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B^ntents 15 Fluid Draohid hrScOHOL- 3 rK" ? (Uift tfoS toiMChsaiidlUwvlsrf Pumpkin S*fJ AU\ At AM Smtft /U/V.ljW }Va**rnnnt> m?rtma*SHbr Hnrmt r -* "WW JBWf (7an'/M SHutr mAnjtnm/knr A helpful Remedy fbr j Gonstipatiotxand Diarrhoea. and Feverishncss arui I Loss or Sleep J pesultin^ Herefrom - in Infancy I ? ? ? - ? fac simile Signature of Tub Centaur Company. NEW VORK. Exact Copy of Wrapper. * CAST0R1A For Infants and Children: 1>? ? l|? i H ?? ?! ?? Hi i ?? ? nn Mothers Know Tfta> Genuine Castoria Always Bears tlie u Signature of In Use For Over Thirty Years CASTORIA THK CCNTAUN COMPANY. Nf W YOMK CI^V The Catbird. Unless you happen to live west of 1 the Itocky Mountains, or south of the j Columbia river, you are apt to have at least a speaking acquaintance with this ' little buiiiile of contradiction*. He has pretty well taken over as a home, this entire country, from Nova ' Scotia to the Gulf coast,' and west to the Hooky Mountains. He winters from the southern states southward to the ftahamas, and through Mexico and Cen tral Aanerica down as far as Panama. A New Way to Save Soap!-i Justa tablespoonful ofGItAND I MA, the wonderful powdered^ soap in the water. That takes the place of all the chipping, slicing pnd rubbing that you do now whenever you wash or clean. And you 6ave soap. Y4u know just how much to use.' Isn't It simple? What woman would put op with the fuM and bother bt Mr soap lying around and wasting away, when she can now bare this marvelous powdmfd soap, k?mcf Mrf?*" Packagea Try this Powdered Soap Today ! Grandma's Powdered Soap Saves TIME? Saves WORK? Saves SOAP Your Grocer Has It! The added charm to a woman's toilet is exquisite jewelry. , The good taste and perfect consideration shown In such a gift is the highest compliment you can pay her. Such articles need not be exceedingly costly if you patronize us and get our suggestions. TWELER ft OPTOMLTOST lit* get* l?i? nuino from ?? peculiar cat like cit 1 1 . or Hicw, and if what other bird* say about biiu i?t true, he resembles a eat iu more ways than as to bin' voice. Whether it is so or not. In- ha,s the replication of being a persistent robber ?! tln> eggs of other bird*, and there inu^t be Kotinrt hing >" tin' charge or he \\-t > iil?l n,?t be m> cordially lin t?'?l by hi* {fciithNwd neighbors. 4lv M ?Ib'Klnf ? furtive . way of Mieaking through the hutfhes (tint looks very much as if he hnd something un lawful on bin mind, A* a rule, be sticks putty close to the t a ngle of honeysuckle that covers half-fallen feuees aiul to the protection of the shrubbery qn the lawu. lie is chary about trust ing himself much in the open, an ex perionce ban taught hlnv that if he ttiakes himself too conspicuous, he In apt to liml himself the renter of a mob of sparrows. jays ami bluebirds, dead bfnt on lynching him. lie is an iiniuit coward, ami when attached majtea it a rule to turn tall ami beat It to his retreat among the syrtiugas. If suddenly surprised whllo stealing silently through bushes where small bir<ls would likely have' their nests, he turns it off by appeariug to bo vory mueh frightened, ami the "unbird-like suarl" li repeated time and again as he goes deeper an<l deeper Into the gloonv of the thicket. It is a pity he cannot prove to the satisfaction of all that he is not a thief, as he ia a bird with a real personality, and there is much about him that is amusing, as well as interesting. Modesty and diffi dence were loft out of his makeup, and in their place a full measure of pertness and brass was. used. He has a habit of following one through the bushes with his incessant cat-calls, that is anything but poifite. Ho has not the hold on our affections enjoyed by the bluebird or t'he robin, as he lacks the open-hearted trust of the one, and breezy good nature of the other. We have a feeling that he- is holding something back that he is a little ashamed of, 80 he does not win our confidence as fully as he might, if he acted in a more candid manner. He is a ^creature of moods, and there is no tolling what kind of a mood you are go-ing to find him in. He may be the very .picture of aristocratic breed ing, with finely polsed^fiead,' alert mien, graceful in every movement, and wear ing his satiny suit of gray with the air of a cavalier, Or you may surprise him wbtli shoulders all bunched, head drooping, feathers hanging like damp rags, tail looking as if it was about to drop off, and altogether a reguler "Weary Willie'-' of birddom. But if some new idea strike#; him, a single jerk serves to shake off his lethargy, his liang-dog air drops from him j}s a garment, and in an instant he is once more the debonair, neatly groomod/"lHtle gentleman, with head erect, eyes shining, and tail cocked at a rakish angle. It is the hbtiip Way with. his music when the humor strikes him, his throat rnn swell to a ?ong, that for softness nn<l liquid melody, would do credit to a wood thrush. And then again, he can utter a jumble of squawks and cat calls, so harati and discordant, that one wants to close ones ears to the rasp ing sounds. Sometimes when he seems to he <)n a penitent frame of mind, usually late in the evening, he bursts into a song so glorious, that he is^often mistaken for his 'cousin, the mocking bird. In fact, he is no mean mimic himsolf,/ and his efforts are often but a potpourri of the notes of other birds. When he falls into a reminiscent mood, he remembers the many sounds he has heard through the day, and mixes them all in a strange medley of melody and discord. He builds a nest that is in keeping with his variable moods, and in among the sticks and twigs he crams in rags, scraps of newspaper, or tangled strings, and anything that he happens to find. But the interior is always softly lined, a fit receptacle for the green-blue eggs. Small fruit growers have no use for him, as they say he does a lot of damage to strawberries, rnsr>berries and cherries, lint they forget about the great num ber of cutworms and harmful insects he destroys. ? C. A. David. Tuesday, Elmo Lincoln will appear in "Tarzan of the Apes.' PROGRAM UNION MEETING To Be Held at Providence Church Sat urday and Sunday. Saturday 10 A. M. ? Devotion led by S. B. Hatfield. 10 :15. ? Enrolling of delegates and Section of officers. 10:45. ? Sermon by. Barnwell Oaston. 11 :30. ? The Church at work with and for its young people. 12:16. ? Can a Nsw Testament Church live unto itself? Miscellaneous business. Adjourn for dinner. Saturday 2 P. M. ? The pastor and the deacon ppllinc double. 2 :4S. ? Wfcrart we owe the returned sol dier. 3 :15. ? Adjourn. Sunday 10 :30. ? A model Sunday school In the country. T. A. Ljrles. 11 .*00. _ -Mission sermon. Tama of the Apes at the Majestic Tuesday night. . INTOTIiEUNKNOWN i Adventurers Irresistibly Lured to Untraveled Paths. Martin Johnson and His Wife, Setting Out for the Sout,h Sea It lands, Explain Yearning That Calls Them to the Jungle Land. To perpetuate the work that Jack London commenced and to llluv the un explored mysterloH of thi' .Umale land ?that vast unknown hush country of the South Sea Islands; to bring hack photographic records of tlw habits, customs and mannerisms of -trlhon of xvhlch no white man has any kliowl edue; to endanger their Uvea In the tropic h t ; to rul) olbowf with natives who are afflicted with leprosy, ele phantiasis and other dangerous forms of contagious disease." All these Items mean nothing at all to Martin Johnson nnd his pretty wife, Osn, who will leave New Vork Monday for Australia prior to Invading the vast hush coun try, the unexplored Interiors of which no white man has ever seen, writes the New York Sun. "I am anxious to go to the South Sea Islands because It Is the nearest place to paradise on God's earth*" said Martin Jphnson. "Thero are no strikes there, and It Is a far safer place than in your little old New York. You tnay have Broad way If you like, but as for mo I want to got away from your talk of 'Bolshe vhlskey' and everything that has any thing to do with It at all,. Pro or con It doesn't make any difference. And then again." Mr. Johnson continued, "there Is the lure of discovering things no white man hns soon. There Is 'the groat adventure hhout It. It Is a yearn ing to got away from all this back here . and be out In the great wild. It Is the unfathomable unknown, the Insoluble wilderness that lures me." For Mrs. Johnson, this represents her second trip to thtf'bush country, nnd she prob ably Is the flr?t woman from the United States to achieve such a dis tinction. The morality of the natives of the South Sen Islands Is eulogized by Mrs. Johnson, who deprecates the morality of the white people, declar ing the former to bo of a hlghor stand ard. "No man covets his nolghboi^s wife there," she said. "C>nly In one In stance did T see the penalty that a woman paid for nllenatlng the affec tions of another woman's husband. They hanged her to a tree and execut ed her by slushing her body. A man lives three years with a woman before he marries her, In the Solomon Islands. In all that time ho Is never permitted to moot her In the open or mention his name to her, or she to him. Their Coming together Is decreed by order of the chief. The man Is told who his mate Is to be and where he can find her. In the dead of night he goes to her. If they like each other they are married In three years. If not, then their children are given over to the un married bride's or bridegroom's parents." Use of Chemical Product*. The tnterest In chemistry and chem ical products has greatly Increased In the United States owing to the fact that this country has been forced by the war to depend upon Its own re sources in this direction. The follow ing uses are ascribed to these chem ical products : In making soap and paper pulp, mercerizing cotton and purifying mineral oils, caustic soda is used ; soda ash is necessary In the manufacture of soap and glass; sili cate of soda (better known as water glass) Is utilized In the ? manufacture of soap and In dyeing and printing cal ico, finishing cotton goods, preventing wool rot, bleaching Jute and*preserv? Ing aggs. Abolishing Trench Pool In the first winter of the war we used to hear much about "trench foot due to standing long In the Icy water and mud of the trenches. It was an InflammaUon that ranged from a sort of glorified chilblain to a condition of gangrene. * Col. George G. Nasmlth, who com* nmnded the Canadian Mobile Labora tory with the British expeditionary forces In France, says Jn the Medical Record that this vanished from the British ariny when It was discovered that tlfe periodical removal of puttees, drying and chafing the feet and legs, covering them with whale oil end put ting on dry socks was an absolute pre ventive. Boy 8couts. The boy scout*' organization was founded In England In 1010 and Intro duced In the United States the same year. The object Is to develop patriot Ism, discipline, courage and self-control in Doys, as wen as to put the Golden Rrito Into dally practice. The unit of the organization Is the "patrol" offrom six to eight boys ; a "troop" comprises tw<j or more "patrols" and the scout master Is the officer In charge of a troop. Lieutenant-General Sir Robert Baden-Powell waa the father of the boy scout movement In England and Ernest Thompson Seton In the United States. Record Shorthand Writing. Herman J. Stlch, an American court reporter, wrote tinder most rigorous rules at the rate of 800 words a min ute for five consecutive minutes, and then presented a transcript that wltb only two immaterial errors almost reached perfection, the percentage of accuracy being WA Mr. 8 tick's per formance is described as the finest Is the history of afcorthand. Your Money Back if Not Satisfied You couldn't make it stronger; you can come to us ' and get the livest styles to be had; HART , SCHAFFNER & MARX CLOTHES; if for any reason you're not satisfied in style, fit w??r? or anything else ? you get your money back. Copyright 1919 Hart Schaffoet & Mwr* We Carry in Stock Varsity overcoat*; you tee one in the picture Waist-seam suits and Overcoats Dress Clothes "Prep" Suits Business Suits Special models for men who are hard *3>, to-fit. Baruch-N ettles Co. The Home of Hart Schaffner & Marx Clothes ? ' ? - * v ? . ? -- -- _1 . if: ' ? ;; * FOOTER'S AGENCY ?; V. ".-T ; \ '? IN CAMDEN IS ONLY ONE OUT OF MORE THAN 200 SUCH AGENCIES SCATTERED OVER THE UNITED STATES, BUT THEY ALL REPRESENT THE SAME FOOTER'S DYE WORKS OF CUMBERLAND, MD. AMERICA'S GREATEST CLEANERS AND DYERS^ ? * * ?' ' liflr ? ? ? , f , ? . ? ' ' ' 1 Hi1 i' Represented in Camden foy J. FERRIS McDOWEU Telephone 145. WINTHROP COLLEGE Scholarship and Entrance Examination To Be Held July 4th and 5th. The examination for the award of vacant scholarships in Winthrop College and for the admfef^on of new students will be held at the County Court House bn Friday, J\Ay 4th, at 9 a. m., and also on Saturday.., Jlily-Ctli, at 0 a. in., for thoee who wish to make up by ex aminations additional units required for full admitaaion to the Frcahman Class of thta 'institution. The examinaton on Saturday, July 5th, will be used only for making admission units. The schol arships wHl be awacded upon the ex amination held on Friday July 4th. Ap plicants must not be lees than sixteen years of age. When scholarships are vacant after JuEly 4th, they will be awarded to those snaking the highest average at this examination, provided they meet the condition* governing Che award. Applicants for scholarships should write to President Johnson for scholarship blanks. These blanks, prop erly filled out by the applicant, should { be filed with President Johnson by July 1st. Scholarship# are worth $100 and free tufBtion. The next session wiil open September 17, 1910. For further In formation and catalogue, address Presi dent D. B. Johnson, Rock Hill* ' S. 0. 6-7-8-13 j Charles liay in "Greased Lightning" at the "M&Jertlc Monday night. FINAL, DI8CHARGK . Notice is herdby given that one month from this date, on Friday, July lltft 1019 we will make to the Probate Court of Kerwhaw County ;? our final' return at Executors of the Estate of Buseeil A. Ingram, deceased, and on the sscne day we wifll apply to the said Court for a final discharge from our tnxat as said Executors. v GEORGE W. SOWBDL, DURHAM CA8TQN, Executors. Camden, S. C., June Otfh, 1910. WHY SUFFER From heat and the uncomfort of flres now, when we have a complete line of electrical goods ready for your inspection. Call and look them over. Also Thurmois bottles. ? % W. Robin Zemp's Drag Store "? * "*"* ? ? -*7 J Al .r . f- - - V-r^1"- ' JcM 1 wMp Wi ?JV*