The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, August 29, 1930, Image 2
4 II Club iioy*.
It ik with very deep regret that
announcement in made that it will
not be possible to take the 4-11 club
boys an the proposed trip to Clem son
College'and other points. This is due
to two facta: inability to secure the
truekM or buses and luck of money.
A a soon afl possible some other
worthwhile entertainment of edueutional
value will In- arranged for
these splendid boy* who are trying
hard to la^ a good foundation for
Kershaw county's greater development.
All hll club hoys in the county are
invited and requested to attend the
big Rally l>ay in Camden September
4th, al which time a special l-H
program will be arranged.
Respectfully,
Henry H. Green,
County Agent.
Kdward Jackson, paying teller of
the hirst National bank of Uaurel,
Mi.-.i., has disappeared and witfi him
$7 I, <io(? of the bunk's money.
Relief From Curse
of Constipation
A Battle Creek physician says,
"Constipation is responsible for more
misery than any other cuuse."
But immediate relief has been
found. A tablot called Rexall Orderlies
has been discovered. This tablet
attracts water from the system into
the lazy, dry, evacuating bo well called
the colon. The water loosens the
dry food waste and causes a gentle,
thorough, natural movement without
forming a habit or ever increasing
the dose.
Stop suffering from constipation.
Chew a Rexall Qrderlio at night.
Next day bright, (let 24 for 25c
toduy at the nearest Rexall Drug
Store.?Zemp & DePass and DeKalb
Pharmacy.
6 66.
Relieves a Headache or Neuralgia in
30 minutes, checks a Cold the first
day, and checks Malaria in three days.
666 also in Tablets.
PELLAGRA
cud be cured. Have you itny ol llietc lymptorni
f Titcd end droway fceliac with hcudache*
and depreeaion J (kin rough; breaking
out or eruptions; sort mouth, tongue, lips
and throat fiaininp red; much mucus and
choking; indigestion and nausea; (ailing
memory ; diarrhea or constipation. Write for
30-pags book mailed FKP.F. in plain, sealed
wrapper.
dk. w. J. mcCRARY, inc.
Ik Carbon Hill, Ala.
Dept. 340, '
"1 Lost My Best Customers
Thru Rats," Writes J. Adams.
"Used to have the busiest Restaurant
in town until news spread that
the kitchen was infested with rats;
lo*t a lot of my best customers until
I tried RAT-SNAP. Haven't a pest in
the place now. Restaurants should
use RAT-SNAP. Three sizes, 35c,
>5c. $1.25. Sold and guaranteed by
Zemp DePass, Druggists, Camden,
S. and Bethune Hardware Co.,
Bethune, S. C.
EYES EXAMINED
and Glasses Fitted
THE HOFFER COMPANY
Jewelers and Optometrists
Sir- &?
t\ When I
| A CLEANSING |
| MEDICINE |
I Is Needed $
kla
? "I have taken
?H HI nek Draught
* all my life, when* .
* ever in need of a
medicine for con*
?r atipation," snva
*? Mrs. G. C. Burns,
?> of Buna, Texas.
?i. "My mother and
, father used it in
j. tli?. ir hor.ii' for
' sears, and 1 was
t raisod to th.nk
i, i>i u as ll.o t.rst thin# if I \
ti.lt ha a hoad:u :io or was con- *
-JJ ht ipatf.i. J {*
! j' At on > 'imo 1 hid indigos
;) ti?>n ro .l h..a. 1 was all out
of ports; try s!<;n w;is sallow.
1 x\ and I ha ! r s pains. A ft or ' H?
1 ||.a v. ; - i 1 '..oh Praught, I *
v It. I have given
, Jj ill.rckPVno.ghi to my child
*< jj ron. whrncv-r they needed n 4*
I (| medicine of the land." 1 ^
; J, Insist on Thediord's ! 4?
; IBksich* ?
II Draught j 1
X WOMKN who reed a tonic X
H should take Cardui. In u?? X
4' ovi-r f.o X
POSING AS MAN,
GIRL WEDS TWO
Female Barber of Lot Angeles
Is JailedL
!,os Angeles, Calif.-- A snave, trou
ser clad,- wlill* u| rotted barber who
pollVb**, Hilt! bUfcllteHM
with customers in a straightforward
masculine voice lias revealed tb the
police tliut "he" is twenty-five-yearold
Catherine Wing, male Impersonator
de hue.
(retained In Jail in that city, MImm
Wing explained how she came to pose
ith Kenneth I.lsonbee and for month*
played the role of an Industrious huehand
to Jier lifelong chum, Mella Harper,
nineteen. Catherine and Stella
were reared In range country around
'J'lntlc, Utah. They rode the till la together
In masculine attire astride cow
ponies.
Catherine hecntne a woman barber
in Utah but later decided to pose as a
man and begin life anew. She purchased
an assortment of men's clothing
and went to Los Angeles.
There Catherine met a girl named
Eileen Gurnet. For several months
Catherine courted Eileen just as a
man would. Then when Catherine
found Eileen hail fallen In love with
her, she explained that she was a girl.
Eileen wept and told Catherine she
had broken her heart. Eileen threatened
to commit suicide, explaining
she had planned to get away from relatives
by marriage.
So Catherine married Eileen. Then
the letter's mother discovered her
daughter's "husband" was a girl. A
family row ended the strange marriage.
I.ater Stellu Harper Joined
Catherine In Los Angeles and Stella
agreed to replace Miss Garnet In the
role of wife. Miss Wing opened a
barber shop of her own, still enjoying
the ruse of playing the part of a husband.
A nelghbqj^'s suspicion led to the expose.
Catherine and Stella were taken
to Jfill. There they revealed their
Stories. Authorities do not expect to
take uctlon against the girls but will
investigate Catherine's "marrlnge" to
Miss Garnet before releasing her.
Temple of Warriors
Rebuilt in Jungle
Washington.?The task of rebuilding
the great ruin of the Temple of
the Warriors In the city of Chleheti
Itza has at last been completed, as
far as modern science can make tinfallen
stones stand again In their
rightful places. This Is the message
which Earl Morris, In charge of the
excavations at Chlehen Itza for the
Carnegie Institution of Washington,
hns brought to the Institution on hl<
return from Yucatan.
The Temple of the Warriors, re
claimed from the tropical Jungle,
stands agafn on Its pyramid of four
receding stone terraces. The stone
nltnr, once used for human sacrifice,
has been restored.
The project of restoring the temple
became extremely complicated when
Mr. Morris discovered traces of another,
older temple beneath the ruins.
,The Warriors temple Is believed to
date from about 1"<H) A. D.
Paintings found during the Inst seaBon
are a valuable addition to old
American arL
Vegetable Sales Loss
Laid to Boyish Figure
Chicago.?The publicized theory of
theatrical producers that the ideal
feminine figure should have a boyish
llmness bus done "almost Irreparable
harm" to certain branches of the
vegetable Industry, E. S. Rrlggs, manager
of the American Fruit ahd Vegetable
Shippers' association, declared
at the annual convention.
Since the "boyish figure". Idea has
been picked up from professional exploiters
of feminine pulchritude, "the
potato and rice market has been glutted,
due to the fact that every one
avoided starchy foods in the interests
of slenderness," Hrlggs said.
3hjr on Bathtubs
Washington ? Oue-thlrd of home*
surveyed by the General Federation
of Women's Clubs had no bathtubs;
one-fifth had no kitchen sinks. The
federations iteductlon la that the
home Is lagging far behind the progress
tn eVery other field of American
life.
| New Yorkers' Baby Born 1
X as Citizen of Turkey *
Constantinople. ? The first i
^ American to ho horn n Turk Is *
; ? ? Rudolf RiefM.ihl. Jr., whose +
j J parents are from New York 4.
I The baby ?;e horn in the Amor- +
4. lean ho-pital here ami was 4?
! j claimed by the Turkish govern
; 4. merit as a Turkish citizen under +
+ .1 new law. J
< That law provides that the
1 J children of foreigners born in 4
j I'urkey shall tie Turkish citizens J
I J although on reaching their mn 4
Jerity they may elect the na ?
Jtionality of their parents. In 4
(hat ?:ise. however, they must *
4. <juit Turkey lorevcr. *
j I'rof. Rudolf Kiefstahl Is pro J
fessor of Moslem art in New +
J York untver?1tv. lie is a visit 4
ing professor In tlie American *
a college here. Mrs. Rlefstahl 4
T 'tenches art In the American Col J
X Uge for Women in Constantino- *
t P,e' 1
^ * * * - - - * ? * * * ? * * A A A ^ A
WW WW WWWWWWWW ww^ww
TWO ART
CAPITAL'S j
</
* Galleries and Gardens of the Zwinger. Dresden.
(l'r?|><tred tiy (h? National <J?*oRruphlc
Korloty. W ii.-luiifcloim ^ t.'. >
TWO Capitals (if German flutes.
Dresden in Saxony and Munich
In Bavaria, are capital*, as well,
of art, and annually draw their
thousands of art-loving tourists.
Dresden is filled with artistic won
deis. rJ|tm picturesque setting, astride
a beautiful bend in the Elbe river,
about 110 miles south ?<>f Berlin,
caused Herder, tlie poet, to call it the
Florence of the Elbe.
From an approaching river steamer,
the Suxon capital Is a city of graceful
spires and huge domes und cupolas,
but Inside the Altstadt (old city) on
the left bank of the Elbe, the picture
changes to one of artistically embellished
buildings, handsomely sculptured
monuments, galleries of famous
paintings, numerous museums with
choice collections of all soi;ts, spucIouh
squares and parkways, and canyonlike
streets where Kunst (German
for "art") is heard among the throngs
nearly as often as some of the common
verhs.
A large portion of the Altstadt lies
near the Augustus bridge, one of the
live spans that connect the old town
with Neustndt, on the other hank of
the river. The Hof-Kirche, facing the
j bridge with its 27'2-foot tower, is u
huge structure, whoso nnriUD'tH lire
topped with Ml statues of saints and.
inside, Raphael Merigs' "Ascension" |
looks down upon the high altar. A
covered passage connects the church
with the old Saxon palace, whose
walls are decorated with iine mural
paintings; and in the various rooms,
' large collections of Chinese vases and
j Dresden china are on di play. Even
] the stable adjoining the palace D embellished
with a cavalcade of Saxon
princes. In porcelain tiles.
Treasures in Many Buildings.
Within a few blocks of the palace j
numerous buildings contain the col- ;
lections that have made Dresden fa- j
! liiuus as the German urt center. Bei
tween the church and .the palace the
' Grimes Gewolbo (Green Vault) con
tains a dazzling array of jewels?dja- |
i nionds, rubies and sapphires?and
1 works of art in gold, i* ory, bronze
and Limoges enamels. On a sLnglo ,
ivory tusk one artist lias carved 142
I angels and another ivory piece depicts
an organ grinder lighting a rob- t
. ber. The Saxon crown jewels, a 40j
carat green diamond. Jeweled trinkets
i of all kinds, a goiden tea service and
I the largest known onyx are displayed.
Bronze work includes statues, pedestals
and vases. A striking bronze
piece depicts Charles II of England
fighting off a dragon.
1 Across the street, surrounded by
1 gardens, the Zwinger, built l>y Auj
gustus tiie Strong and intended to
house banquet and dance Halls, prom|
emotes and gardens befitting royal life
of the Eighteenth century, is a treas- i
ury of art. The building is a tine example
of Italian Renaissance, adorned
with figures of Greek deities, vases !
and flowers. Once In the court which
the Zwitiger Incloses, the trnveler
feels that the rose gardens and promenades
should fulfill the most regal
whim.
The Zwinger museum contains a
i half million engravings, many draw- ;
ings, mathematical instruments, and !
a picture gallery where some of the
finest works of the most eminent
Italian, Spanish. Dutch a:ul German
nrt:sts are on exhibition. Raphael's
"S.^tine Madonna" occupies a prominent
place in the collection. It was
( par.dialed in 17M from Italian monks
and sin lugied out <>; Italy by painting
a landscape t>v t-r ? e canvas. There
are al?" \\? r k s <>f Rubens. Nan l>\<k,
I 1 v e' tl >: : l Ui i t and <'t lifts.
. < > .i'at' tint must nut. fortncrl.v
j s' 'to h'VtbVrtg*, contains an In'crrstn
_ , oiIei ;io't of war m.'.ierial and
' ! ' (> fan jotiHi p.o.es >f Chinese,
.!npai'e>e d IM'e.-d<-tt pot ceiain, and
lia.lan i.i.. .id.va. a _'.:;:'.ed pottery.
I ne A'.bi rl ituttu. t>nce ..tt arsenal,
l.'ivv is a sen* pt - tie mitseuin with malty
I ??r".? .11 and tu?'tlei"M pit . es. I * 11i.iit'.v
pointed Innes'.i .ic rt.tefs th.iing
baek l<< '-'Too B. C. ate displayed tin e.
, while a mummy st. i'. reposes in a c..f
1 ' tin it has occupied more than 2..*>0o
, : v rii rs.
Collections and Churches.
>| These t.nd numerous t?t!ier exhibit
^ places, bit lading H e Municipal n useutu
with a fine collection of etchings;
| the Academy of Art ; the School and
? Museum of JtV.or'.rir 1 Art ti e 7a <y
\ logical find EGint.graphical museum,
containing a large collodion of stuffed
birds and ethnological specimens; the
Miriernlugicnl mid 1'reliiHtorlc museum
with Interesting fossils; draw aft lovers
from all parts of tint*., world and
earn for Dresden the <rlg!?t to he
called one of the world's important
art centers.
Among the churches the FrauenKlrohe,
a Protestant edifice, is the
largest. It can accommodate 5,000
worshipers. The church occupies a .
whole ciiy idock, 'i'iie lanterp above
its huge dome Is 812 feet from the !
pavement. A magnificent organ und
numerous statues are interesting features
of its interior.
Between trips to this almost endless
array of exhibits, travelers enjoy
the Dresden parks and drives. Grosser
Garten is nenrk- half as large as Celltrnl
I'ark in New.. York City. Within
its coiitines are zoological and botanical
gardens and the Museum of the
Saxon Antiquarian Society, Where
there are H.000 objects in porcelain,
pewter and carved wood.
In N^usladt, across the river, the j
Japanese palace, so culled from the
Japanese porcelain collection it once
contained, now houses the Saxon
State Library with more than a half
million volumes and thousands of
manuscripts and maps. Dresden's
market place is also in Neustadt, and
houses to accommodate many of the
city's cjn.OoO inhabitants. " J
In point of population Munich
(Munrhcti) is exceeded only by Berlin
and Hamburg among German cities.
With tSSOjMK) inhabitants it is somewhat
larger than San Francisco and
smaller than Boston.
Munich Is Magnificent.
Ill physical aspects Munich is one
of the most impressive of modern
cities. Its royal palaces,; its magnificent
.national theater, its great royal
library containing 1,1IKUHH) volumes
and 50.000 rare mnmnc; ip: s ; its broad
thoroughfares, partic.larly the Ludwigstrasse
and Maximil'.anstrasse,
bordered by the great ottbe buildings
of the Bavurlun govprnm i.t, and its
famous university which rinks tirst
ftiiKmg the German Institutions of
learning in the number of Its medical
students and second only to Berlin in
the number of students of all classes
?all these and many other buildings
and Institutions make the municipality
one of the chief prides of the Teutonic
people.
Most of the modern improvements
and practically all of its architectural
splertdor Munich owes to Louis (or
Ludwig) I and his art-loving .successors.
Louis cume to the throne in
lSJo and ruled for more than I'D years.
One of the impressive monuments of
his reign is the beautiful iTopylaea,
modeled after the gate to the Athenian
Acropolis, and the reliefs which
decorate lids structure quite fittingly
tell the story of Greece's war of independence
and the events transpiring
in that kingdom during the eventful
reign of King Otho I, Louis' son who
was elected to the throne of Greece
in 1882 but was finally expelled after
30 years. Another beautiful Munich
gateway is the Siegestor (Gute of Victhry).
modeled after tlie Arch of C011stantine
in Rome.
One Munich gallery exhibits such
works as Titian's "Christ Crowned
with Thorns," Rembrandt's "The Descent
from the Cross" and a Raphael
"Madonna," and contains works of
Rubens, Van I'yck. Ilolhoin t: . LhK-r.
i'crugiiio. Botticelli and I in | dippti
I.ippi. from which it will i.?> ,j4;ll
Louis did not hesitate t<? a :!? ?. jju.
masterpieces of other nation.-.
Louis II saw Bavaria gr-o: v
sot bed ' in the I unpiiv. |.t!- .., L.
madness drove l im ;< sui. i-;. ;-.r.
thered the art development . ilX
Ids gvandu.llo r. His reign v.. tde
for his encouragement
nor s dev.* u; of jt,,.
and to Ids royal veneres.t\
would add more to his fane- ,| (t
not been ti.r tin* oppressive 1 i\
It impose.) alol its later excess.. ,
d ie the It.iy 1 cuth productioi.It3
Commerce and Science.
I lie coiiimercial life ,,f . , .
scarcely less interesting than n>
( t.c side. In America the name . ;
j city was oticc indelibly associate! .v .lh
. its niost important article of *\p..ri
i beer In scientific circles M .m ch 8
, optical and mathematical Instruments
have a world-wide reputation; while
the art of lithography had Its ?inh
| mere. "
Mr. James W. Atkins, managing
editor of The Gastonia Gazette, and
incidentally chairman of the publicity
committee for the King's Mountain
Sesqui-Centennial celebration,
was in Yorkville yesterday Afternoon
and called pt The Enquirer office.
Mr. Atkins told The Enquirer that
his brother-in-law, Mr. Claud Miller,
of Huntington, Va., is now a guest at
his home and has been telling him
of some of the conditions now prevailing
in West Virginia. "He says
that when he got down in this country
it all looked like a garden spot.
Everything in his part of the world
is literally burned up. Farmers who
have sheep up there are beggingill
pi? with money to buy them ht^|
a head rather than let them itaBf
He tells m? that the sheep are 1*
narily valued at $15 to $18 per htJfl
? . 1 ' Governor
Names Representatinfll
j Columbia.?Governor John G. Eid|
ar(Js has appointed Edwin G. Sri Mil
Dr. William Weston, both of C<iluti|
bia, and Bernard Baruch, of Ne|
York, to represent South Carols |
the British Harvest festival -d|
thanksgiving association, in |
Paul's chapel, New York, this b|
Mr. Baruch is a native South Cu|
I" SPECIAL EXCURSION |
I WASHINGTON, D. C. I
I Saturday, August 30th, 1930 I
BIG LEAGUE BASEBALL NEW YORK (Yanlwe,)
v?. WASHINGTON (Senator,) Augu.t 31?t
I SEPT. 1ST. (Double Header Sept. l?t) I
I Round Trip Fares: $12.50
I ^amten *12-60 I
1 Kershaw *12.50 I
i Lancaster a.,,, H
1 Heath Springs 50t I
1 Fares from intermediate points on same low ba,us.
riekets sold for all trains, except Crescent Limited,
lukcts sola in Tickete good returning ,11.
^aiurday, Auk ? crescent Limited, to reach orig.
reguUr trai - , midnight September 4th, 1930.
!'! m F?r PuUman reservations and other information,M
see Ticket Agents I
1 SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYSTEM |
? - - *
Friday ana Saturday Specials I
I
CWIBTT'C
JEWEL SHORTENING I
8 a, 95c 4 m 51' J
OCTAGON SOAP
6 Cakes C j I
Small Size M
- a m -n - j
N. B. C. PREMIUM SODA
CRACKERS ? 15e
GOOD, HIGH-GRADE
PEANUT BUTTER
2 ? 25c
SUNSHINE
VANILLA WAFERS i
One Pound ^
2 Ounce f- jf
CAMAY SOAP J
3 Cakes And One Cake
For FREE
a -% ~ fLl
BBY'S
Pork and Beans 3 "o"8 25c
a? ? , a
CAMPBELL'S ... Z
Tomato Soup 3 for8 25* _i
BIG PONCY LOAF T
i
NO. 37?OR?PALMETTO
FLOUR 24 ? 85? :
5
NUT MARGARIN
: S P R E DIT -19'
SANTOS Coffee - * 25M
. :!rzJ!L: _ z>y< ' ' ?
....