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THE GOOD NAMES . OF KNOWN RE SPONSIBLE MENi ARE ALSO BEH/NM OUR national BANK The character of the MEN behind a bank as well as their financial responsibility is always looked into before the, United States Government at Washington will grant a charter to a NATIONAL Bank. If you have not yet banked with us ask our cus jiomers how we treat THEM. We shall be pleased to see you. GOME IN. Make OUR bank YOUR bank. The First National Bank OF CAMDEN, S. G ? ? i K^rom t/ie Qrodle to the jSraue -Everyone Uses Hardware of Some Kind The discriminating customer insists on quality goods, for CHEAP hardware is about the POOR EST investment on earth. The edge of the sharp est razor is not keener than our desire to serve you acceptably ? to serve you in a manner to win your approval ? therefore, whatever you buy from us* will be of the "quality''* kind. We Sell Everything in Hardware Valuable Main Street Property for Sale WE HAVE LISTED WITH US FOR QUICK SALE THE B. R. McCREIGHT MERCANTILE PROPERTY, 1129-1131 BROAD STREET. ___j ? " ^ , Lot 66x382 feet, oil which is situated a commodious, well constructed building. ? This property is peculiarly well located for any com mercial enterprise? Hotel, Office Building, Stores, or any other mercantile establishment, being situated ad joining the Court House reservation, and directly in the path of business development. For price and other particulars, tsee Kennedy & Sh^w REAL ESTATE AGENTS BEULAH NEWS NOTES. What Folks Are Doing On Route Four. Camden, It. F. I). 4., July 'JO,- We had a delightful ruin In this section on Saturday and everywhere crops are looking tine. The farmers have gone to work agulii'Slnce the rain. MIsh Inland Phillips, of Kumar, who had l>eoii visiting here Hoyfrul week# Ijiih returned to her home. Miss Anni?3$<u White of Rranchvillc, Ik visiting Misses l.ela and l.ilu Smith. Mi. uimI Mih. < '. \N . McCivury. Qf <'?> Ininhia, are visiting the hitter's parents Mr. and Mrs. Itoh Mc('asktl). Mrs. Jesse Howell, of Hartsvllle, Is visiting ut tbe home of Mrs. It. F. Howell. MIhs Dos la Moseley of Hartsvllle, Is spending a while with her cousin, MIks Kate Moseley. Mr. George Truesd&Je, of West vl He, was a visitor here Saturday a?id Hun* ?lay. Miss Annie West Is attending the summer school at Itis.k II hi Miss Kate Moseley s|*?nt last week with her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. George Moseley. Mrs. Grace Adams has returned from a visit at Kershaw. Miss Ethel Bruce Is visiting friends and relatives at Westville and Ciy hurns. Dr. Carl West of Charleston, is vis iting his imrents, Mr. and Mrs. J. F. West. Misses I>ela and Lila Smith and An nie Lu White are visiting relatives in the Antloeb section. A Jolly crowd gave Miss Kate Mose ley and her cousin a surprise party on Saturday night. Those com | swing the party were Misses Irene and Eva Bruce Lela nh'd Lila Smith, and Annie Dou White, and Messrs, Alex Bruee, Luther Croft, Geo. Truesdale, Shell, Curl and Troy West, Leslie and Bob MeCasklll. Mr. H. T, Johnson, of Bethuue, can didate for the House of Representa tives was a visitor in this section Tues day, Moseley ?Aklns. On Wednesday evening, June 24th, at 3 '.45 o'clock a pretty 'marriage was solemnized at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Wilson, on Lyttleton street, Cam den., when their niece Miss Callie Le nora Moseley became the wife of Mr. Jesse Carl Aklns. Rev. Smith in n beautiful manner performed the ceremony. The bride Is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. S. B. Moseley, of Westville, and is a young lady of many charms. Her friends deeply regret that, her marriage takes her from among them to live. Mr. Aklns is a man of sterling qual ities and has made many friends since he has been coming this way. Mr. and Mrs. Akins left on the 5 o'clock train accompanied by Miss Do sin Moseley, of Hartsvllle, for Harts vllle aijd from thee to Columbia, where they will njake their future home. Their many friends wish for them a long life full of sunshine and hap piness. THE RACE IN THE FIFTH DISTRICT THE PAGELAND INCIDENT Mr.. Stevenson and Rev. J. W. Quick Explain the Incident and What Led to It. ( Political Advertisement. ) ; Oil tha utehl of. July 14. 1814,. at Pageland, S. C.,( the candidates for Congress, W. P. Stevenson and D. B. Pinley si>oke. Mr. Stevenson opened and Mr. Finley closed and Mr. Steven son exercised the right, assumed by Mr. Finley at Chesterfield, of replying. When he did so Mr. Finley* replied to him and as he turned to sit down he said to Mr. Stevenson, "You can't throw off on me." Mr. Stevenson said "How?" He had not made any per sonal remarks to Mr. Finley and only replied to what he snhl appeared to be an insinuation made by Mr. Finley and had corrected Mr. Finley in reply to questions addressed to him by Mr. Fin ley. When Finley replied, "I will just hurt you." Mr. Stevenson said, "Hurt me, obi man, hurt me?" The chairman had announced the meeting adjourned and as Mr. Steven son turned to pick up his papers Mr. Finley hit him behind the right ear. After Mr. Stevenson recovered from the lick he approached Mr. Finley hnd ap peared about to engage iu the difficulty but he was pulled off the stand by T. W. Itelk, stated to him that he wanted to prevent any difficulty. The incident was entirely unexpect ed and without any npparent cause an the debate was being conducted along parliamentary lines and the apparent heat of Mr. Finley was not understood by Mr. Stevenson apparently or by the audience. W. F. STEVENSON* To the best of my knowledge the above Is a -correct statement hot I donTf lui6w "what Mr. "Stevenson was doing when Mr. Finley struck him. p V JOHN W. QUICK, Chairman of Meeting. ' Subscriptions were made amounting to more than $2,000 in Rock Hill for the aid of farmers who suffered loss by the hailstorm a week ago. 5 The St Paula Methodist church at 8t Matthews, has awarded the con tract for building their new church to W. Lee Harvin, of Lexingtton, N. C., at $20.3dfcr ~ Of the 4,018 who toted In York coun ty In 1012, the number enrolled up to the 4th lnatmnt wm? 2J)6G. - ' \N ADVKKTISINU HTOKY. Old SidiK on Muht's of Dealer Who Avildtj l'uldicit.\ . Aii ad vert 1st ug manager itl h Sphinx cluii dinner hi Now York t < >1? I an ad vertising storyy "A man," lie said. "entered a d|)q|> one Iti 1 1 *?r cold liny ii ii< ) hrbuuht a wool en mulllor. When he opened I ho muttlcr he found inside of it the photograph of # beautiful, gjrl, ..together with a Hole saying : " If you are single, please write to me.' "A inline and address followed, and 1 1??? man smiled. He was single, and lie put the photograph oil Ids slttlliK room mantel. There, every evening, looking up from his hook he lieheld it. It was very beautiful, and in a week lie had fallen head over heels in love. "So he wrote to the girj, Another week passed, a week of anxious, nerve racking suspense. Then the lovesick man received tills crushing letter; "'Sir The Mary Smitli'lo who in you wrote was my grandmother. She died nine years ago, aged eighty-six. Yours truly.' "Our heartbroken bachelor, on look ing Into thin strange matter, found that lie had foolishly Iwaight the muf fler from a dealer who didn't adver tise."? New York Herald. Iteglstratton and Age Telling. According to a Topeka dispatch, the unwillingness of KammB women to give I ami allow their ages to bo put on re cord has resulted in a very small reg ister of the names of Women in ad vance of the. State-wide primary early in August and in consequence leading politicians of all parites are worried. More than 300, (lOO women are qualified to vote, but reiiqrts from Topeka, Wi chita, Leavenworth, Atchison and all big towns show that the age-confess ing feature of registration is keeping the great majority of them at home. The question, "IIow old are you?" Invariably brings a protest. "I am over 21," a woman told Commissioner Kent jMMl "That will not do," he said. "You must give me your correct age." She turned upon her heel and walked out without registering. Women who are over 40 generally are Ones who refuse to register.-? M a cot* Telegraph. GENERAL NEWS NOTES. Last Friday night was (ho coldest in the 44 years' history of the Mobile, Ala., weather bureau. A fountain in the city was completely frozen over. lieo Walke, of Screven, Ga., drank a small bottle of cologne in order to gel the alcohol In It.' He is dead. Dr. W. A. Winters and his wife, Mrs. Byrd Winters, charged with conspiracy in connection with the disappearance of (he doctor's nine-year-old (laughter, have been released at New Castle, Ind., because of lack of evidence. Samuel Gompers, the labor leader, lias declard war against Hepresenta tive J. Hampton Moore, of Pennsyl vania, and will seek to defeat Moore because the latter opposed a measure (iompers was interested in. A German aviator last week attain ed an altitude of 21,450 feet. The high est previous altitude was attained by a Frenchman, who reached a height of IS, 800 feet above the earth. After being on a strike for five weeks 4,000 of the 10,000 employees of the Westlnghouse companies of Pittsburgh, Pa., voted to return to work yesterday. The remainder are exi>ected to give up the contention during the next few j (lays. The police of Berlin last week raided a house occupied by Servian students and secured documentary evidence of a plot to assasinate the* German em peror. Empres, the largest female elephant ever captured, died in the zoological gardens, Philadelphia, last week. Em press had lived, in Philadelphia during the past 38 years. The clipper ship Edward Sewell, which sailed from Philadelphia in Oc tober, for Seattle, Wash., and last re ported March 23, and since given up as lost, last week reached Hawaii. The vessel wds badly damaged by storms at sea. H, J. Gamsman, a New Yoi-k in ventor of an attachment for a camera, was last week paid $300,000 for his in vention by the Eastman company of Rochester, N. Y. A Spanish company projioses to build nn aerial railway across the whirlpool rapids at Niagara.' The span across the gof<ge is to be 1,180 feet, the long est of its kind in the world. The Georgia senate has killed the I proposed Hlxon eugnlcs marriage law. The bill provided for menial and phy sical examinations before a marriage could bo contracted. The total tax receipt,* of (he state of Iowa for the year ending June 3, were $11,524,770.80. After paying all claims (he state still has a cash balance of $757,800.82. Application for Certificate of Stock. State of Virginia, County of Henrico. Rxpnrtc T,. A. Alexanders ~ Notice Is hereby given that the un dersigned is the owner of five shares of stock in the Tenth Series of the En terprise Building and I/oan Associa tion, of Camden, S. C., represented by Certificate of Stock Number I,' which certificate bears date of January 1, 1913. The said certificate of Stock has been lost or. destroyed, and the undersigned will apply to the said Enterprise Build ing and Loan Association, of Camden, S. C., at its office in the city of Cam den, 8. C., at 10 o'clock a. m., August 29, 1914, for a new Certificate in place of the one which has been lost or de stroyed, . ... L. A. ALEXANDER. Richmond, Va., July 22, 1014. 14-19 Mr. Farmer: Do You need Fertilizers? This is the season for Top Dresser. We . carry full stock and can supply your wants. See us and get our prices. Top Dresser, Nitrate Soda, Kainit, Acid, etc., etc. SPRINGS & SHANNON Camden, S. C. To AUTOMOBILE and Machinery Owners WE WELD BROKEN PARTS of any kind of machine better than new,, it makes no difference what the metal is or where broken. OUR SHOP is fully equipped to execute any kind of lathe work, etc., and all work turned out by us is fully guaranteed io be as good as new and in a great many instances better than new. HAY'S GARAGE East Side Lower Broad Street Tribune and Stormer BICYCLES We can give you these wheels ranging in price from $30.00 to $50.00. Come in and see them. We also carry everything for wheels and have Mr. S. B. Bearcl in charge of repair de partment, who give the best of work. - J ? Camden Motor Co. NOTICE To Automobile Owners Insist on getting GULF REFINING CO., ? ?? ? . GASOLINE. It's Better. Let me show you or ask Ike man wko is using it. J. B. ZEMP, Agent