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Pale Children Made over to your liking, with rosy cheeks, hearty appetite*, vigorous digestion and robust health.. Give them a giuss of this delicious di^estant with meals. Shivar Ale Pur* Aromatic* With Shivar Mineral Water a Oln?cr Nothing like it for building rich blood and solid flesh. At all grocers and druggists? satisfaction or your money back on flrst dozen. If your regular dealer cannot supply you telephone Camden Wholesale Grocery Co. Wholesale Distributors ? The feet contain twenty-five pet' cent of the bones of the human body. Radio rash, Europe's latest ufflictiony is caused by the constant pressure of hard rubber headpieces against the ears, causing an eruption which spreads over the upper part of the head and the back of the neck. Ireland is minting her own coins for the first time in one hundred ye at s. i he first Irish coins were struck by Danish kings in the 10th ' Century. A decrease of 1,2 per cent in the number of farms in the United States between 1920 and 1025 is reported by the census bureau. ENROLLMENT NOTICE Enrollment books have been received and are being sent out to each precinct. It is necessary that those desiring to participate in the approaching Democratic.Primary properly enroll their names on the enrollment book of the precinct nearest them. The regulations as to enrollment and the general rules of the Party are printed on the inside cover pages of the books. The secretaries and members of the enrollment committees will kindly familiarize themselves with these rules and be watch ful that the enrollment of each voter is made irf accordance therewith The books will open not later than Tuenay, June 2nd, and close on the 'a?t Tuesday in July, which is July 1 he books must be placed in the hands of the county chairman within three days from the date of their closing. . ,R. H. HILTON, U ( hmn. Kershaw Co. Dem. Ex. Com. M. L. SMITH, JR., Secretary. Camden, S. C., May 31, 192G. 1: ' SON COLLEGE SCHOLAR I .SHIP AND ENTRANCE EXAMP I nations. Competitive examinations for the award of vacant scholarships in Clemson College will be held on Friday, 'uiy 9, 1926,'beginning at. 9 a.m., by each county superintendent of education. These scholarships will be open to young men sixteen years of -ige or over, who desire to pursue courses in Agriculture and Textiles'.' 1 ersons interested should write the Registrar for information and application blanks before the time of the examinations. Successful applicants must meet fully the requirements for admission. ; ' * Each scholarship is worth $100.00 and free tuition) which is $40.00 addiMembership in tho Reserve 'Rimers Training Corps?R. O. T. C. -is equivalent in money value to a scholarship during the i junior and senior years. . . These examinations may also be used as credit toward admission into college. I4 or further information write THE REGISTRAR Clcmson College, S. C. Renew Your Health by Purification -Any physician will tell ynff ""TfiaT I or feet Purification of tho System m Nature's Foundation' of Perfect Lea 1th." Why /tot rid yourself of chronic ail men ts that are undermin'Upr your vitality? Purify your enare system by taking a thorough \vn 01 ^aR)tabs)?once or'twico'a week for several .weeks?and seo how -Nature rcwardo you with health. Lniotabs are the greatest of ^ all Vm-o 1 P.uUvers. Get a family pack -^-i.'^utaniinv fnll dir#v?Hr>nn, oniy s- At any drug store. (AdvA | COLUMBIA LUMBER & I | MANUFACTURING CO.! MILL WOSK | SASH, DOORS, BLINDS | AND LUMBER H PLAIN & HU UK STS. P!ione 71 ft COLUMBIA, S. C. j. I - _ .. * . ? NO-MO-KORN FOR CORNS AND CALLOUSfcS ' Made in Camden and For Sale By DeKalb Pharmaiy-PIiomf 91 J - - ?' " t > In the Kitchen J > u^6 Famous Codes) FIVE WAYS TO PREPARE CHiCKEN These Are Favorite Recipes of Four Famous Cooks '(Rditor't Note: Thia U one of a aerltti of unudUHl cooking article contributed to this paper by fix famoua cooka.) Chicken is a universal favorite. Ver>c few folks can find it in their hearts to refuse a second helping of this nppetiz- j ing fowl. Four famous cooks i grivo tempting: recipes for cooking it-** fricassee, fried, broiled, stewed, and soup. There's variety enough for everyone! Mrs. Sarah m.. ? r? 4.y?uu ivjrer, the Philadelphia cooking expert, has a recipe for a delicious chicken corn soup. "This is an excellent dish," she says. "With u salad, coffee, and a bit of ripe cheese it makes a wholesome meal." Mrs. Sarah tyson rorer Chicken Corn Soup Her directions follow: Singe, draw, and cut up as for atewlQg a two year old hen. Put it In a kettle, und cover with threo quarts of cold water. Bring to a boil, and cook until tjnder?about two hours. Remove chicken. Bklm the broth, and put it back on the burner. Add two medium sized onions chopped, a teaspoon of salt, dash of pepper, and a box of noodles. Add one pint of canned or fresh cut-off corn. Cover and cook 10 minutes. Add the chicken cut into small pieces. When hot, Berve. If too thick, add milk to thin. . Delicious Fricassee For chicken fricassoe, made according to the recipe of Mrs. Kate )i. Vautrhn, Ix>s Angeles cooking expert. select a young chicken, welghjnjjL.il bout 3% pounds. Season pieces of, chicken with salt and popper, dredge with Hour, and fry in hot fat until brown. . I1a.ce in casserole, add wilier and cook in hot oven, 350 degrees F. for onfe hour. Keep tho cover on the casserole. . ^ Ac They Cook It "Out West" Pacific Coast fried chicken ts-dehemus. Vou- have tho worOf U'rs. Ucile DeOraf for that. . Mrs. DeGrkf is a domestic sclcnco counsellor in &an Francisco. For this dish cut one medium ?slscd young chicken as for fricassee. .Sprinkle each pieco with salt and pepper and dredge with '.lour. Meat lour tablespoons butter or chicken rat in frying pan. Fry chicken until well- - browned;??Coyer with not water. Add one tablespoon minced Cttioa and coolt -until the chicken is Under, using ,a low Jlurne. When ChiC.ken?la done, remove to serving plate. If any liquid remains in pan,, drain, oft in cup. Put il tablespoons of butter in the pan. Add 11 tablespoons of flour. Mix until smooth, then add 2 cups of thin cream, cr cream and liquid loft to make" 3 cups, Stir until cic.-auy. 'i'nci e.d?i onb tabl<-Bpoou" liaely tthrrdded green pepper, and Vx teaspoon suii't. Simmer :i few minutes. thori pour around, not over t be OhiOlv'"rt 'Co prepare the green pepper pour water ovrpr it and let standJu tnfsiutes. Shred with sc|B?0>s. . ".'J Vi j iinj ouu i u ?? .r j e? ncciM Kosa Mtchi- Vow Orleans domestic science j.,.-c; ilist, comes from the wJihfo cn'oken In ons of i ',r> mont '??vht4kt vJisbeu. Sho . Tf!\'r ' T' L". rt?*TTTr giir ' r~ "Fop"j*i?i.?horn hrolVcd lihicUon. ?ho t&yp. uvjeot Lt very youu? ?.J-.<okan. Clean, nnd split It down the back, it will Almost I'fo flax. Season with pau and popper. and brush melted b h ttor? <U1'- u vor'1 it. ' broiler ready over a moderate flro. i. [a:.a-chlckaa-An it,-and-let It broil? dftyfly for o half hour, or a little looker If the chicken is not so tender. ? Turn tho chlckon once In a while to hrown both Bides. When done, v. place on a hootod platter which has boon garnished with sprigs of parsley or lettuce leaves. Pour molted butter ovci'-chlcken, and qcrvo hpt. With Brown Sauce ClUckVi prepared with brown sauce is good served with rice. Miss 'Michaolls says. Here aro the In?gradients:? Ivl chlclccn _ ? l._- -?.? 2 tablespoons lard 1 sprig each ot thyme, parsley. and bay loaf *, 1 onion 2 tablespoons flour, salt and pepper to taste Clean and cut chlckon in small pieces. Benson well with salt and . pepper. Chop onion fine. Put lard into deep pot. When hot add onion and let brown. Add flour. Hot this brown, and add chicken, hot slro'. rner a few minutes with thyme, SaVsIcy, and hay loaf chopped tine, tlr often. When all is nicoly brown, add 1% pints boiling water. Stir until if begins to holl. If nocessnry, add more salt and popper. Cover/and let simmer until tender (about nn hour*. Tho gixxard, liver, and heart may he cooked with sauco. and served with boiled rice. No matter if tho chicken Is old or young, you can make It taste good if j you -choose one of -those recipes. i (Urn mxtrm to rood fS? {ntoretHnf cooking | artlcim on this pogs next toook.) f - : " I Now Toaster It really pays to invest in a good toaster which lasts a life-time. ' Many hardware ator-s are displaying a new blue glased toaster. St makes four ever.Ty browned nllces ,.of toast at a time. It does not ' warp. Very handy too. for crisping Hiwrttlsit cereals It* JjaifSt* ? over ooot. It 1* o uSid wlttV equally good rtsuiu on oil. woodA ooel. or gas stq\$a. BRIXRINGBRS ON TUB JOB Fleece Sumter Housewives on 80' (Maled Country llaniH With the arrest of a man, giving his name a* John Elbridge Perry Wednesday morning another Ponzi was brought to light. Perry, however, has been confining his attentions to the meat industry, to the sorrow of a number of trusting housewives of the city. This man for the last three days has been going from house to houso selling "fine country ^ cured hams, with all the bones removed." For this "excellent" product he has only asked the reasonable -price of 38 cents per pound. The hams were ,nicely tied up and looked good, so 15 or 20 of the ladies of the city purchased. But after the hams were deposited in the pantry and Mr. Perry hud doparted with the money, some of the purchasers thought they looked rather small, so they weighed them, with the result that they were found to be far underweight. The 10-pound hams weighed only six or eight pounds while the 11-pound article did well .to scaU^pight pounds. In addi-, tion, the "fine country cured hams" turned out to be only ordinary "picnic" hams, or, in other words, just shoulders. Perry delivered the hams in a fine automobile and his wife accompanied him. He claime to be from California but had been down in Florida and stopped off in Columbia, out of which city he had been working. Ho XiuaUy admitted that he bought his hams from Armour and Company in Columbia and said he paid 23 cents a pound for them. Perry will be tried Thursday morning at 12 o'clock in recorder's court on at least two charges, for operuting without h license, und for violating the weights and measures law. Meanand his car and stork of hams are being held until the npiso lis disposed while he is at liberty uftder $100 bond of.?-Sumter Item, May 27. The famous Nelson monument in Suckville street, Dublin, erected in 1808, is being removed as a hindrance to traffic. When ladies of the court complained that the smoke and fumes werp ruining their complexions, King Henry TV of IO.ngland prohibited tho use of coal. Later, coal burnihg was made u capital offense, and one user was actually hanged. Mica crystal can be split to a thickness of less than one-half of onethousandth of un inch. A new swindling scheme is in operation, whereby thieves deliver "collect" packages staffed with waste paper, business firms and housewives often pay the charges before opening the boxes. .. : j a.itu-,i.^aa-uua-iJL.uniii..iij..i.. jm.u?-iuuij- I JU >m ROMANCE OF THE NEWS Film To Be Presented Showing How AMNOciated l'r?M Operates New York, May 21)?"The Romance of the News," a film showing how The Associated Press gathers and disseminates the news of the world, soon will be unfolded in more than 2,000 theatres in more than 1,200 towns and cities of the United States, Alaska and Hawaii. This film, by Pathe, -which will vYsuulize for the millions who daily rend The Associated Press dispatches the manner in which news is handled, will be released for "first run" houses on June 0, and will be Shown at other theatres June 20, The film will be shown for six months. The development of news transmission facilities, as shown in- the tfilm, begins with the carrier pigeon, the curler and snail-like vessels, and then reveals the use of the present day telegraph, radio and telephone as methods of communicutkng news. To reveal the manner in which a news event is turned into a graphic account, sent hurtling through space in various manners, set up in type, and placed in the readers' hands, a catastrophe was selected. The actual example is a simulation of the destruction of Pompeii. The earliest automobile^ were legally classified ks steam engines. -u^1 ....I-j v.i,.n...i j^. j.ua A University of Utah sophomore was paid $30 for damages, to Ms clothes received when freshmen compelled him to clean green paint from the campus flag pole. Married women desiring to lathi in Cuba must present their husbands' Written permission. $12.00 Trip FRIDAY, JUNK 4Til, TO Washington, D. C. FROM Camden . VIA SUMTER ; ifo ' (Hound Trip Fares from other points proportional) Tickets good until midnight June 8th and in Pullmans on ' payment of necessary charges. T. V. WALSH, JR., Gen. Agt. CAMDEN, S. C. PHONE 128 ATLANTIC | COASTLINE t . On display this week Latest Perfection Cookstoves Lookn do ws All this week you can see practical demonstrations of the Perfection Stove six famous cooks have tested and endorsed. Look for above sign in store windows. See the stove today and judge for yourself ?what the experts approve. Prices and sizes to suit every need. "Utensilsfreevk from sotot," VI I says Philadel- II I phia cooking Jm expert "No mlntUnt \l of flavor* or V odor*," report* I 1 New Orleans /J J authority JA Steak browns ' beautifully 3 , without turn\ing,"says Bos-/[ j H^Jon Expert ^ Add variety by broiling meats in a Perfection;Broiler. Cooks on both sides at same time due to special construction. Turning unnecessary. No juice can drip into flame. Easily cleaned. rT*HIS PERFBCTION is tho model the six famous cooks used in their tests, ft is being demonstrated today,, at ell dealer's, >? ??*|oog-with other Perfection models. See its actual performance with your own eyes. You'll be oonvinoed the experts are right in endorsing Perfection Stoves t , Cooking begins when you touoh a match to the wick. No time lost in heat generation. Clean, intense heat flows up the Ion? chimneys direct to your oooking. Every drop of oil is completely burned before the heat reaehes utensils so they are kept clean and unstained. Bach burner is independently operated and capable of every rsntte of heat. You can bakef boil, broil, fry and simmer on c Perfection? II at one time. Adjust the flame for any cooking process and it remains as you set it. Be sure.to see the Perfection demonstrated today. In size from twt> to five burners. < Glass door oven. Baking always visible. Browns both top and bottom due to rapid Mliyo heat" etronlation from 108 holes. oial oatoh seals door perfeotly, saving heat for bakings Get a Per- ' feotion ovon heat indioa^or, also. Don't guess at oven temperatures. Ideal stove (or oamping. Pcrleotion burner, protecting wind-shield, eyer cool handle. Stands firm on oircular base. Won't tip easily. Four pleoei of tempting brown toast quickly made at one time on this Toaster. Handle is always oool. - ? ? * - * t f 'Cooks as quickly as gas," \ says Battle Creek J ^ expert | Superfex ran^e with ?ast>aa*||aa burners and builMn oven. The etovo for those who want the best. Warm* ing oabinet easy to clean and prevents grease spattering walls. One of many Perfections being demonstrated today. Manufactured by PERFECTION STOVE LOMPANY, (,7<r</aurf, Uhio STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF NEW JERSEY Distributors ? 26 Broadway ? New York Oil Cook Stoves and Ovens FOR BEST RESULTSUSE "STANDARD" KEROSENE SttMriHHBBim?T