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Made Teething Painless and Easy f6r Baby Teething l.i an.onJ.eal that all t>a >jIch wiist ?<? through with. \vm> most n is i .t i ?i r?i i and the eiuio <>( ttttlfulnj CCXlXUl ;|"'I i e v? r ish dominion*. Many b.tbtc* Kuffor nt'Olll'1"* pain <ii thin Unto, lor ' T? elhirta wilt ro <?m?- I it l>>> .HMvatloa of ti.kit gain*, al la.\s fciyorl-'ili condition ?>, Kouthv^ tho ncrvis iti.'t triukoii t< < lhmn lf?K pain ful. Mrs. Miltif J'utu.an of Prince* ton, Ala., writdf 'Tee thine is ,i araml nu'dlcln? for buliit pi , !'?:'( < l.ttly ;i I tcethmw tlm?\ 1 httVc I It In; c'lHd rt ll a M 1 Kiivc 'l'tclh iiiu to all of tht>f? and tliey hat] no t rou h|?- cut I i n ; thf.l r 1 1 < tii ." TfOthfrnt alao roMi'V?*? s'omaeh and bowel troubles, <|Hl? is th?> nerves without tlw> ua?i of opiatf? or other narcotic drtMSiK ? .'Peethlna U sold by all dfutfKltd*. Of serta 8Qo to II,, Moffott f..ti?ora tori. - Cclurnliii". Ua., for ;i piwkatfi*! a lid a f ro.'? bookie^ about bibles. LurRt' Stilt Captured. The largest blockwii' liquor .still over seen in Chesterfield county was captured last week by .Sheriff Grant ? and his. associate". The location of this still was in the sand hills near ".Junction" on the ('. M. & R. K. The plant, ac cording to the sheriff, had a capacity of U00 gallons a day, The first run of the new outfit had been made Tues day evening and preparations were M'Aftlttg for a- second 1 run ? when - t he officers closed in on them Wednesday morning about 8 o'clock, capturing Jim Hosier Hall and Harney Jackson. Kail is a notorious bootlegger, whose operations cover a wide territory, lie is Wanted in Darlington county on a charge oThaving sold liquor that proved fatal to the drinker. I>. K. Scott, hailing' from somewhere above Charlotte, was caught in Pageland as he was returning with twenty f>-gal~ lon cans. 'Tom I loan was also placed .under bond for storing liquor. 'l Sixty-six gallons of whiskey weiy taken, together with 1.000 gallons of mash, sacks ? ? t malt 200 pounds of sugar. Th?? souring vats would hdld ?1,000 gallons. The still had been .recently installed and was spotted by the sheriff at unco and captured when the first run was completed. Assisting Sheriff j (leant were: Deputy C. .J. Sellers, kural Policemen W. C. Tiller. U. K Hroek and II. B. Graves, and Officel l>eese, of Page land, and .Officer (iregory. of Jetfer hoii. Chestei fi?dd Advertiser. A. M. Manila lilt, fur thirty years . president of the Charleston Kvcning Post, all afteinoon paper, died at his home in Charleston Sunday after a short illness. Dr. C. F. Sowell DENTIST (Office Over Bruce's Store)J CAMDEN, S. C. DR. G. C. TRANTHAM DENTIST First Floor, Crocker Building PHONE 450 PIANO TUNING Lewis L Moore 242-W PHONE or 46 CAMDEN. S. C. T. B. RRUCF. Vetertn.it'i.in l J . 3 1 1 Th <?n Si., < * T : t ? : 1 1 ? 111. j CAMDEN. 1- C i Hayes Bus Line c a m d l: n T? i o 1 u 1 1 1 b i a . Bishop vi 11c, Harts viilo er.shaw, Lancaster, Charlotte. }?<>! if: S'-'KHUt ? i-^f? Phone 181, Camden Hotel fA. R. COLLINS Undertaker and Elmbalmer AMBULA N C E S ER VIC K Camden, S. C. Telephone ? Day 41; Nijfht 3ft? TO HIS MOTHER Noted Kaunas Kditor I'ays llrr Beau t if ul Tribute. Mrs. Mary A. White, mother of William Allen White, died the cither day at her home in Kntporia, Kan She was almost 05 years, old. For his Emporia Gazette Mr. White wrote the following account of his toother s life: My mother was the type of woman known as a "captain'.' a masterful person who had her own ideas, and IteinK purebred Irish always wanted t<? nwtke her own views prevail. It is that spirit which from time, imme morial has made the Irish rulers "of the world, She was left an orphan when ;$he svaS sixteen with two younger children, her brother and sister, to war. The brother ran away .and wliit Vp sea (iii l.ake Krie boat, and her sis ter got married, so my mother, being footloose, devoted herself to the pas sion of her life -education, She learned the dressmaking trade and still later the milliner's trade, all to keep herself in school. She fell ?n with friends who -took her from the town of her childhood Oswego, N. Y. to Chicago. There she heard of a coeducational college at (Jalesburg, HI., where she went in the early fifties. She must have been very happy there; for an a child I learned of Knox coiivge ,and It <lilTTlP \n~bo a place of high adventure to me, a sort of port of dreams. She met my father at a dance In the Robinson house, here in Emporia, when* she was teaching school in Cottonwood Kails and hoarding with the Sam Wood family. He was a dozen years older than she ? in his late forties and their love afTair was pretty mature and deliberate prob ably. Hut baby was coming in the sister's family, so mother went back to Michigan to help with it, and in a feu months my father came after her and they were married ? she .37 and h? was IK. I was born just a year after the marriage, and a year after that my J'ather, who was a* natural pioneer, found Kmporia growing too sophis ticated and crowded, so he pulled out f<?r Eldorado in the Walnut Valley with his family. Kldorado in that da\ was a tough town. Kmporia never was. My mother stood it, but she disliked if. The shooting and drinking and sporting around were iiot what she had bargained for her life when she spent ten years getting a eollege education when most women air having their love afTair and balm s. P.ut she brought books into the rough little town, and my earliest memory i-> of her reading to me. Shy was < >ne of the worm n who helped to I found tlx i its labrary in the mid-sev ! cntie... and when 1 was a little child i -? I ; ' ? gave nil- bt-ok- foi mature minds, j I5eft.l i I was ] J she n ad most of hit-kifi- to our. and "M iddletnarch" and "Adam H < ?? i ? - " and one of (Jeorge ; : band's novel?- which I never have been ' ab.t to Itu.ili ; but it '.va? raw meat ! f.-r a bivy. Hut stdi good for me. St oi: and Charles Head ami WiJkio ' < >.1 wi-ic reail before my teen-' 1 v.iT> w< il Mav,ed ami after yihat I ' ' w. W aloi i M > itiothci I. .iii wanted two things' watch a'r.d a!: o:u ration. My j fat I ei had 1; i - pride I le .-aid .- b; I bad a ?<'t?d e.ot k' and was never < T lot' :h>- l.onre. <o why did ?h.e need a : w.tti I. And. be: i .? d< n '. < ? i . h?* I ", w ?, .-ifft'lv w thai -).t (ii.j i.t>; j n l . i : opera".: >r, So those dcMic. j w . ? ? 1 1 j ' 1 1 - >t i i \\ hen I w a It h. ; f- . .. and r;. ?!.' 1 J . o.ed Th.rv.- ' j ? ? 1 ? ' w.?- t i\ of Kid-" a-:--. ? i :. " . ; ? j " ? ? 'i i ? i ? e i ? \ w a ; ' ' : i ? . ? - * .ii ' . ; o . \ ....... .? ? !? i.< ! v it. ti ?? d ?' ?' ? n ' \ ' * . . d ... 1 ? I ! . ? - . I aw or . , !,t v ? ? - ' . : ? I r: :\ e: s ; t \ . A .. * ' ' t .v- . ;?brca?: t.f: ? Hut hi r ????. ;:< ? >' ? - i.ke l ' '? '? ??* re<-- :t f1* t ? ? - >*???- h ^ ? ?-m t i ? ' ' : ' ! > ? nV !. v\ , . . i -U ' -J',.. -UT- I ? a : ' i r rr.a ' ? - 1 r.a i i? ?v ? . \ ? . . . ,ii - ? amt u j h r -he ii a ?; k ??' n moie i n. re gr :m. n.< re j : tiv ? ? !..!? fui a! 'be V( tra:r.ts of itf? > !. i has had a long t:ournev, r-ia;'!\"?'a >???:> t>f it. yearning pas ?innatcty f-'r a f re*-tlom that she c?uld never quite define. So it if with .til of u^. in our heart of hearts. Aral \r?terday she had release ? into the world ef truth*, into the land where our visions blurred by tlie earth's dull circumspection come true and satisfy the houI. I am wure, ?nd no I hiii most .happy that whatever survives of my mother today is young and free and happy beyond human words. Ko r the iron that bound her heart chafes her no longer. She is t ht- ( ,i|>tuin of her soul. If draperiiH ai'tjifit allre, do not try J to pull them down; remove nearbv objects and use wet broom to smother the burning pieces as they fall. NOTICE OF SALE. Stale, of South Carolina, County of Kershaw. Whereas, one Ford Automobile J Touring Car, motor number 828608. used in tin- illegal transportation of alcoholic liquors, as forbidden by the statute laws in this state, was seized and taken possession of and confis cated by me in the County of Ker shaw, this State, under and by virtue of section 8H& of the Criminal Code of South Carolina, while same was being used by Karl Brazell< Henry Player,, Henry Anderson and Rolley Timmons in the transportation of liquor. Therefore, notice is hereby given that I will sell said Ford 'Touring car, No. A-72-121, under and by virtue of the law in such cases made and pro vided, at public outcry to highest bid der for cahh, in front of the Court House door, at Camden, S. C., at 12 o'clock M., on Saturday June 14, 1924, the proceeds of sale will be disposed of according to. law. S. P. W ATKINS, State Constable for Kershaw County. May 22, 1924. ENROLLMENT NOTICE Enrollment books have been -re ceived and are being sent out to each precinct. It is necessary that those desiring to participate- in the ap proaching Democratic Primary prop erly enroll their names on the en rollment book of the precinct nearest them. The regulations as to enroll ment and the general .rules of the Party are printed on the inside cover pages of the books. The secretaries and members of the enrollment com mittees will kindly familiarize them selves with these rules and be watch ful that the enrollment of each voter is made in accordance therewith. The books will open not later than j Tuesday, June 3rd, and close on the last Tuesday in July, which is July ,29th. The books must be placed in the hands of the county chairman within three days from the date of' their closing. M. M. JOHNSON, Chmn. Kershaw Co. Dem. Ex. Com. j M. L. SMITH, JR.. Secretary. v> ' Camden, S. (\, May 2S, 11)24. TRESPASS NOTICE All persons are hereby prohibited from entering on the lands of the undersigned. situate in Kershaw County, about twelve miles southeast of the City of Camden, on the waters of Swift Creek, containing thirty-six ( ?'{})) acres, more or less, and bound ed on the northeast by lands of Hoyt Moseley, south by (I. W. Moseley, west by the Boyle Place. Any person or persons violating ibis notice will be prosecuted. MRS. H. C. A R RANTS May 21J. 1924 ' 9-12pd THE ONIVIRIA1 OAS Back to Nature This Summer i" ' The enjoyment you'll get out of a Ford touring car this summer, is another good reason why you should no longer postpone buying. You, your family and friends can benefit by pleas ant trips at minimum cost ? evening drives, week end excursions or a long tour on your vacation. Buy a Ford, if you want a car that is always reliable, simple to handle, needs almost i\o care, and carries you at lowest cost. rvtroij, Mkhl|?n Runabout $263 Coup* $%2$ TWor S?iian>$.fVO t'ordor Stdun $68i Ad prictt f. <f. h. Detroit KERSHAW MOTOR COMPANY Camden, 23. C. The Touring Car E O. B, Detroit P*motiDiibl? Rim* and Stariaf M5 ?*cr? 1SB8m3?&3i?tS&SB8Sei5 TRESPASS NOTICE All' persons are hereby prohibited 1 from entering on the lands of the undersigned, situate in Kershaw County about twelve miles southeast of the City of Camden on the waters of Swift Creek, containing thirty-six ('M')) acres, more or less, and bounded as follows*: on the North by lands of Jim Burgess, East by lands of Hoyt Moseley; South by lands of Mrs. H. C. Arrants and West by the Boyle Place. Any person or persons violating this notice will be prosecuted. W. J. TRUES DEL. May 29, 1924 9-12pd ' CLEMSON COLLEGE Scholarship Examinations Competitive examinations to fill vacant scholarships in forty-two counties will be held on Friday, July 11, 1924 beginning at 0 a.m., under the supervision of the County Super intendent* of Education. Four-year scholarships ? Open to students desiring to pursue four-year college courses in Agriculture. Win ners of these scholarships must meet fully the requirements for entrance into the Freshman Class. Two-year scholarships ? Open to students desiring to pursue the Two year Course in Agriculture. Common school education sufficient. Each scholarship is worth $100.00 a session and free tuition of $40.00 Membership in the Reserve Officers Training Corps ? R. O. T. C. ? is also equivalent in money to a scholarship during the last two years in eollege. For catalogue, application blanks and other information write to THE REGISTRAR Clemson College, S. C. Wihthrop College SCHOLARSHIP AND ENTRANCE EXAMINATION The examination for the award of vacant Scholarships ? in- Winthrop College and for admission of new students will, be held at the County Courthouse on Friday, July 4, at 9 a.m. Applicants must' not be leas than sixteen years of age. Whea scholarships are vacant after July 5 they will be awarded to those making the highest average at this examination, providing they meet the conditions governing the award. Applicants for Scholarships should write to President Johnson before the examination for Scholarship examination blanks. Scholarships are worth $100 and free tuition. For furtlfer informa tion and catalouga, address Pree. D. B. Johnson, Rock Hill South Carolina. 6-tf DOES YOUR OLD SHINGLE ROOF LEAK? It so why not re-cover with GENASCO LATITE SHINGLES. They go RIGHT OVER THE OLD WOOD SHINGLES. Guaranteed for ten years | and good for many more. Cheapest at start. Cheapest to put on. Come in and iet us explain this proposition. It's being done right in your midsf and all over America today. Let us point out the houses in Cam den that have already been covered over (he old shingles. Solid car of Lalite shingles and Strip Shingles received this week. We always have them and can supply any size job? no matter hoWVsmall, no matter how large. Prices will open your eyes. SPRINGS & SHANNON INCORPORATED