The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, July 22, 1949, Image 10
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Liberty HiM
New* Of Week
A picnic at the club house on
Beaver Creek Lake was enjoyed
by: Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Hilliard,
Mrs. Dan Hilliard, Bobby Hilliard,
Charles and Becky Robinson of
Heath Springs, Mr. and Mrs. W.
F. Hilliard, Miss Jean Hilliard,
Mrs. H. E. Hilliard, Miss Barbara
and Eric Hilliard of Kershaw, Mr.
and Mrs. Henry Louis Montgom
ery of Lancaster, Mr. and Mrs. J.
Abe Hilton and Misses Shirley
and Betty Sue Hilton of Liberty
4 aSL
Mr. and Mrs. James Cocoros
of Bridgeport, Conn., and Mr. and
Mrs. Luther Shaw of Columbia
were guests of . Miss Margaret
Richards on Wednesday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Richards
visited his sisters. Misses Eliza
beth, Lai and Marion Richards for
several days while their furniture
was being moved from Denmark
to Heath Springs.
Miss Jane Higgins, Lancaster,
and Mrs. W. P. Beckham and little 1
son, Buster. Columbia, spent thei
weekend with Mr. and Mrs. H. S.'
returned home on Monday after
a visit with Rev. and Mrs. J. T
Dendy in Rock HilL
Mias Shirley'Hilton has as her
guest. Miss Barbara Hilliard of
l2\ and Mas. J. L. McManus,
Ellie McManus and Miss Betty
Ruth McManus attended an ice
cream supper at Baron DeKalb
Baptist church on Friday night
T. P. McCrae, Mr. and Mrs.
a R. McCrae and children visited
relatives in Sumter on
Mrs. J. B. McCoy, Camden, is
visiting her sister, Mrs. F. B.
Floyd.
Mrs. Steve Duds and little Mar
caret Duda were guests of Mr. and
Mrs. S. H. Cunningham last Wed
nesday
Quota* And Export!
Tobacco Growers Will
Ballot This Saturday
Flue-cured tobacco growers of Kershaw county will
vote Saturday, July 23 in a referendum on the continuance
of the marketing quotas and the Tobacco Association er
count
Lugo!
port program. J. R. West, of Cassatt, is county chairman
for the referendum. Other committee members for tne
ty are M. G. King, of Bethune, and John Gettys, of
>fl. ^ .
Kershaw county last year produced 254,622 pounds
(far- J _ . . af tobacco on about 311.2 acres with an average per acre
Mr ’"IMr^CD. Cimnmgham^ €l(J o{ gl8 poundg
p Chairman West says that the county’s flue-cured crop
was worth approximately $127,000 but without the foreign
market the county would have suffered. There would have
been no place for the 40 per cent that is usually exported
and the resulting depressed prices, he estimates, would
have placed the loss far above the $60,800 received for the
exported tobacco
made • busim
on Thursday.
N. S. Richard*. Jr., and Chesley
Richards of Cliffside; N.
fettles Myers and Nettle*, 1
Jr., spent last Friday with Mrs..
F. B. Floyd. I
Mr. and Mrs. E. J Cunningham
made a business trip to Sumter
on Thursday
Rev. and Mrs. F. A Drennan
F. H. A. Loons
TAM/TfASY
LIT US FIND YOU
A HOME
OF YOUR OWN
$£€ US TODAY
Real Estate Sales
Insurance, Inc.
C, visit
ed Capt. N. S. Richards on Sat
urday.
Miss Vivian Agnew of Mary
land, Misses Winton and Lillian
Agnew of Charlotte, N. C., spent
the weekend with Misses Clara
and Louise Johnston.
Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Clements,
Sr., visited Dr. and Mrs. J. M.
Freeman in Columbia on Friday
afternoon.
Mrs. J. Boyce Bankhead and
children, Betty, Jimmie and
Johnnie, spent Monday afternoon
with Mrs. John G. Richards.
Mrs. Raymond Lewis and son,
Cecil of Columbia, spent the
weekend with Mr. and Mrs. J. L.
McManus.
Mr*. Hazel Powers and chil
dren, Jimmie, Peggy and Mike of
Heath Springs, were
Mrs. J. Abe Hilton on
Mrs. L. P. Thom;
Thompson spent the weekend in
Charleston with Miss Elizabeth
Thompson, whose mother is very
ill.
SQUARE EGGS
Mr. Wert this week urged that every tobacco grower
in the county vote in referenuum on Saturday.
Revival Service*
St. John’* Church
Revival service* will be held
at St. John’s Methodist church.
Spring Hill charge, 1
each night at 8:80, July 24
the 30th. The Rev. E. P. Bell, pas
tor of the Jefferson charge, will
deliver the messages. Public in
vited. Come singing, come pray-
..ome-coming Day will be ob
served Sunday, July 31, beginning
with 11 o’clock service. All former
members and pastors are invited
to attend. Dinner will be served
on the ground.
SINGING CONVENTION ’
9 A. M. to 9 P. M.
' v K.-tm
T4
822 DeKalb St.
Phone 324
is not unreasonable to propose
another improvement. It would
be an economic gain if a breed of
hens could be originated that
would produce square eses.—
Boston Herald.
KERSHAW LODGE NO. 28
A.F.M.
Regular Communica-
lion First Tuesday of
Each Month at 8 P. M.
Visitors Welcome.
J. B. McGUIRT, W. M.
L. H. JONES, Secretary
The Kershaw County Sini
Convention will meet with Tim-
rod Baptist church Sunday, July
24, at 2:30 p. m. The public is cor
dially invited.
INDISCRIMINATE
Now we’ve heard everything.
The postoffi'ce reports that pens
are stolen frequently from its
writing desks in postoffice lob
bies. There may be something less
worth acquiring than a postoffice
pen, but we’ve never heard of
it—unless it might be a postoffice
blotter.—Pittsburgh Press.
Hie scan* above shows the crowd at the "Maytag" drawing on May 18th.
SPECIALS
At
BOYKIN’S
3 Used ELECTRIC RANGES
$35.00, each
2 A. B. APT. RANGES—Used
Like New
$69.50 each
2 SLIGHTLY USED DUO-THERM WATER HEATERS
$85.00
i ^
Used Kelvinator REFRIGERATOR
Guaranteed One Year
$125.00
Reconditioned ICE BOXES
^ Low As
• . »■« .
$1.00 Down—$1.00 par Week
1 Used Norge REFRIGERATOR
Guaranteed One Year
$125.00
A FEW MORE RUGS
6x9 at
9x9 «».
9x12 at.
$2.95
$3.95
$4.95.
m 'Jo**.
••••
I
J
* : ft ..
£ *
Up .
660
t C.-T .<J
.*v4 JO tfrM’KL
WHIN metal parts break, don’t
throw them away. Let us esti
mate hew much We can save
you by saving them by welding.
Remember ... by exy-acetylene
welding we can repair broken
metal parte so that they are as
good pe new. And when “worn
out" parts are rebuilt by weld
ing, they frequently will outlast
new ones. Call on uo—the chan
ces are you will save both time
and money.
WE ALSO SELL
DEMING WATER PUMPS
CAMDEN MACHINE
5 WORKS
Anderson Brothers
GENERAL MACHINE WORK
Electric and Acetylene
Welding
Welding can SAVE YOU
MONEY!
ONE FREE ICE (RUN SERVED TO UCH PEtSM
4 *: A ;
DRUGS and DRUG SUNDRIES
* • - * ■ . i ;
SODA and CANDIES
Prescription Department Under Superynion
of Licensed Druggist,
f/t i:
EVERYONE WELCOME
ji M
j
' ^ -
—-"i"
K
i
Its our big
X. * \ . * a..-, J} r f - L! >43
Our Celebration of Hudson’s 40th Anniversary Yur
/
laafMt trades, bast dldf h tog MG SWITCH TO HUDSON IS ONI
Urttaxu-A. -J- -Jim Of the fin* 800,000 New ITailsi—
bou^ift, over half—100^02 to be
•xact—were bought by alert men
-» an d women who traded ha —rr of
Priding * rioing ^-makee, from the hmeat to tha
of popularity! highest priced, toownaNewHadm.
Official figures prove h! Hudson And new, ae o«r way of oelebratfaw
“ — ttodeon’s 40th annivecaarv andto
1
wh stiN
friaads for Hudson!
f ‘
the
m Hudson ~ our way of oeMbraunr
iao&rthhyev:up33.7% over Hudson’e 40th ennivemary andto
mae period lato year! »*w W^de for the
■mr ■mi i t ti it » m Hudson in this ooaeaeuaiSv.
u
with ezduerve *step-dewn” >*—.—
h America', 4-M08T CerTTZ
1
j
MOST BeeutiftiL 3—MOST Roomv
J-MOST Roadworthy. 4—MOOT
All-round Pffirfnrmm
g* to own tki* yJZSLmTjZt
WePa offering the ' W
t deal* in oe
NOW B
- ■ - 1 Y** '£■ Y? v>H
COMI IN-NOW - rot rout SIVILATION *11
».•
DeKalb Street
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