Photo cutline -- Among the cooks on hand for this year's Elgin Catfish Stomp will be chief cook Larry Nelson, flanked on the left by Bill Hughes and on the right by George Marthers. Stomp cooks usually spend all of Friday night cooking up the 600 gallons of catfish stew that will go to Saturday's hungry multitudes.
Photo cutline -- Field Trial Winners -- Winners in the Kershaw County Shooting Dog Fall Field Trial, held here Wednesday, are pictured above with their owners and the two judges. They are Lanning Risher with "Spot," first place winner; George Lachicotte with "Flash," second place, and Dr. L. H. Hardy with "Chief," third. Judges for the event were George Hodge and Ervin Brunson. Besides being the field champion, Risher's, "Spot" was also the combination ...
Photo cutline -- Jamie Guy stands before the large purging tanks where his harvest of crawfish are cleaned before being boxed for delivery. Guy manages two 10-acre crawfish ponds and says the crawfish, which resembles a miniature lobster, tastes like a cross between a lobster and a shrimp.
Photo cutline -- Brownie Troop 424, which meets at Grace Episcopal Church, recently held Investiture Ceremony. The troop includes 13 new Brownies and 4 second-year Brownies. Troop Leaders are Cissy Lachicotte, Sandra Cooper and Rosalea Kovac.
Photo cutline -- Preparing For Open House -- Barbara Kelly, Donnie McLeod, and Hughie Brown prepare copies of their schedules for their parents to follow during Open House at Camden Junior High School.
Photo cutline -- Happy Anniversary, May Plant! -- Albert Haid, Regional Chef for the Southern area, ARA Food Services, Atlanta is shown with Tom Kessler, May Plant Cafeteria Manager. Chef Haid was a the May Plant to assist in preparing cake squares, two big Anniversary Cakes and other party food used during the recent Open House which celebrated the 25th anniversary of DuPont's May Plant.
Photo cutline -- Festive bands -- Some 40 high school bands marched across Zemp Stadium Saturday during the Southern States Band Festival. Among those earning ratings of 'superior' were the Scarlet Regiment of Camden, with Heather McAdams among the musicians, and the Marching Pride of Lugoff-Elgin, whose flag girls led the way.
Photo cutline -- Washington Intern -- U.S. Rep. John Spratt stands with Elizabeth Marshall, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bennie Marshall. Miss Marshall was one of eight students selected for internships in Spratt's Washington office this summer. While there, she researched legislative issues, assisted with constituent correspondence and attended hearings and seminars.
Photo cutline – Transportation provided by the Santee Wateree Regional Transportation Authority is one thing which may be reduced because of cuts in federal funds for social services. Pearl W. Branham, Lillian Bradley, Louise Jameson and Marih Martin prepare to board a van at the Kershaw County Council on Aging office as Bessie Carlos, a COA volunteer, and Alice Williams, the bus driver, assist them. The women live in Lugoff and Elgin and come ...
Photo cutline -- Beachcomber's Find -- Kay Larrabee displays a dreamed about but seldom found letter found in a bottle on the South Carolina shore. The letter written in Cuban Spanish was translated by Kay's Spanish teach, Mrs. Mary King, and Maria Nicola, native of Ecuador and a Spanish teacher at Camden High.
Photo cutline -- Mary Jones, principal of Lugoff Elementary School, and Mrs. Richard Riley, the First Lady of South Carolina, talk with children at the school during Mrs. Riley's visit to Kershaw County Tuesday. She was here only a few hours before returning to Columbia.
Photo cutline -- Lugoff Elementary School teachers Fran DiBiase and Carol Stokes and kindergarteners Michael Lewis, Brittany Hudon, Terrence Ruff and Jill Loury feel the texture of a dried rattlesnake skin that Mrs. Stokes skinned herself.
Photo cutline -- Tornado Damage -- Linsey Garner shows The Chronicle's photographer the top of a medium-size pine tree which was wrenched off by a small tornado in the Antioch section late Monday afternoon. Many other trees were felled by the high, twisting winds.
Photo cutline -- Work on the new Lugoff Elementary School is progressing on schedule. The new school, which is expected to be around January 1, 1967, will cost in the neighborhood of $442,695 and will have 20 classrooms. The school is located on S.C. Highway 34, near the entrance to Drakeford Park. The new school will accommodate 300 students.
Old CHS Announcement Jogs Memories of Class of 1920
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