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Make Your Repairs with this FIREPROOF WALLBOARD IF your walls and ceilings are in need of repairs, use Sheetrock, the fire proof wallboard. Repairs made with Sheetrock are done well and done for good. Sheetrock is pure gypsum, cast in sheets. Being made from rock, it can ; not burn. You can put it on right over the old walls and ceilings ? just nail it to the joists or studding. Takes any decoration you want ? wall paper, paint, panels, or Textone, The Sheetrock Decorator. Made only by the United States Gyp sum Company. Ask your lumber or building material dealer for a sample and prices. UNITED STATES GYPSUM- COMPANY 205 Wwt Monroe Street, Chi cago, Illinois *?? v ft P?? Off. SHEETROCK THE Fireproof WALLBOARD Call for Democratic Dollars. Mr. H. I). Niles, Kditor, The Cam-! (it n Chronicle; Dear Sir: ? Mr. \V. K. (lon/.ales, State Chairman, has asked ; the undersigned to receive funds for: Kershaw County for the National I Campaign. ! An appeal is therefoie made *o every Democrat to nive as lie or she; ' li. IiLlc . Lu ? Liiijv- AUhouxh it ' will not he possible and pel haps even ! desirable, to make a person to person solicitation for funds, every one is hirpod to Miid a contribution to this ? ause, iither t" the Kditor of the < h ronicle. or to T.,. K. . Trotter. Chair- . man for Keohau County, S. < Let's help elect that K'"eat Democrat. John U\ I 'a to he the next president th< 1'i.ited State-. Make yvui contribution right now before the matter escapes you. Names of con tributors will appear each week in the local papers. T. K. Trotter, Chm. Police Chauffeur Walter K. Milli gan, of Charleston, who while clean ing his pistol Sunday night, acciden tally shot himself, died at Roper hos pital about h? o'clock Monday morn^ 1 ing. Policeman Milligan, \Vho was in his twenty-tilth year, was popular ?'with the men on the police force and : new* ?>f his death came a.s a shock to hi* many acquaintances. He lived at . 'j'j I-'ixhbui ne .*5jeei. Mr. MtHigitn i* survived by his mother, who Monday 1 wa* reported to be in Kentucky and , en route home, and several brothers . ai.d .-isters. I REAL ESTATE FOR SALE CITY PROPERTY SPECIALS. ' 1 ! ' !!.? i .1 . ; . . .1 ; ^ i .ut. in a j: ual 1 1 t-t > 1 1 , In ? t ! ? ? j ? J t r . : ? .??,.??. ilwt . :! k h"U ~ t ? 5 1 .i a! a Mtia'i, i ?. ( ai; b< ? "> ??? < iiiul' ?t }.? n Siuh !?<(.. an \ . i\ > a : . \\ ?? i i.i ' a ? * ' f . - ? i .i k - a . ? h . i * . w ' s 1 - ' ^ 1 1 ; i k t* i ' mi a * i: \ ? ' r v . : ?_ v a:.:.ot I ??- ? .pia! > ? i .i a i.Mfnr j ? i ? ? j ?? ? ? j t i . ? ? . . lh:v. u.-i-.t a:.?i ??(. luK.. ' ? ? ? - ? i* '? -? ?'?-an r< j iai o mm: < ??-* !?? Ka'b -'it.! ? a p: i'y a-: \ a : ? ^ c ! j ...-a-, a:..! \ < 1 u t a ! ' ^ w : ' ' ^ ' > j a k ti { any : a ; . > ? [ ' !, i - | : v j >v i * y . . \ - rv about , t. St \ * II : ? ???us !. J ' ? l-'a.r .it a \ t i \ ! r.i-. :.al''.<- ; 5 a ?? I fa r<l !" bra' .i* * '.< ? . ? J ! . ; r.li ' a ! ! \ ' 'a v. i>< >h>>uv . > a t . \ ! l rn ? ? . n' ? ? ' ' --u-t a . ? :a:^'. ar<: vrm? *r -r ?*-. rr -v : ' If > ?? ' . ? m^ -? ?? u> at t-ni-". BUILDING LOTS. <:? ?? !.>t "i h"iri?- >it?*s in and outshle of the city, [.??t -how you ^umc of them. FARM PROPERTY. " ? ? ? ; ? . i ; : ? > Mi.' ? ? u ? . li) ai-h-.i 1 j? r. . i : . . i 'a ?* i t j i a > t u p ? - a;. : i ^ .v.tii ,j :\>um dwvi.inj,' k? ^5 r* barr.?, Kar.-.fc" -. ? Vv:> ;.M!a. !.\e price. ?*'?" ?' iii.;: ?'.<?! f.n m 5 milc< fr??m I. uk tT. a -a t-aiarat.! farm w K' '? ? r c y< i\ fnn.i. fcncc-d r-.i-'u re--, wood an-! tinil- r !arw>. F u r.; t <n p I ir a * :<?,?. ] r 4 . - .rr.pt sa> can frm ?r ar. .? 1 1 "<? p< r acrn. 75 acres .. v\ . .\ -r -:??? m -?-t<>iy l?a5 ? . about ha'f open !anti an-i '/:?? : '.::r.:x r. In ><?? 1 apa!!y :r.i ro.t.? :n value. Invest iffat* 350 aere farm, high.y . :r ; : v mpit tf .y o.juip}x?J, ir. ..n< (>{ tho host farmir.K M-r:...:. ^ tra- slatr; idra. community ra-nr Camden. A 'ractive jiricc, f r r.r.m e ? r ;r.vostnuT.t. TOD acrc larm, imjvroveii, U miles out. wuod. waXr, orrhard, pasture, good land, i'rice about half would expect tu pay. LIST YOUR PROPERTY WITH US qOME IN AND LET'S TALK IT OVER C. P. DuBOSE & COMPANY H( N I IN(i SEASON OI'KN. Opto Season Hailed With Delight JU> Sporbnu-n. - -^Phtp^Htmtcrs4 Moon" the Indians called September ? And September i* still a month dear , to the hearts of lovers, of the jfreat outdoors? espec ially hunter*. "Open l^?son"^-thc&?. words stand for a .world of joy to <\ny sportsman and now it || < M'a.ion on many kinds of game. Soon, it will he open season on almost akl Kaine, furred or feathered. The old hunting instinct may lie, dormant the rest of the year. But there is something in these early au tumn days that forces it awake. As Kipling puts it, sportsmen hear the "red gods call." Whether for wild fowl or the wing ed or four-footed dwellers in the woods or fields, everybody's going hunting. And? "Ain't it a grand and gloiious feeling? ? . v : ^ The fortunate felloes are planning long hunting trips and the less for tunate are envying them. There are but few red-blooded, two-fisted men who are not rrmnag'11# somehow to squeeze at least several days' shoot ing into their month's activities. Ask men why they go hunting! They'll give you many reasons. Some prosperous business or professional men, probably, will tell you that there's no better preparation for the winter's work than some time spent in the open with their good Reming ton in hand, matching their quickness and wits against thpse of the game they're hunting. They'll say there's no pep-pr.oducer that can compare with the air of this "season of mists and mellow fruitfulness." redolent with the tang of the forest or salt of the bay ? that hunting's a real ef ficency measure. To bring home a good bag a man must be on the alert. Others will declare that now the country and the woods are at the height of their beauty. Many of the trees are beginning to put on their gorgeous russet, scarlet and gold coats" of autumn foliage. The land scape ~~on every side presents a pano rama in which they delight. Still others prize most highly ? be side the never-to-be-forgotten thrill of hunting? a pleasure of a more ?material kind; appetizipg dishes that are fit for a king; roast duck, broiled grouse or squirrel pot-pie-^pm yum! There are most as many given for going hunting as there are hunters, but all agree on one thing; not to go hunting is to miss a barrel of fun, to pass up a big part of the joy o' life. Fortunately game is plentiful this year. It has to be. The stores in town that carry sporting goods have laid in large and varied stocks ? in cluding some mighty good ideas in the way of hunters' equipment. "The best idea in loading shells I've run across in many a year," one nimrod in town well-known as an experienced and successful gunner was heard to remark around Bud ?Coleman's shop yesterday, "is Rem ington game loads. Say, those fel low*? hare got the TlghT~ 'hunch In scientifically loading shells to a uni form standard <>f pattern, penetration and velocity with moderate recoil. It means you get uniform results if ym aim straight- and you i un sure count u:i yTTu j ? truly to do that." \ i 1 ::i I'll, bids fair he a most Sll' ? ? ? t" 11 1 ?ea ! State ! air l.asi of October. f The .* "h at :.ua' South t arolina State ian i- i? v> than a ni?>:.:h away. Kver j- i net' the gates cIomi! on the i 1 -how .the officer.- havi- been busy making ready f<> r a bigger and t ?? ? 1 1 ? ? fair :n l'.c'l. Whiie this work has yone steadily on, is going for ward with extra force new and the fair- offices and ground* are very bu.ty |i!ace>. The fair opens October -20 and i inscs October 2r>, day and night. The pre-idcnt, R. M. Cooper. .Jr., _of.3Vi -a< k-y . : i rT7f" t he" sec re t a r y , I>. F. Efird. i.f I^'xington, believe confidently that the coming fair will be the best the a^n<i'tation has ever offered to the people of South Carolina. In addition to Mr. Kfir?tv the offi ce: s of the fair arc: A. K. Lever, vice pre>ider.t and. Ben M. Sawyer, tteas urer. The executive committee is: W. M. Frampteji. Char!e<t??n, R. R. ( 'ur.rtir eham, Allendale, \V. W. Long, ( lem-on College; K. O. Krierson. Spartanburg; L. I Guu>n, Lugoff; J. I.. Mcintosh. I>ovesvi!> ; I). G. Klii*< n. Columbia; R. M. ('-???per, Jr., Wi<nck\; A. I* '. Lever, Co imbia; T. J. Cunningham. Chester; G. A. Guig nard. '"'dumbia; .1 . A. Hanks, St. Matthews ar.d .J. N K.r\tn, Dar lington. yi~ Helen Dav.s Stor,? . wife of I.. <>t:* Stone of Greenville, died shortly after 1 o'clock Monday of a bullet wound said to have been self inflicted at thf? family residence, 730 Augusta street. Ill health is given aft the cause of Mrs. Stone's taking her life as she had been in deciding health for some time. She was 25 Practical Nurse Tells Mrs. N. E. Snow, edfc?Houte 1. near Paria, Tenn., tolls the story of her experience a* follows: "I am 62 years old and 1 have been a practical nurse for more than 20 years, tak ing mostly maternity cases. J)ne of my daughters suffered rom cramping at . . . She would Just bend double and have to go to bed CARDIII The Woman's Tonic wy recommended to her and ahe only had to take about two bottles, when she hardly knew that it was . . she suffered so little pain. "M y youngest daughter was run-down, wefck and nervous, and looked like she didn't nave a bit of blood left? just a walking skeleton, no appetite and tired all the time. 1 gave her two bottles of Cardul. It built her up and she began eating and soon gained in weight and has been bo well since/' Cardui, the Woman's Tonio, has helped Buffering women for over forty years. Try it. At all druggists'. ^ ^ Chief of Police R. L. Golden, of j Greenwood announced Wednesday that he revoked the licenses of Alcin Carr, Carl Langston and Red Wil liams to drive automobiles in the streets of Gretfnwood Thursday. Wil liams' license was taken away from him, the. chief said, because he was under the influence of liquor while driving his car last Friday. Carr's and Langston's licenses were revoked because of immoral conduct, which Chief Golden said had bfcen proved. In this connection Chief Golden asked that it be stated that he was determ ined to put an end to immoral con duct and liquor drinking on the part of taxi drivers and he wishes to warn all others that the section governing it will be strictly enforced. HETTRR SI'KKCH cbu'MN { Quest iOfiS *lU'Ul<J Ik' jitlllri'S.S'Hl tO. MU* Irene lHUard, The Kxten*lon Division, University of South Caro? Ji{ia? Columbia-. ?? S.' C. . . Personal ' an* s wer* will be made on request 11 a stamped envelope is enclosed.): MUch a s I wUh to serve SoiTth Ciif^jjhtafti through tHfW weeklyj ar|iei*s, 1 hope no one wj!1 make the m^tu k?* "i speakjng of tfiem us the Beit# i Speech Coiyumn. Two simple words that ar*t among those mo*t frequently mispronounced are column ami coupon. The explanation for both mispronunciations is simple: the are contused with Other words that suggest kinship where there is none, Column sounds so much like volume that careless ? and ignorant speakers treat them as parallels. The final syllables, hoover, show upon examination' an entirely different combination of sounds. The umn of the former is nothing but the simple -um sound; the . same short u that we find in rum, cut, gum. The -ume of volume is practically a long un-j accented -u; the u that we find ? in unite, or educate, with the y sound or recti y preseit. For cyoupon there! is less excuse, o far as 1 know th6re' is not a word in our, language in which ou has the pronunciation yu; yet thousands of people persist in dragging in the y. If we had phonetic spelling, we should probably have tollum. volyUm, and coopoh; but who wants those queer combinations, of letters? C,.? Answer, please, through the ."Better Speech Column," the follow ing: At school I was taught to add an apostrophe and the letter s to a word ending in any letter other than an s to form the possessive, as "man's work," and to add an apos trophe to form the possessive of a word ending in s, as "Mr. Jones' cow." I sometimes see words ending in s changed to the possessive by the addition of an apostrophe and another s, as "Mr. Jones's cow," and have seen such as this even in the Literary Digest. Was I taught improperly; lias there been a change, op am I still ripht ?? A.T.W. A. ? There is a proverb that says a rule is kept in the'-' breaking. The answer to your question illustrates the proverb. We are all taught as you were, I believe; but are told forthwith that if the word following the possessive ending in s' does not itself begin with s, we may form the possessive ss. The explanation, I feel, lies in the fact that we have a strong tendency to regularize. The regular1 possessive is 's. It is not only easy, but pleasing, to say Mr. Jones's cow. It is not objectionable, as long as we are speaking, to say even Mr. Jone's >.?n.- Mut the three s's in pjoti ; : <? i?'.? many ; and SO w? 1 he |ine. ftj? best solution i? to accede.to the dictum of usagi . that in the best of society, jinguUiuiidly Tpoaktnfi:. the one is done nnl the other is not, - 1. 1). Q;? Please give illustrations of tho , .i ; h.' Word "might," pa i ? as related to or as it in contradis. tinction to "may." "May," I under, stand, concerns permission. i),H^ "might" involve doubt, or indt- finite ness, only? For example, "i might come" signifies doubt, Is that Col lect as an answer t? the question: Win you come?" or should the atiswet be "I may come." A.? The beat way to answer your /juestion is to hunt up the sadly neglected old fashioned grammar, Latin if you please, and study th> whole question of conditional clauses and the subjunctive mode. In modern parlance the safest answer is two fold. Jn the first place, may and might* are different tense forma of the same auxiliary verb. If, there fore, the statement is as simpjfe as the examples you give, may1 is the correct form for the present and future, might for the past: eg., [ may come, I might have come. On the other hand, if there is a depend ent clause, the doubt or uncertainty involved in the thought is the determ ining factor. "If I can arrange my schedule, I may come/', suggests there is a possibility of arrangement. "If I could" arrange my schedule, I might come/' implies not only, that the arrangement qpnnot be made, but that there would still be uncertainty if it could. ? I.D. Daniel B. Stroman, prominent Or angeburg county farmer, camo to Sunnyside cemetery, Orangeburg, about 11 o'clock Sunday morning to take his life. Placing a single barrel* shotgun with the butt on the ground and the end of the barrel over his heart, with a special stick he pressed the trigger, giving himself a mortal wound. There were no eyewitnesses but two persons saw Mr. Stroman when he drovtf into the cemetery. The report of a gun was heard. A very short while thereafter a visitor to the cemetery found the body. Mr. "Stro man was a leading citizen of the Four Holes section of Orangebulg county | and we^l known in this city. He was a man of means and filled the place of a good and progressive citizen. How ever, he has suffered failing health lor some time and despondenccy is given as the reason for his act. Mr. Stroman drove from his fiome about six miles from Orangeburg, going direct to the cemetery, stopping his car near a large oak tree and there taking his life. | Why Hudson and Essex Outsell All Rivals Learn for your nun advantage why Hudson and Kssex outsell all rivals. It is not merely hecau-e tjie Coach exclusively ^i\ e "Closed CarComforts at ( )pen C'.^r C\ t. ' ' It is because N>?h II j-ism nnd Essex crtTer the m.M > \ 1 n < :i r.g value in genuine car !M R FORMANC'K and Rl- LIA BILITY. It r.< hecavtse f"T irv ! , - \ i : ? r ?ti n less moti >rs e\i!;;-:\r ? '?.( -n because they are built on the Super-Six principle. More than 250,000 owners know their enduring value. That is whv they outsell all rivals ? and why the Coach is the largest Celling (^cylinder closed car in the world. An ex: i.nination will convince y<?u of quality not obtainable elsewhere within *400 to *1 000 f" these prices. HUDSON Super-Six COACH 1,1500 LITTLE MOTOR COMPANY T. Lee Little, Manager - - ?%&&&* ?\-.V -