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Bank at Home IS LOYALTY TO HOME IDEAS, HOME IN STITUTIONS, HOME INDUSTRIES AND HOME FOLKS. THIS BANK OFFERS YOU A||. THE CONVENIENCES AND SAFETY OF AN IDEAL HOME RANK. A CHECKING ACCOUNT COMES IN HANDY IN PAY-UP WEEK. Loan & Sayings Bank OF CAMDEN, 5. C. ; STRONG SAFE CONSERVATIVE BUY * i ?AT? HOME i No need to go elsewhere when you can get such a large selection from one of the largest firms deal ing in General Merchandise. Our stock is large and i varied and has been recognized for years as one of the leading firms in this section of the state. We carry all of the heavy groceries and farm imple ments for the planter as well as th<> housekeeper. Springs & Shannon CAMDEN, SOUTH CAROLINA Member of Chamber of Commerce Banking at Home N't mattrr imu \\ci! planned . n m<Iu.-tr> that has tailed to establish faith and confidence in its sn perst ruet lire and cor porate body, is doomed to lail ure. The F^irst ^National Hank has laith and confidence in itself, its depositors and its communi ty. It welcomes the business of individuals, firms and cor porations who adhere to these principals. SPEED CAUSE OF ROAD ACCIDENtS I ! Auto Touiist Who Has Oriven Mme Than 50,000 Miles Give* Jesuit of Observations. NO TWO 6000 ROADS ALIKE i . 4 . "Don't Take Strange Road at More Than 20 Mile* an Hour,'' H)? Ad vice? Car Doesn't Drive Twice Alike in Any Roadway. Little Fulls. N> Y.- * Archje Buker claims to l-e n continued automobile tourist of long | tuiU varied experience. He says lie has driveh upwarO of 50, 000 miles ill his 1010 seven-passenger six; and the car looked It when Archie a iK I his faintly pulled out hefdde the road Just west of Small tiulf, between Uttle Falls and Herkimer, to tamp In one of the must tinted of Mohawk valley tourist parking places. Baker and hla wife' and a twelve year-old son ami ten.-year-old daughter said that touring m^ivcs with them. They gave the Impression of having an Independent income, "My experience Is that a lot of tourists don't know very much, and don't stop to learn anything, either," said Mr. linker 'The result Is, they have tt lot of hard knocks, When we were coining into New York state, about ???;.( i miles t rom here, we turned off down a side road to camp by Lake KrljK There was .in outfit down hy t he lake which clu i mod they had had a lot of hard luck. They dished a win e-i : they tore up a tire ; they Just a lent' off the hack end of the load; they slept cold niulils. and they were Just about ready to unit. lvut. shucks? they won;t unit.- Nobody, ever does quit once the family have gone to touring right-? the way it ean~he dune. Their dished wheel in? terested me. The man claimed he didn't drive fust, but he skidded, caught the weight of the car on the right rear wheel, and smashed it all a-bllm. "This was on a strange road, out in Indiana, he *aid. and it sure did look all right. Hut it smashed him, and it was pure luck that he didn't roll over. 1 asked him about the. kind of road, and he couldn't tell me; said It was pretty muddy, but had gravel on It too. "There you are! He smashed up and was taught a lesson, and didn't know what the lesson was. The fact Is there are more than 200 different kinds of good roads In the United States. I've been on most kinds. I'll recite a few of them ? mountain contract roads, stone water-hound concrete roads, oil waste roads, gravel, sand and clay, broken down stone roads, cut and till crushed stone surface, cinder, shell, bank gravel, beach gravel, (jcscrt two trackers, and so on. "No Two Good Roads Alike." "No two good roads are alike. Good and careful a driver as I am, 1 darn near rolled over out west of Salt Lake City last summer, skid ding' In the dust ? dry, Huffy dust. Why. if I'd been driving miles Instead of careful 11! miles an hcur, we'd rolled eild < ? v i-r applet-art, and it was a u'ood road, if you knew how to drive it. Yes. sir. There is not a road n all this Fulled States, not the be-', widest, finest, smoothest, road, that isn't t reacherou* j f a man's not uved to tt. I don't mean wild eyed hunmi'-rs. hilt ju-t common folks like me. cjf \,,>i . < . >i i ' t I ie\ e it. \ i'i| study j the l-ond accidents \ou c. upon a* | \ (t 1 1 rid. acro-s -he ci.inr'". Half j t be skidding Is done wher,- the road , t\pe changes. Where a m. n leaves 1 con- it and hit- ",l vi;rf , .? ..r where j be h a\ < - the w a r*. rt . - i r . ? ? -'"tie for ; hard pah "A c; r doc-n't !ii\e twi.. alike on | nnj roadway from S'.-w to San rriinciv, o. I Know . b. .-au-e I'\ .? made | the trip Where d" 'ouri-'- coming ea-t barn: up with ? ; - ? i . b 1 . It's when j they c.?me off bad _ ncds int.. gootl roads. You take lb-- w.-t.:.u part of New York state, ami pe..j-'. leaving t l,e good roads of ? ?hb ? after eroding the little i > * > . k of l )h:u -.K-ti t ? a v e half the trouble that people ,? ou;i!lg east have w lieu the\ b.t ' 'i- ..re-\ New York brand ??!' roadw a \ - Job for Nearest Garage Man. ? Now it's the saute way with Cali fornia Y.?t !?kf a Jean \v|..,v \p:n our of Nevada or eastern < 'a 'for:, a desert rnad^ o\cr the Sierra ;tito the paved \\a>? of ? '? ll fort; ? a. )??? feels re liever}. He'i ??n y..?"l !'":id? at In-t. II, - b". n 'Miefil for L'ihn, :,.!es. He w an's in ..ii er I \ ? d-.es-, ile lilts a sharp turn. ml h ;.?o ' 'l'he ni^b w ! 1 1 ? ?- 1 s < I" rc > j 1 . 1 1 ' o ' j . ? ? s ; j j , d. and there - a big Job f?" 'h.' -'..rage In the nearest r,,wn " I *n r? see, !n r1 y - 1 ? > ? U j _ ? ' me say 1 1 ji ? the man who .|r .???< ?jH?edlng ? .\ e r a road lie ha- t ?? . > : ? ' . c n be fore invites d. a:h r -'er !m all ricHt on m> 1 hit blent' ? e rrv up |o tn'.les hi "Iig If I kr.nw The r .1'! .Ms .??:* . <'iuid it. P. lit . ' r . a s- r. i age -o,.i sny. I'm one ' f ? 1 1 ? 'si- jr. n. .? ? ; didn't Iih^c ' >) 'in.' Mr. a- '? ? ? t ? that It ;. - us' ? . . . k i , _? ? ? ? , a r . d re T'lk' ' r * V . ? ? ,???- u r t. .i.f l j.. ; ? \ . .-a t I : * ? ? ? ' It. c the da > * u h?'i. .'I r ? were ? : . ,\?;*?-d by tfte thousand over the highway*, and joo t w-'t ^ f'.. ? : ..f i, ?),. ,?hr.d ai> Mil n#w- anrt nil ? . .r J ??!. v or *<>ufh or we*? h .'"?i Ii-m* .<?r. I.oiiut# thtf railroad b(^'? wo it laying down on i tlif I r high-wage Job*? I'uyou comero- | her ho* many of those earn wojro miiiii ?()? >i| u|?. buriied up or were shook j half Jo pteoui it wu* by spce<J ! !:ig ov?-j stntnge r<?M(lx. >. ( New Oliver Apt to Be Careful. "It Uai.'l the liovv ?li ivcr who 1* i trapped by different roa Is ; It Is Just ?ik tipt lo be t)ic ?sJ<l - t tin* r. Ne v driv er* n t i* careful; they learn ? a round ? home. hit. i lit* name roads ove.-y day and lc urn em. When thoy w t gocd ? HI tlit! home roads (hey start Oil. hit another kind of good rood, {tiul biiig! Smash UP ! "It's Just' that way nil over. I don't begin lo claim I * 1 1 1 an export In all kinds ?)!' roads; I'm pot, AH I*i|l an expert In Is keeping out of trouble. > I've been through Itertlioud pass. 11, (KK? feet above (lie sen, and more than 140 t'eet below the ocean down In Sal ton sink. I know enough to go slow. 'Hint's whnt I know. "It's the good road that k 1 1 1?. * Men don't break their necks speeding on bad roads, They're caught on g<s?d roads, the way I said. Some pave ment Is deadly dangerous when It's dry, and some is deadly dangerous when It Is wet. Take concrete, for example. There's no cleaner driving In the wnrJd than on concrete. This side of IlufYtilo, and here and there in Now York and California, you have concrete roads. Now, when they are hauling Iiay for a bottom, or oranges out of ait Irrigation project, there'll be about three rods of dirt on tin- con crete. It's 11 1 >t to be day.' It's Just like daubs of axle grease on a rail road track. Ynu hit that stuff going right along, feel it quiver, and iry to straighten up Your steering wheels slick around the easiest they ever did. You forgot where your straight-ahead is, and wiili the rear end of tb?- oil r swinging a head you hit hard pan again, and shoot off Into the ehaparral. Or you <*l i nib the Xe.nce of the I'ufTalo county chili.' depending when* you're at. Dry or Wet, Both Treacherous. "Dry roads are treacherous ami wel romls are treacherous. Then' are more accidents in western New York ! from pooj do coming oft' 1 ?< ??.?r romls on to good ones than there art* on rough J country romls. "Whore you know a road is danger ous you m> slow and careful. Where you think tho road Is not dangerous, but It Is a death trap, you are in peril of your life. I'm thinking that when they have paved roads over the Kocky mountains there II he a lor of a col dents because it seems so easy. "I've seen more than U00 wrecked -cars beside tho road. I've seen the ruins of ton times as many at garages the country over. Not one but what came to an untimely because of carelessness of some kind. And nine times out of ten the carelessness was because the driver was going too fast on a road he didn't know. You'll find at tho bottoms of slopes in tho Hookies big, beautiful cars, all ruined ? skidded on 4111st, on clay that looked solid, 011 sand that was roljer bear Ings, or on a long pooled log gutter cross. "No, sir! My boy. when you get your car. don't you drive over any strange road at more than miles an hour, no matter how good it N, and you'll find lots of roajls where it'* better to go under ten miles an hour than to go faster than that. I'*rom the I{oeki?*s to the Sierras I averaged ^ev en miles an hour- ?><> miles at three miles an hour one day. And I passed (wo cars before dark that left tr.e be hind in the morning. They'd busted themselves getting there. ION. "Co slow. 1 . 1 *t the other fellow go by; voii'lJ get there' first, ati\ho\\." TAKES A 35.000-MILE WALK Swiss Doctor, However, Is Still Going ? Journey Covers Old and New Worlds. Milan I ?r. Maximo A rn.a nd<? I.eijiet, t bitty -i\ a SV.?? l'b\>l ? i.iti. has arrived bere after walking IMI imlex |T1 both obi .ml t!t w World' He Hs?eri? that li to?ir t ? ? k him around the globe. .v.mtnenoing I n 1. H>1 I and eo>i ), j|M .*?-!? mm h ?. He s:t\s he |. ft S\\ i'/erlainl g<?in. north' t" < . ? ? 1- n > : 1 1 1 y I'oland and I! lb* . s :d the l:i?t li:itu*-i| ? ? ; r 1 T r \ when u a r began, and cori t i n jourt.ev jet'oSS KlJ>Ma t>> Sibefa. Ib then v -<'icd t'bina and Japan and hir> r crossed 'lie I'm lib* to Atner: a I b r!n::n*-- ft- have t ra verged ' bo: I. \..r:l; and >?.??!! 1 1 America on :"????? W hen lie get to Su I'.', rlale! he de elded tl it be bad not \t t *..???[, Italv or A f i" i ? a and has < omuiem 1 i :,ov. h.s Joun ? \ s 1 ! rough them. Airplane Garage in England I.oridcn The first alrplarw- garag# for the n-t of the a.r tourist iitude !t? debut III .'I I. "I doll suburb It .0 ?-quipped ? It I: -i s'aff of s(,,: ebardi.s under ipsalitlod ground et. jrlneers :sn*l ii'io-r1!'""' make rr^:iirv "w bile \ 011 vv ait." * Pumpkin Vine Growing Inside the Parent Shell M:"v I >. >> riiMiti *! ' U :i \ : ' ? ! i ?: < I *:? ? i'f ? {?'jmpkJii ??!??? am- m r -*>?] ?. th?r ?' ?? -<>??<!?? >?ri tl.i- ii - tlll'l -!(!! '??. I to ?r<! * !..? I t ; > >i: :i | 'ii , . ii \ I '!?? ha 1 - ? < ? .-t] J > ' ' i i 1 1 rv , tf ? f-r ? ? -t Tfv pt; ? ; * fi J* ! ' ? * . ? I. i ? ?r, j p . *-hr*l ' :??! i itiNrok' t. ; I . i u a* cl.t. K<*>ts wv?tbI ifn h. * ? ir- trt h itiitl f.ill >hape'! 'm-o f?n'l !'<'? n ^pvpU?p*?fl Sumter ItffeaU County Court..; in i ho flection last week vn the question of establishing h county court in Sumter county, tin* vote was. ','{1 fur uml S^8 against the propo.si lion. Every precinct In the county YOliul against the court, several of thorn unanimously. Au ejection was held for Judge at ? " ' |tb? aame time, tho vote 1 HodfW, J8& Purdy 4'?>, UuCfleB^ TU? winner got only au empty I lit* voiirt \vn . .1.-1. n, ,| MUh Olive Clttuhaw, tUo tlrst ^ Unit woinuji to pans the bar ?-?*?? tion. may w*ar a wig wh<w shemti Ikt first ai>i>??aru?oc !i? court. THE CITADEL THE MILITARY COLLJSGK OF SOUTH CAROLINA CHARLESTON, S. C. M '? Hanked as ',l)isilu?uteUpil Military College" by th?> War IW 1 1 1 ? ? 1 1 1 . ^r'' offers a fttiir yea r course in liberal arts, with elective u, i Hittfineering, science#, and modern languages. i v. ? ? " >v. ? ' ? ^ v.,'. J VACANT SCHOLARSHIPS < >iie vacant sc holarship from Kershaw County will he filled ? ? competitive examination on July 8 th, 101*1. For information ami application blanks, apply to County Superintendent of Education. or Col. O. J. Roinl, Superintendent. L. A. PROUTY SODA FOUNTAIN Best Made in America If interested, let us know and we will mail you cata logue and photographs. We also carry a complete line of Soda Fountain Supplies. Distributors for J Hunger ford Smith, Concentrated Syrups and Crushed Fruits. KOLMAN FOUNTAIN SUPPLY COMPANY. 302-4 Bryan street, West I\ O. liox 1273 SAVANNAH, GEORGIA . ; i ? * Buy J< at H No use to patronize the catalogue houses when you can get as large and varied a selection of Jewelry and Novelties at this store as can be found anywhere in the carolinas. Our repair department is all that could be wish ed for.? Buy at Home and it will enable us to help the Pay-Up Campaign. Member of Chamber of Commerce Chevrolet "490" Touring Car Was $925.00 Delivered Camden Now $725.00, All Charges Paid REDUCED $200 T he 1 .owest Priced Completely Equippe Automobile on the Market. BUY NOW George T. Little DISTRIBUTOR . | Goodrich Tires ? Quaker State Oil ? Willard Batten^j RELIABLE SERVICE ON ALL CARS Member of Cham her of Cornm*^