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M,, You Should Boy at Home The following reawom* "Why you whould buy, tit Home," will cqii vine j you that tt Ih to your Interest and benefit that you Hhould mottd your wayn and buy from your home merchant; Vou buy at homo bMUUim your IntervfttH are here. liucau^e you want to kuo tho goodw. IJucaurfe you null what you produce here at home. UecaUHe you want to what you pay?for. Hecauno tho man you buy from payn bin pact of the city and county taxen. HocauM) tho community that Ih good enough for you to live In Ih good enough for you ?<) buy In. iiocauhis you believe in t nuiHnctlng bualnoHS with frlendu. UttcuiiHn the . man you buy front Htande back of hla goods. Decaune every* dollar spent at homo Htaye at home and work* for the development of tho country. UecauHo the man you buy from holpn support yotir school, your church, your lodge and your home. Ilere lH where you live and horo Ih where you should buy. Adopt these resolutions and thereby help to make your own community a better and more desirable one In every rospect. BUY YOUR HARDWARE FROM. Malone - Pearce - Young Hardware Company Springs & Shannon We carry a full line of Wagons, Buggies, Mowers, Rakes, Pise Harrows, Little Joe Harrows and all kinds Farm Implements. FFNflNr ^ complete line of Southern Fence rcnumi Another car just received qf the kind that is "Hone Tight, Bull Strong, Pig Tight" Poultry pENrC Closely woven at botton and will turn & Garden ^ lit* vli small chick*. Square mesh wrapped wire. The newest, strongest and best poultry wire on the market. Look over our stock and get our prices. TPAPFRIFQ Wholesale and Retail, Farmers \JI\UVsLi1\ILiO Supplies. The place, where the prices are lowest and quality right. ? : ? Agents for Piedmont Wagons, Rock Hill and Taylor Cannady Buggies?the kind that give the service after others have worn out. Springs & Shannon For Best Service 8 K E J. B. ZEMP DRAYA Q E Kerosine, Gasoline, Wood and Coal. LOOK OUT FOR POTATO BUGS They will rum your crop of Irish Potatoes in a very few days, it not kill out. We have a GUARANTEED POTATO BUG KILLER Money hack from us it it fails. Larpe cans ready to use. PRICE 25c W. Robin Zemp's Drug Store PHONE 30 Mail Orders Filled Promptly C| [Railroad engineer, 8 years at the throttle, had invested his savings in a printing business. Business, ill-managed was on the verge of ruin. The engineer left his engine one day and stepped in as superintendent. Never had seen the inside of a printing plant. ?J Today it is one of the most successful catalog houses in his section, and he's rich. ?He was a born exec utive, not an engine driver, and he found himself. ?J A want ad will also find your place, old fellow. Wants ? For Sale ? Rents Ads inserted under this heading for 1 cent per word. No ad taken for less than 25 centB. CHOICE HAY FOR SA.LB. -Ono thousand ..bales No. 1 Hay for sal? at Hermitage Plantation. Price $18. per ton in ton lotB. One dollar per hundred, less than ton. Strictly cash on delivery. C. B. McCasklll, Manager. 5 2. WANTED ? To lease a house of five or six rooms, servants quarters, and modern conveniences C. L. Logge, Camden, 8. G. 62-1 FOR SALE ? We have for sale one 6 H. P. Victor Gasoline Engine In good running condition, or will ex change for good work mule or horse. Engine can be seen at Goodales' shop. Apply to S. M. Mathis or G. L. Garner. LOST.-? One nurses' Hypedemic case between the residence Of Or. J. W. Corbett and tho Hospital Square. Finder will please return to Miss Emini James or leave at this office and receive reward. FOR SALE? 50 tons Pea Vine Hay, $20. per ton; Johnson Grass and Clover, $19. per ton; Native Grass Hay, $18.50 per ton. Apply to H. H. Boykin, Boykin, S. C. WANTED ?Every well dressed lady In Camden to know that I have just started to do dress-making at 912 Market St. Can refer you to Savannah ladies for whom I have made morning, afternoon and even ing gowns, also coat suits. I would appreciate a trial from select trade. Amanda It. Carter, Camden, S. O. 51? tf FOR SALE ? Two houses and lotB on extension of Campboll st., No's. 1724 and 17 26. One house contains four rooms recently built; painted Inside and out. Lot 55 by 160 ft. Well in yard and all onclosed by fenc?. Easy terms. Apply to H. L. Rhodes. 17 26 Campbell St., Camden, S. C. 50-51-52-1 ICE CREAM ? Tho finest kind, delivered to any part of the city. Phone us your wants. Crosby's Ice Cream Parlor. 50. FOR SALE ? Eggplant, popper an tomato plants. Phone 27 9-J. 49. MONEY TO IiOAN. On improved farms. Easy terms. Apply to B. B. Clarke, Camden,' S. C. 50. FOR SALE? One mule for sale cheap by .1 T Truesdell, Westville, S. C. 50-51-52. FOR SALE- ? One saw mill, com plete cable driv.e cut up to 36 ft., cut of rig, engine and boiler, 20 horse power, two carts in good con dition. Terms are cash. A bargain. Apply at Chronicle office. 49-52. FOR 8 ALU. One ( 1 ) McCovmick reaper and binder, good as new. Used only 3 days and cut only 2 5 acres of oats. Cheap for cash. John Cantey, Cam den, S. C. 49-50-51-62. WANTED ? You to know that you can have the Columbia Record left at your home every afternoon by telephoning Vernon McDowell at The Chronicle office. FINE COW PASTURE ? Just be yond Seaboard freight depot, good grazing with plenty of water. $1.00 per month per head. Apply to G. W. Crosby. 50-51-52-1. FOR SALE - ? Sweet Potatoes. Choice slips of Triumph and Geor gia Bucks for sale by G. G. Alexan der, Camden, S. C. 46. WANTED ? You to bring us your automobile tires to vulcanize. Work guaranteed. H. E. Beard & Co. fIRgT TEST OF BAROMcTLi. Before Putting Full Reliance on In* ?trvment, Certain Precaution# Are Imperative. Don't ox'pecl u barometer to tell you tho truth about the vveatlier until you haro letted It thoroughly Two common cause-M for unreliability are air and watf: iuIx<mI with the mer cury ?n the tui>? TUeeo" can I >? 1 1 ? m 1 by boiling thr in. i ury In or der to teat a barometer lot It hang for a time In (lie proper position then gently and with earn incline It no that the mercury may strike against the glass tube. If there la no ||r withtn yon will hear a sharp metallic click, but If the kouihJ la dull and mufliod it indicate* the presence of both air and moisture. The presence of air aloud ia shown by jninute bubblea. If at any time the mercury seems to adhere to the tube even In the alight* est degree, and the convex surface as Humns a more flattened form, it ia saf6 to conclude that either air or molature 1b present. In any of theae caaea the instrument should be put Into expert hands for rectification. There are several kinds of barome ters. The ordinary "weatfeer glass" In common use is more or less unre liable and is easily made more so by carelesa handling. In fact, any bar ometer must be treated with great respect in order to retain Its useful ness.? Harper's Weekly. COULD YOU POINT HIM OUT? Many of Ua Have an Idea of Juat the Man the Fool-Kllier Should Locate. The Village Pest sauntered into the office of the Real Estate Man, seated himself In a comfortable chair and placed hia feet on top of his friend's deBk. t "Whaddy think," he observed, "* perfect woman haa been found in Boa ton." The Ileal Estate Man did not en courage a continuance of the talk. "Huh." "And a vaudeville performer is ad vertising himself as the perfect man." "All of which may be very true," ex claimed the Real Estiate Man, "but no body as yet seems to have located the perfect nuisance! Some day they'll get him, and when they do, I hope they'll get him good." ? Youngstown Telegram. Origin of Playing Cards. Although It is commonly reported that playing cards were invented in France in 1392 to divert Charles VI, D'AUemagne, a French writer on th? subject, mentions them as being in use in Belgium in 1379, and probably somethltfg analagous to them ? mark ed disks or counters ? have been em ployed in the east from remote an tiquity. It is now usually thought that it was in Italy playing cards were first made, about 1370, and at Venice. The attempt to connect their inven tion with astrology ariseR from the four suits, and 52 cards in all, being associataed in ingenious minds with four seasons and the number of weeks in the year It does not appear likely that there was anything more asso ciated with the cards than amuse ment at the first, though gambling was a vice with the Greeks and Rom ans long before the Christian era, and games for gain with some kindB oi counters were doubtless found among them. .. - , Low Spots. It has been left to the United States geologists to localize the most de pressed and depressing places 'bn the earth. Every continent dips some where beneath the level of the sea. In the states itself the lowest depth is the aptly named Death Valley of Cal ifornia, about 300 feet below sea level. The old world, however, strikes a low er depth ? 1,200 .feet ? Jn the region of the Dead Sea. We now learn that the flooding of the Sahara, a dream of sanguine engineers, is impossible, for the general height is above sea level. Europe holds her head high, except on the Caspian shores, where she droops eighty-six feet. Australia, one is glad to hear, keeps her chin well above war ter. Inhospitable Tundras. Tundras are swampy tracts of land, covered partly with a thick layer of bog moss, partly with a dry, snow white covering of reindeer moss and varieties of lichens, bordering the Arctic ocean in Siberia and stretch west from the Ural mountains along the north of Europe. It is only the reindeer that renders this waste habit able for the wandering hordes of Samoyeds who hunt the furred ani mals, as well as the swans and wild geese, which, in summer, flock there in great numbers. These polar steppes, however, can be trodden only in win ter, when the whole region is one Bheet of frozen soil and Ice. s He Wai Careful. "! thought you told me Bunch could talk Russian." "So he can." 9 "Then why wouldn't he talk to the Russian gentleman who came here yes terday?" ? "Because that ulcerated tooth has made his jaw bo tender." As a Bracer. "How do vou feel this morninj?" "My tongue feels like an old rug." "Mine, too. Well, the bemt thirg for that fuarv feeling is a comphor cocV tain with a mothball in it." es Co. Set? The Pace." Phoenix Silk Hos< 4 Guaranteed Every Pai Over the Counter ? ' ?' Silk Stockings at the HEnRewSsgf?^r Price of Lisle women who appreciate? silk hosiery for everyday wear. We are now showing a full line of the famous Phoenix Silk Hose which sells at 75c a pair. Think of it! This hosiery, every thread of it except the lisle garter top, is pure silk ? soft, rich and lustrous. ( And it wears. We will replace any pair that doesn't. The toes and heels are re-enforced by a new process. Shaped in the knitting? no seams. Come and let our clerks show yoli this beautiful hosiery. We carry all the popular shades, including the staples, black and tan. Remember ? ?5capdr. 'The Store