University of South Carolina Libraries
Notice of UiiiMiutiM of Churtir. .. Notk'e Is hereby K?veii that a meet llltf of llir - t.x Ujoldots of itftbuiK" 'fete-p^ono Oon^y, iv?-i s. c, Wlirw in t in* office <>f 1 1 Ham. of lictlUHK', S 0., UU W tJk't., Will nt twelve o'clock noon for tbe purpose of eou*klerlu( a proposi tion to dU?olve Charter <?fJbo JU<ll*uuc Tileplmiu? <'0. J. U. INirkvr.' HeereUry. i Hctliuix', S. CL Kept. i#^0. ', Executor** Notice. AU partita InU^btea to tl?*? e*tttte of JttUMtt Brisbane, defeased, are here by notified to wake p: ,viu?*nt to the uuderHlioud, Mint nil parties, If any, having cJaiuun against the khu! evtate will present thew duly attested within 1 1??? time prescribed by law. vlAMKS W- MTQVHH Mifccutor Kwtate of Jaiue* lirlsbaito raimU'n, S. C.. N.pieud>oi liMh, 1020. FINAL DISCHARGE Nottee 1* hereby jst V*?li that OIH' month from thU dat?\ <>h Aiouday, Novi'mlx-r S't'li, 11120, 1 will make, to tl^? Probate Court of Kershaw Coun ty my tinul return mm (Juardian of the fatate of Clyde Waters, h<* bavin# at tallied Ids majority, and on the siuu'' dat?* I will apply to the *ald Court for a thi/il (llvohjiry from my trust as said C no rd la n. AMANDA ?. 1 1 \l.I<t (?iiardiaii. Collins Brothers Undertakers for Colored People TtUpboD* 41 7 14 v> . MfKnlb Sf < VihIuvIui Died Suddruly. Florence, Oct, il. Capt. Harry Scar borough. popular conductor Oil I !??' At lauttc C\>a*t J.lue trulu between bore Mini Augufcta, died ft'Vy suddenly on bin train Saturday ulgbt jti.it uf ter leavlug I( h 1.11 i ii I . lie a**t*tcd a jwwHcnger oil there, after which be walked tbroujjh tin ny in to tin* l'uhinu n, where be died al linisi instantly, lit* bad b<?*n III Itf *)nnlth for aoroe time, but bin sudden deijii* came u* a shocji to hta boat of friends In ibf h section of (bo State, was. universally popular. He wan ut one tliu?- sheriff uf Sumter County, lie had made bin bom*> in Flureuce for a uuuiher of yearn am) be 1ft aurvived by a widow, two datiKli' t? r? and ou? son all of whom are growif, NOTICE! I have adopted a system of giving tickets with every pair of shoes left at my place for repair. This is to notify my patrons to carefully pre serve these tickets and pre sent them when calling for their shoes. Failure to do this will cause annoyance both to the owner and re pairer, and no goods will be delivered unless ticket is pre sented. T. A. BELTON 27-8pd "Mutt and Jeff at the R&C6S Camden Opera House, Thursday, October 28th THE FUNNIEST SHOW ON EARTH. TAKE THE KIDS. Tenth serial of the world famous cartoon characters of MUTT and JEFF by Hud Fisher. The Jolly Show. The Fashion Show The Frolic Show. An Absolute New Show This Trip. The One Bitf Monster Musical Event of All Times. A Guaranteed Attraction. All the Bitf Son# 1 1 its. Th?* most beautiful chorus in the world. A stupendous- scenic production. Nu ft' said.? YOU CAN'T AFFORD TO MISS THIS ONE, GET YOUR SEATS EARLY. r>, To Make Good Things To Eat FLOUR Phone 90 you must have good mater ials. Eggs, butter, spices, flour, etc., must all be of the best. They will be if you trade at this grocery. We guarantee quality on every article. Our prices guarantee economy. McLeod's Grocery SOUTH CAROLINA STATE FAIR AT COLUMBIA ' OCTOBER 25th-29th, 1920 The greatest Fair ever held in South Carolina. More Premiums, (ireatly Improved Orounds and Facilities. Morr Fxhibitx and More Attractions. SPECIAL REDUCED RATES ON ALL RAILROADS New Track for Horse Racing which will be a special Feature this year. Enlarged Government Exhibits. Exciting Automobile Races World Wide Kntries of Fine Live Stock More Liberal Premium- attracting. Knlarged Agricultural Displays. SOUTH CAROLINA'S GREATEST POULTRY SHOW Ollicial State Show of the American Poultry Association. ( I re at ( let-together Week ?>l Farm Demonstration Agents and P?<?y> and Clirls Club Workers. Carolina-Clemson Football Classic (?n bitf Thursday. Annual Knrampment of Clemson Cadets Throughout Fair Week. Admission Fee $1.00 Special Rate For Children. Plan Now to Meet Your Friends at the State Fair ELDERLY CAN 'COME BACK" ' J ' ? i' ' . I I Phy*tci?? T?lt? Mow H? S ;ccc?c^?tl In Throwing Oft l/u initiow* Advancing Y?ait. T>r. I. 1,m) \?*vh?*r tell*. how he nt?d? himself ovtr Into r young mini, In nii i lik- If In People'* 51 a gtr/.l ne for ' Ml v, "It In KO||iet It I li K any elderly pei'KOII an di<" he say*. "lift* In the Mm pit* prnpotdrJon. A fit it it age* in h f ?> year* In tlu? courtie of h Ulnea* booing *e*eral weeks. After h few iveel;* vacation lit* look* and teels inn ii, I tin. to a etitaln extern the eu* lie nus t ?i 1 : 1 1 III. Havi'ig In mind hun dl'OdU ??l CU*OH III which lIlU ll?'4 {Oltvetl true, (i Ik logical to a>k If cannot reJmeiiHle the aged. make them grow young again. Jimt a* w?? mad# Ini* pre inn i ii r**f.v aged hi v? lid become young. Ami. through recent experiment*. that run now in* answered In the affirma tive. I speak froui.pertmnal experience. "It Is a fact thai there I* noi a ?ln ! siUt one of the objective inaHlfestnflop* of senility, thove iluit give the appear ance of old age. which cannot he re moved. suppressed. or hidden. or fit least a youthful substitute found for It. I "To restore the spirit and lniftjHUCj of youth Ih more difficult. This re* quires tli?* will, hot only the desire. l?ut the iloterinlhHilon and the energy to be young, m f??el young and look .voting. Most old persons have the desire, some have i h ?'? determination, hut few have the energy to carry out the treasures necessary for rejuvenation. In many cases the (kill man or woijiau who would like, to do so Ih af.'ald of ridicule, of being rfll led gbldy and foolish If lie or ??he suddenly appeared In youthful at tire and adorned with the artifices* of the heauty parlor. Yet under some special stimulus, usually the desire to attract Home particular Individual of the opposite m x. hotli ? men afld women have gone beyond the limit of pro priety to look younger than they are ami feel younger than they look. And if they went about If the' right way they usually 'succeeded. 1 "I tried It a couple of yen rS ago, not j to attract any particular individual, I hut to see if It coiilil he done. and how I it felt t ti gi 1 1 w \ oimg. | "In one year flu* change 1n my. up j pearam-e and net hi) is find feelings was j vo complete that persons who had not , ueen me since do- earllec da.vs when I ! was iige<j, did not recognize >V?e." j . ? Yields to March of Progress. One of :]ir oldest hanks in Wall -treet lias finally yielded to the march nf progress and installed a telephone, i Tt will only have one phone af first. I for It is ditlicult to Uproot prejudices Of m:iu\ \eiir*. They* have never had a telephone -because they believed that confidential business could not he con ducted over h teh'plione and their at j mospbere of the old hank, the oldest J in the city. Is that of a staid institu tion in ?omp old town settled in Oolo j nlal rimes. Absolute quiet prevails. The employees retain the ohl-faviiiotie:d good manners. Instead of a lovely laughing' creature who tells the world the line is busy in thrilling soprano, the bank will select for their first tele phone operator a person with a beard and a bass voice, able fo endow his lightest utterances with a certain pro fundity. New and Valuable Resin. A new synthetic resin is sfa'tcd to he a suitable substitute for many pur poses for Datuar and Kauri gums and common resin. It Is produced from coal tar distillates, and has been named Cutnnr. It Is soluble in coal tar sol vents, vegetable oils, carbon bisul phide. carbon tetrachloride, ether and acetone. It Is Insoluble iti alcohol, and this unusual property gives It a special value for varnishes. 'If finds use also in leather dressings, polishes, artificial leather, printing inks, water proofing paper, linoleum, and as a binder for molded materials. Its color may vary from light yellow to dark amber, and the melting points of the various grades range from .r>0 de grees to about 100 degrees centigrade. With many mineral and vegetable waxes It gives mixtures of remarkable properties. A New Outfit. The man next door to four-year-old AIImi 1 ih s h new cur and little Alien is much given to accompanying hint to the garage to keep him company while he tinkers with it. He soifte times seeius to get as mu?*h pleasure out or It as does Its actual owner. < inly ihe (ttlter day something hap pened which threatened for a time to ilim hi< fujoynient. The owner of the car ran n? home with a jumper suit in *hirh hp appeared the next time he vrrnt out to work on his car The in xt time lu* started out to the parage ho whl*f!etl for Allen out no hoy came. Tht n he w ?*n t owr to Al len's house and bunuM up the little .'??llow. ?('nine oft out fo th?> iranivf v :h m?'. s..n," he ? ii i ? ) Alien looked hi li i in ?...j-row fully. "I can't." he ^-akl ?udlv. "I !i?\??n'l imv nnderwenr like v.- :rs.*' Chinese (jirls Fight the Boy6 According 10 the I'ekiu .Fipao the ex | ???ri turn t ?>f mixed education ("H* not heen a luilllant >-uc?.-?s ut the i*ai? ?al ;??> It n-sulied in a star.d up tt^'lit between sir! ?nd hi y vtuder. ?s n i||f \ ? i? u". f n t university. |r ?ppf;trx th?H during school hou;-? viiir .?: the ho\ s at temp' fd to "# nt om t " : I e i n* if MHil*- of :he Kit'*4, hi < i 'h^c t)i> ? OtJ?. !r wl tO ? r??f? * .1 in ?' I lie government hn? d.?ti?l?.*ed iill i*H' ' i' ' f ?:i 1 1 f ?? n *he *?. r,ip aiJ.l ' ? v ?' ?'''?? ' 1 ? ' 1 1 e ( : i ' fi:oioet ' I - :.i'pt i ? * ? ? in.\n! e','ue*tioi and will > J ? ? -he ?? HAVE HIGH VALUE! Four South American Animals of Great Utility. Llama In Particular, Wall Call#* "?hip of the Daaart/* la Prixad? Alpaca la #rad far Iti Splendid Flatca. When firm seeing a llama. an dilute*, a vicuna or .1 guanaeo. In their um ive habitat your first comment would be: "Too r>i?r for a ?beep, small for a cam.' I, yet looks like both," while yon might fiUU mentally. ax did the yokel when he saw the giraffe, at the circus: "There ain't no such animal." These extraordinary creatures. little know* out sidle of the southern Andean r? glou of South America, have the range from southern Ktuador through the elevated plateaus of Peru and Bo> llvla southward along the high Andes to the plains of Patagonia and Tlerrn del Fuego. All ate of the very high est utility for men's need*1 for food ami clothing.' The four are merely different breetla of the same race, varying only as they have beep bred In domesticity for cer tain specialized purpose*, or modified by their environment when left un hampered In their. native wilds. Pos sessing a head like a sheep, a sway ing. curved neck like' a eamel, with out the camel's hump but drawn In at the withers like the darnel and with the camera "wobbly" look, apparently In securely braced upon Its tall, slender legs, with the camel's cushion-like splay feet, the llamas undoubtedly be long to the camel family. *Tht?y have the cnmel's nature, for though more vigilant tlian the camel, they possess the same dull imperjturahlllty. and their identical stubborp. morose dispo sition, ami seem to consider man (heir hereditary foe. only to be obeyed by compulsion and with spiteful spittings ami groans. The llama family in prehistoric times had a ijiuch wider range than at pjr.'s.'nt, their fossil remains bplng found from the republic erf Colombia northward to Central" America and /?yen as. far north as central Colorado. The llama and alpaca are domesticat ed, the guanaeo and vicuna are still in the wild state, and this is one of the Instances where domesticated animals range coexistent with their wild con veners. Of the four 'kinds the guana eo Is the most numerous,, and Is found la hands of f> to ."itlO. and while con fined to the high table lands elsewhere, in Patagonia their range is over the plains and lower lands as well, Hofh the guanaeo ami vicuna art* easily tamed and readily take to cap tivity, and from the wild guanaeo and vicuna have sprung the domesticated llama and alpaca. The alpaca, is kept upon the wild uplands near the eter nal snows and is only driven in to be shorn of its beautiful fleece of black or brown wool, which Is so long that It often falls over its sides and back like a curling cascade reaching to the ground. When Pizarro and his fellow con quistadores conquered the aboriginal Peruvians they found the llama the only domesticated beast of burden. Under Spanish domination more than 300,000 llamas were used to carry sil ver from the mines to the seacoast, but the coming of the horse, the burro, and more than all else, the railway Is grad ually running It out. as It Is timid and slow, and can travel with Its 100-pound pack only -12 to If) miles a day; yet It retains a certain advantage, as It is never fed on the trail, but forages Its own living. Baboons and an Airplane. Writing of the passing of an Avro biplane over TTltenhage en route to Tort Elizabeth, n South African news paper has the following to say: "Mr. Norman Chase relates a peculiar expe rience he had In connection with the plane. He was bathing, at Kamaehs, when he noticed a number of baboons which were In the vicinity showing un mistakable signs of fear. They crowd ed together and whITnpered. giving every indication Hint something unusual had disturbed them. Mr. Chase* dog, a well-trained Airedale, and known to be pluck? and fearless, also became uneasy, and appeared to he In dread of something. On looking round for the cause of all the trouble. Mr. Cha?e observed the airplane flying overhead at a comparatively low al titude. The SQund of the engine and the huge birdlike appearand of the plane no doubt upset the ??quilibrium of the baboons." ? Scientific American. Danger in Improper Cooking. In the Italian experiments Indict ing that much of our food i? uncooked, or at least not rooked enough to de stroy bacteria. * Isr^e Joint of enrred beef that had been boiled thrr? and a half hours showed n temperature in the center of Ies? than 14A degrees Fahrenheit. This "?? harni'vse to most , disease germ*, Including tubercle br. ' dill, with which be?*f believed I" [ l>e especially liable to be infected. A meat pie eaten by h number of piopw- j caused two death* a"'! ^ Idle th <? ap peared to be well bak'ed ? ? u t *? i ?! ?? . the 1 middle ga>e evidei.< e *!..?: t bad imi i been In ated flbo\?* Id:" i rs f ?h- i renhelt. , A Politic jn. A *on>?n bn'fr I ? * ( v i>u '-.tit' a : politit .in iiiid on* ?? ? (? r ? i ^ f. r ' 8 MI't' H T'l' ? t ??- r, ,,t vettiiifc' !.'? * Hf. '! <1 | V ' ' ' ' f <?? t. ' ? I - * I f\ "W:!lieii <lf f 1 1 1 ' . ? k ?" .1 I ' : ( ' <; . I \ w n v MK - 1 in viettlr.c "ieir vote* l.ru mar red i.c < b;r::^ Tj * ,l?e. Xuofh'i Still Kahlfd. ) autf Saturday afternoon oU? of the lurgCHt stills which have bmi capture*) In SuintT county wuh fak?*n x>ver by sim iff <\ .M. Hihhi, iiis tic| >ut> H. C3. NfcKuk'ou, assisted by Kurat Pol lociuon Sun New wan, H. It H??> k In. 10. s. Ww man and It. S. (irlffin. This mIH wa# loral?'d about fitftfrn iuIU'h from Nuiut*r and uhout tlii^t tilth* from rin?'wovnl ott the Hu inter 4 riiH'vvotuI road. It wan of about 00 k>iI|oiin capacity. made of eopprr, and wax li? f I ?*>?f Haas niuitluu condition. In addition to th?' Ktlll MixMit .'loo gallon* of In a Nit, ready i? u?e, wax destroyed. Noiu- t.f t ht? in n i o|K'|-a t l??K tl^e Ktill have bwn \ UIMM \vu> nr.st'-.l at WetlKrft^ ou tb? or tt .utsporiluK whUfcj by Rural VolW-vuiau Al?x Norrls. Tfc inn ii i?ul up m $900 ? ?>li homl. -suintu lUr?j( John uii-ks. ;i ?<ntro, nbot and k|lM l>isi 'ituiKhti'v it** Tliurmluy at His lioim- h?ttr i lliik- Hrvon\in? t<? wlln^, HimnolluK wWlt M? \\if?\ \\fcm st ??(> son appeared hum liHpfrtd ^ tioubU'. HU-Uh toad t'bv \K?y ft W|> none of hit business aiul iiUnnuWd about him *?'Mh a The butlw 1 I" the twxly A>f hi* own iliu^ l?r, who waa HtHmUuK iH?ail>y, inntwd. EXTRACTS FROM LANCASTER NEWS. The 8p?rk? ?I?ow# M *??n to b? In Lancaster. Thin ?how is ou? of th* rlf?ii?*t 1 ev?r t*w. I do not hoflttato to recommend U to the pubUe. R. S. STEWART, Mayor of I^aiicHster, K. V. \ ||||g?g Ttie ?ljj Menagerie Is one stride ahead oi Noah's Ark, as many ol the animals are represented by more than one pair. SENSATIONAL ACTS, THRILLING PERFOR. MANCES. and a hoard oi ianny clowns gathered irom every nation on earth. GRAND FREE STREET PARADE ol 4>liNrr tag Spk?4or. NOVEL IDEAS. BRASS BANDS, ( At. I S A FLOATS. HANDSOME HOUSES, an* Ntunbfrlfs*. Musical Vchlf?!% malt Ihr Tar- ' adf wo/lb (?|nlug mllr? to Iff. : '' -At 10:30 KACB DAV ? ,-rTV COMING TO 0 CAMDEN BALL PARK I R E The Jekyll and Hyde of Nature FIRE has a dual person alitv. It cooks, warms and illumi ates. It turns the wheels of in dustry. It is thus beneficent. Hut hre changes from good to evil in an instant Without warning, it becomes a destroyer of property and human life. A Hartford Fire Insurance Company policy helps to control 1 iir $ criminal nature. It assures prompt payment for oss. In addition ? and at no extra cost ? it entitles you to m ientific fire prevention service. These two safeguards make a sound investment in safety. Insure through this "Hartford" agency ? now. Represented in Camden by WILLIAMS INSURANCE AGENCY