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Wants? For Sale hgrZoiu' bull pup. white with fbrindlr spots. I Mrs and tail brimmed I.) name of "Nkeeter". |{0 unrd if li-'tinned to U. W. (/olomaii, I c&m den, S. ( , 36pd. OH KKM (. ood saddle horsy for I for winter season. Apply to j. K. Jonc?, at Camden post office. fOK 8AI.K ? One hot air furnace, in first class conditio!}. Apply to A. A, Shanks; Camden, S. C. tfctf ?raSS K A IN GAUGE ? taken from | ,Vai of our office several weeks $go. About 3 inches in dia meter and 1 0 inches high with 3 brass legs or prongs. If you know where it is please favor us by tell ing the party we need it. No ques tions ask'jd if left at our office. Williams Insurance Agency. 86sb If YOU WANT ? a real Home Light ing plant at $266.00, see Burner's Garage, Camden,. S. C. 3B-378b f0UNI> ? Some money found Satur day, November 17th. Owner can get same by describing and applying to Jim Kobinson, Wateree Mills, Caniden, S. C. , 36pd. TS GOING TO BE COjLP ? suppose you get some alcohol dnd glycerine in your radiator before it's too late. At Burner's Garage, Camden, S. C. '37s b j JlOST? Last Tuesday, November 20th on Bishopville highway, near An tioeh church, 8 miles from Camden, one black and white spotted hound dog. Answers to name of "Dot". Finder notify J. J. McLain, Wateree Mills, Camden, S. C., and receive reward. 35pd. IcJET ? old and new car parts and accessories at Burner's Garage, Camden, S. Cr 35-37sb I WANTED ? Poplar, Ash, and Cypress standing timber. Will figure with you on any size tract. Give full details in first letter. Hoffman Lum'uei (\<ir.par.y, Columbia, S C. 35tf TIRES, TCBES ? and the Best bat tery made at Burrler's, Camden, S. C. 35-37sb CALL The Ever Heady Pressing Club Tor clean ing, pressing, altering and repairs. Phone 159-J. Prompt ser vice. reasonable price. J. S. Gam ble, Proprietor, 869 Broad Street, jCamden, S. C. 33tf KOK rent One furnished room in private family. Steam heat and all modern conveni ences. Married couple pre ferred. Apply lfijQl.. North Broad Street or phone 24&; Camden, S. C. 35-36sb LONG TIME L O A IM S on improved FARM LANDS In an\ amount at 7 per cjent. in terest. I'rompt attenfion; no red lain- Write for particulars. JOHN I, RICE PALMETTO BUILDING COLUMBIA, S. C. Prince Youaaoupoff reputed slayer j of the famous Russian monk, Raspu- ! tiu, with his wife, is on a visit te the United states. WHY STINT YOUR COMFORT? You will not be obligated by allow* ing our representative to furnish an estimate of cost of comfort in mainr, the easy method of keeping the home free from dust and din. Authorized representatives Burton &. Bailey, Box 1290, Greenville, S. C. 36pd. CORN FOR SALE Apply to Mr. R, N. Simpson or to Mrs. J. B, Pearce, Rt. 1, Camden, S. ('. Mlsh WANTED ? A few good men to, farm on shares. Prefer nun with force sufficient to operate two or more plows, Good level, smooth land, easy to cultivate. If interested, see N. B. Workman, or write Workman & Mackey, Westville, S. C. 34-37sb FOR SALE?Eighty-threo acres, ten miles east of Camden, located on Camden-JBiahopville highway, near Antiocli churco and consolidated school. Two tenant houses. All under cultivation. For particulars write to E. J. Arranta & Sons, Tirzah, S. C. 34-87pd. FOR RENT ? Three rooms, kitchen, connecting bath. Nice locality. ? Rents for J|1 7. 60 per month. See or pnorie V. "r* . rrwrv m '>xrepminva 9020 or 9023, Camden, S. C. 34pd. ' - ' ? FOR SALE ? At a bargain a Superior one ton truck in good condition. Apply to T. K. Trotter, Camden, S. C. 33-36pd WANTED ? Pine, Cypress, and Poplar Logs. We pay cash for No. 1 lo'gs the year rourfd and will send our inspector to take up logs at ship ping point. Also buy small tracts of good timber. Address the Zick graf Co., Denmark, S. C. . 30sb. FOR SALE ? Milk and cream in any quantity. Apply to Mrs. B. R. Truesdale, Camden, S. C. 31-39pd FOR SALE ? Several cows fresh in milk. Prices reasonable. Apply to W. A. Edwards, Westville, S. C., Kte. i. SOtfsb FOR SALE ? Two large plate glass doors. Apply to Chronicle Of lice, Camden, S. C. 29tf FOR SALE OR RENT? A good five to six horse farm in West Wateree, lower portion of County. Good ^ residence on place. Barns and houses for labor. Apply to C. J. Shannon, Jr., Camden, C. 26-tf ? - ^ SHERIFF'S SALE, State Of South Carolina, ) ? County of Kershaw, f " . Court of Common Pleas. J T. G. Sessions, Plaintiff vs. W. W. Brown' and "one Buick Automo bile, Defendant. -? -Under and by virtue of the author- { ity of an order passed in the above entitled cause on Novembor 17, 1923, after verdict rendered in said case by His Honor, J. W. DeVore, presiding judge, I will offer for sale on the first Monday in December, 1923, being the 3rd day thereof, in front of Ker shaw- County Court- House JQooiv at Camden, S. C., at 12 m., one Buick Automobile attached in said causo. Terms of sale cash. G. C. WELSH, Sheriff Kershaw County. November 23rd, 1923. TRESPASS NOTICE. All parties are positively forbidden to hunt or trespass in any way upon my lands five miles south of Camden flying near the Charleston road. Per sons disregarding this notice will be prosecuted to the /ullest extent of the law. Parties are respectfully request ed not to ask for hunting permits. W. C. SEAGLE. November 15, 1923. ! 35-pd. MONEY We have plenty of it to Loan, either on first class Real Estate or on Stock Certificates of this Association. ' COME IN AND SEE US. Camden Building and * # Loan Association ' * LOAN AND SAVINGS BANK BUILDING REINDEERS GLUT MARKET; U. S. TO SOLVE PROBLEM Animals Have Multiplied Too j Rapidly in Alaska. Seattle, Wash.? Confronted with the problem of having so tunny rein* deer ho does not know what to do with them, Undo Sam. through his division of edUCRttQQ lu Ma-kit, la ro orgunlzlng the service. W. L. Lopp, superintendent of education of the ua Uvea In northern Alaaka, hut* boen or dered ?to remove his office ??t, once to Anchorage. The reindeer service In the past yea* has completely outgrown Its or ganlEatlon, the anliWls havlug multi plied so rapidly they number In ?x ce#s of 800,000. During this season 80,000 calves wire born. Most of the natives are facing the difficulty of possessing herds so large they cannot handle them and some plan* must be devised for marketing the animals. 'Vho big herds of the government, have Increased rapidly and the flx)ng of boundaries of ranges for the rein; deer must be done at once. At pres ent the innumerable herds of reindeer are reaming the public domain. Native herders who started out five or six years ago with two dosen rein deer have become owners of 1,000 to 5,000. From 11 Individual herds in: 1918 there has been an Increase to 10t> herds In August this year. The discovery of large areas of rein deer moss oh the northern slopes of Mount McKipley resulted in a -herd of 1,800 reindeer being driven there for pasturage. This summer this herd nearly doubled. j^t this time of year caribou pass the interior settlements on their south ward trdnd to winter quarters, an<l. settlers lay in their winter's supply of meat free of cost., Ilelndeer cannot hope to become a meat product until the caribou cease to pass human hab itations. DAirlng this season from 0,000 to 10,000 frozen reindeer carcasses passed through here en route to New York, distributing point for Nome reindeer shippers. Alaska's tundras and moss regions are capable of feeding 1,000, 000 reindeer. , Retrieves Fortune in Silver From Garbage Los Angeles, Gal. ? A fortune is lost every year lu the knives, forl<9 ?nd spoons which accidentally go Into the garbage cans in Los Angeles, accord ing to a number of cafe and restaurant owners, who are the principal suffer ers. ; ? - One restaurant reported a loss of nearly $40,000 in silverware last year. trons, but most of It was sent to the hog farms near here by wa| of the garbage can. Private families are not so heedless of their silverware, Pt is said, but pub lic eating houses suffer heavy losses because of the carelessness em ployees. ^ r A man has entered the business of ? recovering the lost silverware from the farms, and knives, forks and spoons bearing the names of the cafes owning them are returned at a small eo^t. Ant-Eating Bear Trapped in Brazil ? ? ' " 1 Above Is shown Antonio Bergelt, a hunter for C. Bruce Chapman, F. Z. 8., with nn ant-eating bear that he trapped In Brur.il, It la now at the too at London. This animal and its com panion are the first species to be seen for forty years. They live on ants, which they scoop up with their long bills. Thrashed Ex-Kaiser When He Was a Youth London. ? The death occurred here recently of Alfred Russell Price, and passed almost unheeded, whereas it was worthy of special notice, for he succeeded in accomplishing what thou sands of Americans hare itched ""to do, but could not. lie k#v& the boy, who later became German emperor,- a good, sound thrashing, It happened years a^o when Wll helru was the crown prince and was visiting Ilfracombe, an English sea side, resort, with his tutor. Wilhelm, In a playful, destructive mood, be gan to throw stones at some bathing machines belonging to Mr. Price's fa ther. He was told to stop, but took exception to this Infringement of hfc < regal rights. Young Price took off hls coat and began to belabor the^royal youth so successfully that he had ad ministered a black , eye and several cutrf and bruises before the tutor toe cevded in calling off hottllftle*. GOLDEN RULE DAY GAINS POPULARITY Sunday Dec. 2nd To Be Widely Observed ' Fourteen Nations Beside U. S. Join in Aiding Near East Sufferers. . ? '? '? . " \ U * , ?< ? ? ? ' As Sunday; December 2, the day on ?it which the whole civilized world is asked to observe the first "lnternation ?1 Golden Rule Day," draws near, the offices of the Near Relief, the organi sation sponsoring the movement in America, are dally inundated with a flood of letters and postcards from people in all parts of the country, many of them nationally known figures, ex pressing', a willingness to Join in ob servance of the day. v From the number of pledges already received it is estimated that at leftist a million Americans will celebrate Golden Rule Day, not by feasting, but by fasting or otherwise practising some act of seTf 'denial in order that others may not starve. The most popular method appears to be that of foregoing the. usual Sunday dinner and eating in ^^--tffejid a meal similar to that given every day to the Near East Relief orphans and contributing the difference in cost to the relief work. In addition to the widespread ob ' servance <>t the day in this country, people in 14 European and Asiatic countries will observe the day^ In the same way, making their contributions through their own national relief agencies. Among the well-known Americans who have pledged themselves to eat a "Golden Rule" dinner are President Calvin Coolidge, ex-President WoOd row Wilson, Secretary of State Charles E. Hughes, Senator King of Utah, ex Governor Henry J. Allen of Knnsas, John J. Tigert, United States Com missioner of Education, the Honorable Henry Morgenthau, and many others. Foreign nations are represented on the Golden Rule roster by such names as Prominent Americans Who Will * Observe Golden Rule Sunday CHAULES E. ? WUOft&S I PRESIDENT CALVttf ICOOLIDGEI <?> <.-?(>A*W+40 [WOOD ROW NX/ ILSOtf ? ' ' ? H * i/? . MRS CARR16 CHAPMAN CATT M. Georges Clemenceau of Francc, Miss Megan Lloyd George, daughter of England's famous "Little Welsh man," the King and Queen of Greece, Prince Carl of Sweden, Dr. Fritdjof Nansen of Norway, and* a host of others. > In many American cities local Gold en Rlile Clubs have been organized with all the members 'pledged to eat thp refugee rations for one meal, on December 2. As the cost of the aver HON. HENRY MQRGENTMAU age orphan meal, consisting of soup, bread and stew or corn grits and con densed milk, does not exceed 5 cents per person the saving should be sub stantial. ?The National Headquarters of the Near Kast Relief at 151 ;Fifth Avenue, New York City, or the nearest state office can furnish fulhdctails an to the proper sort of food to serv* .for a Golden Rule Dinner with recipe# for preparing it. ? Merger (.'ailed Off. Lancaster, N,"v. 97 cv?l F.<?rov Springs 01V being interviewed regard ing the merger of the Springs group of mills with that of the Pelzer Com pany, stated at a meeting held in Lan caster last Saturday attended by Ed win Farnham Greene and Scott, of Loekwood, (Jreone &. Co. Himself and directors, the merger was called off by mutual consent, same being agree able and satisfactory to all parties as they failed to agree on final details. Should be Compulsory. If a man in able to afford an auto mobile he should be made carry with some reputable insurance company sufficient protective insurance to pay any just claim that might arise 1n connection with damage done by his automobile. It is a crime that a man owning nothing hut the . -automobile can hit and kill or maim the breadwin ner of the family to such an extent as to incapacitate him, and because he has nothing hut the automobile, which may ho mortgaged, the injure il person has no rod vess.? - Rock Hill Keoord. ________ . ... I\ tc r Huvantowicz dropped dead in his wife's home at- Trenton, / N. J., early Tuesday Xiorning after he had shot and killed one Peter Woylovezz, a hoarder and his own wife. Both his victims were asleep in separate apart ments when they were shot. The killer had been separated from hid wife. DECEMBER i - . . ? . I r 10:30 O'CLOCK \ At CURETON PARK HIGH-CLASS BUILDING LOTS FOR THE. COLORED PEOPLE AT AUCTION ! Property is within Half Mile of Post Office, adjoin ing Browning Home^ Being just out City Limits is free from City Taxes. A Choice Lot will be Given Absolutely FREE to some church and Cash Prizes will be given away at sale. Terms One-Fourth Cash; Balance in Six, Twelve and Eighteen Months. J.B. & W.R. ZEMP - v.- . : - ,.-t" . . . ~r:+. - o - ? ,