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R. E. CHEWNING Contractor and Gonoral ftutiIdor 30 Yeara Experience I>et me figure on your next building job. Floors Sanded on Request GUS HAYES Plumbing and Heating j Let us figure with you on your next job. New work or repair work. PHONE 153 "neKALH COUNCIL No 88 a/fX.n Junior Order 0. A. M. Regular council first and /Nr\ third Mondays of each month at 8 p.m Visiting Brethren are welco mod. IIKVWARD SMITH, I, If. JONES , Councillor. Recording Secty. CARTER'S SHOE SHOP 1 027 South Broad Street / I.ot us rebuild > your worn down Shoes. Complete shoe repair equipment. ! The Standard Hydraulic j Presaer Cementing Machine No Nail*. No Stitches. No morn tight, stifr Shoes. j Finished with, appearance of new All Work Guaranteed. H. C CARTER, Proprietor MONEY LOAN on MODERN-CONSTRUCTED HOMES and CENTRALLY-LOCATED BUSINESS PROPERTY I No Appraisal Charge \ADDRESS INQUIRIES ^ P.O. Box 164, Camden, S. C. KERSHAW LODGE No. 2t A. F. M. Regular communication of ^%v^^\thia lodge is held on the ' jtyr first Tuesday in each month at 8 p.m. Visiting Brethren are welcomed. S. W. HOGUK. J. E. ROSS, Worshipful Master. Secretary 1-14-27-tf i ?????????????????? T. B. BRUCE Veterinarian Day Rhone 30?Night Phone 114 CAMDEN, 5. C. Automobile Repairing We are now prepared to do all kinds of automobile repairing. Oood i workmanship and moderate pricei. DEMPSTER'S GARAGE Formerly I.ktle'a Garage ELECTROL OIL BURNER SALES AND SERVICE PHONE 546 E. G. BURKE i Plumbing and Heating I REPAIR WORK AT j REASONABLE PRICES Comer DeKal'o and Fair Streets ROBT. W.MITCH AM Architect Crocker Building, Camden, S. C. 1 Nobody'w Business Written fox The Obfonicle by G?? McGee, Copyright, LOAF VB. I/OAFEU A loafer dropped in to ?ee *** the other day and after exchanging the time of day and borrowing a match and a cigarette and a drink of water and the use of the telephone and a chair for 10 minutes, he got up e"d said?< "W'eM, I've got a whole dya of loafing ahead of me, ho 1 guess I'd - better hurry on." Some folks get behind with their loafing and they never catch up. 1/mfing is due to various and sundry reasons, plus divers excuses and norn. de-plumes. Loafing is u habit that is enjoyed by the rich, liked heartily by the poor who has a wife and some kids at work to make himself an I family a living, and not frowned at by some lazy men and women wh< actually have a job. " I have always observed that chroni loafers generally have more money than anybody else. Mr. Iver Weak bin k starts off his loafing every moi ning at the corner drug store where hr always sticks 2 or .'1 of hifriends for a soft drink and *ome goobers and possibly a handful of candy arid then he moves on. He hangs around a garage till some one offers him a chew of Brown's Muia end he bites off half the plug and sneaks four-fifths of it into his porkels when the donor ain't looking. I Lrtrlc Joe took up loafing once j when he wrenched h;- side up at th?* j ball park that time when he was scuf? (Ling with a young feller who called j h.m Mr. Lightning Rodd. Aunt M;n! e.-vy rubbed it for several weeks but j I ride? Joe never did .?top c??rnp!ain! 1 ?J - He said the "ketch" was ai ways right there when he started to do any kind of work except fuhing and cranking 1 ..*> old Ford to go to town and ait around all day talking about the league of Nation*, the Farm Relief and why banks bunt. Uncle Joe ?eein? to enjoy a aore hand or a big boil under hia arm more than anything elae. He habitually wears one of hia hands in a sling and likes to talk about the rising on it or how he skint it trying to fix a WHggin body, and if yoi?' fool with him much, he'll take off the rag and show you ju*t how baj cff he i? by reason of the aforesail sore. He haa been known to loaf H months on a little scratch he got once while trying to separate u calf from a cow. So, friends, only 1*5 per cent of the people who loaf do *o thru choice. Some good men and women loaf because they simply can't find a job. The others loaf year in and year out looking for a job, but when they j think they run any risk in finding j one with the work still left in it, they change their field of endea\T>r for a more unlikely place. f>oafing is an art: I've known men to loaf for 10 years and yet, they all got 3 squares a day and a place to sleep and just as many luxuries of life as the hustlers ever got. HOW TO FISH fiat rock, s. ('., martch 17, 1030. deer mr. editor: ? as every boddy knows i am a good fisher man, l have been asked to ' rite up my fishing experients in time for early spring fishing so's folks can profit by my plans and not ketch nothing while away from home with a pole ansoforth. here is my rules: 1. for big fi-hes like shads and mud turkles and troutts, use a big l:sh hook and bait -arm- with a long v.irm who must be threaded onto the hook from his front end to keep him from slipping off while he is in the w utter waiting to get hit. and as soon a> the sed worm is swallowed, make a quick jeck and pull him in. 1. for horney heads and little mud cats and other small fry, use young wastes or valler jackets and run the hook thru them from his tall end and let it look like it is alive while crawling betwixt the grass ansoforth on the bottom of the creek and when he bites sorter soft like, don't jeck, but wait till he starts to run off with the hook and then pull him in. 3. for sand cats, use grub wirms and grass hoppers and fish on the dark of ,fhe moon after you have heard some whipper wills holler in n nearby field with yore pole stuck in the ground and when the line commences to wiggle, slide the hook toards the bank and if you don't find a sand cat on same, it is a sign that he did not grab the hook hard enuff and got away. 4. for eals and brims and suckers, pick out muddy watter for the form- j er and. clear watter for the latter, and fish about sun down and hold yore line steddy so's the bait which is a hoss fly will look like he is sick and don't care what happens to him aad the latter will inhale him slowly and so will the former and you \?on't know that you have ketched annything a tall till you pull yore hook plum out of the watter and there he is if he don't fall back like most big fishes do. B. a good way to ketch some flah is to set out a trot line or use ft bftslcbt fcnd bate same wtih cheesi that has spoilt so bad till it stinks like lirmbfcrger and the fishes all go into the basket to see what in thfc world it is ded in there and all you hafter do is go take them out. (mr. editor, rite or foam if you don't understand these instructions). vores trulie, mike Clark, rfd. HOW TO BO ft ROW MONEY TO FAftM ON Mul es and wngons and real estate have become unworthy of consideration when they are offered to moneylending (?) in.->titutions as collateral, so I am writing this article for the purpose of making some suggestions to the farmers as to HOW they should proceed in the matter of getting advances for use in making n crop this year. If you happen to own a good farm which cannot bo used as security tc a loan, I suggest that you swap it for an automobile and rent it back and then take the automobile to youi bank and they will be glad to loar you at least two-thirds of its actual value. (N. B. It is no trouble tc bcrrow money on a car). Now in the fall, after your crop is made, sell it? that is, the crop and go to youi automobile dealer and buy yaur lane back. He will decide by that time that it is not worth having and wil | probably agree to take a loss on sam< ?equal to the cost of the Ford. j Of course everybody knows bj thin time thnt you can't borrow money on a cow, so kindly swap your cow for an 8-tube-?upper-help-you'reciylng-full-grid-two-tone-tuna-ln radio 1 ltd go to your money tender and put 1 it up and he will readily let you have not less than $250.0? on same. A? your cow will no doubt be dry (like the Republicans) by the time you pick out a bate of cotton, you might sell, say, 2 bates to the farm relief board for 8 cents a pound and go back to your radio agent and take up your cow. You can easily buy a 4-drawerfast-freeze ice-making refrigerator on credit by giving a first mortgage on your 4 pigs, if you happen to have 4, (which you haven't), and as pigs are no longer considered collateral when it comes to borrowing the actual cash, go to your money-lending agency and offer your "FrozenAir" for $100.00 and you'll be surprised how quickly the money will, be forth-coming. It is easy to obtain a loan on an ice-making refrigerator? instead of hogs. . If you should happen to need $3,000.00 for- the purpose of building yourself and family a house to live in, don't ever let anybody know that ycu are actually going to erect a dwelling. Go to your money-lender and tell him that you have just bought the corner lot on Westview and Peachtree and that you need $5,00<? for the purpose of putting thereon a super-service filling station and before you realize that there is any money at all in the world, he will shove out a paper for you to sign with a deposit slip attached. No sir roe, Mr. Farmer. Get wise. Don't offer'land or personal property that belongs to the agricultural end of activity as collateral: be prepared to mortgage a luxury of some kind and you won't be disappointed. The bankers know that we will readily part with our land and mules and cows, but never will we give up our cars and radios and ice-boxes. . Preacher Kills Himself Marion, March 12.?The lie v. Harrell J. Ivowis, 28, rector of the Episcopal church here, shot himself through the head at the church rectory early today. Mrs. Lewis and a small son were in another part of the house when they heard the shot. They rushed to the minister, but he died before medical aid .could be summoned. Those close to Mr. Lewis express the belief that the shooting was accidental and local authorities announced that an inquest would not be necessary. Mr. Lewis came here last fall from Kins ton, N. C. Members of his parish described him as a brilliant young man with a promising career, who during - his few months at Marion, had accomplished much for the church. A severe earthquake shock damaged buildings over the Panama Canal zone Friday night. The canal was not damaged. SUMMONS FOR RELIEF i State of South Carolina County of Kershaw (Court of Common Pleas) I J. H. Ratcliff. Plaintiff. against Mettie Fields and L. K. Fields, Defcnda ats. To tiie Defendants, Mettie Fields and L. K. Fields: 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 said complaint on the subscriber at his office in Camden. South Carolina, within twenty days after the service hereof, exclusive of the day of such aervice; and, if you fail to answer the complaint within the time aforesaid, the plaintiff in this action will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the complaint. L. A. YVITTKOWSKY. Plaintiff's Attorney. Dated March 7th, A. D. 11)30. To the Defendants, Mettie Fields and L. E. Fields: Take notice that the orig-innl summons and complaint herein was filed in the Office of the Clerk of Court for Kershaw County on the 8th day of March, 1030. L. A. WITTKOWSKY, Plaintiff's Attorney. Dated March lDth, 1030. r i NO-MO-KORN FOR CORNS AKD CALLOUSB* Made hi Cemdem Atod t* Ml i i ill i. i 1 llfTh I ~1W " . . Constipation I Troubles | "I havi used BlackDraught as a family fnedttcine for a good many years," says Mrs. Sailie Laughrun, of Huntdale, N. C. "I have found it Excellent remedy for constipation and the | troubles that follow it. I have suffered J frequently from gaa j pains, and when I am 3 g bothered that way I begin at g H once to *take Black-Draught. n 2 Relief follows quickly. 0 "I give Black-Draught to the 2 children when they are con2 atipoted, and it in not long S until they are running around j!1 ngnin." t Thousands of other? have m51 ported good results from the *! use of this purely vegetable c medicine. Ihfttat on the gen* 5 uine Thedford's g CONSTIPATION, INDIOBtTtO^ 8 R w?? r.i'fi) a ton\f should take 8 -J leppeepeeme*******^ r ^ i * Voice visits . I by telephone... I i _ ? 1 JLT may not be V ^ convenient for you to visit Y|flMR out-of-town friends and relafs us often as you desire t it is possible for you to W I eep in touch with them by \|J telephone. A telephone visit y is the next best thing to * ^ seeing them, and it costs so In addition to the low cost, out-of-town telephone service w is quick, accurate and per- ^Hj \ sonal. >j| Why not give your friends V or relatives the pleasure of a fca.. A few minutes visit hy^ teleplione ? Number, please ! SOUTHERN BELL Telephone and Telegraph Company Incorporated ? ' *11 11 >j v* - JfrE&k+mical **?*#* Chevrolet awBOwnoes A NEW SERVICE POLICY The Chevrolet Motor Company and its dfcfclert art ple^sfcd ib announce a new Ittvlct policy?one Of the most liberal ' ever offered can a low-priced automobile. Put into force 4U a Wtitteh tlVlitt to the purchased by the Chevrolet - dealer when the car ii delivefrf ? ft offer* the following provisions t 1 Every Chevrolet bwnet rbcMVfes hi* car froim the dealer in perfect condition ?thoroughly lubricated* properly adjusted, ind rbady to operate efficiently from the first mile of ownership. 2 Every Chevrolet owner is entitled to free inspection and adjustment of his car at the end of the first 500 miles of usage. I Every Chevrolet owner is entitled to free inspection of ly? c*r everv 1000 miles thereafter, so long as the car is in , operation. \ Every Chevrolet owner is entitled to i free replacement of any part which may > prove defective in workmanship or ? material, within the terms of Chevrolet's standard warranty. This includes both parts and labor. i ? I 5 Provision number 4 will be carried > out by any Chevrolet dealer in the i United States. As a result, the Chevrolet " oi - pwner may traVfcl M 4fty of thfc country, with assurance that ihe guarantee on material* and workmanship will remain in force. 'tliis ne^ policy CorittHttite* ptfdof ^ ? ' Chevrolet^ high quality?for stifch liberal provisions cobld only he tfiadfc in Conrthftion with a car built of fine maheHaU lo exacting standards of woficmansnip. Back of this policy, and assuring its Successful operation, is bhC Of thfc most complete and efficient iebvice organizations in the world. iThere are more than 10,000 Authorized Chevrolet Dealer Service Stations iri thfc United States alone. Each emplbys skilled mechanics thoroughly trained At Chevrolet Service Schools. Each has specially designed tools and machinery developed exclusively for Chevrolet service work. And each has on hand, at all times, an adequate stock of genuine Chevrolet replacement parts. Chevrolet's flat-rate charges, including both parts and labor, are the lowest in the industry on many service operations I In considering the putchate of a loiopriced automobile, think what this service means?in terms of lasting satisfaction, as well as in incfeO&d economy. s vnevrew can range m pric? /Vol $495 Wf>, /. a. b. factory, Flint, i CHEVROLET MOTOR COMPANY, DETROIT, MICHIGAN Division of Geatral Motors Corporation A SIX IX TDK PRICE RANGE OF THE FOUR