linjnmjU*Mttl\V*.JM9?W.UJt JJii^lilJ-*MgJ M1 v f M wmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmrnmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm The Philosophy of Thrift Save your dollars when you dont need them so you will have them when you do. 1 hat is the whole philosophy of thrift. It is as simple as it is sound and sensible. % . CAPITAL $100,000.00 Loan & Savings Bank 4 Per Cent. Paid on Sayings Deposits Kentucky Electrocutes Three Kddyville, Ky., May 28.?Within less than an hour three, one a negro, were electrocuted ut the stute penitentiary here early today, making the third timb1 since the electfic chair was 'installed here that u triple execution has been staged. The men were: lOlisha Sloan, thirty-one, convicted of having killed j Dh Marvin Kingins; Kd Lake, thirty-, two, Louisville, who killed his wife; and Mrs. Mary Smith, then shot himself * four times in an effort to end his own life, and John Maker, thirtyfour, negro, convicted of killing his wife. All of the men walked quietly and calmly to the chair, displaying no emotion. Six men were originally sentenced to death today, but three were granted stays of execution by Governor Fields. I KREAM KRUST I BREAD 'V * V-V' ' S Is made especially for people that ap- j | preciate quality. Call your grocer in j and have him send you some h KREAM KRIJST BREAD | Every loaf carries a money back guar - i antee. Call for our Sandwich Breftd -it's the best to make delicious sand Ivviches because it's fresh-made; it's white; it's smooth-grained; it's easy j to slice. . Call on us and let us tell you j j of our profit sharing plan. ' j j I Electrik Maid Bake Shop I DeKalb Street Camden, S. C. ? 8flBBHHHBaEn?!8!!S 1~1TTT~H~ iTHiH IBII i HTOIHIll ! Suffered I {!; weaK, nervous I 1 , "T WAS in a very weakened, 1* .in run-down condition, iruxely l* j( in need of a tonic and build- ?<, j or," say? Mrs. J. H. Wrenn, of F 1 Anna, Texas. "I was 00 weak '|j 1 I had to go to bed, and kept jj , j it, I took seven or eight bot- ;, (1, ties, and by the time I had 1' I taken them I was stronger 1 < than I had been in several fi 1 S' years. I can highly recom- , mend Cardui." Thousands of other women ' have found that the tonic ef- I" 1 , ? facts of the purely vegetable ,, ingrodients of Cardui were ' 1' iust what they needed to help i"' 1 - ' restore their appetites, to help ;? 1 ,bring them easily and natu- L, , | rally back to normal health 1 and strength. Its action has ["1 1 -I been found to be of great r > ( J benefit ih many common fe- J, | male ailments. j I 'j Buy it at your druggist's. j"1 OARDUI II For Female Troubles p1 Dutch Windmills Passing The picturesque Dutch windmills are fast passing from the landscape of the land of dikes. The Dutch millers are modernizing their mills and turning to electricity. They are right, of course; but along with the great blades and stubby towers there will vanish much that is quaint and pictorial in tradition as well as in architecture, for the miller has made his mill, through many generations, show and express his joys and sorrows. Always the Dutch miller has given his mill a name and called it by that; never just the "mill." - When a daughter of the household married, the mill was gayly adorned; when a member of the family died, the mill was put into mourning, and the degree of that mourning was governed by fixed rules of windmill ctiquett'e. If the owner ;died, all the twenty boards in the arms of the mill were ^aken out, and the. mill stood motionles for a given time, as if in grief over the loss of its owner. When the church bells tolled, marking the procession of the funeral from church or home to the cemetery, the boardless blades were turned in unison with the bells. When the wife of the miller died, 15) boards of the blades were removed; for a child of the family, K? boards; for the miller's parents, 11 boards, and so on down the line of"relationship to the chil1 4 dren of cousins, for whom one board was removed.?Youth's Companion. Alaska, for which the United States paid $7,"200,000 in 18G7, exported $02,22dx7d5 worth of products in 1925 alone. y Interesting Notice to Builders We have on hand a car-load o?_ JOHNS- I MANVILLE rigid ASBESTOS Shingles | I which we can sell you at very close prices. | This is probably the best shingle on the 1 market and takes the lowest insurance I rates. Can be put on over old shingles if 1 desired. If you are contemplating re- I roofing or building be sure to see us. 1 We also have the Genasco I Latite shingle on hand. 1 J CAMDEN, S. C. I -a : ' ? ?fc \ VrAiiBh P*l>- i' &&?***. - - i ?r-rwrr Why Be Heneet If everybody in the country were to "turn" honeat tomorrow it would be a calamity in one ?en?e of the word. Nearly all the policemen would loae their jobs, and the lockmakers would bo forced into bankrupt^. If we were honest the bonding companieH would have to go out of business, and half the politicians would be compelled to move to the poorhouse. Why, what would become of the cash register manufacturers if everybody were to wake up honest in the morning? Th^y would close down or begin making some kind of attachments for Fords to subsist on. The poor night watchman would not be needed were we all honest and the merchants could sell their counters which they stand behind when they sell us anything?as those thnigs would be of but little value to them. Honesty would practically ruin Chicago? Thousands of detectives und officers of the law and gunmen and inspectors and judges would be common loafers if honesty were to encompass them about. If we were all honest whut would the preachers do? One sermon a month would suffice, and the average preacher could hold forth at 7 or 8 different churches instead of at. one .?were his flock honest. He wouldn't have to be on the watch all the time think what changes honesty would make in picture shows?no ticket sellers or ticket takers would be needed?everybody would/f>ay his quarter by dropping it into a bucket that had no lid on it, and pass in. We would need no fences, nor burglar alarms, no pistols around home, no shotguns over our head, no bull dogs, no night latches and no trunks were we all honest. If we were honest?it would take only half the number of clerks to wait on us while buying a hat or u dress?as we would believe every word he, she or it would say, and we'd buy the garment or article in onefifth of the time it takes now, and presto: half the clerks would be forced back on their duddies. Honesty would hurt card parties. Honesty would bust the safe and vault makers. A safe would be out of date in three minutes if we were to become so constituted that we would want to keep our hands off of the other fellow's stuff. Safe crackers would possibly become farmers if they were to "turn" honest, and naturally all of them would starve to death in three months. Were we all honest?where- would we get satisfactory umpires? And who would have to take the blame for not putting the cat out at night? And a fellow could bring some money home with him at night, and find it still reposing in his britches pocket the following morning?were we honest. Half the patent medicine makers would go to the wall were we all honest. The five million grafters in the United States would have to work for a living if we were all honesL Federal' aid and state aid would go further were we honest, and twothirds of the government employees would resign and join the church if they came within that scope. And the poor newspapers. What in the world would they print were we all honest? No hold-ups, no robberies. no bribery cases, no embezzlements, and no abscondings to put in tile paper?were we all honest? would 1 uiii them, and this column would not be written but about once a mr.nth were we to relapse into intense honesty. The bill collectors?who said collectors nohow? Nearly all of them could be turned off were we honest. They would not be needed" as we would keep our merchants with signed checks for him to use on the first of the month?were we honest. And there would he plenty parking room were we all honest. ^ > Junior Bally Held ' The junior organization of the Kershaw association held their rally day exercise in the First Baptist church here Saturday afternoon, May 22. A large number of the churches j were represented and each rendered a short program. The Camden Sun- j beams rendered a beautiful and very inspiring program. They entered from the rear of the church and I marched to their places giving their j rally cry. state motto and state Sun- j beam song. Little (irace Moseley gave the welcome address and a song : of welcome. Then twelve little girls | presented a beautiful flower exercise , and motion song. They closed with a prayer by two little girls. Mt. Olivet Sunbeams^ responded in a lo\ely way to the welcome given by Onrrdcn Sunbeams and Yi.A.'s. Mt. Pisgah Sunbeams won the banner, having 'IS present and Camden Sunbeams came next with 2.v present.? Contributed. > Fi\e girls were burned to death when fire swept through an automobile top plant at Kockford, 111., Friday. F.ight other girls were badly 1 burned. The fire started from an ex-j plosion of celluloid used in making . the tops. TheTorqueTuKe is a sturdy backbone for BUICK PRICES , Standard Six 2-pmi. Ro?dti' . ?1129 3-pau. Touring I I W 2-pu?. Coup* 1195 2-door Sedan ? 1195 Vpaw. 4-door S*dan . 1295 4-ppaa?. Sport Touring 1525 Country Club 1765 Actual freight and tovernment lax to he ** Ad* A It holds the rear axle firmly and staunchly in true alignment, regardless of road inequalities. Twist and wear on the drive shaft and axle are eradicated, Two universal joints are unnecessary. It would be possible, because Buick has the Torque Tube Drive, to drive a Buick from New York to San Francisco * with all four springs broken. The Torque Tube also seals the drive ' shaft from the dirt and wear of the road. Lopk at the strength of the Buick chassis and make a comparison with competitive motor cars, before you buy your next transportation. ,You can see Buick's superiority with the naked eye. BUICK MOTOR COMPANY, FLINT, MICHIGAN Drvitiop of (i?n?ral.Motor$ Corporation OheSMMUICK O-IMS-Nf IVhen Better Automobiles are 'Built BUICK 'will Build Them - - . LITTLE MOTOR COMPANY T. LEE LITTLE. MANAGER. CAMDEN, S, C. i Jr " . -gr -: > - rt. 1 -w"'- .^ FLYING ACE ^OW AUTHOR Captain Springs, of Fort Mill, Turns To Literature * The advent of a South Carolinian into , the world of letters and the romance of his background drew i"ec- ! ognition from the Chicago American I last Monday, \yhen that paper printed | a photograph of -Capt. Elliott Springs j .of Fort Mill, and a feature' story of his career. __ _v..? The article heralded Captain Springs in his debut as a staff writer) with McClure's Magazine as "The , Flying Author." The picture shows the young financier with the Mc- I Clure's editor, Arthur McKeough, j ohortly after he had landed in a plane at Mitchell Field, N. Y. j The story of Captain Springs?that of a young Princeton graduate in the ! World War?told of his record as an 1 ace in the aviation corps, his rise to flight commander with eleven enemy j planes to his credit, his promotion in the business world to vice-president in one of his father's largest com panies, and his resignation to enter th? literary field. i The story which added literary recognition to the South Carolinian's versatile fame appears in the June edition of the publication, eirtitled, "Big Eyes and Little Mouth." It is a realistic narrative of the A. E. P. aviation during the war days and has been cited by Ex-Brig. Cren. William Mitchell as "one of the most dramatic and accurate pictures of modern warfare published sihce the war." Captain Springs has re-ehlisted in the air service and is now stationed at McCook Field, 0. Sihce his establishment there he has written three stories, said to be autobiographical in substance. The other two stories, succeeding "Big Eyes and. Little Mouth," will appear in subsequent issues of McClure's. I IF YOUR BOILER? ^ L Or Other Machinery I ?IS IN BAD SHAPE r i \ I See or Write Us - | We go to jobs anywhere?Write us j; about your troubles j If it's Metal, we can weld it j| COLUMBIA WELDING COr ~7" ~~1TJ 1208 Lady Street PHONE 5584 Columbia,^. i| - -- BS l.-,? JJL Bte Igg'' ' I We have it. -J A 71 91 331 TC" " i 2 " ?2 ' 4 - 7J - 0 H * Other Standard Mixtures en Hand CAMDEN OIL MILL . A "& ' ... 3 v^- ? - -' Mi "v_ .