The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, September 01, 1933, Page PAGE SEVEN, Image 7

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mmden To Join CainAir M foi??.bi? "?<' wm J?" .Augusta ill noting th? proposes ???..?? uf lhu c,mrlotto ; mden-<!t,lumbia"AugU " ' mU1 Cuptcinbei' & the air mail lino wan schod ,,,uil operation was announce >?? ?';rhe ??* ? Willi.". W- *?'*"*of th. ?i lo.ninoroo, said yoatordai .. Columbia wuukl m#k,! " viKorou, l7ote?i "K""lrtl ,h0 contemplatt'd ttc *%!? wore t'iven to believe," he said ..kit no changes wore contemplatoc J'r our lust conference in Wash on the subject." , night John doLoach, of Cum. ; telephoned The State that Cam. t would join in the light, Th. L. goo. through Camden. Mr l.vkos said ho had conferrec L C. tj'us summer with South CaroSI senators and congressmen instrub;jin having the air line estnb^vcial weeks ago we received asllir?nces that nothing would bo done \ the immediate future," ho added, H< quoted a letter in which United 11 Senator E. D. Smith said July 2! he was advised that "no immediate rtepi" would be taken to discontinue the mail route. Clarence Keuster, secretary of the Charlotte chamber of commerce, ex"presscd doubt the line would bo suspended a Ail said "there is reason tc expect that the business of this line will increase steadily, so, if we can keep the service in operation a while longer it will be so badly needed that no thought will be given to abandoning it." - Thursday's Columbia State. Gobbler Is Mother To Baby Guineas Hampton, Aug. 26.?A turkey gobbler owned by Dr. M. E. Ellis is-a demon for domesticity. The gobbler twice routed a guinea hen from settings of eggs she had laid, taking her place on the nest himself each time. He had no luck with the first setting.. Not to be foiled, he awaited until the guinea laid another nest of eggs md chased her away again to take fhnrge himself. He had better luck this time, hatching out five baby guinea fowls. Now he is mothering the baby guineas, and Dr. Ellis says, proving to be a "good mother" at that. ,1 CAMDEN THEATRE PROGRAMME Week Beginning Sept. 1st. FRIDAY Claud-ette Colbert, Richard j Arlen. Mary Boland in "THREE-CORNERED MOON" Also Comedy and News SATURDAY Buck Jones in "THE WHITE EAGLE" Also Comedy and Serial ? Monday and Tuesday Willar ! Mack, Jean Harper in "WHAT PRICE INNOCENCE" ^Ah , Convedy and News Wednesday' "The BIG EXECUTIVE" ^ AUo Selected Shorts j T H U R .11 f'RID A Y ' | Li>>a Lainli, Warner,Baxter in "I LOVED YOU WEDNESDAY" j WAKE UP YOUR LIVER BILE? WITHOUT CALOMEL ^<1 Tou 11 Jump Out of Bed in | Morning Rarin' to Go JL and mmk and the world a,, 'don't rwallow a lot of salts, ] rum ' r eandy oe chewing I,,,,,. n^,*tl>ert thorn to make you suddenly buoyant and full of sunshine, tv*, / 'v '**" 1 'l- Thoy only more the to. ' * ""-re movement doesn't get at reason for your down-and-out hrJU. , " y u liver. It should pour out two If"k ' ' '^'le 'nt" y?ur bowela daily. J!'Y ? '* bot flowing freely, yonr food T*m o n just decays in the bowels. Allele '7* a "p your etomach. You have a _ ?Acr> ~,t>. 1 ' ao<l your Hreath ie foul, a?k?'out in blemishes. Your bead tTKrrr '? > ^ down and out. Yoer whole l? D-a-K.Aed. UTTtI'T food, old CARTBRfl _ r-M.VtJVKR HLLi to (at theae two Cf-Mr," flowing freely and make you ' Wnnul *r"1 ?P " Tb?y contain wonderful, *W it ' *rn,,e ?*etahle extra eta, amaidng R " e"m* *o making tke bile flew fresty. j**'1 **t? for H*er nflla. Aak for Owter'e IkU, it!!! '-ook for the name (Wi au , " 1 ills on the red label. Remert a 2Vc at all rto^ O lSlC^ST^ Iter Merchants Who 1 Display "BlEagle" * The following merchants and busil neas houses of Camden have already - signed the President's Code and are 1 displaying or intend to display the Blue Eagle emblems. It. should be r stated, however, that the canvas has 1 not been completed and it is not unlikely that some have just signed up ) and we do not yet have the infvrnutr tion to this effect. * A, ,& P. Store, Broad Street?'* A. & P. Store, DeKalb Street. The Boston Store. , Burns & Barrett Hardware Co. I Camden Candy Kitchen. The Camden Floral Co., retail department. Camden Furniture ($o. j 1 Camden Garage Botty ife Paint .Co. > Camden Ice Co. Central Barber Shop. I City Drug Co. * City Filling Station. City Laundry. Corner Bpok Store. Camden Chronicle. DeKalb Insurance & Real Estate \ Company. DeKalb Pharmacy. I DePass' Drug Store. The Economy Shop. j, ? Eichel's. ) Electrik Maid Bake Shop. Eureka Barber Shop, i The Fashion Shop. Gladden's Grocery. F. D. Goodale, Jeweler. , Dick Goodale. . Hermitage Cotton Mill. l Hey man Jewelry Co. , N Hi rsch Brothers, i The Hoffer Company. Home Furnishing Company. Home Stores. H. T. Horton. Jenkins Repair Shop. Kendall Mills, VVateree Division. Kennedy Insurance Agency. Lang's Grocery Store. The Deader. J. K. Lee Meat Market. Lomansky Shoe Shop. C. V. Massebeau Grocery. Mackey Hardware Company. Monroe Plumbing Company. H. S. Moore & Co. W. W. Mungo, Bethune, S. C. McLeod & McLauchlin, ice and coal. Nettles Furniture Company. New York Cafe. Nicholson's Grocery. The Outlook. Palace Barber Shop. J. C. Penney & Co. Quality Sea Food Market. Nero Reed's Grocery Store. Rex Billiard Room. Rogers. Sanitary iBarber Shop. Schlosburg's Shoe Store. Sowell Drug Store. A. Sheheeu. F. Sheheen Dry Goods Co. W. Sheorn & Son. Sinclair Market. Southern Cotton Oil Co. Standard Oil Company of New Jersey, H. E. Beard, Manager. Fred Stokes Cabinet Shop. Thomas & Howard. Thomas Coffee Shop. Wateree Lumber Company. A. W. West. Wilson's Dry Goods Co. Jesse Withers. David Wolfe Dry Goods Co^r I. Wolfe. W. Robin Zemp's Drug Store Aged Kershaw Man j Died By Own Hand Kershaw, Aug. 27.?Andrew Brasj ington, 7S, a lifelong resident of the Haile gold mine section, was found i dead by the roadside a few hundred yards from his home Friday after. noon. Mr. Brasington, who had been .operating a gold washer tor many ; years in this section, informed his | family he was going out to wash some ' gold ore and went to a neighbor's and borrowed a shotgun, ostensibly to kill a hawk. His body was lound a short time later. He is survived by one brother. John i Brasington; three daughters. Mrs. I Hinson, Mrs. Catoe, Mrs. Smith, all j of this immediate section; several I nephews, among whom are Dr. E. C. i Brasington, of Kershaw, and Dr. huii man Brasington, of Camden. He was | laid to rest in the Pleasant Plains Baptist church cemetery, the Rev. Mr. Williams conducting the services. Revival Services at Antioch The revival meeting that was planned to begin Sunday. August 20, at the Antioch Baptist church had to be postponed on account of the closing of Route 34, being paved. The road is now open and the services will begin Sunday, September 3rd, at 11 o'clock in the morning. The preaching will be done by the pastor, Rev. J T. Outen. and he extends to all a cordial invitation to attend. Gene Johnson, notorious gangster, < member of the Underhill gang, died ; at Siloam Springs, Ark., following his wounding by officers when arrest- , ing him. Photos Are Secured | Amid Tragic Scenes New York, Aug. 14.?A thrilling and nearly tragic story of adventure and adversity was pieced together today from cabled bits of Havana news ?the story of the heartbreaking battle of Associated Press stair photographers to till an "assignment" a- j gainst odds of revolution, bloodshed, and rioting. As the last of a relay of planes dropped to Newark airport at noon with a realistic pictorial account of the Cuban revolt, it marked tho successful conclusion of another phase of "newspaper story" that cost many thousands of dollars and almost cost the lives of two Associated ; Press camera men. Seymour lless, Associated Press photographer, lost his camera and precious plates Saturday afternoon ! at the hands of an hysterical mob I which'descended upon the Pan-Amor-1 ican airways dock to prevent the escape of Colonel Orestes Ferrara, former secretary of state. As the pilot took off in a hail of bullets, with the secretary and his wife safely aboard, the infuriated mob bore down on Hess and destroyed his camera and plates?which wqre to have gone to Miami aboard the plane. At the point of pistols and rifles, they forced him into a machine and after handling him roughly, threw him out in the outskirts of Havana. Another Associated Press camera man, Jose Garcia, who last week was dragged to safety as he was photographing the massacre of celebraing Cubans by soldiers before the presidential palace, dug out from vaults duplicate "shots" of the riot- j ing of the week-end. These pictures, taken almost at the same time and places as those of Hess, were prepared, for delivery. Other pictures, obtained fasO* Havana newspaper members of the Associate^ Press, were included. Despite the fact newsreel cameramen and other photographers were keeping films locked in vaults for safe keeping during the rioting, the Havana "AP" staff at once made preparations to lly their second batch of pictures to Miami for distribution over the United States. But it was not until the State Department at Washington had intervened, was government "sanction" obtained to permit a plane to leave the island. And then?there were no planes. President Gerardo Machado had taken the last one in his escape. Working frantically, a ship was chartered from Miami by the Associated Press. Delayed by weather and head winds, it was not until late Sunday that the plane returned to Miami, where the pictures were transferred to two waiting planes'. Fighting bad weather northward, one plane reached Atlanta, Ga., where a crew of Associated Press men were waiting to develop and distribute the pictures to member papers. The other was forced to stay at Camden, 'S. C., by day flying conditions after Pilot W. J. Smith had been turned back once. Smith took off again at daybreak today, fighting rain, poor visibility and low ceilings to reach Newark about noon. Newsreel men reported that more than 1.000 feet of films, depicting the revolutionary events of the week-end had been destroyed by the mob that wrecked photographic | plates at the Pan-American docks on Saturday. The total number of lives so far reported as the result of the violent storm that struck Jamaica last week, is given as in excess of 130. Relief funds of not less than $500,000 are needed at once. A terrific hurricane hit a tent camp where Germany's Hitler boys are encamped to the number of 40,000. Many of the boys were bruised by being hit by tent poles propelled by the winds. Car loadings for the week ending August 12 showed a gain of 9,647 cars over the preceding week, revenue paying freight totaling 622,759 cars, a gain of 110,794 ears over the same week of last year. Glen Ackert, 23. a stunt parachute jumper, was killed at Altoona, Pa., on Sunday when he jumped from a parachute at an altitude of 2,500 feet and then misjudged the distance he had fallen before opening the 'chute. The dairy industry of the country has been promised a loan of $30,000,000 by the farm administration to take surplus butter and cheese ofT the markets. The money was promised on condition that the industry complete plans that will sharply limit the output of dairy products. Card of Thanka We, the members of Pleasant Hill Baptist church, near Bebhune, wish to express our appreciation to J. M. Gandy and Oscar Smy'rl, on the board of the Kershaw County Emergency Relief Administration, for the good work of having the church "yard cleaned and beautified. Mrs. J. Thomas Raley. WBCTII1II OPTTTTT1TT?CTW???i? W/*o //if "Kingftsh" Seems to lie Mystery Milwaukee, Wis., Aug. 20.?Senu, tor* Huvy Long of Louisiana was i | wearing a seal* over his left eye to- j day, the only remaining evidence, he said, of an attack upon him by three I or -four men while he was attending ! a charity ^benefit at a place near Great Neck, L. 1. In a written statement which ho gave out last night following publication in New York of a report that he had been punched while a guest at a, fashionable Long Island spot, last Saturday night, the senator said he had been repeatedly threatened lyul warned that he might be attacked at any time. He said he did not know his assailants but that he ha , been trying for ; two days "to find out the persons ' who did the ganging." The attack occurred, he said, in a wash room of a place.-?he said it j might' have been a night club, hi? ! didn't know?-where he was the guest of "persons connected with the music composers and publishers." He had been there about 21) minutes when he I stepped into the wash room, he said, | As he approached a basin on the wall, he said ho was struck from behind 1 i and, as he turned, one of three or four men hit him a glancing blow with a knife or "something sharp." The senator's version follows: "On Saturday night persons connected with the music composers and publishers asked me to attend a charity benefit to be given on Long Island. 1 at first declined but later in the afternoon consented.' I had been there some 20 minutes or more when I walked into the wash room. Must as I faced the basin and the wall someone struck me from behind and upon my turning three or four i men covered me. I saw one strike ! at my head wJ(b^knife or something ( sharp and I tKH&IL just so that it j grazed my forehttJ^g} One man was j blocking tho door but 1 stumbled low through him and managed to wriggle dear. 1 felt blood coming down my fuoo from whore I was cut. Some one connected with the business met me---also 1 called some of my friends ?we rushed bifck to the wash room but all the persons had escaped and no one hud seen them to identify one of them. "1 employed a taxicab and return- j ed to tho Jlolol New Yorker, By the < time 1 reached there the wound had stopped blooding and it was not hurt- i ing. 1 called a doctor who dressed i the wound and said 1 was not hurt to amount-, to anything. "Throughout Sunday and today we have tried to And out the persons who did tho ganging. "Except for a cut scar high overt the left eye nothing remains to the J Saturday ganging.'V The senator refused to amplify his statement. He is here to attend the , national encampment of Veterans of Foreign Wars ami said ho hoped to swing the 11)31 convention to New Orleans. J , Nobody Seems to Know Much New York, Aug. 21).?The embattled citizen who disfigured Senator Hucy I*. Long in tho wash room of a fashionable bath club remained a man of mystery today despite the active curiosity of Long Island society, the police and the "Kingfish" himself. Guests at a charity party at the Sands Point Bath Club, where the Louisiana senator suffered a cut over the left eye Saturday night, weren't saying much. The senator's version differed sharply from reports published here. In Milwaukee, after declining at first to comment, he issued a statement, saying three or four men Vganged". him in the wash room and that one carved a gash over his left eye "with a knife or something sharp." The New York Times said the police were investigating on the strength of reports that tho Klnglish -was struck l>y a guest Who asserted the senator had insulted him. The XetV York Herald Tribune said: "The story going the rounds at Port Washington, JU I., was that tho senator had wandered into the wash loom, where he brushed against another man. Something passed between them which enraged the other guest, who swung around and smacked the senator," An attendant was said to have separated them and to have bundled tho senator off in an automobile to Now York, where a hotel physician treated him. The physician said ho could not tell whether ho had treated tho senator because it would not bo cricket to betray the confUienoo of any patient. "I couldn't do it, you understand," ho said. At the club, the steward referred an inquirer to the restaurant man agor, who referred him to the front olFice, where an official, ^explaining tho luck of information, said: "This is a very delicate situation, you understand." The Kingt)sh, it. was understood, attended the party as one of a party organized by Jack Curley, promoter, Curley said ho didn't know much about the incident. Mahatma Gandhi, who recently started a fast in India, has been unconditionally released from tho Yeroda jail, where he hud begun serving a one year sentence for civil disobedience. After fasting for eight days Gandhi's health was so affected that the authorities deemed it best to give him unconditional freedom; Maurice Mllhurn, 21, was killed on Sunday near Winchester, Va., when his Automobile collided with a truck loaded with five tons of blasting powder. The' truck overturned, but tho powder did not explode. Neither the driver of the truck nor his helper were injured. H VAl "V I mM ft ji \ B ^,1 jij im w J L\ # Don't postpone getting the tires you need now. Enjoy your last summer holiday on a new set of Goodyears. Prices are still lower than they were last fall. Play safe. Before yoO start out, drive in and let us look over your tires. I wi t>o_oue FAmt mileage safety value price good looks lifetime guarantee ] GOODYEAR I I PATHFINDER I 4.-10-21 $5.55 4.50-20 ! $6.00 I 4.50-21 $6.30 ; 4.75-10 $6.70 4.75-20 $7.00 5.00-19 $7.20 5.00-20 $7.45 30x3 V $4.95 1 ALL Fl'LL OVF.RSIZK Other sizes priced proportionately low Use Purol Pep Gasoline i For More Mileage ft # Prices are marching up. But if you act in time you can still buy Goodyears at prices shown here?and most of them lower than they were last fall... Look at this new 1933 Goodyear Pathfinder. With FULL CENTER TRACTION, 20% thicker non-skid tread, and stouter Supertwist Cord body, it turns in more miles, more blowout protection, more safety, than you could get from any tire costing four times as much a few years ago . . . Now is certainly the time to replace worn, dangerous tires with Pathfinders all around. No one can guarantee how long today^s still low prices can last.We have yoursize. Be sure to get Goodyear quality tubes, too. Carolina Motor Co. Open all day and all night. Road Service Distributor* of PUROL-PEP?a superior anti-knock Gasoline at regular price. t - *.