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> . ~~ , =?r LOOKING BACKWARD Taken From the FUe? of Hie Quronicle Fifteen and Thirty Year* Ago .i i THIRTY YKAR8 AGO November 4, 1904 Statement ^ of Hank of Camden signed by C. H. 'Yates, cashier, and ?. 11. G. Carrison, A. D. Kennedy and W. M. Shannon, directors. Jktween thirty and sixty miner* killed in mine explosion in Colorado. Residence of Mrs. S. L. Hughes, fronting utt Main street, with aide entrance on Monument Square, fQr hale, George P. Watts and Miss Annie Rabon, both of Went WaUireo, married at Lugoff. v ' .Beverly 11. McCreight receives his license from State Hoard as cmbalmer and funeral director. Mi>oi Etta Zemp goes to Clio where she will teach in the graded school. j Sporting brevities?Went point boat Yale in foot ball; Columbia University J goes down to defeat at hands of Uni- j versity of Pennsylvania football team, j Mr. and Mrs. H. I. DePass returned to -Camden to make their home. Sumter to have Pall Festival November 22-25. Mrs. S. It. Adams hostess to 500 Club. Mrs. Robert Johnson receives prize, P- r E. 1), Smith, of I-.ee county,, elected president; John Cantey, of Kershaw county, secretary to the Farmers' Association to fix cotton price. FIKTKKN YKAKS ACO October 31, 1919 United States Senate over the President's veto, by a vote of 65 to 20, made immediately effective machinery for preventing sale of beverages containing more than one-half of one per cent alcohol. Former Judge Mendel 1* Smith presiding at special term of court in Orangeburg. ' John T. Mackey resigns as cashier of First National ^ Hunk due to ill health. S. W. Vanl-andingham named to succeed him. John Cantey Viljepigue, Camden boy, awarded the "Medal Militaire", France's second highest award for bravery in action. Kev. F. 11. Harding, of Grace Episcopal church, preaches in St. Thodden's church, Aiken. The minister, Kev. John Hideout, fills pulpit here. Peoples Hank of Kershaw increases capital stock from $25,000 to $50,000. The Carolina Motor Company in one week sells six Maxwell cars and two Studebakers to Kershaw county citizens. Heavy tourist travel through Camden to Florida and other'Gulf states. Cotton gin water mill in Newberry county choked down by large number of eels getting clogged in wheel, seventeen removed at one time. l>r. and Mrs. Marion Zemp move to | Columbia, where he will be with the | Murray Drug Company, November Important In Better Farming Clemaon College, Oct. 2'J.?In field, orchard and garden there are important November jobs essential toward better farming, brief hints for which' are given by extension specialists: , Agronomy.?Plow heavy clay land now if practicable and make spring work easier. Oats can still be planted. Sow enough wheat to make a good supply for home use. Don't leave any cotton unprotected from weather; it may lose five to ten dollars per bale in value. Horticulture.-?Prepare land now for setting fruit trees in November and December. Prune scuppernong type grapes last of November. Make cuttings of grap.es and ties and set thei.n out. Plant sweet pea- in a well prepared trench, covering the seed five inches deep. Set strawberry and raspberry plants. Sow lettuce in coldfnrme fop use in January and Februaiv. Make hill selection of sweet potatoes for seed at digging t 1 Mil-. In-ei's and Diseases. ? Pi-infect seed of .-mad grain l'or smut control. . Avoid disea-ed sweet potato vines whew ^electing -eed. Purchase materials for dormant orcha rd spray and w\ ei haul* spray equipment. Fumigate weevil-infested grain. Plow y ruler corn stubble, covering it deeply to control the southern corn stalk borer. Pick up and burn severed twigs of pecan, hickory and persimmon, to control the twig girdler. Reduce entrance to bee hives to two-inch space for the winter ihontlis and feed bees when necessary. Agricultural Kngi nee ring.?Repair and construct farm buildings while materials and labor are available at reasonable cost. Store corn and other grains in buildings made ratproof and tight, enough to fumigate against weevils. (live the tract or proper lubrication and attention to the air filter to save expensive delays and repair bills. Our Main Aaaet. The main assets of Horry county' today are her small one and two-; horse farmers. They are the best! class of people or. earth anyway. Put they bol-ter up the town and make our county seat a place worthwhile In-cause they are the back-ground from which we draw about evtfry advantage we could have in n business way. They are what we want to encourage and we want to see the AAA plans modified so that new men can engage in the growing of bountiful nv.ney crops though perhaps on a limited acreage.?The Horry Herald. Three youths were killed near Wilkesbarro, Pa., when 1,500 tons of coal toppled over 50 feet and covered them up as they were culling coal for use next winter. Two other bovs were seriously injured. I Crotalaria Growers j Will Sell Their Seed Crotalaria growers jn Kershaw county who expect to have surplus seed for sale are rt^q^ested to get in touch with the county agent as soon as they have finished gathering seed aqd know the quantity you will have for market. I -think we will bo able to find good markets for every bit of the seed our -farmers will have to spare. Only the matured seed should be gathered. This can best be done by stripping the pods from the limbs by use of two hands, placing the double handful of pods in a sack such as a cotton picking sack swung over the shoulder. After gathering the pods they should be placed in thin l.ivers two or three inches ddep on sheets or cotton picking sheets in the sun and allowed to dry well. Many of these pods will crack open, the others may be opened by treading or beating wi;"h a stick, then sift the seed through a Screen ar.d finally e.\t-ac? the chaff and other trash by pouring the seed from one container into another in the wind. We can arrange to have your seed scarified. He sure to keep the Striata and S^ieelabiii varieties of seed separated. If we continue our Crotalaria program in Kershaw county it will be but a short time before our farmers will have a valuable side line cash crop for added income. We know of one man in the county who planted 30 pounds of seed and has already gathered 950 pounds from his one and one-half acres. All who will have these seed for ; sale should notify the county agent as soon as possible, says Henry I). Green, county agent. J i New and Fatal Dodge. ! In the old days an adult, male or female, was thought pretty lucky who escaped serious bowel troubles, dipthcria, smallpox, typhoid, yellow, and other fevers, tetanus, and mad dog bites, etc. .Science has largely remedied these dangers. After reaching manhood ar.d womanhood, science was still with us in carrying us safely through the dangers of infected surgical operations and preventive measures. There is now a new menace in the field. It is slaying its thousands. One a day in South Carolina alone. Science is helpless in prevention. Inflicted usually by fools, brains cannot meet it. The best dodgers frequently fall before it. The auto casualties are increasing instead of decreasing. Will there be no balm in Gilend? Not so long as morons are spawned, a dollar still in the pocket, or a gallon of gas in the tank.?Calhoun Times. A Baltimore surgeon operated on "Baby" Shepherd for appendicitis just 30 minutes after the child was bom. The operation was performed last Friday and the baby is still living, in an incubator. R EAL ESTATE RENTS COLLECTED, FARM AND CITY PROPER"* Y j HUNTING PRESERVES ) Rvp9tH*lSa? Uu C?,i*w*Tlkili| l>t !Voji?Ey ALL FORMS OF INSURANCE j DeKALB INSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE CO. Crocker Building ? Telephone 7 1 ' mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmammmmmmmmmmmmmrn Ijl ' i ' ! . ? ' _ Honor Roll Students Camden City Schools , " , Scholar whip Honor Roll Scholarship honor roll of Camden city schools for ftrat six weeka' period, VJMi Grade 1A?'Donald Campbell, Chap-^ man Graham, Harry Gandy, Sam Nicholson, Hobby Olmsted,'Mattie Sue AmmonM, Charlotte Boykin, Caroline McFadden, Lillia Peebles, Joan Schlo*burg, Virginia Stokes, Kathryn Sheorn, Annie I<ee Tyson. Grade lB-~Arlias DeBruhl, Skottowe DePass, Shannon Lindsay, Tommy Little, Dallas Mahoney, Do Witt Thiffpan, Billy Williams, Evelyn DeBruhl, Peggy Hasty, Leona Haley, Ida Scarborough. Grade 2A?Trippett Boineau, William Reasonover,, Wiley Sheorn, Bob by Wilson, Charles Zemp, Mary Nell Campbell, Carolyn DesChamps, Janet IAiwis, Kay Lomansky, Joyce Smith. Grade 2B?Johnny Jones, Alfred McCaakill, Margie Klliott, Sally Scott, Steve Gonnell. Grade 3A? David, Barnes, Jack Boykin. Marion Brown, Briant Cox, Randolph Smith, Robert Thompson, Billy Waters, Rhetta Hal**ll, Doris Iaike, Betty Muller, Doris Rush, Jane Thomas, Frances West, Grade 3B?Thomas Massebeau. Grade. 4A?Jimmy Gandy, Edward Ogburn, Billy Smith, Luther Watts, Caleb Whitaker III, Mary Cameron, Azalee Dixon, Louine Hancock, Ellen Holmes, Ethel Ann Mauldin, Carolyn Pitts, Beth Wilson. Grade 4B?Nell Corbett, Margaret Sanders. Grade 5A?Thomas Turner, Artie Dixon, Luther Sowell, Frank Sullivan, Cary Guthrie, Jane Hoffer, Gwendolyn Shirley. Grade SB?Clyfife Boykin, Dora Mae Robinson, Margaret Williams. Grade 6A?Frances Rhame, Billy Clarkson, Charles McCaskill, Joe Rhame, -1/eonard Schenk, Carolyn Cooley, Ithettn McDowell, Betty Munn, Mary Smith. Grade 7A?Phyllis Karesb, Jerry Hancock, Herbert- Moore, Jack Marshall Billy Pitts, Marjorie " Creed, Betty Boineau. Grade 8A?Frances Baruch, Aileen Brlk, Rena Broome, Neta Kirkland, El sie Redfearn, Lottie Smyrl, Mary Zemp. Grade 8B?William Christmas, Massenburg Trotter, David Wallnau, John Carl West. Grade 8C?Maggie Trantham, I>ewi< Anderson. Myrtle Williams, Harriet Foster. Daily Jaek-ion, Albertus Rush. Kathryn Boyd. Grade DA?.Jane Clarkson, Louise Muk!e, Paulette West, Anne Clark> t s!?, Grade DB??Jack Richards, Jack \ lilt pigue. Beulah Graham, Betty Ho!land, Alva I/oe, Cathryn Wright. Grade '?Wylie Hogue, F.lilee Pate, Wilhelmina Strak. Grade IDA?Minnie Sue Bruce, Eleanor Kirschner, Virginia 1)?\ i-, Ellen Little, Caroline Nelson, Elizabeth Pitts, Jean YanLandingham, Alma Ward. Grade 1UB?Rebecca Rush, Florence Sa\ at"*. Grade 11A?Jerome IIofTer, Joe Jordan. Edith Copeland, Fannie Mickie. Ix*na Stevenson, Helen Tindal, Barbara Zemp. Grade 11B?Emily Sheorn. Attendance Honor Roll Grade LA?Burkley Campbell, Donald Campbell, I>aurence Campbell, Bobby Deal, Cecil Drakeiord, Chapman Graham, Harmon'Hancock, Giles Huggir s. Ted Marshall, Kenneth Matthews^ Sam Nicholson, McKay Norris,. Gary Ogburn, J. D. Shaylor, Irby Turner, Annie Blanche Brown, Margaret Holmes, Betty Jennings, Caroline McFadden, Mary Joe McManus, Barbara Raley, Kathryn Sheorn, Virginia Stokes. Annie Lee Tyson. Grade IB?Arliss DoBruhl, Shannon Lindsay, Tommy Little, Dallas Mahoney, DeWitt Thigpen, Alice Cameron, Peggy Hasty, Betty Hinson, Leona Raley. Grade 1C?Harley Corbett, Jack Christmas, Billy Christmas, Jack Harper, Carroll Hasty, Witire Huggins, Martin Price, Billy Thrower, William Sinclair, Wilma Latham, Mary Frances Nolan. Grade 2A?T. O. Boykin, Wilbur Conneli, Henry FLost, Glynn Ixtmoy, Billy Moore, Bill McDowell, William Rea-sorover, Billy Rush, Frank Rush, Wile: Sheorn, Joe Tobin, Robert Turner, Bobby Wilson, Charles Zemp. Betty Barnett, Louise Blakeney, Mary Nell Campbell, Hallie Clarkson, Carolyn DesChamps, Betty Godwin, Mart Kelly, Ruth Ixtmoy, Mary Langston, Janet Lewis, Betty Zoe Rhame, Dorothy Rhodes, Sybil Sheffield, Sibyl Shirley, Doris Stanley, Ollie MatStokes, Pauline Trotter. Grade 2B?Harry Gaskin. John Edward Hinson. John Henry Hough, Billy Jennings, Johnny Jones, William j Melton, Billy Myers, F'rances She-: heen, Henry Scott, Albert Thigpen,! Marion Truesdale, Margie Elliott. Marjorie Mayer, Sally Scott, Jack Tidwell. , Grade 3A?iDavid Barnes, Jack Boykin, Alton Cole, Briant Cox, Jack Deal, Joseph Jackson, Harold Roditers, Randolph Smith, Robert Thompson, Billy Waters, Lantye Williford, Carolyn Baruch, Margaret Boone, Anno Campbell, Sibyl Drakeford, Doris Lake,' Gene Mayer, Carolyn Moore, Betty MiiTler, Mary Louise Norwood, ? Annie Robinson, Doris Rush, Myrtle Russ, Jane Thomas. Grade 3B?T h o m a s Massebeau, Raymond Scarborough, Bobby (Shirley, Thomas. -Waters, Juanita Grandon, Dorothy Pate, Doris Trapp. Grade 4A?Joe Christmas, James Creed, William Ladd, Lynwood Moore, Edward Ogburn, Freddie Ogburn, Marvin Rabon, Dale Smith, Hughey Tindal, Charles Turner, Luther Watts,) Bernice Amnions, Meta Boykin; Mary Cameron, Catherine Cole,- Louise! Copelnnd, Margaret Cox, Macie Denton, Azalee Dixon, Louine Hancock, Ellen Holmes,,. Bennie Little, Carolyn Pitts, Martha Truesdale, Beth Wilson.) ^ Grade 4B?Jay Beasley, Julian Branham, James Boykin, DeWitt j Harper, Joby Hough, Glenwood Outjlaw, James Sanders, Kamel Sheheen, Lawton Truesdale, Geneva Champion, ; Gertrude Christmas, Nell Corbett, | Thehna Dees. Margaret Robinson, Margaret Sanders, Juanita Stokes. j Grade 5A?Edward Lovette, Bennie Marshall, Vance Norwood. Alva Rush, , Luther Sowed, Frank Sullivan, Kirby Tupper, Thomas Turner, Betty Blak<C ney, Betty Campbell, Artie Dixon, Gary Guthrie, Jane IlofTer, Edna Moseley, Peggy McGuirt, Mary Pitts, Margaret Salmond, Gwendolyn Shirley, Dorothy Sotted, Mary Walsh. Grade r?B?Horace Brown. Tommy Clyburn, Leightor. Cochran, John Partin, David Pate, Jack Stein, James jThompkins, Lloyd Truesdale. Margie j Gaskins. Doris Hinson, Virginia Jen-| ! nings. Bessie Lee, Margretta Little, j Peggy Little, Neva Parker, Dora M. j Robinson, Vermelle Rush, Betty Stev- [ enson, Margaret Williams, Mary Alice j Hasty. * 4 Grade 6A?Billy Clarkson, Jim Clarkson, Claude Lamoy, Charles McCaskill, Joe Rhame, Marvin Smith, Billy VanLandingham, Edward Vereen, Yates Villepigue, Oscar Wooten, Edna Aldret, Jane Campbell, Wilma Christmas, Carolyn Cooley, Lois Gaskin, Annie Mae Godwin, Laura Lee Green, Elizabeth Jackson, Rhetta McDowell, Netta I^eese Ogburn, Frances Rhame, Mary Smith, Betty Thomas. Grade GB?Fred Brown, Clarence Graham, Julius Hough, Andrew Mayer, Charles Nolan, Douglas Ogburn, Leslie Player, Lavern Price, K. T. Price, Albert Shirley, Marvi^n Shirley, Edward Watts, Mabel Todd Campbell, Carol Hammond, D.oris MrLepd, Beatrice Oliver, Annie Lee/Pettus, Vivian Threatt. Grade 7A?J. W. Cole, Jerry Hancock, Jack Marshall, Herbert Moore, Wesley Pitts, Stephen Robinson, Rhetta Blakeney, Mary Lee Bradford, Voncile Conyers, Marjorie Creed, Minnie Belle Cunningham, Betty Gettys, Marion Glenn, Louise Hendrix, Beatrice Kirkland, Kathleen Smith, Lorene Smith, Martha Smith, Betty Sowed, Helen Stogner. Grade 7B?Malcolm Anderson, H. C. Christmas, Ted Dabney, Douglas Lynch, Walter Riggins, Wilbert Roberts, Homer Shirley, Wilbert Williams, June Conned, Beauton Cullen, Mattie Lee Cullen, Margie DeLoache, Elizabeth Gaskin, Vivian Gaskin, Fay Horton, Myrtle McLain, Myrtle Player, Mary Elizabeth Riggins, Juanita Sanders, Nancy Sanders, Margaret Sinclair, Vira Truesdale. 0 Grade 7C?Willie Cameron, Marvin Hasty, J. C. Hough, Eric Reeve^, Virginia Gaskin, Julia Hough, Mahgaret Mayer, Theresa Reed, Sibyl Robinson, Marjorie Rush, Ruby Vereen. CTade 8A?Aileen Belk, Jean Bell. Rena Broome, Macie Christmas, Lida Ingram, Pauline Jennings, Olive McGuirt, Lucile McLain, Rhetta MoLeod, -Margaret Munn, Lola Mae Nelson, Lavada Parker, Vesta Player, Thelma Rabon, Elsie Redfearn, Grace Rhoden, Lottie. Smyrl, Lorena VanLandingham, Betty Whitaker. Grade 8B?R. P. Drown, Malcolm Chrlftmu, William Ohrlihnw, hy Connell, Ernest Freitag, A. F. Hammond, P. S. Jordan, Robert Little, Cuy Mayer, Harold McCaskill, John Melton, Matthew Munn, Herbert Ricjiey, Meshell Sheheen, Otis Tidwell, Harry I^ee Waters, John Carl West, Claude Williams. Grade 8C?Dally Jackson. Myrtle Williams, Lewis Anderson, Elsie Lee Raley, Perry Riles, Lula Mae Simmons, Sarah Sheorn, Margaret West, Annie Jordan, Cecil Davis, Wallace Lynch. Grade 9 A?Julian Culvern," Benjamin G'ettys. Jack Rhame, Ellis Rowell, Clement Shiver, Dernpsey Stogner, Stanley Watts, Douglas Weoten, Ira Mae Broome. Frances Burns, Anne M. Clarkson, Jane Clarkson, Mamie Ford, Louise Mickle, Margaret Mickle. Hazel Shirley, Susan Team. Grade 9B?Hugh Gettys, James Graham, Fred Sheheen, Willis Sheorn. Furman Stewart, Jack Villepigue, Pauline Baker, Lou Clyburn, Lesta Davis, Beulah Graham, Betty Holland, Alva Lee, Ruby Player, Louise Vereen, Cathryn Wright, Willis Wright. Grade 90?William Bates, Laverne Conyers, reward Crolley, George Hendrix, Wylie Hogue, Elilee Pate, Woodrow Sanders, Sophia Creed, Kathryn Myers, Ben Mildred Sowpll. Gfade 10A:?'Robert Marye, Harold McCallum, Hazel Munn, Jolly Pitts, Shell West, Martha Bailey, Dorothy Creed, Ruby Melton, Caroline Nelson, Elizabeth Pitts, Juanita Rabon, Jean VanLandingham, Alma Ward, Carolyn Cantey. Grade 10B?Norman Connell, James Elkir/s, L. S. Mayer, Edwin Miller, j Frank Oliver, EJward Lee Plyler, Lee rWest, Marguerite Boheler, Regina Goodman, Zelma Goodman, Evelyn j Jackson, Mary McDowell, Grace Moseley, Ruth Rabon, Rebecca Rush, Florence Savage, Alma Smyrl, Lena Ward, Jamell Watts. Grade 11A?Clyde Brown, JeTome Hoffer, Doris Houser, Joe Jordan, Bill Rhame, Marion Smith, Sadie Freitag, Pearl Godwin, Thelma Jones, Alice Melton, Mary Richey, Lena Stevenson, Ida Williams. Grade 11B?Mary Burnet, Betty Merritt, Florine Mitchell, Elizabeth Reed, Emily Sheorn, Stanford Caskey, Ina DeLaoche Various Facts of Scientific Interest " "?;? ' . Ant* have :been observed to set broken legs of injured companions in a kind of plaster. Usefulness of splints in healing a broken arm was known to the prehistoric Cliff Dwellers of the Southwest. Ancient writers mention quintuplet births in Kgypt, Greece and Rome. In one family, 87 pairs of twins wore recorded in five generations. The cactus has gained such favor for indoor and garden use that sev en?I Southwestern states have passed laws to prevent wholesale removal of desert plants. Tuberculosis was once *o poorly understood and so feared that one congressman introduced a bill to require a tuberculosis penson to wear a bell or rattle to warn all other people. The common belief that raw foods are essential to highest physical vigor lacks scientific support, according to a report to the American Chemical Society. Rubbing mild soap, moistened, on mosquito bites is a simple remedy for the itching they cause. If nil the chemical elements composing the average human body were separated and sold at commercial prices, they would be worth less than one dollar.?Science News Letter. , -7 ......... _ ??, ...... i i. in CLIFTON B. McFARLAND ,1..- -, , ,t . ? . , -w . - . ' -. rr^ Civil Engineer and Surveyor Office Phone 374 , Itebldencc Phone 243-J I , CAMDEN. 8. a > y "Just a Few of the Kick*" (Jetting out thia magazine is no picnic. If we print jokes* people say we are eijlyr-? ?r -f If we don't, they say we are too serious. If we clip things from other magazines, we are too lazy to write them ourselves. ' If we don't we are stuck on our own stutf. j If we stick close to the job all day, we ought to be out hunting news. if we do get out and try to hustle, we ought to be on the job in the office. If we don't print contributions, we don't appreciate true genius; and if we print them, the magazine is filled with junk. If we make a change in the other fellow's write-?up, we are too critical. If we don't we are asleep. Now, like as not, some guy will say we swiped this^from some other mag-: azine. ' j WE DID!?Pathfinder. , Save Home-tirown Seed Thoughtful farmers will escape one of the droughth's most serious aftermaths by saving sectionally adapted seed. It is true that corn is corn whether it is grown in the North or the South. But it is just as true that seed grown in the South will not yield a good crop if planted in the North. Because of the almost total failure of some crops in some sections .and also because of serious damage to the germinating quality of the seed, seed supplies may have to be drawn from the crops of previous years. . Sufficient supplies should be set aside while such crops are still available.? Pathfinder. j ? - '' ?? Honor Boll Of Pino Tree Hill Scholarship Honor Roll Grade 1 (Pearce)?Te<i Davia, Ham McDowell, Betty Bobo, Ernestine Conyers, Louise Langley. . Grade 1 (McCaskill)?Leroy Davis Angus Kelley, Betty Sue CroUey' Mary Driggers, Doris Houser, Sarah Kelley, Doris Sullivan, Gertrude Thames; Grade 2 (Phelps)?James Shirley Grade 3 (Gillls)?Jack Davis, Bun, ny Shaw, Frances Anderson, Ruby Mogeley^ Dorothy Marshall. Grade 4 (Richards)?Ollie Horion, Charlie Cameron, Ethel Broome', Frances Mooneyhan. Grade 4 (Oakes)?Mary Thames. Grade 6 (Goodyear)?Nezzie Jxe DeBruhl. Attendance Honor Roll . Grade 1 (Pearce)?Richard Caulder, Jumes Collins, Jack Catoe, Pearl Crolley, Ted Davis, Wallace Davis, Arnold De?ruhl, Eddie Dixon, Leroy Frith, James Gooditt, Louis Gardner Edward Hudson, Billy Hawkins, Gene Lloyd, Thomas Swann, Derrell Dority, Grace Blackwell, Donnell Brown, Cecelia Baker,\ Betty Bobo, Virginia Branham, Mary Corbett, Agnes Hayes, Mozie Knight, Delsie Threutt, Lily Trimnal, Evelyn Parker, Jean McLain, Margaret Marsh, Oneta Jordan, Sarah Jordan, Ernestine Houser, Kathleen Hasty, Bobby Horton. - Grade 1 (Phelps)?Ned Elkins, Ted Elkins, Leslie ilinson, Marvin Humphries, Walter Munn, Walter Taylor, Leroy Roberts, James Shirley, Wade Parker, Floyd Parker, Grace Ellis, Hazel Hawkins, Margaret McLain,' Margie Poston, Frances Shirley, Lucile Sullivan, Eloise Robinson. Grade 2 (McCaskiU)? Charlton Davis, Jack DeBruhl, James Gqude. Leroy Harris, Grady Hines, Cecil Harden, Carol Munn, Ernest Parker. E. A, Shoemake, Betty Sue Crolley, Mary Driggers, Doris Gooding, Cora Goude, Carolyn Hall, Doris Houser, Sarah Kelly, Thelma Marsh, Gladys Newman, Thelma Roberts, Doris Sullivan, Gertrude Thames, Alice Goude. Grade 3 (Gillis)? Charles Blackwell, Norman Burns, Fred Baker, Harvey Catoe, Jack Davis, Elmer Ellis, Malvin Goodale, Gene Guinn, Stanley Harris, W. R. Kennlngton, Edmon, Roberts, Bunny Shaw, As tor Threajt, Prances Anderson, Doris Conyers, Margaret DeBruhl, Ruth Hutchinson, Mary Helen Hasty, Ruby Moseley, Dorothy Marshall, Aleese McLain, Evelyn Sullivan, Mvrtle Thames, Fay Welch, Grade 4 (Richards)?Charlie Cameron, Harvey Corbett, William Gordon. ,Willie Lominac, J. W. Parker, Billy Player, Albert Sanders, Forest Shirley, Ethel Broome, Beulah Marsh, Prances Mooneyham, Serena Rodgers. Grade 4 (Oakes)?Levi Bradley, Wilbur Buff, Jeter Guinn, Thad Munn, etty Brown, Lily Mae Driggers, Margaret Goude, Viola Roberts. Grade 5 (Guthrie)?Gladys Lynch, rank Elkins, Velma Harris, Ruby Player, Ruby Lee Fagan, P*ay Phillips, Virginia Myers, Dorothy Parker. Grade 5'- (HAiUT^Bniy " Phillips,"" Lester Roberts, Ruby. Bradley, Helen Davis, Mildred Jordan, Li*cile Marsh, Sarah Moore, EVa Roberts, Dorothy Shaw, Emily West. Grade 6 (Goodyear)?J. C. Baker, Z*mp Brown, Earl Dabney, G. F. Marshall, Malcolm Russell, Cecil Taylor, Allene Bradley, ,Nezzie Lee DeBruhl, Annie Lee Eubanks, Peggy Evans, Sarah Hawkins, Alma Jordan, Mary Lominac, Lucile Mooneyhan, Claudia Moore, Inez Parker, Norma Parker. I trespass notice All persons are hereby warned not A?J<*Lcatt-, i 7fn Urge, oh my place, j Anyone violating this notice will have to pay damages or be dealt with according to Uw. MRS. GPfiRXSOTNE CLEMENTS, 32-34pd Rt. 1, Cassktt, S. C. '....LL i FARMS FOR SALE I . ^ ^- *r*' _ i * " i / : : > Now is the time to buy a farm. I have twenty .J ' " . " ? 1 nice farms for sale in Kershaw County. Will be et . ^Tlotel Camden, Camden, S. C., every Friday. H ? > . r- -j "ST ^X~ "7?~? i _ _ _ ... - . .. - !!??-.* . ... ?? ?H r' - BATWr\-|pl,^-- ^