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IT COSTS LESS GIVES MORE COMFORT? IT IS SAFER to Ride on Tirestotte CORDS For every fiber is insulated with rubber, adding great strength to each cord, which stands the extra flexing strain in balloon tires. This process is the very, foundation of low-pressure construction. Drive in -let us equip your old car we . can do it quickly at low cost. Kershaw Motor Company Broad Street Camden, S. C. V ' > DeKalb Service Station DeKalb Street Camden, S. C. Woman Charged With Huge Theft New York, March 7. Arrested and charged with the theft here and in Chicago of more than $100,IXM) in jewels and furs, Mrs. Anton Wor ritzer us said hy the police to have confessed toilay to the robbery of three homes in which she worked as ma; I. She implicated hi.r com panion, Hei'nlan I jiherwjerth, who was also arrested, and said, he play ed'the Mock market with the icsu't of hi1-- operations. PYORRHEA CAN BE STOPPED ? often in iM hour*. If you suffer from Pyorrhea, sore and spongy pins, loose teeth or ether mouth irritations, 1 want to send you my simple homo treatment under plain wrapper. It stops Pyorrhea in its worst form, as attested by thousands, after every thing else failed. Simply send name for generous 10 day free trial offer of my secret home treatment. Ad dress King Laboratories, .'W)4 (late way Station, Kansas City, Mo. Atlanta Constitution Damaged Atlanta, March 8.?The sixth floor of tht' Atlanta'''Constitution was gut led by fire Uxlay and damage esti mated at $100,000 resulted before the blaze \va.-. brought under control. Ma chinery in the composing room on the fifth floor and presses in the basement suffered from the flood of water poured into the building in the two hour fight necessary to ex tinguish the fire. The building, located at the cornel of Forsyth and West Alabama streets is a six-story brick structure. Sev eral thousand people were 'attracted to the scene .and all of the fire apparatus was called out. The Atlanta Journal immediately tender ed the use- of its facilities and tomor row's issue of the Constitution will be issued from the .Journal's plant. On the face ef statistics, the pro portion of male convicts in prisons to females is 10 to 1, and the proportion 1 of hardened criminals is 02 per cent to IT per ceil. NO WARRANT NKCK88ARY Supreme-Court I>ec?dei* C?n? lnvolv i 11 k Search of Cant for Liquor Federal prohibition agent* lawfully may .stop automobiles and other vchi dp* and search them for contraband liquor without a warrant, the su jyarmc court of the United States Monday held in a case from Michigan, brought by (ieorge Carroll and .John Kiro, In another liquor cage, brought from Georgia by Sig Samuels, thf court held that states, under the con stitution. may make unlawful thi possession of liquor acquired legally before enactment of the federal pro hibition law, IU-claring thai "it woqld be intol erable' and unreasonable if a prohi bition agent were authorized to stop every automobile on the chance of finding liquor," Chief Justice Taft asserted that "those lawfully within th? country entitled to use the pub lic highways have a! right to free passage without interruption or search unless there i? known to a competent official authorized to search probable . cause for believing that their vehicles are carrying con traband or illegal merchandise." It was the intent of Congress, how ever, to make a distinction between the necessity for a search warrant in the searching of private dwellings and of automobiles, the chief justice stat ed, and that distinction was constitu tional. "There is no provision in the j constitution which denounces all searches or seizures without a war-' rant," he said, adding that it pro hibits only "unreasonable" searches; or seizures. "The guaranty of freedom from unreasonable searches and seizures has been construed, practically since the beginning of the government," hc explained, "as recognizing a neces sary difference between a search of a store, dwelling house or other struc ture in respect of which a proper official warrant may be readily ob tained, and a search of a ship, motor boat, wagon or automobile for contra band goods where it is not practi cable to secure a warrant because the vehicle can be quickly moved out of the locality or jurisdiction in whic_h the warrant may be sought." The mere manufacture of liquor can do little to defeat the prohibition amendment unless the liquor can be distributed for illegal sale and use, the court asserted, and for that ren son it was necessary that the trans portation of the contraband be pre vented. The rule to be applied to determin ing the legality of a seizure without a warrant, as laid down by the court, is whether the seizing officer has rea-? sdnable or probable cause for believ ing the automobile which he stops and seizes has contraband liquor in it which is bi^ng illegally transported. The evidence as analyzed in. the opinion ?howed that Carroll and Kiro had been negotiating with federal cn forcement agents. for the sale of li quor and the court J) eld there was [ample justification for the stopping and .searching of their automobile on j the road near Grand Rapids, Mich., without a warrant. Hi thf (Jeorgiu caiiO it had been shown that Samuels in JU16 placed in his cellar liquor and wines lawfully obtained before the passage of tlu prohibition law, and two years be fore the state of Georgia made pos. session of intoxicating liquor unlaw ful. ? . . In 1D2<3 the sheriff of DeKalb county seized the spirits. Samuel* promptly brought suit in the stato courts to recover the liquor, contend ing that when property had been law fully acquired a state cannot, undei the federal constitution, mhke its ownership unlawful and seize it with out compensating the owner for its value. The state courts, however, re fused to take that view. Chief Justice Taft asserted that states could make unlawful the pos session of such liquor despite that it was permitted by the lKth amendment and the Volstead act. Photographs by Telephone In Washington Sunday transmis sion of photographs over a .telephone wire 3,600 miles long to three cities simultaneously was tested., by the American Telephone and Telegraph company and was declared by offi eials to have been a complete sue cess. It was the first time such trans mission of photographs had been at tempted to more than one city at once and over so great a distance. Nearly a doren pictures were sent to New York, Chicago and San Fran cisco, i only seven minutes being re quired for each print. Officials of the company in Washington were in touch by telegraph with their of fices in the three cities and were told that the experiment' was without ;i hitch. Snow Reef 100 Feet High Washington, March 5.?One of the few snow reefs to be found in all the Rocky Mountain range, is on "Snow Reef Tqp" in Glacier National Park. This snow' reef is there the year round and is much raved over by landscape painters and camera artists. In some parts of this reef which forms a crescent near the mountain peak, the snow is drifted a hundred feet hiffh. RHEUMATISM While in France with the American Army I obtained a French prescrip tion for the treatment of Rheuma tism and Neuritis. I have given this to thousands with wonderful results. The prescription cost me nothing. I ask nothing for it. I will mail this if you will send me your address. A postal will bring it. Write today. * Paul Case, Dept. Q-2, Brockton, Mass. Are You Satisfied With the Crops You Have Been Making? N IF \< ?T IIAVE Yl>f UoXSII >ERED THE REASONS FOR YOUR FAILURE? - DID Vol' USE THE I!EST FERTILIZERS OR JUST THOSE YOU COULD BUY CHEAPEST? Farmers who used Congaree Fertilizers made away above the average crop last year I'lllS FERTI I.IZER is SCIENTIFICALLY MADE OF THE VERY LEST MA- 1 !'EUi M.S WD WIEE MAKE A CROP IF ANYTHING WILL.""&SK ANY FAR- ? M F. I: \VH>> HAS i SED iT. HAD VOF NOT BETTER BUY IT THIS YEAR? WE -EI 1 \l.l. i ;i:\ I >!?> <?!?? eoNO.AREE FERTILIZERS AN D.WILL MAKE YOU < ' "! .? ?SK !MM( 'KS. ' skk rs SPRINGS & SHANNON (INCORPORATED) Vacant Place* of Earth Await Explorer'8 March in spite of the popular that the wbale surface of the glob* nits yielded to the surveyor, oiUerprl?v lux r.\i>iiMelstill <H)&t(nU9 t" tln^ parts of it wit 11 all the lure of the un knou n. Within <H\ recent tlmea the i?>\?i?? 11?m?>. ?>ji ?i- of .lubrin, lu CHtt great Arabian desert, the remoter re gions of Tibet and tin* Hurl country of Central Africa I?jin*? all bgcu forced to ylel.d up a few more secrets. s&y? the IJving Age. ('apt. li.'K. Che.csinnn, an Kngllslp maiv. lias In't'ji able'I?? locate deiinlte l\ the oasis ot .labrin. whose exact position luis long been in doubt among geographers For %n\ days Ids lll.tlo expedition marched over arid desert, relying on water uupplies a* they could nirry In -kins. 'Ihroughout the Journey In* \erillcd liin position hy aa irunuinicul .Obsfcrviu Uui s :""i u:,,s thereby able to correct such maps of ilit' region as already exist. Hi* found a .savage tribe of Arabs, senrcoly t o he regarded as Moslem, hiu harking hack lo tln> pagan (lays before. Mohammed begun his teaching, and possibly survivor* of the earlier native population that is supposed to have preceded ttie Arabs in the penin sula, These people ftVe still |?raoticaI ly living In the Stone, age. * ..Captain Cheesman was able to lo cate ruins bolieved to be those of .Ter ra, the undent Phoenician port on the Persian gulf, as Its position .corre sponds with that ujvon by I'tolemy about tlie mitldle <?f tlie Se<*ond cen tnry ; and In? also made a collection of geological specimens together with (fesert fauna and Horn, runny of which proved to he now to science. Base Mutilation on Ancient Mosaic Law Scattered over t'lo market place of Adis Abeba (capital of Abyssinia), are the tlimsy booths and open stalls Of native hucksters, fringing' It the slightly tti'?re pretentious Shop's of Oreek and Indian merchants, and the dilapidated hnildlngs which house the custom bouse and the post office, ft. Mo-Junior Powell tells us in the Cen tury Magazine. Hen- murderers are frequently exe cuted by hanging, and here also lesser malefactors, highwaymen and the like, pay the penalty for their crimes hy suiTering the io*>? of m hand or a foot, the senien"4.-' hy.-n_' carried out with neatness ami dispatch by :i loejil butch er. w ho cheeks .the I (coding by plung ing the stump into molted fat. Harharoils? < >f course. Vet. if you express your disapproval ?;> nn Abys sinian. lie will p<?!itely rrmlrsi von that they are only obeying the injunc tion of n law-giver named Moses?the Kthiopinn penal code heing based on the Mosaic law?who said, "If thine rigTYf hand oiTend tTTeo. out Ft off." Soap Long Known and Used Sojij) both as a inoilicinoI and cleans ing agent was known to i4ie ancients. Pliny speaks of two kinds, hard and soft, as usod by the Germans. lie men tions it as originally a Gallic invention for giving a bright hue to the hair. It is probable that soap came to the Ho titans from Germany. Although soap is referred to in the old Testament, auilio.ritiesdtelieve that ashes of plants or other such purifying agents ore Im plied, The earliest kinds of soup ap pear to have been made of goat's tal low and beech ash. As early as the Thirteenth century, however, a fac tory for making soap from olive <rfl was established at Marseilles. Soap making was introduced into .Kngland during the next century. Gave Name to Trees Tin* sequoia trees of California were n:imer| in lionor of Sequoia, who was the son of a white man and a Cherokee woman of mixed blood. Sequoia is famous ;is the inventor of the Chero kee alphabet. lie was born in Ten nessee. about 1700, and grew up with the Indian tribe. He became a hunter and trader In furs, and also a crafts man in xilverwork. In the last years of his life he became interested in tracing a lost band of the Cherokee tribe, that, according to tradition, had crossed the Mississippi river before the American Revolution, and lie had wandered to some mountains in the West. lie was still pursuing this quest In the Mexican Sierras when he met iiis death, August, 184.'*. Cast* Doubt on Legend The summit of Mount Ararat was first reached by Professor I'arrot in l.X'jD after two unsuccessful attempts. In 1%0 another expedition carried a great cross to the summit, which was attained after unheard of dangers and privation above the snow line. The cross was tinally erected, on another occasion), after spending days and nights ^n the stfows on precipitous dirt*, an explorer named Kbodyke de (idoil that ihe climbing was so difficult ? AAM 4 A# ' - - ? ? V/k 1111* MH jl -(..pes "would have proved fatal to m.'itn <>f the animals of the ark." Famous Swiss Valley The. I.nwterbrnnnen 1* a deep and narrow valley In the ennton of Heme, Switzerland, inclosed by perpendicular walls of sandstone from to l.GOO ft*et in altitude. From these heights descend cascades on every side; chief among which Is the famous Sthnb hach ("dust-stream**). The nun Is hardly seen at all there in winter, and even In July not before. ? a. m. Tbrough the valley flows the \Veiase~ LtHschio*, one ot < the tributaries at th* A?r Kiidu, #tjr Karuch Interested In Kice Kxperijnents designed to discover? use for the abandoned rice fieids ^ lower South Carolina him* jU!st begun by Bernard M. Barueh, York capitalist, according to a tywl bia dispatch to the Spartanburg J|et aid. Contracts involving th?| expen iiliturv, oMBQ?C>QQ .have just, i*en W bj Mr. Haruch for the drains ^ i?,700 acres and for the planting of different vegetables and ceuwU n an effort to determine which r<nea thrive best. Killing Near Jolt iMsnil John Cash, his son, Frank, a?j Marion Cash, brother of John, arrested on the Lancaster.Charlotte highway near Gills creek bridge laU Saturday evening and held for the Chesterfield authorities. The me* arc residents of Chesterfield county and were wanted for the fatal shoot ' ing of a son of Pete Nicholson neat Jefferson, which occurred earlier ii the day Sunday. The authorities at Jefferson telephoned to Sheriff Hun ter to be on the lookout for the men who were reported as making for Hock Hill. The sheriff details Policeman Joq Byr<^ to watch Chei- J terfield avenue, while he and Huey Montgomery went out on the Curt i ton's ferry road. The men wi re see*'] by Policeman Byrd in a car heading * for the Charlotte road and he qver- 5 took them and put them under ar rost as stated above. 'They wert held in jail until' about midnight when the deputy sheriff of Cheate*. \ fied came for them. The men claim. ' ed the shooting was accidental, but v no exact details could be learned.? .1 Lancaster News. The earliest kind of soap know* was made of goat's tallow and beeclM ash. I PIANO TUNING Lewis L. Moore 242-W PHONE or 46 CAMDEN, S. C. Dr. C. F. Sowell DENTIST (Office Over Brace's Store) CAMDEN, S. C. N. R. GOODALE Plumbing, Heating and Roofing Contractor Any work needing special .?ittention in this line call Phone 49-W, Camden. S. COLUMBIA LUMBER MANUFACTURING CO. MILL WORK SASH, DOORS, BLINDS AND LUMBER PLAIN Sc HUGER STS. Phone 71 COLUMBIA, S.C. Hayes Bus Line CAMDEN TO Columbiay^ Bishopville, Hart8vill?? Kershaw, Lancaster, Charlotte. -For information Phone 181, Camden Hotel A. R. COLLINS Undertaker and Embalmef AMBULANCE SERVICE Camden, S. C. Telephone?I)ay 41; Nitfht 38? T. B. BRUCE Veterinarian Day i'honc 30?Night Phone U4 CAMDEN, 5. C. DR. G. C. TRAKTHAM DENTIST First Floor, Crocker Bnii&H PHONE 450 "r jj