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The News of Bethune Told by Correspondent Hcthune, June 20.-?'Mr*. Mayo Iravi* ha* returned home after upending M'Wiul wh'ks with relative* and frU'iuia in fjenigia and Kentucky M iKh Mary Kin ma Hough, of < am den, wm.h a la*t week in the hornea of Mimm** l.i/.aie I>avi? mid Mary Ixjuuc M< Kaurm Mjmj? Kunice Severance hah ia-on visiting het ei.-ter .ri Kainar for the laat month. Mih? Kva Jtoyd, of < oJurnbia, hjwnt the week end v. ith M/k. A. if McKaurirt. Mm. J. if. Hiilhouse arid little daughter, Rather Kove, returned tyfTc> The man who has for many years successfully treated Pellagra by mail. No tenuine Rounlrtt 1'tllagra Treatment without label heart picture ond signature?Cautiat pour friends. Have You Found Complete Relief? Ilif* you any of iht following iymp<omiI Nervousness, Stomach Trouble, Brown, Rouahor Irritated Skin, Loss of Weight, Weak ness, Peculiar Swimming of tha Head, Burning Sensations, Constipation, Diarrhoea, Mucous in the Throat, Crazy Feelings or Aching Bones. Don't Waste your money and risk delay by trying substitutes. Put your case in the hands of a Physician who has been a ffroven success for many years as a Pellagra Specialist. READ WHAT OTHERS SAY: Mrs. R. K. Robinson, Stlgler, Ok la., wrltrsi "1 am glad to tell you what your wonderful Trllagra treatment hua (lone for mc. I feel lit a a new woman." Mra. W. S. Hays, Eagleton. Ark writes: "I look Dr. Rountree's treatment for Pellagra in 1926. 1 feel better than 1 have for 15 yean." WRITE TODAY! Rountrew Laboratories, Austin, Teaas. For FREE Diagnosis, Questionnaire and Blue Book, "Trie Story of Pellagra", also for hundreds of additions! Testimonials. ? - - .a. j Wm YftuoStS Night and Morning to keep them Clean, Clear and Healthy Write for Free "Eye Core" or "Eye Beauty" Book Marina Ca^ D?H. 11. S.,9 B. ObiaS<..Ckkafo I |y/ | Delicious ' CDoocl A food for pro I tein; a food for mineral salts; | for calcium and phosphorus; all | the essential elements for health and strength are found in good 1 cheese. And all r the essential elements of good I cheese are found l ? in Kraft Cheese. KR A FT ?^? C H E ESE 111 KRAFT-PHEN1X l'Jf CHEESE COMPANY '*'* rTl! I.I I " 1 I 1 liUPt Tuesday from Abbeville where they , have been upending a few days. A large number of Methodist from r thin town upent last Thursday at ? Kj>worth Orphanage. The occasion i being a picnic given to the orphan i children by the MiThodiut of the Sum- I ter district. Both the viuitorn and t resident* of the orphanage upent a I must delightful day. 'i Miuu Ruth WutUs has returned i home after having been the guest for i ten days of the lU-v. arid Mru. W. V. ] Jerrnun, of Aynor. i, Mru. W. E. Davis and children are visiting Mru. Davis' parents in Dar- i lington. | The Rev. T. K. Derrick, pastor of the local Methodist c'hurch, iu attending the pautoru' school in Columbia.! Mr*. 11. N. Robertson and daughter, Annie Mae, of Gastonia, N. C., are gueatu in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ij. D. Robertson. Mrs. Grady Smith and little son, of Lancaster spent laat week with Mrs. Smith h mother, Mrs. Bessie Seegars. Mrs. Betty (Tyburn and daughter, Orlena, of Clearmont, Fla., arrived in Bethune Friday night, where they will spend some time with relatives and friends. Several families from here attended home coming day at Union church on last Saturday. The Rev. M. *B. Gunter is visiting hiu parents in Leeuville. Mr. W. O. Ward iu spending several days in Moncure, N. C. The friends of Mr. J. E. Gardner will regret to learn that he is still confined to his bed. Mr. Gardner has been in bed for very nearly eight weeks. Mrs. Outlaw, who lives with her son, Mr. J(/hn Outlaw, sustained a painful fall last Saturday which resulted in a broken leg. -Mrs. G. B. McKinnon, of Lancaster is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. A. McDowell. I Excursion To Washington Persons who desire to spend the Fourth of July in the nation's capital, Washington, have the privilege of doing so by tuking advantuge of the special excursion rates offered by thu Seaboard Air Line Railroad for July ( drd. Fine) dm it for ail ticket* it Sunday, July 8th. The special excursion rates to W ashington apply from many points in North and South Carolina.' Tickets are on sale at approximately fortyoutstanding localities in the two Carolinas. ...Proportionate reductionfrom intermediate stations will be in effect. ( hildren five years old and under 1.- will be allowed to use hulf faro tickets. The excursion tickets arc good on all regular trains and also in sleeping and parlor cars upon payment of the Pullman fare. Among the places of outstanding interest to be visited while at Washington are: the Senate and Houso <>f Representatives. Washington mooumont, Congressional Library, Lincoln Memorial, Treasury building. White House, and National Museum. For baseball fans a special feature! or the excursion will be a doublehead- i er in Washington on July 4th be-I two on the W'ashington Senators and! the New York Yanki-es. On July <>th : and jth the Senators will entertain the ( hicago White Sox in t>he home pa rk. Chester claims the world record for twins in towns of the 10,000 population class. It has 30 sets of twins fiince Ralph and William Wood were [born recently. SIMMONS FOR RELIEF I . . State ot South Carolina, < ounty o 1 Kershaw. (Court of Common Pleas) ! i : Henry Savage, Plaintiff, i- against j.ludith Williams, Frances Hart, Rosa a i"8, A1"'"m M- Jones. Jessie Adams," I-.ssie A dam so- and Liz-j 7.ie Adam- : Defendants. 1 ; j ro THE DEE'END a NTS Jessie' | Ad am.von, Ess;, A lanvson and Lizzie i A dam son. You Are: hereby summoned and required to answer the complaint in this action, of which a copy is herewith served upon you. and' to serve a copy of your answer to the jsaid complaint on the subscriber v my office in Camden. S. C., within ; twenty days after the service hereof, jcxcti.sive of the day of such service* :an.l you fail t-. answer the o?mpo-t within the time aforesaid, the , pla..itiff in this action will apply- to the i ourt for the relief demanded in I the complaint. henry savage, jr.. ' ,, . . Plaintiff's Attorney Dated June 20, J02S I ~?111ro the: DEFANDANT. Jessie Adam*on. Ess:* A,lams, n and Lizzie Aitanison: ; Please take notice that the oi iginal - ummons and Complaint in the above entitled aeti.o is , n file in the Office C lintv* S-'V* V' (\Urt' K":sha* , < > unty. ,?t .v-uth (. ai wlu.a H E.NRY SAVAGE. JR.. 1 iai- tiffs Att> r?H \ "hit steady ~ "7 Wherever one goes and whoever h?? nay talk to, one continually hear* the uivil chorus of poor business. If one a very strongly affected by such te will soon 'route to the point where ?e will think that business has gone o the bo* wow* and everything else ? going along with It. Many explanation* are made for the prevail-; ng conditions. One will say that' something should be done for the relief of the farmer*, Others will give [>ther reasons rahging all the way from ho|, weevils to wearing rayon silk, sunspoth and politics. But these things do not explain-the why of the situation. At least no one of them explains it. j The following explanation written by I hillip L. < arret, an economist, might give a line on the why of present conditions?at least he gives us something worth thinking about.' He says: 'Just as in the realm of pugilism a few years of soft living will make Dempsey easy prey for a Tunney, so a period of prosperity contains the seeds of its' own destruction. Effort slackens, wages obtained with relative ease are ispent for luxuries, business men forget the painstaking care by which they have built up their enterprises and commit themselves to reckless plans of expansion, others curtail their office hours, increase their golf games. The silk-shirt era of 1919 and 1920 was followed by the painful depression of 1921. So it has throughout the history of the Let us think back to the period of the war when Uncle Sam- was working then, working at top speed trying to produce; extravagant living was at its lowest ebb perhaps; everybody was trying to save, going to extremes in buying war bonds and even savings stamps; wages were high, ugh, labor was in big demand. W? all marie lots of money. Then came the end of the war. We were still going in high speed making tremendous wages earnings were at their highest. .We began to get extravagant we stopped saving, we went on a wild spree of spending, we slackened up in the hard work, we took more hours for pleasure. We got into the habit ol high and extravagant living and doing as little work as we could possibly get by with. That condition has continued. We are still extending ourselves to have things easy; everyone wants to do as u a*s P?S81ble and get as much as he can while doing it. For the past several years we have been liv! ing beyond our incomes. It is hard >r us to key up our work to make more or key ourselves down to demand less. Most of us are inclined " tT "P W'th Li*' r*K>|r<lless of the ihll ttt us financially able to keep up with Liz and her extravagances. We try to make ourselves believe that because others ke?;P going at the old war time pace lhinkni?KhVor us t0 d0 the Wa think that we cannot all be wronc and! hence we follow the bell wethers ter Vrin J?* 8If stc'a<1>'- a betIII Zu ' ourst,lve?. take stock and and that W Ca" ?h,'ck on this bowwows n/n,not to the oowwows. The fellow who refused to lose his head in the highly extra ST'JU'T ,?f, T??perify .f? arai i.?jo is still sitting steady and going along. He didn't lose his head Mleful T tUt ,U3 ** a more caieiul. Take advantage of our on poitnmties, be a little less extrasfn due tlTr WaaT "nd demands and ^ ? ntd,.? ,||l return and Ol later conditions will y,.r hck to ? level of reasonable pro^ Inquirer" W ** Wel1?Yorkvillo Ninety-Six is suffering from a bad epidemic of the flu with its two physicians confined to their beds with the disease and some whole families down with it. Medical attention was called from Greenwood in the emergency. Why Oranges Differ Hiere ure a large number of vart| etles of orange In cultivation, with ' (1|ffci*cnccs ln shape, color, thickness i ' y 'n* ^l,lce. etc. New varieties j.hnve been formed by grafting stocks froni Africa, South America, Arabia southern Europe, etc. The conditions | of climate and soli in California have .favored the development there of the i Washington navel orange, while Flor, da *ro"? pieties that have shown j ^^nselves better ndapted to climatic and soil conditions In that state No ; general rule can be laid down about ( the thickness of skins; this do | ponds on the variety of orange rather , than on the place where it Is grown. Why V/e Quarrel Friendships have been broken, fam Hies disrupted and civil wars foment ed because of differences In opinion* on religion and politics. The blarm ! M's not. Iie at t' e door of rellglor idid politics, nor in tlle (MversIt i regarding them, but In' tin I folly of trv :g to force Ml people t< [ agree.?Farm Journal. ' W III'. I ".. l.u/Pf gwv* i -???,..?r^i- <? ? ?-?TT HOUTH CAROLINA NBW? | ' The first cotton blossom to' bloom, In South Carolina thin year unfolded at Kllerton, in Aiken county, on June J 14, the state meteorologist reports. It wa? behind time according1 to ita appi-urance in previous years. K. M. Magil! has been elected superintendent of the (Columbia hospital by the trustees and will succeed Ellison Papers the first of next month He has been cashier uqd the board seeks a business administration A rain and wind storm which Struck in the vicinity of Greenwood oii Tuesday afternoon destroyed *400 acres of cotton by hail, unroofed several barns, tore up some trees and damaged grain crop* generally. Columbia is going to make every effort to get the general conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, in 1930. To obtain it, the city will have to acquire a big auditorium and a new and large hotel to provide sufficient accommodations. Elmore G. Bramlett, a Lauren* farmer and lumberman, has announced his candidacy for governor in 1930 on the platform that the i farmers have not had enough to say in the state government in the last 40 years. Edgar A. Brown, of Barnwell, of high rank in the Democracy of South Carolina and leader of the Smith forces at the state convention, had his shoulder dislocated when his autoi mobile hit a tree after a tire blew out. He returned home from a Columbia hospital Thursday. Hayne B. Workman, of the Hopewell section of Laurens county, selectjed as its candidate for Master Farm,er, is 54 years old, lives on the farm , he inherited from his father, of 400 | acnes, and in addition runs a 700 acre,, jfami in the same township. He has a reputation for hard work, and he specializes in crop rotation and soil building. There are a dozen candidates for postmaster at Columbia who have filed applications with the civil service commission. They are Edgar i R. Harris, Joseph C. Etheredge, Thomas B. Madden (incumbent), Fredrick C. Redfern, father of Paul Redfern; Manley C. Sanders, Frank A. Bendingfidd, John B. Rodgers, William L. Perry, Grier S. Kester, Allen B. Crane, W illiam F. Mosley. A mad dog rushed through a meeting of the Izaak Walton club of Gaffney at a country club near there, and the members crowded into automobiles in a panic while pursuing men and boys kept up a shot gun barrage on the dog. Dr. Charles A. Jeffries in getting out of the way hu-riedly fell into a ditch and cut his hand so badly that it took eight stitches to lose the wound. The dog was killed oon after the panic. Politicians all over the state are agog trying to guess whom Senator Blease will name as the candidate for whom the South ( arolina delegation should cast its vote at Houston to against A1 Smith with no other strong candidate available. Among the names guessed for the silent senator to pick are those of,Governor Richards, John Gary Evans, Mendei L. Smith, of Camden, and Col. Alvin H. Dean of Greenville. John I. Glad, wealthy retired Chicago druggist, was found dead in his automobile near his home at Van Nuys, Los Angeles suburb, Monday "night. His wife and two men have been arrested on suspicion. Punica Ratchitch, radical deputy of Jugo-Slavia, went wild in the national^ assembly halls at Belgrade on Wednesday and killed two deputies and wounded four others. R. B. Jones, a mortician of Greenville. driving across the Laurel creek bridge out in the country at noon Wednesday, was confronted by two youths masked with handkerchiefs who pointed two revolvers at him and commanded him to halt. He pushed the accelerator down to the floor and escaped, although the bandits shot at , h.m fron, his rear. P?u] stnne and ' ?Ush, HrafK- "f ? miilvillage near i JFountain Inn, were soon arrested by deputy sheriffs and confessed. They , th<>y wert" broke and staged the robbery for easy money. Dr. Hubert Work, secretary of the I interior in the cabinet of President Coolidge, succeeds William M. Butler, = m as chairman of the Republican natwiB al committee and will have charge< the Hoover campaign. i i HUH ^ X-j VACATION 1 TIME I TRY THE COOL PLACES IN THE SOUTHERN APPALACHIAN MOUNTAINS I . OF WESTERN NORTH CAROLINA t P EASTERN TENNESSEE . AND NORTH GEORGIA "The Land of the Sky" I _ /' T?r.' Jersey Seashore Reports ?- - - -.9 Old Point Comfort (Including New Chamberlin-Vanderbilt Hotel) Virginia Beach (Including New Hotel Cavalier) Beaches at Ocean View (Norfolk) H Charleston, Savannah, Brunswick and Jacksonville Mountain and Lake Region of New 'England Resorts on the Great Lakes , 1 The Black Hills of South Dsdtota Pacific Northwest Colorado M California Resorts National Parks fl| Lake Region of Canada Canadian Northwest I REDUCED FARES TO .. J ALL SUMMER TOURIST RESORTS TICKETS ON SALE DAILY BEGINNING MAY15TH, GOOD UNTIL OCTOBER 31ST W Write for List of Summer Resort Hotels and Boarding Houmi; I also Boys' Camps and Girls' Camps j -* ' S 1 CONSULT TICKET AGENTS Southern Railway System m i ' ??J I More Than Cleaned! S T E R I L I Z ED ! jl Let us do the entire family washing! You find Hfd much more enjoyable when you are reliefM i of, that most unpleasant 'household task. And you H will be more than, satisfied with the results. - We tftjl equipped to do even the most particular laundry worlLB safely?without the use of injurious chemicals. j You will fin<J the cost very low, and the reward in I j better health andt better spirits will be worth much I more than the moderate service charge.'; j Your Laundry Called For and Delivered U Phone 17 CITY LAUNDRY Jl DAD AND I fwK^i fcre fkey ' 1 D^dd y ? r^r- ^ Jr i^cy &np 'is^T)! Rocky VJ50/ Mounf&m !X^?C Ooms . The Rocky ' Mouhtdin Go&t.or s* white Go*vt ' Bc&i ib! Hp's 90b & gur\ ^sucKTJ AIV I wKite -k is the J wisest" ^r\d \br?ivesb of summit MvimaJs K>3 3hot/y y f 9o^tA i as A , | ^hour\tar\e?r istand | * to be*t, being most Sure /oote4.i QtjuthT