The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, April 29, 1932, Page PAGE SIX, Image 6
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v, Honor Roll Students
Baron DeKalb School
Grade I.?Sam Truesdale, Gepe
Faulkenberry, Maggie Napper, James
Munn, John Boone, Geneva Kay, Robert
McDowell, Homer Uraainjfton.
Grade 2.?Iva Mae Baker, Billy
Clyburn, Clemie (Jhildress, Alfred letters,
Charlie Frost, Helen Faulkenberry,
Mario Holland, Chalmers
Hornsby, Willie Mae Jordan, J. W.
Jordan., Stanley MeManus, Dorcas
Owens, Fiod West.
Grade J.: Lottie Twilty, Nina
Young, Jini Clark son, Margaret McDowell,
Barbara 11?11??/?. Hoy I' Owens,
l?en Tmrsdale, Jack^Guye, George
Jordan. J. B. Brasington.
Grade I. ?Ruby Young, Dorothy
Workman, F.uunio Connell, Helen
Broome, Bessie I'ranham, Odell Cauthen,
Kddie Waits.
Grade 5.?Ruth McDowell, 'Doris
Faulkenberry, Vesta Flayer.
Grade 0.?Ann Clarkson, IJla Dixon,
Sara Gaskins Pauline Holland,
Willie B. McDonald, Wilma . Owens,
Annie Blanch Peach.
Grade 7.?Ruth West, Margaret
Vincent, Annie Mae Ray, Willie Mae
Morton, Ruth H nton, Mendell Gladden,
Fdna Catoe, Ruby Bradley.
Grade 8.?Amelia Gaye, LorCe
Young.
Grade ? Myra Owens.
Grade 10.?I0va Brasington. Maud
Catoe, Mabel Catoe. K. C. Httyrs.
Grade ll.-r-Wille.cn Huckabee, Mary
Lui.-? Truest!ale.
DeKalb Club Meeting
w The DeKalb Homo Dein-.-n-tralioTi
(* ;iK If hi it- A |>ri! no < ; ..i,g on I' ndnv
afternoon at the home <>t Mrs.
>',t n\ l Tl lie dah-. I he pre-.dent,
;\| i .hy I:Ue-<in.e, pie I'led. 1 j
I, , . a . v. ell ntt? mil I l'\ I
I i ; . ... Ill ii: If ..Mi lie \ ; 1' e . .
\ - : - v. a : . la im ' be
. i.. .:.g .... e' .fig el' ' ( .1-1;
i. 1 ,. , \\ oir.ef; :i .il l"- .A t ' t part " .
the w a . . I i. : t .' d; pa :
Mati'.a ha -t mo n to Mtil he ' ia I r re- |
joe I . ."-otiio of the.-r lejioi t'S Were
good and 11 >wi ii that the club had
been do.tig some splendid work.
The meeting was turned over to
the county agent. Miss Sadie ( raig,
who gave u very helpful talk on
"Healthful Kitchens."
The officers of the club were asked
to attend the business meeting of the
Council of Farm Women in Camden
on Saturday, April 1G,.
At the conclusion of the program
delicious refreshments were served by
Uio hostess.
The next meeting will bo held on
May 10 at the home of Mrs. L. D.
Broome.
Fiddlers Convention To Ik' Held
There will be a Fiddlers' Convention
and Contest at the Baron DeKalb
school on Thursday night, April
"8, at right o'clock. 1 here will be a
number of musicians there to take
part and a large crowd is expected
to enjoy the affair. Good prizes are
offered and quite a number of notable
tiddlers will compete for them.
A small admission fee of ten and
twenty-five cents will be collected
which will be used in landscaping the
school grounds.
Midway. Honor Roll
Grade 1.?Coleno Hall.
Grade. J.?Johnnie Garrison. Charlotte
McCaskill, Troy West.
Grade I.?Ferris Joyn'vr, Archie
Gordon, Margaret West, Willien West.
Grade 5.?Kathleen Anderson, F.lizaboth
McCoy, Roddy Kozior, Dolly
Stokes.
tirade ?>.--Margaretto Anderson,
Gen?- Cooper, Sadie Corbitt, Willie
Horton. Horace Joyner, Alva Lee,
Kmily M Coy. William McCoy, Milton
McGuut. Chffoi 1 Threatt. Igrurie
We.-'.
(i-ade v (Irani' B annon, Martha
M . . 1on e 11oz.er. The! ma
V r.i.m. he Threatt. IT.by Gay
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' .. . . > .i - a g . aff.r .r.? i j
I h> t.-.c r .'ci -ta'e> - .Ipri-M'.i- miir'.
th:- w - ik The h.gh . irt < pinton
ailed 'he i'-t ter> I'ont'se, vulgar, disgusting
an i indecent and within the
law proh.biting the mailing of lewd
or lascivious letters. Limehousc had
fought t no case to the h.ghost court,
and his opponents followed him there
and won.
George Smith and Ik>b Manning,
"big shots" in the illicit liquor trade
of Charlotte, were this week convicted
in Federal court for violation of
the liquor laws and have been sentenced
to the federal prison ;n Atlanta.
Ga.
A one-pound, perfectly-formed baby
was born at Kansas City, Mo., this
week. The doctors give the child better
than an even chance to live.
IMay To lie I'rewfntcd at Midway
On Friday niyht, April J?i>ih, at
8:16 o'clock'in the .school auditorium,
the senior class of the Midway hig'h
school will present a comedy, "Bound
To Marry." The oast is as follows:
Betty Jan? Dove, Madly in Love, Cora
jftariBnggagiw' ' I II 'I - Klliott;
Augustus J. Baker, A Whoopee
Maker, Alvo Stoke#; Hilda M,
Slater, A Jk>rn Man-Hater, Lydia
Marshall; Samuel Boyer, A Resourceful
Lawyer, major D^vla; June Buy,
Prom (lid Broadway, Vivian Stokes;
Billy Pander, The Make-Believe Tu
tor, Gary Walters; Kvelyn Grace, The
Girl in the Chase, Inez Croft; Moae
Lincoln Hull, A HWk Snowtwll, K. L.
Stokes; Mandy Snook, A Colored
Cook, Mattie West.
When a man plays a French tutor
and an old maid tutor, he must be
"Bound To Marry," and when he give*
Mow Lincoln Hall lessons in lov?making,
he keeps everyone laughing.
Come and And out how "to marry."
Admission 15 cents and 10 cents.
Representative LaGunrdia, of New
Y^rk, Republican, appeared befe^v I
house ways and means commitu^U
Tuesday i? opposition to the tyogTB
000,000 bonus bill, and declaredtw?
measure "would not get thirty .1
able votes if ? secret vote wers
taken in the house."
. . . ?w* of a Great|
i Chemical Laboratory]
Comes
MALVA
: -o
II lias Brought IKappi- <
| ness to Tliou?aiiil$siml
is Dostined to A ill
I ' ' Millions
MNSULIN, which conquered the deadly ravages of
Diabetes?Anti-Toxin which crumpled the choking
hand of Diptheria?the serums, the discovery of which
has enabled science to speed recovery and to cure dreadful
diseases which, not long ago, took weeks and months
to. cure, and which, sometimes, were not cured at all. ,
These are only a driveling percentage of the thousands
of amazing revelations made known to science whereby ?
the average span of human life has been lengthened to
Ahediappy extent of a decade or more. j
The miracles which have been worked and are being
worked every day iri tiie modern scientific
laboratory are too astounding to foretell
? too marvelous even to dream of. Yet,
they are all around us. We accept them as
matter-of-co11 rse as our ancestors accepted
tmd resigned themselves to . unchecked,
unmerciful disease. %
Our Grout Lessan
We have not, however, been unmindful
i>f one great lesson that modern science has
painstakingly tried to teach us?that
is the conscientious care of the human
body. We have come to demand clinics for
the regular examination and care of that
part of society which cannot afford to
'/isit a family doctor, we insist on the examination
of the teeth of children in school,
we take bel ;er care of our own teeth. And,
most important, we have come to demand
?: thousand-fold greater degree of cleanliness,
sanitation, and scientific supervision
of I he f<)od we eat, the water we drink, and
nli tilings 111;11 affect and conic into enn^ icl
in ;m\ form with the. hun ;n hod v.
* V
11 i-nnl\ reasonable, t hen. that the dn\
>' i?>! 11 < I arrive when the old-fasbioned piicni
medicines and "cure-alls . mixed in
i ill ii> I uh^, sinks, I nickels, and what, not,
fie hi Id gi\e wax to t ho hat tie of science for
hiunan life. \ good proprietary medicine
is a human necessity. There are many
* %j
human ailments which do not require the
b tent ion of a physician. V toning-up now
and then in vital sect .s of the body, by a
good propriety y, oftentimes is all that a
sick person needs ? and oftentimes can
forestall very serious future ailments.
To fill in this great gap in modern accomplishment
comes MALVA?prepared,
formulated, and bottled in a great chemical
laboratory, under the supervision of
intelligent modern chemists.
The distribution of MALVA has just
reached this territory. MALVA has proved
itself, time and time again, as a reliable
and modern family medicine, since its introduction
almost a year ago in the state
of Ohio, and parts of Indiana and Kentucky.
Thousands have testified that
MALVA has rid them of their ills, has
restored them to new vitality, has given
them increased weight and strength, and
has been the means to untold happiness
and contentment.
What Maira tn
With 111 is unquestionable assurance of
the qunlit y of \T \LYA, !he manuf a I mn >
of (his wonderful new medicine have decided
tocxpand into additional territories,
and. ultimateb, make a\ailah!c to e\er\
per>nn in I he I niled Slate*, and the
world, if found feasible, I he remarkable
bend its of MALVA?thus increasing the
present thousands of M \LVA beneficiaries
to millions.
Malva is the latest, most improved
formula, scientifically prepared, and embodies
some of tlie most modern developments
disclosed by modern science. The
content of Malva includes Pepsin, Cascara
I
Sagrada, Burdock, Senna, the precious j
Malva herb, and other valuable ingred- j
ients in tended to aid the vital human j
organs?the Kidneys, the Liver, theStom- I
acli and the Bowels in the performance of
their normal functions.
What Malva Will Do For You
Science has found that the entire system
often is thrown out of balance through the
inefficiency of one or several of these organs.
If you are troubled with Billiousness, Hy-h
peracidity, Auto-Intoxication, Nervous- i
ness, Sleeplessness, etc., the trouble may .j
have its seat in one of these organs.
Wherever Malva has been introduced it
has collected to its credit a vast army of
people, men, women, and frequenllv children,
whom it has assisted out of the despair
of chronic ailment and the iinhappi- j
ness caused by it. Not one or two eas< > in j
a locality?Ln? in a sln~lc city.
1 jhm! Vulva's merits atiained in ot!icr~";
-'< 1 a ?l t l.c ? >..nt rv. rnd upon tj.e ex- ^
f , j
jM'i h'i,, a11 i % am.'! !)!?* Know led ore ynncu
1h r<?' i _r 11 M';ir> of ;'i reliable an:i > cress- \
tul I'1 <){ med < is based 2^.*.*!< * J
accfj>\arise ami ivtoniiuendulion b\ die \
DePass'
Drug Store ]
Stop in today and ask the attendant j
what Malva will do for you. His statement
will be far more convincing than anything
which might be said in this announce- j
ment. Stop in today?before you forget |
DePASS' drug store , J
THE REX ALL DRUG STORE 1
Phone 10 Camden, S. C.