The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, October 02, 1936, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4
rHE CAMDEN CHRONICLE*
-- ? P. Nii,m..?dttT ?a
;xs> wai
Q*uu]?n, South CarolluM poatotrioo am
econd cltM mail matUr. Prlo* p*r
Mum ft 00, pa^abU in advaoco.
Friday, October 2, 193d
THE HIGHWAY CARNAGE
A reproduced article In tod ay'* paper,
"Koiifi.K To H*U On W#U/'
should be put in tbe baud* of every I
c itizen of this state to be thought-I
fully read. It is a synopsis or a grand I
Jury charge at Greenwood by Judgel
J. Henry Jobnaon, and deal# largely I
with the cheapness of human life In I
South Carolina and a criticism of the I
growing prevalence of drunken auto-1
mobile drivers on public highways.!
It carries a ringing indictment from!
Judge Johnson that we are "rolling!
to hell on wheels as fast as we can
go." We direct the attention of every!
reader of this paper to the tlineiy j
article. !
How appalling to read the mount-1
ing number of highway accidents and J
deaths. Hardly can you pick up yourl
dally paper without reading or multM
plied deaths and injuries from auto
mobile accidents. Death walks the
highway. Ho strides through our
homes. He is an unseen visitor at I
every place of amusement. He Is apt J
to put in his appearance in the hap-J
plest hours. |
Carelessness, recklessness, drunken-1
ness, ignorance and stupidity are the
principal causes of accidental injury I
and death. And us Judge Johnson!
asks, what are we going to do about)
it? 1
Here is a problem our law-makers j
should fearlessly tackle and a condition
they should strive to improve. J
Something must 6o done to che.ck the
increased drinking that is daily being
reflected In the heavy toll being taken
in automobile wrecks. A law containing
teeth, must be passed 'and
rigidly enforced to help improve the
alarming situation. The problem is
ten thousand times more important J
for the legislature than spending its
time over a highway row or caucusing
to detorinlne whether its members
be more coat-tall swingers for
the governor or men of brain, lntelll-j
genre and backbone who will act with I
sternness to protect and preserve human
life on the highways. I
The gods of recklessness and drunkenness
are devouring thousands of
lives each month on American highways.
Their appetites cannot be satisfied.
Is it any wonder then that the
automobile death toll continues to
climb to unprecedented figures? No
wonder 36.000 lives are sacrificed each J
year that property loss from acci-J
dents runs into untold millions?that
thousands of persons are permanent-]
ly Injured.
I ntll public opinion becomes arous-1
. ed nnd demands that highway travel
conditions be made safer, death will I
Htill walk the highways, our black accident
record will continue to get I
worse, not better.?Clinton Chronicle.
CAN'T DO EVERYTHING I
Occasionally a reader, and soxne-j
times a paying subscriber will send
us a long obituary extolling the virt-J
ues of some departed friend or kinsman,
winding up with about 40 vorses
of disconnected so-called poetry, and!
expect us to donate from a half I
column to a column of space. And
sometimes the. writer gets sore and
raises old ned because we insist on
giving our readers something worth
reading in our limited space. It is
hard enough to publish a newspaper,
and the Lord knows we try to be accommodating.
We record newly born
babies, we lie about newly married
couples and doad people, and. As fiar
as we can do so, chronicle the affairs
of the community. We try to
cultivate a spirit of patience and
< hristian fortitude, even to the point
of not condemning to purgatory those
who don't subscribe to The Journal,
but read someone else's. But then
are some things that get our goat,
and obituaries that are to be published
free, and news items that we can't
read are two of them.?Pagelanf
Journal.
Veteran Major Is Defeated
Atlanta. Sept. 24.?William B.
HartsfielA, nominated mayor of Atlanta
In yesterday's run-over I)omo?
ratio primary, said today he will
seek reorganization of the police department
to improve law enforcement.
The 16-year-old attorney and state
legislator viewed his victory' over veteran
Mayor James L. Key as a mandate
to city council to cooperate with
him.
Hartsfleld won by a three tOftwo
vote, polling 12.348 to Key's 8,178 In
an unofficial tabulation.
German Jewish druggists were given
until October 1 to lease their
stores to 'aryans.' They will be alto
remain as silent partners,
Ml they mast not actively manage
the pharmacies.
traveling by railroad
A modern steam locomotive pulling
a train of thirteen Pullman car* can
b?t accelerated to ninety mllea an hour
In three minutes.
With lean than six per cent, of the
world'# land area and population the
Pnttetl Mate* fnta 32 per cent, of the
world's railroad'mileage.
The railroad# buy more than 70.000 ,
Individual commodities, ranging all <
the way from pine and needlea to |
bridge# and locomotive#. j
Many freight train# are now operat- ,
ed on schedules almoU jm tftft M t
pa##enger train#.
These fact#. Issued by the A##ocla- ,
tiou of American Railroads, give an ,
Idea of the astonishing progress that ,
ha# been made In jallroad trahipor- ,
tation. The chances are that more j
Improvement ha# been achieved In op
oration since the war than in any
like period since the Industry's lnAiw
I I
ception.
When you take a trip "dn a modern
railroad train today, you use the high- ^
est developed media of transportation
the world has yet seen. It may
be hot and humid outside, but inside ^
your car spring weather prevails? ^
because the rails have spent more ^
than $60,000,000 on air-conditioning
since 1922. The train Is practically (
silent and vlbratlonless?and It can ^
carry" you through a dual storm with-. _
out soiling your white suit. It will (
take you to your destination in a remarkably
short time, and at a very (
low cost. Should you eat meals en- (
route, you will find that dining cars (
no longer practice the "robbery" of (
which they used to be accused?the
cost for meals is the same as in any (
good restaurant.
More Americans are traveling by '
rail now than in many years?because
they have discovered that no
other kind of traveling is as com'fortable,
as certain and as economical
In the light of services rendered.?
Sumter Herald.
HALF OF NATION'8 MICA
MINED IN NORTH CAROLINA
A summary of mica production In
the United States for 1935, issued by
the Bureau of Mines, shows North
Carolina produced more than half the
nation's total.
From a production of 4,904 short
tons In 1934, North Carolina's production
jumped to 12,087 short tons In
1935. The monetary value of the
state's 1935 production was given as
$231,151, aH compared with $98,170
the previous year.
North Carolina's 1935 production of
19,320 short tons valued at $405,101.
The other principal producing state
Is New Hampshire which in 1935 produced
460 short tons valued at $19,062.
That was a decrease from 1934
when New Hampshire production was
697 short tons-valued at $23,952.
Possibilities for further extension of
mica mining were indicated by the
bureau summary which said during
1935 there were 9,756,496 pounds of
mica Imported.
Mica mining in North Carolina is
scattered in a number of western
counties.
The rooflug, wall paper and rubber |
industries are the principal consumers
of the mineral In this country.
HOLINE88 PREACHER DIE8
FROM SNAKE BITE
Jonesville, Va? Sept. 30.?The Rev. 1
T. Anderson who was thrice bitten by '
snakes In a "faith demonstration" at !
a Holiness meeting Sunday died at '
midnight Dr. T. B. Ely said today.
The doctor said Anderson's daugh- '
ter appealed for aid yesterday. After 1
hearing a description of the man'# 1
condition Dr. Ely said the stricken
man had waited too long and that 1
medical care could do nothing for him.
The daughter said that at times
spots appeared all over her father's!'
body and he was delirious and In
great pain. 1
Ely said Anderson was bitten twic&
on the right hand by a copperhead 1
moccasin and once on the left hand
by a rattler. Xj
Friends quoted the Holiness preacher,
a former school teacheiL and unsuccessful
candidate for the legislature
as having said 1m "hold
out faithful to the ondV H
At Waco, Texas, 2,000 persons were
homeless, when a Braxos river levee
gave way under the crush of floodwaters
and Inundated the entire eastern
part of the city. It sent a torrent of
flood water Into a residential section.
City Manager W. C. Torrence of Waco'
said he believed all persons had boen
[ removed or warned taJpave the endangered
area before the water hlL
Throe refugee stations were #et up
with national guard field kitchens to
care for the homeless. Police rigged
up a loudspeaker car to direct rescue
trucks, operated by volunteers from
the lean Uefipn, police and national
#ietds. Tw waters were still
rising,- nVMt damage was feared
from their continuing to go higher. ?
It has been estimated that not
more than S per cent of the 1.000,-000
In the world are ?a te*roe*?
v'
jllPjr " .. L! * V1 Jjf
mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmrnttrnrnsm
General News Notes
A freight train of 100 cars at Kill
anlng, Pe? ran over a baby eighteen
month* old who lay sleeping between
the rails, where It fell' asleep while
playing. Its only Injury was a slight
cut ou the forehead.
When the Will Rogers ranches were
sold at Claremont, Okla., to marshal
the assets of his estate, nobody bid
sgalnst the widow who bought them
for 916,000 when the sale was adjourned
to the office of an attorney
ind completed behind
Members of the Goodrich ?' local,
l/nfted Rubber Workers of America,
ruled unanimously to return to work
it the B. V. Goodrich company plant
eblch suspended operation making
10,000 employes Idle after a serle# of
'sltdowns."
Pan-American Airways has been
(Iven permission by the department
it commerce to begin carrying pas
?enger* from San Francisco to Mailia,
and the company will start pas
longer service early next month.
The Thompson orphanage at Charlotte
was left the major part of the
estate of Alexander Kreth, of Raleigh,
N. C., by his will. The amount is
>ver 950,000 which is made a trust
fund for the widow and goes to the
orphanage at her death.
More than 1,000 Walker county Alabama
children remained away from
classrooms while school authorities
itudled demands of labor leaders that
teachers be required to join the Amerft-an
Federation of Classroom Teachers.
A hilddleford, Me., citizens' committee,
seeking to have the Pepperell
Manufacturing company continue operations
in Biddleford, announced
company officials had declared it too
late to Btop removal of 600 looms to
Alabama.
Edwin Robert Crawford, former
president of the McKeesport Tin
Plate company, left approximately
$1,500,000 to charity under the terms
of his will filed for probate at Pittsburgh.
Attorneys estimated his total
estate amounted to 93,825,000.
Relief will be required for 350 families,
victims of the hurricane along
the Atlantic coast, the Red Cross pjxnounces,
and $30,000 must be spent
for them. Six villages In North Carolina
have 125 families in distress, and
18 houses were destroyed along the
North Carolina coast.
The government forces defending
Madrid opened wide the gates of a
big dam and sent a fifteen foot wall
of water down on the camp of the be
sieging rebels. It swept to their death
many soldiers, and destroyed much
ammunition and supplies.
The concrete abutments of a bridge,
being repaired after flood damage, at
the county fair grounds at Rutberfordton,
N. C., fell on a Splndale man
In the chain gang and killed^-him.
Two other convicts escaped, when the
guards shouted a warning, but Paul
Cochran, 22 years old, stood still and
was crushed..
Mrs. Nancy Seymore, 74 years old,
of Greene county, North Carolina,
went into the yard of hor son's home,
saturated her clothes with kerosene,
and Ignited it. She died soon aftef-.
ward. She had been despondent and
bad gone around telling her friends
she would not see them again, and
telling them goodbye.
The cities which have been operating
on their own summer time, an
hour off standard time, returned to
normal time on Sunday at 2 o'clock in
the morning. Chicago remained on
what amounts to a permanent daylight
saving time under a local ordinance
placing the city on eastern instead
of central standard time. There
will be a referendum on the subject
In November, however.
A big six-foot n^gp-o confessed killing
Mrs. Florence (^oodwln, a Washington
typist, after^^Joljce had fixed
the crime on him by BcletaHftc methods.
Very sn^tll silken threads found
under his finger nails were demonstrated
to have come from the robA
the woman wore, under the microscope,
and the blood stains on his
shirt and trousers were found to be
the same type of blood as that of the
murdered woman. <
Forest fires threatened Marshfield
and Coos Bay, Oregon, after virtually
destroying the coastal town of Bandon,
leaving its entire population of
1,500 homeless. At least seven pero
ons were reported dead at Baudon.
Eighteen miles inland small buildings
were oh fire on the outskirts of Coqullle
a town of 3,000, and scores of
families were leaving their hortes.
Burning embers were falling through,
the town. Scattered gdburb&n buildings
In the Coos Bay cities of Marshfield
and North Bend, with combined
population of 12,000, were on fire.
South Carolina is the only state lb
which cotton grades and staples are
better than last year,,they being Irregular
and poorer in Florida, Georgia
and Alabama, a federal bureau at
Atlanta reporta.
Thomas Young, English scientist,
was a prodigy of the rarest type.- Ah
an age when most children lead Mother
Goose rhyme*.. he wee absorbing
foreign lahgnsgee. At the age oflt
he oonld write In 14
Searchers Find
G. W. Hart's Body
Floating In water about waist doep. I
the body of George W. Hart. $9, who
had been mlsing Mince Friday, was
recovered about noon yesterday In I
I .alee Murray by Hoy Wbltaker, an I
employe of the Duubar Funeral home. I
Mr. Wbltaker located the body I
while cruising In a motor launch about I
Ave miles from Stewart's fishing I
camp.
. My. Hart had been the object of a
Widespread search since he dlsap-l
peered on the lake Friday afternoon I
aft*- returning froiq a flaking trip]
with Frank Stewart. f'Mr. Hart went]
back on the lake In a motor boat]
after coming back to Stewart's land-1
ing with Mr. Stewart. No trace of the L
boat had been found and authorities ]
expressed the belief that it had gone |
to the bottom of the lake.
Coroner John A. Sergeant said that]
death was apparently from drowning ,
and that no inquest would be neces-1'
sary. Sheriff T. Alex Helse and a
number of other officers and residents ]
of the section also took part In the I
search.
A reward of flOO had been offered '
by Mrs. George W Hart, mother of
the drowned man, for the recovery]
of the body. v"v.'F
Mr. Hart attended both Cleihson}
College and the University of Virginia.
He had made his home on Lake]
Murray, near Ballentlne, for about a]
year and operated a chicken farm. |
His mother has been In Columbia ]
since Monday as the guest of Mrs. R.
L. Burnett.?Wednesday's State. j
. 3 I
Luck 8avss Life L
Chester, Sept. 27.?Officer N. Wrayf
Benson believes that luck and quick]
thinking saved his life Saturday night
in a desperate fight that he had with |
[Amos Crosby, negro, World War vetteran
and Janitor at Gaylo school,
Baldwin Station, Chester, when the j
negro in a drunken condition resist-]
ed arrest. '
Crosby was driving an automobile,]
while drunk. Officer Benson said.
When he stopped his car, it angered ]
the negro. A terrific fight then en-|
sued, he said. Officer Benson said |
that in the fierce fight Crosby
aged to get hid finger on the trigger j
of his (Benson's) revolver, and tried]
to direct the barrel against hie stomach.
However, he *yas too quick for
him and he managed to get the barrel
turned into the earth, when the car-]
tridge fired, sending the bullet into]
the ground. Otherwise the officer be-l
lieves that he would probably have
been severely shot. Sam Ramsey then J'
rushed up to assist Mr. Benson and
the negro was brought to Chester.
His injuries were treated by Dr. |
George A. Hennies. Later he was*]
placed in the Chester county jail. Of-]
ficer Benson escaped uninjured. '
ENGLISH WOMAN LIKES
LIFE IN UNITED 8TATE8
New York.?Having completed by
automobile a roundtrlp of 10,000 miles
across the United States and Canada,]
traveling Incognito with only compan-1
Ion and chauffeur, the Dowager Mar-|
choness of Reading professed her ]
abiding admiration for America before
she left here for England recent-1
ly. " ? -f
Lady Reading was especially Inter-]
ested in the methods by which the j
United States handles Its unemploy- ]
ment problem, since she is the leader]
of the Personal Service league, one
of England's largest voluntary relief
organizations. By traveling as a"-commoner,
she was able to talk with re-l
lief recipients and to learn of the]
problems of people In all walks of
American life, she added. I
"The four months since I landed
have been full of deepest interest for])
me," Lady Reading continued. "I ]
have met men and women, boys and |
girls of vastly different types and
ages. I have found, every wondrous]
hospitality, not merely in the form]
of entertainment, but also in the most
valuable and delightful friendliness
and kindliness."
So Interested was Lady Reading In
North America that she indicated she
would return here next summer for]
another tour. She said that inspiration
to make the trip came from the
affection which her husband, the late
Marquess of Reading, had for the
United States.
I was greatly interested in the |
great resources of American youth, j
particularly iu its virility, enterprise
and determination," she continued. "I}
j'W0' help feeling that one of the j
great gifts education and democracy ]
have had to bestow is the complete
freedom of self-consciousness appar- j
ent in the youth of this country.
"In every city and town I was
moved to admire the broad vision of
the future which young people show,
and also by the generosity displayed
la public enterprises given by the
wealthy to Improve conditions of the
poor."
t - t * TyJ |
-iSssrsiiiiii ******
? * ~ Vi- > >
I I
ANTSfrCOOPKII PROJECT
AWAIT? COURT ACTION
Columbia, Sept. IS.--Chairman Burnet
Maybaujt of the South Carolina
Public Service Authority said today
a conference of !fc? Anther**?, sponaor
of the 8antee-Oeoper project, and Its
advleory board had- la a better
undent landing between the two
He aald 'the sponaor* were cheer
ed by a prospect of action on lttlgs->
Hon by power companies, against the.
big project "soon after" the U. 8 upreme
court paaeee on a elmllar
nn ^ul "> Bwiart tWo.t froject
next month. k y' -1
The Charleston mayor" disclosed
that the Authority had expressed "appreciation
of the cooperation" of the
advisory board, headed by Governor
Olln Johnstorf,'and had offered to send
It fall copies of its ndnhtetf.
Spokesmen for the advisory board,
he said, replied that they did hot deem
this ndrdsMhry, and would hsk for Information
on the progress of the project
whenever they wished It.
Maybank assured them that records
of the Authority were "open at all
times." x
He said the Authority bad spent
only 131,000 In two years of negotlatlou
and litigation, $7,600 of It In attorneys'
fees and the balance at the
rate of $1,000 & month for staff and
all other expenses.
The Authority also discussed litigation
brought by the Duke Power company.
t^ie South Carolina Powar company,
/ and the Carolina Power and
Light company on grounds the proposed
project was unconstitutional.
The case has not reached the
United States supreme court, but a
decision on the Busxard Roost pro(ect^lu
Greenwood county waS/expected
to play a considerable part in determining
it
Sumter Has Brush Artist
Sumter has a young man who Is
& natural artist with brushes and i
paints in the person of Cecil MqCasklll.
The very clever sales display
banners in the Capitol department
store, depicting "Jiggs" and
other comic sheet characters are his
work and are well worth a visit by,
anybody to see and enjoy. .He has
achieved local faqae too through some
landscape scenes he has painted, one
of White's Mill, which it is Bald he
has been offered a good sum in cash
for it by a prominent local man. Mr.
McCaskill displays a talent that is
bound to carry him to->a place of notei
if be follows it up.?Sumter Herald, j
r
Massachusetts and Rhode Island
are the only states that bllow arrests
for an uncollected debt.
Wants-For Sale ;
MEN WANTED?For nearby Rawleigh
Routes of 800 families. Write
Rawleigh's, Department SCJ-20-SB,
Richmond, Va. 28-30 pd.
L08T OR 8TRAYED?About three
weeks ago one brown and black female
hound. Answers to name of
Kate. If found notify Louis Clyburn,
Central Service Station, Camden
8. C. 28 pd.
FOR RENT?Six room brick cottage
in choice location. Heated. Furnished
for winter season w?r unfurnished
on yearly lease. Available soon.
Better act quickly. Shannon Realty,
Company, Phone 7;_ Crocker building,
Camden, S. C. 28 sb. j
FREE ROAD SERVICE?Creed's Fill
ing Station Fifty-Mile Free Road
Service. Call Telephone 48C, Camden.
8. C. ;
FINAL DI8CHARGE
Notice is hereby alven thafj one
month from this date, on November
2, 1936, 1 will make to the Probate
Court of Kershaw county my final return
as Administratrix of the estate
of B. W. Rabon. deceased, and on the |
Bame date I will apply to the said (
Court for a final discharge as said
Administratrix 6t the said estate.
: IDA R. RABON, .
Administratrix.
Camden, S. C., September 30, 1936.
Wants-For Sale
" |i in i i i
WALL PAPERING and Painting at
reasonable prices. Before ha via, *
your work done write me for pri<
9 O. Bradwell KdgewoUJ Poetofflce!
Columbia, 8. C., or Telephone 9318
27-t9pd.
DO NOT WAIT all day to hare your
cotton ginned. We hare the largest
outfit in this section and the inoet
modern. Time is worth lot to you
during the harreet season. Gin *t
"jThe Southern Cotton Oil Company
> [Camden. 8. C. '
WANTED?To sell paint and roofing
material. No down payment. No
~ mortgage or security required. Two"" ~
years to pay. Only 6 per cent, in
terest. Camden Furniture Company.
Inc., Camden, 8. C. 17-28sb.
WANTED?You to paint and put new
root on your house now. No down
payment. Ne mortgage or security
required. Two years to pay. Only V
6 per cent, interest / Camden Furniture
Company, Camden, 8. c
CHOIOE8T BUILDING L0T8?"in
city,ton Bast Walnut street Fine
neighborhood, quiet, neer business
churches, schools, theatre. Car cost
saved In Ave years will repay for
lot. For sale, prices and terms
reasonable. See J. B. Wallace
Camden, 8. 0. 14 Jt '
WANTED-?Work as house maid or
nurse. Address Inez Salmon, Box
37, Route 2, Catnden, 8. C. 29-31 pd
FOR RENT?Cottage at 1904 .Broad
Street. Furbished or unfurnished.
Apply on premises or to J. E. Rob?
ineon, Camden, 8. G. 26tl ?
FOR RENT?Six room cottage In one
of best sections of city. Available
now. Shannon Realty Company
Crocker Building, Phone 7, Camden'
8. 20-28 tf.
WANTED?You to take advantage of
our Paint and Roofing plan. No
down payment. No mortgage or security
required. Two years to pay
Only 6 per cent, interest Camden
Furniture Company, Inc., Camden,
8- C. 27-28sb.
HOU8E8 FOR 8ALE?We have some *
very desirable homes in all sections
of the city at very moderate prices.
See us. Shannon Realty Company,
Telephone 7, Crocker Building,
Camden. 8. C. 19tf
GIN YOUR COTTON at the Southern
Cotton Oil 4 Company. They have
installed a modern outfit and you
will receive a fine sample. A,-good
sample means a better price. You
will receive prompt and courteous
service. Southern Cotton Oil Company,
Camden, S. 0. 24tf
iWE HAVE?In stock Mascot Ldme
Stone for your land. McLeod and
McLauchiin, Phone 63, Camden.
5?- - -1 ? 27-tf. ?
FOR 8ALE?Filling station, store,
lunoh room, home, all under -one
roof. Corner lot on Number One
Highway. Fine opportunity. Shannon
Realty Co., Camden, S. C., tele7.
' 27-29 sb.
FOR 8ALE-?A desirable five room
bungalow, .with bath, for $2^50,
easy terms. For further Inform!,
tlon apply Enterprlee Building A
?.h<?a.!?.?5,o0,?*,0n' <**mde#i, 8. C. 3sb ;
BUILDING LOT8?Are increasing in
prices. Buy now and save. We
have five fine lots 62x136, close In;
three choice lots 75*160 In center
of residential section; three more
near Brevard Place Other beautiful
lots. No advance in prices on
these. Address Shannon Realty
Company, Telephone 7, Camden, S.
~rQr :~ 24tf.
FARMS FOR BALE?We have many
good farms listed, all sizes and at
favorable prices and^ terms. Shannon
Realty Company, Phone 7, In
Crocker Building* Camden, 8. C.
S4tf
FOR 8ALE?Tract of about 100 acreq
of fair grade Of land, containing
nice stream, and about 200,000 feet
of timber, all at a bargain. Terms
. to right party. Address "Timber,"
Box 272, Camden, 8. C. 28 pd.
*_ i: : ' V '.V'V . J
QUALITY MEN8 WEAR k J
GRIFFON I
SUITS and OVERCOATS I
$25.00 and $29.50 |j
W. Sheorn & Son I
QUALITY MEN8 WEAR I
.
| ii i i ,1 i 1 i 11 sasaeaassggsfl I
Grocery and Market Specials I
FOR
Friday - Saturday a * Monday || |
BEST>vrr "* '
Floor, ^
VEGETABLE 7:' I"K ;
Lard, lb...... 14c
FAT BACK v
Bacon, lb. :;, 14c ~
; ' " - :
CAVtNAtlON . ' " || ,1
Milk, ,m*" 4c,ur?* 9c1
DOMINO i|
Sugar, 10 lbs.. 55c f J
PURE |{
Coffee, lb.... 15cji
BL__ PMSH MIA? XI
Sirloin Steak, lb 20c
Tenderloin Steak,- lb.., 20c
> T-Bone Steak, lb.! 20c
Round Steak, lb. 20ft
Chuck, per lb 12V?c
1 Roast, per lb. 15c '
Pork Chop*, lb 25c
ii I II i M ^mrnrnm^m
Spare lUbg^lfeigfcwe. } j II I
Weiniea, lb. J*6 H I
Beef Liver, lb 20c H
Hamburger, lb. ; WJi* H 11
Cured Ham. lb. ^ Hi
Breakfast Blcoe, lb. 33. |
Butter, ptr lb. 44t |