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Between You and Me (By THE SKIPPER) Nice going, Bulldog*! ? ? ? The gang from (he mountain* put! up a valiant scrap ami offered a nlco defense, but that Hip doozle-ruzzle dazzle of the Bulldogs caught them off balance The result Camden 13- MtAI r y 6 While the Bulldog* were smearing Ml Airy, a powerhouse from Sumter was giving the Mrooklund-Cayce" team u II to o shellacking. That B. C. team not a headache remedy?faces the Bulldogs tonight and we'll bo able to get u line OR how Camden stacks op against Sumter's prowess. t And next Friday night Wow! That brings Humter here We hear that our next door neighbor Is coming over lock, stock and barrel. Will the welkin' ring when the Camden and Sumter cheering sections go Into action'' And How!! Columbia Highs nosed out Orange burg H to 0 In a ragged tilt at Melton Field, Columbia Chester Highs defeated Laurens 18 to 7 before 2,000 (?) fans ? Listen gals, would you like to win I $7 by just exorcising your vocal chords? All you have to do Is to call | your husband on October tf hare in Camden. And men, how about showing the' power of your lungs by calling liv the hogs Nice cash award here too. And who Is the fattest damsel In Kershaw county or thereabouts? Wouldn't you like to win a few bucks; by stepping on the scalos on October C here In Camden? ? And good gracious, we can hardly wait until those two groups of city Are fighters start that water fight on; Rutledgo street on the afternoon oL October 6. / j With our old arguing friend Heck-, ham Russell captaining one team and J Brother Shebeen the other, man allvo I -?watch the water fly. ? Jitterbug worries?talking about the teams of yesterday Wondering how the Sumter Bulldog game will conn- out Also how the Bulldogs will slack up against Charleston. ? ? Things we'll he thinking about and talking about soon. Touchdowns, skiing, skating. Rose Bowl, topcoats, | polo and boss racing. Remember a few months ago when, wo were picking the Cleveland Tn-. (Bans to be tops In the American League race and at the same time referred to the Clncy Reds as national league pennant grabbers. Well?forget it please. Well, follow football curbstone oracles The pro football season is on and just as we predicted the Chicago Bears are off to a two-win start The Chicago Cards were the first victims J and last Sunday the Bears defeated j the Backers 2 to 0 Ray Bulvld. All-! American back. Trust a tackle and Ron/mi. a back, all former Man]n?jt tj grill aces, were1 big factors in the Bear w in< Tbi- soda fountain sages over in Sic k Zt-mp's drug emporium haviC beon doing a lot of figuring about tie | games South Carolina has scheduled. Seems to nie that thhome gang rates the Gamecocks in rather a sour manner Take It from ine laddies. South Carolina has a conch this season that should produce. You may he surprised at what the Gamecocks do this season. ? ? Anyhow they showed good judgment in selecting their uniforms. Look Just like the Camden Bulldogs, they .tell me. Listen fellows. That game between the Minnesota and Washington teams will go on the air Saturday at tkree o'clock from WIS and also WBT. It's going to be a real scrap and while I have all the admiration In the world for Bernle Blerman of the Gopher camp, I'm stringing with Washington this time. And for the benefit of those who are following the pro league let me say that the Chicago Cardinals and the Green Bay Backers have each defeated the Cleveland Kama. The Brooklyn and Washington Redskins, the latter the 1BU7 champs, played to a 1 fi to 1'! tie while the Philadelphia Kagles handed the Pittsburgh Pirates their third straight defeat, 27 to 7. Visgah News Notes IMsguh, Hopt 15.?Mr. and Mr*. Hawkins Watson aiul young daughter, Suzanne. of Orangeburg, and Mr*. Clarence Hough, of Camden, spent Sunday with Mr und Mm J T. Watson. Supper guests of Mr and Mr*. W. V. lluker on Sunday night were Mr. and Mr*. K K Kenney. Mr und Mrs, Clarence MeLeod and young daughter Mary, of Rembert; Mr and Mr* J II Campbell. Jr. of Stateburg; MtJ and Mrs S (1 Lenoir, of Horatio, and I III I e Lets {franco* Moutjoy, of Clinton. Mr and Mr*. Leroy Koger* had for their aupper guest* Sunday, Mr und Mr* J T MeLeod. of lioykln, Mr. and Mr*. C M. Hhlvar, Jr. Kuyinon Dennis and Alva Bradley returned to WofTord College Tuesday. They will be sophomore* there this year Mr* T M. Koger* and young Uotty llaker, of Hembert, spent Wednesday with Mrs^ Loon Stuekey. Ml** Maud Hatfield Is quite sick with malarial fever. Mrs Edgar Moore, of Orangeburg. Is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs |J. T. Dennis | The W. M C. held their regular monthly meeting at the church Wednesday afternoon. Devotlonuls were conducted by the president, Mrs Kenney Mrs Rogers, leader for the afternoon, after giving a short but Intorestlng talk on "The States," called on Mrs. C. M. Shlvar, Jr., who gave a very Instructive talk on "Missions In the States Fifty Years Ago and Today." A dialogue from "Royal Service" was given by Mrs. J. H. Campbell, Jr., and Mrs. S. G. Lenoir, who also sang a duet. Immediately following the meeting. Mrs. Kenney, Mrs. Roger* and Mrs. D. J. Hatfield, Jr., were hostesses to a lovely miscellaneous shower for Mrs. J. H. Cami>bell, Jr.. a recent bride. Delicious refreshments of nssiy^sd crackers und Red tea were served. / Miss Ellen James was a recent visitor in Greenville. Declaring that a "Czechoslovak nation does not exist", Premlor Mussolini. in a letter to Viscount Runclman, British mediator, urged a plebiscite for "all Czechoslovak nationalities." ADVERTISING I * Does Four Things j | If you conduct ? retail store, there are four things you wish to do: 1 j ( 1 ) You wish to HOLD all of your present customers (2) You wish to sell more goods to your present customers | (3) You wish to REPLACE with new customers the old ones who move away (4) You wish to INCREASE THE NUMBER of you/ customers. Thus you have four objectives. Not one of these objectives can be reached by doing nothing. None of these objectives can be wholly realized without advertising in & i i The Camden Chronicle Phone 29 Camden, S. C. MllMhnMiMnnrn* HIGHWAY BUILDING TOPS 22,000 MILES New Year's Record Is Set for United States. Washington.?More than 22,000 | miles of all classes of highway were completed In the fiscal year 1937, topping the former rfecord of 21,700 miles in 1934, the bureau of public roads of the Department of Agriculture reports. The averuge for the past four years under emergency appropriations to provide employment to those on relief rolls has been about 20,000 miles a year. "Although the volume of such work remained large, the year was definitely a period of trans:!ton from on emergency program to the more normal federal-aid road construction operations," the bureau stated. "Emergency funds available for new projects were reduced to a small remainder at the end of tin? year. Considerable emergency \w>rk under construction was carried over into the pew year and when this is completed the emergency program will have been practically concluded." Near-Normal Program Scope. The more nearly normal program includes $123,000,000 for improvement of the federal-aid system, $25,000,000 for secondary or farm tomarKet roads and $50,000,000 for elimination of hazards at grade crossings in the flsfcal years 1938 and 1939. Funds for federal-aid and secondary roads must be matched by the states, but the funds for elimination of crossing hazards are direct grants. I Grade crossing work In the fiscal year 1937 established a new record, with 1,149 eliminations, of which 1,086 were financed under the $200,000,000 program authorized by the emergency relief appropriation act of 1935 Also 196 existing grade separation structures were reconstructed and 574 crossings were protected by safety devices. In road building 18,768 miles were constructed with funds apportioned to the states and the work was done in co-cperation with the state highway departments. At the end of the year 11,274 miles of road, to take $268,445,582 of federal funds, were under contract and 2,074 miles, involving $36,542,365, had been approved but not yet contracted for. U nob! i g a t eel balances available for new work totaled $232,053,608, in large part newly apportioned funds for the fiscal year 1938. Inter-American Progress. The bureau said that work on the 3,250-mile Inter-American highway extending from Nuevo Laredo on the Texas border to Panama City, had continued with increased momentum, impassable gaps having been reduced to about 560 miles. Improvements also were completed on 139 miles of the Forest highway system, bringing the total improved with federal funds to 6,593 miles. In national park^, parkways and monuments 169 miles of roads were completed, bringing 'the total to 1,293 miles. . The bureau said that large volumes of traffic between densely populated localities had created a demand for wide, multiple-lane highways with opposing traffic separated by a center parkway, but that it was "not readily apparent how any large mileage of such highways might be financed." The most practical way, it suggested, might be payment of tolls. Physicians Graft Bone Using Carpenter Tools Philadelphia.?Physicians at Osteopathic hospital here were forced to set aside surgical instruments and use a set of carpenter tools to perform a delicate bone grafting operation. Mrs. Lillian Tap pin, sixty years old, suffered a broken arm in an automobile accident about a year and a half ago. The bone never set right because of injured nerves. Drs. Edward G. Drew, Carl Prey ' and Robert Warden used a cold chisel, hammer, electric saw and drill to take a piece of bone from her right leg and graft it to her useless arm. With the saw, the physicians cut ' away two grooves in the woman's leg parallel to the shin bone. They used the chisel and hammer to lift out a splinter of bone six inches long and a half-inch thick Cord of Wood Changes in Crossing State Line Moorhead, Minn ?What the citizens of Moorhead and Eargn, N D would like to know is?how much is a cord of wood? Complaints reached officials of the adjoining towns concerning discrepancies in the measurement of sav\ed and split wood The o.Teials looked into the problem and found the cause of complaints. The Minnesota law calls for 128 cubu ft i: when the wood is cut in tour-f'?>i lengths, 160 cubic (Vrt if sawed under 4 feet, and 176 ubic feet if sawed and split. But in Kargo the law specifies 128 cubic feet as a cord, and the only other requirement is that if sawed iron twenty-inch lengths 150 cubic feet must be delivered 'H.1 I X Lights of New York by L. L. STEVENSON Talking with Billy Swanson, learned that one way to start as an orchestra conductor is to enter the practice of law. A native of Boston, Swanson graduated from Harvard with a lot of honors, including : the presidency of the all-university body. Having decided to make luw his profession, he took counsel with his father as to means of making a success. The futher advised him to specialize in cases that looked hopeless. Young Swanson did so, won three cases and at the end of two years, retired from the law with a capital of $174,000. In college, he played in various orchestras. In passing, it might be mentioned that Eddie Duchin was one who played with him. So when he was through with law, he organized an orchestia of his own and is now the maestro of the Green Koom of the Edison. A chance encounter with a friend, who is a volunteer fireman in one of the commuting towns, revealed the fact that occasionally the boys have a lot of fun at their gatherings. It seems that at a recent dinner one of the firemen became offended because three steins of beer had been poured down the back of his shirt. So he picked up a beer bottle and bopped a brother fireman in the eye. The result was a closed eye, a broken nose and a cut in the forehead, the wounds being of such a nature that the fireman was taken from the party to a hospital. The humor of the whole thing seems to lie in the fact that the fireman who got bopped was not the one who poured the beer. The other evening at a little party in an uptown apartment a young wife turned pale and informed her husband that they had to go home immediately. Something had happened, she explained, though she couldn't tell what. Instead of arguing, the husband called a taxi immediately. With unusual traffic breaks, the trip across town was made in less than half the ordinary time. On their arrival, they found their apartment had been looted. An open window indicated an escape by the prowler by means of the fire escape. Wedding presents, jewels and furs of considerable value had been taken. The wife was most concerned over the loss of a lavalier, however. The husband called the police. A radio alarm was sent out and because of fast action, the jobber was caught on the roof and his loot recovered. The lavalier was a death-bed gift to the young wife from her mother. t A little clot of men and women stood in front of the window of an Eighth avenue pet shop watching police dog puppies. The lithe, alert little fellows were having a lot of fun in the torn paper on the floor of their pen. One, however, didn't take part in the sport. Instead he walked slowly around the window, stopping now and then to peer into the face of an observer and wag his tail furiously. Each time he passed on to another watcher as if disappointed. But his tail didn't stop. "Poor litlle feller," remarked a burly truck driver. "He's tryin' to wag himself a master." 0 0 * Speaking of dogs, the other afternoon while strolling along Central Park West, I noticed a young woman leading a dog which looked as if a hard breathing, fat, boyhood memory had come to life?a pug such as was so popular in another generation that plaster casts adorned whatnots. As I passed, I heard the pug owner remark to a companion, "Never before in my life had I seen a live pug and it was so homely that I just had to buy it." 0 0 In one of those swanky cocktail lounges, a woman became engaged in an argument with a younger woman. Finally the older exclaimed, "Priscilla, if you don't come home with me right away, big as you are, I'll take you across my knee and spank you!" Priscilla and her mother departed at once. 0 0 0 At the second night performance of "I'd Rather Be Right," an autograph hound was busily pursuing celebrities and was doing rather well in obtaining signatures. Suddenly, he lot out a yell. Some one had walked away with his fountain pen When last seen, he was still holding a lodge of sorrow. ? Bel) Syndicate.?WNU Service. Hoarder Leaves Over Million in Currency Detroit.?Executors of the estate of Charles Gauss, tobacconist. who died last September, found more than $1,052,000 in cur- ! rency in a safe deposit vault, it was revealed hefe The hoard war disclosed during probate of the extensive estate of the' tobacco magnate. The currency was in envelopes each ! containing $50,000, and addressed to the widow. Mrs. Margaret Gauss. The rcmey was in bills, 'ranging from $50 to $1,000. Besides the currency, executors found thousands of shares of stock. One box contained diamonds, sapphires, pearls and amethysts. ^ "IN OLD SANTA FE" TO BE AT I BROWNING HOME TONIGHT I , "la Old Santa Ke" is the movie to be shown in the auditorium of Browning Home tonight at 8:00 o'clock. The i general admission is ten cents. The picture will feature one of the world's . greatest singing cow-boys, Gene Au-| try, with the sharp shooting Ken Maynard, Tarzan, and excellent supporting cast. "notice of tax levy The books for the collection of State, County and School Taxes Tor the fiscal year commencing January 1. 1938, will be open from September 15 to December 31, 1938, inclusive without penalty. When making in-( qulrios regarding taxes, be sure to | state the School District number in which you live or own property. The totaJ tax levy for the various' school districts are as follows: I DeKalb Township Mills District No. 1 48% District No. 2 37 District No. 4 37 District No. 8 39 District No. 25 23 District No. 43 23 Buffalo Township District No. 3 37 District No. 5 21 District No. 7 23 District No. 15 * .. .. .. 21 District No. 20 27% District No. 22 39% District No. 23 27% District No. 27 32 District No. 28 23 District No. 31 29 District No. 40 41 District No. 42 21 Flat Rock Township District No. 8 32 District No. 9 32 District No. 10 25 District No. 13 24 District No. 19 32 District No. 30 21 District No. 33 32 District No. 37 32 District No. 41 32 District No. 46 27 District No. 47 21 Wateree Township District No. 11 26 District No. 12 35 District No. 16 23% District No. 29 27 District No. 38 21 District No. 39 26 Yours respectfully, C. J. OUTLAW, Treasurer, Kershaw County, S. C. Preliminary estimates place the Canadian tobacco crop at approximately 60,000,000 pound* from 65,000 fl acres. Thin la somewhat better than the crop of 1937. 7. fl Major John It. Brooke, Jr. was convicted In the federal court at Columbus, Oa., after a trial of a week or more on a charge of having murdered fl his wife, Elizabeth, on the Port Hen- I nlng reservation. Th6 verdict was first degree, but the Jury ordered that the punishment 1b not to be the death fl penalty. FINAL DISCHARGE ti r ' Notice Is hereby given that one H month from this date, on October 3, 1938, J. Team Gettys and J. Gardiner B Richards, Jr., will make to the Probate Court of Kershaw County their final return as Executors of the estate B 1 of Henrietta M. Sill deceased, and on B the same date thoy will apply to the said Court for a final discharge as said Pftcocutors of said estate. N. C. ARNETT, 1 Judge of Probate of Kershaw County. Camden, S. C., September 2, 1938. I, CITATION I State of South Carolina, County of Kershaw. I * (By N. C. Arnett, Probate Judge) fl Whereas, G. H. Haney made suit I to me to grant to Louise Gardner I Letters of Administration C. T. A. of fl" the estate and effects of Kate Haney. flg Theso are therefore, to cite and ad- Hg monish all and singular the kindred B and creditors of the said Kate Haney, H deceased, that they be and appear be- fl fore me, in the Court of Probate, to H h be held at Camden on Friday, August H n 19 next, after publication hereof, at I g( 11 o'clock in the forenoon, to show I cause, If any they have, why the said H a Administration should not be granted. fl Given under my hand this third day fl 01 of August, Anno Domini, 1938. fl M N. C. ARNETT fc Judge of Probate for Kershaw County B r| /? /? MALARIA |E ii Allin 7 days, relieves . UUV COLDS |i8 Liquid, Tablet# ?"/!! flm Salts, Noee HEADACHE fl, ? Dropa 30 minutes Try "RUB-MY-TI8M" I "" World's Beat Liniment ? I I . ! M.I I I I I I I I mmmmmrnmmrnmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm* * ?? ( fflpj^c&msjimgimfyii COACHES OH ALL THROUGH TRAINS l?mn 41 foul, clran, ftf/ttl trip at U? c?H Map-GEtsmsmsmtm rUL^MAN CABS DIMIMfl CABS i0 Be comfortable In the eafety of train travel fYwuilt PHMoqm T>iHti RAI.ii??IAHV? ss Tlfrfcrt AOGoto f(V y?MB lahwUt^ PMIL?A RNM**U?M ?nd otikGt Uml IsdoMssHoB SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYftTBM __ I Sanitary Plumbing and Heating I *< ^ dai TELEPHONE 433-J I slu Estimates Furnished on Short Notice J ELECTROL OIL BURNERS |j ati I (or ^??ewe^E?PP?^SS fea Examples of one-way fares from Camden New York $14.47 9 Philadelphia 12.22 I Washington 8.90 ? Richmond 6.80 Tampa 11.15 I St. Petersburg 12.00 Miami 14.25 J. L. Carter, D.P.A. Seaboard Office Room 1 Arcade Columbia, 8. C.. . Phone 3821 Every modern appliance has Tl been installed in Seaboard coaches and for your enjoyment of a o-o-o-li J J . clean trip. Keclining seats, softly upholstered, clean head res*-- roru Meals, pillows?low cost- Co1?" 14 pi plete wash-room facilities. Hub- . dued lights at night. Gothisweyl " . Convenient connections from here A In if SEABOARD I ?: