworld, but In a courtroom,
Milwaukee police started to round nb
persons suspected of being vagraitt
er crooks. They arrested 18 cusn In
Judge George Ihsugfin?y's court
1 IB*anHMG^^3BE5aBBS9nBBMBKRES=?=3
Fall Found Guilty .
After Eight Years
Washington, Oct #!.?Albert B.
Full, waa found guilty today of acj^pting
a #100,000 Bribe from Edward
L Doheny for tHo lease of the
Elk Hills, Calif., naval oil reaorve.
The jury recommended to the court
that the former interior secretary be
shown mercy.
Eight men and four women composed
the jury which convicted the
08-year-old man, now broken in
health, of guilt in this connection,
! while serving as secretary of interior
in the Harding cabinet.
The verdict was handed down nearly
eight years after Fall received
(he money from Doheny, a friend of
prospecting days when they and tho
j West were young.
The case was the first criminal acr
tipn won by the government in those"
growing, put of the celebrated senate
oil investigations. The government
has recovered the leases but Fait,
once branded by the supreme court
as a "faithless public servant," Is
the first person connected with the
I leases to be convicted.
During the trial Fall has appeared
in court most of the time in a wheel
chair and at one session a recess had
to be taken because of his condition.
The four women and eight men oU
the jury stood as they announced
their verdicts individually..
One by one they were polled. Each
replied "guilty, with mercy of the
court." v
As the jury which had been out almost
24 hours walked to its piace
there was not another sound in the
court room.
"Ladies and gentlemen," asked the
court, "have you reached a verdict?"
"Ves," was the reply.
"What is your verdict," asked the
court.
"Guilty," replied Foremnn Thos. E
NTorris. i
i . I
As this verdict was rendered Fall
slumped back in his big leather chair. I
:?
Doheny's Turn Next.
Washington, Oct. 25.?Owen J. Roberts,
special government counsel in
the oil scandal cases, announced today
that the government would have
to bring E. L. Doheny to trial on a.
charge of giving a bribe of #100,*
000 to A. B. Fall soon after the first
of the year.
i' ' i' ,
(URESIS MAKING IN SOUTH
6,000,000 Pound8, Valued at ll.OOOr
000, Last Year's Output.
The la at few years have seen the
rise of a new industry in the Souththat
of cheese manufacture, says the
United States Department of Agriculture.
In 1914 no cheese factories
operated in the South. In 1915 two
small co-operative factories were organist^
in the mountain section of
North Carolina, and these factories
manufactured during that year 15,000
pounds of cheese valued at $3,000.
During the next five years many
small co-operative factories were organised
a|id operated in the mountain
sections of the South, where it
Ml II
wus found a good quality of ehaese
could be made. The volume of milk,
however, increased very slowly.
In 11)27 a. cheese factory was open*
cd in Mississippi. It was successful,
and at once the cheese industry expanded
very rapidly. Sixty-three
factories were opened in several of
the Southern States where heretofore
it was the common belief that because
of elirpatlc conditions cheese
factories could not be operated successfully.
? The fact that in 1628 the South manufactured
more than 6,000,000
pounds of cheese, valued at a million
dollars or more, with the State of
Mississippi alone making 2,500,000 pounds,
is evidence that cheese manufacturing
is likely to become an established
industry in this section.
__ ___ ' *?
Eat With Us I
K j
W# have had our Cafe thoroughly remodeled on I j
I tU Interior which makes a most inviting place to Mt , I
I We invito your patronage, and will give you prompt
| service and good food. ^ I
I OLYMPIA CAFE I
I Cits MICHITOR8, Proprietor j
I I
n . I I. 11" 1 i 1
Central Barber Shop
Found Guilty
We're guilty as accessory before the fact; because
C V 1 **
our Barber Service improves the looks of Ladle*, and
gentlemen to such an extent; that we plead guilty'
before the bsur of public sentiment. <.
t * - * . . ?"
Three Good Barbers at Your Service .
1 'i ?' VbjcHit t. ? < ,06'?.; ? .' )' , ?? <\ turn i "i <*<??
Emmmmmmmmmmmmrnmmmmmmm+mi I i
mmtmrnmsmmmmmmmsmtmi \ n
-have you driver}/ ;
a Chevrolet Six?
? Z/ =?
Have you felt the thrill of its six-cylinder ;
performance?so smooth, quiet ana vibrai
tionless that you almost forget there's a
motor? v . , a"
Have known the satisfaction of its sixcylind^rcswe^jpttwerr-readjf
tbshoot you
ahead at the trafficlight, to carry you
over the steepest hills, or to speed you
along the highway?
And do you know that anyone who can
afford arty car can own a Chevrolet Six?
t f . ' J : ::
If you have never driven a six-cylinder car, it is impossible
for you to form any idea of Chevrolet per- . ** < ;
formance fqpm your imagination alone, . _ ;?
*Smoothest J No r^nble in the body?no tremble in the
steering wheel?no vibration to loosen windows and
doors!
Flexibility f Power that flows in a rilkenstream?and
never a trace of ' 'lugging' M- ?- ?
Quiet! Hardly a whisper from the motor. You can ?
drive it for hours* without the slightest noise fatigue!
But why try to tell you the story vi^en only a ride can
give you the facts? Come in. There's a car waiting '
for you . . Now! '
... . 1 . -u 1.1 1
TH* Kmmdmtt, $92f; TSm Phmtoa. 9929s Th* Coach, #505/ '
? A Ride tells a
Wonderful
Stoj
Welsh Motor Company
North Broad Street Camden, S. C.
Btt& -it" t {, - , * ' ?
^BDE 4 -VT" *V-y *111[:I'jL'TjhjaT v ^ a>r ^ \ ^ V -* ?
A Six I^BbI* PRICE RANGE OF THE FOUR
HST'/ %. ' *"
Br ' -jTiB?yEl}s- ~ . i8ffr ' .? - - ' n. i? i ^