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II On Second Thought. | I Dawt "Nothing but on operation , ugve your life," ?pgtfent: "And how much will that jfB^ppetor: "About ftve hundred dol rfi" \mpgtieut: "But I only have a hundred ?ljwtor: "In that case, let u* see Uh.t pin. Will do." "special """ Reduced Fares EACH SATURDAY TO New York < Atlantic City Chicago * |. Detroit ; Cleveland inquire ticket agent Southern Railway System I CARTER'S SHOE SHOP ] .; 1 927 South Broad Street |ut us rebuild your worn down JMshops. Complete shoe repair equip* ment. ' | the Standard Hydraulic Preaaer Cementing Machine ^ tn'o' Nails. No Stitches. No more tighl, stiff Shoes. ^ Finished with appearance of new t ] All Work Guaranteed. h, c. carter, Proprietor ?I Automobile [Repairing We are now prepared to do all kinds of automobile repairing. Good j workmanship and moder |ate prices. !)EMPSTER'S GARAGE formerly Little's Garage ELECTROL OIL BURNER ALES AND SERVICE PHONE 546 I KG. BURKE Plumbing and Heatings REPAIR WORK AT reasonable prices Corner DeKalb and Fair Streets OBT. W. MITCH AM Architect j Crocker Building, 11 Camden, S. . \/feltV ? bad a i after eating \ TOO* TBAXS ago, 11\ suffered with heart* iV burn rod, bilious in digest! oa. Whatever I ate disagreed with me. Qaa on my stomach made me very uncomfortable. My I tongue was coated and my color was bad. I needed a good laxative, and so my It mother-in-law gave me some Jjck-Draught end told me to JJJ? it- I found H helped me J ?ueh, eo I bought It tor Ri Savfrc w^tlpation. * -r^~*ogive BtwMjHMBnp JA BBtfVKKBr^r Bfa-ij t-. " flpf K. * *gte-.dn^L." . ^ A, xit~ _t Llkj^ . s-fc jQft *rSr ?-. ~2'C. ty~* IN o body's Business WrUt*?5" ? Cknmlci* k, (*, *<*> ?. C<U>yrtght. 1928. ; Ar? You De-Prcmt. flat rock, a. C., juUe 10/ 1920. dear mr. editor:? pleoe allow me space in yore valuabull paper to express myself about the colored lady which mrs. hoover invlted to her big dinner the other day. and thereby set a new rule for future republican first ladies of the land to follow. J__ + Of course, no dimmercrat would think of having a nigger at their com. ing out party, and if this here de preest woman don't watch out, she won't be respected by them Chicago gun men and dusty browns of the city when she gets back home. She's liabull to lose cast ansoforth by associating with them common folks at the white house. most annyboddy knows that mr. hoover was under obligations to have mrs. de preest at his house, all of the niggers that anny one ever saw vote in the r.ecent battle voted for mr. hoover, and there wasn't no way for his wife to get around having that chicagoln present Ke~ wjlThafter" run again 4 yr. Hints, and he will need all colors to make the grade. when i first saw about mrs. de preest being at that party, i thought mebbe that she was just going over to help mrs. hoover set the table and fry the eggs and wait on the folks, and it was sort of a shock to me to find out later that she was one of the girls, and had a good time all the way thru. i have not got no condemnation for the de preest female, she was possibly as good, as anny other woman present who was glad to see her there but of cohrse?there were a few in the flock that felt like someboddy had pulled a bone. mr. cole bleese would no dout say that her being there was something -like finding a worm in a peach after the fourth or fifth bite. but- why wory? after all, mrs. hoover felt obligated to have her friends with her on this great occasion, and mr. hoover has alreddy shown his willingness to disregard the* color lines, he don't judge folks by how they smell, he makes up his opinions from how they vote. oh, well, that wasn't the first time our countty has been disgraced, we will get over it, this catastrophee was just an introductory spasm that forecasts what the hoovers will do from now on. i have looked all over our county for the past 2 weeks hunting for 1 of the 999 hoover-dimmercrats that scratched smith last november, but they are either all dead, or have forgot about the campane. rite or foam if this don't suit you. yores trulie, mike Clark, rfd. Goat-Getters. The other day, I decided to talk to a few of my iptimate friends? and find out from them what was the saddest thing that ever "came across their path," and I am taking the liberty of recording some of these horrible events for your kind consideration. Uncle Joe said': "Well, lemme see. I believe the worst thing that ever come my way since I first seen the light of day was?ronce I was a-fishing on Big Dam cteek and I ketched a trout tu&t weighed 14 pounds ar?u 3 ounces, and jest as I was about to * ? - pull him into the bat?au, he flipped a flap and flopped back into the wnter. wade a[ dive for him, but he cot way. That almo.t killed me. I never 1 got over it for might nigh a year." Aunt Minervy said: "Oh, I have had heaps and heaps of trouble since 1 *oi married, but when I loo* back over the past, I must say that the time I busted my set of false teeth at ? little dinner the Ladles Aid gave a: Mrs. Brown's home, J ain't so sure! that anything ?l*e worse than that over overtook me'. I tried to bite a piece of candy, and them teeth flew out of my mouth like an arrow from a bow. I was never so hacked in all ?ny life. I never did And my 2 front ones." Flupper Lou averred: "Believe me, kiddo, or squint and hush! The most terrible calamity that ever befell a human being, befell me once at a dance. Me and Jimmie Brdwn were about the only couple on the floor, and the orchestra was pouring fourth the "Memphis Blues", and me and Jimmie wore both doing the shimmy and the black-bottom and the hootchy kootchy all at the same time, and before J realized-what had happentd mjy underwear had slipped down n?y ankles ami had me hog-tied. Gosh 1 almost died. I've got over all my troubles but that, and I * ain't seen Jimmie since?but I don't depend on buttons no more. Gimmie strings every time." Cake Eater Jones, being duly sworn, said: "I have never had many bad breaks, but my narrowest escape from utter disgrace and death and sorrow was the time me and my girl was strutting up and down the 'bored walk' at White Springs, <v and some little squirt that had more gall than sense bellowed at me: 'Hey, there, Cholly: your flag of truce is hanging too low on your left, and why surrender ? She ain't quite got you, is she ? I looked down and discovered that my shirt tail had become chesty and was showing off to a large extent. This happened before it was stylish to let your shirt tail hang out. That was my worst experience, and I'm 23 now." Use Discarded Motor Oil on Hogs j Clemson College, July 15.?The louse, a common parasite of the hog, at this season of the year, is quite numerous, and consequently the animals should be examined frequently, and properly treated when the insect is found, says M. H. Brunson, extension entomologist, Clemson College. "When lice are present on hogs the best gains from proper feeding ' can not be expected, as the insect torments the animal by piercing the skin and sucking the blood. The presence of lice in indicated by the animal rubbing vigorously against feed troughs and fences and scratching with their feet. The skin becomes cracked, thick, tender and sore, and the animals becortie restless and unprofitable. ~ There are a number of control measures recommended for the hog louse but the cheapest and most , effective is through the use of crankcase oil, which has been drained from motors. Usually this oil may be secured free or for comparatively small cost per gallon from most anyl garage. "Hogs to be treated should be placed in a small pen, and the oil applied to the animals with a sprinkling can. After the oil ia.'fepplied it should be rubbed well over the body by the use of a fine^bristled brush or broom. The animals _must be completely covered with the oil in order to control the pest. - A second application of oil should be made two to three weeks later to k/ll, those insects missed by the first application, and those hatching from the eggs present at the time of the first application. Race Clash Occurs In Maryland Town Princess Anne, Md., July 14.?Negroes were a minus quantity here today following a clash with whites last night, during which the former were driven from the town -\yith clubs, guns, billiard cues, bricks and other weapons following a fight between a negro and a white man. The trouble was precipitated after the fight, when an ultimatum Was delivered to negroes that they keep to one side of the main street. Sporadic outbursts, consisting of missies thrown from one side of the street to the other, were culminated when a white girl was struck by a bottle said to have been thrown by a negro. It was then that the negroes were driven from the streets, and state police sent here t? patrol theStreets after a call from the local police force. Thieves are no respecters of persons. K1iy Albert of Belgium was relieved of hU gold watch, a gold pen and 500 francs while at a bathing resort at Ostend. Your Shoes Uncomfortable feet make \ hours long, distance longhand patience short. Let's help the feet by rebuilding the shoes. The RED BOOT Shop Next Door to Express Office j 619 Rutledge St. CAMDEN, S* 0* ~r? ABRAM M. JONES J ' <T | Proprietor ? r? - 6 6 6 Wflieiii mS* jf? ^ ? - AJW.IJU. J.. ' ' Government Hospital \ Saves Vet from Charge Columbia, July U.?The United States government took a hand today In helping an alleged safe-cracker whose trial is scheduled f6r Monday, to leave the state, Cordon A. l.usby, former service man, and accused by police of bicaking and looting a safe in a business establishment here, was given commitment papers to a United States Veterans' hospital. Solicitor A. V. Spignor said he was helpless to prevent the man's leaving until lourt opens Monday. The $2,&00 bond under which Lusby is free, will be ( streuted should he .fail to answer) and no doctor's certificate presented to show he is unable to stand trial, he said. He is suffering from an acute case of diubetes C. T. Craydon, Columbia attorney said, a Columbia physician said l.ushy would die in two months unless he received immediate treatment, the attorney said. The United States Veterans bureau, in refusing to tell Lusby's destination and in exonerating itself from any effort to help the man to escape trial, claimed it was operating within its rights under government statutes. The stalf is not permitted to reveal the location of a patient unless a warrant is served on them and the approval of the director in Washington rmits the disclosure. Prevents Prisoners' Escape. Carrollton, Ala., July 11.?Mrs. S. F. Allen, wife of the warden of the Pickens county jail here late yester-1 day caused the recapture of two prisoners who had made a break for liberty after choking and beating her husband unconscious. The men were met at the jail enaside but without investigating what' had happened inside the jail, she rounded up a posse of officer* and citizens resulting in the recapture of the men a short distance from the jail. The prisoners, Alvin Cook and Edward Healer, were awaiting trial on charges of having burglarized a store at Alieeville, Ala. Correct, Teacher: "Use /dispair' in a sentence." Grade Five: "If a tire blows out, put on de spare." MONEY MADE FROM POULTRY. \ . Statistics Compiled Show Remarkable Growth of Industry. During the four weeks ending May 25, this year, cooperative poultry shipments were made from 30 of the 40 counties in South Carolina, and 1 I of the counties made two shipments. It is expected that not less than 200 carlouds will be shipped this year, bringing the farmers at least $1,000,000. That Georgia farmers are doing something besides killing grass is evidenced by the fact that cooperative sales of poultry in May amounted to 40 cars that sold for $102,111.17-?an increase of 200 per cent, over last year. Cooperative sales of poultry during April in 23 Northeast Georgia counties brought $72,555.88. From December, 1027, to May, 1028, the Sequatchie Valley, Tennessee, shipped out 284,608 pounds of live poultry in carloads that brought $60,079.40. Southeastern Tennessee ships a full trainloud of poultry to the Eastern markets every week, Cullman county, Alabama, farmers have a perfect right to adopt some such slogan as "Cullman County ConAfocta-Oue44??sT-C<nvs-and-Cottmi'int<r Cash." They sold close to a million dollars' worth of poultry and eggs last year, ranked third among Alabama counties in cotton production and supplied the local creamery with $41,000 worth of cream. Z. K, Patrick, of McKenzie county, Alabama, says his poultry pays better than cotton or conn He made $510 profit last year from 200 hens. Union county, North Carolina, farmers find hens more profitable than banking. Their hens are worth on an average, $2 a head. They laid an average of 216 egga last year which sold for an averagd of a fraction of u cent above HO cents per dozen. La- * bor, board and lodging averaged $2.35 por hen, leaving $3.05 clear profit per hen, with the hen ready for another year's work. Hilary McEntyre, of Gordon county, Georgia, is paying his way through college by growing turkeys. Ho proved that there are t^o unsurmountable difficulties in the way ?>f raising turkeys by growing 300 year before last and 800 last year. ?? Alabama turkey growers sold 2o carloads for the Thanksgiving and Christmas trade last year, for which r? thoy receiver! $105,000. An Aiken county, S. C., farmer raised 487 tur- H keys last^year on which his net profit was $1,574.17. Mrs. John Webb, who lives noar % Nashville, Ark., started a few years ago with a Betting of turkey eggs, from which she raised seven hens and gome gobblers. Sho sold the toms for enough to supply her kitchen with all of the utensils except the stovo. The next year she cleared enough to paint the house. This year sho expects her turkeys to net her $1 for each day in the year. From a breeding pen of 22 hens and 2 toms, Mrs. Walter Kcnney, of Bour|bon county, Ky., raised 350 turkeys. Eor-the?young- tems-shereceived"tH> ' each and for the young hens $7 each. Experienced turkey raisers say it is not unusual to raise $400 worth from four hens. Some of them raise as much as $600 worth from four hens. Savannah Gets First Bale. 0 Savannah, Ga., July 11.?The first bale of cotton of the 1929-30 season ' was sold today for forty cento a ^ pound at an auction on the Savannah Cotton exchange. ~ ' ~ The bale, weighing 475 pounds, as compared with the average of 350, was said to be one of the largest first bales sold in recent years. Fruits and Vegetables "1 FRESH DAILY " Come here for your fruits and vegetables, for here you will find the most select varieties and the best values in town. S. S. HENSLEY 920 Broad Street Camden, S. C. . % mmmmm??? THE NATION HAS NAMED IT "-A GREAT PERFORMER" 1 ' BUILT BY BUICK , *965 to *1035 Thf?e pricfi f. O. b. Buttle Factory, spec ?l ' quipment evtra. M arqaette delivered prices inclu te only reasonable charges for delivery and fi? nancing Convenient tertrscan beam nr~d ~ *-on the bbrral O.-ni.A. C. Time Payment Plan Consider the delivtrcd price as well a* the list pnee when Comparing sutomo* bile values. "A Great Performer" the Marquette is being hailed, the nation over. Never before in a car of moderate price have there been such acceleration, -speed, control, handling ease, roadability, flexibility, balance! Only Buick could offer such performance. In Marquette you get an engine of remarkably large displacement. You get speed that holds qi> honest 68 or _ 70 miles an hour with unequaled ease, steadiness and security. You get acceleration of from 10 to 60 miles an'hour in high gear In 31 seconds. And this groat now car Introduces many more unusual featuresi Beautiful Fisher bodies. Exclusive new upholstery proofed against water, dust and wear. Dustproof tilt-ray headlights. An exclusive new sloping nonglare windshield. Four Lovejoy hydraulic shock absorbers. Easy-acting, completely enclosed brakes. The Marquette is easy, to own oo the . liberal G.M. A. C. terms. Come In and see this complete car. Take the wheel and learn the thrill of Marquette performance. < :A_M ? C K MOT OR COM PAN Y, F I I N T , MICHIGAN - : , Canadian Factor)** DlvUlon of Oanaraf Motor* tuild*r* Of" v. * Mtlovghlin-Bvick, Othawa, Oi?t. fi :L Corporation ?.lck and MorqvotH Motor Cox* E=*4i? ?; - - - 4- , LITTLE MOTOR COMPANY rrt i t ft 1T, ?- / , . Camden, South Carolina WHEN BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARE BUILT BDICK WILL BUILD THBM ^ < , " ,