University of South Carolina Libraries
go *V4 fJw p^iiTj- & i -^S l* CAMDEN, SOUTH 4 a tin jaoi fn ^ (»* 4»rtl « •» f t !^r » ~yl <"■ ! 7®k'C .O'H tva: (J il Adil«Si i^omas, tner, la ' about leorner are still on __ ; for two nogroos itched $254 from - is, a nerro ten- •ij la of RatlWfe - ^ reets \ lit in bills of $10, $10, * .m Siamese Twins Born To Neon Girl At c ere, Dead $■ $*4U V< e / bora to •ttfao Number Of T>'f S <*1*, fr' t < • *»' • Products And f" c » Jt:r4 il <1 OCTOBER 25. 1949 In Kershaw r:- r ’ n! t; *St» Afeed Tuesday Night To Farther Plana - Preparatory School * ^ The number of manufacturing establishments in Kershaw County has jumped from 28 to 50 and the annual value added by manufacture of fo maimfacturmg establishments of the County has increased by JL w ■w Tl' i. ./Dil.77' two had farm near of the W. F. store, lied, mden bill vrh 'njorniw, the fsh> _ed the | - 25 years of a«e. i bills from him, £ Arthar f m^ n A rm of the opinion that waiting on a back had fled In the ma> also believe that the > by other than local [the 1 [two strangers were seen 1 the cotton platform noted the sale of nrob- •"t£e ive than dial they : . . : »<s they Plan Bargains “ r ‘ ^smsrvs Loco I Merchonts Will Offer Special Buys On N**t TtMsday V ^ A number of Camden merchants plan to take ad vantage of “Circus Day’ 7 on next Tuesday, Nov. 1, to of fer special bargains to the crowds of people who are expected to conie to the City on that day. In other words ♦‘Circus Day*’ will also be in Camden. *<; circu* which deen in amny yaara and.it i SSftStR ^Brjfflfa 105,000 since 1989, according to information received by The Camden Chronicle from C. Parker Persons, regional director of the United States Department of Com merce in Atlanta. A Census Bureau report from its 1947 census of man ufactures shows, Mr. Per sons said, that in 1989 the value added by manufacture or goods produced by man ufacturers of Kershaw Coun ty was $864,000 and that in 1947 it was $8,969,000. The term “value added by man ufacture means the value ot manufactured goods in ex cess of the cost of materials and supplies, the Commerct Department official explain- edj , ' *? r Various branches of Ker shaw county’s manufactur ing industries have grown correspondingly to the fc- year period; it was stated. The number of establish ments engaged in manufac turing operations has in creased from 26 in 1989 to 60 in 1947. the number of employees from 757 to 1,147 and salaries and wages paid from $446,222 to $l326,000. These figures should show a very tremendous increase after the Du Pont plant be gins operations. Th« addi tion to the Henutosge Mill also further swell the in futufn years. Census lansau report also reflects the rapid strides ' • S * * 4 * U ^ \ *,. • J made by South Carolina in dustrially since before the war. For example, the value added by maaufi goods produced in as a whole ipcr more than since 1989, going from a Val uation of $169,294,000! to « that year to $794,812,000 hi |f| 1947. Also, the number of ■” establis manufacturing operations has grown from 1,861 in m 1969 to 2,187 to 1947, toe m number of >Aii6 LM Vtf « f <2 i i «)ld.l uij ioir; ,r tU City Commissioner Joe McKtifr Breaks Leg Mowing Lawn " Oily taSSbi'toe E. McKain dvr td » a Sanotor OUn D. Johmh . msw •• 3' i IU To •Spook At Ixoi^iii a* Jim-lliy iDtfW A. 11 i 4 . United Olin States Senator will be the .wn'»« • Pomeroy it For RSU |l#| ■■Ml [wot Florence, ti rccik yvineraf \iuxy Pont V t. the fwvksr^ ti served one term as isi ; “he ious com* affair this ,ui' . i will be the garden to the Reese Gardner, Rtehla man v and in all but . having b—w •Usegue last Iff the towns i in favor" of the _ , ttom semi-pro to or- w “* “a NtoU, but the repre- * must take what they J yesterday'* meeting ■ before their respective before they «»aw commit themselves, that sentiment in Flor- <hvided on the subject. Some factions favor re in the Tri-State, where walked off with the gard< the churc py John for hk iaasH IM^IS to 18$,60 aries and wages $108,672,600 to 000, Mr. Persons ! l i9!" , W l f j v m v*r f f n>«Ki othar laundry ing p a new two-story i balhBng^ d w ion of ueational Which will be lo af the ptm- be some The kte of a rapidly Dtil s n si Isiii i sdioi n Savtrol Lao dart Of Stwfa oW “Wa‘ Km K# MaafliiB i\al 4% n A meeting will be held in th* Court rHousa. .*oa' next Tuesday night, Nov. 1, at A] o’doak to$r the purpose oi plant, thal Laundry and Cleaners, vrho wiH open on December 1, in the building on street formerly occl the Charley . Rumtllwt dry tent tof lor the building ’V r *<7^0 yd [of the Gastonia arranging for renovating of Rotai ■ w ^ Tie,:;;' Here On Tnesday m «r trnuL-ijirrta .ul Chib of Cswide" fWgHZ The P? District who is visit Rotary nil r f M to attends! SHi - -O! about 25 ef faith. to William A. Plott, Low- coupe him was who was aH I this summer, while oth- tbe opinion that the f be better off in a WWW classification. 5SS5 S3 £ an the semi-pro E* the present. The ' ‘ ^, p lsr ' ,« Class D nail may with salwr Hp- ot Columbia and i manager of the Gofo Conference |J* Methodist preachers T«waty « ^■•tnodist laymen are iy . ^omirtg for the ^utt.c.roUn.^ Pauline Mr. and Mrs. Edward thia city, and also his Phyllis and Brenda Sue. The was enroute to this city Ip the weekend with Mr. and Barfield. Coroner Plott said Mr. Low- man lost control of his car about 12 and one half miles out of Co lumbia and turned over. Mrs. Lowman was admitted to the hospital with injuries; Brenda Sue had numerous superficial wounds about Hie head, but was not admitted to the hospital; and Phyllis was not hurt ; Mr. Lowman was bom at Cas satt on October 2, 1924, the of the late Wallace Loyrman Mrs. Lillie Bowers Lowman. the time of his deeth he li c5SL“ ,,,7 ft son and served for 18 months, one which ( was to fi* South was a member of the Cas satt Baptist church and the Amer ican Legion, Richland Pott No. 8. He is survived by his widofr ^wtedVbl PALL 1 rANL gam a ot^ Camden; and a number of ’ "rhSwrato'is being investigat by State Highway Patrolman p. Hallman an$ CoToder Wi A Plott Mrs. Lena Clyl ■ “ *&, Football Con Again This With the return of the Camddn to the local stomping bliah- in fills lame the third of the football winner-picking con- teats. Seventeen outstanding col lege games to be played this weekend, plus the Camden-Der- iington tilt, will provide plenty of , fodder on which the until game time may feed until game time r Entries this week must be markedbefore noon Friday, ners win be announced m next Tuesday’s issue of The Chronicle. With the predominance of UP the college grid scene this li w«s siavea come iorwara[v*i fions di Mayal at the church a is iMftd. Mounted 1 of the Carolina Motor building < evangelist throng. The meeting is generally pro nounced to have been the great est evangelistic meeting ever held in Camden and it was. stated Sun day night that the crowd at the sets on grid scene the random guessers have ut as wall as the .choose their win- statistical study. New Bus Service To Myrtle Beach (I ‘fn|4'i « i Turner, presidi Scenic Stages end i. Corporation, ano Wamfah Turner, president of Carolina Socnk Stagas and Coast- £ Iniunntioii at which. fiie Piedmont sectieos of South , a. through eoachr-fm change of * ‘' V4 ti This schedule will Is villa at 93ft a. m^l Myrtle Beach jl Ml •ntving at « crowd at 1 ■ Paoa 8) tl!MI KdBuftW COUllt^ I rv# irdfnn ■Mrt TWdaj M 1 home teveral ■o’clock in the cries of fiie baby, ■ and upon found the is an MU5 5T 11 ' Oub of Ches- \ BAPTIST BROTHERHOOD •'^riuppEk^ ^ . There will be a Baptist Broth- j ture marks tti th# i erhood supper at Thomas Tavern) The spider was 1 jsr&S 1 gsr Sm r«i ^ JJSetaryTu&l S fiiV^JkSjSujSie back was | spider and also noted the ture marks 6n thn toby’s wTldf - ^ Pe0pl * . organisation mn4in\imm to CrSSSer. anSin strength. Plates will be fist each, and all men are ini New City Water Tank vited to attend. • | , When the spider was found mid it was seen that the baby had been bitten, the parents rushed her to the hospital. According to report Sunday. - • . vp | Hie infant had entirely recovered Presbyterians Protest Proposed Site For Tank |c3^ JC<x ‘ rt ti 4|»' A 44 At a meeting of the Session of RethewU Presbyterian The faU term of the Kershaw ‘ ■ ‘ ■ * ' ‘ ‘ ' ' rt of the opinion of'.this . body I county court td be erected by the CHyj^iSSJjSa mmediately in the rear of JjJjJSnS doc church on October 28, it was that the water tank proposed of.Catoden on the property immediately in the rear of the Church would nob only spoil the beahty of^the Chareb but would constitute a great injury ito the (Chnrch prop-|oy« the The Semion, therefore, gaked that 9. petition. ad- ^JJ 1 to the Mayor and Commissioners of Csmden be presented to the membership of the Church and congre- den. location of th* watar tank. 1 general 10 o^ock the 'prLl ‘M chvxfrqtJ Following the church ANwH jPaulWallace not _ of m proerving Oct. ji ian church was country’* J2® EASTERN STAR MEETING 1 The official inspection of the Leslie Zemp Chapter, No. Ill, ogf )Ocdsr of the Ba^mn Star, wiH .to « names were catted for ' 82 were callec * sbExs in t theiweek. new Rotary (hubs 1 to 8V countries of and Central Ameri- and the Crispin Oglebay, Well Known Here, Died On Sunday JjoeM Camden learn of Oglebay , i. .i — j will of the death of iy, whicJf occurs [here for| Ohio. He linCam- hto^ will be held at 1 o’clock at wvu IMJ the horses owned by Champion ‘and 4E,” "I" IM 1 'l 1 ' Holystone. He t and to the faith and Sf : ‘^ , «S32?J Camden'e are ‘ its charm to andHH the not traveling on the main ns of the town, and faaas of the town, ai Arable ^nH unsightly Mari of the town; from the Wffll vfcr? TAX ;d He was