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NEW1^ MUSIC? 0+ \ By Special Arrangement With the Associated Music Publishers of New York We'll Feature by Daily PATEPHONE Demonstration BROADWAY'S BIG SONG HITS Come in and Hear the "Latest" Direct from Melody Row ?V. , ?;;??? ? ?, , ?, G. W. CROSBY Soda Water and Ice Cream, Cigars and Confectionery I, KB COUNT V NEWS Items of Interest fiatUered Krom lllsh onvllle Vindicator. Till' rlosinu excrciscs <>f the lMiliop vlllo (traded Kc1i<m>1 was held last Thursday night and it. was tho best of Mil for unually the 1k*mI 1m reserved for the lasi. From the fact, that the con test for tln? liest drlli<Nl boy lu tho mil itary company and tho declamations t\v the graduating class -would take place, >i largo crowd was there Ion# lH?fore the oj>cnlng hour. Mr. \V. A. James, chairman of the Itoard of Trustee*, pre sented ttap~rilp.loiimH and had a pleas ant. word for each one. The class roll was as follows: Joseph Edward J>u rant, Viraiec Lee- Mat his, l^adson Fra w*r Montgomery, Clifford Durant Heaves, Wilson Flinn Show. Myrtle Vermel le Stuckey. Supervisor Bvaius -gave the chain Kan# a half holiday oil May 80th, and got one of the ministers to go out to the camp and preach to them. Mrs, Fannie *Sca Thorough, mother of Mr. M. 1 >. S<?a ^borough, who has beiti spending a year or so with her daugh ter In Mnry!;md was n pleasant visitor to our otljco tills w?>ek. She talks most Interestingly of the tine country of Maryland. Mens in. C'haille ,?nd Will Mci,cnd vn luuvo fifteen aer<*s of -pretty tobneo as we have seen this season. It '?0d tH'Kun to show the effects of the not weather, l>ut the <-oplon? showers have put a change to It. It may be a surprise to the f i*IcthIk of Mr. Hamincrsla and Miss Wllcher to hear they -were married last October In Columbia by Key. Hon ley at the homo of Mr, and Mrs. Tanehwftll. Our ??ld friend, Mr; J. V. Matliis, dropixxl In to see us yesterday. He rei>orted Mutt the raina Monday after tiooii in the Spring Hill seejion were very heavy ^iul damaged the grain ero|'s wry 1 1 1 1 1< 'h . lie says tbfi wheat and i vi* (s um> unusually line In Ill's s?s - tion. 3 Dr. K. O. MeCufcOheou carried Mr. .Joe Dult'ant to the FloreiMw In Urinary Tuesday to l>e oj>erut<Hl on for ap|*m dleltls,. Mr. and Mrs. El He Dullant, his father ami mother, aorompatiled 1 hem. Mrs. 1. F. Harnett and her sinter, Miss 101 ma Evans, left last week In Mrs. Harnett1** touring ear for a trip to South (ieorgln ami on to Taeksonvllle. They will stop a few day* at Valdosta 1 visiting relative*. They will l?e gone | about ten days. (lie low are the names of persons who have bought the limit In War Savings Stamps *Uid are members of the One Thousand l>ollar Ch?b: M. B. Me rutehen. E. W. Tladale, J. 1?. Kllgore, S T. K. Davis, J. M, Ilearon, W. II. Shaw, i W. A. Stuekey, II. W. Woodward, W. T. j llall, Woodward McOutchen Co., (reo. M. Stuekey, (J. II. McOutehen, D. C.I Stuekey, Mrs. A. T. Cooper, I>r. A. C. j Haxkln, W. K. Moore, Dr. N. Y. Alford, ! It. M. Jenkins. The four year oiu son of Mr. A. J.' Parker, who lives a few niiles south of, < 7h est e ril old, wan instantly killed Sun- ; day morning of last week when the wheel of a heavy Ueo automobile .jwiHts et! over its head. Heeoine a -stockholder in the United States? buy War Savings Stamps. HOW TO FKONOIiM'K HUM Nan** of Fnmch Towiik figuring In N> w* of Rattle of ? Hon brie** many uow#p*ii**r readers in Anu-rlca lii|\i> found UUUi'UltV III l?r*? nounclng tlie name* of French town* which have apiicarvd In the war u?>m> from Frances I 1* a Hat of towty* in ricurdy, with t li?>l i pronunciation Albert Ann* ltai?auuif l>ouay lNm>iine (?oml? ... A uilcnx Soy on i 'haulnes t.-.t 7?;. f'anrbral .. . ( *< 'in | H'i j^nt ? iwiMsljifny SoIhhoiih ...... tumbles ...; Montdldicr Chauny ......... Xesle . i .? Fori*, ttoilot k:; I*atn?y-mirMntz Orvlller* ?. Ploinont llt, ? -Mom t - ltena IK I ... Abhecourt ... lyCllS < >vlmy Arleur Fouchy ' . .Wuvlllc ItolsJcux r?> . . Itofry ... Moycnuevllle Ayette Mutxjuoy ..... " Sorro .... Hen union I .... Ilaiuel ? Aveluy i->ernaneourt .... Vnlro -..., ... Hnnganl HOHVffi) Castel .... Mori so Hraches ..... Thory .. < { rl vec*nes Crintigny ^jwolift M'nignelny .... .... Saint-Just ...v ... Cerva Ijcne .... I /A none .... ... ,i Homme Itavenei .... .. . A 1-1 ?are A ir -ill i Hap onir Dpo tt> I'ay r?>n .... Con-day Am .m m Koayong shono Caiub-ray (\)ini^yen ^.^..l^iKs-c-Kny goa-song rombel ... Mon-did\va . .... Sho-nee Neil l.a Fair Hollo Panny-?u Maaa .... Or-wcel-ya .Piay-mong .... Mong-ltenno ..... AM>ay-Kur Jvon Ov-eeroy Ale-lr Fir-shee Nlr-ville ..ltoa-llr Hoay-ry Moyen-vllle Ay-yet te Buck-oa Say re lto-mong .... ....Ham-el . .. Av-ebwee 1>are-non-cur Vare Uoim-arc . Hen -v rail Cast-el ... Mau-reese Brash . .... .... Tory .... Greev-aln Canteen-gny .. Ay-ong-cur Maln-ya-lay SaliiK-.lnrnt Sayrye-vage ...... Ivongrcro La Sum ...., Rav-en-el Died in Attempt at Rescue. Ashevllle, N. O., June 9.? In vainly trying to save th? life of Ed. Jolmson, until recently a member of tljto press room force of The Ashovllle Citizen, A. L. Mills, a leading business man of j Greenville, S. C., lost hLs own life at laurel Park lake, near Hendersonvillc, this afternoon. It is stated that Johnson, who was unknown to the Greenville man, lie came exhausted while attempting to swim across the lake. His cries for hell* caused Mr. Mills to attempt his ivscue. Reaching Johnson after the latter had gone down for the second time, Mi Ilk was seized around the neck by- Johnson w,ho dragged Ills would-be rescue^ down to death. Both bo<lles were recovered. Luxuries as usual means a victorious Germany. Save and buy Wal' Savings Stamps. BEST IN THE LONG RUN TUP) trench, which always encircled the?Ronqan cas tra, or camp, was brought to France by Julius Caesar nnd used by him on the very battlefield where to-day the Allies and the Huns have 25,000 miles of trenches. With rings of trenches, gradually drawn smaller, probably the first modern trench warfare, the Turks in 1667 took Candia. \ auban, builder of Verdun, in 1673 employed the first parallel trenches, the system of the present war. "Defeat, not foresight, turned the Germans to trench warfare. Hut Goodrich never hail to dig in. Since twenty-two years ago Goodrich manufactured t h'e first American pneumatic automobile tire, Goodrich has driven ahead to the big, graceful, masterful ? GOODRICH TIRES Hut whether ( joodrtch was revolutionizing tire manu facture by bringing forth the tirst American clinchcrtire ? ( )r originating the one practical non-skid, the cross bar, safety-tread, or tough black tread rubber ? Ooodrich built tires to one end -SKR VlCK VALUB ? what they are worth to the motorist on his car and on the road in COMFORT of an easier riding car ? ECONOMY in gasoline saved, ? and LONG MILEAGB. SmaJl difference whether you buy GOODRICH SILVUTOWN CORDS, or BLACK SAFETY TREADS, you get SERVICE VALi'K tirhs. THE H. P. GOODRICH RUBBER CO. Charlotte Branch: 435 S. CThurch St., Charlotte, N. C. WHEN MASEFIELD FIRST SANG Author of Many Song# as a Youngster j Often Lulled His Boss* Baby to Sleep. Id the hidden recesses of Paradise alley you may see a service flag with one star. Hut how are you to see Para* dim) alley? Jt is in Greenwich village. The entrance Is through a hole in the wail in Sixth avenue, between Jeffer son Market Jail and Klevenlh street, recalls a writer In the New York Mall. In Paradise alley there is a row of quaint dwellings that seem to slant in outrageous fashion, In fact, everything in Paradise alley la strange to the point of queerhess. I^ut oi^ce within the alley you forget the world and Its buatle. You are Id a land far away. Around the corner from Paradise al ley la PatchiD place. If memory does not serve 111 It waa Id this queer back water spot that John Masefleld ate and slept and rocked th* cradle of a man child Id the daya when be 'tended bar" in New York towa. A queer lad was Joho Mansfflel.d, A thousaud songs struggled for birth In bis brain. The world knows many of these songs to day. for be ranks Id the second flight of llvlpg poets. Rut wheo John Masefleld "tended bar" In Greenwich village and ate and alept at the boss* home in Patchln place, the only part of the public that got the benefit of his poems was the poau' baby, for Maseflold, while he waited for the boss' wife lo cook a meal or "set" the table, had to rock the Cradle and sing to keep the child from raising the roof with his wails. The babe never cried when John Masefleld sung. It Is the testimony of thnt good wife of the boss that she never could inuke head or tail out of the songs the queer youth sang ? they neither had rhyme, nor reason, nor things that songs should have. They were like chnnts, she says. Hut the baby seemed to make them out, even if his mother eould not. Never a wall came from him while John Masefleld sang. Value of a Good Look-Out. Speaking of the value of a careful lookout as a protection against the submarine, the first lord of the admir alty, Sir Erie Geddes, said that if a submarine .Is sighted by the lookout on " a vtfssel-^-yrBether the vessel Is armed or not cb&kes no different* ? It la seven to three on the ship in favor of its getting away. Out of every ten attacks, when the submarine Is sight* edby tho ship, aevea of thttp fall, but of every ten attacks when the subma rine is not sighted eight ships go down. In this connection we note that Sir Alfred Yarrow offered, Rome months ago, n monetary reward to the first seaman on any merchant vessel to detect the presence of a submarine. In the case?of the American destroyer, recently sunk, It will be noted that the presence of a submarine wan not known until the ship was torpedoed. Will some American offer a similar bonus for the seamen on our ships? ? Scientific American. War Beer In Germany. ? Reports from Berlin recently re ceived in London show that the kaiser's subjects are facing a further reduction In the supply of beer, says the New York Times. The amount of malt available for brewing has Jusf been fixed, and, whereas tho amount for tho last, year was 25 per cent of the peace quota, the amount for the next year is to be only 10 per cent in North Ger many. and 15 per cent In Havarla. When tho requirements of the army and of the munitions factories ? which In Germany get precedence ? have been met. there will be enough malt to provide the civil population with about one-third of Its consumption In pence time, but the hoer Is only the thin "war beer." The barley harvest In tho rest of Germany has been bad, and there Is now a great Increase In the proportion of barley that Is used for food. After the War. "I shall want some money today, dear," said George Plpwhlstle to his wife before the latter set out for busi ness one morning in 1927. And Mrs. Plpwhlstle, grumbling tho while, hand ed out the chips and waved her hand from the garden gate as she made n dash for the elght-nlneteen. Three hours after Mrs. P. had re j turped from the city, George Pipwhls I tie came in. lie had a mountain of parcels In his arms and the light of ! triumph In his eyes. "Yes," he panted, as he untied the I parcels and disclosed four corkscrews, ' a stuffed owl, an assortment of paint brushes, a remnant of a cloth-bound "Uncle Tom's Cabin," six walking sticks, a toasting fork, a brace of tin , openers, and a roasting Jack. "Such a , scramble! It's Just about the best bargain sale that ever was!" America Now Leads In Toy*. "American manufacturers are mak ing 90 per cent of the toys being sold in this country today, and they are never going to let this wonderful and i profitable Industry which has been de ' veloped since the war to slip out of ! their hands." That statement was mad? by Wil ! Ham G. Whlttemore, manager of the stationery and novelty department of " the American News Company, says the 1 New York Journal of Commerce. Mr. Whlttemore was in Germany when war was declared, buying toys for his con cern. This was before the war, one of his duties, but It is doubtful If such i a trip will ever be neeeasary after peace Is declared because of the fact that the American toy manufacturer I has taken bold of ids problem with such aptitude and facility. i lit; tylRL OF THIS hoi k i ii, following paragraph in a v*xmt Issue of the ( ^iV-ago Tribune has at tracted considerable attention and has brought forth .1 number of < oiitrilmt? il comments from reader*: ? si. i .? >11 1 k women liave ('lit ttielr ho. \ down to sock length. The tenden , V (? (he full sex to rediteo gradually i hi- amount of <*lothoA they wear <-au?es koiuo appivhonsion tliat t hoy may ultl in.. i !?! \ ixack i?? tile fig leaf" Among l hose whose interest was ex cited Is a gentleman slgnliig himself ??At: Cllil Married Man." \vfto ?utt)JOlllS the following verse*: Utile kI?1. you hx?k so small, lioii'i you wear any clotlicH at all? ] lou't you wear a' shlimn y shirt? jioh't you wwi* a "petty skirt ? Just your <*or*et. and your hose, A>r these all your underclothes? Little girl, when en the Htreet, You aipiiear to Ik* all feet, With your dre^s so very tight iioh'i > on w$ar a petty ^kirt? Kot a tiling to keep you warm, ( ~v ii > itist to show your form, Little girl, you won't live long, Juvt because you dros* all wrong. Can't you wear more underclothes Than you'" eoteet ami your hose?. Afte>* while, I Jo Ik'Hovo, You will dress like Mother Wvo. ? . ?' ???'?'-? V ?.*?? ?? II ladles do not consider it presump tuous on oUr imrt. wo will offer the following w\jol=juder for their use: . * ? *| Married Man, you are a fake, Cut your I'liHlV. for mercy's sake. Why should you lay slightest stress on how we i>oor girlies dress? 11' you don't like what -we wear. i)|d (iroUe.li, then why do you start* V li' we do ii.it please you, pr.'y. Turn your-faee the. other way. We'll not moll for oii<> or two (ilea i-ev cd niblu'ieis like you? If like Kvo we elianeed to roam, Wlfey cuuldn.'t ktk?p you home. ? Hock Hill Hpeord. He?:e Found (iuilty. . Lexington. X. l\. June 0. ? J. ham liege ou trial hero for the murder of J. F. 1 Joadoriek in the former's homo on Mareh 10 was found guilty tonight of manslaughter after the jury had de liberated for three and a half hours. Judge Adams sentenced liege to be confined for an indeterminate period of I not loss than ono year and not. more! than four years in the state peuften-i tjary. Counsel for liege have given j notice of appeal to the supreme court and liege was released on $2,500 bond. After the jury had rendered the ver dict liege's counsel made pleas for mercy. I Serve, abroad or serve at home. Huy War Savings Stamps. "The Reaton Why^ It. A. Thomas .Stu* U,.!^ the bwt. they a iv w?tvt>Uik*UM 11)1(1 U.u wedUHne. Tin s k?H?p nl;,' up, ami (lie JWd hill tlowii, a .iiiim' for ever* vffvxt, rvuZl vaiiM' ami tlit' efjCOOt ?$tl4QY?g |?9 The I'OUltrj Heim'tllc* ^ tiug, 10 rellovo nil the ?iiMnj?| FonvI family such as <Tlolert%a4i timl makes Mm ll0li?* luy. The Ho# Homely will KvHH> off rtw> Ohotefa, aiul If -to the Ifrwt stag's, will "uigttt jSl Don't forget to un lund tu* of Fan-Is' Oolte Hrmotly for H. It Ik ho simple with tlvonper. u child can ?lve li? Also a bottw J rl?' HettltW? UeuMxly fur Cut, \lrulses on man op l>east, Thfj ] foil. Thene remedies *ru all gum to you by your dealer, to glv? ^ tion, or your money back. l\iade by Dirt Kentucky Munutj lug (\>.. raWncah, Kentucky. For sale l?y S\>rin?s * Hlwimou, ilen, S. < ^ ^ COLUMBIA LUIBai MANUFACTURING o MILL WORK SASH, DOORS, BLIND AND LUMBER jjA.,' " : ?<r i vk PLAIN 4b HUGER STS. Phont COLUMBIA, S.C. ' DR. J. W. SHARP Veterinary Surgeon and Denibt I make ? specialty of Stirftry i Dental Surgery. Office Phone 168 CAMDKN. S. C. KEEP FAITH WITH ,FlYOUR BOYS "OVER? THERE" When your boy was so little that all the world_ was a foreign country to him, he trusted you to take care of him. You sent him to school and to play and on your little errands, and with iipplicit faith he did your bidding. Now we have sent your boy or your neighbor's boy out into foreign land, into terrors that he cannot oven know ? and his faith has not faltered. He knows we will do our part if he does his. Pledge to buy War Savings Stamps on or before JUNE 28TH National War Slvingi Day ?wSaving to help our sons is not to be called by the ugly jjiame of* duty or sacrifice. It is love's blessed privilege. ? - ? Are we keeping the faith? Are we scrimping and saving and giving to help our boys do this thing that humanity has asked of them, and to help them come back to us sane and whole? Are we doing not only out bit, but' all we can? - Loan & Savings OF CAMDEN, S. C. Many Are Lending Their Lives-? j What Are YOU Lending? . \ rhonsands ol our boys are going down into the trenches tud'iy ? cJean-faced, determined, splendid , * oung men. IVi^ny are soon to join the army of the iame, t|^r blind or the dead. You can at least go dovvn in your pockets for them. T hink it over ? be ready on JUNE 28TH? NATIONAL WAR SAVINGS DAY! I here s an army. Yes, a dozen armies ? of attK. wart, wind-bronzed, young men standing between yoll( and the grizzly Hun. These young fellows are givinff thrii ease, their comfort, their friends and their bodies, the hope of life ? giving for you ? -for yo*1' ^ ou can at least loan your dollars for thenit. PHONE 66