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Severe Indigestion "I had very severe attacks of Indigestion," writes Mr< M. H. Wsae, a farmer, ot R. P. D. 1, Weir, Miss, "I would suffer tor months at a time. Ail I dared eat was a Uttle bread and butter. , . consequently I suffer ed from weakness. 1 would try to 'eat, then the terrible suffer ing in my stomach 1 I took medicines, but did not get any better. The druggist recom mended Thedford's BLACK- DRAUGHT and I decided to try it, for, as I say, I had tried others for two or more years without any Im provement in my health. I soon found the Black -Draught was acting on my liver and easing the terrible pain. "la two 01 three weeks, I Atsssg i 4saSs. *j? i/> I only weighed 123. Now"! weigh 147? eat anylhlngj waul to. and by faking Black -Draught 1 oo not suffer. Have you tried Thedford's Black-Draughi? If not, do so today. | Over 8 million package* sold, a yaar. At <k ners' ? as DOC TAX. I wish to call special attention to the dog license tax, which can bo paid from October 15th, 1923, to February 1 m t , 1924. (February lHt, 1924, is the lant day for the payment of this tax.) The iiterme tax on each dog is $1.25, ? in! I r.uw have the liccr.si: tags to supply owners of dogs when paying their licen.se tax. A dog is liable to thin 1 4i x if Mix months old or older on January 1st. (A dog born June 30th, 1!?23, is liable to the tax January 1st, 1924.) This is in lieu of all other taxes or .licenses on dogs, either county, mu nicipal or otherwise Dog license tax issued by the Treasurer should bear the inscription "Dog License 1924." also show the serial number and county. This is not charged on the Auditor's Duplicate, nurLcarried on the odinary tax re ceipt. Separate receipt necessary. D. M. McCASKILL, County Treasurer. Amended Summons For Relief. State of South Carolina, j County of Kershaw, J Court of Common Pleas. I G. C. Welsh, Plaintiff, against McKinley Kirkland and Sam Rollins, Defendants. (Copy Summons for Relief.) To the Defendant above named: You are hereby summoned and re quired to answer the complaint in this action, of which .n copy is herewith served upon you, and to serve a copy of your answer to the said complaint on the subscriber at his office in Cam den, S. C., within twenty days afUu' the service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service; and if you fail to answer the complaint within the. time aforesaid, the platftiff in this action > will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the complaint. K. I). BLAKENEY, ' Plaintiff's Attorney. To the defendant McKinley Kirk land : You will please take notice that the Summons and Complaint in the above entitled action was duly filed in the office of Clerk of ( ourt for Kershaw C'ountN <ui this th?* Xth day of Decent her, li?23. i: D. BLAKENKY. Plaint itf's Attorney. HE best footing your car can get on rain-swept streets and slippery hills is the gripping AM -Weather Tread of a Goodyear Tire. The high, thick, sharp -edged blocks of that famous tread take a slipless hold and hang on with a wedgelike action that prevents side slip or skidding. At Sarcira Stmt inn 0s* far i im teli raram man t! tha nam Gaodyaar Card* ?Wf tha bm+aUd All Traadand bach t h a rrt up aailh atandmrd S+rvUa Kenhaw Motor Co. Camdrii, S. C. GOOflt II Hi 11 KK I'KICKi) CrOTIUNp, Outlook Im That W?Hfl Crop Im AJfO Short. With a .short cotton crop, hopes (or cheaper clothing do not seem to be very bright, if a Boston correspond ent of the Now York Tribune i? cor rect in predicting: a shortage of Amer ican wool and eager competition for foreign wool, To quote what this writer .say* on The Tribune'* finan cial page: With the immense quantities of for eign wool being reshipped out of tho UOftpn market, and with the territory I and dona stic wool being used Ug, there is considerable conjecture around the trade as to the percentage t.f th<- 1028 < lip in the United States which is left on the marked The present yearfc* clip is roughly, estima ted at 2f>0,(M>b,000 pounds and some have stated that they felt that from 25 to 35 per cent only of the domes tie clip is left with practically eight j months, yet before the new supply1 would be ready. The. country has now been five months on the present i clip and what was left over from 1922. Attention is railed to the fact that the ] wools, or the bulk of the wools which j have changed hands recently have not j been sold among dealers, but direct i to the mills. If an average is taken of the esti- j mates that have been mentioned, or 30 per cent, the amoimt unused would ! be but 76,000,000 pounds. At the rate wool has been consumed a wool man l states that the trade would use up j 200,000,000 pounds before the new is available. . ' ' That the demand Is not likoly to let up is indicated, we read in this dis- j patch, by the probability that the woolen mills will continue to run well. "Th? u*nt/?rm?nt of W. M, Wood of the American Woolen Company is called to mind, when h? wait! that 83 per cent of his machinery >vas in operation." And then, "the Goodall Worsted Com pany of Sanford, Maine, which is a big factor in the buying of wool, is put ting its mills on full time again." And foreign wools are higher in price, for "quotations are rising all the time in Australia, South Africa, the Conti nent and Bradford." This writer says of the foreign demand: it is interesting t<> not$ that the main .support of the foreign markets is buying for mill accounts ami im mediate consumption. At no time wince the armistice have France, Ger many and Belgium been able to get a supply for more than three or four weeks ahead of their requirements. The English wools -m- being taken by the continent very consistently, and while trade in England has not been any too good there has not been an opportunity as yet to accumulate stock* for the woolen and*. worsted trade. With all of this consumption and activity indications are that when some real winter weather comes the demand will be so excessive that gar- j ment manufacturer and mills will not ! be able to supply the public as fast as they might desire. Charleston, December KxceptinK Pete Cross, of Detroit, all the dc fendants, who were found not guilty yesterday in the United States Dia- j trict court of conspiracy to violate the prohibition laws, have been charged anew by the District Attorney's office. M. S. Sullivan, of Charleston, Loui Kanter, Detroit; Edward Trattner, New York; C. B. Hernandez, Charles ton, and E. H. Walker, Charleston, are accused of being concerned in the lighter of whiskey camouflaged as white potatoes confiscated in Green Creek, off the Stono River, June 28, 1922. Sullivan, Trattner and Hernan dez posted bonds of $500 each. Kant er went to the county jail and Walker is to be arrested. Sullivan, Kanter, Trattner, Hernandez and A. H. walker are accused of being concerned in the whiskey camouflaged as lumbeji- con fiscated at Harvey's Siding on the * Seaboard Air Line in Berkeley county, July 14, 1922, Sullivan, Trattner and Hernandez furnished bond of $500 each K?nter d'd not jr iv?> bond and Walker is to be arrested. Box Supper at Blaney. The Blaney B. Y. Pi U. will give a box supper and social at the Blaney school house Friday evening the 14th of December. The young folks will donate the proceeds of the occasion to the repair fund of the Blaney Baptist church. The public cordially invited to attend. Sale of boxes begins at 7:30 P. M. Here's Proof That Advertising Pays Famous Wriglcy Building in Chicago Being Doubled in Size The part of the Wrigtey Ruild ing erected two years ago has filled such a want that the north scction, nearly double the floor area ot the south section, is being added. This north scction, nearly com pleted, occupies the ent:re block, immediately across Xorth Water Street, fronting on Michigan Avenue and reaching to the height of the main part of the first struc ture. with a connecting bridge. The space in the new section is already nearly all taken by high class hrms in advance of the com pletion of the building. Here is a concrete (as well as a steel and glass) proof of the say ing that "advertising pays." In these magnificent buildings Mr. Wrigley has erected an impressive testimonial to this gicat truth. They loom large and beautiful. They typify the achievements of the man who built them. They stand as a monitor over the activ ity of the Nation's second city ? inspiring ? dominating? massive ? bearing unanswerable testimony to the POWER OF ADVER- - TISING. ~.L . *V EAT HER RECORDS NtSOEU ! They > i o Of cn important ir. Settling Questions That Are b?fon? the Courts. Any extreme or unusual weather condition* which prevail at the time of some particular event tend to fix the circumstance more vividly In the memory than If ordinary condition* had prevailed. Very often the weath er bureau of the United State* Depart ment of Agriculture la called on to provide Information from I in rec<yds of went her renditions at a given place on. a five? date. Much information may settle a question before the courts. establish a claim to an inheri tance, or otherwise prove conclusively the date of some event! Involving Im portant consequences. Recently It be ? mne necessary for a man to prove the date of iiiy birth, which waa under Uippute. family tradition pointed to the year when New *>Y ear's day whi very, very cold ? the lowest tempera :ur?' oil record" for that district. The weather bureau was able Immediately to place the date required mm 1804, when in the Middle West there wus an extraordinary cold, wave spreading. quite generally over Ohio, Illinois and nearby sates, reaching 10 degrees be low aero In Cincinnati and 18 degrees VIok- Jfero In Alton, HI., with corre sponding low temperatures throughout the region. CAMEL WENT TO HEAVEN Mahemet'i Boast Given Place for Going From Jeruealem to Mecca In Four Bounds. Mahomet's camel, according to tra dition. performed the whole Journey from Jerusalem te Mecca In four bounds, for which service he had a place In Heaven with Ahorak <the prophet's horse), Balaam's ass. Toblt's dog snd Ketmlr (the dog of the seven sleepers), says the Detroit News. It Is said the mosque of Koba covers the vn apOt wucri tiic Cauif! liTiiu Wi'if n Mahomet fled from Mecca. Mahomet considered the kneeling of the camel hs a sign sent by God and remained at Koba for four days. In the Koran there Is an expression similar to the one found In the Bible to the effect that "It Is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a nee dle than for a rich man to enter Into the kingdom of God." The Koran says: "The Impious shall find the gates of Heaven shut ; nor shall he enter till a camel shall pass through the eye of a needle." In the rabbini cal writings there is a slight variety: "Perhaps thou art one of the Pampe dithlans who can make an elephant pars through the eye of a needle.** St. Louis Shaft to Laclede. Pierre Laclede, founder of St. Louis nearly 100 years ago, like De Soto be fore him, died on the MlsslsslpiJI river. He was buried on shore somewhere near the mouth of the Arkansas, but companions who went later to dlalnter his remains found that the river had washed them away, giving Laclede his last resting plnce In the body of water which had been so closely associated with his life, says the Detroit News. Laclede, a native Frenchman, sold his chateau In thtJ shadow of the Pyre nees to acquire the means to come to the New World. He went Qrst to New Orleans, where he fought in the Colonial wars. Then he sailed up the Missis sippi" to find a location "for a" trading post, and coming upon this site, knew that his quest was finished. . A monument to Leclede's memory was recently unveiled In St. Louis. A Success Secret. The secret of nature's success is pa tience. A naturalist may go out into the wood 8 to study the birds. He mny wnik and walk and walk and see no birds. Hut let ifim sit down on a log and wait, and lo ! the brawhes ure full <rf song. Those who pursue success never catch up with her. Success takes alarm at pursuit and avoids the stealthy pounce. "Seekeat thou groat things? Seek them not but. "Seek ye tlrst the Kingdom of (Jod and His righteousness and all other things shall be added unto you." ? Nellie Ripley Harris in Nautilus. Better Than Lawyer. A popular comedian was a witness In n suit f?>r slander, and the oppos ing counsel said: "You are an actor, I believe?" "Yes." replied the comedian "Is not that a low calling?" "I don't know; but it's so much better than my father's that I mn rather proud of it.' "What was your fathers <-n!ling. max 1 iiM,';" "lie was a lawyer." said ?l:e con. r'llan Proved. .?'nine ar''heol!tg!st> excn\aMnc on ?' ?? 'order of the Sudan, upon l..*v:i\. t._ > amp. neatly hurled their 'I sardine tins. Another wienn-if ea.ni a !nt;a and happened to dl-j > >> > ? I. is s'a.r.e site. I'rett.s ?ixin he held ? \> a an embellished w i 1 1 j the ptcuiiv <f a plump golden salmon. "Aha." he exclaimed. "Now I haw* evidence in support o f tu,\ theory 'hut the Sahara vwts nm e an Inland *??><." Conservative. A cer'nin man had Just bought a car. ilu took hla wife out on a few pre linunary expedit Ions, during whi? h Vie did not hesitate to criticise her hus band's * .Torts at driving. "llallnn. old man!" said bl? next d<?or neighbor on* evening. "I you'\e *rot a little iwt^Mirr What do you gej out of her?" "Abonr fnnjr thousand word* m th% f*lr??n ~ The tm-er sadlf. "" "? *^* * V f ?_ 'rf'*** fc % -r ' 16 Year Old Boy With Bride of 46 Kren though his dad, Postmaster. Joseph Tucker, of South Kssex, fnsH., Is asking Investigation and annulment of his boy'* marriage, ?or ton H. Tucker, 10 years old, saya he wooed And won and loves hit \ oar-old bride, who wan Mrs. Susan O. Simpson, wealtkv widow and v?#r of a big hotel In New York. Pictures show youth and his brhle? -also photo of brld*'t> numwer to at Gloucester, Mass. Give One For Christmas The Tudor Sedan is a gift every member of the fam- . ily will share. It adds to daily happiness. It will extend the joyous spirit of Christmas to every day of the year. This new Ford type is of an exceptionally pleasing design. Wide doors open ing forward, folding right front seat, and a roomy interior make it a conven ient car to use; its high radiator, broad Cowl, sun visor, and large windows make it stylish in appear* ance. Yet it is sold at (he lowest price ever askod for a Sedan? only $590 f.o.b. Detroit. The r i ch, permanent luster oi its finish, the quiet good taste of its upholstery, and the ornamental treatment of Its full-nickeled hard ware, all help to mak4 it a car you are proud to drive. This Car can be obtained through the Ford fVcekly Purchase Plan. Kershaw Motor Company MONEY T 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 . . ' _v *? - ' , ^ , . ^ ^ ^ LOAN AND SAVINGS BANK BUILDING ? ~-v , ? rfc,- " - : ?