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ft'iiraiujc niilWt fruit bntr ^ xVh?ch imvr flooded the soft ? 1 1 ink *trk*t since advent ? >i prohibition t.iiit issued ??> public health v,rfliV. Muiiy ?f the dimuio bever hjC4 s how b?'lf?g *(,ld. ?' wuh suM. eon ^1 ..ni v of S\\ ivlmrd MrbOAit^' >w}*' fiiivofil Will. Utile oil from the of orantfe* colored ? Mje depart tawd of ^agriculture has ru hm.1 that provisions' <?r the pun* av,( ?i|1 IMIV? bevu held to have violated c11?? ?uch drinks iiih1 gold on<|er t ra<!t* name* \v hitUi lead I h?* pur cjU|gera I" Mteve ,lu>v contain the ?'?ll Ly, purt'ow "JolW Of the fruit, You Know the Kind. ?'What sort of a clmp b? Mill to camp) ,?.i uiihV" ??jje's one of thorn? feVhiwii who al t?i ki*a? down a mandolin about the Hint' it's up I" somebody to not busy wi(h the fry inn .pan." IWtou jii'ripb ' NOTICE Notice is hereby kIvou. thai on th? day of November, 1920, an appli gallon wiH be made to officers of tht ?linden Land & Improvement Com pany. of Camden, ?S. C., for the inane of a new Certificate of ,?tock Number Four ( I) and Tor Ten (10) shares of alack- Issued to applicant Charlotte U.J Whistler on the 5th day of April, 1902,' ^ v fiiitl corpora I ion. This Certificate of tftook has been lost or destroyed and iger diligent search cannot he -fajnrd aid said Certificate of Stock has' not ^<^01 at any time or to uny njunuvL die i of by applicant. CMAKLOTTM B. WIllSTLKlt l)n I I'd Oct. 22, 1020 29-34 NOTICE Not lee is hereby Riven thJit oil th* :id?L day of November, 1920, an ap]4l- 1 ?at ion will be made to officers of. tint Enterprise Building & Loan Associa lion t?f Camden, S ('., for the IstiliQ of m new Certificate of Stock Number Fif ty. One (51) and for Two (2) shares ?f stock issued to applicant Lai K. Miakeney mi the 17th day of January, ID17, by said corporation. This certl Scate.of stock has been lost or destroy ed and after diligent search cannot be found iiihI said certificate of stock has nut been at any time or in any manner disposed tif by applicant. t LAL K. BLAKRNKY. I Dated Oi l. 22, 1020 * 29-34 Collins Brothers Undertakers for Colored People j Telephone 41 g 714 W. DeKalb St. COLUMBIA LUMBER & MANUFACTURING CO. MILL WORK SASH, DOORS, BLINDS AND LUMBER PLAIN A HUGER STS. Ph?n? 71 COLUMBIA, S. C. We Can't Restore Sight to the Blind But ? We can help weak, defective sight most wonder fully, by glasses especially ground for each individual case. Don't be blind to your own interests if your vision is fail ing. Let us pilot your eyes to sight safety. M. H. HEYMAN & CO. Jewelers and Optometrists * DR. R. E. STEVENSON DENTIST Crocker Building Camden, S. C. Dr. C. F. Sowell DENTIST (Office Over Bruce' s Store) CAMDEN, S. C. LUCERNE; THE HOSTESS OF SWITZERLAND LuCCI'lte, scelle of 1 HI port u 11 1 confer ence* among allied statesmen, Is a precious Jewel among Swiss cities with tin* lake* of the Name name for U? setting u lake where varlpd beamy and historic |fi|0di^ou ure blended. On thai lake's shores William Tell Ik refuted to have exhibited bis marks "i:in ship to the discomfiture of Oes&ler, und on Its waters tradition holds he wou his revenge by seizing the rudder of the vessel on whb'h that tyrant held blip prisoner and guided It to the rook where he alined, not at an apple, hut at his oppressor's heart. I<oss picturesque, but iuore slgnlfi cant, was the formulation of the per* petunl league. That famous Instru ment not only was the antecedent of the Swiss con federation, but Marked a mile post In humanity's political freedom. Heloved by tourists and crowded with them In normal years, Lucerne ha? retained many of its ancient as peels. Its crumbling wall witb its watch towers give It a medieval stamp; two of Its covered wooden bridges also serve as an galleries. On the walls of" one are depleted scenes of the city's history and the other has paintings of the *T>aiice of Death." Perhaps the tnowt fumed art object of the city is the Lion of Lucerne, con sidered by one critic "the most appro priate and touching monument in ex istence." In a grotto, hewn from the natural rock, Is a dying Hon pierced by a lance, with his paw protecting the fleur-de-lys of the Bourbons. Thor waldseu, Danish sculptor, designed this tribute to the Swiss guard who died in seeking to protect Louis XVI against the mob of Paris revolution ists that stormed the Tullorles in 1702. Many quaint houses remain, Includi ng the wooden structures whose in flammability gave rise to curious tire regulations. Wood for building could not lie in the streets more than 24 hours. No smithy could work between vespers and early ma?s. Ipvery citi zen was a potential fire tighter and the citizens' brigade jv,hen colled to a tire had to await word from the mayor for dismissal. Women were required 10 aid at nlg^it by holding lights In the doorways. Until two centuries ago the city fathers were assigned special duties in fire fighting. NEITHER WARS NOR RENTS DISTURB THIS CURIOUS PEOPLE The cone dwellers of Asia Minor, technically known ns the Troglodytes of Cappndoclu, arc. harassed not at all by the housing problem, for they live In nature-made apartment houses, fashioned by trickling streams and vol canic violence. Nor Is it likely that they are con cerned in the least about their politi cal fate, for, though they inhabit what Is characterized as the "cradle of civi lization," they are more primitive in gome particulars than the most be nighted tribes of Africa or the South Padflc. A communication by J. R. Sltllngton Sterrett to the National Geograptalp society describes the Cappadoclans as follows: "Residing within a .^tone's throw, metaphorically speaking, of the won derful clvillzatiou which flourished on the banks of the Nile 0,000 years ago; of the mighty kingdoms of Assyria and * 1 Five-Story Cone Dwelling. llf.hyioniu which arose in the valleys of the Kuphratea and the Tigris, their povvr and splendor dazzling I he world yen rs hefnre the < 'hristlan era; and at the very threshold of ancient Greeee. with Its unrivaled culture and political advanepmeut, the Troglodyte* of Cappadorla still retain toward their fellow men an attlturJc of mind akin to tftnt mJiIcIi ??l?lHlned in the stone nffe. w hi"i there was no such thing as hu man society, hut every man wax his own law fnd the mortal t*?!err?y of his neighbor. ''ilfe cave*, cones and cliff dwellings of the CsppadoolAD Troglodytes oi both tun It'iti and modern times are to U ( i > 1 1 1 1 1 1 iii giveiest number lu Ihv I . is < t ? > w of Asia Minor'* iof tlcat p, ;tK. WOW Cla<) Mi. Argaous (called by (ho Turk* Krjluv Dagh), an extinct vol nuto whoM' eruption In the dim past laid rho foundations uiul supplied the material for the*.e ivimukahh' hahiia nwos, . nn i ? 1 1 *? iiio iiaiys river of tin undents (now known us KUil Irmnk) In succeeding centuries became their I I I't'b'SS II IVhl t tM'l . "The practice of living in cave*, In cliffs .?r in e\< avairtl rnvltles tn the o i m *i i plain Is to bo traced to a state of sodeiy which we Of today ha\e some .lllll. ulty In 4ttpJotlUg to our And yt>t I hi. .vulral I hough; of the Trogiodytlc habit I* the bUNle principle upon which anelent civilian (It II wns fountb'tl. '"I hoy haw .sought ml found fur themseivos ? complete Isolation. 'ITiey seem to have none ?of the Instincts of agiidilturul laan and they ?re wholly Inhospitable. "The entrances to their dwelling are hltrl) up In the almost perpendlcu lar wall* of the Otttfs, nml |hcy an* reached solely by mean* of lOHg TH>le*. which are. light enough to be drawn up when the lord of the den and hi* family are safely housed.0 And when housed i hey really are safe from In tnisicn, for It would require a bust to force an entrance against the. will of the family. "One unci out writer tells us that some Troglodytes made a practice of killing all those who were not In flrst rate physical condition, on the groiintl that a man who cannot earn his own living has no right to live; and when one sees these dwellings, one can Im agine still another reason for killing off the aged and the 1 a 11 rtu^? because of their inability to get In or out of the house." THE TEMPLE CITIES OF JAPAN Many fee t liave been treading their way to the shrines iu the temple cities of Japau In recent months. In the temples of Tskyo tuany bits of American pocket money went to a priest for writing a pretty prayer on a slip of paper, which the visitor, -In true pilgrim fashion, pressed to his forehead and to his breast and then fastened to the temple wall In order that It might be a perpetual petition. There are 30,000 deities to whom de vout Japanese write. Ji> a few Amer icans' pleas scarcely clogged the oe* lestlai postal service. There were many nailve pilgrims 011 the way to the shrines. During the summer months when the crops have been taken care of. the village folk, though they have thf fen i pies of their own patron dell y and the fox god. feel that they must semi out a pilgrim 01 two to the sacrc<l mountain* and hol\ places of Jaj>an to worship In behalf of those who cannot >;<>. and s?o they pVoVhle it fund for his expenses. Not; does the emissary travel iu vtate. Lite Tor hlu^' loses most of its complexities,' He is equipped with a., cheap white eOtt on- shirt that can be easily washed, tight-fitting trousers and a loose white cotton jacket which he tucks In with a glrdlei He wears an enormous broad, stiff straw hat, and on his back he carries a piece, of matting which serves him as an utm biella by day and as a bed by night. He; carries his luggage in two bundles, one on his back and the other In front, usually labeled with the name of the shrine he is to visit, and somewhere about his person there is hung a little bell which tinkles as he stumps along over the weary road from mountain to mountain. In August the pilgrim rolls off his mat and the visitor from foreign lands climbs out of bed at the crack of dawn to hear the lotus flower bloom, | for the buds burst with a pleasing characteristic irouhd. If Nlkko Is the most beautiful city in Japan, Kyoto can be called the most interesting. Here the feminine visitor finds herself bewildered by the most exquisitely wrought of all the exqulsr Ite pottery, cloisonne, bronzes, fans and velvets. After she has bought more than she can comfortably get home with, she probably will want to see a bit of the mikado's palace which covers over twenty-five acres of ground and Is surrounded by a great wall with six gates, or journey out to see the largest lake in Japan, Lake Hiwa, and the 1,200-year-old pine tree which stands neur It. ? ?ft HOW SUGAR MADE CUBA A WORLD EL DORADO Sugar, like shoes, we once took for granted. Hut procuring enough for the preserving season was a problem and sugar "speak easiex" are still not uncommon In lands where the supply Is rationed. Writing to the National Geographic society. William Joseph Showalter says : "With a sugar production nearly doubled und prices more than quad rupled since 1012. one can readily see why Cuba is the world's El Dorado of 1920, and why sugar is its king. "The imagination Is almost over powered In attempting to comprehend the vast proportions of the sugar In dustry of the Island as It exljfts this year. "The cane produced Is of such tre mendous volume that a pro<-?.sslon of bull teams four abreast, reaching around the earth, would he required to move it. The crop would suffice to build a solid wall around the entire ?v*o thousand miles of the Island's coast lijyi as high as an ordinary dwell ing house and thick enough for a file of feur men to w alk abreast on It. **The ntipir ?>\ 1 1 *.te <1 fr.m tills cane would, Eugtf * Meet of ?|eauiers reach lug from Havana to New York, with ? ship for every utile of llifc twelve hundred that stretch between the two |K?rt*. Tin. great pyramid of rhOopv before whose Inspiring pfOpvr t Ioiik million*, of people have st?*?r and (tiie^ iu open tiw u lunl aiua/< went, ivnutln*, a; tor five thousand yearn, unrivaled iih a monumental pile but t'ubn's s?nu'iir output i Ills \oi, would make i\\?> pyramids, eaelj nm basing ti ml overtopping liliyopx. "Tin- wealth thf oil snpir *???>>; brings In Is not les* i;k?il<lt? In lu proportions. Four IiijimIi. | dollars on of a single crop for i \ Imman tf(* log u ho llws 01? lli> l-liiii(l II stiin almost us Ki?ut ms the per eapit. wealth produced by nil the fanus. <lill the factories, mid aH 'the mine* of the Tutted States. "What wonder, thou, that Tuba ,t*> day Is a laud of gold 'and gems, richer than Midas over whh, .-onvertinK Ooesus, by <eiitra*t, into n beggar? "How uiuch net profit the nine f*ro\\ er reaps hi IPL'o prices is Imrd to es tlinate, hut that It Is Int'Ke "Ill npP? when the methods of cape growing an stated. To begin with, after the llrsr. crop the phinter does not have to bother wttn jfciPti time tor about ten yoara. The soil Is so deep and so fertile that one plamiiig produces ten harvest*. Neither does cultivation bother him after the (list season, for the blades stripped from one crop form a tiuilob that keep;* the weeds from competing with the next one." * WHEN THE NEAR EAST IS CIVILIZED MEtoQgljjty ipcikln|, Turkey whs <i I vlded Into five great prmJnccs or dl* trlctn Anatolia, Armenia, Kurdistan. Mesopotamia and Syria." With Mils introduction William H. 1 ! n II, writing lo i l*<e National <*eograph lo society, sketches the resources of Turkey, which have an opportunity for development with measures that may lesson the horrors of misrule, Injustice, deportation*. ntus^irijps nix) ('amines. He continues : "The Maine HVond plains that once fed ami clothed a population, of 40, 000,000 human beings are waiting to day for the plow, the scfed and the reaper. The mountains still hold riches of coal ami Iron nml copj>er. The quarries still have aluutdance of choice .marbles. The rivers are la tent with power lo rum tin* - .whorls of Industry. The natural harbors In vlte the fleets ?? f men-hit nl Men and tlie river valleys, ami mountain pat*se.s offer "natural lines ??f communication and transportation. as in the days when >;reat caravans pas.Mul along these natural highways, lirlnirlng the 'merchandise of the Knst to die mar kets of the West. "The whole land has been l\ intr fal low for centuries-? a land that modern exploration reveal* as one of die rich est In nyrumL resources and as unsur passed by lis geographic location for being the trade renter Of the world. "Exclusive of Arabia, which was never more than nominally ? under the Ottoman dominion, the Turkish empire embraced about filO.OOO square miles of territory at the beginning of the -World war. Only about 10,000 square miles of this were In Europe. The Turkish empire was equivalent t/? the combined areas of the British. Isles, France and pre-war Germany. It was larger than tall of the area ea.it of the Mississippi and north of the Ohio and Potomac rivers. "The boundaries were the Black sou and Caucasus on the north. Egypt on the south, the Aegean and Mediter ranean seas on the west, and the S.vrjan desert and Persia on the east. "Turkey In Europe wan almost a negligible area, as the Balkan wars stripped the Turks of all their Eu ropean possessions except Constanti nople and a narrow territory along the Bosporus and Dardanelles some 40 intles In width; so that when the Turk ish empire has been referred to in re cent years, Asiatic Turkey was nearly all that the term embraced. BIRDS HAVE YANKEE ACCENT Londoners Complain That Imported Parrot* Are 8poi|ing the Pronun. elation of Their Fellows. The American accent has Invaded even the pnrrot house at the zoological gardens here, according to n London eorr?*s|?>ndent of the Detroit News. A large consignment of birds has arrived from America. Many have names that suggest cocktails. Hither to scientists may have doubted (be ability of cockatoos to acquire a rec ogulzahle accent, hnt two of these birds fresh from the New York zoo speak unmistakable American. . They ask repeatedly for "c'.em oysters on a half shell" and beg their amused visitors for hominy or ."all fornln peanuts. Sometimes in an out. burst bf patriotism they repeat "Cali fornia" until It would appear t tin t It Is the only word In their voc abulury. And now a very small green parrot In the cage next door !?? trylne to *ay 'T'alifornla." too. A disgusted k?-*?per ?Oand?? outside his cage saying "London London. London," hilt the small green parrot does not scent t<> admire his accent so much as that of his feathered trans atlantic friends. Bright! When xchool opened this fall, Har old had a n?*w p*ft':l?er. H* report e1 on her to bis mother a*: follow*: "Tier -n iiiie Is Miss Albright, and ?be l'? k right, and believe me, she 1* going to make ?h?? rest of n* bright or know ihe reason why." 1UMU <vu UOO.OQO to ^{YO.OOO Jnvs of' >mo<l in il?o DititiHl army utitl iiiixy u n?I h?mkmi?' oOvps <|ur in# worM \vm?. Special prices on Flooring, Ceiling, Siding, Castings, Mouldings, Shingles, Laths, Dressed Boards and Brick. ' ' ? ? ? ? ' ? ' t v; \ ??? '? ? V J; '? "Everything for the Mouse" Kershaw Lumber Co. Phone 340 D. H. BELK, Mgr. C.mden, S. C. JL ra package 1 before the war * a package ? , _ _ during the war NOW The Flavor Lasts So Does the Price! JUST RECEIVED CAR LOAD OF CHEVROLET Touring Cars - ? George T. Little