University of South Carolina Libraries
Kt'MJH W THK ROAD Hint* For Motor l?ts Suggested by Tty I nlted State* Tire Company. CI,,. I ;i (III V4!?',' tllO I WlllCllUfS driver, III* driver who does not forCe kliuxoif to be a "knight" and !?? ' will greatly iuaroaae th<>t danger (Jf motoring to phe j>edcstrlnn, to other drivers and to hlmtfolf, ami Je<?pnrdl*o I !,(? privileges ho has heretofore etc j(?\ ed. , i * What should a driver do? The rules ,i?v very simple: jy>e|i l > the right Of Hie io:*d S.'.ow down ut crossing* / Signal for a slop or turn t?? Hie ?ars |? !iiml by holding out the loft hand. Apply brakes slowly. Change ?i>eed rates slowly. Drive carefully. Me preimred to help any motorist in f roiih'e oil road.<#dlstant frotn garages. U?' prei*ared lo give pedestrians ??)|fts" mi country roads. Slop ear and engine when meeting pixels with sheep, swine or cattle on con 1 1 1 rv road*. I'.iiy only at sftfe of loads, leaving fair way. - . W licit buying prodtjee in the country park aionslde mad, not on the road. When i rarking at niglit leave warn ing lights on. ? * ? Have headlight dimmers nhdv, use ? I h? in when meeting and passing other itplorlsfs a t night. j When picnicking carefully put out I picnic fires. When picnicking do not trespass to Hat her wild flowers, tree branches, blossoms, fruit or rthrnlm. When picnicking elettn up thorough ly. removing from' sight nil cans, pa J ? -? ......... . . . ^ .. ~r>. ' !v; h and rubbish. mvtt (ill . vehicles. eH)ii??lally l(xi(l(Hl I rurks, H good half o? rue ro^d. I Take hills oh the riu'lil >dde of t In' road. <io ovor the crest carefully, AVOtd roasting or .-.peed tug tiriMind curves .at r<?*>t of liil Ih. 1 M-v oi'iwttMum (o pcdcst t in n* po uoi tlr'yo cm- Jit thorn full 1 1 1 1 un i l.t ughVv hen they Jump. 1 >t? not splash ? a r <>p i hem aVf t hey stand at cross !iiv>i <>r near curbs, waiting for you t?? < pass. A v id street earn carefully at stops, t. miii and follow the local traffic .lies, speed limits and drlvhllf ordi nances. These arc made for the coin* mon Rood of all driver** IjaclUdlUK your self and all pedestrians. With these practices universally fob 1 lived !>y driven#, motorists will main t iln its safety. Its freedom, Its stand ing and Its favorable acceptance l?y the community. Five years ago such surest loti* as these were unneces- ' sary. Today, when tweh eleventh i>er son i wiis a car, it Is vitally necessary to have drivers recall the days of chiv alry. Crowded and still more crowded , street? and road* have produced a nn-j tlon-wlde problem whose simplest so lution Is n return to the courtesy of the days when knighthood flowered, The automobile Is too vital to the ini tio i. too much a (part of the blood and 'mm ie of the country's economic life to jhuve its use curtailed through the fall-j ure of Its users to follow the rules of simple courtesy a Ad safety. ?United .States T(re CV>. Mrs. .lullctlc Low, founder of the (Jl'rl Scouts movement, is seventy years Mfc . ' . "I ' ' . , " ? .".j| No Red Tape in Joining Qur '<"?> >? ... ' _ ' ? '* Christmas Savings Club i Just 9ii y, Harkis Is willing and get your pai?s Hook. You will rlioii bo hnppy 011 your way * Mo a PRUT-FREE OJtRISTMAS next yra r. . .. 4 \ Vou cau look tin- problem of Cluiat uias Squarely in the eye. A Ten Dol lar Kill in tJio hand is bettor than a lot ? if Unpaid Hills on January 1st. You Can Join Today. A l*lai? Tor Kverj I'urse. Any of Tliom Spell Christmas Cheer. MAKE YOUR BUILDING A LANDMARK To do so it must be permanent and beautifal. Use the Palmetto Brick ? they are the best and prices are right. See Leroy S. Davidson & Company Camden, South" Carolina F Life Insurance Protects mortgaged real estate. A "Life" Policy pays the mortgage if the. bor rower dies. It gives him time to discharge the obligation ii" he dies. An "Endowment" Policy pays ofT the mortgage whether the borrower lives or dies. ? V 4& * Southeastern Life Insurance Co., r < ^5r / - ? ? (> ? -< L. A. McDowell, Agent ? "" - - ^ V - - - : When Will Good Old Times Return? SO.MK SAY AIHH T IN THK SI?IUN<i As Day Follows Night, and as rUHnl Tiiiii Follows Kbb, So Must lMrn ty Follow Famine. The Literary IMge^t says : As day follows night, and follows ebb, sii hicvttiiMy mwd the ex isting bllstuOSH llUprC'HMloil #01110 Muu?! ( onto to mi q ml and the Infloodlng tide, of prosperity begin to rise, At least, go1 nil our historians, economists, bankers, ami fltmnelnl nuthorltloa agree (lut what the anxious business man as?s Just tn?\v is. "When will the tble turn, when will the dawn break, when will the buyer eease from striking and the .wheels of Industry again begin to re voire? To those questions, after a care ful search of the dally ami financial press, we are at least able to give an answer from men who know whereof they speak,. "The Federal Hosefiwe monthly beulletln. the Annalist, the our rent report of the Harvard Co awn It tee on economic res ?rch, the review of the National City Hank." as" il Is noted in The Nation, "all agree In a general oyneclailon that the Industrial depres sion accompanying the proc.-ss <>f detla tlon wlM last Into the spring, but that a revival Is due to begin by March or April." Other authorities who venture predictions agree In a general way that while the depression is likely to he w rse before it Is better, there are already simis of improvement, and a definite recovery Is to l>e expected some say, by the end of the present month; others' put the date a if y where! from one to six mouths in the future. Mr. A. \V. Douglas who heads the com mittee on statistics uf the United States Chamber of Commerce, in a report bused on investigation throughout the country, makes the encouraging decla ration that "we are near the bottom of the depression, or will bo In.the ne^t thirty days." In a forecast prepared for Forbes, the hanking Html brokerage firm of Ilornblower & Weeks asserts, its belief "that the current industrial depression will end in February." Mr. E. O. Catte'i. Philadelphia city statisti cian predicted at a recent luncheon in New York that the end of. the business depression will come in February or March, that from then on for :i period of two or tliroe months business would improve slowly, and by October should he going ahead at full speed. 1< rank F. Porter, chairman Of the Finance Committee of the National Industrial Council, last month predicted better httstnes* conditions within ninety days. The Harvard economic committee holds to its forecast that "the recession of business now in progress will ^terminate J by April 1021." John Moody, the au thority on securities, is convinced "Uhat j a business revival will occur during] 11)21, and especially after the end of the first quarter; for sm-h a revival is ( definitely foreshadowed by Jthe present abundance of material and labor, and by the aluindanco of capital which we will prohaldy soon see." The December letter of the Alexander Hamilton insti tute contains a careful survey of the prospects of business revival. In . the tir?t place, It is asserted that the bank-j luir' crisis was reall.v^passed in Novem- 1 her, a statement supported in part by I the drop in the interest rates on call, loans and time loans. 'The predic- j tiotk^thjM money rates will be much easier in 1021 i- based by the cer tainty tbat both the farmer and re tailer will have to pny off losiiis in large amounts durina the coming j months and that lean re<pilnnents in 1021 will be conspicuously smaller." There is thought likely to l>c llrtle large scale expansion by corporation before 1022, I ioeause of interest charges. "Hy the summer of 1021 conditions may favor a moderate degree fd" new con struction work and retail buying, but during the first half of 1021 we shall "have to pass through the i>eri<?d of li quidation which normally comes be tween prosperity and tb? point of porn pleto readjustment." The low 'prices, which come with depression hear in themselves the conditions necessary for revival. First, "they produce easier n,..ney conditions and stimulate the Is- j ?iu e of bonds :" Secondly, "low prices in themselves stimulate larger purcha ses. There are many tnou*ands ??f peo ple wn i t i oj? to buy furniture, clothinu. luxuries when prices appear to be at the end of their decline Honor Koll For Logoff (iraded School. (IratU' 1. luring Itlackinon. f'ole in. in Itranham. (JriKlo 2. ? Evelyn < Jetty#. I>eshi Kirk land. John .NIKVin, Melon Uotri>oro. Mol ita Team (irade H. -Olarowc m*\VItf, I<ouis Oulon, Hayinond lite, Leroy Mason. Mary I xv Ward. Allee Itranham. Car ric ltranham. John IJranham. J T. Cameron, Luelle Ward. Orado 6^- Jemel Ilabon. <)rad?> 7. ? Alex S. Hey ward. John I>ee, Allie Awmonii, Martha Ofclcaby. fJrade & ? Bertha Jonea. T/onl.<?e fta hon. Loey MoCaa. (irado ft ? Thorn a ? Kooburo. STARTS HIM ON NEW TACK Mr. Hilltop* Kecontldeff Subject AfUr Gentle Reminder From Hli Very Much Better H*lf. "Tin midnight the young man stn.vs sometimes," said Mr, Hilltops, "liUii! as I sil with Mrs. hilltops wait* Iuk I wonder If ho will over go. Ton or hull po?T i* as late as I ihluk lie ought to stay, ami 1 have devised many plans to shirt him about that hour; bun t<> everything I suggest Mm. Hill top*. smilingly says no, and so 1 sit and t>ei ami fume mid got more and more nervous, " 'I-- ;lds it now custom?' I say to Mrs It., souiothlug that has come in with the nut n y new-fangled ways of tht |t??srlil duyf % " Ms it it m-w custom V says the (UnM* itig Mi Hilltop*, 'Why, It Is h cus tom as oh) us time. Don't you reraem her how laio you used to stay when you niiMr calling on met' "Ami really It was quite a shock to me, that ivmlnder; tor I will admit that 1 was myself u frightfully late stayer. 'Iltii dirt her father come In with a largo cltth at about 10:30 and 4ny to me that ho thought now wuh about timo f??r mo to g??? Never I In ft km ho was always very kind to me. tut I now gratefully r.umombor; but i now here was I getting nil wrought | up biH-auso a young man stayed late In my luuise. ? ?-Crown older, I had come to have fixed and settled habits, and I like to see the whole household ordered in like manner ami keeplnjg regular ab<t oarl> hours. Hut I was reminded now that vouth looks at things from a dif ferent point of view; youth takes lit tle nolo of time: to youth Hooks are of no interest. "So. thinking back, and as l see hero the smiling face of the blessed Mrs. Rllltops, I wait with a somewhat bet ter grace for the young man to go." Clay Passed Joke Along. Henry Clay made a speech in New York one time, ami amon|? his hearers was Miohaol WaMi. afterward h con gressman, hat at the tlmo uu appren floe in a printing oilloe. Ills fellow workers dared him to shake hands with Clay, whose rooms were directly opposite I ho shop whore Walsh worked. Never taking a dare, the ln> pulslve apprentice ran across the street and Joined I he line of guests who were passing Clay and shaking his ITfind. Walsh had not stopped to wash his liaud.s. and the result wus Mint tli" groat orator after shaking hands with the shirt-sleeved young man found his palm stloky_wlth print ers' Ink. t He looked at the mess for a mo ment with a grim smile slowly up pouring on his face. Without a word of reproach he allowed the print er s laiy fo go on his way, hut he ton* care that those waiting In line dirt not see what had happened to him. Many of those 'assembled wore while kid gloves, and all were dainty and clean of hand, day calmly con tinned to shake hands, and guest after guest departed with daubs of Ink on hand and glove. By the time the last one had gone Clay's hand was clean. Appropriate Name. There were a husband and wife who had many quarrel*. But a woman uovit I* a fair antagonist, because she al ways weeps during every quarrel In order to win her point. The other night she brought homi*? as a bargain at greatly increased prloos ? a now pale mauve hat, which sln> proudly .exhibited to her husband. lie did not like It. and pnx-eodod to say so. ''Why. it Ux?l<s queer, even t<> the dog." ho ended. '"Look how he's bark ing at it ' Ho thinks It's a squirrel In ? l roe !" "I>o you rftll me a tree?" s|-e cried, and then hoenn ro cry. ?'! shall go home to mother! I suppose you're go ing to say next that I'm either a larch or an ugly oh! oak tree!" "No." he smiled blandly. " I should think a weeping willow would he a more appropriate name." On to Battle. In a small town upstate there was not one person who knew how to play the organ at the church. At last a girl who could play Just a few arid very few hymns at that. cmne to the town. One day the preacher asked the or ganist: "Can you play a wedding march for a wedding tomorrow?" The .organist replied : "I am very sorry, but I do not know one note Af n wedding march." The preacher knew that t hc> must have some kind of tnuslc for the wed. ding, so he said : "IMay the nearest thing to a wedding march that you I- now." I he bride *n?l brhb*gr??om ca t?e flown the nisle. "'Onward Christ!*1 Soldiers" was the tune that rolled forlh rr> ?rn the organ.? Indianapolis N'ew* Disappearing Native Race. N';itlve Hawaiian* are facing e*r inc : ion. and If the present ratio of hlrth* and deaths is maintained the remain ing life of the race will ho only about 7."> years. At present there are ap proximately 2f?.0nn natives of pure* t?lfvjd on the island*. ?nrt ref>ort* for past years show thejj number to he rapidly decreasing. ? Popular Mechan ic* Magazine. What Makasr'a Wave Wild? Bos* ? Von nufrht to ehange hair dressers, Tea*. Tesa (ftlgldty) ? Indeed. fisri - Just ttn. An a friend to frie?d I'm telling ><*i th?( year mtrrtl ??t? M ? fvo choppy ? Buffalo Riprm Phone 66 We specialize on Telephone Orders. Prompt Delivery. Brace s Pure Food Store ^HONE 66 VtivitifN of WoilM'H. .? means of self-defense Ia)U(I(>ii policewomen art* laugbt jiu-jitsu. l/.uml Is considered the greatest wo man port 111 .fa<i>aii. Women are now cligiVde to ho|d pub 1 lie office in Pennsylvania. Turkish women arc fast quitting so elusion for work In the outside world. A now profession for wouion is that of educational director for storew. The women of Mexico Olty have formed an anil alcohol society. Wuinen voters lu the new republic of ( '-/.echo-Slovakia outnumber the men by liberal margin. More than lO.Ooo women are em ployed In Industry on the Island of Madeira A liill before i lie (ieiuiau Kelchsta:: provides that woliieU t?e made eligible to -Serve as judges' and State attor no.vs. Infirmities of ,-me and Increasing deafness has caused Dowager Q\u?en Alexandra, of (.real Hrltain. to for sake society. In the newly organized University of Ulo do Janeiro, women will he eligi ble for all teaching and administrative post<?. The leadinu divorce ceilte!' of the I'niied Slates i> now in Seattle. Wash., j where during the last year more limn .2,500 divorces wore granted. Vr :? recent convention of tin- 1 >eino 'crats in Germany a resolution was *7M**ed which favors w<nnan's Hon of i he Foreign office. More than -IS j?er <*ent of Immigrants from Italy during the past year were women. This is an Increase of nearly 'J."? per cent over the pro-war period. In Slam many women are employed on the railways and roads where they In army* workshops, In factories and ; are paid the same rates :is men for i equal work. ' ? ) .Mile Adrieiine Haiaml, known as the cadi IIU "aee" ?.f l lio French )illSv4MU0li will make a lour of South Amor leu. ^presenting her country as aerial mis sionary. SOUTH (MltOI.'lNA STATIC MK1T1 WAV DF.I'AKTMiKNT; F, A. PKO JECt, NO. ?t; KF.RSIIAW CO. Not ire to Contractors HUls will In* mviyrd ftl 12 0'ch?oK Monday, January Mist, 1021, at the ??f fire* -of tin* Hoard of County Com mis sinners of Korshaw County, C? union. S. for (ho construction of S.X72 ml Irs of tin* Camden- nishopvil le lioad. ami, tlu* bridges thereon, between station SJ-: ,'{7 nrar Camden ami tho Leo County line. In Kertfinw county. Tin* road work consists <>t! nil the necessary clcnr.iug and grubblnjr. I*?*INI el i-l tic yards rominon ex<?i va lion, 21.S.T2 euhfc yards sand rlay sui faclntr. l(l,8-lU.\f. '.lineal feel mixln;: and shaping sand rlay, iMl7.r> linoni fort V. < '. pipe or ronrrrto l>lpr. 01) II lira I fcrt relnforrrd concrete |>i;pc. .'54.2 cubic iards class "A" concrete. 227 H pounds strrl ? rr-lnforcrnv'ut in box culvert and 7-^.S cubic yard? rlass "11" ronrrrtr In hcadwalls. Tlir brhlgework consists ol' a l)N t. foot timber trestle containing npproxi matcly 1 1.052 F. 11, M. creosoted lum ber 1MH? F. H. M. untreated lumber K<M) 1 1 nrn I frrt creosoted piling, 1077 pounds hardware, and 11H? square yards bituminous surfacing. Proposal* must l?r? ' accompanied bj certified check or corporate surety bond for Five Hundred Dollars < $500.00) madr paynhlt*, to the chair man of the board of county com nils sionrrs of Krrshaw county. ? Separate bids will br received for both classes of worS howrvrr, If hid is submitted for both road ami bridge work- only ono chock will .bo required. ?Plans. KjsM'ifiratlons ami pw>|K>Hal forms are oil file at office of \V. L. Klrklamt, County engineer, Camden. S. f\, at tho oflflCe <?f J. P. tiregory. Division Knginrrr, C/ohimlila, S. (3.. in id' nt the officr of the Stnte High way Kngin'eer. Columbia, S. O. Plans niid ?|>eelfl cations may he obtained at tin* latter address upon request, ac ; eompanled by check for five dollars | <$5.(X)> which will be refunded If pl^tis arc returned, in good condition within thirtv days after receipt of . bids. t Double - Barreled Service Yt/HEN you buy i H C machines, you * * also buy the Ser vice that goes with them? the co-operation that exists between us and the International 1 harvester Com pany, and which we intend to continue with you. We expect to hold your con fidence in* the 1 11 C line by furnishing the best implements, machines and farm operating equipment on the market. We render to you a double-barreled Service in not only supplying you with first-class goods, but in seeing that these goods are kept in perfect running order long after the original sale is for gotten. Genuine Repairs Our moral obligation does not stop with the original sale, but you can hardly expect us to assume any responsibility for the successful operation of I H C machines if you buy imita tion repairs of inferior quality instead of buying genuine I H C Repairs. We sell only genuine 1 H C Repairs made by the Harvester Company, and which are made of the same materials as used for the original machines. No imitation equals the genuine. Play safe! SPRINGS & SHANNON #Camd?n, S. C.