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m m FINAL DISCHARGE. Notice Is hereby given that one mouth from this date, on Monday, July 26th, 1&26, I will make to the Probate Judge of Ketfshsw County my final return as Administrator of the Estate of Horace Latham, deceased, and on the same date I will apply to the said Court for a final discharge as said Administrator. PAUL G. WALKER, Camden, S. C., June 24, 1026. l&ipd -' -? f ?-? FINAL DISCHARGE Notice is hereby given that one Month from this date, on Monday, August 2, 1026, I will make to the Probate Court of Kershaw County my final return as Administrator of the estate of Edward Brooks, deceased, and on the . same date I will apply to the said Court for a final discharge as said Administrator. THOS. J. W1LUAMB. Camden, S. C., July 2, 1926. FINAL DISCHARGE Notice is hereby given that one month from this date, on Tuesday, July 20, 1026, I will make to the Probate Judge of Kershaw County ray final return as Administratrix of the estate of J. F. Bateman, deceased, and on the same date I will apply to the said Court for a final discbarge as said Administratrix. MRS. JANIE R. BATEMAN. Camden, S. C/, June 17, 1026. ft KERSHAW LODGE No. 29 A. F. M. Regular communication of this lodge i? held on the first Tuesday in each month at 8 p.m. Visiting Brethren are welcomed. FRANK D. CAMPBELL, M.yBILLLNGS, Worshipful Master Secretary. 3-5-26-tf " 666 is a prescription for Malaria, Chills and Fever, Dengue or Bilious Fever. It kills the germs. PIANO TUNING LEWIS L. MOORE All Work Guaranteed Telephone 242-W Camden, South Carolina Get Rid of Roaches They crawl up water pipaa and through Crack*?but you can atop them forever. Baa Brand Inacct Powder will kill every aae. Sprinkle or blow it into avary crevice ? all around your kitchen and pantry. It's (' harm lea* to mankind, domestic animate, birda and pets of all Linda, but death to roachee. It alao kills AnU. Flea*, rite*. Moaquitocs, Water Bttgt, Bed Bug*. Moth*. Lice on Fowl, and many other house and garden ineects. Oct Bee Brand i n red sifting top cut at your grocer'* or druggist'*. Household tae*. 10c and 25c. Other aizea. 50c and I.00. Puffer gun. 10c. #/ your dcaUr can / iuf>ply F*u? **r\d ijj 25c for tarfe mnaa/ioid af*c. Give dceUr'e i mamm and aaV for free book- ' |?*? l| Kilje Tbem." & guide fo* killing nouu and garden petit. McCormicx Ac Co., Baltimore. Md. y \ "On# By One, Tint Star* Con# Out* (The following editorial, which appeared in The Tampa Globe of May 6, will take rank, according to mauy judge* of newspaper editorial style, as a high type of journalistic literature.) As the sun poises on the western horizon like a giant bail of fire and shoots its Vist rays before hurrying on its eriand to herald another day, and to light the world of other people, then* come8 that quiet hour of the day~~thnt slowing down of the noisy wheels of life?that hush of the day, sunset-time. There's no sinking to rest of the sun. There's ntver any rest for the sun?its job is thut of lightkeeper, his work-tlsat of furnishing light and warmth for the nations of the world. Maybe the sun does hang for a time out in the west hating to leave us, possibly envying mortals the peace of the sunset hour, and perhaps*those multi-colored shafts of light that we see shooting from the sun are the protests of a tired old sun who wearies of its task of forever looking down on the frailties of a funny old world. But, there's a rest time for all mortal life?there's a rest time for man and beast und for flower and bird. As a sign of its approach midafternoon casts small shadows to be soon followed by the longer and deeper shadows, and then the hours of no shadows at all as darkness falls. Sunset-time is rest time, and the light or rest time is starlight, for thejre's no need of the dazzling brightness of the sun at rest time. Sunset-time is the sweetest time? the peaceful time of the day. It's the tired mother's time?the tired father's time, and the tired children's time. The hour of dusk is ever restful. What a terrible punishment it would be if it was always daylight time and the sun was always shining. , How wonderful it is that night does come, for without darkness there'd be no stars, and without troubles, there'd be none of the sweeter, truer joys. Those, merry, tiny, dim twinkling) points of light in God's wide canopy at night hold a promise for us all,; which soothes our tired minds, and hearts. And they come out one by one. That's the way the stars come out, always one by one. Have you ever thought of that- as you've witnessed the grandeur of the transformation of day into night? Have you ever thought of that as you've been enveloped in the shadows as the dark mantle is so gently and quietly thrown around a tired world? And have you noticed that as you've sat under the starlit dome and watched the stars as they were marshalled and set into place one by one that you're soothed and your troubles are put away?one. by one. That's the way everything worthwhile works. The lesson is learned from the stars?one by one each- is attained and one by one each success is achieved. And one by one your good deeds mount up, and one by one your kind words cheer the discouraged. Don't wait to do the many big things all at once, brother, do the small things one by one and soon you'll have a whole skyful of happiness surrounding you. Oh, tired mothers, enn't you learn that the lessons you must teach your own must be one by one and not all at once. Or, tired business men, can't you learn that the lessons of life are learned one by one and that they're honesty and tolerance?and thai they're not records of sharp deals and cute tricks. And if we're tempted to think that, we're beaten ut any game of life,, can't we all remember the lessop of the stars?that battles like everything else Are won?one by one. Drinking Orgy Causes Deaths Cologne, Germany, July 8.?A drinking orgy that began when . a wine-laden steamer was wrecked and its cargo washed ashore, has cost the lives of five persons and the serious illness of a score more. Attracted bv the wrecking of the steamer which crashed into a bridge on the, Rhine near here, hundreds of persons gathered on the river banks yesterday and followed the wine casks, released by, the impact. The casks floated down the river for a time and then strandid on the banks where they were broached freely. The drinking wont j on until the river banks were dotted , with persons overcome by the wine, j So disorderly did the drinkers bei come thai 80 policemen had to be i summoned to restore order and to confiscate the wine casks. When the . excitement subsided it was found that [ two persons had died of alcoholic j poisoning, two fell in the river and were drowned and one was killed in a brawl. Twenty others were so ill that they were taken to a hospital where it wa? found they were suffering from alcoholic poisonfhg. A Thought For The "Buy Lowe/' (Kork Hill RoconL) f Suppose some morning all of your customers refused to buy from you unless you cut your price to a point below the actual coat. Such a circumstance would be distressing. If you met their demands, you would go broke; if you did not, and therefore suspended selling, your expenses would soon bring to you the same end. Very sad, indeed! However, if not only your customers, but all customers of all firms should .simultaneously decide that they would no longer pay a profit fori what they bought, the result would be disastrous. The recent general strike in Great Britain, would be jnere child's play compared with this. There are few men who do not desire that those from whom they buy make a legitimate profit, but should [this by any strange chance toe read by one of those who stage contim,p>uK bidding contests, and refuse to buy until some unlucky contestant makes an error in his figures, or, driven by a poverty that such practices breed; offers the desired merchandise at a ruinous price, we hope that this picture of the result of a general adoption of his selfish practice "will flash before his mind's eye. Men who consistently endeavor to buy below cost may be sharp traders, but by no twisting of economic laws > could they ever be rightly termed business men. We laught at the phrase "Live and Let Live/" incorporated In the names of grocery stores, barber shops and bakeries, yet there is a Ideal of business wisdom and plain , American honesty in ' this queer phrase. We can not but think of I some large corporations, and some public utilities, themselves insisting on rates based on a fair per cent, of earnings on their investment, who could well ponder this homely axiom. Succumb* to Injariea 1 >* Witt Knight, 19-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Knight of Lancaster, who was injured Saturday night last near Kichburg, Chester county, when an automobile driven by two negroes collided with the truck on which young Knight, David Blackmon and a young man named Ghent were riding, died Wednesday night at 8:30 o'clock at the Chester Sanatorium from blood poisoning. Young Knight was badly mashed about the body and it was necessary to amputate the right leg just below the knee. David Blackmon, bis companion, suffered minor injuries but young, Ghent, who was driving the truck, was unhurt except for a bad shakeup. Mr. Knight was riding I on the fender of the * truck., when' struck by an automobile driven by1 two negroes on their way from Kichburg to Chester. The negroes were also injured and were taken to u Chester hospital for treatment. The Mackcy ambulance went to Chester Wednesday evening and brought the body to Lancaster where it was prepared for burial, the funeral exercises and burial taking place at Westside cemetery Thursday afteri noon at 8:80' o'clock, Kev. H. P. Bennett officiating at the funeral service. The deceased is survived by his parents, his father being blind, one sister and one brother, all of whom have the sympathy of the entire community in their great loss.? Lancaster News. <?m? ?? 1 i Early Victorion styles again predominate in the latest London fashions. Side whiskers are becoming popular and fashion experts predict the return of the short-tailed coat and nearly brimjess top hat of the balmy .Victorian era. I ' i Siberian sled dogs, reputed among the best in the world, howl like wolves ! instead of barking. * v The forty-two dollar ^per capita circulation of money in America indudes such moneys as are lying in the '^vaults of banks, hoarded, and in reserves. The money actually in circulation daily serving the people as a circulating medium is probably less than ten dollars per capita. I nthc South Seas there is a little fish about six inches long that leaves the water to hunt insects and worms on the beach. f. c. A resident of Death Valley, California, as an experiment, put a setting of white leghorn eggs in a box in his cellar last summer. He avers that six chicks were -hatched. The purchase of a collection of manuscripts, maps and documents which once belonged to Christopher Columbus has been sanctioned by a royal decree of the Spanish government. They were in the possession of the Duke of Veragrfa, a direct descendant of Columbus. A corked bottle thrown into the Atlantic Ocean off the coast of Florida was picked up on the beach at Ireland, 4,000 miles away, ten months later. There are more telephones in New York City than in 'London, Paris* Berlin, Brussels, Vienna and Rome combined. A Checking Account ' You will never appreciate the convenience of a checking account until you haVe one. As a saver or time, trouble and worry, the chepk * method of handling personal or business financial matters is one of the most valuable features of modern business. . '/? - ? . w > > / CAPITAL $100,009.00 Loan & Savings Bank 4 Per Cent. Paid on Savings Deposits ??^i? ^^^ flfl^^^^^.$.?AT. oTT^^ TKAot ??* M6 V " - v- ' f .^T'vr'' ^ ' C/f GIANT POWER AT the ESSO pump there is power. Giant power that \ banishes motor knocks, that shoots you through the thickest traffic, that puts your car over the long steep - - ? hills on high. ? ESSO, the wonderful new motor fuel, makes old motors run like new, gives new life and flexibility to any car. It sets a new standard of motor performance. It is specially refined to meet abnormal motor conditions. Test ESSO yourself, in your own car. One tank full is enough. Try it out in traffic?on the hills?over rough country roads. Compare results with those you have been getting from other fuels. ESSO will stand on its own merit. You be the judge. Red in color. Packed with power. Costs 5 cents more ? worth it. * ' t ' !) Vu ,--^--.-^fr^ "STANDARD" Gasoline /'; is the ideal fuel far normal requirements ' "* **' ESSO is manufactured to meet the following special conditions: _ ~ 1. For motors that knock 2. For motors with excessive carbon " 3. For high compression motors x 4. For motors which from long use no . longer develop full power 5. For motors operating under excessive loads 6. For any motor from which .tl^e driver demands extra power and performance. / 7"7~r T-: " x ^ v5S5 STANDARD O f i. c o m P A N Y ' "