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LANGS' Se GROCERY OFFERS THIS WEEK Woe-Tai Tea, a combination of several of the highest grades at 60c per pound. Try a pound today. Saratoga Chips, Pearl Barley and Tapioca at all times. LANGS' & GROCERY "WHERE QUALITY COUNTS" Phone 2. Camden, S. C. ^Special Annual Reunion United Confederate Veterans, Macon, Ga. A % r mmm may v-y, iyiz All A x?'i? t s in Smith Carolina: On account of the above occa sion we will operate a special train from Spartanburg to Macon, (ia., May Mh, as section of No. H 9 , on the following schedule: Leave Spartanburg 10.45 A.M. Greenville. . 11.45 A.M. Arrive Central * 12.45 P.M. Dinner. LeaVe Central * . .'?< 1.15 P.M. Arrivu Atlanta ?. Central Time 4.30 P. Mi L?-'ave Atlanta ? 4.4 5 P.M. Arrive Macon . . . . 7.4 5 P.M. 4-ioa>UHt? uX th>? iibovo train _ be one baggage car and four coaches prop?*x from Spartanburg, one coach froin Columbia which will be delivered at Spartanburg on Train No. and one coach will be picked up at Greenville, also another coach at Seneca from Colum bia, which will be operated on Trains No. 15 and Blue Ridge No. *9. To accomodate Veterans and Visitors from Columbia and Char leston and other points in the Southern part of the state, one extra coach will be operated on Train No. 1 :? 1 from Columbia and one ex tra coach on No's 1 :{ and !55 from Charleston May C>th., and delivered to the Georgia Railroad at Augusta- to be handled by Special to Macon leaving Augusta at l.'Uj P. M. Central Time, and arrive Ma con at P. M . We will also operate on Train No 25 night of May Gth, Charles ton to Augusta, one extra coach and one. Standard Pullman Sleeping car, which will bo delivered to Georgia Railroad at Augusta, arriv ing Macon 11.25 A. M. Extra coaches and Pullman cars will be provided on other trains operating through to Macon that may be found necessary. For Pullman reservations . and other information apply to \V. - E. McGee, I). P. A., Charleston, S. ('.; S. II. McLean, I). P. A., Colum bia, S. C.,; A. H. Acker, T. P. A.. Augusta, Ga.; R. C. Cotner, P. & T, A., Spartanburg, S. C. ; W. R Tabor, P. & T. A., Greenville, S. C. REAL ESTATE t SELL DO YOU WANT TO < LOAN ( BORROW I May Help You. LAURENS T. MILLS, {CAMDEN, S. C.*. WHY NOT MAKE $200.? A MONTH - - That's 350.?? a Week, almost $10. 00 a Day Selling Victor Safes and flre-nroof boxes to merchants, doctors, lawyers, dentists and well- to-do farmers, all of whom realize t ho need of a safe, but do not know how easy 1 ? Is toown one. Salesmen declare our proposition one of the best, clean-cut money-making opportuni ties ever received. Without previous experi ence YOU can duplicate the success of others. Our handsomely illustrated 200-pa^e catalog will enable you to present the subject to cue tomers In as Interesting a manner as though yon wore piloting tnem mrougu our ractory. Men appointed as salesmen receive advice and Instructions for Bellini Bales, srlvlim convincing taLking points which It 1b Impossible for a prospective customer to deny. Why don't YOU be the first to apply from your vicinity before someone else gets the territory? We can fuvor only ono salesman out oi each locality. V Our N?w Horn*. C>mM> 10,000 fcHi Anwwlty. f The 25th anniversary of our company was celebrated by erecting the most modern safe factory In the world. Wide awake men who received our aj>eclal Belling Inducement, pondered It necessary to double our output. We are spending many thousands of dollars en larging our sales organisation, but to learn all particulars, It will cost .yon only the price of a postal card. Ask for Catalogs 1ST. " THE VICTOR < SAFE & LOCK CO. OtlCIIUTI.OIKI APOSTOLIC 8UCCE8SION UN SCRIPTURAL. Mark ill, 7-19} Matihiw v, April 21. Tejtt: "Y t did not <Koo?* He, but /. tho ** you and apiKttnttd you. that yp should yo and U nr fruit " ~Jok* ?t, 19 (H. V j. CODAY'B lett*on show* tl)e par ticularity with whlg^i the twelve A [K?Ht lex were ; ^bow u Home of the things said to and respect InK them art* equally approprl ute to every one of Jettus' followers, but otber things said to The Twelve and re# pectins tbeui #?pply to none oth er? of their day nor since. A? for in stance, the Bavior ?al(l to The Twelve, and to none others. "Whatsoever ye shall bind on earth shall be bound In heuven. and whatsoever ye shall loose on earth shall bo loosed In heaven." Tho Import of these, words clearly 1? tbut the persons Indicated were as sured that they would be so socially guided of Divine providenco ^hnt they would set forth u? the Di vine will amongst men nothing to which Heaven j would noi absent; and they would declare not bind ing- upon the fol lowers of Je.su* Apostle*' unauthorized choice of Matthias. only such things ns In God's sight would not be binding. In those twelve men. therefore, we recognize u ple j nary Inspiration, or special guidance ! hot accorded in this particular degree to others of tho "brethren." Surely there Is no intimation In tlie New Testament that as one after an other of the Apostles died other men were recognized as succeeding them. On the contrary, tho Scriptures re peatedly refer to the "Twelve Apos tles of the Lamb." Moreover, as the Jewish Dispensation began at the death of Jacob, in the recognition of his twelve turns, so the Christian Dis pensation began p.r the death of Jesus. In the recognition His twolve Apos tles. And as one of the tribes of Is rael was cut o!T, and is not mentioned In the enumeration in the Apocalypse, but the tribe of Manasseh substituted, so amongst Jesus' Apostles Judas Is dropped and a successor Is appointed St. Paul to Succeed Judas. In tfi'e past we may have read too carelessly the account of how the elev en faithful Apostles exceeded theirau thority in the selection of Matthias take the place of Judas. They should | have remembered that the Master spe cifically told them to do nothing u\itil after receiving the heavenly benediction. Accrediting them with the very best of heart Intentions, it was, neverthe less, effrontery on their part to select two names and to determine that one or the other must be tho successor of Judas. They had. 110 authority fur so doing. As for the one upon whom the lot fell, Matthias, we hear nothing fur ther of him. In God's duo time. He Himself brought forth Saul of Tarsus. St. Paul tells us that he found evi dences that God had chosen him for a special service from his mother's womb. And such special preparation' and supervision we doubt not was ap plicable to all of The Twelve. "A Crown of Twelve Stare." The Lord's specialization of the twelve Apostles is variously referred to. lie said, "Have not 1 chosen you twelve?" And again. "Ye shall sit on twelve thrones." In the symbolical book of Revelation He pictures the Church as a tcoman clothed with sun light. standing over or near to the moon, which symbolizes the Jewish Law Covenant; and ui>on her head was a, crown of twelve stars, repre senting the twelve Apostles of the Lamb. Again, later on in the same book, we find pictured tho Church in glory be*" yond the veil, the Bride ? tho New Je rusalem. Of this City we read that it had twelve foundations, and in the twelve foundations the names of the twelve Apostles. The recognition of successors to the I Anostlea wns on? of th?? flrat- (irrnro "Apostolio aucccsaion" un*criptural. after their death. Every bishop was recognized as one of the successors nnd hence as pos sessing Apostolic authority. It was hot long until the words of the orig inal Twelve were neglected- The liv ing bishops were acknowledged as ppeaking with the same Divine authority *? up-to-date. Later great Church Councils were cull ed in which these bishops, ns claimed successors to the Apostles deckled ? what should and^what- should not be j believed by tho Church, what was and j \rhat was not orthodox. It can bo readily seen that this exal tation of false apostles (Revelation il, 2). contrary to the Divine arrange ment, opened a flood-gate of error," however well intentioncd all concerned may havo been. It is surprising that bo. many sjtill hold to tho creeds thus * formulated by pseudo-apostles. The^i need of the hour Is a recognition OfJ thesq facts and an abandonment of all those creeds and a return to the words. . of Jesus and the Apostles and the Prophets. Only thus can we extricate' ourselves from the multiplied error# represented In the six hundred dlvi Mdons of the church of Christ CLAIMS OLE BULL'S ISLAND Estate Was Bequeathed to a Swlea ChilJ by the Famoue Vtoliniet'a Daughter. Ralph H Bartlett. who was coui?wA for Mr#. Olea Bull Vaughan, only child of the late Ole Bull, the famoua violinist, successfully contested the will of Mrs. Hull In the probate court of York county, Maine, laat summer, recently left on board the steamship Franeonla for Liverpool on hla way to file Mrs, Vaughau's will at Bergen, Norway, the New York HerMd's Bo? ton correspondent says Mr. Bartlett la executor for the will of Mrs, Vaughau, and he and Miss Amelia Shaplelgh of West I^eb&non, Me., ,, are co-trustees for Sylvia Vaughan. the adopted daughter of Mrs. Vaughan and the principal beneficiary under Mru. Vaugbau's will. .The reason that the will of Mrs. Vaughan la to bo offered for record In Bergen la that the only foreign real estate which she possessed Is tho Island of Lysoen, near Bergen. Ole Hull owned this Island, which Is said to be one of tho most beautiful In tho world. It is In a fjord about twenty two miles from Bergen, and consists of about seven hundred acres of land, largely forest, Ole Hull in his life time developed two fresh water lakes and a cave and laid out twenty miles of paths on the Island. I.ysoen wbh left by Mrs. Vaughan to iho little Swiss girl, Sylvia, whom she adopted a couple of years ago, but on Sylvia's death Lysoen 1h to be pre served by the Norwegian government as a memorial to'Ole Hull. The exact procedure which will be followed In Norway with respect to tho case 1h a matter of uncertainty, be cause under the Norwegian law no foreigner can own real estate In that, country without the written consent of the king. ? WHEN LANDIS WAS NAMEb J Brother of Judge Tells How He Came 5 to Be Called Kenesaw Moun tain. "Tho most memorable Christmas 1 ever spent was during the war," said former Representative Landls of Indi ana at the Willard. "My father had returned troin the war on leave of al> sense to find another won. lie had takfen part In the fight at Kenesaw mountain, and when he found his heir awaiting him he suggested the name Kenesaw Mountain, That is how my brother, who has become more or less noted as a judge, came to be named. "I3ut it was not that incident that made my Christmas so memorable. Kenesaw was a baby. I had other brothers. We were living a few miles from a smail town in Indiana, and my ^ father had only a few days' leave. He was compelled to rejoin his regiment - before Christmas, If I remember cor rectly. "I shall never forget the day before that Christmas. My father and moth er went to town, and the boys natural ly were much excited. When mr.ther came back with a bundle we were more excited. It turned out that fa ther had purchased us some gifts. Mine was a candy camel. The other boys had similar gifts. I had great ap preciation of that camel. I placed him affectionally on the 'what-not' of tho best room, and took many pilgrimages to have a look at him. Of course, I caressed him, and now and then I would take a loving lick. For several days following Christmas my camel remained there, but one day I could not resist the temptation, and, turn ing carnlverous, I devoured my ani mal. I do not know what the other boys did with their animals, but I sup pose they went the same way that mine did." ? Washington Post. Heine and London. Heine did not like London, but the London county council likes Heine, for the passer-by Is now reminded by the usual encaustic tile that the poet once lived in Craven street, Strand. As he looked out of his lodging Heine exclaimed, "Send a philosopher to London, but no poet- This downright earnestness of all things; this colos sal uniformity, this machine-like movement, thiB moroseness even in pleasure, this exaggerated London smothers the Imagination and rends the heart." But if Heine did not love London he found something within easy reach to warm the imagination and fire the heart ? the chalk cliffs of Ramsgate In mid-June, with a beau tiful Irish girl to assist in the pro cess. ? A New Kind of Exorcise. It is a morning exercise invented by a Parisian actress, who takes the newspaper and tears it up. The fragments are thrown upon the floor In a thousand pieces. Then she gets up and collects those pieces, and the point is that not a fragment is lost. For this Is tho new way of gardening ? the stooping cure that Is recom mended by every doctor. You can do It in ^our home, and do not require a garden. It 1s only to buy the morn ing paper, tear it into fragments, .chuck them on the floor, and v pick them up. Quite as good as garden ing.^ ? ' | ^ Aerial Postal Service in Italy. Italy is the latest country to try an aerial postal service. The Italian aeronaut Dal Mlstro recently carried a sack of mall between the Bologna and Venice - postofflces in a Duperdusaln monoplane, covering the distance of 10^ miles in one hour- 'and twenty* eight minutes. .. ? ?'? THE GREAT competition in this class of time piece has brought about such a high standard that alarm clocks are now sold by us *. mere fraction of their former price. No one need be without an alarm clock when they can be bought at (he prices we ask. ? ^ We have a large stock of other clocks? from the stately old hall clock to the pretty mantle time- ?gj piece. Come in and admire? we know you will buy. ?- ?' G L. BLACKWELL, | Jeweler and Optician. * Camden, S. C Are You Insured v if not, you don't know how great a risk yon run of losing every, thing by fire. Better see about a policy at once. ' Delays are dangerous and no one knows just when they will be visited by fire. Make it a point to see ur to-day. C. P. DuBOSE & CO. Heal Estate and Fire insurance. BLANEY HUB & BUGGY CO. Blaney, S. C. \ Buggies, Wagons and Harness. Full Line of Farming Implements and Hardware of all Kinds. t ia We wish to thank the public for the very liberal patronage given us in the past and solicit a contin uance of it in the future. We now occupy our new brick building and our facilities to serve the publiq are better than ever be fore, and it shall be our aim to give them the very best in our line obtainable. We Guarantee Everything we Sell. BLANEY HUB & BUGGY CO. Blaney, S. C. L J Patience is a Virtue I when a tire bursts, or a brN occurs, or some accident happ? to your auto, wlrtoh makes H > cessary for you to send for ?P> on? to tow you back to to* fc.ut you won't have to wait lg for repairs to be made ir jl come to us. We will make til quickly, and thoroughly. lISs a reasonable cftftrge. 0 Camden Motor Coropai