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Soon Felt Improvement 'The first time I took Cardul I was In an awful bad way," says Mrs. Ora Car lilo. K. V. D. 6, Troup, Texaa. "I wont fishing one day. A heavy storm cams up and I got soaking wet la the rain. I was afflicted with awful smothering spells. I could not got my breath. My* mother had somo For Female Troubles In the house that she was taking, so she Immediately began giving It to me. In a few days 1 got alt rtgfct. "Last fall I got rundown In hoalth. I was weak and puny and I began to saffer. I would get so I could hardly walk. Having taken Oardal before, I sent to tfce store far a bottle of It. Almost from the first dose I could feel an improvement "Cardul has helped me a lot and I am glad to recom mend It. I don't feel like the same woman I was last fall. My appetite U good now. aud I'm sure lt'n Cardnl that's mado It pick up." All Druggist*' ,r R.tl Honor Roll Antioch School Grade 1 ? Mae Sinclair, Peggie Hol land, Hollie Crossland, F^lizabeth Crossland. Grade 2 ? Lenn Boykin, Jr., Mike Crossland, Louise Hinson, Arthur, Holland, Marion ShivAr. 4 Grade 3 ? J. C. Braivham, Robert! Rodgers. Grade 4 ? Lacy Galloway, Kenneth] Joye, L. E. Peebles, Leila Hinson. Grade 5 ? A. C. Baker, Dolly Rod- ! gers, Mary Shiver, Lola Spears. Grade 6 ? Katie Arledge, Evelyn ! Branham, Grace Marsh. Grade 7 ? -Sadie Pate, Jessie Mae Sinclair, Hattie Hinson. Grade 8 ? DuBose Davis, Vavshti Marsh, Lena Smith. Grade 9 ? Loyd Davis, Henrietta^ Joye, Theodore Pate, Alma Pate, ! Flora Pate, Elma Stiver, Sallie Winn Johnson. J Grade 10 ? -Margaret Johnson, Cor nelia Johnson, Clyde Pate, Clara Hinson, Myrtle Pate. Grade 11 ? Ida'Pate, Lawrence Sin- 1 clair. Ford Buy* Famous Village Smithy Uxbridge, Mass., Feb. 18. ? Henry' Ford has bought Longfellow's famous village smithy. I The shop was built in 1787 by Japhet Taft, grandfather of the late Caleb Taft, It^has among its im plements a sling u?ed- in shoeing oxen, the only one in this vicinity in use up to ten years ago when Mr. Taft retired. Henry W. Longfellow was inspired by seeing Japhet ,Taft before the forge to which his famous poem was writtenr NO-MO-KORN i ? * FOtt CORNS AMO OMWJWPW M?d? in Cftudei t?d F?r Sal? Mj , DHCilb Pharmacy-Phone Sfe j is a prescription f?r Colds, Grippe, Flu, Dengue, Bilious Fever and Malaria It Kills the GerMH. Amimlaace Scrvice Baj ?r Niffct M?ter Eq?jpMe*t *f the B??t C. W. EVANS MORTlOfMN ? f .1> lr|?k*aen 5.1& P?KftHb St. *?d 2B3 ?a?iftm, S. C. COLUMBIA LUMBER & MANUFACTURING CI. / MILL WORK SASH, DOORS, BLINDS AND LUMBER plain & Hl'wER STS. PH?ne 71 COLUMBIA, S. C. T. B. BRUCE ^ Veterinarian [,*y f*?on? .*?? Nlfht Pfc??? 114 | CAMgttN, * C ^ SNOWSLIDR TAKB8 TOLL C?u?d l>?th of Many in Utah Mining Town .Bi^harn, Utah. Feb. 17?Upw,r<l. "i lives were snuffed out .when i snows] ide, thundering down the lun UnT ? t0day bU,ied tHe Utt,e Hi?h land Boy nuiunK settlement at the oiirht J SrP Gu1Ch' near herc* Twenty nif?.V S ^en recov*r<Hl fcO !V ? j l)y re8C?? workers digging in &S? " " ? ?' Kl1" Twenty-nine persons were listed by t? -Delaware Mining company ???iniMln* and believed to have per wh'Qd. This number maty be in ZT"; Kra"k A< Wakll?w' superin uient of the mining company, said, e did not know how many others wi>ro m the buildings engulfed, (t I?75f?ared lh? t0)l ,might ??ount Ward law and physicians said they had abandoned all hope of recovering any one alive from the ruins, but the search of the debris went on tonight with a dozen electric searchlights on the scene. Ten persons were in the Bingham jospital and an emergency hospital ?n the Highland Boy mine office. Fire added to the horror pf the catastrophe, flames breaking out in crUtl,hed buildings a few minutes after the avalanche struck. The fires still smouldered tonight and a heavy pall of smoke and1 fog (overhung the scene of destruction. % The bodies, as fast as they were extricated were placed in sleighs and taken three miles down the canyon to the morgue, where they were placed in a double row on the floor.! Tags bearing the names were placed on some of the silent forms, while others were simply numbered pend ing identification. Many of the bodies were fright fully burned. Others were scarcely scratched and Dr. F. E. Straup, the county physician, also mayor of Bing ham, said that in most cases death was due to asphyxiation. Property damage, Superintendent Ward law said, would not exceed $40. 000. nHalf a dozen men, armed with shot guns, were sent tonight to patrol another gulch above the Highland Boy mine office in anticipation of an other slide. They were ordered to fire several rounds of shots as a warning to those below should the snow begin to move. "The slide was like a bolt of light ning from a clear sky," Superintend ent Wardlaw said. -J. H. Rentz escaped from the Mc Donald boarding house, but his wife, his sister and brother were entombed. "There was no warning other than a thump and a trembling of the build ing," he said. "I was buried beneath bedding, i snow and the walls and ceiling of my room. Somehow or othei^ I managed to drag myself from the suffocating sribw and I was pulled from the wreckage." Luther MdCandless was taken from the debris uninjured, but his bedmate, Ben Benson, was buried so deep that he suffocated before res cuers could reach him. Two Held Without Bail Hendersonville, N. C., Feb. 17.-^ Charles Kendrick, 22, and Well> Green, 19, of Gaffney, S. C., were held without bail here today by Magistrate Battle for trial in the Burke county court beginning on March 8th, on a charge of having muifdered Frank Butler, 29, of Burke county on the morning of January 30th. Roy Hill, 20, and Otis Jolly, 25, also of Gaff ney, were held on the same charge but will be allowed to give bond in the sum of $1,000 each. J. B. Bell, .Esq., of Gaffney, represented Hill and Jolly, while the Green boy and Charles Kendrick were represented by Ervin & Krrin of Hendersonville, and Gardner & Burris of Shelby. The courthouse during the hearing this I afternoon was filled to overflowing, i Mrs. Butler, widow ojfji^ slain man, was the first witness for the state. She told how in the early morning of January 30, her husband was awak ened by some men who asked if he could get them some whiskey. ffe complied with their request and was gone for half an hour, when the party returned to the house. A minute or two later she heard two shots and a little later her husband staggered into the house, where he fell dead after saying "Those devils shot me." The four men were arrested at Gaff ney and have been in the Burke coun ty jail since February Ujfc. Heir To Millions Burned to Death Chicago, Feb. 20. ? Frederick W. Pearson, 30, who** father died two year* ago ieaving a $2,000,000 est te, was burned to death in a firo in his room at the Clandge Hotel, started by a lighted cigarette. John H. Hogs head, a young companion in a night revelry, narrowly escaped a similar, fate. % How to Stop That WeakeningCough Why let heavy, stubborn cough wear you down when you can get speedy relief and often break it up completely in 24 hours through a remarkable new method based on the famous Dr. King's New Discovery for Coughs? Here is the method : You simply take one teaspoonful and hold it in your throat for '15 or 20 seconds before swallowing it. It has a double action. It not only soothes and heals irritation, but also removes the phlegm and con gestion which are the real cqttse of the coughing. So with the cause removed the worst cough soon disappears. Dr. King's New Discovery is for coughs, chest 'colds, bronchitis, spas> modic croup, etc. Pine for children, too? no harmful drugs. Very econpmi* , cal, as the dose is only one teaspoonful. ' At all good druggists. Ask for , HOW STRIKE WA8 SETTLED Grant Succeeded as Mediator When Politicians Failed Philadelphia, Feb. 16.? R. F. Grant of Cleveland, who is credited by min ers and operators as the instrumen tality who settled the strike,1 was all smiles when the final announcement was made. In a formal statement to the Asso ciated Press he said: "When a coal strike develops, many champions of' the people with political hopes start to develop ways and, means to capitalize the situation for their own benefit. The first thing to do is to convince the people of their general love for humanity. There 's no publicity value in being a private lover and so their love 1s 'proclaimed loudly. The -next thing is to have a plan or to offer ?heir'good offices. This is done so that later when the strike is settled they can point with pride to their helpfulness. "Hundreds of plans have been sub mitted. Generally they follow the plan of the Ten Commandments, the Epiftcopal marriage ceremony of Mrs. Rorer's 'Cook Botok.' "The champions of the people ac complish nothing except to confuse everything .and everybody and pro long the strike. "For three days I have been the sole contact between operators and miners. Right at the start it seemed sure that a formula could be written to end the strike. My only fear was that some great friends of the people would have a heartbreak and start loving out loud and spill the party. "I call attention to the great com mon sense and wisdom of President ! Coolidge. It is my firm conviction that if he had yielded to the great pressure upon him and had tried to intervene this contract would not be signed today. The American people are entitled to know this solemn con viction of mine and to honor this great president of ours, who 'has shortened the strike by his wisdom. "I would like to paste across the sky in eternai letters a warning to America who want to do their loving out loud and who would capitalize the distress of our people for personal reasons." Stocking* at $500 a Pair A fifth avenue store in New York i sella silk stockings at $500 a pair ? hand woven on special loony*, the [ most sheer, delicate stockings pos sible, as carefully made as old hand made lace. They are a bargain at that and the store assumes the profit is not large. It also sells $260 stock ings and plenty of $100 stockings. But tfie best seller is a line of silk stock ings at $15 a pair. One society woman buys eight dozen $18-a-pair stockings at a time. Plenty of cus tomers buy $500 worth at a time. These expensive stockings break as readily as the cheaper ones. The store employs several expert women menders who are paid a dollar an hour, the store making no profit on the mending. Sometimes a mender will spend eight hours repairing single "run" in a stocking, using very small fiahhooks_set in wooden handle* for the work. "'tfVhat will women folks with two pairs of $2 stockings say, when they read this ? ? ?Capper'?< Weekly. I Aberdeen is the only university in I Great Brttaiq where the students i wear scarlet gowns. GOITRE REDUCED Two lnchea, Choking and Smothering Relieved. A Liniment Did It. Mrs. Geo. Baldwin, College Place, Columbia, S. C.f saya she will gladly tell or write her full experience to any one about Sorbol Quadruple, a color lent liniment. Get more information from Sorbol Company, Mechanics burg, Ohio, all drug stores or locally at W. R. Zemp's Drug Store. Farmer Attempt* Suicide Kershaw, Feb. 18. ? Henry T. Mor ton, well known farmer of the Abney section near here, made an unsuc cessful attempt to end his life Tues day afternoon by cutting himself in the throat and wiists with a razor. Fortunately a physician, was calling upon him and found him shortly after he .had committed th*> rash act and prompt attention saved his life and last accounts from the patient, indi cations wore that he would survive the wounds. Ill health and despond ency ovqr financial matters were as signed as causes. NOTICE Creditors of George R. Cook, do ceased, are by au order of the Pre rogative Court of the State of New Jersey, dated February 13, 1926, upon application pf the subscribers, notified to bring in their debts, demands and claims against his estate, under oath, within six months from above date. HORACE COOK, HENRY N. YOUNG, TRENTON TRUST CO., Executors. Present claims to the Trenton Trust Company, W. State and Chancery Lane, Trenton, N. J. . Feb. 25, 1926. 48-4-sb FINAL DISCHARGE Notice is hereby given that one month from this date, on Monday, M^rch 22, 1926, I will make to the Probate Court of Kershaw County my final return as Administrator of the estate of Mrs. Harriett R. Jordan, do ceased, and on the same date I will apply to the said Court for a final dis charge as said Administrator, H. G. CARRISON, JR. Camden, S. C., Feb. 17, 1926 - ESTATE NOTICE All parties indebted ,to the estat3 of W. H. Carter, deceased, are hereby notified to make payment to the un dersigned and all parties, if any hav ing claims against the said estate will present them likewise duly attested, wjthm the time prescribed by law. w. l. Mcdowell, Judge of Probate, Administrator Est. W. H. Carter Camden, S. C., Feb. 20, 1926. FINAL DISCHARGE Notice is nereby given that one J month from this date, on Monday,' March 8th, 1926, I will make to" the j Probate Court of Kershaw County my ! final return as Administrator of the1 estate of Susie West, deceased, and on the same date I will apply to tke said Court for a final discharge as said Administrator. A. M. DILLON Camden, S. C., Feb. 2, 1926. ( FINAL DISCHARGE Notice is hereby given that one month from this date, on Tuesday, March 2nd, 1926, I will make to the Probate Judge of Kershaw County my final return as Administrator of the ?state of J. E. Jeffers, deceased, and en the same date I will apply to the sajd Court for a final discharge as said administrator. H. T. JEFFERS. Camden, S. C., Jan. 28, 1926. NOTICE OF LOST CERTIFICATE Notice is hereby given that Certifi cate Number 61, for three shares of Enterprise Building and Loan Asso ciation stock, issued to Ten* dated January 6, 1920, has been lost, and that after due notice of this ad vertisement I will apply to the said Building and Loan association for a duplicate of said Certificate. TENA DAVI?. . Feb. 1, 1926. 45-48-sb FINAL DISCHARGE | Notice is hereby given that oae ; month from this date, on Wednesday, l March 3rd, 1926, I will make to the { Probate Court of Kershaw County my final return as Executrix of the | estate of Esau David, deceased, and on the same date I will apply te the said Court for a final disoharge from my trust .as said Executrix. BLLA DAVW. Camden, S. C., January 98, 1926. FINAL DISCHARGE Notice is hereby given that oae month from thie date, on Monday, March 1st, 1926, I will make to the Probate Court of Kerekaw Cooaty my final return .as Administratrix of the ectate of William H. Bryan, deceased, and on the same date I will apply to the eaid Court for a final discharge ae said Administratrix. MRS. ELLA C. BRYAN. ' Camden, S. C., January 20, 1926. FINAL DISCHARGE Notice is hereby given that oae month from this date ,0*. Monday, Marsh 1st, 1926, I, the surviving exec utor of the estate of H. F. Boykin, deceased, will make to the Probate Court of Kershaw County my final return as said Executor, and on the same date I will apply to the said Court for a final discharge *y trust us said executor. HUBBRT R. BOY-KIN. Camden, S. C., Jin. 21, 192?. _ PINAL DISCHARGE Notice is hereby given that one month from this date, on Thursday, | March 4th, 19B0, I will make to the ; Probate Court of Kershaw County my I final return as Executrix of the es tate ?f Solomon Powell, deceased, and on the same date I will apply to the said Cenrt for a final discharge from my trust as said Executrix. CALLIE POWELL. Camden, S. C., January 27, 1920. V FINAL DISCHARGE Notice is hereby given that Mr. Albert L. Sawyer, through his attor ney, Mr. L. A. Kirk land, has this day made application unto me lor a final discharge as Executor of the Will of Prank 8. Hamlin, deceased, Of Harern hill, in the County of Eeeex and Com mon wealth of Maeeachusetts, and of Camden, South Carolina, and that Monday, March 8th, 1986, at 11 o'clock in the forenoon, at the Pro bate office in Camden, South Caro lina, has been appointed lor the hear ing of said petition. All parties, if any, haying claims against the- said estate will present them duly attested ti to the above named attorney on or before the date set for the hearing or he forever barred. ?? 1 w. l. Mcdowell, , Judge of Probate Kershaw County Caitfderu Feb. 4. 1926. for Economical Transportation 1 1 II every i costs less New Low Prices f M Coupe ? ? MS Co?cK - - MS Stdtn' Landau 7*1 /? ?? fc. Flint. MkU|?? Ask for a Demonstration ! 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