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Bruises 77?? throb ache of a bud bruise ;V t'V V- .) it a warning 1 thai delicatm fibre ? hav? been injured Sloan's Liniment sends straight to thorn the increased blood supply they need to repair them, reliev ing the pain, clcdring up the con* I'.cstion. Get a bottle fromfyour druggist today - 35 cents. Sloan's Liniment- ki iu pain! HKTHi m: m:w s not ks. ? ' ? ^ ? : < * "A C' Happenings ?t Interest As Told By Our ( It nt. Bethune, S. Oil. '51., Mrs, 1). M. fi> circle number ti\vo ?>'?' the IN e,sby terian church Wed nesday afternoon. Misia Mary McKin U(iM i < <n<iurl('d the .study period. At the ch). c uf tiiu meeting iakc and Itllo served with whipped cream ? and eherric wen* enjoyed. i'iii .r. tiurnhiw one was entertained by M II, 11 West'. After dispens ing >v ' h the program ice cream and ? eake \y. i e' -.e' veu |)r. Harvey Mrl.ip'd of Hishopville assisted J >i . T. u.-ixtcll Ui throat oper ations Frida\ es?niug. . Mr. W. M. SUrveii". and children of l.aijca - Wednesday in Hc^ Maine. ... Mrs. A. 15. Mckimmn and daughter Mary, Mrs. K. Z T. u-sdt li and Miss Stella Uethune wi re quests of rela tives n Hurts viile 1* riday. M i> Kathleen .Met askill of t ht> fac ulty of Mai ion High School, was the vvicli nd kuisI ;>f her parents, Mr. .iiiil M i s. .1. A Mri 'a vkill. She was accompanied horn/ by Miss Eva West, a co-worker. l.ittl" Mis.-n i! ii i iott Stevens of Lane;? ci, \yn> L'-'e guest of Margar get T uesdell Wednesday. Ke\ J. M. 1 ai bis and Mr. N. A. Ijtthu i' are attending presbytery at Winnsloro. . Mi. For bis will preach the ??i' ' ning . sei fi<-iii a s he Is retiring mode i a tor. Tiie tirst numb -i uf the Lyceum nurse was. given m the school audi torium Thur.^di?\ evening. The next mimbc- will tv> n December and promises to be highly entertaining. ."?! 1%. Z. TiUv'^dell and Miss Stella Hcthune spent Satuday in Columbia. Mr. lie x .Jo>ey returned from a ??' i weeks si.i.i ip St. Petersburg, Florida, Saturday .) I*. It. : hxn - and children re u h> ?me Stj' .jaj after a three >vt i !. stay with : datives in (iheraw. .N and Mr.-. I iirnei of Ilar'.sville, Wert? Un gu< -.is of Mrs, A. Jf. NK - I.uunn Sunday. Miss Mmy McKino.on am! Mr. ahd Mj s. Charles McKinnon spent Sunday in Timmonsvillt* with Mrs. McKin ' i *1.1 . .Mi K"K' i . % Prof. C). it. Hell am! family, acf companied by M is.-cs McChesney and Ulakely, .spent Sunday at the homo <>f h : -v father in Hancasbr, Mjss Klt.se Hook spent the wn'k-cnd at lie: home in Innu. The following wore t ho guests of M , T). M. Mays Sunday: Mr, and Mi . Johnson of Pollock, Mr. and Mrs. !.. Mays of C'arterayjjle, Mr, and Mis. Stephen Lam* iff Cartersville, M r, I A'c Mays of Florence and Mr. and Mrs. ,!. 1'. Hcthunc. Mr. H Parrott and family of l}ar l.nk'ton .spi^t Sunday ?t. the hunm of Mr, Ci. K. Parrott. T. Hateman and W. L. Hlack mon, of Kershaw, are attending school here and have joined the football team. I?(. lita/.ell of McFdrland, N. ('., is assisting 'with the work at the Bo thune ,l>rug Co. Mrs. Sid King and daughter, Chris tine, iff Dalzcll, are visiting relatives* here. Show Maniacs No Mercy. Knoxsville Sentinei. If the. speed maniacs endangered only their own machines and, their own lives, there wouldn't be a'nylhing >o worry about. Perhaps the world would be better 'ofF and safer if they would wreck their machines and kill themselves. Hut the man who goes tearing through a city street at 40 miles an hour is a menace to others. Other au toinobilists are not safe on the same street; pedestrians are not safe on sidewalks or at crossings. The speed fiend is one of the most dangerous of criminals, for he is noth ing but a criminal. His . criminality lies in his indifference to the safety of others. Officers of the law do well to hunt him down and judges upon the bench are recreant to their duty to the public when they do not im pose the full penalty of the law upon him. The speed maniac is not to be shown any mercy, at any lime, by anybody. That is why hi' talks to deaf ears when he goes to the newspaper office and asks that his name be kept out of print after he has been arrested. John K. Mieneka, wealthy merchant of Belfast, N. Y., has been sentenced to prison for one year and. to pay a fine of $.r>00 after conviction on a Charge of bore- whipping his 19-year old niece. He became enraged at the girl, struck her with his fist and then forced her to remove her dress and horsewhipped her. Two' men were fatally and three others seriously wounded in a gun fight on the Main street of Hawkins villc, Ga., Friday. HERMITAGE COTTON MILLS OSAGE MANUFACTURING CO. We are in the market far 8,000 to 10,000 bales of i cotton per year. Iv ? -J- \oiir cotton to ('anidon w) ? c you can i>vt top prices. S. . . ; ? 'hay oi". M . J. MA Y FIELD, CunUlcn , N. ( FARMERS ?fore i/ : ; - Lmjlt your Nitrate of Soda, Cotton ?of] Mo;i. . Fertilizer and Fertilizer ma rials. y;rl our prices. CAMPBELL & SMYRL hub at msaarvuxB. Tindale Block in Center of Business District DcKtroycd. ! KSpvUIe, Ortober WY.Ines ?lay night Bishopville whs visited by a disastrous tin- i^vojvi^g the loss of possibly $100,000. when the handsome two-story TisduTe building was gutted by flames. The loss is only partly covered by insurance. This building was located, on Main street and built in 1'JlU at a co*t l)f about $50,000. It is estimated by some that $15,000 of $20,000 will be necessary to recon struct it. It is stated that only ?? small amount of insurance is carried on the building. The building was occupied down stairs by the business concerns of Hearon & Austin and Woodham Bros. The loss to Woodham Brothers it i$ said will be about $15,000 with only about $3,000 insurance. Hearon & Austin carried a large stock of gen eral merchandise valued at about $50,000. Their loss is difficult to esti mate as merchandise was taken from the burning building. This firm car ried insurance to the amount of $18, 000. Such of their stock as was not burned is badly damaged. Upstairs was occupied by the law office of (?. B. Ruffin, whose law li brary is almost a wreck. The dental office of J. L. Williford, I?. R. Dray ton's barber shop, the ladies' rest room and some other office rooms that were used by cotton buyqrs and in which were stored several bales, of sample cotton, where, it is thought, the lire originated. The cotton office of Wiley C. King was located in this building and the cotton samples be longed to Mr. King. It is impossible to find out the total loss or amount of insurance at this" time, although it is believed that the loss will run to $100A000 with about half that amount of insurance. Four Japanese girls were rocently rescued at Tokyo after having, been buried in the earthnnnko <lohri? fr>r twenty-five days. They were found covered up but protected by a large' boulder that kept the rubbish from crushing them. They had existed on the little, water that trickled iht'd the hole in which they were confined and were rescued by workers removing the debris. JurorH To Serve November 12. Adolphus Rose, Blaney. E. G. Drakeford, Camden. W. M. Brannon, Bethune. W. C. Seagle, Boykin. J. S. Branham, LugofT. E. H. Bowers, Cassatt. J. W. Horton, Westville,, C. E. Parker, Cassatt. M. H. Stokes, Camden. Leonard Scott, Kershaw. C. J. Outlaw, Camden. Banyan Truesdale, Camden. Zellie Gatoe, Kershaw. J. E. Sowell, Kershaw. R. C. Jones, Liberty Hill: John Whitaker, Camden. G. C. Sowell, Kershaw. E. F. Miller, Jr.,. Camden. J. K. Lang, Camden. Daniel Drawdy, Camden. 1). Eubanks, Bethune. F. J. Tidwell, Cassatt. W. P. Thomas, Camden. (I. W. Sowell, Kershaw. G. B. Peach, Westville. Thos. J. Horton, Kershaw. J. L. Hinson, LugofT. T. P. Bfown, Camden. L. J. Truesdale, Westville. M. II. Faile, Kershau. W. ('. Nicholson, Camden. A. E. Ellis, Bethune. Lewis Gardner, Camden. .1. W. Z. Hearon. Westville. O. II. Luwman. Camden. l>. H. C'yats, Ker.-haw. Second Week Juror*. !i. L. Smyrl, < ":inni?-i: .1 . I .. 1 h Mi it h I . < :i m<i< :? j W. P. ledger-. Be'.hura. W. L .ll-Pao. ? .t iti.it fi G. Blackwell. < anvl. 1 Alex Shaw . ( .i - .tt : .1 M Smith. I ug..t 1 II / 11.,.11-L' ? j \\ . C. ( ....k . Kcr a .M. S. Mr.: ? I '!*. .M. Hum ? u P.. ?? i . ? T. ii. Hi .. ... I II. |!ia:.i..ii! . I : i u ? ' . > W } : . I) -a- . \ I l !! ::.( . i mi ? i; : s-.-k -. < '.u - v\ li - ? K M }*::> I\- -i. ,-v \ I- K, . 1. ?V i! Tru. <!?> ? . w : .1 R \\'c<! , < ?!??:??? i:.? ' L. '!:?.? W 1' I ' ? < i . i. r. ? ; C> }?'. M.ii -ha' ' .i n.ti. ii A Hav. . 1 ;g " i l 1 ?: v i ?: < rv . : ? 'A K. N't ! ?> < > I ! . ( ? W A i ieW h? i . K . ? <>. K K Mum, Cam.:. ? .:<?? Ii < >a>kin?. ? ain.i. : K II Young. Wc,;,i!:. C N M yt-r-*, Camden. -N. Ii. Workman. Wesivuu>. 4 G. S. Catoe. Bethune. P. L. Bradley, Camden. (i. F. Mahaffey, Kcr*fcaw C ITIZENS FURNISH TIPS. Many People Write Governor Giving Him Information. (William Hanks in News and Courier) j Columbia, Oct, 29.- -As stated in \ this correspondence some time ago, i about 40 per cent of the mail that conies to the Governor's office has t>' do with petitionH for pardon. Half of the remaining 00 per cent has to do j with liquor. There are a great many I earnest citizens of this State who I write to the Governor giving tips and j clues upon whicfi may be worked up the evidence upon which to base raids leading to arrests and iconvictions. ' Many citizens who know more than they are willing to tell ."pass the [ bucJk.,!' saying, "Oh, well, that'.s none j of my business. There are men hired ( to catch tho bootleggers." On the 1 other hand there are some who realize | that tho Gpvernor's law enforcement ? fund is inadequate for him to have the J whole State covered with special men, j but there is a possibility that infor- 1 mation is given that will lead to spe cific inquiry there is a probability that the bootlegging may be stopped. One great difficulty in the first months of the Volstead act has been" the indifference and in fact the as- j sistance given to bootleggers by the j moral attitude of so-called "good [ citizens", Many of them seem now to be regretting their attitude of those months, but it is rare for a citizen who has been guilty of patronizing a bootlegger to take any step that would land the liquor peddler in jail. The fascination of getting liquor unbeknown to the law is wearing off and the guzzling of questionable concoctions is left largely to the very ; rich or the very poor. There is yet a lot of saia guzzling goiiiK on and it can be stopped only by the closest \ cooperution between the citizens who ; are opposed to the liquor traffic with the officers of the State, municipality ? and federal government. To say that enforcement of law j .ie 1 IV* pGuoih 1c 13 tu y tlldl tut? ifltt- I jority of the ' people refuse to give '? their backing to law enforcement. ; The law, any law, can be enforced if tho people -are law respecting; li- j quor laws are not the only ones that ? invite disrespect. The destruction of ; game and fish is another crime that <s j winked at by the "respectable" people j of the state. - I I was told today by a man who j loves sports for sports sake, and not I merely for the kill, that he has posi- j tive information that one of the riv- : era iii the lower part of the State is being plundered by tra^> fishermen who are backed ui> financially and otherwise by "good citizens." Wilmington, Dt'l., was recently made a proposition by I\ S. du Pont to the effect that if the city would ?'aise $5,00t>,000 for needi^l new school buildinyti and equipment, that he would give $8,0(10,000 toward the $1. '1,000,000 wanted for the purpose. The city council has accepted the pro position. Mra, OHie ?Gomba Justus, who on * September 22, shot Pewitt Turner to death on the atre?U <>f Atlant .. (;a, has been declared guilty of by a Fulton county jury ?md Wjn spend the remainder of her days in prison. She told the police after the killing, "1 killed him boiausi I |ov^ him." Fifteen or twenty armed Umdiu hold up a watchman of a bondt <1 ware house near Cumberland, Maryland, early Thursday morning and got away with fifteen barrels of liquor. Don't Wait Until a freeze comes. , / ?' 1 fV' -v ? , /'ViV|L | ??' '/ ' - Get your COAL now and be prepared m John M. Villipigue & Co. PHONE 14 R. L. Moseley Brokerage Agency j _ Wants To Buy your cottonseed, corn, oats, hay, milch cows, beef cattle, etc., and to sell you fertilizer, horses, * mules, buggies, harness, etc. "tjf We trade for almost anything of value. We also have some good city and country property that we would sell. "See us." It. L. Moseley Brokerage Agency _ f The Most Important Trusteeship in the World When the will of the late President Harding was admitted to probate the executors named were required to give bond in the sum of $750,000. 'These men were personal friends of the de ceased President and undoubtedly men of character and. sub stance. Why then this heavy bond? Because the law treats estates as peculiarly sacred and hedges their administration about with many safeguards. Bonds for executors and rigid laws for their guidance are designed to pro tect the family. The family is the oldest Institution in the world. It was the first form of government. It is the unit of civiliza tion. The love of husband and wife, the love of parents and children, the love* of brothers and sisters, all have their roots in the family life. The head of the f amily is tbr- trustee to whom, in the order of nature- i? committed its prosperity and happi ness. The head of the family therefore holds the most important trusteeship in the world. 11 :> w can that trustee iraarantee that he will faithfully discharge hi obligation? His personal bond. the bond thrt every man j^ives to hi- uif, ami dependent.-, tfoes far, but not far enough, because. howeNer nobie hi intentions. and hourver deeo a t - fectior.s. death may inlervt m- at am moment, and the capital of that fan-. ilv. his productive powert will imme diately be destroyed. ile needs a Bond. "A voucher stronger than ever law could make," stronger than his per sonal fidelity can furnish. There are such bonds ? easily ob tainable. The law does't compel him to buy one. Perhaps the law should. Perhaps the law will some day. * It he is reasonably sound in mind and body ho can purchase a life insu rance policy in a responsible company. ! hen he is bonded. Then his guar antee is complete. That is one of the processes by which President Harding created his estate. A life insurance policy in the New ^ ork Life not only creates an estate but provides, if the buyer so desires, i or its administration. The New York under its charter has power "to make ami execute trusts," and it will ? 'ain the proceeds of its poJicies un a trust agreement and distribute as directed by the Insured. Any agent of the New York L.fe will tell you how you can guarantee your.truoteo.hip how you can create an estate and how you can have it administered without per sonal or surety bonds and without cost to your family. New York Life Insurance Company L. C . SUA W , Agent , Camden , S. C.