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Yankees Split Heriea Money New York, Oct. U.~~Each regular member of the world champion Yankees will receive $6,70*2 an his hare of the world series profits, it was announced tonight. Manager Miller Hugging, Charley O'l^eary, a?siatant manager, and Art Fletcher, the coach, also were voted full shares. Don Miller, a young college pitcher, who joined the team late in the summer, was voted a half ?hare. "Doc" Woods, the team's trainer, will get a three-quarters share, as will Mark Koth, the rouu secretary. F'hil I Schencht, groundkeeper, was given $750 and his assistants $250 each. i iches, i i IS | ired ! | be?n poor |; ore 1 took ? Irs. Anna ' I t, IndL **I . 0 account', day after { en effort, j the joy of ! * a dreadful ra ck, and my S 1 worried g I lardly able jut the de- 9 j ing family g id to; eo I S what was St ?ary, and JH a in. ^ ne suggest- S| I took it gi ib, and all 3; i growing S h nervous. g1 lina finally years ago. 3 haa been fi? ood health, <3 e taking of 8 h me, so I 3S recommend S SCARPUI J? KERSHAW LODGE No. 29 A. F. M. ? ^TQMLfrRegular communication of ^'s l?dg? iR held on the first Tuesday in each month at 8 p.m. Visiting Brethren are welcomed. T. V. WALSH, J. E. ROSS, Worshipful Master. Secretary. 1-14-27-tf T. B. BRUCE Veterinarian Day Phone 30?Night Phone 114 CAMDEN, S. C. MONEY TO LOAN At 6V2 Per cent Interest On improved city real estate. Apply to Henry Savage, Jr. Camden, S. C. N. C. ARNETT R E A L E S T A T E Loan and Savings Bank Building OUR SERVICE INCLUDES A CANDID PRESENTATION OF OUR LISTINGS AND UNTIRING EFFORT TO SUPPLY YOUR NEEDS "WSASED/ Pleased patrons make us pleased ?you know For that's what makes our business grow. ? Mr. Before and After Olll win k Coujuvd . With the pleased comment about it is the beat advertisement of this family service. CAMDEN DRY CLEANERY Phone 17 1 1 11 II III I III Nobody's Business Written tor Tb? Chronicle by Gee McGee, Copyright, J927. 8Uge Fright When 1 was about 9 years old my parents decided that inasmuch as a 3-moriths school was going on only 6 miles from home that 1 might as well be attending it, and getting a little "book learning," so shortly thereafter 1 took up my studies in the aforementioned school. The school took up in December (after all the cotton had been picked) and I closed the last of February, (sprout cutting time). i My studies consisted of l blue back spelling book and ] slate and 1 pencil. The school house consisted of a stack of logs with a board roof over them and some planks so arranged that wind could whistle between them without any special effort: this was called the floor, and 6 or H benches with 4 stobs stuck in them, 2 at each end, arid these were the legs thereof. My "nice suit" consisted of a pair of jeans britches, a hickory shirt, a set of bed-ticking suspenders, and a little wool hat that went to seed the first week 1 wore it, and thereafter looked like a funnel. I carried 3 big biscuits to school and a small bottle of ho-made molasses. When little recess would come, I bored a hole in a biscuit with my finger and poured in some molasses: when big recess came, I did the same thing, except I bored holes in 2 buscuits and poured molasses in them, and feasted thereon till the last crumb was gone. (Every ant in the country starved to death waiting on me to drop a crumb, but I never did). About the time I got to "B-a-k-e-r" the teacher announced that everybody must make a speech the.following Saturday. She might as well shot me right then and there. But she whipped children when they didn't do as she told them .to do, and I began to study, and otherwise get ready for the coming calamity. I finally made up my mind that I'd recite?"Six little rabbits went out to lun, ansoforth. I had heard some of the pupils say that several times, but 1 hadn t got that far along in my books. 1 he time for my speech came, and the teacher called for me. I tried to get up, but my legs wouldn't mati iculate. My mouth got so dry I couldn't open it. My stummick began to hurt and get weak, and I thought I d throw-up every minute. She hollered at me again, and * I bounced 2 feet up in the air, and made a dive for the rostrum. I don t know what happened then. When I came to. I was under the school house and 1 or 5 kids had hold to my feet. They pulled me out and got me hack into the school house, but I wr.s too weak for utterances. The teacher excused me for further service. One of the boys told me afterwards that 1 got up there and said: "5 little rabbits" and then I bolted out of the window. I have never been able to make a speech yet, and never expect to try. I'd as soon venture a trip across the Atlantic on a kite as to undertake to make a speech. The dresses tha't the girls are wearing in the good old year 1P27 are exactly the same length of the dresses that were worn by "ballet dancers" on the Aage in lyio, and the public generally said that they were vulgar and indecent?all of which goes on to prove that the public is sometimes a fool and very often wrong. A baby was born in South Georgia the other day that had its brain in its stunimick. We are sorry the little fellow did not live: he would have made a wonderful congressman. The department of agriculture seems anxious and willing to correct the^alse report they circulated some j time ago about the cotton production. which, naturally put the price . down about 2 cents a pound. This I j statement cannot be recalled or cor. totted, it is like making a remark about the virtue of a good woman. 1 he hurt has t>een done. I sheers and jobuck co: please send me by frait the beef waggin which has its pitcher on page no. 22 in yore catalog, hut this pitcher shows that 1 of the wheels is crooked and allso it looks like the waggin hoddy is warpped on 1 aid", so pick me out 1 which is in good fix and ship it at once, and if it fits my mule alright and there ain't nothing else wrong with it, i will send you yore monney for same just as soon as i sell the first beef ansoforth. my oreddiek is good down here and i suspose it is the same up there, but don't rjte any of the banks about me, hut rite my wife, if this don't suit you, rite or foam me at once, and i will make out with my old waggin. yores trulie, mtkc CtaTk, rid R-A-B-B-l-T-8 Our teacher has asked us boys to write a coinperaition on some irtaecks that infects the earth today, ayd 1 have chose rabbits for my subject. Rabbits uster be called hairs,* hut later on when their hair turned to fur, they was called rabbits and have been rabbits every cents. I am very fond of rabbits both cooked and in the woods, as I enjoy the running of them as much as I do the eating thereof. Rabbits will eat cabbage and turnips and vegetables if ahf . can get in your garden where they can bite them. Rabbits wear their powder puffs at their back ends because they don't want to get no powder and nothing in their eyes when anything gets after them, such as dogs and hawks. I believe this is about all I know about rabbits, except they do not.lay eggs and once thought ansoforth. ^ signed, . Fuller Carrotts, 7th G rade. Judging Team To National Show Clemson College, Oct. 8. A student dairy judging team consisting of G. E. Beason, Simpsonville; T. F. Cooley, Lowndesville; L. K. Martin, Ninety Six, and W. T. Martin, Chesnee, leaves here Thursday, Oct. 13, to represent Clemson College in a judging contest at the National Dairy Show, Memphis, Oct. 15-22 in which teams from many other agricultural colleges will participate. The men chosen to represent Clemson are all senior dairy students here. 1 raining for the team has been intensive since the opening of the college year in September and has been directed by Prof. J. P. LaMaster and K. S. Morrow of the dairy division staff. The college herd of cattle has been the chief basis of work, with special trips recently to Ware Shoals Guernsey Farm, and the Montgomery Holstein herd and the Glenn Jersey herd at Spartanburg. Regardless of winning, the training and the later experience at the National Dairy Show will have great educational value for the young men. Negro Women Beautify Atlantic City, N. J., Oct. 3.?Upwards of $20,000,000 is spe,n^ every year for toilet preparations and beautifiers by the negro women of America, it is estimated by G. Barrett Moxley of Indianapolis. "The beauty consciousness lately aroused among negro women," he said, "is responsible for the great sale of beauty preparations among them They have been told by their own educators that a good appearance means a good job. Many negro women buy the most expensive of the French- perfumes, their taste being largely governed by those of the household in which they work." Veteran's Day at State Fair Columbia, Oct. 12.?Cots and blankets will be provided at the Richland ( ounty court house for the convenience uf Confederate veterans who come to the state fair and who spend one or more nights in Columbia, according to Adjutant Genera! James C. D r/.ier. If the veterans cannot all he accommodated at the coutt house, the state armory will be thrown open. The superintendent of the Confederate Hume will . also bo able to take care of some 25 or ,'50 veterans. Wednesday, Oct. 19, has been designated as Confederate Veterans day. On that day they will be admitted free to the grounds and will be provided with dinner. Free transportation over the railroads has also been provided for. Senators E. D. Smith and Cole L. Blease have been invited to address the veterans at the grounds. Two ducks from a migrating flock, alighted on the roof of a hotel in New York Tuesday. The drake was wounded in the wing and the mate would not leave it.- The dueks will be liberated when able to fly again. An inmate of a prison at Birmingham, England, committed sui. cide by swallowing two hair combs, a toothbrush handle, two spoon 1 I handles and twenty metal lickj jfl I a spring mattress, I Many a gasoline 1 salesman claims J as his final argument that his I ? product is as I "STANDARD" J GASOLINE I ': *' i j Made in South Carolina 1 * # ,? - I I Your tongue tells when you need I @>s | Coated tongue, dry mouth, bad breath, muddy skin, groggy nerves and sour stomach suggest its use. i - .-O -t ? - *~..=*VJ I Face Difficulties Better? Trouble of one kind or another is sure to come to'M you sooner or later. The chances are that a good<| bank balance will, be quite a solace to you then. Because with some cash in the bank you c&n face diffi~ j culties with a braver heart and a more peaceful mind- ' The First National Bank' Of Camden, South Carolina ?ONLY NATIONAL BANK IN KERSHAW COUNTY