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*" ' a* I II. . I .. I- I. I, Pale Children. 1 Made over to your liking, with roey cheeks, hearty appetites, vigorous digestion ana robust health. Give them a glass of this delicious (H^estaut with meals. Shivar Ale Pun Dla?tlvu AromnUo* With - r - Shlvsr Mistral Water a Ginger Nothing .like it for building rich blood and solid flesh. At all grocers , and druggists?* satisfaction or your moijey back on first dozen. If your regular dealer cannot supply you telophbno Camden Wholesale Grocery Co. b Wholesale Distributors POULTRY FIELD DAY Stat* Wi)h, Event To B* Held At MoCqrmick July 15 . e Columbia, June 28. -Plans ; have been perfected for the holding of "Poultry Farmers F|* Id Day!' at McCormick, by the South Carolina Poultry Breeder* association, according to infphmation given but here today by H. H. McGill, secretary of the organization. The field day will be' held July 15. Mr. McGill stated that all members of the poultry association, all county and home demonstration agents, and al farmers in South Carolina interested, in better market poultry, Were invited to attend He .stated that an interesting program was being worked out hy Ben E. Adams, of Charleston, president of the association, and Arthur Gannon, -manager of the Southeastern Egg Laying demonstration, now being held at McGonnick. These officials have been working out the details of the' meeting for some time and have proctically everything in readiness. This wlil he the first poultry .farmers field day undertaken in South Carolina, says Mr. McGill. He fdded, however,, that it wass the intention of the organization to make a permanent feature With a view to bringing the poultry breeders and farmers' of the state together during the. summer months. Prof. J. H. "Wood, director of poultry husbandry, University of Georgia, Athens, Ga.,* will be one of the principal speakers -aft the gathering. It is understood th?ta number of poultry leaders from Gedrgria will be In attendance. H. D. Hall, Clemson College, and iMiss Juanitn Neely, Wjnthrop College, are expected to appear on the program which will cover many features, of the poultry industry, ' It is the desire of those in charge of this movement to ' have eVery county in South Carolina represented. All officials and directors of the/organization are working to that end. An effort is being made to enlist the. support and active co-operation of thecounty agent? and the home demonstration agents in the state. j Mr. McGill states that the pVogram will be announced at an early date. Medicine Qmcern Kicks i > Columbia, June 19.?Injunction proceedings have, been instituted here it is announced today, against the state highway department's recent order for the removal; of advertising signs from the.state highways, the'ketion being brought by the Vick Chemical company of Greensboro, N. C. The order is against Chief Commissioner ' Samuel McGo^an kiid members^ and; employes of the highway department and ii returnable here on July 1, befdr^ Judge W. H. Townsend. < The chemical company sets forth in iur complaint that its signs are worth several thousand dollar*; that many of them have been removed without permission or notice* of remuneration, that none of- its signs wep? on the highway right of way and such removal of signs is in rio1 ation of the constitutT6h,~m t^at~TtT deprives the plaintiff of property without due process of law. In the complaint it is set forth that the highway commissioner was ^advised in July of last year by Attorney General Daniel that there wag no law allowing the removal of the signs. ^ " 1 1 Backward Glances According to Sunday's News and Courier, in Its issue of' June 20, 1828, one hundred years ago; the announcement as made that a long drought in this part of the country was broken on that day by "heavy,rains which swelled the streams and did considerable damage to lands and crops. INTMuS^ION^T MPOSrtKhi , . I?I.MV . ^ .. jcrrmmqnn GAINING A MILLION ' Fear Do So Before Ago of 91?More Do So Between 41 and 90 ' At what age will you have your fortune t If you haven't made it at 21 there is still hope?provided only that you were born poor. Or at 81. Even at 41 or 61 or 61! This interesting disclosure appears in a study made of American millionaires by the Russian economist, Piti-rim Sorokin and reported in the current 'number of Social Forces. The records show, according to this study, that of American millionaires who. are born poor there were jiut 2.2 per cent who had made their fortunes prior to the time they were thirty years old. ' Between the ages of '81, and 40, however, tHbre is a surprising jump. Something more than 23 per ceut .forged to the front during' these years. It is at the ^ge of 41 to 60, though, that the greatest gain in wealth -is shown. During this period the figure rises to the surprising level of 88.7. J v And even beydnd the age of 6l, Wore men acquire wealth than at 81 or below. The figure ib 24 per oent fe be exact. Artd at 61 and beyond Apparently age offers no obstacle to the making at a fortune. When will you have yours? Town Boosters jr We find tta'e following in an exchange which will apply equally as well to citizens of Camden: Life-is what wO make it. So is this town. Neighbors ought to got together for something besides funerals. The man who begins to plan for his toWn will soon begin to call It "my town.". Remember that the farther you send a dollar on an Orrand, the longer it will be getting back. You like to see this nation maintain its trade balance. What about the balance of trade of your town? You d6nft plant xa garden and leav? it akme. Why expect your town to,, grow without cultivation? This community is ready to say a good word for the fellow Who is ready to say a good word for this community. The circus takes a lot out of town, hut the mail order house does not even give a parade. It is better for one to help his town accompllsh-one-goed thing than to"point out a dozen dr more of itsnmkbtakes. - . The . easiest way to make things, right at Washington is to begin by making things right at home.' Remember that there is ona big difference between this town and . all other towns, namely, this is Hvhere you live; ^ *' , | -Yesterday is gone. Tomorrow~may riever come. Today, is your best opportunity; so is this town. BeWare Of Medical Fakes You have some chronic ailment that has not. been 'benefited by your fam-\ ily doctor. What are you to do? You see page advertisements of doctors or medical institute? in your, favorite daily newspaper, and in. first-class, magazines. What must you do about these highly advertised specialists ? You are ^making a sad mistake if you let# th??e advertising sharks take your time,and money. Time is quite an item in'the cure of disease. With a* great many diseases, there is a tijnfi_when they are curable. This t.ime is often of short duration.' This is; the time, when you need a real doctor, not an advertising faker. This 4s the way Wme of the advertisers advertise ttT'eufQ' a certain disease?probably the. victim sees this ad, and thinks he has this disease. He writes to the faker and they send him a long list of symptoms. There are certain symptoms that you have with most all diseases. They give such a long list of symptoms that a few strike your cake exactly.** The, symptoiris , yotf have' after reading and re-reading these advertisement, stand out more, and mote prominently until the .other symptoms that ^ou do not have pale into itislgnlficance, and ypu-4>ecoroe morally sure that this is your trouble. Then begins a lively correspondence with loads of testimonials, the most of them fakes.?Dr. Hjkgister, in The Progressive Farmer. ; . A French electrioal concern recently discovered a unique .method by which it had bedn defrauded. A consumer nad frozen water in molds to the diafneter end'weight of a coin and had flipped this bH of ice through the franc-in-the slot meter. The ice welted after a short time and left no trace. : ' t ? A~ six-foot Ute Indian for neariy 90. years has worn the gaifc of a squaw and has been entirely Ignored by the fellow men of his tribe \teause In 1887 he refused to take part tea tribal amid. ' jL> iuit "i J' - * ??AS / Richland Get* Send Hill Station . Colombia, June 19.?^Clemson College'* sand hill experiment station the only onp of ita kind south of New Jersey^-wtll grace 600 acres of Richland county soil just on the outskirts of Pontiac. So it was announced late last night by telephone by W. B. Barnett, a member of the Clem son College boa?<l, just after that board had approved the report of the agriculture committee which in turn had sanctioned the report, of tbe subcommittee making Columbia the site for a station which is expected to be of untold value in assisting farmers of the sand hillfe of South Carolina and of adjoining states. The board's decision yaa after some discussion made unanimous. Work on the land is to begin' immediately, it was said; some land Is to be sewn in grain this faU, a super-, intendent's home is to be erected, and by this time next ^ear the experiment ntatidn should be firmly established. 17SS- 7?4 ?1W? COLLEGE OF CHARLESTON . Examinations 'at the County Seat for the Kershaw. County scholarship, Friday. July 9, at 9 a.m. Subjects: English grammar and composition, American History, algebra, and plane geometry. Four-year course# lead to the B.A. and B.S." degrees. Special two-year premedical course. A course in Oowmere# and Business Administration is featured. . Expenses moderate. For terms, catalogue, and illustrated folder, address HARRISON RANDOLPH, President. AN ORDINANCE Regulating the Butchering of Beef in the City of Camden, South Carolina. State of South Carolina, County of Kershaw, City of Camden*Be it Ordained by the Mayor apd Council of the C|ty of Qpmden, in council assembled,'and by the authority of same: . r3 i - That all beef sold in the City of Camden, South Carolina, be butchered at some sanitary slaughter pen within the city of Camden, subject to '< the inspection of the Health Department of the City of Camden, provided, however, that all meat .bearing . the stamp of the United Stdtes Government be exempt from the provisions of this Ordinance.' / II. That anyone violating the provisions of this Ordinance, and upon" conviction of -same shall be punished . by fine nob exceeding One Hundred Dollars ($100.00), or imprisonment at hard work upon tbe public works of I the City of Camden for a period not exceeding thirty day*. < Ratified in Council assembled this lOth day or June, 1926. CP. JOuBOSE, Mayor. Attest: W. H. Haile, City Clerk, v T PINAL DISCHARGE Notice is hereby? given that one month'/ from this date; on Tuesday, July 20, 1926, I will make to the Probate Judge of KershaW County my final return as Administratrix of the estate of J. Fi patermap. deceased, and on the same date J will apply to the said Court fo_r, a final, discharge'as' said Administratrix. - , . ' MRS. JAN1E R. BATEMAN. Camden, S. C., June 17, 1926. * ? > Notice of Application for- Discharge ^ Notice is hereby given that one month from dite, July 12. 1926,- at 11 a.m., I will make to tne Probate Court of Kershaw County my final return ar Administrator of the estate of Cora S. Boykin, deceased, and will apply for a final discharge as such Administrator* J. W/ BOYKIN, Admr. Est. Cora S. Boyjcin ' Camden, S. C., June 11, 1926. "f! Notice to Debtors and Creditors/ All persons indebted to the estate of W. B. Allred, deceased, ate hereby requested to pay same and all persons towhonl the said W. B."Allred was indebted are hereby notified to present their claims, duly attested, at the office of de Loach & de Loach. Attorneys, within the time prescribed by law. ?,MaudeLrAIlred,? Administratrix of the Estate of W. B. -/Allred, deceased. > June 2, 1926. Bt rf; . ' - - \-er - FINAL DISCHARGE T~ . Notice is hereby given tha*; one month .from this date, on MondaY. June 2B, 1926, Ir"WilI make to 'the Probate Judge of Kerahaw County my final return as Administrator of the ,1 estate of Mrs. Mary E. Schrock, deoeaeed, and ;on the same date I will _ ?ppiy to thf aaid Court'for a final discharge as said Administrate!1. T. BENTON BRUCE, Administrator. Camden, S. C., May. 27, 1926. fT FINAL DISCHARGE ~ Notice is hereby given that one month from this date, On Monday, July 19, 1926, 1 will make to the Probate Judge of"Kershaw Cdiraty" mf final return as Administratrix of the estate of Edward L. Gamble, deceased, and on the same date I will apply to the said court foT a final discharge as said Administratrix. LOTTIE GAMBLE. * Camden, S. C., June 17, 1926. FINAL DISCHARGE. > Notice is hereby given that one ifconth from this date, , on Monday, July. 26th, 1926, J will make to the Probate Judge of Kershaw County my final return as Administrator of the Estate of Horaoe Latham, deceased, and on the same data I will apply to the said Court for a final discharge ha said Administrator, r PAUL a. WALKER,! Ctmnita, 8. C. Jin* M..1W*. M g- 1 Mfc_._V : .1 :* I: IL-: ell ; LBTTBK8 GO INTO DISCARD. IMay Important Dart in Compromise of Ormond-Cole Suit. Raleigh, June 16.- In the compromise agreement that kept Rev. A. L. Ormond's suit against W. II. Cole from going to trial the contents of alleged sweetheart letters written to Young Bill Ormond ,by Mies Elizabeth Cole arc insured a lasting seal of secrecy Interest in the minister's suit, brought, ho said, to "clear his son's name," had centered largely about the expectancy that Mias Cole's lettors, barred from thy evidence in Richmond county court when her father was on trial for killing young Ormond,, would come out in the civil action in Wake. Bill Ormond's letters were admitted in the crimina trial* to furnish the star evidence in support of Cole's defense. One, particularly, written to the father and begging permission to marry the daughter, was regarded as the strongest influence in directing the, jury'B acquittal verdict. The d?? fense held It out as a slander, and the kind of slander for which a father plight kill, and the jury must have agreed. But Miss Cole's letters to young Ormond, which the prosecution hinted might present things in a different light, were not permitted to ko into the evidence. F When Rev. Mr. Ormond instituted fits civil suit for fl50,000 damages shortly after Cole's acquittal in Richmond county court last October, it was asserted in the pleadings that the alleged sweetheart letters from the girl to the boy would be offered in the trial. 4 Under the terms of the agreement by which the suit has been compromised, however, .all reference to the letters haa been stricken from the Court records, thus removing finally the possibility of the mysterious "Sweetheart" letters ever reaching the public eye, In accordance with the judgment signed by Judge M. V. Bamhiil in Wake superior court this afternoon, Oole must pay $16,000 to the minister and bear all court costs. The compromise of the case came after attorneys on both sides had agreed to let Judge Barnhill name the amount of the settlement, He arrived at the sum of $16,000, it was understood , by taking the tables of expectancy and figuring out the young man's estate on the basis of his salary, at the time of his death, as an electrician at State Colleger drawing $110 a month and room. Allowances were made for increases later in life. At the time he instituted the civil action, Rev. Mr. Ormond announced thwt,>he was bringing the suit solely to clear his soin's name, that he did not want Cole's money and that he would give whatever he* realized to charity. ? Hector C. Leach, 18, has been sentenced to hang at Liverpool, England, after conviction of poioning his ayreetheart. J. H. Weldon, a seventy-four year old citizen of the Providence section of Sumter county, died Wednesday night. - ii, if? ft-S Nettle of Ldt Certificate Notice is hereby given that Certificate No. 1, representing Twenty Shares of the Fidelity Building and Loan Association of Camden, 8. C., Issued to T. J. Arrants, has been lost and that after due publication of this notice I will apply to said Association for a duplicate of the above ? mentioned certificate. A. W. HUMPHRIES, Administrator. EsUte of T. J. Arraftta. ?-Camden, S. C., JUne 25, 1M6. --? 18-10-sh . , BAILEY MILITARY INSTITUTE GREENWOOD, S. C. "COMMISSIONED OFFICERS'." A PREPARATORY SCHOOL WITHOUT A PEER * A HIGH GRADE MILITARY SCHOOL, where each cadet la placed under Christian Influences, INDIVIDUAL INSTRUCTION insurea proper progress of every A FACULTY OF SPECIALISTS selected for their fitness as leaders as well as teachers. > MILITARY FEATURE teaches obedience and inoculates habits of order, neatness and courtesy. 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