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QRUISIN* 'ROUND WITH THE SKIPPER li s only a few steps to the nearest majl box-?wrjte a letter. Take a lit* tle chunk of your heart and spread it 0Ver some paper; it goes, Oh such a long way Write a letter to your mother, your dad. your Bister, your brother?your loved ones. They are dear to you. Prove it with a letter. If they ore far from you, bring them near to you with a letter. ? Write a letter to that aged relative or friend who hasn't many months to live, the frleu^ of your dad, of your family, the ope surviving link between your own present and the past. Don't wait for that dear soul to die befdre you act. * ? Try it?you'll like it. Great Joy and surprise^ are in store for you. All that you gave in your letters will be returned ten fold to you. For a letter is u three cent Investment In good fortune. Yes sir?write a letter, Whether you say "Attaboy", "'Thanks" or "I love you mom", always remember, a j letter needs no excuse. From the serious side to that of the 1 unusual In life. Watching a north side J resident who loves songblMs care-j fully sight a slingshot and lo and be-1 hold she hit the offending bird of prey who was seeking to slay some little hirdlets right smack in the button. Did you note I said SHE?for It was a lady who handled that slingshot so expertly. Paging John deLoach of the county defense council. Why not a squad of female sling shot sharpshooters? ? V By the way?Just try and say that | fast "sling shot sharp shooters". Unconsciously. we presented the world j with a new tongue twister. i Taking you to-^the baseball park.- < Hello baseball park, Come In. That was a nice crowd at the ball game last Thursday?the best of the season but I a long way from being what It ought ' to have been. m 0 9 However the crowd was about on a ( par with the game. It wasn't a good i ifame?full of stupid .playing and it j dragged at such a slow pace that some two hours and ten minutes were required to complete it. ( w m n w * 1 \ Wonder who the cock-eyed lame brain was who thought out that 4 1 o'clock starting for ball games down in this neck of the hills. You don't j see any big time ball games starting I at that hour anywhere. TtV a relic j j of the famous Rooseveltian designation of horse and buggy days. i 0 0 0 0 j Well dear readers, when you peruse < this column this corner will be roll- 1 lng through the blue grass country 1 ot Kentucky. Yes sir, we're on our | way tor the annual visit with north- i ern friends and relatives around Chi- 1 capo and Milwaukee. And by the ! way?we have two baseball dates, one at Coniiskey park and the other at 1 Wrlgley field,- the American and National league pastime pastures In Kood old Chi. -! And then for a week up In the Wisconsiu woods where we will tlsh, swim and recline in the sun. In the meanwhile, keep the home fires burning, attend tl\e ball games and keep up that tine Camden spirit. Hats off to Abe Fennell. Yes slr-e-e-e, the big boy sport scribe of the Columbia State is the prou4 papa of a fine son. "This is one time I did not strike out" sex Abo. Mother and baby are both doing tine. Mrs. Penned is the former Miss Jewell Moetse, of Columbia. No two happier people can. be found anywhere than Abe and Mrs* Fennell. ? t ? Sitting with Abe in the sport sanatorium of the State last week we heard him describe this new_*rrlval as follows "A boy, Alva Bratton Fennell, born May 21 in Columbia hospital, weight 6 pounds, blue eyes and more hair than his pop", * * * * Well Abe, hearty congratulations and good luck to all of yez. Again back to Camden?-We note by the state that Mayor McCorkle is being mentioned as a possible senatorial appointee. Yes sir, light in that state house column of the State. It's all right with us to have this signal honor extended to an alert progressive and wide awake chap like Mack. But we sure would miss him in Camden. * "n Brown as a nut and radiating good health and energy our girl Friday returns 'from Kanuga lake to take over at the Chamber of Commerce while the boss is on his vacation, NOTICE OF SALE Notice is hereby given that in accordance with Ihe terms and provisions of the Deer see of the Court of Common Pleas for Kershaw county In the case of Fidelity Building & Loan Association, Plaintiff, vs. Easter Cly^ burn Adams. Gus Clyburn, Jules Ellis snd John Doe, representing collectively all' unknown persons claiming by, through, or under Bog Clyburn, deceased, and especially .the heirs at law of Tom Clyburn, a deceased brother, Eliza Clyburn Massey, a deceased sister, Ellen Clyburn, a deceased sister, and Lula Clyburn, a deceased Bister, Defendants, I will sell to the highest bidder, before the Court House door at Camden, S. C., during the legal hours of sale on the first Monday in July, 1941, being the 7th day thereof, the following described property: All that parcel or lot of land in the County of Kershaw, State of South Carolina, located about one mile north of the City of Camden,, containing one-fourth (1-4) of an acre, same being square in shape, each of the four sides having a dimension of one hundred and four and one-half (104 1-2) feet, and being known and designated as lot number Three (3) on plat of A. B. Boykin, Surveyor, of date June 14, 1927, recorded in the office of the Clerk of Court for Kershaw County in Plat Book No. 8, ptfge 82. The said lot Is bounded on the north by property of Hattie Williams; east by lot Number Two (2); Bouth by lot hlumber Four (4), as shown on said plat, and West by property of Wheeler, and is the same, which was conveyed to Bog Clyburn by Mamie Johnson.' Also Five (6) shares of stock of Bog Clyburn, deceased, In Fidelity Building and Loan Association. Terms of Sale: For cash, the Master to require of the successful bidder, other than the plaintiff or the defendants herein, a deposit of five (5) per cent of his bid, same to be forfeited In case of non-compliance. No personal or deficiency judgment Is demanded and the bidding will not remain open after the sale, but compliance with the bid may be made Immediately. W. L. DePASS, JR., Master for Kershaw County KIRKLAND & deLOACH , Plaintiff's Attorneys Nobody's Business I Written for Tho Chronlole by Qoo MoOoo. Copyright, 1928. i am in favor of free rpeech if you are Careful about what you 8ay ?I hoar oo much these days about free speech. What has so many of these free-speechers got to talk about? I am free to say what I please I around my house, but I know before-1 hand that I have to take the consequences. Aa a matter of fact. ? I when I exercise my rights to free I speech, I am always mighty particular I about what I orate. j i i - I -r-Most of the folks who howl and I growl about free speech want to run I down somebody or his owu couutry-l If he demands free speech, you can always guess that he wauts to say something that he knows ought not to be said. He had to hide behind hiis rights (f) The majority of tbe men and women who belch forth their free I speech now-a-days are not going to I all of this trouble because of their loyalty to their country; some of them get well paid for it, others are pro-Hitler but swear they love America while still Others are just nothing but peeved, pin-headed, peanut politicians.. .of the static variety. ?If a fellow is working for me he of I course has a right to say what he j pleases about me and my business. I After he gets thru free-speeching, I have a right to do. what I please I about him. If I am wrong and he proves that I am wrong, there won't be any differences between us, but if I am right... .and he is trying to bust I me or drive my trade away or ruin what little character I might have ' left after having been in public business 40 years, then he ll have to get I Off my premises to enjoy his free I speech-making. ?The good old South- is inhabited! almost altogether by loyal, peaceable,! honest, American-born Americans. If I some of those free-speechers were to come dowo here and "cut loose' they I might smell tar and feathers. fiver 1 w*tee that a\l of this "America *1r?t" j crowd stays north of the Mason and I Dixon Line? Bunders, Communists,! and most free-speechers know where! to stir up strife and aid Hitler and I his brothers in crime. And, by the way, it's a sin for that bunch of civil-j zation destroyers to call themselves,! "America First" Club. They are only static. | ' WHY IN THE WORLD DO WE I .. HAVE TO DQ IT? I ?Dressing up Is a pain in the neck. As a matter of fact I rarely ever ! dress up. When I dress up on rare! occasions, I feel like every body is wondering what that boob means try-1 ing to look so nice. I htfve no tails: I only a tux, or whatever you call that! kind of garb that - has a regular I length coat with footdong lapels and a little vest tfiat has 2 buttons on It I at the bottom end that fasten*70T?rj a stiff-front shirt that is pushing yourl neck off and a pair of britches to | match with black braid running up and down on the outside of the legs. I I think they call it a tux. ?The collar that I wear wh^n I dress up has 6 saw-teeth on the left side, 3 J on the right side and 72 running around my neck. By the time I get half thru bowing and scraping and careening to the guests and visitors, I imagine that blood is flowing down my anatomy In regular streams, but when I get home And. remove the afflictor, I find that only the skin all around has been scarified and pinched up. I always?recover within a week or so, but ha've uNj^ear a soft cloth around my neck for a few days. ?Those stiff shirts that a guy has to wear to these parties and weddings ought to be out lawed by a constitutional amendment. It takes tha whole family to get one of them on "pa". And when you are trying to talk to some one at the ."gathering", the thing pops and cracks every time you open your mouth. Nine times out of ten, it you aint awfully particular, the little Wollworth shirtstuds drops out of their holes and either slide down your inner clothes or bounce out on the floor in front ol you. ?Mebbe when wo get like Russia over here we wont have to put on airs. The Russians don't dross up ever. Weddings and funerals and fiveo'clock teas (which they might have at the risk of getting their heads chopped off) and receptions generally require only the "A la Stalin" brown britdlieB and little sa wed-off Jumpers (overalls) to match. They say that those bolshevicks don't even undress when they go to bed. Combs and hairbrushes and soap are taboo. Man, what a fine country Russia must be. | Slugfest U Won By << Rock Hill Jr. To?m (Conttcz?d from first page) the fourth Camden had the slender kid up lu the utr, wheu after one out had been recorded, three batters went to first on passes. With the sacks loaded and chancea ripe for a scoring hoe, Houtaon, who waa on first watt allowed to take too great a lead arid was nipped off the bag by a wide margin, Mongo rolled weakly to third and was out at first?that ended the threat. In the sixth Camden pushed over two runs on two singles and an error, Mullen openod the round with a single and worked his way to second to score when Mlm's roller to third was thrown wild to first. Hough popped to the catcher but Mlius who had gone to third on a passed ball scored ou Smith's single. Hoiiston and Mum go popped to third to retire the side. The fans wenl beserk in the seventh wheu a cluster of four blows' one a double by Mims coupled 'with three walks, scored four runs and brought the Mudlieus to within a point of tying the score. Cox who had gono in to li.it for Williams singled. Moore walked. Mullen singled to scoro Cox. Mlms doubled to scoro Moore und Mullen. Hough walked and Mima came home when Smith singled. Hough was tagged out trying to steal second and Houston flew out to left. MeCowan who had opened the inning by walking was caught when he allowed himself to Jog down to second on Cox's hit. A quick throw from center to Pressley who covered the sack boat MeCowan to it by several feet. After a scoreless eighth inning aud trailing the Invaders 7 to 11, the locals went to work !u the last of the ninth and managed to put two more runs across. Moore opened with a single aud took second when Richardson threw wild over second. Mullen popped to first but Mints doubled to score Moore. Hough singled to scoro Mtm?v Smith popped to first and ItouHtou to Hhort And the gamo was over. Score: Rook Hill It 12 ' 5 Camden B 10 S Batter If 8; Clraut and Richardson; llouatoa and Smith. i. ' Skinny Girls Look Unhealthy i Boy friends don't like that "on- j Peppy" look. 80, If you need the , Vitamin B Complex.and Iron of Vlnol j j in your diet to Improve appetite, tov | fill out those hollows and add lovely curves, get Vlnol. ZEMP'8 DRUG 8TORE ] DeKALB PHARMACY .._ LUMBER FOR"SST We have on hand several thousand feet, cull boards % x 4 inches to 12 -inches tongue and groove, square edge and shiplap working. Also 2x4s. This lumber is very suitable for ordinary building purposes and priced so low it will pay you to investigate WATEREE LUMBER CO. PHONE 75 CAMDEN, S. C. WOMEN! ... , ; gpooic for I # Mrs. Mala prop, you may recall, was a fictional character who used the wrong word in the right place ?or was it vied versa? Anyhow, in answering these questions, don*t be a Mrs] Mala prop. Indicate your aniwers in the space provided for each question, then look up the answers and your rating. 11HMM f 11 ? Mi??Jfc? 11/ raui ivevcic, ucsiuca uciui the man who warned the Colonists that the British were coming, was an (a) architect; (b) manufacturer of dyes; (c) silver- J 1 smith; (d) soldier* I | (2) The Toltecswere an ancient and now extinct tribe or nation who lived in (a) Brazil; (b) Arizona; (c) Libya; | I (d) Mexico. | | (3) Napoleon's son was called "L'Aiglon," and his body was moved recently from Vienna to rest beside his father's tomb in Paris. L'Aiglon means (a) Little Corporal; (b) The Eaglet; (c) Son of the Emperor; (d) Prince r | of the Aiglons. 1 I (4) If you're a girl, and your boy friend gave you a nosegay, you then would be the proud owner of (a) a bottle of cheap perfume; (b) a red nose; (c)-a Christmas tree decoration made of glass; r"~~| <d) a small bouquet. I I (5) Elephants are reputed to have extremely long lives. Another denizen of the jungles which lives an unusually long while is (a) a parrot; (b) water buffalo; (c) rn gorilla; (d) jaguar. I I (6) A trireme, you know, is a boat. Specifically, it is (a) a Greek or Roman galley having three banks of oars; (b) a shallop used by inhabitants of the Black sea's shores; (c) boat on JTl the Ganges. I I (7) The proscenium of a theater is (a) the gallery; (b) that part oi the stage in front of the curtain; (cf the passageway leading to the dressing rooms; <d) p^T? the main aisle. | I i' 1 i "GUESS AGAIN" * "? ANSWERS JET r 1. (e) tor 20 point#..... , . (dj tor 10 point#. _____ *. (b) touahte. tor 9 points _____ 4. (d) tor 10 point#.. . _____ 5. it) for f points _ . ( ) tor 10 points...... _____ 7. (h) tor SO points nirv ? rumrr fiMMai I I ^tk^'.s!00.^ total J K"wsii?'a*rl?M;' 00-70, try sfsln. . 1 \ goodAear] \TJtRE SALE!J GET OUR TRADE-IN DEM. 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