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Your Friends May Fail You But Your Savings - ? Never ! . . i ' . \7 MA friend in need, is a friend indeed" and no better friend could you have in an emer gency than tlu* money vmi have .saved ? the money at your own disposal. Now., while you have a regular income, is the. opportune time to open a saving ac count at the First National BanK. Whether' your lirst deposit be large or small, it will be sV'elcoMed. Don't procrastinate ? start at once! ATTENTION! OUR GIN HAS tfEEN PUT IN FIRST CLASS SHAPE AND WE ARE NOW READY TO TAKE CARE OF YOUR GINNING THIS SEASON. PLENTY OF BAGGING AND TIES ON HAND. WE WILL APPRECIATE YOUR GINNING AND SEED BUSINESS. _ Camden Oil Mill Wm. KING, Mgr. J. H. OSBORNE, Supt. Life Insurance Protects mortgaged real estate. A "Life" Policy pays the mortgage if the bor rower dies.- It gives him time to. discharge tlu? obligation it' he dies. An "Endowment" Policy pays off the mortgage \Vhether the Ixiriowcr lives or dies. Southeastern Life Insurance Co., L. A. McDowell, Agent Service and Quality Wr rstahi; our business on the principle of I > ? ? i 1 1 vr f ;t i r with our customers, giving them full value for the money tiie\ leave with us. W ?? have continued that policy throughout the ve;ii> u ?? have been serving you. and w r are pursuing it more per>:>tently than ever in Ihi^ era of price in flation today Hut we never lower the standard of our goods. On thi.-N high plane of commercially we solicit your patronage. Bruce;s Pure Food Store PHONE 66 4*' On the Bank of the Seine. IN ONE of hi* utosi charming pas sages Anatole France evokes a tleeting memory of the quays klottg the Seine, "where one| (Hst urbs the dust-covered boobs of the u-cent stall, and 11 tltousund shadows terrible anil ehni'Ujlng." It l*n't our purpose to revive the-? memories : to do so would he to parade t ) i * * whole past In review; we shall simply state the inngle which drawn and which, holds to the quays of the Seine, writes I, A Des (Jarets in lit) Friinee. The quays' Along both "sides of our river they run !v But when we speak of quays, we mean, of course, the quays ot' llW lei! I batik. There Is the heart of Purls. Who would deny It? The iirliiiii of iho^e workers who live III the neiglibbrhood of the quays ? artists, thinker*. poets or simple workmen ? when they seek -their river, Is one of happy ' Indolence. They do imt .pause before the windows of the antiquaries' shops; they 'go toward the rampart which courageous and deter mined booksellers have raised, before the- river of forget fulness, the dike which will protect their books. It Is there that. In the summer sun. as well lis In winter fogs, are tlm last resting places of the production of man's thought. It Is there-thfrt a book, af ter good or bad fortune, comes to take its last chance; it Is there that they a re viewed by the savants, in search of information, or with sentimental curiosity by Ml in I I'lnson . . yes, the last refuge and the tranquil .resting place over which watch the high profile of the Louvre and the towers of Notre Dame! Where Point of Interest Begins. The quays start a little above the Palais Bourbon, at the palace of the Legion of Honor, once the famous Ho tel Salrn. During the revolution, since the prince of Salm-Krlburg had been given command of it battalion of the Lafayette guard, his palace became the meeting place of the Reformist club. Later the same building received the members of the Cerele Constitutlon nel, until the day when Napoleon made It the seat of the grand chancellor of the Legion of Honor. It is a pity that this charfning Greek temple should be eclipsed by the surrounding buildings. Next there Is the Qual Voltaire, where Mine. Ceclle Sorel makes her home, near the house tn which Voltaire died. When one enters this building the ghost of the mighty century ap pears; you are received with the gra ciousness of Cellmene. Everything in this house bears the imprint of Louis XIV, and nothing could be more a part of It than the character of the great artist who lives there. Here died In gres; there was the convent of the Theatlns, brought to France from Italy by Mazarln. Further along, at th corner of the Hue de Beaune, used to stand the barracks of the gray musketeers. The Famous "Bridge of Tears." Let us stop at the Institute. From here all the Paris of yesterday Is seen; the towers of Notre Dame, the Louvre, the Saint-Chapelle, St. Germain I'Aux errois, the csnclergerle. the pa In Is de Justice and the Pont-Neuf. still look irt? very solid. Since It was opened to trafllc by Henry III. the same dnv he lost his favorite, Quelus, the Parisi ans called It "the bridge of tears." That did not prevent it, bouevr. from ' becoming the center of animation of the city where all Paris irmheriMl m l>e amused by the ni*w< of the cm yet- j tiers and the sallies of Tabarlo. Next we see the pala< e nf (lie pr rice of Contl. today one of t!u- T ? ??,. ^.:r\ ( buildings. To save nur^hi^ '???Mi re : mor>e and regret let u^ put a> de the sad memories of St. German ? \uxer j rols and of the concjerse-'i l.?t n< Instead follow alone the Quai < ootl. in I the footsteps of Lnmarrimv >f \'lr:.?r 1 1 id.'o. of Salnte Beauve. of VP-'-l <1e Mu^set and of all thos.- o-hers who have heen familiars of the uu..w. AIh^! Where are rhe c'-?r - - of th, pn>t I'nder the dome of the nstl tUte * Quays Are Charming (cjr quays are Indeed charm Hi: ?-|'h the movement of trnmwa\? agoos st.'l .arrliiges with the nf the !?oa^s tin'l fhove t l??ni-?;?t??i Mnall which are n?ultipl?M| h\ the of the river I wntrh tl,e !oufiu*er? \vt?o ro . loaf there, father* >f ?? ' 'is: 'he'r youngsters along, by , the hand, nnd teaching them history, retrospectively. I lave to see the^e youngsters, with respectful eyes lifted toward these great relies of the past, poipted out by (he pnternal hand? while their thoughts, I know, are wandering to> ward the .lardln des liantes a ad the greater attractions t?f the monkey cage. llesting his elbows on his boxed, the -bookactter wiiti'hes the crowd; he ex changes greetings with Maurice Rnrres, Lwn Ilourgeols. Itaoul Ponchon. . . . A young servant girl coilies timidly to ask for the "Clef des SJonges;" a collegian Inquires for a dictionary* . Liked by the American Soldier. The American soldiers liked our quays very much. More than one. un der the Influence of these skies, caught the disease and became bibliophiles Or numismatists or philatelists. All of them have 'kept an exquisite memory of this corner of Paris. There, Jn fact, men and things exchange a pleasant smile, as though the people of the twentieth century had found them the good fellowship of other days. The npftuess of night descends like a mantle over the old river. The sun has set. '*? Heedless of time, the Immor tal city falls asleep In the shadows of night. Inviolate and splendid, peopled with glorious spirits, evoked from the past. MUCH LIKE A FLOATING FIELD Sargasso Sea, With Its Wondrous Vegetation, Has the Appearance of a Prairie. In nearlng the Sargasso sea It pre sents the appearance of a vast, undu lating prairie, clothed in bright yellow vegetation. , On coming on deck one might imagine oneself and ship set down In the midst of a field. As far as -Hie eye can reach Is the yellow weed to be seen. In masses more or less compact, according to whether the winds are light or strong; sometimes In lines many miles In length and but ,L*0 feet wide with intervals of clear water between ; sometimes In dense circular patches ;like floating Islands. In this moving continent life runs high. Myriads of tiny crabs, some of them no larger than jJfcas, cluster about the tangled fronds. Weird-look ing little shrimps with wondrous eyes on long stems, each facet shedding a brilliant greenish light, sparkling like a cut gem. Water fleas in a hundred varieties, colors and shapes. Little wormlike annelids, black with bril liant orange stripes, lead an active life here, wiggling among the leathery leaves. Lovely corrallnes Infest the branches, plumed feathers with myri ads of polyps. It Is the Ideal breeding place of all manner of marine life, for the heat of the sun Is very groat, so great, In deed, that In the noonday glare the flsh sink several foot to the cooler wa ters below the algae. Bobby Was Hungry. The father of the family always re peated a very long grace at tho dinner table. The children exported It and had boon taught by mother to be very reverent during that porlod. In fa ther'* absence she In turn said a very short one ? perhaps partly as a reward for Their good behavior during father's turn-;. P.ut recently when they earn** lo t:ibie very hungry indeed, thoro be fore them was a plafo of fried chirk ??n Rod a large ) onion pie. Father took his t?1 h ? and looked around the ruble to s flint nil hand* vv ere folded and nil heads bowed They were and be was lust preparing to bow his when si\ \.-:-r< !d Hobby <-:tid :n all agoniz in;: foi l- : "< ?o mother don't jou sup pu.se >i?tj eould *:\v zra c today even If J fat her i - home ? ' A Paradox cal Fact. j "I'll! VOIJ see Ml. etc >llgar I ?> !.'?>- ' ing to sour in i ? r ? < ? :ind mny hw : source this SMnTt"-r*' Wh:>? w!!j the I women do then 'or preserving?' "1 don't know 1* look* though preserve-; may he in :? {? < Ule. The Result "I suppose the w.'it tins 'ntepfered very much i r t. !he lu'e'-nntlonal marriar*? mHrket "Yes in ?" uif?tiv countries n<">w It is h?r-> ?<> c ' i ????! M'le to Ibetu." Trespaiw Notte*. --- AH pari 'en are hereby notified not i?> 1 1 fvpa.-vs en my t?wainp placo for Uttttttug or ftiiy otter purpo#?. Anyone (Hsi'oyHi'itiuK tills notice will he duult with tO t In- full ?-\l. ul i?f I In* Uw, w. r Beagle, Boyklu, 9. <\ UH ;i i p?i One-third of the luuulgrauta nm>ly f<?r adminslou to the UnU^ 8tat?* are barred by the lltertey tut \ iiroiwsal by the UrUUU aUudrtUj to uul^e the British aiul CviuidUt u. ytyft Was be**i rejected Uy Of^ titan government. Goes Straight to the Point A long distance tele* phone call, whether it brings a business or so cial message ? has the fac ulty of going straight to the point ? admit ting no chance of delay or misunderstandincr. ? . ,?ii i:nes i-eiu-h almost everywhere and the low'sTATlON 'l>? STATION rotes make the service u real economy. SOUTHERN HEIX TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY Products of the PIEDMONT MILLS Three Famous Brands of flour, but only one high standard ..of excellence." PIEDMONT PURITAN ARGUS SELF-RISING FLOURS are milled from selected Red Winter Wheat. That is the reason'why they have been favorites for fifty years. Ask your grocer. ? Piedmont Mills, Incorporated High-Grade Rod Winter Wheat Floor Lynchburg, Va. The "Service" of this bank is planned to relieve you of vexatious details and to co-operate with you in the discharging of financial worries. To assist you politely and promptly. To make banking easy for the customer. To spread wide our facilities making them available to all and thus really bringing the bank to you. Does this kind of co-operation seem desirable? Does it appeal to you? Our depositors tell us that they like it. Perhaps you will like it too. Loan STRONG & Savings Bank OF CAMDEN. S. C. safe CONSERVATIVE WE CAN SAVE YOU MONEY By Making Your Old Clothing Serviceable We are doing it for thousands of others ? why not for you? We believe a trial will convince you. FOOTER'S DYE WORKS Cumberland, Md.