University of South Carolina Libraries
TratpuKH Not Ire. AH persons are hereby forMdden (<? t realms* U|H?n my lauds k? t?i? t ??<t Id K< i - *haw County*, ahout four mile* South fiist of <'asMuf, for h tinting, fishing vr for any other i>urtH>#e. Any iwrsoJi found disregarding i t|ds notice will he dealt with according to la w. Mrs. II. \V. Humphries. 'JT-'JOihI, Oct i, lDJO Executor's Notice. All |m it Indebted to the estate of ifa uies itiislmne, deceased, art* h*re> hv notified In make pi yni?'nl !?> the ondersiKm'd, and all parties, if any, having Olaims against the said estatd will present them duly attested within t It? I inn1 prescribed hv luw, JAMBS W. STUVKU KxceUtOr Lata to of Jaimw Brisbane Cannl'm,- S. <\, H< iiu-inlu-i, 20th, 1024>. FINAL DlHCHARtUK Not loo 1* Hereby given that on<' month from this <la t<*. on Monday, November 8th, 1020, 1 will make to t ho Probate Oo^rt of Kershaw Coun ty my tlual return an Guardian of the ?-?tate of Clyde Waters, h<* having at tained lib* majority, and on the name dato 1 will apply to the said 0<>urt for a Until discharge from my trust ax Mild Ouiirdlan. A\fA.\r>A E. HALL, Guardian. TrespusH Notice. A'l persons are forbidden to trespass ?ii n?y lands situated in Kershaw bounty, two miles sofith of Cassatt, for hunthiKt hauling straw, wood, eto. Violators will 1)0 dealt with according to law. .1. II. Katcliff. 28-3 lpd/ FINE OFFICE POSITIONS t'uyliiK splendid Hilarys are recorded 4'vfry day at our employment bureau. We can fill only one fourth of the pos1 ti??us listed;. If you want n position with a hank or a hlgl} class business 'house when* future iKlvatiremoht is assured, pre pare -now l?y taking our hiislnoss course. We 'gun ntnlee positions as soon as stud cuts are fitted to take them. Cor par licitJars. writ* Draughon's Columbia, S. ('. ^ COLUMBIA LUMBER & MANUFACTURING CO. MILL WORK SASH, DOORS, BLINPS AND LUMBER PLAIN & HUCjER STS. Phono 71 COLUMBIA, S. C. School Days will be pleasanter if the childrens eyes are in good con dition. EYES EXAMINED and GLASSES FITTED M. H. HEYMAN & CO. Jewelers and Optometrists DR. R. E. STEVENSON DENTIST ( roikor Building Camden, S. C. Dr. C. F. Sowell DENTIST (Office Over Bruce's Store) CAMDEN, S. C. j Collins Brothers j Undertakers for Colored People ^ TeUpbone 41 714 W. D?K lib S< GOOD IN POVERTY Mr. Gosfrngton Does a Uttto Philosophizing. 8ee# Much Benefit in the N?c???itj to Work and Aleo |n the Worry Which Falle to the Lot of Majority of Mankind. "(Jllmmerhy, my friend (iliuuncrby," nald Mr. (ioHllOKtoik, "propounds Un til oo ry that hoth poverty and worry ure conducive U> longevity; and i think 1 1 hi*' is something in that. i am not no Mire, about the worry, and yet I liilnk even that may be true. 1 can see, for Instance, that if a man worried hard euough lie would keep himself lean and ho escape the Ills und Inconvenience* uttendant Upon obesi ty; hut tiiat poverty tends to lengthen life I have uo doubt whutever. "The man who is poor, as we moat of us are, has to work for a living. Surely it is iti work that we are most blessed; and tf we have work to do In which we are interested, that appeals to us, then are we fortunate Indeed; we tlnd a pleasure in lalfc>r and a Joy iu accomplishment ; and It makes me smile to think how In such work we forget our worries entirely. "So we don't really need to consid er whether worry Is a life prolonger or not; all we want to lengthen our days Is to be poor, poor enough ho that we have to work and keep 'plug ging; but I do wonder that Gllminerby did not mention along with poverty jiml worry, aji among the things thut might fend to prolong life, our physi cal aliments. "Some years ago a friend of mine began to lose weight and he kept on In that way until lie had lost pounds. Then be consulted a doctor. It was something that could be check ed, controlled and perhaps entirely cured If the patient would follow faith fully the prescribed treatment; and then In* wiih told that the general bene fit/* he would derive from the Ueut inciit were such thut his life might he' prolonged to ii greater limit than It would have reached if he bad never had this ailment at all. "I might add that this friend has now regained several of hi.s lost pounds, he is feeling very chipper and cheerful atnl he fully expects to live r<> he a very old man. "The fact Is that many things that ?we ma\ look at. when they come upon u*. us drawbacks are in reality blesa , lugs in disgUise." Australians Well Off. In no part-of the* world is there a I population apparently better fed and j better provided vviih the ordinary ' necessaries of life than in Australia and New Zealand. Thore Is an ab sence of indicatiops of poverty, and In the cities slums are rare. On the streets there is a healthy, bustling 1 population of a type more like the dwellers In the cities of the middle West than those of London or Liver pool. The visitor recognizes the self reliant spirit of a pimple detached from the rest of the world who have their own problems to solve, and are pe culiarly ready to accept luriovnttonS. There Is a great fondness for sports, football, tennis, surf bathing, which Is possible nil the year round In portions of Am* rutin, nnd, most of all, for horse racing, in connection with which there is a great amount of gambling, which the state sanctions by taking a certain percentage of the sales In the pool rooms.? Exchange. Old Rome Has Paper Shortage. I.e Figaro of Paris has unearthed for Its readers what It believes Is the wurlil's first recorded paper shortage. It quotes from the "<"n userles du Fundi" where Salnte-IleuvH, translat ing from Pliny, soys that under Tibe rius thorp was such n scarcity of pa per In the Roman empire that It was necessary to appoint senators to regu late distribution ; In other words, a congressional board of control. Salnte-Beuve, grown cynical in his da.v of excessive erudition, books, Ink find paper, added : "How welcome such a shortage would bo now ! Hut such things hap pened only under nbcrlns. We can not hope for like happiness today." Le Figaro finds Salnte-Ileuve re freshing reading, but In View of the Pit nation In Wjo, unduly appreciative of Tiberius. Sheep Should Be Sheep. A recently published book dealing ?Hh political and social HflTairs in I'll gland is <iillp,.l "The Island of She. p." utilise authors (one of whom J 1- a pro:u:uc!.t British statesman) art- j d -ct; spd jis "<'adtnu?" and "liar , 1 1 ?i " Tb e ?.heep referreil to are ' the Fn* .sit ,md the i *- ! m i > ? I Orent , |lrii:i n The Hutcher* Advocate. ; aro?;s. r! t \ the happy thought of an j Inland "Med With muttons. \?rltes for, a t opy of "Cfldniuv II H^rinonia" to; review. "it be!nj( tlo>> < 1 a 1 ni , "of exceptional Interest to 'he people re;v bed br our week'y." River Football Revived Some athletic enthusiasts of I>erby phire Knjrlar.d. h:i\ <? recently revived The gnmr of rive- f^o'bri!!. which l.i said to br a condonation i >f polo, soc cer I !isk'-!! a!!. w t est:,:..v >\viminin? an?4 j ? I? :s ? .-xactly r "la ! > s l;i China's Thirrt for Education. The p>idd?-r> dernai.d f r popular edit- i cation In '"hlna I" ?hown h\ the fart j that *h." ??<"!, ooi attendance ri >"ie prov I n? ?? he- increased p e- ct-nt In fi\e yea rs? MANY HAVE WRITTEN OF WAR Prom Homer to the Present D?y Cor respondents Have Accompanied the Armies In the Field, War corrcspoiHlfmtS, who have a (IIhI I i i y, (i i o I u-< I place in latest hum ors lift, form mm him lent tribe If Wt reckon Hyiiier a* out* of them. re mark* ib<? Manchester GuurdijiU. Sutherland Kdwards maintained ti>at the ft) i (<>r of it Greek paper entitled t'hronos sent I r out to Troy to deaerlhe t Ito Incident H of the siege. i v\ l?i?-li Yenliy Ins i f<l only ahoui weeks, Cut when It wa? tit an '<>??<! < I i*k Greek chiefs 1 1 1 1 < I no desire what ever to go home; ami as Hoiner (or 'O'Maher" -to give hU name In Ha: original un-Hcileolzed form) wax a very good tvijtjw and drew a largo sal' ary with un abundant-* allowance for expanses. he readily accepted the Idea proposed i?> the wis# tnysses - 1*? keep \l?e war going in the column* of his (?a per a? loot,' as he Could manage to write about It. UN correspondence was too good not to publish; and meantime the Greek chiefs went about amusing themselves. There Were no newspaper corre spondents In the peninsular war, nor In the Waterloo campaign ? though Rothschild. In 18ir?, had a correspond ent of iila ojvn who kept close to Wellington's army and supplied bis employer with news of high tiuanwlal value. After the peace of 1 H 1 the llrst war of Importance in Kurope was the one between the OarHsts ami the Ohrjatlnos i^Spain. which, beginning In 18.'11, dragged on In desultory fash Ion until 1KM7, when, a British legion having been formed to assist tiie Chris tines, it attracted much attention, li. this country. British opinion was di vided. Queen Christina finding support among the Whigs. I ion Carlos among the lories. Both armies were accused of committing atrocities, so the Times and the Morning I'ost sent correspoud cuts to t be Cnrilst ennip with instruc tions to find .out bow the war was really being carried on. Capt. Ilen nlngsen, who represented the Times, was an admirable writer and a profes sional soldier, whereas Charles Gru neiaeti, who went on behalf of the Post, possessed no military experience. Still, lie proved the more successful' of the two, for I lenningsen's letters never reached the Times, Gruneisen's, on itbe other hand, appeared in the Morning I'ost, and on this rests tin* claim put forward, not by Gruueisen himself \l?ut by his friends, for class ing liltn as the earliest of our . war correspondents. Now the "Flivver" Airplane. The perfection of a small, simpli fied airplane with a purchase price find upkeep within the reach of the average man, has often been at tempted in both tvurope and America. < >ne of the latest American attempts bus resulted in t lie completion Of a little monoplane, says Popular Me chanics Magazine, that measures only twenty-five feet eight inches In span, weighs only TlfHi pounds when empty, yet is very satisfactory in per formance. The single seat body Is of the monoctpie, shell type, with the four struts of the pylon rising in front of the cockpit. Brin ing wires stretch from iitA ? ??? eight1 points on the spnrs of the right and left wing. Ailerons are of the wine tip, unbalanced variety. A twin' cylinder, opposed engine drives the machine, giving it a* maximum I of seven ty-five miles an hour with a load of LTitl pounds. The Unmistakable Cockney. Lady <Jei?rginna I tells some good stories in her "Recollections." One concerns Iter father indnw, General Pwl. II?> was at a banquet In Paris. Mis trusting liis capability of conversing In French, lie talked during most of the dinner to a neighbor who he knew liked airing his Kngllsh ; but after a time he made up his mind lie must talk to Hi*- silent French gentleniRn on his left. He gathered his French together, and hazarded a rvniark: "Quelle chamhre magnlfique !" he said, wltli many distinctly foreign gesticulations. The man leant towards him confi dentially. General Feel braced himself to understand. "Ain't a patrh on our Gulld'all." was the whisper that reach ed him with an unmistakable accent. Woman Question Again. Oih- day Karl Mdwln llarrlman mane a pilgrimage to General Wes ton's Connecticut farm and on the fust lap of the Journey took :i jitney. The driver had his wife on the front seat with l.lm and ITarrlman noticed later that it ?as the wife who rollect ed the fare. As they traveled the ed itor spoke about the author. "It's Just like r.eorgo Weston's Im pudence to write stories about wom en." v:t:d Mrs. Jehu. "What does he know a b"ti t women? Ain't '?<n mar r ied !" "That :i:n't no .argument " ?n d the Jitney driver. sadh. "ma\be !.?? knows to<> n 1 1 F .red n ? ; < I. n!><>ut em ?n pit mar ried." Thorough Job of Destruction. Funk. :? trixknism n? Win ded, I'tinn ? rjlnjr fo w'i m auction r uair<<n w Inch b!o? -??\eral vejirs njr" found ' * a f r obod v w' o u 1 d bid rrore than ?*?"? for If. n.vher than w!l It fo anybody at that price, he t<w>k t)i?? w a iron *0 ft'1"1 ? T ! % iT u m p, pulle I if to p.'cee .. threw the bolts In various directions, n,nd? u pi;? of the w hee' ? flawed The wagon on fop Bprinkl'd Ve;vy,M?ne a!! over the h??p ! -"Are and leff the dump. ?->?t,%fled ? no one wi\;Id get his wa^oii for a ?'>ng. Smokeless and Black Powder* Waterproof i. ? - - '? Money-Back Shot-Shells You can get your money back for The Black Shells if, for any reason at all, you don't like them. Just bring back the unused part of the box, and we will refund to you, without question, the pricc of the whole box. The Black Shells have reached so high a state of perfection in waterproofing, in speed, in power, and in uniformity ? that we can make this unlimited guarantee.^ BLACK SHELLS Smokele ss and Black Powder/J Try The Black Shells, if you don't know them. You can get your pet load for every kind of shooting, in smokeless or black powders. UNITED STATES CARTRIDGE COMPANY, New York, Manufacturers Cmuio in and get a copy of Tho U, S, Came Law Bonk ? FPT.F. We make exactly the same guarantee with (^CARTRIDGES There it no 22 Long Rifle cartridge as ac- , curate at distances from 50 to 250 yards as U. S. 22 N. R.A. Long Rifie Lcstnok Cartridges. This is 50 more yards of ac curacy than has hitherto been possible with 22 rim-fire ammunition. Solid bullet for target work. Hollow-point bullet for small game. Cost no more. Ask for circular C-93. BURNS & BARRETT, Camden, S. C. MACKEY MERCANTILE CO., Camden, S. C. OF DRY GOODS i And Shoes, beginning Saturday, October 16th, 1920. I have decided that I would sell my entire stock of Dry Goods and Shoes at a greatly reduced price in order to correspond with the low price of cotton. I am reducing my price from 10 to 30 per ceit and you will do well to take advantage of these prices as my stock is good, clean new goods. Remember, the Sale begins Saturday, October 16th. Come early and get the best bargains. Below I am naming a few prices: DRESS GOODS Dress Gingham, price 55c per yard, now 45c Dress Gingham, price 45c per yard, now 35c. Dress Gingham, price 40c per yard, now 32c. Apron Gingham, price 30c per yard, now 25c. Percales, price 45c per yard, now 35c. Dress Suiting, price $2.25 per yard, now .... $1.40 Dress Suiting, price $1.50 per yard, now $1.00 Bleaching, price 45c per yard, now 35c. Bleaching, price 35c per yard, now 25c. Outings, all colors, price 45c per yard, now.. 35c. CLOTHING Boys Suits, price $15.00 now selling at .... $12.50 Boys Suits, price $12.00 now selling at $9.50 Boys Suits, price $9.50, now selling at $7.50 Men's Suits, price $45.00, now selling at .... $35.00 Men's Suits, price $35.00, now selling at .... $28.00 SHIRTS Men's Dress Shirts, price $5.50, now $4.75 Men's Dress Shirts, price $3.50, now $3.00 Men's Dress Shirts, price $3.25, now $2.75 HATS Men's Fine Hats, pi'iced at $7.50, now $6.50 Men's Fine Hats, priced at $6.50, now $5.75 I have a lot of Mens new Hats at $1.25. > This is a real bargain. UNDERWEAR Men's Underwear, priced at $3.00 suit, now $2.50 My Stock Includes Many Things not Mentioned Here This Sale is Strictly for Cash. Don't Ask For Credit W. T. DAVIS, - Cassatt, S. C