!? , I.,' J, l .. ,?I L '. Murdei era Given Respite o. .. Spartanburg, June 1.?Hay Coleman and 'Paul Johnson, who were to \ STROYER. Just spray it around. The flies fall / dead. Safa and easy f to use. Quick and thorough. For a health> ier, mora comfortabla home,free from flies,usa Canol Fly Daatroyar* Sold in Camden by DeKALB PHARMACY WEEK END RATES. To Mountain and Seashore Resorts, j Sold every Friday and Saturday. ; (iurt<| returning following Tuesdays. 1 AT VERY LOW RATES. Consult Ticket Agents. SOI THKRN RAILWAY SYSTEM. | Badly | | Run-Down $ "8dc yeera ago, I [K wu rwy much run- IM 1 down," wyi Mrs. fff not aleep wall, and Iff wu weak and reet* W laaa. I dragged B around the nouee K wtth not enough fl 1 atrength to do my K( , dail y taaka. I wor- H' i riod a lot, and this f J dieturbed atate of jU, 0 mind ntoud on ray health, iff ' 1 "t had often read of CarduL Ul J aol thought I would try it I mLm soon began to Improve after I u had taken Cardui for a while. /) J "It waa aatoniahing how , much I picked up. 1 slept bet- U t ter, my appetite Improved, and fj A that awful dragging-down feel- d)| : Q lug left me. fif [J *1 was so much better that fi ?o I continued taking Cardui un- Ml| Iftl til I felt perfectly well." jC Wjl Cardui has l>een used by M Km women for over 60 years. j* rail . For sale by all druggists. fy) i CARDUI Ko Helps Women B[! To Health JZj f)V TkKo TlmJford'H Black-Draught yft] ^i^jj fur Cot>wUpathuc Dibit; cut Ion University of South Carolina ( oluntbia, S. C. I Mt i? M. DuUULAS. President SCHOLARSHIP AM) EN IK A N CK E\A M IN \ HONS Examinations f?>r award of vacant -.?>.<. 1 iti .-hii'- r. the Cniverdty and t\c cMt alio will be held at the County * ourt tl'?u-t* 1 rtday. July 1 J. 1.it j a. ni. Applicanls must be Ui vi'at'i ui age. S. holarship- art- vac ant in the following c'nuntio: Abbeville, liainbe' g. Barnwell. Beaufort. ( harleslon. ('laivndon. Dorchester, Hampton, Horry. l.e.x ngt?m. MeCornr.ck, Marl bore.. Saluda. Sumte;. Emm. W .1l:nm?l?urg. Y>'i"r>. Applicants f"t hula: s.'t ;p> .->houlu write to the Committee on NorVnni Scholarships for application blanks, to be returned by July 10th. Scholarships worth $100. plus tuition and term fees. Next session will open September 18, 1029. SUMMER SCHOOL June 18 to July 26, 1929 Faculty of 53 offering more thar 100 courses for teachers, superinten dents and principals. Many graduate courses. Degrees conferred at end o summer term. Full information upot ' application to Director of Summr School. NO-MO-KORN FOR CORNS AND CALLOUSES ? - Made in Camden And For Sale By rr-~* .? DeKalb Pharmacy?Phone 95 I ' - - - a - :w:;;:r "r . - ' i. f - Former Mayor Mahon Make ft Grave Charges "It the taxpayers of South Carolina want to see tfl. wliat use state appropriated funda are being put, they have but to gq to the lobbies of the Columbia hotel*, and watch lobbyists and 'grafters spending money in drunken debauches. State funds are often put to other uses than that for which they were inj tended," said G. ii. Mahon, Sr., last night. Mr. Mahon, a former mayor of Greenville, and long time resident of this state, has just returned from a bu*inc** . trip which, carried, i him over 20 southern and mid-western states. Speaking of the political situation in the country at present, Mr. Ma- ! hon stated: "The present special j session of Congress has proved n great surprise to mid-western farmers, who were expecting itepublican campaign promises to be fulfilled in a definite program of farm relief. Since the special session convened, the price of wheat has dropped 35 to 10 cents a bushel. Congress has done absolutely nothing. If elections were held today a different tale would be told in the mid-western' grain growing section." 1 expect the Democrats to come ba^jt stronger than ever next election, if the present session of Congress does nothing toward farm relief. It was not the prohibition question that defeated A1 Smith in the recent election. In my travels over* 20 states, I found religious prejudice the most predominant objection to his candidacy for president, yet personally, I believe that a man should he allowed to worship God as he sees lit." Mr. Mahon limis business conditions throughout the South favorable, with only a few pessimists | ci>ing hard times. In most South-J oin states the cotton crop is unusually I late, and in muny eases the land has I had to be replanted. Boll weevil survival has been heavier than in six or eight years, and the farmers must begin work early to combat the pest, especially if the summer is wet. Cot- | ton growers need hot fear Ipw prices 1 this fall, unless there is an unusually heavy yield, which present indications do ndt point to, Mr. Mahon said. "Labor unions have now_qfo? n foothold in the South, and will spread to the detriment of both operator and operative. We are getting along fine 1 down south in the textile industry 1 and the operatives had best let well ' enough alone. The installation of the "stretch-out" system was the cause of the strikes in this and other states. "It runs against my grain as a native South Carolinian to sit in hotel ' lobbies and hear traveling men criticize our state, but many times I have listened to people censure South Carolina because of the luxury tax on soft drinks, tobaccos and cosmetics. These taxes and the obsolete Sunday ' laws which our governor, Mr. Rich- j aids, recently tried to enforce have run away a large portion of our pi o fit able tourist traffic which can only be. brought back, after a long' time. I hese laws have done the state more harm than any others ever put on the statute books. "I find the roads in South Carolina superior to those of any state except North Carolina. I think the liquor traffic in this state, contrary to Mr. Derieux's recent article in ( oilier s, is no worse than in other Southern .-tates, with the possible exception of Texas. I find business conditions in the Piedmont region as ! good as anywhere in the South. In ail my travels, I find only one other newspaper in a class with The Greenville _ News," Mr. Mahon stated. "It is commonly considered the best paper in the state; i! all-Greenville'.enterprises measured up to her papers, .-he would surpass any city o:' '.er si/.e in the South in every respect. I believe both of the city's papers to be a credit to Greenville."?Tuesday's Greenville News. Death of Mrs. J. Cunningham I A telegram '.>> Jos. K. Conn-.rs last Thursday from Palmetto, Ida., anMiear.ee.j the sudden eath t.-iere of ati'.t. Mrs. J. L Cunningham. M's ( mningham u.. the youngest - i Mr. Conn.- mother, Mrs. L (\?nnors. y.t was CO years of ,agi and was b in the Haile g ; i Mine section : Lancaster coun'y, where her fath.i. -he late Phin. a- B. Tompkins o! New York, having purchased a controlling interest in this mine, had comr to take charge of the industry. Yea:* later the family removed to Camden, S. C, i where the deceased, except for four | years spent in Due West College lived until her marriage thirty years 1 ago to Ciipt. J. \S . Butler of Chattanooga, Tenn. She was married some years after the death of Capt Butler, to J. R. ( unningham of Flor (ida. She had only one child, Ro i berta B. Butler, now Mrs. Everett* ; ^ oung of Quitman, Ga., who, witl - - the following are the survivors: Mrs Nell R. Connors. Igincaster; Mrs Henry R. Elliott. Virginia; P. B j Tompkins, Buffalo. N. Y. Miss "Cal _ ; Tompkins, as she was familiar! ^called by her many friends in Lan toaster, (Vanulen, and other parts o the State where she had often visite .ami lived, was an exceedingly sweet | lovable, Christian character, smart | witty, vivacious, talented, And was j woman of considerable literary attain ments. She was greatly esteemed b I aH w^? knew her.?lancaster New. Politics Ridden County' Again in the Limelight Columbia, May 31 .--Comptroller General A. J. Beattie today reported to Governor Richards that County Trenailrer F. A. Gross of Dorcheater 1* ahoi't in his accounts to the amount of $28,#83.66. Mr. Beattie stated that the shortage was revealed in an investigation of the financial affairs of the .county covering the eight years of Mr. Grosa' administration. The full amount of the deficit is mad?; J up of county funds, he said, and the' state is not involved in the loss. I Governor Richards arjqounced thai the report would be turned oyer to | the attorney general for whatever action he might deem necessary after u study of the situation. ! Mr. Beattie'* report showed .? cash shortage as of May 1, amounting to $22,285.50 and in addition to this amount there were found the papers of the county treasurer checks totaU ing $6,608.06 drawn on banks that had closed before the issuance of the checks and one which the county was unable to realize. Among those checks, the comptroller general said, was one drawn by (). Ii. (Bossy) Limehouae, former sheriff of Dorchester, for $4,787.78 to cover certain taxes collected by the sheriff. The check was datea July 27, 1028, on a hank which had closed its doors three months before, according to K. B. Wilson, one of the three special agents employed for the audit. Numerous errors were found in the tux books and other uccounts of the Li easurer s office and the comptroller general called attention "to the extreme carelessness of the treasurer in the management of his office," Mr. Beattie stated that he first began investigations into the Dorchester situation last year when he was una hie to reconcile his accounts with those of Mr. Gross. First investigations revealed a shortage of $14,101.81. Following this announced shortage Governor Richards called for the county treasurer to appear 'before hi hi on a rule to show cause why he should not be removed from office. The treasurer appeared and at the hearing asked the governor for a complete audit of his books, ex- i pressing the belief that the apparent deficit would be located. The full investigation, for which three special agents were employed, resulted in the report made to the governor yes- I terday. - .. Thought Son a Squirrel; Shot Him j Jefferson, N. C., June ,1,?News of, how a father, catching a glimpse of, gray, fired at what he thought was a squirrel and killed his 12-year old son was received here today. The boy wore a grey coat. G. C. Shepherd, well known citizen of the Grassy Creek section of Ashe county, was out squirrel hunting with the son, Blain, when the two became separated. Mr. Shepherd thought his son had gone in a direction opposite to that he Actually took. The man fired six shots into the boy's body before, he realized what he had done, he said. Officer and Physician Shoot Out Differences j St. I'aul, Minn., May 31.?Gunplay, .engendered by the triangle of a j young army officer, a middle aged , physician, and girl, had put the officer in a hospital tonight while the physician faced charges of assault with a dangerous weapon. 1 he army officer, Lieutenant Walter R. Miller, and the physician, Dr. William II. Hirst, shot out their differences last night in front of the home of Miss Nan Elizabeth Ferguson. 26. I Lieutenant Miller whose homo is in (Virginia, was shot through both legs, one bullet causing a compound fracture of his right leg. Physician.- said | his condition was serious but that he j would recover. The shooting started when Miller 'found the physician seated in a cur with Mi-< Ferguson in front | of t lafter'- home and invite.; him to i out. " ;iiul settle this matter.?'' ' Hirst married and ha- two children. His wife is an invalid. SCHOLARSHIP EXAMINATION < ompotitive examinations f. the awa .! of vacant scholarshi; s in Clen n College will be held ,. Friday. u!y 12, 1P21), beginning at 5 i a- n. < each County Superin: ndent , <>' 1 > . ation. These scholars!; - wii be young men sixteen years , ot ,l~' or over, who desire to ursut , cou - in Agriculture or Textiles . ^cr. ' - hi ps are awarded h th< * ta Hoard of Education <; th< recou.;.,. ndation of the Stat. Iloarr * ot P-.r ' c Welfare. d ' examinations includ. Eng " '\igehra, Geometry, and !| storj ? aim based on the Sta- Higl 1 s > urriculum. Applu.,- . f0i Ag: n ( ural Scholarships ar. ex iinut.vd on Agriculture. j- j ns interested ahould w; th< R?v -t ar for Information \ ap y j p- -i at ;or. blanks before the -,,e 0. . fn?- vxaminations. Succe.ap f | P'-a ant.-, must mefet fully th? require j i meats for admission. Ha, h scholarship is wort >.C0.0( ;',and free tuition, which is Lni'o ad l' ; ditn.nal. Scholarships are onj, " | to residents of South Carolina. * For further information w-,-A y THE REGISTRAR dtlMon College, S. C Young Lady Drowned In Lake Near Columbia . Columbia, May 2ib?-Mist) Thelma Park, 20-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. Max Park, of nearWinnsboro, a junior at the University of South Carolina, >vat drowned about 3 o'clock last night at Twin Lake, approximately eight miles from Columbia. / She, together with f Forced lubrication " Love joy hydraulic ;| shock absorbers ij Four-wheel internalexpanding brakes . j m r, Adjustable steering I ? wheel A host of other extraordinary features that > I combine to make the - ! Marquette America's t most complete car in the* 1000 field. f THE MOST COMPLETE CAR EVER OFFERED IN THE '1000 FIELD % Everywhere throughout the Marquette there is evidence of exceptional goodness. In design, in construction, in finish and fittingsall the things that go to make a better car, the Marquette provides in greater value than has ever been offered before at the price. Only Buick's twenty-five years of knowing how to build better automobiles have made these price^on the Marquette possible. Only Buick could have produced such a complete car ?with quality written all over it ?in a price range within the reach of millions. Marquette Model 36 IN delivered priest include only reasonable charges for delivery and financing. Convenient Urmt can be arranged on the liberal O. M. A. C. Time Payment Plan. Contlder the etetlvered prlcejat wetl at the lltf price when comparfog aUtomotoMe ? value*. ... . BUICK MOTOR COMPANY, FtINT, MICHIGAN DI viti on of General Motors :. " Canadian Factories Corporation lolldors of * McLoughlln-Bukk, Oihawa, Ont. Bvkk and MorquetteMotor Cere LITTLE MOTOR COMPANY J ? " Camden, South Carolina J WHEN BRTTBR AUTOMOBILES ARE BUILT BUICK WILL BU1