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To Tell Europe When and How Much to Pay U> ^ Thin I* (h,? House Committee Juat after letting (he White House where Prealdect Hardin* outlined uIm iNilloy fur the Kuioikmh del>t ftejttlci.neut. Thoy are, left to right : llurtou, Ohio ; M oodell Wyo. ? 8*nfor<i and I^oiixwortb. Ohio; Campbell, Kan. , Towner. lew*; Madden, 111. ;;Oreen. Vermont ; Green. Iowa *18 SECOND LARGEST BJ5IX.' ... ' ? , / , Cincinnati PostieMicN Hell Too I-arjje to Toll. Cincinnati, Ohio, Jan 19. ? The lar gest bell in America and the second largest bell in t h** world is located in Cincinnati and hangs suspended in the belfry of the St. Francis de Sales Church here. While no verification of the presence of the famous boll in Moscow, Russia, is available since the incumbency of the Soviet regime, it is believed that the largest hell in the world still remains intact there, j The bell here has been rung 1m! vmcc. That was in the early part of j January, 1806, just 27 years ago, when its obstreperous tone shattered i windows in buildings near the church -- and it was agreed that the t.iuer was in grave danger of collapsing. Since then it has been tapped only bv n large hammer, the !>? ? 1 1 clapper re maining in a vertical a? ! iurmant jv>- , sition fur safety .sak>', Cast - in Cincinnati in memory 0? its donor, Joseph Ituddeke, a former Cincinnati merchant, the bell \va> hauled to its present location by 10 teams of horses. It weighs approxi mately 30,000 pounds and is nearly 12 feet high and 10 feet across its rim. The cost of the bronze memorial was $10,000. The tone of the bell is K flat and were it to berung its sound could be heard within a radius of 15 miles of Cincinnati. 15ut with the simple pro cess of striking it with a hammer, the sound is no louder than any other bel!. The bell rests 125 feet above the ground. ' " Judge Alton 11. Parker, 70, na. married to Mrs. Amelia Day Camp bell, 51, a" divorcee. Judge Parker was the Democratic nominee for president in 1004. BUDDED PECAN TREVES FOR SALE Standard Varieties Write For Prices W. II. LAMAR Park Front, Thomasvillc, (In. KOI, I. OF HONOR For Fourth Monthi of Camden (iraded School*. ?J Grade 1 Alice Frost, ilarvey Pa vis, William Gardner, John Flowers, John Hilton, Mary K. Kirkland, Wil Ham Khamo, Mayola Sharp, Golda Shirley, Harry Snyder, Mary E. Woor ten, Mary Zeigler, Nataline Zeigler, Grace Moseley, Pollyo West, Bertha Rosenblatt, Henry Beard, Herbert Blaekwell, James Clyburn, Marion Kvans, Fletcher Moore, Cecil McCas kill. Grade *2 -Nancy Brown, Olivia Bud- 1 din, Betty Garrison, Frances Creed, | Virginia Drawdy, Eltaabeth Dunn.. Kathryn Little, Meta Mogulescu. Lila Ross, Jack Boyd, . Melicu McCoy,' John Sowcll, Homer Baldwin. Thomas B. 'Brut*;, Reuben Pitts, Harriet Beard. Jean Harris, Mary J. Maekey, Ruby MrtrnhaH, Klizabeth Gardner, Louise So well, Margaret Watts. Grade .'t-? Vera Trapp, Ruby Burns, A lire DePass, Emily Goodale, Edith Wehs-er, Dan Maekey, David Boone, Clarence Christmas, T. S. Dunlaj), Julian Burns. Harold Hough, George liha m Gray sun S ha w , W a iter JVwh ten. Levering Hail. Ma rgaret McCoy.! Eloise Rhoden, Sara Lynn Riehey, Grace Robinson, Margaret Goodale.. Grade 1? Geneva Jones Elizabeth McCaskill, Olive Nettles, Emily Pitts, I.enora Rhame, Archibald Beattie, Shannon Blaekwell, Henry L.'h Cly burn. Allen Hardy, Thornton Evans, Moise Evans, Mable Flowers, Miriam Hi'!!. Marguerite McCaskill, My.rle Bast-, Louise Smith, Essie M. Watts. Grade 5 ? Betty Cureton. Ellen Stewart, Catherine Boykin, Louise Drawdy, Lucy Kirkland,-. Nancy Pearce, Caroline Richardson, Maureen i Sowcll, Nell Goodale, Elma Shiver, Carolyn Burnett, Sarah Mills, Pur tell MeCaskill, Arthur Davis, Marvin Hu<*kabe<\ Walter Stokes, Inez Gard ner, Sarah Moseley. Grade 7 ? Hebron Munn. Willie Por Trapp. Molly Blaekwell, Howard Hin?5pn, Sybil Rhoden. Joe Mogules < u, Edward Wooten, Evelyn Bruce, \*irginia DeLoache, Edith Goodale, Dorothy Harte,* Evelyn Moseley, Frances Owens. Rebecca Zemp. Grade- f> ? Hebron Munn, Willie Por ter, Julian Eichel, Donald Barnes, Clare,, Bruce, Myrtle Gardner, Mary E. Johnson, Moultrie Burns, Robert Davis. Leightcn Hardy. John Richard s i -n. Billy Lindsay. 1 Grade S ~ A? Robert Bruce, Wil liam Clyburn. Ward Hough. Jack K ikland, Clarkson Rhame, Margaret Billings. L?-ila Davis, Maud Dabney, Sarah DePass, Margaret DeLoache, ' Jumelle Haile, Margaret Hodges, Dolly Singleton, Susie Watkins, Car ? olyn \\ outcn. ? ? ? Grade S ? B ? Hubert Brown. Frank frackey. Pearle Jones, Molly Moseley, Jennie Smith, Frances Storey, Mary F. McCoy, Harriet Whitaker. Grade (J ? -Alma Holland, Cordelia THE Woodstock Represents the latest achievement in Typewriter Construction; g- i v e s the greatest measure of satisfactory service and a quality of work that is unsur passed. Woodstock Typewriter Company General Sales Offiec 35 A\ Dcaborn Street Ch icagoy 111 inois I Johnson. Mary Sparrow, Wade gtokea. Grade 101 A? Bertha Jones, Christo pher Vautfhn, Louise Hirsch, Louise Rabon, Mildred Gardner, Zulee Wat ers, Harriett Lipscomb, Lilla Mills, Frances Hough. Cecil Wittfcowsky, Sallie Hinson, Miriam Bruce. Grade ll)-?B~M*ttrd Barnes, Arnett Ledford, Arthur Stokes. Grade 11? Emily Wooten, Margaret Mills, Martha Workman, Kate Wat kins, Basil Bruce, Mary N. Camp bell, Thelmn V lowers, Ethel DePass, | Annis Hast, Elizabeth l)eLx>ache, Sa rah Lewis, Aubrey Beattie, Willie Moore, Ralph Little, Albert Evans, j Andrew Whitaker. A Kond Good-Night.. I Never before have I so fully real ized the utter impotence and l'utilitj of words, as I did when they toid me Doctor Lodge was dead. 1 was dazed. Staggered, awed, overwhelmed, as it I stood face to face with Almighty God. And even now, it seems that no words would fit my tongue ox pen except those of the Psalmist: "I was 1 dumb, 1 opened not my mouth, be cause Thou didst it." i But it is Some little relief to know I that words are not essential. Dr. Lodge needed no eulogies from me when living, and he needs none now. His name is emblazoned on the fair I est page of our 'current history, his virtues are impressed on thousands j and tens of thousands of loving hu t man hearts, and the ennobling infiu ! ences which he has set in motion will i ifd on widening and deepening for ever. I 1 believe I knew more of Dr. 1 Lodge's inner life than any other j living man. I was intimately asso i i-iated with him day and night for I twenty-one years, often in trials ffnd discouragements; sometimes in sor row that wrung our hearts and sore | ly tried our faith, and again at raro | intervals in hours of mirth and "joy ' uncon fined ; " and now the memorj | that holds the experiences of all I those years is sweetened with the i consciousness that dwells like linger I ing incense in my heart that through ( 1 all those experiences I never once heard a word fall from his lips un becoming the transcendent scholar, the devoted Christian, the peerless, spotless gentleman? never a word or sentiment that wouljl have caused the slightest blush to mantle the cheek of the purest woman or an an gel to frown with disapproval. I 1 riVed him as my own son or younger brother, and I knew that he was my friend in all that the word in its fullness and farthest reaches can imply. And now some* hmg Lkc thv b?Hiw< ness of despair chills my heart as I realize that never again shall I feel the power of his warm sympathies nor the thrill of his glowing words. Never more shall the crowds hear "His surging sentences, his cadenccd chimes Of speech that through th?* seven climes >t Wooed the many to rapt listening. His brilliant talents have gone out in darkness to shine again with a more resplendent lustre in a brighter world. His silver-tongued voice has fallen on stillness, but to ring out in clearer, sweeter tones among the antrels of heaven. God be praised for his wonderful life' And C.od be thanked that it was lived in all its fullness and far reaching activities right here among us, and Cod grant that its example mav -inspire us all with higher Meals and lure us all to purer lives and nobler deeds. And now a fond good-night to >ou, I)r. Iyodge ; and a loving goodbye, but not for aye nor for long. W e part under a cloud that comes down like night upon my soul, but joy will come in the morning. A strong hop< tinged with the rainbow hues of promise rises in mv heart and will down at no man's bidding? the hope that beyond the clouds and shadows, bevond the outermost rim of this vaie of tears and the sunset of the night, I shall meet you and know you. and love you as of yore ? H. P. Grif fith in Caffney Ledger. Two Floneat Lawyer*. Shortly after 11 a. m., Saturday, two Norfolk attorneys, B. A. Banks and John G. Tilton, aboard a ferry boat and homeward bound from court in Portsmouth, fibred in an episode calculated to have mado tho shade of old Diogenes feel that the hero of mornl tales passed hrnce centuries too soon. A bulky package of en-. I velopes, held together by rubber , bands, left on a cabin seat, caught j thr eye of Mr. Banks, fie picked it I up. The envelopes t>ore inscriptions j showing them to contain American j gold currency and negotiable securi - tie* to the value of $75,000 being sent by a Portsmouth bank, name of I which is withheld for obvious reasons, to the clearing house. Attorneys Bank* and Tilton, ama*ed by tfee evi dent caroleaspess of the bank me** senger, came ashore with the small fortune. They went to the Norfolk National bank, where the package was turned over to Preaident W. A. Godwin of that institution. Mr. God win reported discovery of the pack age to the Portsmouth bank befdre its loss had been reported. The head of thi? Portsmouth bank has thanked the lawyers, a messenger is hunting u job and the spirit of Diogenes is i annoyed. ? Clifford Pine hot was inaugurated as the twenty-ninth governor of Pennsylvania at noon Tuesday. He declared war on ''bootleggers" and all violators of tHo prohibition laws. On -the same day George $, SiUer was inaugurated governor of New Jersey. He recommends that the leg islature pass a resolution urging mod ification of the Volstead lfew. Notice of Application for Charter. Notice is hereby given that the un dersigned will apply to the Secretary of State on Tuesday, January 30th, 1923, for a charter fpr "Stokes & Evans, Inc.", a corporation proposed by the organization for the purpose of doing a general wholesale and re tail business in the city of Camden under the laws of the state of South Carolina governing the issuance of charters for corporations; \ Notice is further given that at eleven o'clock in the forenoon of the same day a meeting will be held in the place of business now occupied by said Stokes & Evans on Broad i Street in the city of Camden for the purpose of completion of said corpo- 1 ration. v.'--. P. D, STOKES, M. M. EVANS Incorporates. Camden, S. C., Jan. 25, 1923. NOTICE. Notice is herebyQ-given that com mencing at 1U o'clock on Thursday ; morning,? February mt, 1923, a final hearing will be held at the Probate) office m Camden, S. C\, in the litiga tion in the estate of J. A. Shankiiii, deceased. All parties interested will govern themselves accordingly. w. l. Mcdowell, Judge of Probate. Camden, S. C., Jan. 19, 1923. FINAL DISCHARGE. Notice is hereby given that one month from this date, on Tuesday, February 27, 1923, we will make to the Probate Court of Kershaw Coun ty our final return as Executors of the estate of J. L. Irby, deceased, and on the same date we will apply to t lu* said court for a final discharge n* ^said Executors. \L. D. JENNINGS, K G. ROWLAND, A. s^vJIAKBY, Executors. Camden, "S. C., Jan. 22, 1923. Final Discharge. Notice is hereby given that one j month from this date, on Monday, J February 2Gth, 1923, I will make to I the Probate Judge of Kershaw Coun- | to my final return as Administrator of the estate of J. Z. Young, deceased, 1 and on the same date 1 will apply j to the said Court for a final dis- I charge as said Administrator. H. H. YOUNG. Camden, S. C., Jan. 24th, 1923. CITATION. State of South Carolina. County of Kershaw. (Court of Probate) (By W. L. McDowell, Esq., Judge of Probate for Kershaw County.) Whereas, Annie M. Brown made suit t<> me to grant her Letter* of Administration of the Estate and ef fects of Ben Brown. These, are, therefore, to cite and admonish all and singular the kindred and creditors of the said Ben Brown, deceased, taht they be and appear be- j fore me, in the Court of Probate, to be held at Camden, South Carolina, on Monday, February 5th, next, aftor publication thereof, at 11 o'clock in the forenoon, to show cause, if any they have, why the said Administra tion should not be granted. Given under my hand, this 2^nd day of Januarv, Anno Domini 1923. w. l. Mcdowell, Judge of Pfobate for Kershaw County Published on the 2f>th day of Jan uary and the 2nd day of, February, 1023 in the Camden Chronicle. And posted at the Court House for the time prescribed by law. MASTER'S SALE State of South Carolina County of Kershaw (In the (*>urt of Common Pleas) Kershaw Building and I^oan Associa tion, Plaintiff, against S. I). Crockett, Defendant, Under an order of His Honor, W. ! H Townsend, Judge of the Fifth Ju- ' dicial Circuit, dated January 17th, 1923, I will sell to the highest bidder at public auction for cash before the Kershaw County Court House door in Camden, in said State, during the legal hours of sale on the first Mon day. being the fifth of February, 1923, the following described real estate: All that certain piece parfcel or lot of land lymg, being and situated near the town of Kershaw, County of Kershaw ami State a foresaid, con taining ono acre, more or less, lying between the public highway leading from Camden to Kershaw and the right of Wky of the Southern Rail way, being the same lot corrreyed to S. D. Crockett by L E. Broughton t ?ii * / m ?? fc i Mfci "fr" i f *? by deed dated February, 1894, and bounded North by lands now or for merly of L. K. .Truesdal? and South ern Railway, East by said public highway from Kershaw to Camden, W6st by right of wfcy of the Southern Railway Company and South by lands formerly owned by J. E. W. Haile. B. B. CLARKE, Master for Kershaw County. January 18, 1923. MASTER'S SALE. State of South Carolina, I County of Kershaw, (Court of Common Pleas) Thomas Ancrum, Trustee, Plaintiff, | ?8 | Daisy Thompson, Catherine Ellerbe, | Richmond Thompson, Lucilla 1 Thompson, Mattio Thompson, a mi- j Bernie Thompson, a minor, Eva; Thompson, a minor, and \V. B, de- i I/oach, j Under an order of His Honor, W. j II Townsend, Judge of the Fifth Ju- j dieial Circuit, dated January 17th, 1923, I will sell, to the highest bidder j at publie auction for cash before the Kershaw County Court House door in t'amden, in said State, during the legal hours of sale on the first Mon dav, bp;ng 'he fifth of February, ; 1923, the following described real estate: Lot No. 71, containing seventy-five (75) acres, more or less, of the Bur^ rows Tract. Land Commission Land ill Kershaw County, South Carolina, having such meets, marks, buttings and bounds as fully appears upon the record of the plat of said Burroughs tract in Plat Hook Volume 1 of Land Commission Land and other Public lands, in the office of the Secretary of State, Columbia, S. C. Anyone desiring to bid at said sale (except the mortgagee) shall first deposit with the Master a certified check or cash for the sum of One Hundred ($100.00) Dollars, j as an evidence of good faith, which | IF YOU ARB LOOKING T FOR ECONOMY in auto tires, it wall certainly pay you to call At thin store and price our casings and inner tubes. Wo can savo you money and give you good service to boot. Many an auto owner has learned (his aft er experimenting with other makes. Beard's Filling Station West DeKalb Street deport shall be returned to the un sue cessjful bidder at the conclusion of said sale. B. B. CLARK K, Master' for Kershaw County. January 18. 1923. , MASTER'S SALE. f State of South Carolina, County of Kershaw, (In the Court of Common Pleas) a Pursuant to a decretal order in the . case of J. M. Hearon, Plaintiff, against M. P. Daria and W. H. Da- ~ vis, Defendants, in the Court' of . Common Pleas for Kershaw County, ; South Carolina, 1^ will sell at public ; auction, to the highest bidder for cash in front of the Court House, in the town of Camden, County and State aforesaid, on sales day in February . same being the 5th day of said month, ^ during the usual hours of sale, the j following 4escribed property, to wit: - All those two certain tracts or parcels of land situate, lying and '? being in Kershaw County, S'ate aforesaid, and bounded and described ? as follows: , , 1. All that- tract of land containing ~ ninety-five (05) acres, and bounded North hv lands of Simon Stokes and Kelley Bridge Road; East by lands of W. S. Stokes and Mrs. M. P. Davis; South by lands of Simon Smokes and M-s. A!. P: Davis, and West by lands of S[mon Stokes: being the land thix - "day conveyed to me by W. I/. M. S'ekes r>{id Catherine S. E. Outlaw. 2. All that tract of land contain ing one hundred (100) acres, more or less, and bounded North by McCal lum Ferry mad: East bv land of es tate. of H. H. Hall; South bf Levint son p'ace, formerly Shiver; West by land of the estate of M. J. Holland.**' Said land having been conveyed to me by H. JI. Holland. ; ^ Purchaser to pay for papers and revenue stamps. B. B. CLARKE. Mas'ot for Kershaw County. January 1$, 192H. To Welcome smali Accounts That Promise to Grow Planting potatoes and pulling them up the next, would not develop into a bumper crop of potatoes. Just so in depositing funds. While the First National Hank wants and welcomes small accounts, it urges the importance and desirability of having them grow. Remember that regular deposits anc^ consistent checking will have the desired result. WANTED- 1,000 bushels cow peas. F. M. WOOTEN WE ARE SAVING MONEY for thou?andi of others in clnaning and dyMOg Win ter Garment*, Carpets, Rugs, Blankets, Comforts, Curtains, etc. We will be glad to serre you. FOOTER'S DYE WORKS CUanora-Dyora. Cumberland, MmryUnd.