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the CAMDEN CHKONICLil CAMOKN, SOUTH CASOHIIA, TRIDAY. NOVEMBER «, 1f4S PAGE THREK \ • /- _ >» •. y V'-. WMt- Oid You Do -Today, . My • • • • ten t just a question. It is the ^ f . ooem 'that was written on ( 01 • >T. Kv A Vie Africa a BrUlsh ^rommander named ffean Shat- Lieut Shatlain amputated his foot with a jacknlfe and thought ’ ifl dying when he wrote the * He was reoeived'by Americans now recovering^ In a hospital r&filand. * ♦ • • • [ ^ Hiink that the poem should be ‘ lUy every mah and woman In ^en * *"<1 Kershaw county. It this done, the block leaders who giv^a ,^ir time' and patience to aid In worthy activities of the war might find a more ready re- fWere priui,iug this poem of Lieut. , Jin's, for to us it is something "the many w lio gripe, grouch, and because of rationing ^nd other arictiTe measures which have rgrn out of the war. • w • fiiit did you do today, my friend, s morn until dark? ( »any times did you complain , rationing is too tight? . KM ate you going to start to do of the things you ssy? loldieV would like to know my friend, ‘ iat did you do today? It met the enemy today took the tovtn by'storm. sy reading it wilt make ,• you tomorrow morn. Mil read with satisfaction . brief communique, ifaught, bgt are you fighting IfHAT DID YOU DO TODAY? feet ly gunner died in m^ arms today hit warm blood yet; neighbor’s dying boy gave out acream I can’t forget. • my right a tank was hit, and then a fire; stench of burning flesh rises from the pyre. I flash IHAT DID YOU DO TODAY, MY FRIEND, Itielp us with^tha tsmk? I you work harder and longer for lets, r it that too much to aak? ut right have I to aak you this, I probably will say; x now you’ll understand SEE. I DIED TODAY.” . • • * « Bare you ^ead Sues to Singapore? 01 don't miss It. The book is by Brown, noted CBS news com- Ator tof many years and Is a re- T's report to the nation of the, mt war. It is a personal intimate and no punches are pulled. h1l know more of the blunders of bpre-U. s. entry-lnto the war, after tread this masterpieces by Brown. spcmrs Is our facmred? Excuse please. We Jumped the gun in our sport column last week when we urged our sport t'i!! w ^ on the Notre Dame-Army game. What we meant was the Notre Dame-Navy repeat our suggeation on listening in on the Notre Dame- Army game tomorrow. It should be one of the best of the year. Prom the Skippsr’a Desk • • • • f Kather'lng flj;® Camden-Cheater game last Fri- day. The reason—moving up the start ing time from 8:30 to 3 o'clock. This dpprtment was not notified of the change and hence we had 8:30 men tioned in our game 8t,ory. * ‘v* • - , Those metal .yardage marke,rd^alcng the east side of the gridir^at 2rmp Id .be .replaced .with should .ipv'Mcca .witn wooden markers. W^ have wondered Just how long it would be before some one was cut by wandering into one of them.. It happened last week. A girl received a^ bad cut on her leg while a man h^d a pa_ir of trousers ruined. • ne tin has a sharp edge. week from tonight a -pqwtrful Flor- race outfit will invade Zemp stadium. For the 1S44 American Legion Dia- tinguiahed Citizen award hereby nominate Pat Orr. He certainly earned K. • • • • Antf in passing, we might mention that Henry Savage. Jr., also comes in for consideration as a co-winner with We believe the small attendance at last Friday’s game waa due largely to the fact that Chester hdd. been mauled S3 to 0 by Sumter and the home gang could not visualize many thrills, in ths local encounter. So they Stayed home. • • ■ Well, that party last Saturday given by the Lonesome ’ and Blue Maidens was a nics affair. Jom WAC and Replace A Casualty Enlist now in South Cairollna'a "All State” Group.'. Mail this coupen to U. S. Army Pecrulting Office, 1703 Main StreeL Columbia. Name . Address Of course, that Is not the proper spirit. There is considerable expense involved In the Carrying out of a foot ball schedule and the athletic group needs the money to meet these ex penses. So let’s help the football pro gram by turning out in force tonight and at all of the remaining games on the schedule. We shudder to think what might happen should ,a player collide with one of these iriarkers. W’e have* an idea that any Injury could be made the basis for a successful damage suit. w The biggest upset in last Saturdjsy’s football picture waa the 13 to f3 tie game between Army alid Pennsyl vania. Notre Dame lived up to the dope by routing Navy 33 to 3. MIchU gan tarroped Minnesota A2. to 3, Duke nosed out Georgia JTecH 14 to 7, while tn Palmetto high ranks Sumter de feated Brookland-Cayce_ 27 to 0 and Cblumbrr-^ipr defeated Benedictine of Savsnnah-40-±o_Z- B • • • And while doing this.week’s fault finding, we would like to call atten tion to the condition of the bleachers along the east side of .the stadium. Many of the boards have rotted out and present a dangerous hazard. What under the sun is the reason equip ment like this is permitted to de- terioate so? It is far more economical to keep the place in repair. Sport writers ail ov^r the nation give ladder-top honors to ’Notre Dafne with .Army and Pennsylvania in a sec- I ond place tie and Michigan next in ' line. • « When Notre Dame plays Army to morrow, the Irish will be without their ace, Angelo Bertilli, who is now in the service. Don’t forget to tune in on this game of games Saturday. The Camden Bulldogs, after a woozy start last Friday, really got rolling and trampled over the Cnes- ter Cyclones 33 to 0, Coach Pierce used his second stringers aln^ost en tirely In the second half. Had the first Une continued the route the visi tors would have'^gone down under an avalanche of touchdowns. f By the way, that Lake View High team that spanked Sumter had its hopes for a 100 per cent season blast- t.d by a surprising Bennettsville High team by a 13'to 6 score. From where we are sitting a game between Cam den and Bennettsville on Turkey Day would be a fine bit of dessert for Cam den sport fans. We venture to say that the old stadium would be jam med. The Wailing WaU Wise guys, eh? Just because I wor« a rubber hat last week, Tuesday, when a sleety rain had taken piece of Merry Sunshine, some of the gang began to wisecrack. “Getting salty eh?” came from Oliver R^e, who was gaxing from the second sto^ window of ths Savage building. “Where’s the fire Skipper?” Inquir ed Sam Karesh. “Oh, for A Lift on the Bounding Main,” chortled none other than good old Stan Babin. City ., S. C. Phone T.Tr7.7TTrrrrr.T7V. TT.... . ..m Age Application blank and information literature will be sent to yoii im- q]tediateiy upon receipt of this card. Enlist now and replace a casualty. ,• • • • Yes folks, Boy Stan came buck for a few days, Stan says that| Unrie Sam likes him and exhibited bis; return pass to show that he is wanted' back at his base in Daytona, Fla. special delivery, now 10 to 35 cents, unchanged; 2nd class mall, now 1 cent each 2 ounces, to 1 cent an ounce; 3rd dags mail; rtow 1.5 and 2 cents for each 2 ouncss, to 3 and 4 cents for each 2 ounces; money orders, now 6 to 22 cents, to ID to 37 cents; reg istered mail, now 15 cents to $1 an article, to 20 cents to $1-35; Insured mall, now 5 to 35 cents an article, to 10 to 70 cents; C. O. 0. mail, now 12 cents to $1.20 an article, to 24 cents to $a.4a ^ a • • • a a a • Camden’s future edmiral looks fine and says jlftat the life in the navy is just immense. • a “And we really have some softball teams down at Daytona," he quoth, Softball fans hereabouts will rraall that Stan was the Ix)^ Oehrlg of Cam den when he played-flrst base for the famous old Sinclair team. This girls, will hit you hard. Stiff increases in taxes on so-called luxu ries include: Toilet greparatlons (lip stick, etc.y now 10 per cent, hals^j to 26 per cent; jewelry, 10 per cent retail to 16 per cent; furs, 10 per cent retail to 25 per cent;, general admls- ,8lons to amusement places, now 1 cent on ea» h 10 cents, faised to *3 cents on each 10 cents; cabarets, 5 per cent of charge to 30 per cent. W’hitney who is at the head of the B. or ,R. T. as follows: “As a close kinsman of a splendid young man who was lost on p bombing raid over Germany, I sincerely and respectfully suggest that before you take action on a strike that you communicate with the Commander of the Klghth Air Force In Kngland and ask if the, men under his cumniand are to be giveh an opportunity to vote as to whether they will make the next bombing raid over Germany." • * • • ' ' A railroad strike of the magnitiKb* of the one . now threatened would cause us to lose this war. To quote front the Charlotte Observer "The coal strikes, the proposed railroad atriko and the attitude of labor ip general all represent Mr. Roosevelt’s clilckens coming home to roost. And the sad thing Is that many more chick ens are still to come.” • • • « « The first quarter was a technicolor picture of fumbljng. ' Between the two teams, seven fumbles occurred In this period^ Not one however result ed in a score, although Camden was robbed of two splendid opportunities. During the game exactly eleven fum bles were checked. Camden fumbled seven times as against four errors on the part of the visitors. Two of the Camden fumbles were recovered. • • • s Tonight Hartsvllle comes here for a tilt with .the rushing Bulldogs. A Our suggestion to Coach Lindsay Pierce that the Camden, Florence game be moved up from Friday night to Thursday Nov, 11, was greeted with a big huzzah by the Camden grid mentor. All stores, business houses and professional offices as well at city and county offices are closing on Armistice day afternoon, which would mean a packed house for the Florence game. Florence rates about the toughest proposition the Bulldogs have met this season. Can you imagine the turnout that would greet such an afternoon of entertainment next Thursday if the shift can be arrang ed? Ah me! them wuz the happy days. Remember way back when Stan Ba bin, Beck Russell, Charley Russell, Charley Villipigue and a lot of other stars used to perform on the sand- lot' for the fans. You’re Telling Me Believe It Or Not U’s a fact. Americana In paying an ro mated 49 eifn mated 49 billion doliara in federal, state and local taxes' this fiscal yeari will ahell out more on a per capita' basis than either Britons or Cara-1 diBns. The comparable figures fdr the' three countries, made public by the treasury department are $357 for' eyery man, woman and child in the- United States as against $291 in Great Britain and $261 In Canada. • * « • a stratosphere experts and we can sug gest the names of some Axis leaders as trial trip' passengers. Zemp Stadium Cchc^ gray and coldly empty no'w, tiered seats rise into the fading >siy on the darkened turf I think 1 set lin, our boys, who sail, and march, and fly la greater, crueler contest than they Pia.v«d hero boys who held that field an other year. * * * * I Hive you ever stopped to consider •hat l{ 3 mail released by a WAC -3ted In-the Navy? , ljaih,itU;!.lj.a. iIia City RiirAniifiil u«a. Yes rhiltlV Washington may be *eat of gove^bj^nt, but try and 1» place u a . **!-,'*•* r [J^fr the phone: “Hello Skipper, do ^ think 1 should copsult a doctor? '* gal who doesn’t care for Frank ^tra. « • • • ^o*e ^ thuslngs: ’Sciiae wives positively awful to their hus- and some are awfully positive. Germans are going to ■ 10 to spend Christmas at home ‘•’^y are going. . L ts wrong with the new penny! / three people *-have accepted ^ from me as dimes? novelty of married life soon off. • The i« • • • • L m (he Chicago Daily News: a wife. 'Alice, expects to be* Tor the second time ®onth." Gosh! • m Ljj. launched bis paper- he did not expect the he so expert Ih 4oing the I ^ri • • • a adjacent planets are ’ being- dreamed about by fare Congha ' hoin common colds. ■ That Hang On E^fnulslon reltevsa 1 inflamed bronchial ^ tanW^ ^ the foa. iIEOMULSION OiMt Cola, ImckHii Roses and Thoms per cent of the child actr.'tss’ salary will go to taxes and the remaining 60 per cent-wlll go to her parents." Some arithmetic. An Increase in postal rates raising local letter charges from 2 cents to 3, has been approved by the house ways and means committee i\pd will probably be passed by house and senate, and become a law before the first of the year. • • « • The proposed schedule on postal rate changes is as follows: Local let ters, first class, now 2 cants an ounce,, raised to 3 cents; qjit of' town'’letters, first class, 3 cenis, unchanged;, air. mail, 6 cents an ounce to 10 cents; I’p in Ohio they have started a MacArthur For President club, ’’in Illinois scores of these clubs are in fuM steam ahead.. Should General MacArthur be released from army service next January when he reaches; the retirement age’ of 64 the chances are he will he nominated as the presi dential candidate by the Republican par^y convention. It would be a walkaway for the bi;iliiant mllBary leader. And he would have a spleb- did chance of winning the election, no matter who opposed him. Out wo do not believe MacArthur will be retlri*d from army service for the leaders of this nation as well ,aa those of allied nations realize that he has done the I most Outstanding Job of any military leader In this war. Electric Hay Driers Prove Their Worth Clemson, Oct—That (ne use of elec tric hay driers makes possible the curing of hay without regard to bad weather and Insures a better quality of hay at-a low cos't are conclusions dra'wn from an electrical hay-drylug and demonstratloq held at Abingdon. Va.. Sept. 20-21, says W. J, Ridout. Jr. extension rural electrlficatloft special few The government of this country should hide its head in shame, that strikes of the magnitude of the pres ent coal affair ar,e tolerated. And now another strike affecting 360,000 mem bers of the five big railway' unions is threatened. This latter treasonable gesture is headed by th^ Brotherhood of Railway ’Trainmen' who are de manding a $3 a day wage increase, a a • • 1st. who attended the conference. One Virginia farmer, after 2 years’ use says, "I would not do without my hay drier for anything. I paid for this unit In the saving of hay." Another Virginia farmer says: "My barn-dried hay la 60 per cent better than my sun-cured hay of the same cutting, and I wouldn’t have saved ahy hay at all last yegr if it had not been for the hay drier.’’ KERSHAW LODGE HO. 29, A. P. M. We admirq^ the kin of an oven^eas soldier who wrote to a chap named T Regular CommanleatlMU First Tnaaday of ladi Month, At t P. IL Vlattora Welcoma. J. t,‘ HOFFMAN, W. M. J. B. ROSS, Seeretaiy. It has baen auggeatad that Joa Goabbela is overlooking a good alibi. He might tell the Germans the Nazis! have been abandoning all those Rua-| sian towns because it was too much trouble to pronounce their names. Defiance from Dallas: “One more over act by the OPA and Texas v/ill secede from the Union, apply for Lend-Lease and fight its own damned war.” England reports a poor grouse sea son, while in Germany, it’s a good a‘#1lB- bet the grousing is reaching time high. As for Axis U-boats, there might be a song now starting with "Rub-a- dub-dub, We’fe licking the sub!” It is fqund that Vitimin B-1 in- cresset the learning power 6f rats. And there is nothing so embarrassing around the house as a backward raL • • a Despite Senator Wheeler, it seems inevitable that a lot 'of young hus bands will graduate from the dog house to a pup tenh » • « • One of our Northern housewives says she isn’t so anxioui to locate Benito, but if any one happens to find Mrs. Mussolini’s maid, be awe to wire her collect. • - Last night, when Lily said she was gding tb wash her girdle, I didn’t say. “If your girdle doesn’t dry tonight you’ll be In -a helluva shade tomor row. * * * * Do you remember way back when the only pinup tlrls wo knew were mothers with small children?^ • • B • Uncle Looie always claimed he was born with a silver spoon in his mouth, but he never has been able to explain why it was Inscribed “Kirkwood .Hotel.” • • • • You know I don’t claim to have many Coins to spend, and of some kinds ....not any. But, Slick, it’s confusin’ An3 I fear I’m . losing On this new jfsnglod, dime colored penny. 9 9 m 'Prom tHc Coluinbia Record. Sixty QUICK REMEF FROM 10b«i»«ArbtoltauB STOMACH ULCERS DUE TO EXCESS ACID 9»w*BneM«'i»«FMomeTreatineirtthst . Help «r It WW Cost You Nothing nviF TwtwomtllloD hott{o« oft7 yjx-iw. this OeKALB PHARMACY, Phone M 4C ■k * * LET N ext Thursday is Armistice Day. In other years that day ha^ been dedi cated to the memory of die men who gave their lives in World War I. But this* year we believe those honored dead would rather joii^ with us, the living, in paying honor to the men of another generation who have taken up the weapons that fell from- their lifeless hands. This year we in this community are asked to observe Armistice Day not with words but with deeds. iTiis yeaf we haVe a special re sponsibility. This Armistice Day marks the beginning of a new drive to make up the shortage in pulp- wood. Everyone who can possibly do so is asked to cut an extra cord in honor of some friend or relative in the service. * *^Ciit-a*Cord^* * Victory ' --'.“WOOD CAMPAIGN NEWSPAPER PULPWOOD COMMITTEE There are two good reasons for putting the drive on this basis, . " • First, it takes i^early a ton of pulp wood to supply each man in the service with the many things l>e needs. ^ Second, th^present pulpwood shortage, million cords, is just about equal to th^ num ber of service men who come from the pulp- wood-producing areas. So if every one of us in this and other pulp- wood-cutting communities cuts an extra cord fpr our service man, the emergency will be met. No fighting man will lack any of the thousand-and-one war essentials that are made from pulpwood. f No boy shall die because we failed.