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j ' Frequent i Bilious Attacks J "I. Ruffered with aevere blli j. oub attacks that <aroe on two ' or tbret times eict toflbth," f my* Mr. J. P. NovIdb, of I Lawrenceburg, Ky, "1 would j get nauseated; I would have I d I /./I iu'bb and couldn't work. \ I would take pills until 1 wan ' worn-out with thein. I didn't teem to get relief. "A neighbor Void me of BLACK- DRAU6HT Liver Medicine ' . _ f TC " * *-T " r v and I began Its us#. 1 never have found so much relief ab It gave ma. I would not be wiiUont it for anything. It seemed to cleanse my whole system and made me feel life* new, 1 would take a few doses ? get rid of the bile find have my usual dear head, reel full of pep, and could do twice the work." Bilious attache are "sea sonal" with many people. Million* have taken Thed* ford's Black-Draught to ward off such attacks, And the good results they have reported should induce you to try It. All Druggists* Canada is to have a flay of its own soon. A red ensign bearing the Cana dian aims is at present flown over ? Canadian buildings abroad. Although il has never been authorized, this flag", or the Union Jack with the Canadian arms in the Center, may bo decided upon, or an entirely new de !>i?u may be arranged. Is a Prescription for Malaria, Chills and Fever, Dengue or Bilious Fever It Kills the Germs Electrical Repairs ARMATURE AND MOTOR REWINDING Repairs to Fans, Irons, and all Electrical Fixtures PHONE 296-J Dewey J. Creed .Ambulance Service Day or Night " Motor Equipment of the Best O ' Ar ' C. W. EVANS MORTICIAN Telephones .135 DeKalb St. SI and 283 Camden, S. C. T. B. BRUCE Veterinarian Day Phone 30 ? Night1 Phone 114 CAMDEN, 2L C. COLUMBIA LUMBER & MANUFACTURING CO. MILL WORK SASH, DOORS, BLINDS AND LUMBER PLAIN Sc HUw.ER STS. Ph.nc 71 COLUMBIA, S. C. ? PIANO TUNING Lewis L. Moore PHONE 346 CAMDEN, S. C. Hayes Bus Line (INC.) DAILY SERVICE BETWEEN Colombia, Camden, Kershaw, Lancaster, Waxhaw, Charlotte Columbia, Camden, RistopTiNe, Sumter, flarierflfo, D?lfn*ton, Florence, Columbia, Rateaburg, Aiken, Aufoata Colombia, Chester, Rock Hill WANT FISH SAVKI) < ( *iii ii( \ ( ui/t-ns Alt' He coming Alarmed H ' Wahertjoro, ^uvi'. 4v~*A general muss meeting uf ajl eifcwens of the county has been called to me<rt at the court house on Monday, August 10, fVlix'k, noon, for the purpose of taking some action relative to the of a.nsriA ing L/it- fish and K a ii?i- of the county. A rail .signed by numi i ?m- citizen* has In-en issued, and there will doubtless be a large crowd present to discuss ways and means to furnish protection for the fish and game of the county. Pvaul Sanders of Hitter 'had numerous pe titions prepared to secure signers calling for this meeting. Hv has found great interest in the pwposed protection, and is assured that there will be a large number of .interested citizen* present to discuss the matter. Some of the petitions are not in, but those returned indicate the interest of the people. llhe following is the vail issued: - "This call is addressed to every man and woman .in Colleton county who is interested in the enforcement of the law, the suppression of law lessness and the preservation from destruction of 'the fish and game in our county. If the present condi tions are permitted to last for a short time longer our fish and game will be a thing of the past and we will learn, but too late what a priceless heritage it was. That we should sit with folded hands and permit this wilful and wanton destruction to con tinue is impossible to understand. The laws passed by the General As sembly for the protection and pre servation of our "fish and game aae being openly and flagrantly violated in every stream and in every com munity from one end of the county to the other. . Fiish that escape the net are either dynamited or taken at night with the gig by lain fern light. So widespread and persistent has be come this practice, and the fish in our streams is depleted to such an extent that it is now. almost impos sible for the law abiding fisherman to secure enough to make a meal for himself and his family. ' With reference to gaTtie private property has become a public com mon and every provision of the crim inal law on the subject i-s being openly . flaunted with very little, if any effort, at concealment.' The whole year has become an open sea son and the darkness of the nig<ht the favorite time for the slaughter. "The improved highways and the automobiles have, done mucb to hast en the crisis. It is now an easy mat ter t*>, reach our famed fishing terri tory from any point in the state or nearby points in adjoining states within a few hours. o Advantage is being taken of this quick and easy method of transportation and the public highways are teeming with parties equipped with every device for the violation of the law and the rapid destruction of t(he fish and game. * "Realizing: that the conditions are alarming and conscious of the neces sity for immecbiate action, we are, urgently requesting that every man and woman in Colleton county who is earnestly desirous of seeing the laws enforced and our fish and game preserved from utter and wanton de struction meet us. at the courthouse at Walter'boro, Monday, the 10th day of August, 1925, at 12 o'clock, noon, for the purpose of taking such action as may be deemed necessary.' The Rush To Florida The l ush to Florida is not a lan i j settlement proposition, but a land J trading speculation. Not one out of ! ten thousand of the buyers of Florida I land expect to settle on the land or j ?attempt to make a living by cultivat ing it. They hope to sell it At., a profit to some other speculator and thus make some easy money in a hurry. There is much rfidney circu- j lating in Florida ? millions of it ? but it was not made in Florida, and when the land trading fever subsides much of the profit's (that shrewd and suc cessful traders fvave gathered from bhe less shrewd will be salted down in stocks, bonds and' steady Income "producing enterprises in other sec tiorra. The ultimate owners of much of the Florida land that is being gob bled up at fancy prices will find them selves possessed of permanent in vestments that will not pay carrying chargos. Florida is a fine field now ?for traders, and those who know how J and also know when to cash in and quit wall live on easy street here- ! after. ? Sumter Item. According to a recent report of the United States Public Health Ser vice, the averago length of life in the United States is 56 years, an in crease of fifteen years since 1870. In the sixteenth century, human life averaged between eighteen and twen ty jwn. A Sweet Breath at alt timet / Altar citini m NMklat Wri^ey* ftnMM tha mouth and iwrttrn* 6* breath. Nwmuvaootkcd.tKrMt If Hfrtdwid and d%ettkn> So ?*?y to carry fcltltk pKfcHf THEY WILL MAKE HOOZE Development of Hogback Mountain Will Not Drive Out Moonshiner* (ireertvilh?, Auj{. 5. ? "It makes no difference \\<hat they do up on old Hogback; they may build their roads, their club houses, their golf courses and thqir residential sections; they may make a summer resort out of it, they may make it a playground for the city folks, but there are some people up there who'll make liquor no matter what comes or w'hat goes," This was the substance of a state ment made this morning by Alex ander Pitman, a real son of the "dark corner," who with his son, Holland, are held in the county under the death sentence, they ?having been con victed of the muvder of State Con stable J. H. Howard on January 1, 1924. News that has come down from the majestic heights of old Hogback and neighboring mountains, to the effect that R. C. Rrtnick, an eastern real estate man has bought upwards of 14,000 acres of mountain land em bracing Hogback ai%l otlher moun tains, and that he is building a mam moth resort development in these hills, is more than interesting to Alex and Holl Pitman, who have not seen thei beloved mountains and valleys for more than a year. To both it seems inconceivable that the mountains could be anything more than they have been for eaons and aeons of years ? any more than they were when tihey (the Pitmans) roamed that country footloose and free with scarcely a care to trouble their minds. But now comes to them news that the narrow, snakelike winding roads are being rebuilt into automobile highways over which the "city folks" with their 80-horsepower sixes, eights and twelves can whiz by leaving a trail of dust as they ascend the heights. "Aw they're not doing all that up oil old Hogback," chimed in Holland this morning, as he, his father aad a reporter were discussing the devel opment. "They're not doing any thing but building a few little log shacks ? I call them pole . houses." The "pole shacks" Holland was speaking of is a log club house, which in the future, no doubt, will be the center of social activity on the (Lizzy heights of the plateau which extends heaven ward 3,228 feet above sea level. Charged with the task of building a road to the top 'of old Hogback were three Greenville engineers, Dan Huillick, W. D. Neves and R. E. Dal ton. They have effected the difficult ! engineering task of building a road ' from Tryon, N. C, to Hogback, a distance of seven miles. All this is highly interesting to Alex Pitman, but he finds it very difficult to believe. He explained very carefully that no matter what comes or what went there were men in those mountains who were going to make liquor. "Of course -"they're going to make it, " he said. "Why, theye're making it today and ?thfey'H be making it tomorrow." It .will be remembered that it was right in the shadow of Hogback that j the "Pitman Murder Case" arose. On the morning of January 31, when Constable Howard ran in to "flush" some moonshiners at work, he was killed, shot four or five times. The I Pitmans were accused. They were convicted, but they still protest their i innocence. One hundred ami one homicides took place in South Carolina during the first six months of the present year, as compared with 81 during the corresponding period for 1924, as re ported by the South Carolina Bureau of Vital Statistics. For the Mttie i period 34 persons committed suicide in the state, 32 suicides occurring daring <tbe fifcvt six months of last year. Money If you are wrong and thv other fvl ; low U right, the only way to get balm for your outraged vanity ia lo eali him hard names, Continental* j wh<? Wish to justify their unwilling* nyss to pa.V their debts rail Americans "dollar chasers." As a term of re proach, the expression hats a miser able .225. bet it be said to the everlasting glory of Americans th^t they are dol lar chasers. Chasing dollars keeps them close to the band wagon in th? march of civilization. The mare isn't the only thing that money makes go. It makes ignorance go -and superstition, and dirt, and disease, and crime. Kind a section of America in which an idea regarded with suspicion ??-where men work long hours for small wages, where there is a little salu for books, and demagogues play on passions and line their pockets from the public treasury ? and you have found a section that hasn't yet developed the art of dollar chasing. To get money U the first business of those who would advance civili zation. It isn't a sordid business, any more than /the building of Universi ties is a sordid business. It is h noble business, for all progress de pends upon it. When men get money, they begin | to have a little leisure. With leisure and full pockets, they begin to invite ; their souls. They get n bath and a ! manicure; they buy a book; they | learn good table manners; they learn to scorn ignoble things and filthy things; they begin to cultivate a taste for talk that does not concern itself with personalities, and to enjoy an exchange of ideas. America is cleaner and more at tractively attired and broader-minded today than it was fifty years ago because it has more money. It leads civilization because its pockets are full. You can't train men to become gods while they live in hovels and wonder when they will eat. The beginning of salvation is cash. ? Fountain Inn Tribune. K. ^ ? Eckert, a radio amateur of Philadelphia, picked up a message from Dr. Alexander Hamilton Rice, explorer, sent from the upper waters, of the Amazon River for transmission to his wife in Paris, France. "Why, But For This Glo rious Medicine I Don't See How: I Could Do My Housework Today, Much Less Feel So Splendid," Says Colum bia Woman. "I don't believe 1 would $ven be able to be up and doing my house work today If it hadnt been fori this urlorious medicine; Karnak, much less feeling so splendid," de clares Mrs. Daisy Moore, of 128 Sumpter St., Columbia, C. "Oh, how I did suffer from indi gestion and gastritis for the past five years. I had just gotten in such a wretched state of health I didn't know what to do. The gas pains in my chest and around my] heart were so terrible 1 just feit like 1 would smother. And nights 1 had such fearful pains in my side ami chest I couldn't sleep. 1 tried so many treatments without results that I was alarmed over my con dition. "But, oh, what a blessing- four bottles of this wonderful Karnak has been to me. 1 began improv ing from the very start, and now all that awful gas and indigestion has entirely gone. The pains have disappeared from my side ana chest and I eat iust whatever I want and as much as I want now without it hurting me one moment afterward. And nights I simply sleep like a child. "It just seems almost like a miracle that four bottles of Kar nak could have done what It has for me. I can never praise it enough and I want to help every person I can find out about this wonderful medicine." Karnak is sold in Camden ex clusively by Zemp & PePass and by the leading druggist in every town. Cuts, dog's and other household pets, will not bo abandoned by New York City vacationers this season, i The S. P. 0. A. has 17 ambulances i which will be used in transporting th<* animals to a plaee where they will be properly eared for during the vacation period. ? Incarcerated in the Florence county jail and charged with the theft of an automobile, Claud Doyle, young white man of Darlington, attempted sui cide,. fishing his wrist with a pen knil'c. Will the last man know how to talk to the other planets, and will he know just what is going to happen to him aftor he dies, or will he be like our selves, still wondrring, with only faith to eomfort him, awl save him from painful thought and speculation f The National Hoard of Fire Under writer# announces that, fire destruc tion in this country in 1804 amounted to $54H,810,G30 ? the largest total ever known. This means a daily loss of $1 ,500,000. Dekalb pharmacy PHONE 95 CAMDEN. S. C. . xt . for Economical Tratisportation The Coupe - - '675 *~?SS The Coach - - '695 p^SS The Sedan - - *775 4 ?. All prices f.o.b. Flint, Michigan Increased demand has made it possible to improve the quality and lower the price. Come in and see these remarkable values. SMITH'S GARAGE 405 East DeKalb St. Camden, S. C.