University of South Carolina Libraries
I-K1NT1NG printing printing printing printing printing PRINTING printing printing printing printing printing printing PR1NTIN0 printing PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTINO PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTTNO PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING printing PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTINO PRINTING PRINTING PRINTINO PRINTINO PRINTINO PRINTINO PRINTINO PRINTING PRINTING PRINTINO printiKc: PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING [PRINTING PRINTINO PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTINO PRINTINO PRINTINO vv. . ?; ?? > * '" + T JUST stop and think one moment about your printed stationery. "A firm or indi vidual's printed stationery is an index to ''I ' his business judgment." If you want some thing that you can be sure will make a good impres sion wherever seen bring your job printing of every description to us. We guarantee perfect satisfaction and^can do work mV "htufpw TELEPHONE Your Wants to Num ber 29, or Write us and we Will Have a Representative Call and See You. Mail Orders Receive Prompt Attention. mihwnci PRINTINO PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING FHINTINO FHINTINO FHINTINO FHINTINO FHINTINO FHINTINO FHINTINO FHINTINO FHINTINO FHINTINO PRINTING PHINTINO FHINTINO FHINTINO FHINTINO FHINTINO FRINTINO FHINTINO FHINTINO FHINTINO FRINTINO FRINTINO FRINTINO PRINTING FRINTINO PRINTING PRINTING FRINTINO PHINTINO PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTINO PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTING PRINTINO PRINTING PRINTING A Tribute to The Dog. In a speech made by the late Sen ator Vest, of Missouri, in the course of the trial of a' man who had wan tonly shot a dog belonging to a j neighbor, Vest represented the plain ^ tiff, who demanded 1200 damages. When Vest finished speaking, the jury, after two minutes deliberation,' awarded the plaintiff $500. The Bpeeeh follows: "Gentlemen of the Jury: The best friend a man has in this world may turn against him and beoome his enemy.' His son or daughter that he has reared with loving care may prove ungrateful.1 Those who are noarest and dearest to us, those whom we trust with our happiness and our good name, may become traitors to their faith. The money that a man has he may lose,. It files away from him, perhaps when he needs it most. A man's reputa tion may be sacrificed In a mo ment of ill-considered atcion. The people who are prone to fall on their knees to do us honor when success is with us may* be the flfat to throw the stone of malice when failure settles its cloud upon our head. .. The one absolutely unselfish friend that a man can have *in this selfish world, the one that never deserts him and the one that nev er proves ungrateful or treacherous, Is his dog. "A man's dot? Btanja by him In prosperity and in poverty, in health and in sickness. He will sleep on the cold ground, where the'Vlntry winds blow and the snow drives it fiercely, if only he may be near hja master's side. He will kiss the hand that has no food to offer, he will lick the wounds and sores that come in encounters with the rough ness of the world. He guards the sleep of his pauper master as If he were a prince. When all other friends desert he remains. When riches take wings and reputations falls to pieces, he is as constant .in rJttfs love as the sun In its Journey through the heavens. If fortune drives the master forth an outcast in the world, friendless and home less the faithful dog asks no higher privilege than that of accompanying Itiov to guard against the -danger, to t against his enemies, and when last scene of all comes, and takes the master in its em e and his body is laid away in cold ground, no matter if all frfcula pursue their way, gMfcjgpiiide will the n? - Me dog be found, hie head between Mb paws, his eyes sad but open in alert watchfulness, faithful and true even to death. ? . , CITATION, State of South Carolina, | County of Kershaw. i By W. Li. McDowell, Esquire, Pro bate Judge. Whereas, Weston Alexander made suit to me, to grant him Letters of Administration of the Batate of and ofects of Emma Alexander. These are therefore to cite and admonish all and singular the kin dred and ?? creditors ot the said Emma Alexander, deceased, that they be and appear before me, In the Court of Probate, to be held at Camden, S. C., on Aug. 19, next af ter publication thereof, at 11 o'clock in the forenoon, to ahow cause, if any they have why the said admin istration should not be granted. Given under my. hand this 3rd day of August, A. !>., 1911. w. l. Mcdowell, ?? Judge of Probate for Kershaw Co. Published in the Camden Chroni cle on the 4th day of Aug., 1911. DISSOLUTION OF CO-PARTNER SHIP. .Notice Is hereby given that the firm of R. D. Dibble & Bro., doing business at the corner of Broad and DeK&lb streets, has been dissolved by mutual consent. The business will be continued by B. H. Dibble. R. D. plbble & Bro'. If It's a Horse Buggy, Wagon or Harness you need we are in a position . to furnish your wants along this line. We do a Livery business also. Stylish and handsome turnouts can be had at our Stables. DefCalb Street, Camden, S. C. W.W.KING argains We are ottering many bargains in millinery and millinery novel ties. We are reducing our stock to make room for fall goods soon to come in. : &*"2-23HU s. ?- i7**3-,f JIIH>1 Ifgj|JP"?ft ????*?' fHe misses oeraiId. IAii Hornet Itlng <i?KMl lie Hnld. When over the fair fume of friend or foe The ahadow of dlugrace ahall fall; luatead Of words of blame, of proof of ao aud no, I*et aomethlng good be aald. Forget not that no fellow being yet May fall ho low but love may lift hla head; tGven the cheek of ahanie with teara la. wol, If aomethlug good be nald. No generoua heart may vainly turn (Wide In way* of aynipathy; no aoul ho dead * But may awaken, atrong and glori fied If aome^thlng good be aald. % ' ' And ho I charge ye, by the thorny crown, And by tho croaa on which the Ha vlor bled, And by your own aoul'a hope for fair renown, Let aomethlng good be wald. ?Jamea Wbltcomb Riley. "llrooks"?ho will fix your cur. Word* to Young Men. A contemporary has collected tho following which all will do well to hoed: Tho railroads have a motto that every man Hhould adopt, viz: "Al ways take tho Hafe side when In doubt." Have nothing to do with anything that your conscience does not tell you is right. . Reware of all temptations that of fer you a chance to get rich in a hurry. The devil's leprosy has got into a young man's blood on tho day that "he) persuades himself that there is a better way to get money than by downright honest effort. Don't let your passloiiB and appe titeH rule you. Remember that jt is a stop toward heaven to bo ablo to say "No" to yourself. Don't learn to play cards, or the devil may have a rope around you by which ho Will pull .you into the pit. . L- The devil has a well baited trot ltne always sot with which to catch the man who bets. Many a man is wearing Htripes in prison today?* who would not be there if he had never made a bet or played a game of chance. ? Avoid extravagance. Angels weep on the day that: a young man be gins to spend more money than he can make. Before the devil can get anybody tfl steal he has first persuade him that there Is necessity for it, and hla best plan for doing this I.; to get him head over heels in debt. There are gamblers' graves that would never have been, had tho nun who fill them kept out of dobt. ? Debt 'is as 4*?re-to down a young man as death, if he gets into it by deliberately spending more money than he can make. It is gratifying to be well dressod; but when fine clothes are bought on credit they cost too much. No matter how small your In come may be, lay up a part of it, It was thls^rule that made Jay Gould and Vanderbllt.?-Front Rank "Hell Fix Your Car" Real Bstate. All parties having houses, lots or country property for sale will please writ? ine at Lancaster, 8. C., or see Mr. L. A. Klrkland at Camden. I'll list your property, advertise It and sell same at a small com mission?-no gale, no pay. :Vivr FOR SALE. 60 acre* 9 ml lea north of Camden* on Liberty Hill road?the Klrkland place. . Renta for $100 or over. Prloe 1050. 1476 "acres, one mile north of Liberty Hill, known as the Perry place, 400 acres In cultivation which rents for 80 bales of cotton, 6 00 a cre8 in woods which will Baw 3 to 4 million feet of lumber and cut many thousand cords of wood.rests principally In old field and pasture. Part level, part hilly and part roll ing, Has two large beds of fine granite, two nice quarry sites with many million cubic feet of rock In sight. One large two-story houso and twelve 2, 3, and 6 room tenant houses; plenty running water, 10 springs and a number of wells on place. Price $25,000. 16 acres, D. R. Williams, at north edge of Camden, fronts Broad St. on East, Knlght'a Hill road on the North, and O. T, Little on the South dose In and has a fine view. Price $3650., 10 lota In north Camden, fronting t on Broad street, 60 feet front by 250 feet deep, nearly In front of Klrkwood Hotel. Nice, level and very dtatrable for' houses for the best of people. D. R. Williams lot: price $550 a lot. Nice ? or 5 room house, on a 32 acre lot in north-east Camden front ing oft Union street and other lands of t& R. Williams, Just south of John Boykin, formerly the tt. 8. Net tles plaoe. .Very desirable for r truck or dairy farm. Price $1000. T. M. BKLK, Real Sstato sTofl *'o. 'w You Know that the Gilt Edge Store is offering some Big Bargains In Sum mer Goods? We are having just a Clean-Up Sale on summer goods this month also some staple goods cut deep. 10c Colored Lawns and Batistes, per yard . , 5c 10c G inghams, per yard 7c I Lot Colored Lawns, per yard 3c 1 Lot White Lawn Remnants, per yard 4c 1 Lot Cotton Mohairs, I Oc goods, per yard. . . .6VjC 25c Cotton Voils, per yard 15c 20c Colored Flaxons, per yard ,\2V2c 1 Lot 35c Silk, per yard 25c 1 Lot Children's Dresses 98c 1 Lot Children's Dresses 48c Ladies and Childrens Whiie Oxfords at Cost. TABLE LINEN Here is where we have used the knife. We have just cut 25c off the price?big lot to select from. The J. W. Carter line "Solid Oak," flexible sole, Men's Ox fords, $3.50 goods at $2.98. FURNITURE COVERINGS. Another line that we want to close out. 20 per cent, cut on these also. Men's and Boys Straw Hats going at your own price. EMBROIDERY AND LACE You will find something to inter est you here for we are offering some big values. These are just a few of the bar gains that we want to show you ?table full of remnants?all kinds ;eptored f. T. YILllftGUE. Prog!**, "J j