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Another Royal Suggestion Biscuits and Cinnamon Buns From the New Royal Cook Book BISCUIT! $o lender they fairly melt In the mouth, and o! such glorious flavor that the appetite is never satis fied. These biscuits anyone can make with Royal Baking Powder and these unusual re cipe* Biscuits ) cups flour 4 teaspoons Royal Baking Powder u teaspoon salt, a tablespoona shortening K cup milk or half milk and half water Sift together flour, baktnr powder and salt, add shortening and rub in. very lightly; add liquid ?lowly; roll or pat on floured board to about ono inch In thlokneaa (handle as little aa poaslble); cut with biscuit cutter. Bake In hot oven. 18 to '20 min utes. Royal Cinnamon Buns 114 cups flour 1 teaapoon salt 4 teaspoon* Royal Making PoWder f tsbleapooua shortening lefff ft oup water tt cup sugar 0 teaspoon a cl/inamon 4 tablespoons seeded , raisins Mtt 2 tablespoons ? >f moar ured augar with flour, salt and baking powder; rub shortening in lightly; add beaten erg to water and add slowly. Roll out ^-inch thick on floured board; brush with melted butter, sprinkle with su> par. cinnamon \ and rai sins. Roll as for Jelly roll; out into IMHnoh pieces, place with cut edges up on well-Kreased pan; sprinkle with a little su gar anil cinnamon. Rake in mod. rate oven 30 to 36 mlnutos; remove from pan at once. ROYAL BAKING POWDER Absolutely Pure Made from Crttm of Tartar, derived from grapM. FREE Write TODAY for the New Royal (Wok Hook; con tains 400 other recipes Just ?s delightful as (base. Address ROYAI. BAKING POWDKUOO. 115 Kultou Street, New York City Since tiu' iufcorporatlon of the Per matM'iit Blind Relief Wlar F<nnd in 1010 no li'.s^ t':in $1,71)0,314.44 haK been follt'tii it In I he organization. The aeuiiMisliip at present exceeds 17, |?00. i It is figured that it will take three years before a soldier can be consid ered 100 per cent efficient after having gone through every phase of soldier ing in the National. Guard of the United States. US Save Money ? Be Comfortable Tklnk of actually Mv>int! mon^ -tfitKout hattntf to mat* stcriflc. of pl??ur? or comfort. ri?v? you ever be?n ?*> to doit before? It not on!? can be done, bul at th? ?am? tun. n?W ?nd ?dd*d comfort* can b? enjoyed. POLE'S ' 4 ORIGINAL HOT BLAST HEATER wO?g }>$ t o ^our fuel bill and at the tame time gi^M -pou doubt* ^Mtin| Com* in arui Ut u* explain th? features *n?J guarantee of ihi* h? ur, ICAMDEN FURNITURE CO. Phone 156 Camden, S. C. WOOD SAWING MACHINE Do not forget that when you buy our Type "W Drug fciaw ma. in no cut of which you have seen In the paper that you buy one with l*>* h Magneto. and which alone sells for about $40. This machine is ?il*o controlled by lever Friction Clutch, which prevents stopping of KngiiH* every tiiuo you wish to stop the Saw. A_nd last, but not least, this Machine s??lls for NO more tlihn the machines that aiv not K,iuii?pf?<| with Bosch Magneto, and do not have Lever Control. COLUMBIA SUPPLY COMPANY 823 West Gervais St., Columbia, S. C. |A Wise Man {insures hi-1 cotton, cotton seed, dwellings, barns an Lldinss before he has a fire. Too late to C.H an agent l'fttr property is burning. We have many of the ry l^told line companies and lowest rates. It wi no I , ka Sec us and |you much to insure against loss and us write your policy before it is too late. fcmden Loan & Realty Company Mi** Ethel C. Rodger*, Manager . Telephone No. 62. liEAR HEAVY LOAD Some of the Trials of Present Day Executives. Man Who Complained That Thora Wara N# (fflclant People In the World Had Some Kxcuaa for Mia Blttar noa# ? Trouble la Moral. Several year* ago, when I had Just been promoted to my Ural real Job. I called ou a business friend uf mluo.ll' Is u wise and experienced handler oi men, 1 asked liliti what suggestions be could make about exeeutlva rwapoual blllty, writer Bruce Harlan, lu the Hed Hook. "You are about to make a great dis covery," be said. "Wllhiu a week or two you will know why It Is tbut ex ecutives grow gruy and die before Uielr time. You will have learued tlu bluer truth that there are no efficient people In the world." . I ain still very far from admitting that he was right, but 1 kuow well enough what he meant. Kver.v wan knows, who has ever been responsible for a piece of work or had to meet a pay roll. " ' Recently another friend of mine built a house. The money to build It represented a dltlicult period uf saving on the part of himself and his wife; It meant overtime work and self-de nial, and extra effort In behalf of a long-cherished dream. One day when Ihe work was well along he visited It, and saw a work man climbing a ladder to the roof with a little bunch (it shingles In his hands. "Lqok here," the foreman fried, "can't you carry a whole bundle of shingles ?" The workman regarded him sullenly. MI suppose I could," he answered, "If I wauted to bull the Job." a By "bull the Job" he meant "do an honest day's work." At 10 o'clock one morning I met still another man In his oltlce In New York. Ho was munching a sandwich arid gulping a cup of coffee which his sec retary had brought In to him. "I had to work late last night/' he said, "and meet a very early appoint ment this morning. My wife asked our maid to have breakfast a half hour early so that I might have a bite and still be here In time. "When I came down to breakfast i lie maid was still In bed." She lives In his home, and eats and | is clothed by means of money which ! his brain provides; bifl she has no Interest-In his success, no care wlui' t'ver except lo do tin- minimum or work. "Th<- real trouble with thc'uorld to dav I* ? niornl trouble,*" said a ihaaghf fui man recently. "A la rue proportion of IN people have lost all conception .if w hat it means to remler a n_ ade quate t-ervlce in return for the wage> they are paid." He Is a generous man. On almost any sort of question his sympathies are likely to 1>e with labor, and so are mine. T nm glad that men work short er hours than they, used lo. and in certain, instances I think tlje hours should be even shorter. I am glad they n re paid higher wages, and Tfope they may earn still more. Rut there are times when my sym pathy goes out to those In whose be half no voice Is ev<*r raised ? to the executives of the world, whose hours Mre limited only by the limit of their physical and mental endurance; who carry not. merely the load of their own work, hut the heartbreaking load of carelessness and stolid Indifference In so many of the folks whom they em ploy. Perhaps the most successful execu tive In history was that centurion of the Bible. ? | "For I am a man of authority, hav ing soldiers under me," he said. "And I say to this man go, and he goeth ; and to another, come, and he cometh ; ond to my servant, do this, and lie doeth It." Marvelous man! ?fhe modern executive also says, "Oo." and too often the man wh?> should have gone will appear a day or two later and explain, "I didn't under stand what you meant." He says, "Come." and at the appointed time hia telephone rings and a voice speaks saying. "I overslept and will be tthere In nhouf. three-quarters of an hour." Sugar Hog Punlahed. A man who came out of the driz zling rain Into h Cincinnati lunch room late at night and ordered a cup of coffee Rnd two rolls, complained when he got check for 14 cents, saying that the bill of fare said that coffee was 6 cents and rolls 4 cents. The prfn>rletor explained that there was it charge of four <-<*nts. because the man. sxfeetenlng his coffee, waa too free with (he rereptarlc that dis charges one spoonful of sugar when Inverted. "I watched you." the pro prietor said. "You dumped five spoon fti's of sugar In your coffee." Planting Trees on Pralrlea. In order to demonstrate to farmers on th?- pin ! n s the advisability and feas ibility 'rf planting trees on the prairies of the West, the Canadian Forestry association Is sending a dem onstration car on n tour of tl?e three western provinces. A railway coach Is being fitted up with a moving picture outfit, lecture hall, and a miniature HUfMfy. The car -wilt travel AVer the bnlfc of the western railway lines. Caecho- Slovakia. The uev. republic of Chechoslovakia has urea of between 50,000 and 00, 000 m piiire miles e?U a population of yj r.nri nno 400 CHAPTERS 2 ARE RUDY FOR 4TH ROLL CALL Rivalry Koon Among Southern Towns To Got Quota Of Hod Cross Members Flrot. Atlauta, Nov.? More than four hundred chapters of t*e American Hod Cross and about three hundred chap ter branches ?ro organised in the southern division ror the Fourth Bod Cross Koil Call. November H-81. "Hy organisation is meant that these chapters and 1?ih4?i-U?s have chairmen committees and \\w enthusiasm to make the Fourth Roll c all M?re;uc oess in their communities. *?ud J. L M c Mill i". soul lu'i n division man ager of the Rod ' Gross, today. "We have reports from every one of them th%* only ?Wtt"ln* the date to begin the campaign. F the wbrkers themselves will renew their memberships in the Red Cross Then every old member will bo called upon to re-enllst under the Rod Cross banner. After that, ovovy effort will he made to got in the territory ot. ??<* chapter as nearly a one hundred p cent membership in the Reft Cross asj I it is possible to g?Jt." , , The southern division includes the five states of Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina. Tennessoo and Flor Ida. Last year the division, for its population, made us fine a record as ??y part of tho country in enrol Ulng Red Cross members. This year it is the eager purpose of every chapter to put the southern division on top ft*A friendly but keen rlvulry exists among the various chapters to be the first to report that their quotas are secured. A different system has boon used this yoar in assigning quotas to the various chapters. Instead of de termining the quota for the division firBt and then dividing this Out among the various chapters, each chapter carefully estimated the amount of mohev needed to finance its needs and its plans during the coming year. ine chapter's quota was then basejl on this amount, and the quota for the entire division made up from the various chapter quotas. Thus the Roll Call this year is more than ever a local proposition in each community. When local people sub scribe to the Red Cross, they are sub scribing to meet local needs, and for every dollar paid for membership in I he Rod Cross, fifty cents will be kept by the local chapter to finance its plaus tor next year. The other fifty cents goes to national headquarters, to maintain the national work of tlTe Red Cross. ?? "Wo challenge every other chapter in the southern division to beat our Roll Call record," wrote one Roll Gall chairman in North Carolina. tend to be tho first 'over the top , for we are laying our plans to get our full quota of members early in the morning of November 11." This spirit is typical of ?the way the vast majority of chapters are awaiting the Fourth Roll Call. It is a rare exception where chapters auo not thoroughly organised and plans worked out to secure the quota of members easily and quickly. Hundreds of newspapers throughout I the southern division will co-opera e with the local Red Cross chapters to make the Roll Call a success. Speak ing of the view with which most Amer icans regard the Fourth Roll Call, one Atlanta paper already has called upon Atlantans to Join the Red Cross in I the following editorial language. "Tho Red Cross Roll Calls are not ?drives', not attempts to raise lay*"? sums of money for untried causes but they Are tnstltutlonr in lhe nation ? life the one time of the year when the' American people, old and young, are asked lo renew tbeir memberships in the organisation that is so expres sive of the national spirit and so great a benefit to the nutlou as a whole. I "The American Red Cross Is differ ent in this respect from the Red cf?8? or other nations, in most of which it IS maintained by large contribution, from the wealthy. The American Red Cross Is essentially democratic. It was founded by the American people. They maintained it for nearly forty years. In the war, thousands of them found in it the opportunity to serv.e they so ardently sought. "So, today, the Red Cross belongs to the American people. It gives ihera I the chance they all want in their hearts to do aome good In the world. Singly their dollars for memberships might amount to little; but matched by millions of other dollars from ev ery part of the country, they become I a mighty factor in caring tor our sol Liiers and sailors; looking after the Interests of the wounded and maimed of the war; safegua ding the discharg ed h?.tv1cc man ami his family; doing the same thing for thousands of un fortunate civilians; bringing public henlth nursing and good health to hun dreds of communities; training our boys and girls in the way they should fco; dc!ng many other things that en ter into the peace-time program of the Red Cross which, in the two years since the signing of the armistice, has been demonstrated to all as one of I thQ finest agencies for public wetfsn I In tho life of the country. "That is what Red Cross member ship dollars can do. It would seem that n* American citlxen, with the good of bis country and his owa co?* munity at heart, would refuse to lit Zoelnnd the glrlti rind women rtH w??ar full long black skirts, white V?l*. tiuy gold H|?lri?U, coral bonds nnd a pronx. Kui<UnU women 1 are pnrtic*!*rljr attractive. Thoy go unveiled aud they lmvo tho at might, UlrtX't look of the UU'Jl GOODRICH TIRE SALE All Firsts, Fully Guaranteed 6,000 miles. No War Tax ? . We Pay It. Closing Out A Big Stock At Unheard-Of Prices 80X3 Smooth $10.50 30X3 Safety $12.60 30X8Vi Smooth $14.50 30 X !t '/a Safety $15.50 38 X 3V4 Safety ' $17.50 82X4 Safely .$24.50 83X4 Safety $25.50 88 X 4 Vfe Safety $32.50 This Sale Will Only Last 10 Days GEORGE T. LITTLE GOODRICH DISTRIBUTOR Camden, South Carolina. MONEY Advanced on Cotton SEE ME J. L. MOSELEY Special prices on Flooring, Ceiling, Siding, Casings, Mouldings, Shingles, Laths, Dressed Boards and Brick. "Everything for the House" ? ? ? * Kershaw Lumber Co. Phone 340 D. H. BELK, Mgr. Camden, S. C. JUST RECEIVED CAR LOAD OF CHEVROLET Touring Cars George T. Little