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Good Credit A prime essential to business success is good credit, and the Loan & Savings Bank depositor finds its officers eager to co-operate with him in placing himself on a good credit footing, * \ , When broadening opportunities present them selves a bank credit may be the one thing necessary to accept them. A checking account is in itself a factor in build ing credit, not only at the bank, but everywhere in the field of business. ? ? , WE WANT YOUR ACCOUNT Loan & Savings Bank OF CAMDEN. S. C. 6c a package before the war 5c a package during the war ?is:. 5c a package NOW THE FLAVOR LASTS SO DOES THE PRICE! FARM PROPERTY I t ! .? i-i w ! , > i ri - 1 ? r to | ? m i- . ? ! i ;i -i o a I .?>. t a t ?? h a \ * I In* t "i. < ? \\ 1 1< K i. ..ft". \ t.i ? : 1 1 . ?! Jimmi .Kiev in N.-r i h-w rM< - rn part ??f ? ?? . u 1 1 1 y . ? ? r. t ? i u ?- It ! . ii :i ii t .i<- !"? ? r 11 lulled ? ?? ? T l? ? 1 1 . j ? ri ? .<11 per iter* l'.MHt !n?r l.ihrrtv Hill at J?lO per acre. I ? n i n.Te* n>ar t'antev Hill at \<>'r wre. Jimi ,t . ?!">? fanu. ?"> tenant h?ni?e> at JMO per iirn1. 1 1 < M I ;nT( .. I lo ;icrt >? < ? I ??' 11 a I n . i, t . I : III ? I ? ' 1" pastil!'. 11 ' > I. SI 1. 1 Itou-.-j ai:<l 1 I'arii- at If'JO per a . r> ."..V! a< !?? ali-'iit l'Nt (.pen, 'J ilw .?!!:: j:*. I'arn ainl pasture .it $T?0 1 " * ??*"? 7" a< ?;??? fa :i h;.. - f i ? *:?. ? i : W a *1. . n k! ? >n A t '.a ii t a Hitfh \s.i\ .vjrMHi lilMI .1 ??:????> f "'111 I'lllll !? t, .i ' N p> >? u?T?. 17i> .ifi'i". In ???.it liw.f ? < a luilej.. ???ftl?uii. ut> ai.?l han.v :il?".t T"i :i<ti-> ?*p**i: . pasture. riMivic -tr.Min at p?T a?re. 1 M? at"- ;t t unles .u \S" ? - 1 v 1 1 .?? at 1 jicr acre. J a.-j e- s i,.? , ?( , . i ".nil,!, .j, | 1 1 1 , i ] vj ? ? nl"'iit 1 T'i hit'" p. : j, j Smi p. r a. re. at'!< ? i ? \ -"i i >? a . i ( . .] .. ? t \ A.. k.i.?is ' . ? . r.. i. re a r. ! '? i 1 1 Camden Loan & Realty Company I. C. HOUGH, Manager F00t? FOH #REW OF AIRSHIP Moit Careful Consideration Had to Be Given to Proper Nourishment of Oaring Navigators. | ? The average housewife would hold up her hands in horror at th<* thouglrt of c<y>kLng and providing for thirty men during u four days' atrial voy age. Yet this was only one of the tasks, and hy nV> means the U)OB t Important, which confronted the orgunlvera of the It 34'# trip to America ami hack, remark* London Tit-Bits, Wlieu It is reinemhered that the men, had to conform to the rigid limitations of the accommodation, the task assumes even more formlduble proportions. While the provisioning of the crew taken a back place, relatively, when compared with the navigation and other scientific arrangements, diet was, nevertheless, a subject requiring the most careful consideration. lite di gestive organs, If Impaired, react at once upon the nervous system, and In an enterprise of such a daring <4iar acter as the flight nerves had to bs tenderly nourished, The rfiedl<;al department of the air ministry was early consulted and de vised a menu consisting mainly of meat, bread, cheese, chocolate, tea, eggs, and potatoes. Then came the problem of cooking, and the K84 has surely the strangest kitchen existing. Instead of fixing an electrical or other usual type of stove, the hot exhaust gaseR from one of the motor engines were trapped, and led around a receptacle shaped foi* boiling or frying, the heat thus obtained be ing sufficient to meet all the require ments. There were three of these boilers provided altogether ? one in the fore car to hold three pints, and one in each wing car to hold one and a half gallons. By means of these, soups and hrit suRtnlnlng drinks were able to be made. Tho type of flying clothing provided for the crew Is another example of the attention paid to detail to give the flight every chance of success. Each member of the ship's complement was provided with two complete suits of silk underclothing. Over this, woolen gear, similar to that provided for sub marine crews and divers, w#h worn. The Bell* of Michael'* Mount. The pealing of Joy bells In the year 1910 has made up for many years dY silence in the ancient belfries of Eu rope. Somebody deplores that on the occasion of the peace the one remain ing bell of St. Michael's Mount on the Brittany coast, should not have been rung. There would have been a cer tain piquancy In hearing the clang of that bell, the gift In 1711 of the abbot from across tlie Ithlne who, be It said, reigned at the Mount onjy by proxy. But St. Michael's Mount Is without its bells; even the abbot's bell which used to warn and guide the fishermen out on the bay has ceased to ring. The old abbey's peal was busy indeed, dur ing the Hundred Years' War, warning 'he countryside of the approach of the enemy. In the Revolution the order ?vent forth that the bells should be melted down, but It was never carried out. In the Intervening years all the bells have disnppeared except the ons given by the German dignitary. Deer Increasing In California. Though the Rami' reserve established In the greater portion of the Angeles forest reserve In California, which In-, chides the San Hernardlno and Sierra Madre Mountains, has been in exist ence but two years, wild deer are mul tiplying rnpldly, according to forestry officials. It Is believed that within a few years great herds of deer will be ron riling the hills. Deer have been on the verge of extermination in the Southern California mountains, but es tablishment of the preserve Is protect ing the herds. Even now deer often ap pear along the boundary lines of the restricted nrea, and at times wander into cities near the foothills, seemlHg to be very tame. The forestry servlc? will establish specinl patrols along the reserve during the coming hunting i^ihod to see that the law Is not vio lated. ? Christian Science Monitor. Good-by, Dobbin. Figures complied by the New York sanitary bureau of the department of health and reported by Harry T. Gard ner, secretary of the Automobile Deal ers' association, show a great decrease In the number of stables, nnd. natural ly, in the numbers of horses occupying them. In 1017 there were 108,036 I horses. The most recent figures show a shrinkage of 32,036 horses. Chicago, I too. shows a falling off In the reg istration of horse-drawn vehicles un der the wheel tax law. In the four ! years ended May 1, this year, the num ber of sueh vehicles decreased from | 40.S82 to 32,480. This diminution of about 34 per cent compared with New York's falling off of about 30 per cent. PubllcKy Promotion. "My dear," said the caller, In a stage whisper, "It came to me in strict con fidence and you mustn't breathe a word to a living soul 1 It la the most sacred communication. Promise me? Well, they say that ? " And as she left the house five min utes later she smiled and said to her Inmost self : "Well, thank goodness, now I've got THAT published r Pcaca Maneuver. "Yon nlway? play the phonograph during meals." "Yep," replied Farmer Corntossel. " 'Taint that w? care for the mualr. but we want to da everything possible to keep the summer boarders fi\am taikJn' about tfca League of Natlook* Be Provident Prepare for sudden Fall cold snaps and conserve your coal supply. The portable Perfection Oil Heater makes' heat available, when and where needed, in the quantity required. Clean, safe, Bootless, odorless, eco nomical ? bums ten hours on a gallon of kerosene. Used in over 3,000,000 homes. Aladdin Security Oil gives best re sults. At your dealer's. STANDARD OIL COMPANY (Ntw Richmond. V*. BALTIMORE, MD. Charlotte. N. C. Charleston, W, Va. Charleston, ft. C. Use Aladdin Security Oil PERFECTION OjJ Heaters m.Aynard WINNER ' .Makes Trip in 2-1 Hours. I ."? .Minutes anil K Seconds. .Mincola. N. V., Oct. IS. ? Steering by coin) >uss and dying at an average speed of nearly two miles a ipinnte.. ">,400 inili-v across the continent and return I | j ? ? ; ? I through srtiow.'fog, clouds and rain, Lieut. It. \V. Mayuard landed on Roosevelt Field at 1.50 o'clock this afternoon, the first aviator to finish iii tlio army's great transcontinental air race and reliability test. He carried as passengers Master Electrician .Willi ami K. Kline, of Harris burg. Penn., who he described as descrv I ing the "greatest credit" and "Trixie," a I ? ' ' ? ? ' German police dog. Undaunted by the fact that ten lim ht^ve been lost directly nml indirectly u a result of the raee, Lieut. Mftynard n nou need within an hour after he I landed tbat'within a few weeks he would attemlpt a one-Ktap flight from Minwli to San Diegn>, Cal., with Dallas, Tmm, the only stopping point. "Wfcen Grandma Conies the Dirt Most Fly" With Powdered Soap There is no grit in Grandma ? it never cuts nor scratches. Will not harm the finest leather chairs nor the finest grain mahogapy. Just a tablespoonful in the^ water and then SUDS ? creamy, radiant, glorious, foaming suds that clean without scrubbing and without effort. Goes further ? cheaper to use. Grandma's Powdered Soap is a perfect cleansing medium, Does the work of BOTH Washing Powder and Bar Soap. Buy it from your grocer today. Don't wait until tomorrow. By tomorrow Grandma will have done today's work. 4 Grandmas Powdered SOAP p^Tnj This Powdered SoapTodai The Giot*. Soap Company. Cincinnati <?-'? -,r