The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, August 30, 1946, Image 12
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60di Year
l^iniei'g Story Of
All-Star Grid Game
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Dmy Eaiariaai Wm
Bm IMd Mi Twaaday, Sap-
10
Browninf homo tad Mather Acad-
emr will begin iU llth rear of ogon-
tlDDann ’nieedar. SepteoAdr 10.
Day ■tndenta are reqaeated to take
note that they are to reglater in the
afternoon of September 6. t and 7th,
and that opening day ezwrciaeB wil
ie held in the chapel of the acal
emy at 10:10 a. m., on Slumber 1<
On September 10 and Ittt tha hocM
atore will be open in the aftemooga
only. All new atndeata ahonld repoirt
Segtamber I at I:t0 a. m. for
BYHUM NKBBC NOW MANAOCR
NBWBBRflY BTORI IN VIRQINIA
Bynnm M. Neeae, former manager
of ^e Camden J. J. Newberry atore,
haa completed hla rafreaher coorae in
Aahfaille, N. C., and ia now manager
of thA Newberry atore in Stannton.
lit'*
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KBHBHAW LODOB NO. ft. A. F. M
Regnlar Communication
nrat Tueaday of Baal
Month, At • P. M. Visltore
Walcoma
U B. JONB8, W. M.
0. J. OUTLAW, Beeretanr
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By The Skipper
Chicago, ni., Special to The Chronicle
laroy (Craiy Lega) Hirach, the bril
liant UnlTeraity of Wiaconain runner
and Martin Luhy, a powerful Tezaa
Aggiea tackle led the college All-Stara
to a ataiyiing If to 0 rictc^ ever the
Loa Angelea Rama Friday night in
Soldtara Field.
A huge crowd of 17.180 crammed
the lake fhmt atadtnm here in Chica
go expecting to aee. a brilliant if not
Tictorloua aerial performance by the
Taunted profeaaional championa. In-
atead thay aaw the Rama thoroughly
whipped in arery phaae of play.
Bob Waterfield, the Rams pitching
quarterback and aald to be the high-
eat paid player in profeaaional ranka,
did not, they telf me, remotely ap
proach hla eminent deeda of the 1946
aeaaon whan the Rama were located
at ClerMand. Inateed Bo McMilllana
inaplred and deadly ricioua ainatennr
put- on the ahow. At the game’a end
the pro Champa were obrioualy de-
morallied, lacking in coordination,
hope, preclalon and virtually all other
ingredlenta of winning football.
Hirach raced fS yarda through the
vainly graapiag proa for a firat quart
er touchdown. Again, in the third
period, be took a beautiful 82 yard
paaa trora Otto Graham, alumnua of
Northweatern, and ran SO yarda to
the aeeond touchdown. The final two
points Juat aerved aa a fitting clinch
er to the evening's triumph. Paul
Walker of Tale bowled Kenny Wash
ington, tha big n^ro passer in the
end tone and Washington was roam
ing around vainly trying to find a re
ceiver for a desperation pass.
So desperate were the Rams in the
waning minutes that they shoved
School Time!
NmYeeOrMredYeer
CMb’iWOVWNMiesT
It now coats lass than
2^ apises to protset
P 'f washabiss with gsnnins
Cash s WOVEN
Namsa. A school na-
cassity, and also pro-
isclion for ihs Is family s bslonginga
SI homo or away
W. Sheom & Son
PkOM M
El'S
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COMINO ATTHACnONS
Camden Theatre
Fri.-5At, Attfuat 30-31
••WILD BEAimr
One Thousand Thrills I I I I I
- ' Lataat Nawa
SBt.f Auf. 31, 10:30 Show
“THE CATMAN OF
PARIS**
Terror Strikaa Nina TImtaf
1—BOBBBOOOOOBBOOOOOO0Oi»
MoiMiaF-TiiwadaF, Sep^t 2-3,
EXTRA SPECIAL I I I
*‘SMOKY**
In Tschnicotor
Fred McMurray and Ann Baxter
Also Lataat Nawa
Wed.-Thura., September 4-5
“CLUNY BROWN**
Charles Boysr-r-Jennlfsr Jonas
%
- Also Latest News
irauiuiiiiraiHiiHiiiiHiniiiHMB
COMING ATTRACTIONS
Haiglar Theatre
Cemar Broad and Rutladga Bta.
.11
i'-JiS
Fri.:^t., Aufuat 30-31
AMBUSH TRAIL**
«<
with
Bob Btaala
Barlal: '*King ef Tha Forest
RanfereP
Alee Comedy and Cartoon
Mofidaj-TmMdBF, Sept 2-3
Qoee Autry with Bmiloy Bumotia
ie
“GOLD MINE IN
THE SKr *
Alee Letaet Nawa
WbC-Tliara,, Septeaaber 4-5
“OOIG DONG WILLIAMS**
**T^,llejrat Meeiikad Ridas ABaln"
Tern lUoaaa the ***■**#—
ieea of: lt|S4t into the Mr. -BaA'be
never had a eluuaoe in hla first codte
heck appaaraaea. Ruaeell of Baytdr
dumped him for a eight yard kwa aad
Harmon walked off the field with a
dislocated left elbow.
Tbna Hirach aparked tha offenslva.
But that does not eomplete the pic
ture of one of the moat decls#e routs
in this All-Star a«iea. Marita Rahy
was tha team captain and he to<^ his
w(^k seriously. He wai tha anehor
of the llna all eva^Mg. The Rama
could not move him neither eould
they atop him .from damping their
mnners repeatedly. |
The victory was a great trlbate-4o
the coaching proweee of Bo McMil-
lln who had led the All-Stars to
amashing decision over the Redaklna
of Washington in 1988, the other time
when he was head coach of the All-
Stan.
It was a i^t ahow that the Aik
Star classic ^offered. Some 26,000
people, many of whom had sat near
thajiUdium all day, had to be turned
away, theire were 800 nahera on the
job and all were aqnlpped with elec
tric megaphones in handling tha big
mob of nearly 100,000. The show be
tween the halves was an epic in pag
eantry, with a 200 piece band playing
on a darkened fl^. Their inahru-
manta illnminated . wttk 1,000 tiny
bulbs. A six foot illuminated drum
had a Ram'e head on one sida aad
eleven stars on the other.
Tour hundred sport writers and
hundreds of football coaches and team
Wants—For Sale
of a system. oIjbMM etfaMtlsn wBM
promlaaa to ba more democratic than
our own. Thpe, nt a time whan the
Aamrlena natlon^Mumld do everything
wHhla its power to maintain its pos
ition of werM laatemhip, it is per
mitting the nation ta Imi behind both
Rnaela and Oreat Britain in education
for tha peaila”
Dr. MeOMkill aUted "as nearly as
1 can aettmata on tha kaais of avail
aMe data ,BSS,200 teachers have quit
the prefaselon entirely since 1939
Poesibly 100,000 of thoee were good,
experleaced teechera. The others
were people who entered teaching
tried it out for a year or two and
Heft"
Ha emphasized that approzlmately
60,000 poaltlona have not been Tilled,
which necessarily reduced the num
ber of teaching poeitions and increaa
ed the teaching load of the remaining
tea^ert.
In connection with teachers’ ialar-
iaa Dr. McCaeklll said ‘ia 1989 the
average teacher’s salary In tha Uni
tad States was |1.408—that average
inclttdes not only classroom teachers,
km
wM,
tka average
nSbon wee' abtmf |1,M0. BaC*t^
UUbBf* Bave happened to the teaser’s
salary. In the ilrat place, approxl-
amteiy |8i0 went fdr tedanl taxmioa.
aeveaty-feur cents 'on tha deUti ak
oompaied with IMI vatneg. iBflat-
krnaiy farces of invlngihla strlBgtk
are pushing still lewar th* vaM of
tha teachar’a dollar. Tha inereues of
10 percent and 20 pereant aad 2i per
emt whkh tsnehers will reeetva hare
and tiara aem yMr wfll Imra iftMit
aa much effect on the.sitaatkm as a
In cteshm hla
Mtrsf nditsmyim as^^
tha taeportaam>^3iS!S.
atlens. local,,
teg tha
skm. Ba
j***|"f iSr?igL*
imiiaam.
Tha
SaS!
NOTICE TO TAX LEVY
The taz books for the collection ot
County and School tazae for the fls-
ei] year eommsDelng Jaanary 1, 1946.
will be open from September 11, 1946,
to Deeember 81, 1946, wlthont pen
alty. Thereafter a penalty of one (1)
per centum for each of the months
• - _ u u .-A
aoctlons. It was a typical Chicago
■how and not a hitdi to tho whole
affair.
It was a great Miow with Blroy
Hiracn doing the starring. It is an
tnterastlng ^t that following the
scoring of the two touchdowns by
Crasy Lags, It was an old team mate,
Pat Harder, of Wisconsin, who kicked
tha extra points.
Raaelved tee Isle fsp
LOST—Ration books No. 4, laaued to
John Oliver Jones and Oliver P.
Jones, Luaoft 8. C.24*P
WANT TO BUY—'81. *86 or ’26 Ford
or Chevrolet. 2-door or 4-door. H
T. Stephens, Logoff, B. C., R-1. 84-p
FOR RENT—To' couple only. New
four-room oottaga, availabla around
Saptamber 1. Apply ’’BTA’* care
The Chronicle. 84-p
FOR BALE—818 feet picket fence.
Austin Shehaan. 84-p
FOR SALE—One spinning wheel, flO;
one French sleigh bed. 116, antique
brass handles. Mrs. Austin Shebeen.
. ■ . 24-p
FOR SALE—800 tons good timothy,
clover or alfalfa hay. Harry BalL
Fairfield, Iowa. 24-27-p
FOR BALS^-On# wood aaw with halt;
one model T motor with power-
pulley, need little repair.' L. T
Branham. Phone 866-W. 24-c
FOR BALE—Juicy white rock broll-
'ers, delivered to freeser lockers or
elaewbere in quantitiea. Delivered in
quantities, $1.00 each on foot. Write
or phone Mary B. Hale, Boykin,
8. C. Phone 8111. 24-c
FOR IMMEDIATE BALE — House
with three bedrooms, baths. Inner
‘ cloaat, living room, sun porch, din
ing room, kitchen, pantry, front
and hack porchea. large lot, excel
lent location. Apply Box “X. Y.”,
care Tha Chronicle.
Hurd Annual DAR
School Concludes
Successful Session
One hundred and sixty-six dalegataa
and goasts repreeantlng 48 South
Carolina counties gathered at Tamas-
aee DAR School for the third annual
workshop for county adneathm asso
ciation workers during Anguat 14-17.
Chesterfield, Clarendon and George
town were the only counUes not rep
resented In the moet incceasful work
shop ever sponsored by the South
Carolina Bducatlon Aaaociatloa. If
the enthuaiaam and cooperative spirit
manlfeated throuihoat tha workshop
is indicatlva of snccam, county asao-
ciationa ahonld enjoy their most tmlt-
ful year of progreaa. Aaaociatlona
needing hMp are urged to call on the
8CEA staff at any time for aastatance.
The workshop opened with a gen
eral -meeting on Wediraaday avtidbg,
Aug. 14 with Mrs. Louise O. Carson,
8.C.B.A. President, presiding. Dr. J.
L. McCaskill, Asst. Dir. of tha Federal
Lagialativa-Division of the NBA, made
the opening address. Ho cited many
■tartling statistics comparing educa
tional expenditures in the U. S. with
those of Russia and Great Britain.
He pointed out that ‘Today the U
S. is lagging behind both Rnssla and
Great Britain la the development of
its edneational system. Russia apenda
approximately 20 per cent of her na
tional income or IS billion dollars for
education while we apmid leas than
2 per cent or not quite 8 billion dol
28-c lars. Great Britain Is also putting
A VOTE FOR
Robert I
“lack”
For Magistrate
OF DeKALB TOWNSHIP
.. . Meaps a vote for an intelligent and
fair administration of this
important office
I
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Jack David’s Motto:
I
“Juttiee Tempered With Mereif’
F«i4 PoliticBl
on April firat and additional penalty
of four (4) per centum will be im
posed. making a total of seven ptf
cent.
When making Inquiry about taxes,
please atato the school district num
ber In which yon live or own prop-
eiW-
The following is a list of the total
levies for tha varioua school dia-
trlcts:
DaKALB TOWNSHIP MUh
School District No. 1 86
School District No. 2 26
School District No. 4 80
School District No. 6 86
School District No. 26 25
School District No. 48 26
BUFFALO TOWNSHIP
School District No. 8 89
Scho(4 District No. 6 26
School District No. 7 24
School Diatrict No. 15 26
School Diatrict No. 20 22
School District No. 28 87
School Diatrict No. 28 26
School Diatrict No. 27 29
School Diatrict No. 28 .... 22
School Diatrict No. 81 86
School Diatrict No. 40 .. 84
School Diatrict No. 42 26
FLAT ROCK TOWNSHIP
School District No. 8 .29
School Diatrict No. 9 29
School District No. 10 22
School DIatrtet No. 18 24
School District NO;, 19 29
School Diatrict No. SO 21
School District No. IS 29
School Diatrict No. 27 29
School Diatrict No. 41 29
School District Na 46 ... 21
School District No. 47 21
WATBREB TOWNSHIP
School Diatrict No. 11 27
School Diatrict No. 12 S9
School District No. 16 22
School District No. 29 20
School Diatrict No. 88 24
School DUtrict No. 89 24
C. J. OUTLAW, Treasurer,
Kershaw County, S. C
Cotton warehouses
We Will Store Famiars Cotton
' ' 5.
Your Business Is SoRdtod
J^T. Hay Cothm Co.
West Rntledfe Strwot
C(ind«i,S.C
YOU CAN NOW HAVE AN
AMERICAN BANTAM
i TON ALL-STEEL
UTILITY TRAILER
AH Stool ContlnicNoN—SoBif-EMplic Sfwiiits
30 Co. FI. Body Ykos MOxll
K NIW AU-FURFOli YIAM-AHACH YO CAB,
TRUCK OR TRAaOR-FOt RIYAUK-WHOLIMIJRS-
JI(ULNUFACTUBfM~i^FAilUU7-FAmY UM
MIBT iY AMMCAN BANTAM CAI CO.-BHIUA liL
--
125 E. DoKalb Stroet
no
Outstanding Values
in Superbly
Tailored
Jt
I
Yes, Men, weVe got
’em! — White Broad
cloth Shirts, full cut
and tailored to a T.
Sixes 14 to 17
SPORT SEORTS
»•
Small . . liodhim'. . Largo
$2i0
>«
Wa Aiio Hm a
Good Supply ol . . .
Y
Men’s Shorts
(with olostie) <
85c
SPECIAL
den’s OvenUs
12.78
Mah«f)wtnn*
YohPob I
PtBRo
Sm
•
EIWIN • HUMITAU.
CAMDEN, a C : (Ox U. S HMiwf H«.
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