The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, November 23, 1945, Image 4
rAOl TWO
TH» CAMDEW CHKOmCH, ^AMDKN, tOUTH CAROLINA, FWIDAY» NOVEMBERL2a. 1945
NE W S of ^
Annte U Pettu*, Y 2-c, and her
friend, Viola Mullins. Y 2-c, spent
this past weekend with her mother,
Mrs. W. C. Pettus. 610 Broad street
Thomas J. Clybum, Jr,, SKD 1-C,
son of Mrs. Edna Wllllaras of Char
leston, has returned to the States
after two and «»e half years on the
U8S Essex serving In the Pacific. He
Is now stationed in Washington state
and expects to receive a furlough the
last of this month.
T-5 Parley L. Pierce, of Kershaw,
is on his way home. He is erne of
more than 1,100 hlgh-point Army and
Navy veterans whom the' ‘‘Magic
Carpet” is bringing back to the
states aboard the'^U.S.S. ATTU.
Charles Oscar Stogner, Jr., with
the rank of SK 1-c, USNR, whose
home address is 413 Hampton street,
this city, has been discharged from
the United States Naval service at
the navy personnel center at Termi
nal Island, San Pedro, Cal.
Prom the U. S. Naval Personnel
seperation . center a t Charleston,
comes the report of the discharge of
Ralph Little, who gives his occupa
tion as that of architect and his
home address as Camden. He enter
ed the service March 29, 1943. He
attained the rank of Lieutenant.
Others who were discharged from
the Charleston naval seperation cen
ter included Matthew Hunter. 28, of
Bethune; Banyan Reese Truesdall,
33, Camden; James McLeod Chewn-
Ing. 1416 Lyttleton street, Camden;
Ernest West, R D No. 2. Camden;
James Beaufort Reynolds. 408 DeKalb
street. Camden; John D. Crolley, 29,
of R D No. 1. Camden.
Also Harold Hoyt gegars, 26, R D
4, Camden; Charles Prank Ham.
mond, 25, of 200 Davis street. Green,
wood; Anderson William Amos. S3,
R D 2, CamdMi; Lyles Simpson Nun.
nery, 1207 Fair street, Camden; Win-
ford Jennings Galloway, R O 4, Cam
den; Joe Hornsby, 36, 906 1/2
Lyttleton street, Camden; James
Woodrow Thompkins, 1004 Pair street
Camden; Herbert Dewey Mahaffey,
27, 819 MUl street, Camden; Marvin
I.«gree Rabon, 21, R D 3. Camden;
Harry Carlos 22, Camden.
Thomas Arthur Christmas. 27, sea
man. first class, USNR. Kershaw,
South Carolina,, has left 70,000 miles
of sea travel behind—miles covering
operations in which his ship contri
buted 976 tons of projectiles to the
defeat of Japan—when the VICKS
BURG took part in the observance of
Navy Day there October 27.
Ens. Cecil T. Neal. 24. USNR, Ker-
shaw, S. C., figured In the first land
ings of U. S. Navy planes at two
points on tlie Japanese homeland fol-
lowing the end of hostilities.
Elmore Phillips, 20, seaman, first
class. USNR, oute 2. Kershaw, S. C.,
seryW|ton the Deetroyer USS Melvin,
when she‘ steamed through Tsugaru
Straits with other units of the North
Pacific Force to receive the surren
der of and to occupy northern Japan.
The MELVIN partlclpater In the
blockade and bombardment of Japan,
fought in the Battle „ of gurigao.
Straits and earned eight battle stars.
Charles Armstrong Dorma^, signal
man, first class, USNR, oute 6, Ker
shaw,'S. C., Is serving on the USS
HAMLIN in Tokyo Bay. This ship
entered Tokyo Bay several days b^
fore the formal surrender ceremonies
to become part of the occupation
force.
Pfc. Lewis L. Tidwell has returned
home with 'ah honorable discharge,
after 28 months overseas duty. He
wears the Good Conduct ribbon, EyTO
ribbon with 3 campaign stars, plus
th^ Arrow Head, the Purple Heart,
with an Oak Leaf cluster, and the
Presidential Citation ribbon.
Enriched Grits On
Sale In the State
The law requiring the sale of en-
riched grits in South Carolina be
came effective last Thursday.
Vitamins and minerals are added
to the grits to enrich the breakfast
staple of gputh Carolinians.
BRONCHIAL COUGHS
COUGHS
Loosens - U P *■ Raises
, Thick Choking Phlegm
-With Amazing Speed
t-pt-nil 43 rents today at any Kood
hriiK Btore for a tiottle of llucUlry'a
OANAL'IOL MlxtVire-*-XiMt<* ' ouplo
«if dosed nt i)eiltlm(. - ficl ltd Indt int
powerful effective fiction spread thru
throat, heail nnd bronchial tubes. It
DUE
TO
COLDS
atartd at onee to loodon up th!-k,
choking phioKut—doo'the raw inein-
branod nnd iiiako breathlnif ead'ler.
Sufferers find Buckley's ftlvoa
quick relief from those persistent,
iiadt.r, Irrtfatlnij bronchial couglis
ilue to cotda. But ho dur’'o you get
Ituckley's t'ANAHIOI, Mixture—mada^ j»
In l'..S..\.—by fiir the largest scUing
cough medicine In cold wintry Can-.'
ada, (iet Buckley’s CANAOlOtj tft-
dav-^Yi>u L^'t relief In.ttantly.
DeKalb Pharmacy — Phone 95
They Fit Right—
Last Much Longer
11*8 our warGme responsibility
to keep your Ford car rolling.
The best way we know to do
this is to give your car genuine
Ford service regularly and to
use Genuine Ford Parts
whenever it’s necessary to re
place any part.
To Be Sure-*See Us!
You can bring your car to us with per
fect confidence—because we’ll give you
Genuine Ford Protective Service and
use Genuine Ford Parts.
Automobile parts xnay look alike but
they are not alike. Ford manufactures
parts only for Ford-built cars—every
part is precision-built exactly like the
original part which came with your car
—it’s made of the same identical mate^
rial under strict lalwatory control—and
will perform right. Don’t take chances
—see us for Genuine Ford Farts.
Motor Co.
We»t DeKal|> Street
Cemden, S. C.
See the 194$ Ford
Now On Display
/ ' ■
Place Your Order Now For
FUTURE DELIVERY
Football Chatter -
Prom tho Ekipper’a Desk
Bishopville football fans, and there
are plenty of them, are complaining
against the edict of the State High
School Athlectic committee in forfeit
ing the Bisbopvine-Dillon game of a
week ago last Friday, won by Blshop-
vllle 41 to 0, to Dillon. »
« * * * '
It is reported that the edinmitt^
held that Blshopvllle was playing a
boy who was not eligible under the
rules of the state athletic unit.
Whether he was over age, or had not
been at school long enough, we do
not know and neither does anyone at
Bishopville.
Rock Hill, by virtue of Its 27 to 0
win over Florence week before last,
^Ipibed Into the top spot In the wei-
ing for the b^st high' school team in
the state. Charleston, tied and out
played by Camden, was given second
place, Brookland-Cayce ranked third,
?Iorth Charleston 4th; Columbia 6th,
Greenwood 6tb; Spartanburg 7lh;
Camden 8th, Sumter 9th; George
town loth; Florence 11th; Chestet^
12th; and Easley, Gaffney, Greenville,
Anderson. Olympia and Parker In the
order named.
• * • •
l
Well, rules are rnles, and If they
are violated, the team violating them,
should be punished. However, if re
ports we hear have any foundation
there are other teems in the state
that should be .lnvestlr,'ated. It may
be these reports are without founda
tion. But It would be a smart bit of
work on the part of the committee to
do a little snooping.
• • • .* —' ' '■'''
Bishopville Is withdrawing from
state league competition. The whole
thing is to be regretted. 'The Bishop
ville Dragons gave the fans of the
home town and. surrounding area
some high school football this season.
They made the place football con
scious. They provided the stimulus
toward a memorial field .with a fine
lighting system.
« • • •
The Lee County Messenger says
many fans* believe the hearing held
in Columbia was not ehtlrely fair to
Bishopville, but rather than stir up
more bad feeling, decided not to go
any further with the protest.”
• • • •
The Blythewood high school de
feated the Blaney high 24 to 0 last
week Wednesday at Blythewood.
« • • •
The poll should not be taken ser
iously. While admitting Rock Hill is
tops’ in the state, based on Its record,
the balance of the listing leaves
much to be desired. 'The pofl is cast
by the sporting editors of some ten
daily/ papers and we want to point
out that none of them have se4n all
the teams In action. In other words-^
they"-are not competent to pass Judg
ment upon a majority of the teams,
gome of the ratings make us snicker.
• • • •
The Charleston News and Courier
rated Charleston tops. The Sumter
Item rates Charjeston tops. North
Charleston 2nd, Sumter 3rd, B-C 4th
and Rock Hill 6th. And so on and so
OJl.
Sgt Robt SUIs
Returning Home ,
T-4 Robert M., Sill, son of Mr. and
M^s. J. W. Sill, 1012 Fair street and
husband of Mrs. Eunice SOI of the
same address, is stationed at the re
distribution station at Fort Ogel-
thorpe, Oa.
Sergeant SOI was returned
ly to the SUtee after
months in Prance, Belguim
many as a mechanic In tba
tation divtslln.
His decorations include th«
p^B theater of operations
with four campaign stars and
Conduct medal. ^
and
tral
The Argentine government has
recommended utilization of the 1944-
46 corn crop exclusively for fuel.
HoNwonieiianc/giris
may get wanted raief
/rom functional portoJic pain
Csrdnl Is a liquid awdlclnt
woBwa say toss brought rdlaC
Ihs erssm-liks sgoor sadnsr*
strata of funetlonal patlodis
Hncs how It may halp:
I IbkM Uks a toais.
It sbonld sUmulsIs
Mvtlts, aid (UgsiK
,• thus boUd vu-
moa for tbs “IlmW*
to eoBss.
2 Stasts4 a dsyu is*,
fora "your ttms^, ft
should balp lallsve
pala dua to Buraiy fnus
ilMiSl SM
^t hslp» yauTI
NOTICE
THE
Instance Agencj
Announces
... that it hfls organized a
Real . Estate Department
to engage in the sale, renti
¥
and exchange of Real Estate of all typel
list Your Property With Us.
Telephone 52
PLACE ORDERS NOW
4
* SOT
VICTOdT
eoNid
//i BeattMUZ/fk BUZCK
T his, we reasoned, is no time
to offer folks a car that stops
with artful face-lifting.
It has been nearly four years
since our last new Buick was
built — it wouldn’t be shooting
square now tb give you less
than our honor-bright best.
I
So wo ov’erhauled our whole
factory to advantage it with
the latest in war-developed
machines and processes.
We scoured the country for the
stoutest metals anyone can buy
today.'
Wc set ourselves precisions
that in some cases exceed those
of aircraft engine production.
♦ w • * ■ , « *
And we eqgle-eyed every one
of this Buick’s 12,000 parts to
see if it could be bettered in
any way, big or little.
The result is that through
every stunning inch of this
bright new honey runs solid,
dependable Buick character,
honest and uncompromised.
It’s in swift clean lines. In seats
that are three-persons wide. In
stout, time-defying frames and
underpinning. Above all — in
the lift and liki of a Firebali
straight-eight that’s even live
lier than in 1942.
The cars your Buick dealer'
. will have are big. They’re
beautiful. They’re Buicks.
In fact ~ thebi^ BuickjS yeti
When befitr
automobiles ore built
BUICK
wii! them
CAMDEN MOTOR COMPANY
» f-,
ftrond Street
Camden, S. C