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[Winter | Homes I Anticipating the interest of numbers of Camden's winter visitors in both Camden and nearby country ; . property 1 secured last summer listings on attractive places at prices that should be investigated, not only for homes, but as investments. Read listings below: B1* I ! Country home, 8 rooms, 125 years old, good con! dition. Superb outlook. Magnificent trees. 25 j minutes' drive from Camden. 73 acres (more land | | available at low figure if desired). 1 want to show j ! yoXi this whether you buy or not. Price $3,500.00. ' Country home, 10 rooms, approximately 400 ..I acres. Very interesting proposition. $20,000.00 I I ! In Camden winter section, house with 8 rooms, j 2 baths, perfectly heated, large' basement, excellent I location. Unusually well built. Worth much more j than price. $8,500.00 I j 8, room house, 2 baths, good sized lot, Sarsfield J | section. Wonderful trees. Cheap at $6,(^)00.00. j 6 room house, basement and bath, new, (not hri winter section). A real value for one desiring a modI est, good home on large lot. Rental will pay 10% I J net. Cannot duplicate for $3,500.00 I One of the very best business sites in Camden. I To those interested in a permanent investment in a j location that will always be the best and ten per cent net on his money. Please let me go over this with I Please write sr call me personally for appointj ment. I will not ask too much of your time. N. C. ARNETT I | j "Conservative Real Estate" A New York taxicab driver who last week found an envelope containing $ I .H00 in ins car, turned it over to tile police. On Tuesday he was presented with checks totaling $400 as a reward for his honesty. A merger of three car building companies, including the Pullman company, has made a corporation with a capital of $400,000,Ony. John I). Rockefeller has recently jriven $">uu.000 to the relief anil anmiity board of the Souhern Baptist convention, says a Dallas, Tex., disj.atch. The check was written Christmas Kve. Mrs. \' invent Kemp, of Lancaster, | Ohio, on January I of last year jjave birth to twin boys. On Dec. .'U she uave birth to a boy and a jfirl. I Iodine Products Stores South Carolina's Own RESOLVED: | That in 1930 we will, through our tremendous volume i ! purchases, endeavor to give our friends and customers Highest Quality Foods at savings that will enable you ! i to save many dollars. ! ! WK WISH ALL A PROSPEROUS AND HAPPY 1930 I I LOOK! SPECIALS FOR I Friday and Saturday, Jan'y 10-11 I SUGAR, Fine Granulated, 10 lb. limit, 5 lbs. for 27c BACON, Sliced, Rined, a bargain, per pound ...28c UOFFKK. W! ite Holier and Maxwell, per lb. 40c I ('( >FFKF. (Bulk). 11 <one Lin. I N"thii.c better* for the Mon.\- Per pound 27c ' I < I1K1\>K Lull ('ream, per p .nd 26c | SALMON ? Raceland No. 1 (Tails) per can 14c TOM A VOLS?*-No. 2 cans. Bu\ ;i dozen eans 98c , ML AMY 1) t \ Salt Fat Bacon L r Boiling, per lb. 11c ' Kill M LA T. p?r poun< i i4c j; ^ >' leak o" Lean. Streak o" f at. Ij BUTTER, Fancy Cr amery, per pound 44c I BEANS?Lord Fairfax, packed in South Carolina Buy a dozen cans ... 98c | CHIPPED BKF.F. in glass tumblers, small Jar 12*'2c Large Jar 19#c HCitJS?Cloverbloom?They will please you. l)oz. 47c LARD, Compound (Bulk) Very Special, per lb. II1 2c BAB-O, for Enamel an J Porcelaiij, 2 cans .. 25c Visit Our Two Big Stores 1028A Broad Street 549 DeKalb Street H. F. Evans, Manager T. C. Gladden, Manager i Merchant's Body Found in Well Jefferson, Jan. H.?Wulte/- W. Miller, 40, prominent citizen <*X?Jbi? place commitcd aucide by jumping in a well on Mkin street Sunday night. Mr. Miiler was one of the beet beloved citizens and one of the leading hurineMtt men of the town, being a member of a mercantile firm and an elder in the Presbyterian church and superintendent of his Sunday school for 15 years. The citizen# of the town are stunned and at a loss to understand why he commited the act. ? Mr. Miller seemed in the best>-jof spirits nil day and attended Sunday school and church services, both morn?ing and night, but complained fit severe headache in the evening and before retiring went to the basement to bank the furnace, staying longer than usual Mrs. Miller called to him ami receiving no answer went down 'to investigate and found his trousers and coat hung on the wall. She gave the alarm and after about 40 minutes' search his body was found by the aid of n' flash light in an abandoned, well close by. Artificial respiration was resorted to for two hours and pulmotor was brought from Charlotte, Mr. Miller is survived hy his widow, Who was Miss Lena Stultz of Rock Hill, and two daughters, Dorothy and .Lena. Keid; his aged father, W. W. Miller; four sisters, Mr^. J. M. Dowry of Kershaw, Mrs. W, F. (lay of Httrtsville, Mrs. W. C. Kills of Greenville and Mrs. J. II. Nicholson of Jefferson. Health and Beauty Questions about health, beauty and the prevention of disease will be answered in this column. When a personal answer is desired, send your questions, with a stamped self-addressed envelope to Dr. Sophia Brunson, Sumter, South Carolina. Dr. Brunson will not diagnose or prescribe for patients in this way. For that you must consult your physician. The Complexion Beauty is impossible without .i good complexion. A good cmplexion is impossible without good health. You cannot care for your body intelligently unless you understand something about the skin. The perfect complexion is soft, smooth and elastic. The coloring differs with the individual. The skin is a protective covering for the body, and its health is dependent upon that of the body, and vica versa. The skin is made up of several layers. The outer, which is known as the epidermis or scarf skin, is continually throwing off scales. In a normal condition this process is hardly perceptible. The lower layers of the skin contain oil and sweat glund&, nerves, blood vessels, and the pigment, or coloring matter. If you take a section of a negro's skin and study it under a microscope, you will find that it contains layers of black pigment in the true or deep skin. An Albino is lacking in pigment. That i- why he presents such a cutious appearance. White mice are all albinos. The luster of the pel ft-. I -kin is due to the proper action of the glands and the presence of the cutaneous fat. One of the first signs of ill health or approaching age is observed in the change that takes place in the skin. As age comes on, the skin loses its ilasticity and begins to show fine lines and crinkles. Unless properly treated the condition becomes rapidly worse until it actually falls into deep and veritable furrows. The normal skin should not present such an unpleasant appearance until the subject is far. advancer! in years. The enlightened student of life knows that it is r,.?t conducive to happiness to see one's reflection in the mirror when the fa e is sallow, the cheeks sunken, tin face and throat seamed v ith lines, a d the skin sagging and flahhv. Tais is especially unwel,, me u he: > .1 are not yet bending beneath : ),< a ? ight of years, and still Law si , n:'ii ami vigor and the love < ! lit", \ .ur youthful hear! It : vt discouraging when you ' a! < :. w due to your u ig- 1 jme;?m. a! <! m-glect. You wonder >f lnr\tV.:ng -.an *>,. done about i' a* tills j I 1 1 to date. | We shad -< < Maybe there is help j f r you w'. You can, by followj vg our :n.s* uetions, improve yourt self even hevpnd vour expectations. These who have not yet reached the stage described, can actually prevent that unpleasing condition from overtaking them for many years. When real old age finally seizes you in its n'entless clutches, you will probably no longer care. (To he continued.) Charles P. Taft. Cincinnati. Ohio., philanthropist and editor, and brother of Chief Justice Taft, died Tuesday night from pneumonia after an illness of a year and a half. He was S6 years old. Negro Confesses to Killing of Three Knoxvillu, Tenn., B??. 27,?Confronted with the blood ntftlned overcoat of fene of his victims, Theodore Harris, 23 year old negro houseman, today confessed to slaying/^. B*rr clay J. Jones, his wife and their nephew at their home here Christmas Kve. The negro's confession was made less than twelve hours after he was taken into custody for questioning. At first he denied knowledge of the slaying, but when confronted with the overcoat and watch found in the house of his wife, whom he married yesterday, he admitted slaying the trio "Because I got mad/' Attorney General J. Fred Bibb,, of Knox county, has announced that he will ask for a special session of the grand jury to present the confession and other evidence and if an indictment is returned Harris probably will be brought to trial early in January. The negro, who had been employed by the physician for about a week as houseman 'tqld officers that he and the boy, George Lane, Jr., 13, were playing in the cellar about I o'clock the day before Christmas making tgy airplanes, and that the boy became abusive. "He cursed me and called me i regro," Harris said, "and I got mad. The' boy was kneeling on the floor holding an airplane and I picked up a pipe and hit him over the head, then finished him with an axe." After killing the boy, Harris told officers he went upstairs where Mrs. Jones was dressing and entered her loom. O "She ran for the phone, m n?trol said, "and I knocked it down and dragged her to the cellar and hit her with the axe." The negro said he threw a lump of coal at M/s. Jones' head as she lay on the floor bleeding from a gash in her head. ?' * rria> said he changed clothes "and packed hla suit ease un*| then made a round of the house locking doors and putting out all lights except one on the front porch. "I decided I might as well kill the doctor too," the negro said and told of hiding in the garage for about an hour until I)r. Jones arrived. Harris said as Dr, Jones stepped from his car, "I grabbed him and hugged him and threw him down. I hit him in the face." After killing the physician, the negro said he came to Knoxville and spent the night at the home of another negro. He said he told Gertrude Kelly, a negress, what he had done and she advised him to leave town, but he " doc i tied not to and to get married." The following day he said he and the woman he married went to the court house, obtained a license and were married. They then returned to the home of her parents where he was arrested early today. I"is wife and her parents told him to leave town, Harris said, after he had told them that he had killed the Jones family. Asked by officers why he hadn't left, Harris was unable to give any particular reason. A short time after his confession was announced the negro was removed to Chattanooga for safekeeping, although there had been no indication of violence toward him here. Officer# said it wa? merely a pr?. I cautionary step. fl The body of Or. Jones was fou'n.j I in his parage by a relative Christ- 1 may morning and tho?? of Mr*. I Jones and the boy w^r? found in the I ( t llar of the house. Harris was 1 missing and a search was instituted for him. I Late yesterday one of the city de. tectives lesmed of the marriage li fl cense and early today went to the house of the woman named in the records and found Harris. Cupid Shatters w All Records I York, Dec. 31.?Shattering all previous records, 3,064 marriage licenses were issued from, the office'0f i G. P. Smith, probate judge here, dur- fl ing the year ending today. The number issued in 1028 was 2,654. More fl marriage licenses are issued/here than i ir. any other place in the Carolinas. Visit the Market Members of the Community Market | rnnounce that on next market day fl they will have the following far? pro- I ducts on sale: Eggs, creaim, butter, jams, pickles, jellies, hpitey, spiced A peaches. In the meat products will fl be found: Sausages, pork chops, ' dressed chickens, fryers. Among the fl vegetables to be found this time of j year are turnip greens, spinach and ,9 cabbage. Remember the hour for fl opening is 9:80 o'clock. fl Preaching at Mt. /ion. fl According to Rev. T. J*. Christmas, j there will be preaching at Mt. Zion I Baptist church on Sunday afternoon j at 3 o'clock. All are cordially invited I to attend. f ' ya. . -ixi o ^ - .. .;:; ^ I 1 ^ : 'j m ' ^ ' . I : ? I (A^r\ 25? SALE : I j VW w W A 25c sale at your A&P Food Store is a sale event H Ws. ESTABLISHED y^ - . - ~ ^ , . 1859 of importance. The items below are typical of I irwi^coNo^vTuitrl what 25c win buy at your A&p store thU week- I* ioiytwhbvtiiebag 1 ' < 2 o I SAUERKRAUT* l?J 25c fl CHEESE ? c"lt, ? ib. 25c Tl 1 1 mir?m Ji - I^unncr inmu CATSUP 2 ? 25c Mnivif rVn*nnna>w1 I LARD 2 lbs. 25c MACARONI SPAGHETTI 4 25c Quaker Mai* j beans ii 3 cans 2$c I ' ?' j "coffee' I lb- 25c | II S&, SYRUP Te - ? 25c' ,p Aunt FLOUR 2 to 25c f Jemima pancake or buckwheat ??- u "j PEACHES Mggh 2Sc. || IONA BRAND Cocoa | 2 ?, 25c 1 Campbell's Beans 3 cans 25c Tomato Soup 3 cans. . . 25c Salad Dressing 25c P&G Soap, 7 cakes .... 25c | A&H Soda 6 pkgs 25c j Wesson Oil, pint. . . .25c I Kidney Beans, 2 lbs ?I ? | Fruit Salad N?n1 2Sc " Apple Sauce 2 2.&C ^ I A&P Oats 3 25c I ?????????????? y i ?ctagon soap ' r* & ica ymi i Octagon Soap Powder i ~ I GREAT Atlantic & Paoehc ? i