University of South Carolina Libraries
< 'v*- 7'" ^7y ' ' - -,v . ?? ? lira. Ctare Sberlden, one of tbe mo*t ?k>Uh! of Mnglaml'# w<?uj?hi ?i<ulptor?. b&H completod ? hiwt of Her left A? qultb, wblcb tb? will |>ut on oxbllil Stomach Out ot Fix? 'Phone your grocer or druggist for a dozen botilea of this delirious digcMunt,? a #!??? with iiii-hU give* 1 1' 1 1 '' 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 relief, or no charge' for tlio fir?t do/on iwed. Shlvar Ale PURE DIGESTIVE AROMATIC* Willi SHIVAR MINERAL WATER AND GINGER Nothing like it for renovating old tired stomachs, converting fund into rich blood and M>und ftfih. If your regular dealer cannot Kupply you, telephone Camden Whuimle Groeery IMittributora for Camden COLUMBIA LUMBER & MANUFACTURING CO. MILL WORK SASH, DO(RS, BLINDS AND LUMBER i in i i PLAIN & HI EH STS. Phono 71 - COLUMBJA, S. C. ye comfort for near view and dl.stance ithyptok XVr GLASSES IV io the work k of two ~ [ partis* ot rQIdLSSes We Examine Eyes and Fit Glasses. M. H. HEYMAN & CO. Jewelers and Opticians DR. R. E. STEVENSON DENTIST Crocker Building Camden, 8. C. Dr. L. H. Snider VETERINARIAN] (Fomerly of Camden) ?HEARON'S STABLES Bishopville, S. C. Dr. C. F. Sowell DENTIST (Office Over Bruce's Store) CAMDEN, S. C. Collins Brothers Undertakers for Colored People Telephone 41 q 714 W. DeK*lb St. CONSERVE OIL, WARNS U. S. I Consumption In United ?tates to Cx oecding Production, Oaya BureaO Olroctor. Washington, D, 0,- with ' oti c?n- 1 sumption In the United States exceed- j ing production, Director Manning of J the bureau of uiine** predicted that In lea* (luiii twenty yearn the supply still underground would be exhausted. If the demand for gasoline und other oil produetN continued to Increaae us It ha* during the last few years, the United States, he xald. yvould have to depend on other cuuntrfees for part of Its supply. The geological survey estimates that more than 40 per ceut of the supply In all oil field* In the .United States hat been exhausted. Director Matt* nlng ?ald that the yield of north Tex as field* during I i ?~<> would be lews than last year. "Promising fields In I^oulslana have proved to be lurge, but not as extens ive as many had untlclpated." he Hald. For a supply from foreign fields the United stun-* will have to depend largely on Mexico, Venezuela, and Co lombia, according to Mr. Manulng, who ?aid that fields In other countries, with the exception of Kusfda, were largely under the control of Great Britain, fYance and the Netherlands. FOR HEALTH AND BEAUTY Out? t?r i lie essentials to beauty nnd henlth. we are told, Is deep breathing.* Cultivation and expansion of the mu* : cles of the breathing apparatus we possess is necessary If we wish to re- I main free from bronchial and tubercu lar aihuents. for there Ik no tonic Ilk* a deep breath of fresh air, especially the last thing before retiring, or first thing in the morning. Deep breathing for milady Is also essential If the lines, of the throat are to conform to the requlreme ' f the beauty censor. Gets Drunk to Supply Investigation Data, London. ? The classic obi Eng lish "under the table" answer to the question "When Is a man drunk?" Is being revised. Kings college Is making In vestigations to which end a pa triotic citizen volunteered to get drunk once a week In order to supply data. Once drunk the "patient" draws a circle, Inserts a square inside It and draws diagonal lines from the points of the square. Every half hour he does this. Drinking stout on an empty stomach, the drawing got worse for four hours and twenty min utes, but it was never ho bad as after whisky. NEW ORLEANS DONS OLD DUDS Campaign On In Crescent City to Force Down Coat of Men's Clothing. New Orleans, La. ? Threadbare conta. shiny trousers, lust yenr's straws nnd resoled hboes were the order of the day here, signalizing the opening of the city's second organized drive on the high cost of living." Proclaimed "Old Clothes day" by Acting Mayor Hicks as a part of the campaign begun at Tulane university, the celebration was Intended to arouse interest in the organization of ihe "Wearem nnd Patchem clubs,"' designed, as were the overall clubs, to force down the cost of clothing. Hundreds of business men appeared at tli<ir offices In once dis carded garments. An Ancient Transaction. Danville. Kv. ? .Judge \V. <?. Prewltt of Perryville hn* an old note executed by Da\ld Prewftt, hl< great-great grandfather in 17s I. The note is writ ten on >h< in . and nn as given In settlement (? r n 'ru t <>f land In Lin coln c.'.intv. Virginia. It is for i.'if/i and " r v re.-i'ntly <!Ui i>vcred In an an , clent piece <> t furniture. ? ? ? I I I i. ? III T PUNISHED FOR KINDLY DEED Magistrate 8??m to Hav? Oaalt Harshly With Man Wha "Brok0" th? Sabbath. John Hull la an KngllHtyKpubllcatloft. The letter we are reproducing from It# I coluutua waa written to the magla | tratea of (he ICnglUh town of Heading. One wonder* If they ever benrd of the distinction between the letter and the spirit of the law, remarks Our Dumb Animal*. "Your Worship* 2 I gather yoi don't go to church ou Sunday** as a regular thing. Let me tell you why I gather. On a Sunday during the atrlke a po liceman dug up the Sunday observ ance act In order to convict a poor devil of a drover ? Charles Palmer, to. wit? of driving cattle through the j streets. The man had fetched the bea8ta from the railway atatlon. where they had arrived from Dublin. They were then In a bad state. If they had not been removed to be fed and watered they would have been the victims of callous cruelty ; and though ?n tbla particular Sunday that which Is written, 'Which of you shall have an aa8 or an ox fqll Into a pit and will not atralghtway pull him out on the Sabbath day' was part of the gospel, you made the drover pay the costs of his prosecution. To all Intent and purpose, therefore, gentlemen, you might as well have convicted and fined him. What a pity It Is that the act of 1077 doesn't prohibit Reading mag Istrates from walking or driving through the streets on Sunday in or der to catch their dinner." VOLCANOES AWAKE TO LIFE Mount Katmal, In Alaaka, Especially, 8howa Signs of Preparation for Destructive Outburst. Affording an awe-compelling specta cle of nature In a sullen mood and awakening memories of the ghastly details of the eruption of eight years ago, Mount Katmal, most powerful and restless of North American volcanoes, Is again In violent octlvlty, according to Capt. Charles A. Qlasscock and Purser Gary Bach of the steamer Ad miral Watson, which reached port re cently from southwestern Alaska, nays the Seattle Post-Intelligencer. A ?able flail of smoke from the fun nel of the belching crater broods over the northern sky for a radius of 40 or 50 miles by day, while fretful itongues of flame can be seen by ves sels n score of miles at sea at night, according to the Seattle mariners. Knight's peak, a neighboring vol cano, has also been stirred to spectac ular efforts by the outburst of its more deadly companion, and wreaths of smoke hang over numerous peaks of the rugged Alaska peninsula. A slight earthquake shock was ex perienced at Kodiak Island the night of April 8, a day beme the arrival of the Admiral Watson, Two days later those on the Admiral Watson had m rp.re view of the volcano. Submarine Radio. The Inst annual report of the bu reau of standards states that members of the bureau's staff have developed very successful methods of communi cating with submerged submarines by radio-telegraphy. With a single-turn coU or loop attached to the outside of the submarine, signals can be received as well when the vessel is submerged as when it Is at the surface. It Is also p esAlblfr 1o transmit from a sub merged submarine a distance of 12 miles. Thus It becomes possible for a ship and a submarine to exchange recognition signals. A coil fterial la a saltefaetory direction finder when submerged and readily receives signals transmitted thousands of miles, just the same as when used In the air. The navy has equipped Ita larger subma rines with this apparatus. ? Scientific American. Airmen Guide Cavalry. While the Fourteenth cavalry wai on the march recently from Fort San Houston, Tex., to Fort Ringgold, Tex., an aviator, who chanced to pass ovei their heads, acted as their volunteei guide. The observer In the airplane saw that. Instead of the Trio City road, they were following what Is known as the Somerset road. He advised them of their error by a message dropped In front of the moving column, and the troop detoured to the correct road. The air-service officers reported tht Incident to the chief of operations at Kelly field upon their arrival, and 23 minutes later a map showing th? route to their destination, Fort Ring gbld, was dropped In the middle ol the marching column. Just What Did He Mean? Little Henry Honnhnmmer Is a typ- i leal Hoosler youngster, who uses his ! ears to good advantage. Since prohb bitlon hnf: been enforced In Indiana he has heard n great many remarks made [ by people who In the past were aecus- 1 totned to Imbibing occasionally. Rut at Christmas he electrified his fnm- ? lly hy Ills own opinion. The Christinas tree was aglow and everyone was talking about Its beauty, etc. Finally It came Henry's time to say something ami he did. He looked I nt the brilliant tri e. "(lee. it's all lit ; ! np " he sighed, "and 1 sure wish I j ; was, too." ? Indianapolis News. Hard Luck. ? "I whs b<>rn too early," he sighed, j "What's tb*? mnf'er?" "I bad fit wear overalls when they were a * inLr of hard labor, and now j I that wenrin" 'em Is fashionable Tm out t of the gjune.." I How ? WwWy P?|Mr Is RomL ' Wheu tlie average pmrioo r?atl? a tuaguxliie be mid* the ?tor)e*. Wheu '? ? ' v ? V ??; -HT ? ?/v ? h<> uft? m dally paper be re*d? tfce headline* Wibeq be get? a country 1?M|MT 1iv HhuiclK'K down Into A OHli for (able position and rcadq every Hue from start to kt\*t b? ? It through he goA back om | make iur? that \w h**u't aU^ j tiling R*?> You never saw anything in your life like Clean Easy for washing. You simply soak the clothes over night and boil them for ten minutes in 454 gallons of water and lA bar of shredded Clean Easy Naptho leine Wash Soap, dissolved. Punch with a stick, rinse, blue and dry ? and the whole -week's washing's done. Sounds almost too good to be true, doesn't it? Just think of doing an average week's washing in ten minutes for only a few cents! Without rubbing, scrubbing or an> mean work ! No wonder thou sands of women suay that Clean Easy is the most wonderful helper a woman ever had. - Once you've seen Clean Easy work, you'll never, never break your back over a scrub t ig board again. Clean Easy disinfects and cleans cjjeaner than you can, anyhow. It looks different from other soaps ? and it is different, too f One trial will prove it. Order a bar of Clean Easy today, from your grocer's. Louisville Food Products Co., Incorporated Louisville, Ky. SAVES THE RUB Follow dircctttin* ob in side of wrmppor ?at your grocer's. The Zig-Zag Tread Mechanically and scientifically ?or reet for greatest security under *11 road conditions. The shaped cups alter rate on both sides of the eitra wide, be*Ty tread. Skidding is minimised. Parallel Bar Bases of tb? "Pint Tth?" and straight Center Llns of tread are thick rubber stud* tliat M' ?1 A i" kcvplug tUe wheels "bead on." Puncture-Proof with Every Cord-Quality LEE Cord Puncture-Proofs are the only J cord. tires that can win an argument with eteel. Let the thinnest, toughest, sharpest nail or stoutest spike try to pierce the triple thickness of steel discs. They cannot pass. Your tube is safe. The cord construction is uninjured. Not a cord cut or weak ened. for the steel discs are placed be twee!: the cords and the tread. For eighteen months Lee Cord Pun? ture-Proofs were subjected to tht sere* tests before being offered to F. ^ They were everything that a cow should be ? not a single cord <Iua^M been sacrificed to make them p? proof. Let us show you the quality and """"I tion of this remarkable tire. KERSHAW MOTOR CO Camden S. C. ( Layer Vie- 7; C LE* Co-el Rincture Proof Smile at Miles