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Child Welfare Truck. Two successful clinics were held on Monday, one at tho Wateree Mill vil lage when thirty ftVP ( hi|(li'<'ii wcic examined by Dr. S. ('. Z< nip and l)r. C, A. West and the usual number of defects found. A clinic for the colored children whh held at the school for colored children, Dr. J. P. Plekctt ex amining. Wednesday Dr. K. Z. Truesdale was in charge of a .splendid clinic in Bu thune when sixty-one young children were examined. Another clinic under Dr. Truosdalo was held at ('asxatl with twenty present. On Thursday morning a clinic will Ik- held a,t the Hermitage Mill village under i>r. ftun.p, In the afternoon l)r. iJaudvi-s will attend a clinic at LugofT. I . truck which is sent out by the JUi eau <>f Child Hygiene of the State Ilonid of Health will be in Camden on Friday, and^will park at the old Court H<nue. The hours for the clinic will bo 10 tooJU a.m. and 2. to <1 p. m. Dr. W. Cornell, of Columbia, baby .specialist will bo in attendance - as sisted by loeal dot-tors. The first and second grades will be examined for ear, throat and nose troubles in the aftei noon. i)r. Ralph Dunn of Sum ter will be in charge of this examina tion. Is your child up to the standard? Wedding in Colored Society. (Written for Trie Chronicle. )v The marriage of Daisy I). Pickett to Sidney . I. Hemphill of Rock . Hill, S. ('.. was solemnized at the home of the bride's brother, Dr. J. I'. I'ickett, on Wednesday afternoon, September lDth, at 0 :?{() o'clock. A host of ad miring: friends assembled for the oc casion and Mother Nature aided gen erously by lending all her charms to the occasion, for the afternoon was clear and beautiful. .The bridal arch which had been very neatly arranged back in the alcove of the spacious parlor, was beautifully bedecked with ?n artistic entanglement of ivy, ferns and goldenrod. The gentle chiming of wedding bells heralded the up- i p roach of the party. Music for the occasion was render ed by Alta Mai Thompson, pianist and Washington, violinist; vocal selection, 44I love you," by Mrs, Reese of Rock Hill. The bride was escorted in by ber brother, Dr. J. P. Pickett. Rev. W. P. Williams of Winnsboro officiat ed. The bridal' party consisted of the following: Ella Pickett, maid of honor, Blocker of Beaufort, bride's maid and- Hemphill of Rock Hill. Kiln Pickett as usher to the bfide, Hays of jRock Hill, best man, and Hunt and (.lathings, Charles Pickett, son of Dr. Pickett, as ring bearer. ? The bride was dressed in a coat suit of blue tricot ine, with hat and accessories to match and bore a beau tiful bouquet or roses and ferns. The i bride's maid was dressed in a gown of pink mesaline satin with hat and ac cessories to match, and bouquet of roses and ferns. The other bride's maid wore a pale blue mesaline satin trimmed in black spanish lace, and hore- a bouquet of roses an J ferns. The maid of honor, Klla I'ickett, wore a gown of gray canton crepe. The little flower girls were dressed uni formly in white organdie. The men were uniformly dressed in black. Tuxedos. At the end of the j ceremony the guests were served with ice cream and cake and shortly after awards th? entire party accompanied by many friends motored to the sta tion wheyee the newly weds entrained] enroute fo Washington, \vhe.t;e they I will spend their honeymoon.. FINAL DISCHARGE. Notice is hereby given that one month from this date, on Saturday, November 10th, we will make to the Probate Court of Kershaw County our final return as Executors of the estate of Mary J. Jordan, de ceased, and on the same date we will apply to the said Court for a final dis charge as said Executors. FREDDIE C. JORDAN, MARTIN L. JORDAN, Executors. Camden, S. C., October *lth, l!)2?t. | ? FIRST- WEEK J U ROUS. : ? For October Term Which Convenes .Monday, October 22nd. II. !>. dusk ins, Kersliaw. L. A. Shiver, Camden. ?Amos'' West, Iiethune. J. H. Hinson, Jr., LugofF. Roland McCoy, Camden, I?. S. Taylor,. Kershaw. J. G. Cunningham, Camden. E. II. Watts, LugofT. \ 11. J. RatclitT, Lucknow. .1. R. Brannon, LugolT. W. J. Parker, Cassatt. M. II. Morton, Bethune. I). M." Jonoa, Camden. W, IX Whitakei*7"Camden. George Ray, Lugva. Willie Young, LugofT. W. D. McDowell, Camden. ? Gus Hirseh, Camden. W. L. Hunnicutt, Camden. L. S. Mayers, Camden. I Mannis Wilson, Lugo(F. B. T. Rabon, LugofT. F. E. Watts, Camden, i C. L. Poston, Cassatt. J. E. Abbott, Blaney. i II. K. Gardner, Westv.il le. B. W. Gettys, LugofT. E. P. Truesdale, Camden. W. M. Brannon, Camden. C. C. Williams, Kershaw. (). J. Smyrl, Camden. L. I). Holland, Camden. R. A. Faulkenberry, Kershaw. J. C. Bajqley, Camden. S. H. Shirley, Camden. I). L. Miller, Camden. At Ninety-One Still Keeps Up. B.J. Wilson Says Dr. Thacher's Liver and Blood Syrup Keeps ^iim Going. "Although 1 am ninety one years old 1 hardly feel half my age, and it is Dr. Thacher's Liver and Blood Sy rup that keeps me going," said B. J. Wilson, of Humble, Ky. "1 had been suffering for years from kidney trouble and constipation. My back, was weak and hurt me down | about my kidneys, and my liver was inactive, causing headaches and con j st ipation. I "1 got hal?*a dozen bottles of Dr. I Thacher's Liver and Blood Syrup to I tak<> and now I wouldn't take a thou l sand dollars for what those six bottles | have done for me. I feel almost like a ; young man again and believe it has i given me, a new lease on life." Dr. Thacher's Liver and Blood Sy j rup is sold by all druggists and the [ purchase price will be refunded if you are not satisfied. * COMING TO COLUMBIA! IRENE CASTLE The Best Dressed Woman in the World. Columbia Theatre, Wednesday, Oct. 10 111 Gowns and Jewels of Bewildering' Richness and Beauty, and a Production Costing More Than $100,000 Mail Orders Now, Received with Remittance Prices ? $3.00; $2.50; $2.00; $1.50; $1.00 Plus Tax. BROWN & PROPST, Managers. PHONE 9409 SPECIAL PRICES ON MAGAZINE SUBSCRIPTIONS Until November 1st, 1923. SINGLE SUBSCRIPTIONS OR IN CLUBS ORDERS TAKEN FOR ANY PERIODICAL PUBLISHED, AMERICAN OR FOREIGN S. W. HOGUE, Camden, S. C. GKNERAL NKWH NOTES Prohibition Qfflcllil at St. Loult hftVfi uhnounced the disappearance o( hai tvls of whiskey from the' Jack Duuit'l distillery. The Japanese government has With drawn nine Jt>attleships tram 1 1 ^ navy in accordance vHth the Washington agreement. Charles Hland, aged 72, the father of 18 children, grandfather of t?0 and jfjMjlfjtgran'Ifat her of two, it as heen granted a divorce by a court in Akron, Ohio, from his fifth Wife. He claimed that she left hini a Week ftftev Iiiai iiar,i' when he refused tu give her a deed for all of his proper ty. E. O, Stigall, Atlanta policeman, wan convicted in an Atlanta court Saturday afternoon on a charge of murder, the verdict of the jury being | voluntary manslaughter. lie was given a sentence of fifteen years in state prison. His victim waa W. H. Haiyies, a private detective. Tne legislature of Alabama has passVd a bill to. substitute the ejectric j chair "Tor the hangman's noose for executior|s in that state. Five men have been arretted at Seminary, Miss., on a charge Of hav ing caused the death of a sixteen year old boy by selling him illicit liquor, During the year 1022 Texas pro duced 100,000,000 barrels of petrol eum, having a value of $250,000,000. Dr. David B. Guster, of the Mana yank district, near Philadelphia, has resigned the position of police doctor after thirty-one years of service be cause of the distastefulness of exam ining so many men in serious condi tion from drinking poison whiskey. One man was killed and four other persons were more or less seriously injured in New York Tuesday when the car in which they were riding hit an electric light pole. The car was traveling at a speed of sixty miles an hour when the pole was hit. The officers of Greenville rounded up more than a half hundred vagrants last week, and are sending them away or to the chaingang. Sheriff Rector says the idlers are committing many crimes , and his object is to get rid of them. Seven dead and nine injured was the toll of a brick tenement house Jire in Jersey City, N. J., Sunday. - ? | Egyptian women ? are demanding that they should be set free of the convention of wearing veils and of living in harems. The number of married women em ployed in mechanical industries in the United States increased forty?one per Cent between 1910 and 1920. The Pennsylvania Railroad* since the merger of its accounting depart ment in Philadelphia, has !J00 girl clerks, a lone in this department. Miss Joan Proctor, considered the world's greatest snake charmer, has been chosen to take charge'of the rep tiles at the London zoo. As Supreme Commander of the Woman's benefit association, Miss Bina M. West, of Port Huron, Mich., receives a salary of $20,000 a year. Mrs. Louise Billie, . of Detroit, Mich., heiress of $100,000, will devote her life to washing for the poor, and for which she will accept no pay. THINGS WORTH KNOWING. A lain]) that rivals the light of the sun has been invented by -a Swede. Under the light of this lamp colors may be matched as accurately as if they were being viewed in the sun light. The invention is the result of a series of experiments by a Stock holm company headed by the Nobel , prize winner, Dr. Gustaf Dalen. i Five hundred, times more narcotics in the form of opium and its deriva tives, are produced than are legiti mately needed. The average age of the 50,000 known addicts in New York state i* 23 years. The Desert Touring club of Alexan dria, Kgypt, has fifteen members, in cluding Albania, British, French, Greek and Italian. With three cars they tour thousands of miles over the Sahara Desert. if the 150,000,000 acres now in farm wood lots in the United States were placed under sound forestry me thods they would yield substantial revenues to their owners, as well as lumber to help relieve the timber shortage which has already begun to be felt. ' There are twice as many cars and trucks in Hawaii than there are in ali China. The last type set by' Warren G. Harding has been plated in gold and sent to Washington to be kept with other relics of the late President. Ho set the type in the composing room of the Fairbanks News-Miner, At that time he was presented with a gold "make-up" rule by printers of interior Alaska. "The United States must stop kill ing its presidents," said Mrs. Douglas Robinson, sister of the late Theodore Roosevelt, in commenting on the death of President Harding. "No man who comes to the presidency af ter The age of fifty can bear, without serious cost to his health, the enor mous obligations put upon him by the American people." T.L.Mirnnauqh h Co. SPECIALS FOR THE WEEK We were highly pleased with our opening day and judging from the crowds who came to our store and left satisfied, we believe we have won a place among the trading public of this county. Beginning Today and Saturday and extending through next week we are offering unusual ??values. ' ' * ? '' . ? w - ' c? J 111 FANCY FLORAL CRETONS yard, 40c Full 36 inches wide, and larjye collection to choose from. - _ . . .... - -- -? Ladies9 Leather Handbctgs $1.00 to $2.7 5 A big line of ladies' Leather Handbag's and Vanity Boxes. Nicely lined and furnished with purses and mirror. Style and color to please everyone. LADIES 9 SILK HOSE , Special pair, 96c Perfect quality, no seconds, lisle top. colors: black, white and gray. Sizes &to 10. Boys 9 and Girls9 Ribbed Hose pair , 15c Especially good for school wear and will give good ser vice. Colors: black and white only. wmmmmBmmmmmmmmmmmammmiWMmw *\ mmuwm immi? a? AXMINSTEli RUGS each, $2.75 Fine all-over patterned in sub dued color effects. Patterns adaptable for any room, and will lend to the brightness of the home. Size 3ft. x 5ft. 39-inch SEA ISLAND Special yard, 10c. Good closely woven quality, made from a good grade cot ton. Red Seal Dress Ginghams yard, 19c Good quality in pretty plaid combinations, dark plaids for fall and winter wear, 27 inches wide. 36-inch COLORED OUTING yard , 35c An extra heavy good quality Outing with colored stripes on light grounds. 54-inch TABLE DAMASK yard, 50c Linen finish, full 54 inches wide, assorted floral and con ventional designs. 36-inch Ratanspun,yd . .... 59c The cloth that has gained so much popularity. Just the weight for dresses, skirts and blouses. Colors: Rose, Pink. Orange, Green, 1 Honey-dew, I Grey and White. 27x27 Hemmed Red Star Bird's Eye , $ 2.50 doz. The genuine Red Star hemmed and ready for use. It possesses a soft absorbent sanitary quality. 27-inch Dark Outings, yd. 19c Heavy weight and very suita ble for pajamas, gowns and wraps. 32-inch KNICKER CLOTH yard, 25c A very desirable cloth for chil dren's and women's tub clothes. Comes in checks, stripes and solid colors. The* colors are fast. 38-inch FRENCH SERGE, yard, 89c Every thread pure wool. Col ors are Navy, Black, Brown and Grey. 32-inch Floral Plissea Crepe yard, 25c. An ideal cloth for gowns and underwear. Requires no iron inp*. SPECIAL : NUMBER 19 NAINSOOK bolt , $2.49 Thirty-six inches wide, and a very popular and dependable quality. 10-yd. bolts. Waste Paper Baskets, each , 89c Made of extra heavy double strength tin. Colors, black and rose. DOUBLE BED SHEETS each, $1.49 Made from wide sheeting, bleached snow white, seamless and free from dressing*. Size 81x90. Bordered Indian Head Napkins, Doz. $1.00 , A napkin that will wear like iron and give the best of satis faction. Size 18x18. Floral Dimity Bed Spreads Closely, woven into pretty pat terns, fulfsize for double beds, each $2.95 LINGETTE , yard , 79c Everybody thinks it's silk. Especially adapted for linge rie. .Holds its finish after laundering-. Colors : Rose, Lavender, Pink, Yellow, Blue, Black and White. FALL SWEATERS , $ 5.75 Worsted and Brushed Wool, solid colors or with contrast ing* fronts in stripe designs. Colors: Buff, Brown, Maroon, and Navy. CAMDEN'S LOWEST PRICED STOKE"