University of South Carolina Libraries
LKtC ( OI?M \ NKWH Itrin* uf liitfrrnt iJathrrrd I rom HUh Upvt lit- Vindhaloi. ?. ? - ? -n r. , ^ ( Tm>?day ntOjNl|i|(< .lunw ith. the <U>at.l> auuol visits |)ic home of Air, (iuu Mix. John I . M? ( a n I m . ihI look from tliein then kwoot lit 1 1?% i m i ?t ? , trig' I .oil I ? i?M?. sin- u'a'M a vwi'i't dial hrljfht Utile tflrf, only 4'lKlit mouth* Mini 10 days old, wil? *iok ?ul,\ .four tiny*. . Mr. MH?ood MM'Ui?*. who has hw?n OU tin* HIumU* Island, emuo %liuiMt? ><?*? l<-nla.\ oil a .".mlay* \fili'l<?ii?li. Hi- Is i?M>klim woll mimI says that he Jihk Ihh??i traiiHfomsl to one of Mm now I h^at destroyers and will ivinut foj- duty ? mi it when hi- it-hmis. .Mr. I ?. C. Sturkey lias 40 at'ics of wheat that has J*een harvesU'd and wlille It has not <Ht*n thftodied out, In; *a.V* h?* tadhwos !?<? will got 4MH> h.U-h ol?. Such farming as that Is not only helping himself, httl Ik holplng to win the war, High Soap Prices Arouse Interest in Home Made Soap ejp- ? ? Women all over the country aro saving money by making their own soap. ' Try this: First, set a largo can or jar in your kitchen; throw into it all meat skin, watte greaje, bones ani other Kit chen scrap that has any grease in it or on H> Whfen l!i- can or jar is full, render it (by boiling) and you will obtein enough clear grease to make a big batch of duncly *'-?ap, cheaper and 1 purer than any you cun buy. With Grfcue aud Hcd Devil L yt . You will find homo joap making ?o easy and economical that it will be a genuine pleasure. On the label of every can of Red Devil Lye are complete direct iousy for making soap by the told process or by boiling. > Anybody Can Make Soap ? if they have Red Devil Lye and grease. Furthermore, toap making at home psys big because you buy nothing but Red Devil Lye ? t|te other ingredients are actually saved out of the waste that you have been throwing away. You will thank us every time you use Red I^evil Home Made Soap. CtntUmtn:? Pleue wend me your free booklet on pooling ti? chra, b pray inn fruit troe?, makiiui compoMt, etc. I Muiiiot IwKin to Utll you how pleated I am with ltai Devil Lye. <.ot groat reeulU In making my ao?p. Your# truly, Feb. 2, 1013. ETHEL RUTLEDCE. Route 6, Bo* 46. Kayetteville, Tenn. Atk Yititr Grocer. Savm thm Labels. WM. SCHIELO MFG. CO. , St. Levis, Ms. i '.I ) ?l . Sootl I0i( mtml.?-rs of (Ik- fcwJ UU&tA* went !?? Ca ui| > I ,o\ iimiou, .snmla> evening to ??'?? I :i week In training with otlwr M|?W<U from | ho Stale Ucscrve eniu|Miiiles, Tlie> will be under command of Cot. < Vgsw ??!!, ami mi otlleer from 1 1** 1 ' |i 1 1?'< I States A rni v ha- l?eeu del, a ilcd to ylvo Instruct lolls. There \?lil I. Mi | atH'iil 1A0 hkmi In oauin, llo.v WIMlatUf, H'ilU rolUUtCHTiMl III j I lit' engineering corps, hit *4 wi ll ton his father. .Mr. M. I?. Williams. aMtioutir !lij(: .111* cuf*' a nival In l-'ranco. The < <..!( n House ? oiuiultlce l> Ir.ving ?to bea lit If. v I (if C??hrt House ground*. It iiaM Imm'u noticed that the llowvrv, ivipmially tin- hydrangea*. are laing pi< k?M I. tlil*> very discouraging to iho coininlttec'and they desire to notify i-M'i-y oiu* thiil this practice miM slop. Tho committee ft opes that Iho Court House utholaU ami others %vlIT* assist iii preventing further spollatUm of fh?*0 mollluls, Mr. Frank A, H<i?epd ha> announced that la' Is u caudblate for MoJU'Uor. Mr. Mcl.pod was aiMutlnloil hy <?ov. Manning to till out tho unexpired term ot Sol hi tor Stotl .who resigned to UOoopt |H?slth?M of .llUlge Advocate in I lit* aiiuy. .Mr. "Mohood has served hilt a Abort tluie. hut has proven that hp makes a tf<NN) Solicitor. Mr. I,. K. Wood of Sumter- announces himself tld* week for Soljeftor. Ml*. Wood lias heeu court. stenographer for this circuit for nearly sixteen .veins and hns proven himself an otticient ami prompt official. Ills Ioiik experience be fore the court well qualities liiin for the "ollicc j?f Solicitor. lie has acted as Solicitor H'veral fimex and mnile good as a prosecuting otticer hy his clear and Tearless presentation of cases, at the same lime his sense yf right ami jus tice. causes him .not to persecute, but Ills is ho|e jthn Is to vindicate the law and give the defendant as well as the state /.istiec. Tuesday morning about I I :.'Ml o'clock whtye Tonuie Arrant* was on his wheel delivering packages for the Handy (Iro eery Co. he was -at lacked hy u dog and severely bitten on left Jyg. . lie wan tidfug at the time on Church Street near t4\e AleHioUi^i' ,jCharch and it . is said the dog had just come Hito town. ?The dog was kHled by an officer and the head sent to the ' Pasteur Institute for examination. Irounie's wouud was given prompt attention and it is ' hoped will give him no. further trouble..- It is thought by nuin.r that it was only , a vicious attack of tin unfriendly dog. but a* a precaution it was decided to have the Institule uuike examination. of head. ? South Carolina Marines Wounded' Washington, dune ID. ? -The marine corps casualty list coutains sixty-three names. Killed in action S ; wounded severely Tm. . I.leut. Julian C. Cogswell. Charleston, S. c.. and l>mid A. ilolla day. of Marion. S. C? were severely wounded. ? Protect your soldiers with your sav ? ngs. FRANKLIN and HUPMOBILE AUTOMOBILES EACH IN A CLASS BY ITSELF GEO. T. LITTLE, Distributor W.S.S. Buy Them And Help Win The War TOR SALE EVERYWHERE FRUIT JARS Beit Quality, Glass Top, 2 Quart Size, - - $1.50 Dozen Fruit Jar Rubbers, Best Quality - - - 10c Dozen Parowax - 35c Per Pound Wood's Preserving Powder 25c Package. W. Robin Zemp's Drug Store Telephone 30. SIIOI I-M NOT UNI* CHOI'S. CouuounUle* frged to l^ooU Ail** Crop* .1 of KHiiurit \Vlu> Vrr Drulld. 'I*. . the t'huiruiiii i'l the t'olllil* ('oillntl of I >eft>u?oj ; Some tiitif ago the War Department I Issued order* In I h?* Kvcmptiop Hoard* ' iKil (?? imluct farmer* into; I h? military j (tcn-lrc until further orders. 'IV very | serfou* itifitl' tlcvch?pincntH lu the. mill | tary r?ii uutiou luu ium)? it i?fcex?mry to ! *us|H?nd tbif order. I out (Ulvl*t4| Ifj M?. Ili'ljclit Williamson, chairman of the | I ?mi liuKtoii Ciiiiiii.v Kxvuntitiu Hoard,! thai out of ih?* quota of M will tea just ! ordered front this County there HIV nuly S ftvniluble who. arf^uot farmers. Forty :-i\ young white fiHtiero will, iher^ir, I have t.1 ||'?)I' their farms at once for tin MM'Viei* of their country. The government well nmli'i '?iamli. I In hardship which thin will mean to many of these men, but the military neceaidties arc mo great that nothing else can now la* taken into nnisideratlou, The peo !. pic at home however, ought to ?ee to it that tin' crop* of the <l^afte<l faruiern all over the State are uot destroyed for iack of warR. The patrw tic cltUeUb living in9 the neighborhood ?>/ any farm who*t? manager or chief inborcr Is taken, should see that labor Ih provided to work the crop. ^ The Council of Defeifac for each coun ty should make it their business to at tend to thin matter. The attention of the people should he called to the vital .necessity of' weeing that thcMc young men do not lone their cropa by rcai?onding to the call of the government. The pa triutii- neighbor* and friends of thenc men can and will assemble periodically to work then*' crop*, if they uudcrataud the neecHHUie# of each cane, and your ' t 'ouucil of Defense eau do no more val uable service at the moment than to ace (that this in done. I' suggest that you appoint a neighboring farmer to rcpre neut the interest* of each drafted farmer. 1 would call attention c<? the fact- that several thousand College ami high school students have Just returned to their homes and that most of these are keenly "HllxloUs to remler pat riot ie service to their country. Some of these can be used in this emergency. % David U.' (Joker. Chairman, South Carolina Couucll of Defense, Met a Horrible Death. ?Mr. Oiftuu King <>f McHee was in st an 1 1; v killed Monday about noon when In* wok thrown ygainxt ? w*w at Hor ton's Mill live miles north of Mcltee on the Jefferson road. The struck him in' the breast and literally fcawed him open from his waist to his nose, the saw going deep enough to penetrate the liver and lung*. He had broujfht a log to, the mill to have some timber c ijt. to (Io some 'road work, and he and Mr. Stan Uortou Were doing the work. As. Mr. Kin# started away from the saw a plank 'was caught by* the saw and Mr. King" was thrown,;, face fore most over on the saw. He was thrown over the saw and left sitting against the carriage dead, ltlood wan thrown, all over Mr. Holt ton. and tlesh was scaj.^ tered all about and uoinu left on ^iie saw teeth and frame. As soon as Mr. Horton could shut down the water gate and stop the saw he spread the news and a erowd gathered. No inquest was thought necessary and the body was carried home,, aud later huried. Mr. King was a son of the late Mr. (lilliatn King and tfas well known in his sec tion of the county.? Pageland Journal. Convicted in Federal Court. Policeman T. \\\ (irejjory attended Federal Court in Charleston last week, and reports that W. M. Hushing was -convicted on a' charge of operating a still in the western end of the coun ty anil sentenced to one year in tile Federal prison in Atlanta and to pay it line of $500 aud costs. It will W reinenil>vred that a still was Captured early in the year on Hushing' s prem Iscs. that he was placed under a $f>00 ciikIi bond for Ills apjienraiice at court, that he did not apj>oar. and that later he was* captured in Union county, and turned- over to the Fed eral authorities. IJhe counttv still holds the $f>00 cash bond and it is s/iid. will try him in the county court when his sentence Is finished in At lanta.* He , was represented in Fed eral court by J. J. Parker of Monroe. -.Pageland Journal. * j L \ Soldier Kob* Pawn-shop. Spartanburg June 18. ? An unknown soldier this morning entered the pawn shop of It. Sknlowski. in the heart of the business district, held up t wo em ployes at the iK?lnt of a pistol, forced n clerk t<? handcuff the manager, rilled the safe, and st-eured one hundred and fifty dollars in money. He did not mo lest the traj^ of 'diamonds in the win dow worth at least four thousand dol I ??*?*. \ About, Face! Have you thought War Savings Stamps beneath your d ignity ? that W. S. S. were only for your children? Have you thought War Savings Stamps were only for those who could invest in 25 vent units as steps to W. S. S. ? Have you thought that Liberty Bonds, in their higher denominations, were your principal method of helping to finance the war? _ No matter what your subscription to Liberty 'Loan ? War Savings Stamps are also ? FOR YOU! Friday, June 28th, National War Savings Day. An exact quota, according to population, has been set. It is $20 average for each American man. woman and child ? this means the limit ? $1,000 each ? for those who - ran. to average those who cannot. , RIGHT ABOUT FACE! ? Subscribe for your full quota of W. S. S.. Sign your, pledge (}n or before Friday, June 28th. ? t C. P. DuBOSE & COMPANY REAL ESTATE INSURANCE . CROCKER BUILDING PHONE 43 ; r WORLD'S MOSt CURIOUS CITY ! i 1 41 11 ? - ? I London Magazine Seems to Have Ola covered Queer Settlement on Saginaw Bay, Lake Huron. ? The inoMt cyrloun of 6ltlea consists i of wooden huts oq wheels, t?? tiu> num I her of about one hundred and thirty, which, when the season arrives. are rolled onto the lee on Saginaw Hay, I Lake Huron. The population of this j city Without a name Is about five hun dred. Kuch hut Ih fitted with cOQvtng utensils, hammocks, and a stove, and Ih occupied by three ineii. whose busi ness on the Ice b* to follow a peculiar method of (tolling. In the center of each hut a hole, about a yard square, Is dug to the wa ter. One of the fishermen then takes a live fish' of the herring ttlhe, and after fastening It to a pteCe of pack* thread drops It Into the water. The fish dashes away as swift as an arrow until It Is pulled up by the thread, when It return* town pis the hole fol lowed by a host of pike and other flsh desirous to feast on the dainty mor sel. Beside the hole stand the fisher men, harpoon In hand, waiting the ar rival of the pursuers, who are received with thrusts of the four or flve-prong ed Instrument, which rarely falls to , bring up some writhing victims. Some huts can show two' hundred or more .of fine flab at the end of the day's work. The most weird appear* auee of this city is at night, when the fishermen prosecute the work by the light of torches, which, as Is wall known, attract Ash without the aid of the herring halt. .The glancing torches and the shadows of the men leaning over the holes make a strange spec tacle. If flsh are not abundant In the spot*flrst chosen '.he. hut Is wheeled to another site.? Loudon Tit-Tilts, FAIR' PLAY ABOVE VICTORY Canadian Soldier Generous in 8eeing That Opponent Should Have HI* Right Chance to Shoot. In an obscure 1>qb Angeles suburb lives a blind man. The following Is one ot the ninny stories he tells of his experiences : It wns In the early nineties thnt a picked team of American riflemen had gone Tnto Cannda for a friendly contest with the Queen's Own. The competition had been fierce and the score close when the last American rifleman laid down at 800 yards. He I hart to make 23 to tie and 24 to win out of a possible 25. A great crowd had gathered to watch the contest,, and had gradually closed ,Jh behind the firing station until there was -very little space left for the rlfle The first four shots scored the bull's eye, counting 20, With bis last shot he had to make a 3 to tie and a 4 to win. The excitement was Iriteuse, and the air . was charged with the magnetic stillness of repressed excite ment^ as the commanding officer of the Queen's Own stepped forward and called out "G*t back there and give the man a fair show. How can he shoot with yon standing on top of him V The crowd fell back, the American flred, and the vindicator recorded an other bull's eye. making his score 25. Age of Fishes. The most striking characteristic by which fishes of different ages can be distinguished Is their size.- But the size afford^ us only the means to esti mate the age of younger fishes; as to the older, it cannot serve us as an In dication of their age, since theli;, growth may vary according to tlfe dif ferent conditions of nutrition, so that often the younger fish will excel in size the much older fish. There Is, however, at least as regards the fishes of the Northern seas, a sure Indica tion that betrays their age. It is the otolites, or ear stones. These ear stones grow as long as the fish itself continues tg grow, and form annual rings In the manner of trees. The more annual rings shown by a fish's ear atones the greater its age. In this way the age of a fish can be ex actly determined. A Change for the Invalid. If you have a frlond lying ill, try taking some daintily prepared edibles next time you make a visit, Nourishing broths and soups, wine Jellies, delicately browned custards and light puddings made of eggs and milk are good. Or a small Jar of mar malade or half a dozen lightly brown ed biscuit' for the Invalid's . tea. Or creamed chicken and creamed oysters delivered |n a charming blue bowl and all ready to be heated up by the nurse. Grapefruit Is always appreciated and mandarin oranges and white grapes In a pretty basket are an appe tizing combination, and there are some invalids who would be delighted with a Jar of preserved ginger for occa sional nibbling. Unnecessary Intestines. The human intestine seems to be partly a relic of prehistoric times, largely uselea* In this modern day and age. The uselessness of the vermi form appendix, which Is simply the stump of what was once an Impor tant and functioning branch of the alimentary canal, la well known. Re cent operations in a London hospital seem to Indicate that a large part of the lower main canal, the colon, can be dispensed ,wlth without harm. In these operations sections of the colon have been removed. The work brings up again the famous scientist Metch nlkofTs debated contention that theee parts of the anatomy are, not only use lata but dangerous, . Provide the boys with the things they necSd to make short)' work ot him. ^ Guns, clothes, aircraft, food,; munitions and the sh'ips to get over with, Thejjp are the things the boys need, and they cost money ? hunks of it. JUNE 28TH National War Savings Day Make a pledge to War Saving* Day The more quickly our soldiers have all the things they need, the more quickly the ships will be briniriiS our boys back to us. G. L. BLACKWELL - ' ? ?: . ? ; . v ? .? Jeweler and Optician Canadan, S. C. ?r . i \ LEND YOUR MONEY AS FREELY AS THEY ARE GIVING THfeIR LIVES You don't have to' fight, you don't haveto die. But ? Your spn does, or your brother who is now across the way ? -or the kid now in khaki to whom you used to give pennies h short time ago. / That money you have laid away for "a rainy day" ? wouldn't you give every nickel of it to keep a Hun's knife away from his throat? Well, the Hun is here, and so is his' knife ? and so is the "rainy day" ? it's raining now, raining bombs' and shrapnel upon our boys "oVer there." ?. ' JUNE 28TH National War Savings Day On that day the nation will call upon you, not just your neighbor ? but you ? to oledge yourself to the purchase of a certain number of War Savings Stamps during 1918. ? ? ? ? "*r Lend your money as freely as they are giving their lives. ? t. ? - '> . * ? i i 1 111 V . ? ? The First National Bank OF CAMDEN, S. C PUT A CLIP OF PATRIOTISM ON YOUR SHOULDER JUNE 28 TH ; Ifv, tJ'T 't?!? ' 'N ^,Ur "S:lvlnKs cm or before J-une 28. . \ (?u .. , ! >,VV~t ?e, (,ay fhe ftovewiment will call t<? win:' non- T'vido'iitv ii ' ir? ?f ,OJaH-v ! I,tn^ pwxrf of >your will i ?? *h i i ?? I n,o moil f; i < ? i 1 1 " 111"' !ii,n"r (,J>.l,Hrfi aH wel1 ?H >'<>?r hearts are ~ 1111 ll,,n ??? the inft rtyred fields of fair France. National War Savings Day ? Friday, June 28^ - ih.ir d.i> ??.|| \X||t jK. a<kort fo sjj?u A jK?rsonHi pifjd^o to hny WAR SAVINGS STAMPS N'onihi^cwn rr a ioa? fr?m y?n *? um?i? 8am Vn, well. lUalTtim ^7^ ,llw?-v" ?t par. They par inonoy (loos f,,r h,.., . M" ,lf important to you a? what your . him L ,nI"7TTWMi,? vo1,r <nrft ? "over there". Back '?l>p<. full ..f mrtrirjJEL Vh f' Keop H 1,<>at 0,1 hlin- Kecp hlS '? ??in twf. ma w x'v s,bLTs on h,y feet- 800 that ho f?*?*Hi^r rhut crro'io* fr.?m l.W ? 1 mor the fe^wlth the jro-get-'m _ wlvHt is ?-mii ii?? to hini'<,ninK y%ni Mr? to 800 that' ^ i Savings l>av. An(VT/w\ 'xv' L>lo<JKC ''"iriotlwn on National War ahlo to <i<> it ? . . s. until you wonder how you were p ^ on- H pj( v *1.17 f,,r ... , * f**r o:i?-h of fhom ' **' ?" ,Tuno 28th? and you'll ? ?" I -j Springs & Shannon The Store Hut Carries The Stock.