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**My back and head would ache, and I had to go to bed," says Mrs. W. L. Knnls, of NVorthville, Ky. MI Just could not stay up, for I would cramp and buffer so. I was very nervous, My oblldreq would 'get on my nerves.' It wasn't a pleasure for mo ta try to go anywhere, I felt aq* bad/ "My mother had taken at one time, so sho Insisted that I try it. I took four bot ties of Cardul, and it oue should see me now they wouldn't think I had ever been sick. ? . , "I .have gained twenty pounds, and my cheeks are rosy. I feel just fine. I am regular and haven't the pain. "Life ia a pleasure. I can do my work with ease. I give Cardul the praise." Cardul has relieved many thousands of oases of pain and female trouble, and should help, you, too. Take Cardul. At All DrngglctaV Negro Rapist Hanged Georgetown, Del., Feb. 26. ? Henry Butler, Convicted of a felonousattack on a ten yoar old girl, was hanged in the jail yard here today. The trap was sprung at 10:04 and he was pro nounced dead at 10:16 p.m. The child victim of the negro's* at tack was convalescing at a farm near Bridgeville. Delaware law imposes a death sentence for such crimes. Dur ing the night the little girl is said to have told her mother that she wished she could pull the rope of the trap for hanging Butler. With the execution over, prepara tions were made for public view of the body, which was left dangling 1 from the gallows. A small gate in the court yard wall was opened so that the lino of persons could obtain a momentary glimpse of the executed jnan as they passed on. The conduct of the drowd was orderly, in contrast to the scones during Butler's trial when state troops, called out by the governor, were forced to use tear gas to keep the crowd from rushing into the court house. A Dirty Mean Trick Memphis, Tenn., Feb. 25. ? James Miller, negro, was held up last night by two other? of his race and robbed of everything he had, including his coat ahd trousers. Miller borrowed a barrel from a night watchman of a nearby factory and made his way home in it. NO-MO-KORN FOR CORNS AND CALLOU0BS Made in Camden and For Sale By DeKalb Pharmacy-Phone 95 -I is a prescription for Colds, Grippe, Flu, Dengue, Bilious Fever and Malaria ' It Kills the Germs. Ambvlatice Service Sif or Nlfht Motor Equipment of the Boot C. W. EVANS MORTICIAN Telephone* 5AS DeKalb St. 31 and 28.1 Cam dew, S. C. COLUMBIA LUMBER & MANUFACTURING CO. - MILL WORK SASH, DOORS, BLINDS AND LUMBER PLAIN St HL ER ST S. PK one 71 COLUMBIA, S. C. T. B. BRUCE D *y Phone 30 ? Night Phona 114 >EN, S. C A State of Mind One of Florence's livest and moat uniformly optimistic merchants, and one of the oldest in the city, by ths way, and for this reason we are not giving his name, was very much struck the other day with a bit of French ? Allegory taken from the Canadian Finance that points a moral worth rememhering. ft runs like this: A portrait painter sat in his fav orite cafe sipping his wine. His firat small bottlo finished, he was about to order another, when his eyes fell on a headline in the Figaro, "Hard Times Are Coming," so instead of ordering his usual second bottle he called for his check. "Is there anything wrong with the win j?" asked tho landlord. "Tho wine is good, but I did not order a second bottle because hard times are coming and we must econ omize," explained the artist. "Hard times?" said tho landlord. "Then my wifo must not. order tho silk dress we planned, but must take one of cotton," "Hard times?" rpeated the dre3* maker when the order was cancelled "This is not the time to expand. I must not make the improvement I had planned in this place." ^ "Hard times, eh?" said the builder when the dressmaker canceled the building plans. "Then I cannot have my wife's portrait painted." So he wrote the artist and canceled his order. After receiving tho letter the artist went again to his favorite cafe and ordered a small bottle of wine to soothe him. On a nearby chair was the paper in which he had read of hard times two days 'before. He picked it up to read more 'closely and found it was two years old! If you can't talk optimism, don't talk at all. ? Florence News-Review. Historic Landmark Burned Abbeville, Feb. 24. ? Fire of un known origin completely destroyed the "Calhoun Place," owne<i by Mrs. C. J. Lon, located about two miles from the city, Tuesday night about twelve o'clock. This was ono of the landmarks of Abbeville and the loss of it is de plored by the citizens of the county. It was built in 1846 4>y John A. Calhoun, nephew of the famous John C. Calhoun, and foiir years was re quired for its construction. It was built of choicest material, the man tels and some of the other material having-eome from Europe. Support ing the huge porch were twenty Grecian columns built from the ground up. Since its construction it had been the scene of many brilliant social affairs. ^.insurance in the amount of $6,000 /\vas\arried. Want* Stevens For Senate The recent satisfactory recovery from a very serious illness of Mrs. J. H. W. Stevens will >be received with great satisfaction by her friend3. Mrs. Stevens although380 still main > tains a hearty interest in the welfare of her town and through her children is still exerting a wonderful influence on the destiny of the state. There is perhaps in South Carolina no private [ citizen who labors more unceasingly and unselfishly for his state than does her son, John T. Stevens, of Kershaw. If Mr. Stevens will heed the re quest of South Carolinians and offe* for United States senate there will be in that office a man who has shown in his private affairs an executive ability as well as a keen regard for all move ments that build for his section. ? Cheraw Correspondent in Chesterfield Advertiser. Receives Foundation Check Mrs. Viola Thomas, widow of the lato Henry B. Thomas, of Goose Creek township last Friday received her first check from the Andrew Carnegie Fund. It will be remembered that Mr. Thomas last summer attempted tho rescue of Thomas Terry from a well j in Lanes Creek township after tho latter had been overcome by the foul air ip the well. Because of the hero ism displayed by Mr. Thomas, his widow and three small children ? two little daughters and a son ? will re ceive from the Carnegie Foundation $80 a month ? $66 to JJirs. Thomas and $5 each for the children. Tho children are to receive $6 each month until the youngest is 15 years of age, and who is now one year old. Mrs. Thomas is to receive $65 a month during her lifetime. ? Monroe (N. C.) Enquirer. CongreHsman Stevenson to Wed I York county friends of Hon. W. F. Stevenson, congressman from the FifttfT South Carolina district which includes this county, will be interested in the announcement that he is en gaged to marry Mrs. Clara Finney, popular lady of Chjeraw, which is also the home town of the congressman. The wedding is understood to take " ApriI 'V ? fV; ^ : * "V~y> ? T, ~j ^ T^y jr. * ? * New Method Quickly Banishes Heavy Coughs ? Why be annoyed and weakened by persistent, strength-sapping coughing hjkHs when you can, through a very simple treatment, quickly stop all iirt tation and very often banish the trouble entirely in 24 hours? This treatment is based on the fa mous prescription known as I)r. King's New Discovery for Coughs. You take ?ust one teaspoonful at bed ? time and told it in your throat for 15 or 20 sec onds before swallowing it. The pre scription has a double action. It not only soothes and heals soreness and irritation, but it quickly removes the phlegm and congestion which arc the rxU causa of night coughing. Thus, with the throat soothed nnu cleared, coughing stops quickly and you sleep all night undisturbed. Dr. King's New Discovery is for coughs, cheat colds, sore throat, hoarse ness, bronchitis, spasmodic croup, etc. Fine for children as well as grown ups?no harmful drugs. Economical, too, a9 the dose is only one teaspoon fuL At all good druggists. Ask for COBB HAD WIDE RANGE Seminary Student Seemed To II?ve Been Winner With Women Atlanta, Feb. 25..? Investigators of the marital adventures of Noel Cobb, Anderson youth, today were wonder ing how much territory the seem ingly ever-rwidening circle of his act-1 ivitiea would, envelop. Already ten cities in six states have been involved. NewB dispatches today haji revealed knowledge of him . in the following cities, arranged as nearly in chron ological order as possible, according to his activities: Anderson, S. C., his home, where his father's family is well known and highly respected. ' j Columbia, S. C., where he attended for one. year the University of South Carolina. Nrihville, Tenn., where he was a theological student at Vanderbilt Uni versity, and where he met. Miss Mar garet Farmer, pretty Dothan, Ala., student, at Peabody College. Jeffersonville, Ind., where he is be lieved to have gone through a fako marriage ceremony with Miss Farm er, following a whirlwind courtship. Louisville, Ky., where he attended the Presbyterian Theological semi nary. Dothan, Ala., where he went with his bride and was received by her family and filled for one Sunday the pulpit in the First Presbyterian church, and which city he was asked to leave by Miss ? Farmer's father, following suspicions. Birmingham, Ala., where he pre sented himself to church officials and officials of tho Birmingham Southern College as a French diplomat, and obtained letters of ? introduction to students of divinity at Emory Uni versity, in Atlanta. Atlanta, Ga., where he presented the letters and was well received by Emory students and introducedl by them to their acquaintances, and where he was found three weeks later, unconscious on the streets, suffering from a strange mental malady, later pronounced dinientia praecox. Decatur, Ga., wher' he met Miss Virginia Hollingsworth, another pretty young girl, a student at Agnes Scott college and inaugurated a whilr wind courtship culminating in their marriage. Chattanooga, Tenn., to which city he eloped with Miss Hollingsworth and where they were married follow ing a two-day courtship. Cobb now in in a sanitarium in an unnamed North Carolina city, where he was taken by his mother follow ing his collapse here. Noel Cobb, of Anderson, S. C , whose marital adventures in Alabama and Georgia have aroused interest throughout the South, is a patient in the Highland hospital in Asheville for nervous disorders, it was learned to day. On December 17, fifty carloads of frozen haljj>ut and salmon were shipped from British Columbia to eastern markets for the holiday sea- 1 son. - This is probably without par allel in its size and the distance from water to dinner table. 1 " NOTICE Creditors of George R. Cook, de ceased, "are by an order of the Pre rogative Court of the State of New Jersey, dated February 13, 1926, upon application of tho subscribers, notified to bring in their debts, demands and claims against his estate, under oath, within six months from abovp date. HORACE COOK, HENRY N. YOUNG. TRENTON TRUST CO., Executors. . Present claims to the Trenton Trust ch^ Trb. 25, 1926. 48-4-*b ( ever before Rice for Price \folue fcr\6hie for Economical Transportation Reduced Prices Touring - -*510 Roadster - - 510 Coupe - - - 645 Coach - - 645 Sedan' - - - 735 Landau - 7*5 Vz Ton Truck 1QC (ChMUOnb) 1 Ton Truck CCO (CHtxssLt OtUy) f. o. b. FUmt, Mich. Think how low the recent re* duction of Chevrolet prices brings the cost of a fully equipped /automobile. Com pare what you get for Chev rolet's new low prices with any other car in the world. Remember that Chevrolet equipment includes speedo meter, Fisher body and bal loon tires on closed models, Duco finish, Alemite lubrica tion system and scores of other features essential on a modern motor car. Now more than ever before, check price for price and value for value ? and you will buy a Chevrolet. Come in. Get a demonstration! Welsh Motor Company CLYBURN BLOCK CAMDEN, S. C. QUALITY AT LOW COST It cost $3,459.21 to keep one in mate of tho Home for Aged Farmers in . Davenport, Iowa, last year. Five is the largest number ever housed there. ; - ; . - ? Notice to Debtors and Creditors Notic is hereby given to all parties indebted to the estate of Augustus M. Trotter, deceased, to make pay* ment to the undersigned and any parties having claims against the said estate to file same duly attested with in the time prescribed by law. T. K. TROTTER, Administrator of the Estate of Au gustus M. Trotter, deceased. . Camden, S. C., Feb. 16, 192G. FINAL DISCHARGE Notice is frereby given that oae month from this date, on Monday, March 22, 1926, I wiH make to the Probate Court of KerHhaw County my final return as Administrator ef the estate of Mrs. Harriett Jordan, de ceased, and on the same date I will apply to the ?aid Court for a final dis charge as said Administrator. H. G. CARRISOtf, JR. Camden, S, CM Feb. 17, 1026 ? ESTATE NOTICE ~ ..All parties indebted to the estate of W. H. Carter, deceased, are hereby notified to make payment to the un dersigned and all parties, if any hav ing claims against the said estate will present them likewise duly attested within the time prescribed by law. w. l. Mcdowell. Judge of Probate, Administrator Est. W. H. Carter Camden,. S. C., Feb. 20, 1926. FINAL DISCHARGE Notice is nereby given that one month from this date, on Monday, March 8th, 1926, I will make to the Probate Court of Kershaw County my final return as Administrator of the estate of Susie West, deceased, and on the same date I will apply to the said Court for a final discharge as sold Administrator^ ^ dILLON C?mden, S. C.. Feb. 2. 1?2?. FINAL DISCHARGE Notice ]r hereby given that Mr. Albert L. Sawyer, through his attor ney, Mr. L. A, Kirkland, has this day made application unto me for a final , discharge aa Executor of the Will of Frank'$. Hamlin, deceased, of Havern hill, in the County of Essex and Com monwealth 0 of Massachusetts, and of Camden, South Carolina, and that Monday, March 8th, 1926, at 11 o'clock in tho forenoon, at the Pro bate office in Camden, South Caro lina, haa been appointed for the hear ing of said petition. ' All parties, if any, having claims against the said estate wilt present them duly attested to the above named attorney on Or before the date set for the hearing or be forever barred. w. l. Mcdowell, Judge of Probate Ker/haw County Camden, S.% C., Feb. 4, .1,926. SOIL BUILDER K- ? * t' ? ? .1 jx v * # ' Has made larger crops ? and more friends than any fertilizer we know ?f. We have been handling Congaree Fertilizers for a number of years and are convinced that they are superior in every respect, both in mechanical condition and quality. The many satisfied customers who have made money by using Congaree Fertilisers, Soil Builder, 8-3-3 and 8-4-4, speak in eloquent terms. We solicit your business and once you try Congaree Fertilizers, you will be one of the boosters. When you place your order for this year's requirements be sure to see ub. Our fertilizers are better and our prices are the same as others/ Thanking you for past patronage, and soliciting a continuance of same, Yours very .truly, SPRINGS & SHANNON, Inc. CAMDEN, S. C.