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Cows Need Grain and Salt Clemson College, May 18.?A small mount of grain must bo fed throughout the summer, supplementing pasture grass, if a heavy and profitable milk flow is to bo maintained, says j. P. LaMaster, dairy chief. A cow cannot hold enough grass to supply the necessary digestible feed, be says. Then, sometimes pastures are short and the cow must travel in the hot sun all day long, covering a great territory to get even her "fill." While the cow may keep up her milk flow for some time after she goes on pasture, she will draw much of her manufacturing materials from i?er body storage. Neither should a heifer be left to the pusture slone for feed. Few pastures in the .state are good enough to furnish all.^he feed necessary for growing heifers, says Professor LaMaster. , A little grain fed while cows are on pasture will be the best feed investment a dairyman can make, according to Professor LaMaster. Specially is it advisable to supplement substantially with grain, when first turning cows on pasture in the spring, for grasR is mostly water at that season, j Cows on pasture need "salt, too. It should be kept before them at all times, so they may gel it when they , like. \ Young Woman Killed. Laurens, May 12.?Miiss Elizabeth Turner, twenty-one year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Will Turner of Lauford, Laurens county, died at the local hospital this afternoon from injuries she suffered in an automobile accident Tuesday afternoon on the Musgrove highway, four miles north of Clinton. The accident was caused by two tires blowing out simultaneously, causing the machine to leave the road and plunge over a twelve foot epibankment. Miss Turner was thrown from the back seat, her body being caught and suspended on a strand of barb wire fencing. A deep cut and laceration in'" the right side produced internal hemorrhage. M iss Vallie Bull and two men were in the car with Miss Turner. Miss Bull was driving. YOUNG MOTHER DROWNS P.^1, ? Tragedy Taken Place in Florence qpoiy When the horse drawing tho buggy in which she and her baby were riding became frightened and backed off the bridge at Lake Swamp crossing yesterday morning Mth. Craven Jones of Glenwood was caught beneath the I wreckage and drowned in water not quite a foot deep. Persons who chanced to come upon .the tragic scene at least half an hour later found the two-yearold child piaying in tho water and nearby the horse, which having broken the traces and freeing itself from the I buggy, stood awaiting the command of its owner. Everything possible was done to reI vivo Mrs. Jones but she was beyond human aid when rescuers arrived. Ii was believed that she was stunned when she fell over the embankment and there wore bruises on her head I which indicated that she may have been unconscious when she was I thrown into the shallow water. How the baby escaped injury will of course never be known and equally as mysterious in the light of the J tragedy will be the escape of the I horse of any bruise or scratch whatI ever. The baby was standing in water I about waist deep when found and was apparently having a good time. I Not far away was the wreckage of the buggy beneath which the mother lay dead. Mrs, Jones was about. 35 years of -age and loaves a husband and five children. She was the daughter of W. H. MoElveen, a prominent citiI zen of Timmonsville and former repI resentative to the legislature from Florence county. I Craven Jiones, the bereaved husband, is Hr .son of Charlie Jones of Jones Crossroads, and one of the best I known and most highly respected I citizens of the county. I The tragedy has occasioned the | deepest gloom in the Glenwood secI tion where the family is so well known and the news of Mrs. Jonto I death will be received regretfully wherever she was V known.?Thursday's Florence News-Review. Kershaw Baptist Sunday School Contention. The following is the program for the Kershaw Baptist Sunday School Convention Which meets with the Beaverdam Baptist church Saturday, play 29th, at teii o'clock, a. m.i Prayer and praise service, L. II. I Catoe. Enrollment and, organization. Standard of excellence?-design, aim, value, C. A. Byrd, Jr. Using the Bible in the Sunday I School, J. L. Corzine. Building the Sunday School, C. L. Norman. ! Grading tho Sunday School, R. L. Smith. Special music, Mt. Pisgah choir, j Rural Problems?trained teachers, Mrs. Robert Goodale. The Sunday School Pupils'and the Preaching Service, S. B. Hatfiold, Elementary Work, Miss Elizabeth Nuckols. Adjournment, dinner and ' social hour.. Convening at 2 p. m. with prayer and praise service, C. O. Stogner. I Baptist Sunday School Literature, teaching the doctrines, J. W. Kenney. The Sunday School under church control, J. P. Graham. The Teachers' Meeting, or Workers' J Council, P. E. Blackmon. Special Music, Buffalo Choir. Denominational Work in the Sunday School, J. L. Corzine. Evangelism in the Sunday School, M. B. Gunter. Digest of Letters. Miscellaneous and adjournment. Remains Brought Here Richard Nelson, aged 56, died Friday morning at 10:30 o'clock at his residence, 1523 Park Street, after an illness of two weeks. Mr. Nelson was born in Camden and had made his home in Columbia for the past 20 years. He was connected with the Union News company of Columbia. He is survived by two brothers,. T. C. Nelson of Kershaw and J. K. Nelson of Philadelphia, and three sisters, Mrs. L. F. Matthews of Asheville, N. C., Mrs. R. J. McQue of New York and Mrs. Pearl Jones of Richmond, Va.^Saturday's State. Mr. Nelson was the son of tho late C. Nelson, who for many years was a meat dealer in Camden, and formerly resided at the corner of DeKalb and Mill street. The body was brought here for burial Sunday after- . noon, services being conducted by Rev. J. T. Peeler. After keeping weather reports fifteen years showing losses on the Great Lakea from unexpected atorm?, Dr. I. A. Lapham secured the adoption of U. S. Government foracaata in 1870. ' . Blaney Schools Close Next Week. Blaney, S, C., May 18.?The closing exercises of the Blaney high school will begin on Friday night, May 28, with an operetta, "Cinderilla in Flower Land," given by the primary department, Superintendent Leonardo announced today. On Sunday morning, May 30th, at 10:30 o'clock the Rev. J. L. Corzine, Secretary of the Rural and Young People's work of the Baptist church, j will preach the sermon before the graduating class in the Blaney Baptist church. On Monday evening in the school auditorium an operetta, "The Quest... of the Pink Parasol", will be given by the grammar school. The graduatihg exercises of the seventh grade will also be held when certificates will be given to eight boys and girls who will be promoted to high school. I I On Tuefeday evening in the school auditorium the graduating exercises. will be held. The speaker of the evening will be Bishop Kirkman Finley, of Columbia, S. C., who will deliver the address to the members of the graduating class. The members of the graduating class are as follows: Miss Lucille Dinkins; Miss Mattie Mae Dinkins; Miss Ntile Evans; Miss Elise Rose; Mr. Avery Nelson; Mr. Oscar Rose; Mr. David Roberts. . i ' *i I V i pa i M i'i i .i i r, i .. .r - . ? "Cat Eye Annie," alias Lillian McDonald, one of the most notorious sneak thieves in the United States, made her escape from the state prison ? at Auburn, N. Y., early Monday morning. She was serving a sentence of ten years. She dug her way trough an 18-inch brick wall with an iron bar and escaped over a 12foot wall but was later recaptured. ' A ' * SIDE DRESS WITH NITRATE of SODA For Quick and Sure Results Use Only NITRATE OF SODA ! You Can't Afford to Lose Your Season's IV^ra ay Experttneniin% With a late Spring and many weevil# expected, a Nitrate ">f Soda sidy dressing A 100 to 200 pounds per acre is absolutely necessary te set squares before drouth or weevil - can hurt them. A Nitrat of Soda4 ' side dressing insures yield mid 'ncreases profits. ! OUICK* ^ecl'V(J * ide-dresser must be quick acting. * Official results obtained in this country and abroad show conclusively that only in Nitrate of Soda is the rilant food 100% available immediately it is applied, t leaves no acid residue. SURE: Ab Close, l^owrys, S. C., says: |i J "I have been using Nitrate of Soda for at least fifteen years and to my honest conviction it is the best form of nitrogen that we have for the . growing crop..l am using one half of the nitrogen in my cotton fertiliser from Nitrate of Soda, and intend to use about 100 pounds per acre as a side application when the cotton is chopped. I find that it gives the best results ' vy-., at tfist time." Years of actual results show Nitrate of Soda the best side-dresser Ask your county agent or send a poetal card with your Sddreaa to our naaraat office for our free bulletin* which have helped thousands of fanners to grow bigger and more profitable crops. I ) Chilean Nitrate of Soda ? E UCATIONAL BUREAU I Dr. William S. Myers, Director 1111 Hurt Bldg., Atlanta, Ga. 27 Madison Avenue', New York | Run-Down I 1 gave oe* easily R 9 "MY health wsmt any aon 1 count at all," aaym Mr*. K fl E L Caytoo, of Washington, N. C. "I would start to do h my housework and 2 would |T* jw give out before I had done m* vfl anything at all I did not B* A havo any strength, and if I did K HI the least thing it seemed to ah 9 tax ma so X could not finish. K 9 I was run-down sure enough, if 9 "Several of my friends had 9 9 taken Cardui and they said 9 to me, *Why don't you try itf K 9 I knew 1 needed something to 9 9 build up my general health R Jffl and to increase my strength. V 9 "Finally one day when I K 9 was recovering from a spell l> 9 of sickness, I decided to try IV 9 Cardui I got a bottle and be- |p 9 gan to take it I could notice lu 9 that I waa improving aa my*E> 9 appetite got better and I did R 9 not give out nearly so quick. H+ 9 I took several bottle# and I K 9 fait lota better. 9 9 "Two years ago I decided IV IK to take it again. It built me HI' |l up and made me feel like a Hu 9 different person. It is (*oe n& 9 grandest medicine for women R 9 that X know anything about" Hh ] CARDUI I 9 For Female Troubles Isolation BAINBRIDGE COLBY, EX-SECRETARY OF STATE, SAID, "ISOLATION IS NOT POLICY, IT IS A PREDICAMENT." THIS BANK DOES NOT WANT TO BE ISOLATED. WE DESIRE TO HELP STABILIZE AND INCREASE EVERY LEGITIMATE BUSINESS IN THE COMMUNITY. I The First National Bank I Of Camden, South Carolina I Dojpou know why BUICK j^wheel brakes a are mechanical m Buick 4-wheel brakes are Built on the same sound mechanical principle as the two-wheel brakes you always have used. The brake on the outside front wheel releases when turning a corner. The outside front wheel needs to turn in a larger circle to avoid skidding and Buick brake* let it turn. And the operating parts of Bukfcj brakes are steel drop forgings. For safety's sake, and for easier driving, pick Buick and Buick mechanical 4-wheel brakes. BUICK MOTOR CO., FLINT, MICH. DirUion cf (Jen oral Motor $ Corporation A A fcBeMfflJICK G4MI-NP WHEN BBTTBR AUTOMOBILBS ARB BUILT, BUICK WILL BUILD THBM LITTLE MOTOR COMPANY. T. LEE LITTLE. MANAGER. CAMDEN. S. C. | . ' ........ .fc ? ' ..I **77. 1 Add to Your Savings Make up your mind that you must and J ' ' ; . ' ' ' -v;^ Y [ ! will save. If your income increases, let I your savings increase. And do ygur savI ing through the bank, which will protect j and reward your thrif t. " 1 in?-*- ^ ' --- -, " Y ; ... # A Y Y' $->Y> CAPITAL $100,000.00 Loan & Savings Bank 4 Per Cent. Paid on Savings Deposits We have it. - --f-n _ 4-7J-21 4-7J-0 - * ' * P' Other Standard Mixtures en Hand CAMDEN OIL MILL . "