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yniver?IO <?f Vermont Is Hie . l^rHiiUow ??f Joawilll* to a<luilla Tjm?'? ChangM In Blsbca. 1||tir Arl? , where Is now beard honk of the modern automobile, U! tick of wrist watches and flm wall ?T .tt h(>8e of all colors exteudlng irthe top* of ?13 was entire ^?wU#y??r.?*o. ?uMiU?ew a jLter In the Review of Hlsbee, Then S hardworking miner hud to atrug 2!for hours to get a scat at a poker *Tjt or H "l"?k In" at h faro game. Main street was once one of the Hve mi thoroughfare* In the western ^bMilsnhere, saloons, glided and other 'Sib a Wag hoen the honored business (ejpr|?es which lined both aides of toe street. If anybody hud predicted a Street railway would at some future time run through the center of gain street, or that it would some' fcy become as dry and arid as the khara and QOhl desert*, ho would im mediately have been taken before a lunacy commission. . Too Much Ceremony. ybe battalion was resting beside the ^id toward the end of Its 10-mlle hike. After the weary marchers had eased jhelr pack? and sipped from thelir near ly empty canteens, they watchedlfdls plritedly the. energetic setting-up ex ercises being gone through by a strange tatflt In a nearby field. "What's that there gang>" Inquired frfrate Hanks of Oklahoma without Hthuilacm. Infantry candidates' school," re eled the corporal. -Candidates I Infantry candidates TV tiploded Hanks. "My good gosh I Do jou have to make application and be Initiated to get into this mess nowa days?"-The Honje Sector, Sculptors In the Doldrums. According to American Art Ncw*j. the sculptors complain thut there Is lit tle work at present In their line of eii? dcavor, and even the leading men are ?waiting." The commemorative war rtatues nod patriotic groups that were I: far decorate cities, towns and ceme [ teries'have"not thus far n iaferlalIzed. The unsettled conditions of the coun try, they contend, which nre holding op building, are accountable for the present "doldrums." i No Wonder He's Crazy. "This poor fellow Is In a terrible condition," said the visitor. I "Yes," replied the asylum attendant. "He's the most violent lmflent we have In this ward." v_, ? "What caused blm ,fo lose his mind?" "He trie I to figure out some? wny to hsnx-ss the energy that was going to waste in tango parlors."?Birming ham Age Herald.- V- ? ? =1 <?OOi> KO vi>s FOK 81 MTKK >suh?(?t, May u. Hani nurfWcwl innmIh ovw nil the main UiyhwayH of Kmnter eoutMy luive Ikm'ii assured l?y a Vjflttt in favor ??f a t>on<l Ishuo l\n that Iiurpu^v. Tip voir iii j rlnI oVrlUMi lufltl unlay wiis four to' i oho for the l**io. 'Muiv has l>eeu >cn%tf interest manifested in tltW* prttjwt ami Mil Intensive eMn\wtU{a <* eduction eou< vrnlng ?!'?' |a-">|hi |*l1 n ha* Ihh'U earrlvd on for the (KM: uioiith In every low iiNhip of | lio <inuity. ; b holand\s JfiettUMt Imhi In the llotf of Allen, \vihleh haw an tm*l of about -MO,. (KH? aeres, n Ik I ?\t?Mt<l>i Into four imiiii We*. The INrfli>.!? alplkaitet lux 43 lot toi*?. Gorky, Russian Radical, ' Finds Soviets a Failure Hitter disappoint moat with bolshevlsm In expressed in an ar ticle recently published by Max im Gorily, the Russian radical, according to a dispatch from Stockholm, Sweden. "The revolution has not been followed by spiritual revival," tbo article Is said to declare, "and has proved Itself unable to make men more honest. Men*ln power now are just as brutal as those In authority under the im perlal regime and send as many to prison; Bolshevist leaders, drtven by ambition, are perform ing experiments upon living peo ple, especially the working classes." PRETTY FACE CAUSES WRECK Aviator Crashes Into Tree While Throwing Klaaes to Swarthy more Coeds. ' r Swarfomore. Pa.^The Ourtlas mall plane R-30, which /dropped Into a cluster of trees on the Swarthmore college campus, Is rapidly disappear ing at the hands of souvenir hunters In spite of the efficient guarding of the .local police department. An eyewitness furnished an account of the mishap. According to his story the pilot was flying low and waving to a group of Coeds. All went well, It is alleged, until he loosened his hold on the controlling rod for the purpose of throwing kisses with tooth hands. In nn instant his plane dropped ln< to thu trees, and it was another case of o pretty face causing the downfall of t roan StrtMiK A Broi., Inc., 1920 Keeping a cool head ?on a warm day is often a matter of having a cool body. We direct particular attention to the new arrivals in the Midsummer Styles in HjghAktGjothcs made by btkoubk A BROTHERS. !?e. BALTIMORE. MO. ?sheer, tropical fabrics, that keep a man's mind off his clothes?and tailored so they keep their shape to the very end. Hirsch. Bros. & Co. Camden, S. C. BURIED IN JUNGLE "O ? Tropic Growth Overwhelmed City of Ang'<er Thorn. Devastation Wrought. Especially by the Deadly Fig Tree, la So ?omplete aa to Be Almcat Unbelievable. Iii the hwri of Camhodla, one of the live provinces of French Imlo-Chten, lie tho rulu8 of tin* royal city of Ang kor 'l lioin, built koiiu'w lu*iv boiwi i n iiu' tit iii ami aeventh wnturlpii and of I lit* marvelous temple, Amrkor Wat. The architecture. ulilrh Is Hindu, in niii' UUentangled from Jungle growth* Uy French archcologlsis. The city and temple are thought to lutve bwtt bltOl. Ity the Klimers, a long vanished race which certainly lias no connection with the Cambodians of the prevent day. Writing In Harper's. ICIIen N. U Motte describes a trip through the lunglo on au Elephant In order to visit one of tho more remote rulvii "In about ten minutes," she writes. ?*we found ourselves climbing over the fallen stones of an Immense temple that lay* completely burled and over grown by the forest; So thick was the foliage that only a dim twHfght pre vailed. The supreme loneliness of that tmrled temple, the utter Isolation and silence that enveloped It, were appal ling, and our scrambling feet and tiuslied voices only Intensified tho aw fal stillness?the silence of centuries. "The horror and vlndletIveness of the JuUglol Everywhere giant stones were overthrown, pushed out of place ind toppled over In heaps through the Mnlster vitality of thai deadly tree, the tree of the ruins. The roots of this tree begin as Innocent, halrllke filaments which .Insinuate themselves through the crevle?\s of the great stones and slip through tiny openings and crocks, then grow and develops with an evil vigor that nothing can withstand. They never die never are .Starved <nit these flue., The big stones never crush or kill them. Year by year, century by cen tury, their fierce strong life Is fostered by the fierce heat and fierce rains of the tropics until they overthrow and lestroy everything in their pathway. One fearful root that wandered In its course through ? whole corridor of mightv carvings was IX) metellw in length, with the circumference Of an elephant. And the tree Is useless, too ?Just spongy, porous wood, unfit for Anything* "For an hour we wandered through dim. ruined chambers, scrambled and climbed over fallen pillars and carv ings of great beauty and delicate, In tricate design?all In- utter ruin and the fig tree of destruction In supreme controL.jt _was elephants again and to leave behind that overwhelmed and evil spot. "Only the most Important and beau tiful ruins are being reclaimed from the forest, those in Angkor Thom, as well as the Angkor, Wat. These out lying one! are still left as originally discovered, buried and smothered by the everlasting forest. To me they are far more Interesting in this setting, choked and swamped by the mighty growth of the tropical Jungle. They afford more thrills to me who am not an archeologlst than the P1**? up, restored and cleared ruins that the government is reclaiming. "Of course, one cannot see thern verj well, these buried temples, swamped In undergrowth, enveloped by a tw - light gloom. And as I scramble over fallen images, over barbaric sculp tures, my mind is largely set on ser pents. And when we reach a fairly open space it turns to monkeys the agile black gibbons that hoot and leap oyerhead at our coming, furious at the Intrusion upon their solitude. Between snakes and .monkeys there are times when I forget to admire these old temples, supposed to be among the most fnarvelous in the world." ~~T Marshal FocU'? Cane. From the first days of the war Marshal Foch always carried a dap per stick with him. There Is an In teresting story connected with the cane that the head of the allied armies regarded so necessary. It. was carved for him in the early days of the war by one of his beloved pollus of the trenches," says the Home Sector, the ex-soldiers weekly, -since which time. If reports are true. It has nver left his side. It has made itself useful-as well, as ornamental on occasions, and there Is a legend that It was used to map out the great ntrokes and counter-strokes of the summer and fall of 1018 by which the war was ended." Saving th* Wood. ^ "Our noble forest* must be sarea. exclaimed the theoretical conserva tl0"T?ey must," assented the man who facturers are required to P"*J"ce matches that will produce a light with out using up half a box to each clgar ' ette." No Soldier Did Thia. According to itif new KtnnrtnTd <1!c "oSpt-'n-'ctoMl. o. *?> A game of cTTin w thr numbers ihrown on t?o "ice. Home Sector. - - - Silence ?? Golden. First Private?-Can you imagine any thine won* than having coot lent t?co ., Private?Yes. Suppose yon had 'em. and they ehlrpe<L-~tW t?*ao Legion Weekly. TK1.I S WHY IIK JOINED 4?o\ t'l'iMM* Say* Cotton AkwicI?H<xi l*ro motr* Well IMiig of Cotton (?rowvTH May S.- thivfriutr Oootier In a letter to KihHe .fonkUv*, oluiirnian of Uu* UlHilund oniilHy ttramtfh of tln? South Carolina lotion Ajssmk i.i i Ion Dm) vv^toh t>v ?uya "im Im>1 1<h| me to join- the American Cotton As^x-Uitlou ami to *ay why 1 ur^e other* t4? heoome iuviiiUmW, ?*TIh? Cotton grfrwor,,, say* tkworiftW*, <\h?Ik?i' '<% Iwii without it cent i .i i m-tainl/atlou ; faelllcltlen for -the tlis Meminntlon oT valuable Information, tV>v promoting Intelligent ott^peirotJoi), ft>r coordinating our effort* ratluvr than neu tiering them have long Imhmi wanting. TtlO O?tt?>o AssocliWhm affords u iiu cUmis for promoting the gw^l wen l>olng of the cotton grower. Through the A*>*>olatlon In forma Hon may l*? Ikt>>odenoted, (dew* exchanged. (xf-ordi nuted effort effected* ami eoropeniitlon practiced. Our economic, and social In the South ileppiulii upon agriculture, and the degree to which wo attain In tills eoouotule ami Moelal happiness ?to jkmhIh upon the ex tout to whUih wo ap? 1 >1 y Intelligent effort, to <wvr fa rmlng. The farmer hns a iHreet tntero?t in the Association, for ?tlio or&t nidation lis Jils; It dealt* with the crop In wldeh he Is uMMrt interested. Tho fewlnww umn has an <H|ual, though iierhupH not mi direet1 an liitorefit. The biM*lne*t of tho S?mth b< Iwsed upon agriculture, and tin* development of agrlenltwre menus the devoLjpmunt of aH oilier business enterprise. Iiere-^o*fotv we have proceed**! In a liap-huKard umn tier, mid we have paid I heavily for our huk of concerted ef fort. We have not diversified our erojis, We have not looked oarofully Into market coimHtioiirt. We Have not made any ironerat uuiforJULilffori. tu.Xlt.. CITY CAFE Under New Management I with to announce that 1 have taken over the City Cafe on East DeKalb Street and it will be conducted in such a way that the public can get a meal served in the best of style at any hour of the day. We will be glad to have you call on us when in ^ 1 : - ' " . . ? ' ' d ' 1 town. CITY CAFE D. G. GOFF, Proprietor. jirodnctfou to iUmiuuhI. Ttio Otfttou Am Morlaflon will "help w to thioae tWflrira % ' **? l>1?? tiling, I h iiwt th<> < .impaimi for uu?nrt>er? tn HK hJii .ul iinil in hU oHmm* oountlrw will lw? highly MHHienwful. .Marrtage. Mir. Ji's.-n' 10. Outeu, pf WwtvlKlv,, s. II ii<l Mltw Tlioo Uontou, of K<>tk1i?w, S. <\, wtn*> marled by Protwte Judffo \V. Ij. M?'t>owi"lJ on JSatuirday Jfytat May srii. u?20. The nturrtuge took place at tJ?* lK?w?'4?f Uh1- Pinrfrn'ti" Jtid^e. Turkey's i*?i>uljlMoft "\vttl, by th<J ikmkv livaty, he reclined from 30,000,000 to niiotvt 0,000,000, ami her navy xpavt .^'nsi.i.T ..inly of a lWv ivvemio cutwra. FINAL DISCHARGE Nutico 1# ihoixVby given thwt one month from I Mm date, on Juno 4tli, 1920,1 will make to the l^rofiato Count of Koradwiw Oounty my ftowi irotiwm as (Jiumltan of the estate ?xf Dora Bolk, minor, nod oil the xanie clay 1 \vl1 a^ly to Jlhe salil Oourt for a final <llaohargo from my t rust wk so hi Ciuinlijm. J. ?. B1QLK, Cunuh'n. S. ildv fill. 11VJ0. The Car Problem is "Gas" HO^ SOLVES IT GASOLINE is steadily going down in grade. Motor car engineers are much concerned. Some have found a remedy by accepting the Chal' mers principle of Hot Spot and RamVhorn. For this principle has supplied the answer to trie problem of "gas." Hot Spot transforms the raw, inferior "gas" into a fine fuel, sim ply by "breaking up" the particles into a "cloud." RamVhorn, minus abrupt sharp corners, short in length and ingeniously designed, makes the distance "gas" travels from Hot Spot to each cylinder equal. At a velocity estimated at 100 miles an hour the "gas cloud" is rushed through RamVhorn and the results are marked: Quick starting Power r Smooth action -?- - ' Spark plugs seldom foul Absence of engine troubles suck as burned bearings and scored cylinders. The sum of results from Hot Spot and RamVhorn looms large in your mind once you become a Chalmers owner and you, too, will say Chalmers is one of the few great cars of the world. CEO. T. LITTLE Camden, S. C.