University of South Carolina Libraries
)on't Neglect our Kidneys! u Can't Be Well When dneya Act Sluggishly, you find youraelf running down -always tired, norvou* and do At Are you stiff and achy. sub* to nagging backache, drowsy cliea a ltd dizzy ope!U> Are kidi jicretion? scanty, too frequent irning in ps?aage> Too often ndicutr.3 sluggish kidney* and jn't be neglected. in'a Fills, a stimulant diuretic* LSe the accretion of the kidney* :hus aid in the elimination of iinpu/ities. I Joan's are endorsed where. Atk your neighbor/ roAN'S Pl&s IMULANT DIURETIC tU; kidneys ^r-Milburn Co. MfgChem.Burtelo.NY. I . Christopher, Greenville bartally shot C. Dewitt Booth, a irker, in the barber shop Wedputting three bullets into him lling him almost instantly, had been drinking and using nguage in the shop Saturday Christopher said, and next time ?. in the barber demanded an r and when he did not get it shooting. Christopher was Will E. Johnson Electrical Contractor 614 West DeKalb Street Camden, S. C. Complete Line of 71 ield and Garden - 4 ' Seeds from Buist Lmdreth Wood % j Phone 10 'EMP &DePASS Just Tottering, . So Weak "n'v*118 in a state of . and was going through critical time of my life." save *?la Scarborough. R P. ? than< -Va. "Several di& things were recommend.10 ma. but I did not get jyreal relief until I began to ke Cardui. ^ just 08 weak aa could " My logs were shaky, and n 1 would just totter tJ10 hoil?c. I finally got 8 that I was-in bed Beveiv weeks. ? ke' r"j " 6" th,t 1 to ardui. I kept it up for my hooltK Cardui wu 1 -v 8 friend to me in time need. lj'health is splendid now. sdiH B?!dcm hav" to ^ f* ,ut 1 gladly say a ^ Cardui whenever a friend going through sufTerin? which I en. all druggieta. ARDUil ^abBStWJ SOLID TRAIN LOAD OF KITCHEN CABINETS SHIPPED INTO PROSPEROUS SECTION OF DIXIE Another indication of the South'* prosperity is this. This is a photograph of a solid train load of kitchen cabinets shipped into the South recently by the Sellers Company, of Klwood, Ind., and one of the carloads came to Camden. The cabinets were all for dealers, none being shipped to storage warehouses or placed on consignment, it is said. The train halted at Atlanta and here the cars \vere distributed to various parts of the'South. This is the first time u train load of kitchen cabinets was ever shipped from anywhere in tho United States, in a single day, it is said. The Camden Furniture Company is showing the Sellers line of kitchen furniture, including cabinets, breakfast room suites, utility closets, servers and porcelain top table?, done in colors. This is a day when the housewife wants beauty in her kitchen as well as in her living room. Colors, curtains, attractive floors, pretty furniture and devices for making the work of the kitchen easy and efficient are all conspiring to make this u new day for the home-maker. Mother is God's Wonderful Gift "Why God Made a Woman," was the subject of the addres^ delivered by Mrs. Jennie Miller Sharpless of the World's Purity Federation at a meeting for women only, held in St. John's Methodist church last evening before a large audience. This was the second of a series of meetings to be conducted by Mrs. Sharpless during the week. The meeting whs opened with prayer by Mrs. W. R. Alexander, after which the speaker was introduced by Mrs. W. D. Magginis, president of the State Federation of Women's clubs. The sweetest gift God ever gave the earth was when he opened the gates of heaven apart and gave earth a mother," said Mrs. Sharpless. "The highest vocation a woman can aspire to is motherhood and God created woman as a soul-mate; to help man climb the ladder of life round by round. "Woman was never intended for an ornament or a plaything. Many women look upon their husbands as a meal ticket or a cash register, giving nothing in return. Napoleon was once asked what the greatest need of France was, apd he replied; "Mothers." That is America's need today, not a mother in name only, but the queenly mothers who will keep the "love fires burning." A real home is where you will find the real wife and mother. "Conscience is an apartment of the jgni, an apartment that is often neglected?it becomes dirty. The mind becomes cob-wdbbed, the floor covered with dirt and all too often the key lost. Oiae tof the needs today is for mothers and women to enter that apartment every hour of the day and permit JestiB to enter and have Him as a permanent guest. This old world of ours would be a better place in which to live. Now to be conscious of evil we must be able to put our foot down on sin. 'I will arise and go to my Father' will be met with the purple robe. 'America'^ future is what the homes make it. If our American homes are right America will be right. The nation is as a great area fed by so many 'streams?social life goes back up these streams and they have their fountain head in the home. "The sweetest place on earth? the place around which clusters the vety sweetest memories and towards which our hearts are constantly going, is Home. "What makes it so ? What makes home the ideal of one's life? I answer not the palatial buildingswealth can not take the place of love. Our boys and girls need more love. More of the real old Puritan kind of mothers. "Social life has robbed the boy and girl of the home life. Hkrtv many--girls and boys of Rock Hill can in a few years look back and associate mothers and the Bible? " "We need 1 Christian mothers. A little boy was lost an a department, storfe and a policeman found him crying and said; "Sonny, what is the matter?' He replied, 'I've lost my moser.* 'Why didn't you hang onto her skirt_?, I couldn't reach 'em.' Our Great Master said 'Lead us not into temptation.' "Mothers, do you realize you are leading our boys and men into temptation? The little girl in socks soonlowers her pure, sweet, finer sense of modestry and soon will be parading the streets in bathing suits. Right now there is a nakedness from both ends that makes feminine fashion and while the better class does not create the fashions, they adopt them. "Once only, the women who sold their favors for money appeared on the streets with painted faces and abort dresses, now it is dress, dance and auto are the three weapons that the devil is Using to drag mora into ball than any other thing. "Familiarity, which lands to ha' * > , . . X Man Who Shot Springs Put Under Peace Bond Charlotte, April 26.?Eldred Griffith, who on February 20, shot Col. Leroy Springs of Lancaster and Charlotte, textile magnate, today pleaded guilty to assault with intent to kill. Judgment in the case was suspended on condition that Griffith give $25,000 peace bond and report to the court at stated intervals and show that he had kept the peace with Col. Springs. Griffith shot Col. Springs on a crowded street here after the millionaire textile magnate had refused to discuss a business connection which had been severed five years previously. Col. Springs was shot in the side of the face but not seri-l ously wounded. Bond was raised for Griffith by his brother, Thomas Griffith, a local real estate dealer. Attorneys for the prosecution, including special counsel employed by the Springs fnmily, said at the oetset of the case in Mecklenburg superior court today that they were not desirous that Griffith be punished but only wanted protection for Col. Springs in the future. Defense attorneys immediately offered to submit a plea of guilty of assault with intent to kill for their client and to furnish a $25,001) peace bond in return for a suspended judgement. 'Judge John M. Oglesby, presiding, told the attorneys that he, the attorneys and all parties in the case, took great responsibility in accepting such a statement. Even a $*00,000 peace bond, he said, would net absolutely guarantee the safety Col. Springs. Col. Springs today appeared to I have completely recovered from the wound that shattered his right cheek I bone. After the plea had been made 'Judge Oglesby listened to the evidence. Col. Springs told of the circumstances of the shooting "and eye witnesses told briefly of what occurred. The defense offered several witnesses, mostly as to Griffith's character. The judge said that if Griffith were a young or middle aged man he would certainly send him to prison but that the $ge of the prisoner moved him to accept the submission and agreements to furnish peace bond. Griffith also pays the costs. Griffith is 76 years old. Joe Hester and his son John, were chopping near Lincolnton, N. C., when they found n dud shell partly buried in the ground since the Civil war and they thought it the container of .buried gold believed to be in that neigh-j borhood. When they could not bi&k it with axes, they built a fire around it. When it exploded, it scared the' country for miles around, cut off trees several inches in diameter, and scattered shrapnel for a half mile. The men had gone back to their chopping after making a good fire around the shell and were not injured. Gaatonia won over all America, in the Near East Relief drive and is denominated the ,Golden Rule City of America by the Committee on awards of that organization. Gastonia will be presented with a rug made by the orphans, of the best quality. Darlington, S. C., won second place and gets an oriental vase 30 inches hign, fahied at $50 for its public library. Rock Hill came third. Gestonia made the "most unique and thoroughly successful campaign in any city," says the citation of the awarding committee. v * - . death to thousands every year. "We need mothers and women who will stand against sin. I believe a curfew law wouM be a good thing for mothers today to compel them to be home and Jcnqw where their daughters are. Let Jesus into that apartment, keep it dean and do as your conscience dictates, to you and the world's things of Ufowift soon vanish and the world will be won for Christ,"?Jfcock Hill Herald, April, 24th. * ... , . ^ ROBERT QL1LLEN, SUCKER A certain man needed money to pay his daughter's expenses at school. He would pay it back in sixty days. He hasn't. A young man needed money to finish paying his college expense*}. He would pay it back as soon as he got a job. iHe didn't. A young woman needed montf when the banks broke. She would pay it back as soon as she got word to her brother. ?>he didn't. A 'certain man needed six hundred dollars to clinch a business deal that offered a sure profit. He would pay it back in thirty days. He didn't. A certain man needed money to get to a promised job. He would pay it back out of his first wages. He didn't. A certain man needed money to finish his studies at a theological seminary. He would pay it back. Ho didn't. ISfot one single man, woman or child has ever paid back the money wheedled out of me by means of fair promises in time of distress. When you want money from me, why do you promise to pay it back? Why not be honest about it? Why not come to me and say: "Quillen, I've wasted my money and now I'm broke and in need. I know you are an easy mark and therefore I come to you. I'm a liar and a deadbeat and my word isn't worth a darn, but I'll be fair with you this time. I don't intend to pay back what you lend me. It is my iutentioi), God will j ing, to beat you out of it." Why not come right out in the open and be fair about it? I like an honest crook much better than a sneak. All of the people who can't pay me what they borrowed because they are too poor, and simply haven't got it, are able to pay cash for gasoline and dress their families well and enjoy such necessities as cigarettes, coca cola and corn liquor. And of course I can't "go to law" against people : , H as hard up aa that?the poor things. I think I have .65 in the bank. If any infernal dead-beat wants it, let him think up a hard-luck story and come for it. Hut if ho promises to pay it buck, I'll kill him.?Robert Quillen in Fountain In Tribune. An overture written in aeven hours by William Broughton, director of the Salvation Army staff band of Chicago, won first prijte over 60 others submitted from all over the world. piiiiiiiiiraiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiH | BRING YOUR | i Tires I and I Tubes I | BEARD'S FILLING STATION | i i And Have Them Vulcanized by Mr. Huggins laiiuiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiiiMiiuiaBgiiiiiiiiiiiiigiiiiiiiiiiiigniHuuiKitl I MOST LIKELY TO PROGRESS I | Even as the most successful businegs enterprises are the best organized and managed, so the individual who uses forethought and system in handling of his personal financial affairs is the most likely to make satisfactory progress. I The First National Bank I Of Camden, South Carolina _ .. I ONLY NATIOf^J^^lNKEj^HAW COUNTY