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THAT LITTLE NICKEL OH DIME MAY BR THE BBOIM. SINO OF A HIM FORTUNE. IF VOU HAVEN'T THK ft pR 10 CKNT8, YOU CAN 8TART WITH TWO CENT8 OH EVEN WITH ONE PENNY EACH WKKK YOU IN0HKA8K YOUK PAYMENTS THK SAME AMOUNT YOl STARTED WITH. IN 60 WEEKS io-cknt club pays $127.50 5-CRNT CLUB PAYS 03.7ft 2-CKNT CLUB l'AYS 2ft.ft0 I -CENT CLUB PAYS 12.75 VOU CAN BEGIN WITH THE LAttMEST PAYMENT FIRST AND DECREASE EACH WEKK. r??w?i YOU CAN PAY IN THE 8AME AMOUNT EACH WKKK 30 I'KNTS. $1.00. $ft.OO OR ANY AMOUNT YOU WISH. ? ' ? ' ?? . 11 ? ;?) ??? .11 1 ,, ? The First National Bank OF CAMDEN, S. C. Tl<ts IS THE LIFE . f Hi. i' V'>.. , (?limpsc of Crown Prlnee Without Kven a Movie To Go To, o :? . , r r ? ? 7?: - ? ; Two hundred loose-Drceched, w ood en - xhoed Dutch fishermen, two local po limnuu, u burgomaster and. half a doz on newspaper men,- the only American umoDR them being the World correspond cut, silently watehed the ? cresi-fallen former Crown Prince of Germany land at I :.S0 on this bitter cold and cheerlelss afternoon on thia dismal, ialan{T iu the Zuyckr 7,ee, where- he has been formally interued. . The "has-been Crown Prince" as the ljuteh call him, was accompanied by a Kfnall iwrsnnal suite. He Landed from a whito M-foot I >utoh government yacht, the Xoord Holland^, and he cut a pa thetic comedy figurlr '".us he )>osed eon Hpiciousl.v,, iu the stern, trying to keep up appearances as he gased on the un promising shore line of the itfand and, its deadly dulness. TT ?* His* sheepish grimaces were plainly forced. He wore a green Alpine hat with a feather, and old wiftte^'JrtBUFp skin f foot, wat with a bcjft'e^cotj&r. He twirled n pair of gray ?tiede gtjWea in lieu of a cane. , * . With cries of beggar ! by the l.?utch populace :it Enkhuisen, his port of de Uarkatiou. still ringing in hilars, to# looked pitifully self-consciolis and ner vous, as if really dreading thffjefcrsof a hostile reception on the 4sl(ind, aU. though he feigned an air of nonchalance while pulling a cigarctte, and evfen forced himself to be jocoae with his . equally nervous entourage. I ?9 * As the yacht w?rped into the pier he minted sriffly and seemed greatly re lirvcd when the stoic ft?herfolk hurled u-> invective at h^m. It wuh n perfectly sileut reception. Ill was not permitted to land until the Dutch lieutenant, hi? chaperon for the internment, surveyed the scone and called out /loudly in German a phrase which meant: "All right, you can Ret busy now." Then the Crown Prince leaped ushore, daubed across a narrow roadway like a frigbfeued jack rubbjt into a waiting ramshackle, two-horse ?9 *ea -going cab, the bent the town could boast. He looked shyly from the windows and began ta salute and bow to the fisherfolk. When, far from cheering, the frtoic natives failed to "rcfepond tc courtesies of the unwelcome guest, be chocked himself. ?" leaving his suite to look after the ex-royal baggage, the ex -Crown Prince, directed the cabman to go full speed to the parsonage which had been assigned fgr his - use. Arriving there after a (Jjpive uf nearly an hour, a fresh shock awafted him, which probably brought home to him, more vividly than had anything else the depth of his fall, v- Ue saw" there that. his house of de tcimpii is a nieau two-story brick struc ture which would pas#* for an extremely modest tenement in furthest Bronx. ; The impression it made on the new arrivals was tersely expressed by the Oertnan orderly who showed the World corre spondent tin? bed room of his chief, say ing, with u sob in bis voice: 'Es 1st traurig, damn it*" (In^plain English, 'This is tough, ebc." A hall room in a Harlem flat U, quite sumptous in comparison with this cham ber, which is done in dingy, dark green paper. There is a single bed-dresser iu oue corner, uu oil stove in the other, aud lu the center of the room * tiny table, adorned with a photograph of the IK Clown 1'rinceas hi au oval gold fl two photographs of tho ex-K?l*erln in ?V<>deii frauitw, uu atotniaer uud other Sott m ami some shabby writing ma i mil, lodging wouM be dear in Now York at a wwk. yn?o ox-Crown Print**'* adjutant, oo ?unles uu equally model* room imme U'.latfly -at the back. Downstairs are a cobl hall, a very small dining room, a iivlug room occupied uialuly by a shabby billiard table, a dining table net for four persons, with two round** of wlae glasses, flu house iH on the cuutern >*i?l?? of thfy island. It id tlauked by a briek hurch uinl u parochial school, ami the ( uty viow looks out upon tho cheerless expanse of the gr(iy and gloomy Zuyder Zee. \ W'lcrJugen 1m about eight ml let* long, and it* widest diameter la four milt*. It has a populatiou of tt.OOOi Tfetre U uo form of amuvemeut there, not oven u movie show. The fishermen get their recreation in the taverns. Walking and tuiking with his own compunioua ,*eem to be about the *ouly activities i>. Ksiiii.- for the iutorned Hohcusollcrn. Wierlugen la one of the world's jump* lug-off places. ? Cyril Prown's Copyright Cable to New' York World, Get Out of The Wagon. 0 up of the four army uirplaives that1 parsed jiyer this city yesterday morn ing on their way from Lang Icy Field, Virginia, to ? 'Wilmington, was cnutO for. a descendant t?f .the i ace. David Liv ingstone when the dark continent was j without a skylight, getting a chilly morn- J lug bath in the 'l'ar ii\Vi.* Ilere'g hoW it happened: The :,aid colored mail wikv loading J sand in a wagon near the river when he hravd the drone of the airplane mo tor. An airplane being a curiosity to him. ho thought it was an automobile. He scanncd the i\>ad on his right for ?the approaching machine, but saw noth ing. Ho looked to the road op the left wfth the same result. Ho was puaaled. Tin? sound seemed to come from above. He looked up ? and saw something he had Jnever seen before. As to how he feSt about it is told in hia ovrn xl words : "Mnn, when I saw dat^ thing, I was gittin outa dat wagon."- ? Rook Mount j Dispatch to Wilmington Htar. v TAX RETURNS j- * . ?? ? i Auditors Office, Kershaw County. Notice is hereby given that the Au ditor's office wiU be open for receiving Tax 'Returns from January 1st, IMOj Jto February 20th. 1919. A11 person# owning real eatate or personal prOp? erty must; make returns of *he aapie within said period, as required by law, or be ' subject to a penalty of 50 per cent. The Auditor' will attend in person x?r by deputy at ; the following "places in the County on the dates indicated for receiving returns : Pcthune, Jantrory 14 and l/>. Haley's Mill, January 10. ' Power's School House, January 17. Kirkley's Htore, January 2Q. Kershaw, January 21 and 22. Wostville, January 23/ ? ! . Liberty Hill, January -24. Hlauey, January 28. All persons between tho ages of 21 and 00 years, inclusive, are required to pay Toll and Road Tax, unlets excused by law. All Trustee*, Guardians, Execu tors, Administrators or Agents biMing property in charge, must return same. Parties, sending tax returns by mail must make oath to same before some officer and . fill out same in proper man ner or they will be rejected. W. F. RUSSELL, Auditor Kerahaw County. Camden. S*,C., l>oc, 17, 1918, Answer the Red Cross Roll Call BLACK , RACCOON HomnmitEol ogpgw OPOSSUM MUSKRAT NM.IXTRA URGE onwn*vuM( lS.Wi.12M 8.00 to 6.00 6501s ISO 11S?? IMS 2i0l> 150 2w40t? 120 -JJ^UARCE imu TO 10.00 1# 8.00 S.7SH 125 17S?42S, 2.40 1* IM 2J0K 2.00 lJOti 1.70 NHMEMUH MMnimMi 7.001* 6j00 4i0to 3.75 17Sto 3.00 iJ0? ut UOk Ml 150l? US 5.00 1? 4.00 12Sl? 2.75 Z50l? 101 ? . r i.oou a LSOh Ml l.lOto .85 N?2 1 SJOto 100 lOOtoiOO ZStrn liO UOte M M0|? * LOOK .80 ??SSHSmm 2.00 k US lis I* .15 IJOOf M , JS JSQt* I .M J5? .25 MTfMtaWMUTV .75u S 0 iOto .40 jt* -n ill* JOS umanmsi mmanmx CATCH 'EM? SKIN 'EM? SHIP We Want AH the South CaroUna Furs Yon Can Ship RACCOON, OPOSSl/M, MUSKR AT, and all other Fur-bcarers collected in your section in stronc demand. A shipment to ''SHUBERT" will bring yoo ''more money"? "quicker." GEY A SHIPMENT OFF-TODAY. You'll be mitfhty glad yoti did. -? ' , Jt* - * x~* ' ' ? " Them* extremely high prices quoted for immediate shipment . Must Not liberate ! Them Only to Perish The Millions Who Have too* Made , < #!>?? Muit Now l? eod Ad ministration Soon to Announce Pro gram for Wertd Relief? People of South Carolina Will Do Their Pert Willingly. Columbia. ? The Pood Administmr tion h*H been, slnoe the United States entered the world strug gle for the pre servation of human liberty a war no cessity.' Now that the war haa heen ao gloriously 1 ended the Pqod Admin* 1st rut I on voltes a humanitarian ap* I peal. I Food haa played its big perl in the ?inning of the war. Pood will play a bigger part, perhaps, in the winning I of the world. In the immediate futuros rood muet aave the world-- and the food must| come from America. Herbert Hoover is In Europe. He haa gone overseas to ascertain what are I the actual food ueeds of the hundred# of millions of people in the liberated territories. Whan .he has made hia J investigation* an estimate ot the amount of foodstuff* that will be re- 1 quired to feed thete people who bar* returned to the wayl of peace to find ' themselves practically helpless for tho present and until a crop can bo grown. 1 will be cabled back to America. The Pood Administration will then be able to announce a food program to meet I this need. , It is already known that the need will be enormous, and that the food program wtll require, on tho part of J the American people, the most in tensive conservation. The evacuation I of territory by the enemy has increas ed rather than diminished the de mands upon America for food. Tho amount of food that had already been pledged to the allied countries will not he sufficient to ^me^t the uTgont need. Millions of people are hungry. In many )ands famine threatens. The Amelcan people, who have suf fered little In this war, oompared with the sufferings of the people pt many 1 European countries, would not be will* ing to see these people, who have been fighting in a common cause, liberated Only to perish for lack of the barest I necessities oM He. That Is not the victory that Uiey have suffered for I four years to attain. Out of their j plenty the American people will share | thefr food with their cousins across the seas. The Flood Administration believes j that, because of the awakened public conscience the food program to be an-.| jounced In the near future wlHc?ot I 'few W volanthrUy complied with by the American people?lncludtng, oft course, the people of South Carolina ? | but that they will cheerfully comply j With it, and count it a privilege to I tat at a common table with thoee leas forturt^e who have been associate I ed with them In the greatest of all I human struggles. Already ehlpa laden with food to relieve hunger and dlstreee have I reached port ecroea the eeaa. Others are following- These have been die* patched to avert ft* mine and disaster. I rood ships must continue to cross the I seas from America until fields which I have been under fire or plowed with the shells of mighty guhs or which have been battle grounds thoee past fdur yewrs can be tilled again and made to produce food where death, hot through death, victory, has been tht harvest. The people of South Carolina will I he ready to do their share when the food Administration makes knows I what Is needed. c- ' ? - ? 8UGAR LIMITATIONS OFF; NO F U RTH BR RATION I NG Columbia. ? The limitation of foot pounds of sugar per month per per son ha* boon removed by the Food Administration and the rule requiring restaurants, hotels and public eating places to limit their sugar consumption to four pound# for web to meals served, has been rescinded by tie Food Administration. The sifti shortage la orer. The Food Adminis tration, however, expects that with the removal of the restrictions the public will not exceed the normal f? uirements, hut will continue to ?n sugar with discretion. Manufacturers ?sing sugar may likewise secure theti normal sugar requirements, without the. further use of sugar certificates. THE FOOD ADMINISTRATION STILL FORBIDS PROFIT EENiNQ ; Cohnafcia. ? In order that no of# : understanding ma y arise among lloe? eeee with regard to the effect of th< , armiaUce upon the regulations of th? i Food Administration, it is stated bf j the Food Administration and nadi perfectly clear that the regulation! I are not unitM by the armistice, i Modification* have been made bn of profit a ad regulations preventlni ? hoarding have not been removed, aal ' there la no present intention on th< part of the Food Administration <h dropping these restrictions, which wil be rigidly enforced. The world needs at the present tfcne are for a larger amount of M then before the signing of the^nrmls tloe brought the fighting to an end This i smprshende . food of nil kinds 'with tit* possikls exception of whent of which thert H reported tm b? ?leatr / HAVC /VjTK#/t 1 s 'c? /?AA/Y 4/JC? ?? r JVGGSjrrJWS J (5ift? that rotleet' ji pvrwnul interest, and care of keUgtlOfii IIO matUr haw small the cost will rouvey the good wishes as you would have them convoy ?d. ^ V' : " . ' \! ? - Such Kifta can be easily t?*lected if you will allow .... ! ? - . \ . Tr . " ? - ??? ?? - ? ?? ?.-* ....... ,.v, yourself a few minutes timfc In our store. '' " X S> ' ' '? :? A: ? ,, .* MQUIK CARGO ltKLtiAHKIt 'Govo*nor Order* t "Try-On" t<? IVoceed On With I/ojul of Wet Goods. ? ? . ?. ??.i ( Vluinhiii, l>cr, !?#.- ? ou nu opinion by Tkonu II. lVepU-s, the \t torney General, rendered this afternoon, Governor Manning has ordered the re IniM' of the gfeMdino cruiser, "Try-On," Under command of Oapt. Kobort P, 1011 In, and its cargo of fifteen tQD? nfintoxi cants, coniposed chiefly of high grade winefe, champagnes, alfcs and Home whis key. which i? being held at Georgetown by thQ sheriff of Georgetown county and StAt* cout tablets. 'i'lic "Try-On", wringing a' leuk at sea Hoveral weeks ago, put in at George town for repairs and Was seised by tne |?cflee officers of thnt port for al leged transportation of liquor in viola tion of the prohibition laws of the State, The boat contained 548 coses, four demijohns and one barrel *f in toxicants, estimated to be worth*-#25l? (KK?. The intoxicants, should they bring the prevailing prices of the Columbia njarket, are worth around $250,000. The intoxicants are the property of Paul Chalfln, of 507 Fifth avenue, New York <Mtyv and were manifested from \Vy> York to JmkK\nivHI?>, Khi. The Mtorney Uonorul, in his opinion hrJil th.it the intoxicants Inter Mate MiipmeiKtH, from one wet .state to another wet Htate, and, us tt in ?Ot shown that thero hud been any attempt to kcUL them, th?y should be reloaded to obtotluue their voyage to Jackson ville. ljrgMt rrops In History. Washington, l)oe. ll^With a tot#i vaiuo of $12,272,412,000 the nation'* principal fiirin crops this year wore Worth more, bused on prices paid to far mers December 1, than -in any year lu the history of American agriculture. Do ci-mber crop estimates today of tho de* purtment of agriculture showed tlmt this fkiihi total price exceeds the former n cord your 10V? l? v $<lt 1,.'IKO.OOO. There ul- <> was a marked increase in acreage. 722 total exceeding that of last your by lO,7<W,O0tt a<;pqe. I'? Irtrtwr crop fiicutoft were locked upon by officials as showing that tho nation will be in even u bettor position to ful Jill its pledge of 20.000.0(H) tons of food stuffs to Burope iirit.yeoi' than had bepft expected. ??.' -. f- - . . < THIS LARGE GENERAL STORE COMMANDS T77TT 1 '7l " " >? 'H: ^ ' ,ly - ?"*'? ^-~r-7~ ----- , ATTENTION AS TO YOUR NEEDS AND PRIVATE WANTS. * > ' 4f ^ ? V ? 9 We specialize in almost everything that is necessary in the home'* or about it. ?" Our Staple Groceries are the b?^t in the city rind at the right prices. Let ub Jm> .ypurJlQjrne supplier and you t ' ? 1 wl> will agree that our merchandise is the best ? . : : ? ? :4>' >?? v possible and that our method of selling it is -T-rC -?ni? T . . . v * ? -'fr""* ? y .g^yioa^t also the proper one. ? ? v^jT ^ ============== X V. ? 9H Springs & Shannon ??? ?-V. ' *? i ? y The Store That Carries The Stock. SOLD AND INSTALLED AT W. O. HAY S GARAGE ?fM GUARANTEED ONE YEAR ^||