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Was In Misery All Over **I wan in a dreadfully rundown condition," ?ay? Mn. ('has. I* Lacroix, of Montgomery, La. "I suffered a great deal of pain. I waa in iniaery all over. I could not ait up and I oould not lie down. I couldn't sleep and at times I would have dreadAil vomiting spella. The ache a and Kins seemed to cover my whole dy. "One night rny husband brought me home six bottles of Cardui and I began to take it. I could tell that I waa improving from the first bottle, but I kept on taking the medicine, for I I knew tliat I needed a tonic . that would build me up and I strengthen me where I waa weak and run-down. That is exactly what Cardui did for me. After 1 hud finished the six bottles 1 felt fine. "I feel truly thankful for what I Cardui lias done for me, for I , I could not have gone on living in I the desperate condition I waa in." For sule by all drugglata. f |M La TOKg a^, icarduT I USED BY WOMEN I FOR OVER SO YEARS. Three Sentenced To Die Beaufort, July 2.?Frank Francis, Paul Francis and Abruham Gadsden, negroes of this section, were found guilty of the murder of E. F. Langford, rural policeman, in general sessions court tonight and were sentenced to die by electrocution Friday, August 12. Ethel Francis and Robert Adams, tried with the others, were found guilty with recommendation to mercy/ and were sentenced to life imprisonment .while Sam Simmons, found guilty of manslaughter, wus sentenced to aorve ten years in the penitentiary. The verdict was returned late tonight after seven hours' deliberation by the jury. A motion by G. W. Beckett, attorney for Paul Francis, for a new trial was overruled by Judge J. Henry Johnson. NOTICE TO EXECUTORS. ADMINISTRATORS AN1) GUARDIANS. The law requires ull Executors, Administrators and Guardikns so long as an estate remains in their hands to make to the Probate Judge annually before the 1st day of July of each year n just and true account upon oath of their receipts and disbursements of such estate the preceding calendar year. Even though nothing has been received and nothing paid pot during the last twelve calendar months it is obligatory upon these officers to make this statement anyway in order that a correct and upto-date record may be kept of each estate. Failure to receive these returns makes it the' duty of the Probate Judge t<> require such derelict oiiicer to comply with the law in regard uncreto. Failure to comply with the order of the Court subjects the defaulter to a possible fine of $20.00 for each and every day during which such default may continue. All Executors, Administrators, Guardians and Committees who have failed to make the annual return as required by law arc hereby notified to do so at once. w. l. Mcdowell, Judge of Probate. Camden, S. July 1, 1927. Renew Your Health by Purification Any physb will tell you that "Perfect Purification of the System is Nature's 1 ourulatien of Perfect Health." Why i t rid >\>urscif of chroni ailment; ' arc i.luu running your v.ta i.y. 'urifv your intire ?te i Yj t r. Ctrrov. course tit" Calotabs,?onef or twi- e i week for several weeks?-an.! x 1 Nature rewards you villi he Calotabs are the greatest vystem purif:ers. Get a fami . age. containing full directL" 35 ct.s. At any drug store. KERSHAW.LODGE No. 29 A. F. M. CjT Q^^Regular communication of />\,^^thi8 lodge is held on the first Tuesday in each month at 8 p m. Visiting Brethren are welcomed. T. V. WALSH, J. E. ROSS, Worshipful Master. Secretary. 1-14-27-tf T B BRUCE V eterinarinn >ay Phone 30 -Night Phone 114 CAMDEN. S C. | MONEY TO LOAN At 6l/j Per cent Interest On improved city real estate. Apply to Henry Savage, Jr. Camden, S. C. HKTHlTNK NKWH NOTKH Happening* of Interest mm Told 11) Our Regular Correapoudeut i Bethune, July ft.?Mr#. Mayo DaviB | was hoztez* at a bridge party last Tuesday afternoon honoring her sister, Mi?a Louise Gaines of Dothan, Ala , who ia her gueat. Four table# wofro placed in the living room and dining room where brown eyed auaana were used as decorations. Miss Nancy Heat made top score and was awarded first /prize. The guest of honor waa also presented with a dainty gift. A tempting salad course was Served on the card tables. Those present were Mesdames C. K. Braswell, Loring Davis, I,. M. Best, T. R. Bcthune, Ralph McCaskill and Misses liouise dairies, Murie Horton Helen Pope Ward, Nancy Best, Malloy Hearon, Mary Louise McLaurin, Stella Bethune, Carrie Yarbrough, Katherine Ward and Lizzie Davis. On Friday afternoon Mrs. Loring Davis complimented her house guest Miss Marie Horton of Kershaw, and Miss l/outse Gaines with three tables of bridge which had been placed amid a setting of lovely June flowers. Miss Lizzie Davis was given first prize, having made the highest score. The guests of honor received attractive gifts also. After cards had been laid aside, a delicious salad course was served to the following guests: Mesdames R. A. Griffin, L. M. Best, P. H. Hester, Mayo Davis and Misses Marie Horton, Louise Gaines, Malloy Hearon, Nancy Best, Katherine Ward, Lizzie Davis, Mury Louise McLaurin and Helen Pope Ward. Mr. and Mrs. A. B. McLaurin and children are spending the week at Bluf fton. Mrs. T. R. Bethune and little son are visiting Mrs. Bethune's parents in Clinton. Neil Truesdale is in Cleveland, Ohio, where he has gone to attend a world convention of the Christian Endeavor organization. Miss Eliza King who is in training ut the Columbia hospital spent the week-end at home. Mr. Charley Maddon of Clinton has returned home after spending some time with friends in town. Alvin Clyburn accompanied Mr. Maddon home and is accompanying him also on a trip to the mountains of North Carolina. Miss Mildred Billings of Lancaster is visiting friends in town. Miss Rena McNaul and Eugene McNaul of Columbia spent the weekend with relatives here. Mr. and Mrs. Loring Davis and Mr. and Mrs. Mayo Davis, accompanied by Misses Marie Horton and Louise Gaines, have returned from a few days' outing at Folly Beach. Mr. and Mrs. G. B. McKinnon of Lancaster have been the recent guests of relatives in Bethune. A number of people from Bethune spent the Fourth at Happy Hours and report a very happy day. This is i very attractive resort for those who enjoy dancing and swimming. Miss Geneva Pitts of Columbia was the week-end guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. L. M. Best. Misses Lizzie Kate Davis and Nancy Best have gone to Hendersonville, N. for a short stay. Mrs. Johnnie G. Richards of Cheraw is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. A. McCaskill. Dr. Eldon Severance of Columbia has been the guest of his parents recently. Mrs. C. H. Wall has returned to Andrews after spending some tinte with her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Yarbrough and children were the week-end guest* .if relatives. Five Die in Train Wreck Ruiherfordton, July 2.?Five men were killed this afternoon when Southern Railway freight train No. <>X, operating between Blacksburg, S. C., and Marion, N. C., jumped the track near Gilkey, Rutherfordton county. Six men composed the crew of the train and tonight only one Fred Pinniger, flagman, riding in the caboose, remained alive to tell of the tragic crash. He. escaped uninjured. The dead are W. M. Kendrick, of Rock Hill, S. C., engineer; J. P. Akers, of Marion. N. C., conductor; Perry Ward of Vane Mountain, N. C., brakeman; Lynch Weaver, of Thermal City, brakeman; Alf Lyle, of Rock Hill, S. C., fireman. The tender of the train jumped the track as it was crossing a 90-foot trestle over Cathes Creek, but did not overturn until it was nearly 100 yards north of the creek, when both the engine and tender plunged on their sides, carrying with them nine of the eleven cars. The cars piled on top of each other three deep in one place and were demolished?Products of the textile mills of Rutherford county wore strewn along the track, and the rails were toin up for more than 20C yards. Pet Deer Slain in Bit more Woods Asheville, June 30.?-A beautiful pet deer, the pride of the famou.? \andeibilt estate for years, was shot a few days ago. dragged into the bushes and quartered. Three men were arrested immej diately afterwards by Game Warder rum Parker. The names of the men were not made public by Mr. Parker ho said two more aiiests in the ease are expected. The animal was a buck, had IS -gc and weighed many 40C p u d< ar*. takers of the estate, deeply g lev ed, sad Mr. and Mrs. J. F. A ( oc.l had tamed the deer and were ^ery fond of it. The Cecils are at present in F.urope. THINGS WORTH KNOWING Experiments show that the preference oP fish for dark, shady sections of water is due to the fact that the buii's ultra-violet rays are harmful to them. All other creatures, however, show a favorable response to these rays. In the United States there are 41 persons engaged in fanning on each 1,000 acres. Italy has 24tS persona, or six times as many, cultivating the same amount of land, Germany about 100, France 120, and England and Wales approximately 100 persons. London watchmakers have discovered that hand-clapping puts wrist watches out of order. Announcement to this effect brought such a sudden decrease in theatre and music hall applause that actors began to wonder why audiences no longer applauded, although they continued to laugh as uproariously as ever. Substitution of potatoes for rics as the main article of diet in Japan is being urged by economists as a "Solution to that country's food problem which is daily becoming more acute due to increased population without* a corresponding increase in the amount of cultivated land. All paper money, says a report from the United States Treasury office, has the same weight. Since it takes twenty and one-half dollar bills to weigh the same as one standard silver dollar or 312.5 grains, the weight of any bill is 20.12 plus grains. The noise of two goldfish swimming in front of the microphone, amplified ten million times, sounded to the radio audience like the drumming of a horse's hoofs on a hard road; the beating of u man's heart sounded like the thump of a ship's engine; and the ticking of a watch, similar to the crashing of a compressed aid drill. So numerous have been the demands on Minneapolis firemen to come to the rescue of foolish cats that have climbed poles and high trees and refused to come down that the firemen have called a halt and will rescue no more from precarious positions. A twenty-two-story Chicago office building just completed is unusual in that the twenty-one upper stories extend westward ten feet farther than the ground floor. The explanation is this: originally a cow pasture, the property when sold carried a deed providing for a ten-foot runway along the former owner's cow. Failing to its west end for the convenience of break the clause, lawyers refer to the $2,000,(100 building as a monument to a cow. A London school, started primarily to teach languages, now finds most of its pupils among American tourists who are anxious to acquire an English recent within a short time. A close second in popularity is a course in "curing" accents. Pine, oak and spruce are the trees most subject to lightning stroke, while beech nearly immune, according to a European survey. In the American 1_^0151x^2 per cent of the trees hit are western yellow pine and Douglas fir. Portland cement, an artificial product, is so named because of its color resemblance to stone obtained from the Isle of Portland on the coast erf Dorsett, England. Records of the United States Weather Bureau show that the highest tempera ure officially known in this country was 121 degrees at Boise, Idaho, in the summer of 1871. Havre, Montana, registered the coldest known L mperature of 57 degrees below zero in 1916. The maxim of the South American Cholo is, "Plenty to eat, little to wear and nothing to do." The Cholo i i second cousin to the peasant of Cyprus, where goats are so valued that if one of the peasants gets a goat and a chestnut tree, he will work no more for the rest of his life. Chinese geese, trained -for generaHcns, are the policemen of the West Indies. When enemies approach, their shrill, raucous cries will awaken an entire neighborhood. They are now being used as watchmen at the Wash[ ington national zoo. Automobile accidents are most likely to happen between five and six o'clock in the afternoon, a survey indicates. The only autoraph manuscript of 1 Edgar Allan Poe's "Tho Raven," presented by him to Dr. Samuel A. Whitaker, a college chum, has just been sold to dealers. Although the pur, chase price was not disclosed, the manuscript is valued at more than $50,000. Poe received $10 for the poem. The menu of the lumber camp to( day includes fancy loin of pork, boili ed ham, tongue, special sausage, fruits and puddings in contrast to the ^ salt po:k, corned beef, thick bacon, beans flapjacks and fresh meat thrie ^ times a day of twenty years ago. ) Five thousand dollars was paid by Colgate University for < no of the twenty-five dinosaur egg- found hy I the American Museum of Xatura! J History in the Desert of Gobi, Mon, 1 frolia. The egg is said to be 10,000,I 000 years old. "LETS GET DETECTIVE PLUS" Anderson Independent Thinks Utile Of W. W. Roger* Between friend* at Geffney, Covernor John (J. Riehapd* is unofficially quoted as pred'.-ting a shake-up in the state constabulary and the implication is that South Carolina's star cryatalgazer and seer, one Mr. W. W. Rogers, sleuth extraordinary and Sher, lock polities of this commonwealth j may in the vernacular of the day, "get the gate." I All that Governor Richards has to do to moke S^uth Carolinians generally happy,- -Would be to make this an official instead of an unofficial statement. , South Carolina is seriously in need of a detective. We would, not say that Mr. Rogers is without ability; probably he has the goods. He certainly knows how to write warrants and make arrests. But somehow, between the great majority of the people of this state and Mr. Rogers, there is lacking that bond of perfect understanding and confidence. The people of this state either do not know Mr. Rogers wbll enough, or they know him too well! It is doubtful if there is a man working on the payroll of South Carolina today who is as utterly lacking in public confidence whether deservedly so or not, as this state detective. We were mildly surprised that Governor McLeod kept him employed; we were shocked when Governor Richards retained him. Probably the public has summed up Mr. Rogers unjustly. But there i* something wrong somewhere, and it would be a great boon to law enforcement in this state to have an investigator whose name is held above reproach and whose integrity and sincerity is unquestioned. In Anderson county, for instance, the detective in question has never "gum-shoed" to the satisfaction of officers of the law or the public at large. Some of the mysteries he investigated here are as mystifying as ever before. So much for his ability. Mr. Rogers is now busily engaged ! in solving the mur4?r of Sheriff Sain Willis of Greenville. The great weakness in the published and reported evidence against Henry Townsend and Mrs. Willis, as far as public sentI iment goes, can be traced to the lack i of confidence in Mr. Rogers. If the | Greenville crime is solved, in our opinion it will be due to the work of city and county officers there, who have gone steadily forward with the investigation while Mr. Rogers hog; ged the front page. I We are told that Mr. Rogers holds his job by always bluffing the governor with stories about "evidence" he has on certain important cases, intimating, it is said, that any interruption in his services migbt cost law enforcement a severe blow. How long I he will get away with that, of course, is problematical. Frankly, we are in favor of ditching Mr. Rogers and getting a deteci tive-plus.?Anderson Independent. "Old Bill," a famous parrot in the . London zoo, reputed to be 100 years old, recently laid an egg. Governor Dan Moody, ? ! by 125 business men of^J making a "good-will" toiS the northern states. I i I should be kij I \ Bee BwitfPwl 1 ' \ Liquid kills VMM \ Mosquitoes, JRl I \ Anta, Water M I \ Bugs, Moths, Crl I 1 Poultry Lice and! I i *nsect*' j 3 Bra ji justaj NOTICE TO CREDITORS. In the District Court of the United States for the Eastern District of South Carolina In Bankruptcy. In the matter of, J. G. CUNNINGHAM, Camden, S. C. Bankrupt. Notice is hereby given that the above named bankrupt has filed a petition for discharge, and that a hearing has been ordered to be had upon the same on the third day of August, A. I). 1927, before this Court, at Charleston, S. C\. at 10 o'clock in the forenoon, at which time and place all known creditors and other persons in interest may appear and show cause, if any they have, why the prayer of the said petitioner should not be granted. RICHD. W. HUTSON, Clerk. 14-17pd. Notice to Debtors and Creditors All parties indebted to the estate of Gillum Raley, deceased, are hereby notified to make payment to t^e undersigned, and all parties, if any, having claims against the said estate will present them duly attested within the time prescribed by law. LOMA H. RALEY, Administratrix. Camden, S. C., June 16, 1927. ' # FINAL DISCHARGE Notice is hereby given that one month from this date, on Monday, jJuly 25, 1927, I will make to the Probate Court of Kershaw County my j final return as Executrix of the estate of Benjamin Doby, deceased, and on the same date I will apply to the said Court for a final discharge from mv trust as said Executrix. LAURA D. SPAULDING. Camden, S. C., June 22, 1927. , ,, ? _ f I Southern Railway Sysi Announce* Greatly Reduced Round Trip EkciJ Fares to -| ATLANTIC CITY AND NIAGARA FAI44I The following round trip fares will apply from ntM I .shown below: To 'Jyj I From; Atlantic City Niagar^M I Camden $22.9?' | I Chester 22.20 'J Columbia 24.16 'Lancaster 22.96c | j Winnsboro 24.15 jjl | Proportionate fares from intermediate points* j Tickets good for 18 days including date of ijl I ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. 1 j Selling dates: via P.R.R., June 21; Julyij^B August 2, 16, 30; via B.&O., June 29; July I | August 10, 24 ; September 7. || | Excursion fares as above also apply via NorfojH| j Reduced round trip fares to other New JcrsqH I NIAGARA FALLS, N. Y. j Selling dates: via P.R.R., June 22; Juty^jH I August 3, 17, 31; September 14, 28; via B.&0|H M 30; July 14, 28; August 11, 25; September 8,* I I Stopovers permitted on return trip not to exceed? I days within final limit at Philadelphia, BaltiiJ j Washington, etc. j i Call on nearest ticket agent for further informal? I reservations, etc., or address: 77? B. H. TODD, D.P.A. W. E. McGEE, DA I Columbia, S. C. Columbia, S.fl I II Help Your Crop Now is The Time I / We Have on Hand Sulphate of Ammo rsia J Top-Dresser 3 I ^ I ^ I Can deliver promptly and will make, y u the loWj I possible prices. See us before you buy. J f i - 3.. 'xXi. --3 I " """' M " ? I II I .i < IE I Springs & Shannon, Inc.