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B. F. JONES, IL D. V. Graduate Veterinarian ? <4, . ' 1 will be at Mr. Little's Stable* every Monday. B. F. JONES, M. D. V. Notice Having bought out the stock of the Kirkwood Gro cery we beg to advise the public that we will be pre pared at all times to supply them with the choicest line of Groceries, Fruits and Country Produce that the market affords, and assure you of the most courteous and prompt attention to all orders Your patronage will be appreciated. Respectfully, Kirkwood Grocery COMPANY, Phone 37 Telephone 227-L When you want your home wired for Lights or Bells. SHANNON B. KIRKLAND Fresh Vegetables FOR SALE Spinach, Young Onions, Kale, Mustard, Carrots, Turnips, Swiss Chard Rad ishes, Lettuce, Beets, Pars ley. All orders delivered afternoon of day received. PHONE 279-J Attention Veterans ! Thoro will bo a meeting of Rich ard Kirklaml ('amp United Confed erate Veterans at the Council Chamber, on Saturday, the 6th day of April, at 111 o'clock. All mem bers areearnestly requested to be present as business of Importance demands your attention. Notice is hereby Riven that one month from thi.s date on Saturday March 30, 1 9 1 , 1 will apply to the Judge of Probate for Kershaw coun ty for a final discharge as Admin istratrix Of the estate of E. R. Cureton, deceased. AH parties having claims against said estate are hereby notitied to present them duly at'e tt(] on or before that date or be forever barr ed. Sal lie W. Hoy kin, March 1 . 1912. 1 mo. SHOE REPAIRING. Men's half soles and heels sewed, $1 .00. Ladies' half soles and heels sewed, 90c at Camden Harness & Shoe Repair, A. It. Bobbin, Mgr. Mar. 19, 4t. The Ladles of the U. I). ('. will have an Egg Hunt on Easter Mon day at 4:30 o'clock, for the pui pose j of raising funds (o furuith k room i in the Camden Hospital. The chil-j dren aro asked to assemble at the Graded School building. Admission ten cents. Character and Circumstance?. "Character is built out of circum stances ? From exactly the same ma terials one man builds palaoes, while ?notber builds hovels."? O. H. Lewes. W. F. Russell, Commander. FINAL DISCHARGE. Adinini.s; rat i ix. Easter Egg Hurt. AN ORDlKAIVCfe 1 i'rovldlug for and iUfuUtliiK the I ItutdiPrinK and K?lr? of AH Mmi Wit hi it tlw City of ('?imla#. City Council of Cautdun, Camden, 8. C., March 18, 1912. lie Ji ordained by the City Coun cil of Camden, H. C? in due i m>? nion assembled the 18th day of March, 191 2. Suction I That from and after tho 1st day of July,' 1912, no cow a, hoKa, sheep or other animals shall he butchered and sold within the corporate limits of the City of Cam den, unless same are butchered and sold in accordance with the pro visions of thi? ordinance. Hoc. IJ. That before any auch cattle shall be butchered for sale wi?hin ihe City llmitH of the City of Camden, the said cattle shall be inspected by the health ' officer of the said City, or aome member of the Hoard of Health duly appointed for such purpose and auch animal found by auch officer to bo healthy and in fit condition to be butcher ed and dressed for sale. Hec. III. That all animala butch ered and the meat thereof Hold within the City limit* of Ca/nden, ahall only be butchered in aome sanitary slaughter houae .approved and licensed by the City of Camden. Be c. IV. That no slaughter pen ahull bo erected unless the persons desiring to build auine shall first make written application to the City for a license to build same, the said application to Klve in detail the manner of construction of said slaughter pen. Bee. V. That any slaughter pen hereafter licensed by the City Coun cil shall contain a room for cooling and inspecting department, same to be at least fourteen (14) feet by eighteen (18) feet, the walls to be at least ten (10) feet high, four (4 feet of which, from the ground, to be constructed of brick and cement, and all corners rounded; the balanc of the wall to bo six (6) feet of double wire ncreens; the roof to be of shingles or other material ap proved by the City Council. The slaughter house proper to be of the following dimensions: The body of same to be ten (10) by twelve (12) feet ,wall? as specified for cooling a and Inspecting room. The water supply to bo by hose and spigot. Bald slaughter house shall also conform -to the following} conditions: 1. The premises should not be within 100 feet of any dwelling house; and the site should be such as to admit of free ventilation by direct communication with the ex ternal air on two sides at least of the slaughter-house. 2. Lairs for cattle In connection with the slaughter-houee should not be within 100 feet of a dwell ing house. 3. The slaughter-house should not in any part be below the sur face of the ground. 4. The approach to the slaughter house should not bo on an Incline of more than one in four, and should not be through any dwelling house or shop. 5. No room or loft should be con structed over the slaughter-house. (>. Tho slaughter-house should be provided with an adequate tank or other proper receptaclo for wa ter, so placed that the bottom shall not be less than 6 feet above the level of the floor of tho slaughter house. 7. The slaughter-house shall be provided with means of thorough ventilation. 8. The slaughter-house should ho well paved with asphalt or con crete, and laid with proper slope ! and channel towards a gulley, which j should he prbperly trapped and cov j ered with a grating, tho bars of which should not be more than three-eighths of an inch apart; the ! gulley to be in the center, said floor i to slope from bides to center. Pro j vision for tile effectual drainage of ! the slaughter-house should also be made. 1 0. The surface of the walls in I the interior of the slaughter-house ?should be covered with hard, 'smooth, impervious material to a " sufficient height. 1". Xo water- closet, privy or I cesspool should be constructed with in tho slaughter-house. There ; should bo no direct communication ?between the slaughter-house and an i stable, water closet, privy, or cess ! pool. I ' ii. Kvery lair for cattle in eon ! n ect ion with the slaughter - house ! should be properly paved, drained and ventilated. i 12. Inspection ? Freo access to ie\ery slaughter-house for tho pur? jK)se of inspection must be afforded at all reasonable times to tho Medi cal Officer of Health, Inspoctor, Sur voyor, and Committees appointed by| tho Sanitary Authority. 13. Water must bo supplied to ?very animal kopt in a laic prior to slaughter. 14. Mode of Slaughter ? Cattle I must b? Matured by the !w?t<J so bb to be felled with as little yttlu tut practicable. 16. Drainage, water supply, and ventilation must be kept In efficient order. 16. Cleanliness. ? The walla au< floor* must be kept In good order and repair, and moat be thorough ly cleansed within three bourn after any slaughtering; the walls and cell lug niust be lline washed four time* yearly, that la to say, within the first ten day# of March, June, Sep tember and December respectively. 17. Animal* not to be kept.-?- No dog may be kept !u a slaughter house ; nor other animal, unless In tended for slaughter upon the pre mises, and then only In proper lairs, and uot longer than may be neces sary for preparing it for slaughter by fasting or otherwise. lb. Removal of Refuse.? Suita ble vessels made of non-absorbent material*, and provided with close fitting covers, must be provided for the reception of blood, manure, gar bage, and other refuse; all such matters must be placed in these ves sel h immediately after the slaught ering; the refuse must be removed within twenty-four hours, and the vessels forthwith cleansed. All sklus, fat and offal must be remov ed within twenty-four hours. Sec. VI. The owners of such slaughter house shall have the right to charge reasonable tolls for the use of such slaughter house; said tolls to be approved of by the City Council. Sec. VI I. That all meats butch ered in said slaughter bouses shall be conveyed to the respective places of sale in covered sanitary wagons or receptacles, and while offered for sale shall be kept pure in clean san itary apartments, and when the wea ther requires it, in clean sanitary refrigerators and shall at all times be screened from files. Sec. VIII. The provisions of this ordinance shall not apply to dress ed meat shipped from outside pack ing houses, when same conforms to the l'ure Food Law of the United States Government, and said meat la inspected and approved by the said City Health officers. Sec. IX. Any person violating the provisions of this Ordinance, upon conviction shall be subjected to a fine of not more than one hundred dollars ($100.00) or imprisonment, with or without hard labor on the public works of said City, for a pe riod not exceeding thirty (30) days, for each and every offence. Ratified in Couhcll assembled the 18th day of March, 1912. S. F. BR ASINGTON, J. J. GOODALE, Mayor. Clerk. CITATION. State of South Carolina, County of Kerahaw. By W. L. McDowell, Esquire, Pro bate Judge. Whereas, J. E. Drannon made suit to me to grant him Letters of Administration do bonis non, of the Estate of and effects of Thom as It. Thorne. These are therefore to cite and admonish all and singular the kin dred and creditors of the said Thomas It. Thorne, deceased, that they be and appear before me, in J the Court of Probate, to be held at Camden, S. C., on April 6th next, after publication thereof, at eleven o'clock in the forenoon, to show cause, if any they have, why the said Administration should not be granted. Given under my hand, this 21st day of March, A. I). 1912. w. l. Mcdowell, Judge of Probate for Kershaw Co. Published in the Camden Chroni cle on the 22nd day of March, 191 2. KICKSHAW COUNTY BONDS FOR S.XLK. Proposals are invited from pur chasers for ninety - five thousand . dollars (95,000) of non-taxable Coupon Bonds to bo issued by Ker shaw County, bearing date. May 1, 1912, payable twenty., years from | date, interest at five per cent (5) payable semi-annually. Purpose of j issue to refund maturing Railroad aid bonds. Bids to be opened 12 M., Wednesday, April 24th, 1912. | No bid for less than par and ac crued Interest will be accepted. Ceritlfied check for one thousand dollars ($1,000) must be filed by each bidder. Right reserved to re ject any and all bids. Address, M. C. WEST, County Supervisor, Camden, S. C. March 19, 1912. For Rent. Houso of BenJ. Haile, on Fair Street. Two bath rooms ? one on each floor. Apply C. P. DuBose & Co., Agents., Camden, S. C. For Sale. Columbia I^ong Staple Cotton ? $1.60 per bushel; in five-bushel . lots $1. por bushel. Mammoth Pekin duck eg-ge, $1. per 11. Barred Ply mouth Roek eggs, $1. per Betting of lb. H. Savage, Camden, S. C. JESUS' SOUL RESURRECTED. I Corinthians *v, 1-11 ? April 7. 7>/f "Tk(? Je**a A/j/A (Jo4 roi?<U w/, tfihd-ftol *CK Ott Oil Klfl(MM?,',- 4d? it. St. CODAY. appropriate lo the ISaster ?MM>D. are to consider our Lord's resurrection. At the very outset we ore confronted with certain errors which have grad ually crystallised around the central truth* of (jod'a WorrJ. Ooe of these errors is the sup|>osltlon that the res urrectlou of the dead, which the Bcripturea hold forth as the hope of the Church ami of the world, is to l>e a resurrection of the bodies which go down Into death. This mistake has given ground for Infidelity to sneer at this precious doc trine of the Bible. We are a h k e d. How could tbe dust vrbJcb once constituted tbe bod lea of tbou bn ixl s of millions of humanity ever be recollected and rearranged ko tbat we could way tbnt those b<MlieM were renur rented? Tbe Infidel urges tbat "fit It risen." many of humanity have been eaten by fishes and animals, and many, other corpses have been absorbed by vegeta tion. which in turn has been eaten time ami again by man and beast, entering into the many organisms. The propo sition is manifestly unanswerable, yet It does not refute the Bible teaching of the resurrection, but merely our crecdal misapprehensions of the Bible teaching. What the Bible does teach Is that the real man is the soul, the beiny. and that he persists while grad ually his body keeps changing? sloughing off. Scientists estimate that the human body undergoes a complete change every seven years. According to the Bible the process of rejuvena tion would have continued everlasting ly had man continued by obedience in Divine favor and in enjoyment of the everlasting Jife promised. It was sin that brought the death penalty? the death of the soul. It was Adam's soul that sinned, it was Adam's soul that died? "In the day that thou eateth thereof thou shalt surely die." "The soul that slnneth it shall die." Christ's Death and Resurrection Makes Future Life Possible. The result of this Divine sentence upon man would have been extinction ? he would have been on the same plane as the brute without any hope for eternal life, had not God in great mercy provided a redemption? that "Jesus Christ by the grace of God should taste death for every man." The death which Jesus experienced was exactly the same kind as the one | which destroyed Adam? the soul of Jesus died os the ransom-price for the | soul of Adam (including Adam's pos- 1 terity). Thus we read of Jesus: "lie poured ovit His sow! unto death: Uej made Ills soul an offering for sin." It is by virtue of this corresponding price which Jesus paid that ultimately Adam and all of his posterity, every soul of man. will be granted a release from the death penalty? a resurrection from the dead? not of the dead bodies, but of the dead souls. In the resurrec tion God will give to each soul a body as it has pleased Ilim.? I Corinthians xv, 38. The few during this Age who have become the followers of Jesus, begot ten of the Holy Spirit, will be granted spirit bodies like to the Savior's. The remainder of mankind, not having been begotten of the Holy Spirit, will in the resurrection be granted human bodies, the same as they previously had: and their raising up will bring them event ually to all the perfection of the first Adam, unless they refuse the grace of God. in which event they will die the Second Death, from which there is to be no resurrect ton. . ? Jesus' Soul Resurrected. St. Peter, on the Day of Pentecost, laid stross upon the fact of Christ's resurrection, and he reminds us that this was foretold. The Prophet David declared. "Thou wilt not leuve My soul In shcol, nor suf fer Thine Holy One to see cor ruption" ? Acts ii. 27. - St. Peter's quo tation of this, in the Greek, substi tutes the word hades for fthcnl, showing that the The ttalk to Emmau ??. words were a prophecy of the resurrection of Jesus? that Ilis soul, poured out in death as the redemption price for Adam's bouI and for the race, was not left in death, In 8heol, in hades, but was raised from the dead. St. Paul tells us that "He was put to death in flesh, but quickened in spirit." lie declared that Jesus, in His resurrec tion. was exalted to a higher than hu man nature? "far above angels and principalities and powers"? the divine nature. As angels could materialize and ap pear in the flesh, and disappear, and bad done so in the past, so did Jesus. In order that His disciples might not misunderstand He appeared in differ ent forms? on two of the occasions, in forms representing the Crucified One. On the other six occssions, in various forms, as the gardener, the sojourner. Pansy Flour Hams and Strips Country Style Lard Welch's Grape Juice . Fresh line Canned Fruits, Vegetables ?* " * ' "^8 Evapor'd. Apricots, Peaches, Apples ' I 1 LANGS' & GROCERY "WHERE QUALITY COUNTS" Phone 2. ~ ' ' - Cwnden, S. C. REAL ESTATE / SELL Do You Want to < loan ... borrow ; I May Help You. LAURENS T. MILLS, [CAMDEN, S. C.; The best sign for u ineut market? CABOT wmKonr Numerous Customers! We ' Endeavor to Wait on You * V> * f w>> y Just as promptly as possible! the best meats, HONEST WEIGHTS and IX) WEST PRICES aro worth a short wait occasion ally, but it will no longer than necessary here. Campbell Bros. COMFORT OF THE SADDLE has everything to do with the pleasure of the ride. Our sad dles are as comfortable as "gradfnahters chair," even after a long hard ride. , Stop in and see our line, also our fine har ness. We'd like to show you a set that your horse would ap preciate. W. W. KING > IROST PROOF CABBAGE PLANTS ? GUARANTEED TO SATISFY CUSTOMERS FROM THE ORIGINAL CABBAGE PLANT GROWERS <o gSZT WAKKTlXLtt. . .fWMM M Ifirtm 3 IVHMMID T DCTOW TRAQg HARK Established 1868. Paid In Capital Stock SSO.OAO.AO ..viMen iiwurn r HOST PROOF PLAN _ , - ,m esitonm We h*rc crown luid sold mora i man mi otmt pwo^ Hi nt state* tombiMd. WHY? Bcouw our plants most please or w? send yo?r motwy b*ok.OM*r?o? It Is time to setthrao plants in your section to get extra early cabbaffe, ?o4 they ars wo ? that sell for the most money. We sow throe tons of Cabbago Seed per season PX? Fruit treos and ornamentals. Write for frea catalog contZlnln* Taloable Information aboo* rrii and rentable (rrowlnr. Prices on Cahhair? Plants:? By matt Postals Paid tf osntsper J?P"L By e?prs?s. buyer paylntr e* press charjrea, whleh tinder special rata IststttIowi lOJforfi-w. ???? to MOO f 1.60 per thousand; 6.000 to ?,ooo $i.? per thousand ; loaaft ?<t ?? ? " Will. C. Geraty Co., Box 224* Y A Backsliding Santa Claus. Mr?. Peavish says that before they were married Mr. Peavish used to say that If she would let him be her Santa Claus he would devote his life to slid ing up and down the chimney for her. And now it makes htm mad to have to talro up ashes from the grate. jr.-. ; *? ' -? Plan. ? Write down a- -list of thing* 7** | Intend to do in spare time and ?? not let a week slip away, nor a daTi | 'ft you can help it, without doing onj a of them. $ach month will brinE_^e - \ interests which will be worth tryro ? to take up. ' tv*4*jrga r<Cx.'