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Ko'r Hal?* or H? nt K room Iiouhc ort Lyttletou vlreel < for' occupied by T. Dultoae) lot 1 00*860. H?rn and b?u b|en oh proinUi'H, eawy turniH; prlco, on application. Kor Halo One lot on ('hoMtnui (bclwt^u Iiouho No mid Dr. tt. < ' Zein p'i reiddenro.) One l<ii oil Fair Htreot, 100*250, a bargain for quirk Halo. Ill iidv? of land Oil Adam* Mill i ..... 1 , mi). I.i.i <.i < 'u II TWO llfifM I. n il! Open ""d und?-r . all Ivat Ion, l?alan<? of ii a< t In yrood <4ixl pfA> ? i ???*>?? i 006 4 loom $WQ))lO|, h.nn and wt&bleti, nlno cotton I|oum?. All now bulldlnga. For quick Hale w? offer thin at a bargain, 7f? acr<*H of land niUon HoutbeaHt of Camden on Cam den-Darlington public road; 25 acron open and under cultiva tlonn; 20 acre* of long and Hhori loaf timber, balanco in wood land; out* 3 room dwelling, Imrn and Htabl??; good running ? water through l'l?" Tlil.< In ii K<>?'d HMiall farm ftttfj ran !??? bought for 1 1 600, 1 x f? fjicreH of land 7 ihlleH from Camden on Darllngton ('amdeii road, 00 aere? open and under cultivation, balanco in wood with Homu pine timber. 12 ftcron In pabturo, under wlro. Oijc four room dwelling, barn and Htablen, hIho Hinall cotton IIOUMO, Price $8.00 per acre, rarin of J. H. and S. II. Truendale, 11 miles north of <'aiml?-n, S Thin tia.t <ontain.s 1 :: 1 a<rin; 75 acren open land, mostly level; 1 4-room dwelling, 2 tenant Iiouhoh, 2 good HprlngK of water. REAL ESTATE SELL Do You Want to \ loan borrow I May Help You. LAURENS T. MILLS, CAMDEN, S. C. To My Friends: I wish to announce that 1 have* enlarged my stables on Kut lodge street, by having quite an extension and addition for the accommodation of my stock of buggies and wagons. I Want Your Business in this line as well as in the stock line. 1 am handling a number of well known f., Buggies and Wagons I call your attention to the "Virginia" and "Roland" Bug gies which 1 handle. Also the famous "Studebnkcr" and "Louisburg" Wagons. These aro the best grades on the market . ( An Up-to-Date Stock of Harness When in the market for a good bu^K.v, a good wagon, or for horses and mules bo sure and see me. . I am cater ing to the needs of the public, and want you for a custo mer. Call and see me. W. C. MOORE GEN. CHANT'S SON i IS FOR WILSON In Open Lettpr He Says Issues This Year Are Similar to Those of 1860. PRINCIPLES FATHER UPHELD Same Problem Today, Wrltee Jesse R j Grant, In Choosing Between People j ?nd the Interests. , ? Jesse It. Grant, eon of General Uly? ; see 8. Urant, do'mmauder In cf?le( of i the Union army In the Civil war and j Republican president of tha United j Wales from 1S69 to 1H77, links the generation of war veteran** and the young voters of today In the follow^ ing appeal, made public by him at his home in New York; To the Voter. Especially the N?w Voter' We are facing the 6th of November Issues of momentoue Importance to the future of the United Htatee. Khali the old order of things continue? Shall our economic life be determined? shall oui- government continue to be doiui nated by the thoughts, the deslret* unci the iutereeta of those who have boon the principal beneficiaries of that gov ernment's patronage or shall the pow er of government be handed back to the whole people to be administered (or their common good? It wua a similar issue fifty-two years ago. when thore arose from out of Illi nois a new leader, who held human rights to be greater than property rights, whose thoughts were not the old thoughts, whose vision of Justice had not been clouded by association with the ruling Interests. We are at the threshold of a new period of transition. Shall the door be blocked by mdn who cannot aee ahead? Shall we? elect to follow men who, while clothed with offlelal power, nur tured privilege and fostered monopoly and who now propose nothing better than to legalize and regulate monopo ly and make ub live under it the rest of our lives? The New Leader. Or shall we call to leadership a new man from the outside, from the ranks of the people, In sympathy with their lives and their Ideals, holding their viewpoint, consecrated to their serv ice? Such a man Is Woodrow Wilson, As a son of the soldier who fought to uphold the principles for which Abraham Lincoln stood and as a son of a Republican president, I can see | only one duty for myself? to give heartily my influence and my vote for principle and not for the name of a party long since divorced from Its sympathy for the common man. Verily, I believe that the principles for which Woodrow Wilson is fighting are the principles for which my father fought, and that he Jone among the presidential candidates measures up to the standards of courage, co r?H: ence and capacity of the leader whose hand my father helped to uphold. Old voters, as well as new, I beg of you not to be deceived by names and prejudices. Open your minds to the truth and vote in itB light. JESSE R. GRANT. New York, Oct. 19. AMERICANS TAXED FOR ENGLISH PROFIT Enormous Dividends of Thread Trust Go Abroad. Cotton thread payB an import duty equivalent to 47 per cent. This tariff was levied originally to build up an "infant industry" in America and pro tect American capital. It happens, tiowever, that practically all the capi tal in the thread industry in the Uni ted States is foreign capital, and that the dividends of the thread trust are nearly all sent abroad. The American Thread company, in corporated in New Jersey in 1898, has $16,21*0,475 of capital, and its net prof its in 1910 were $2,441,844. Lyman R. Hopkins, president, testifying in 1901 before the United States indus trial commission, Bald that the money to buy up the fourteen concerns in cluded In the New Jersey consolida tion was furnished by the English Sewing Cotton company. The thread trust's principal competitor in this country is the J. & P. Coates concern, which maintains its English organiza tion and English factories to manufac ture thread for the world, and its American factories to manufacture thread for Americans in order to reap the extra profits from manufacturing within the American tariff wall. As far back as l9(?l the thread trust, according to its president, was em-0 ploying "one-quarter to one-third" of fofelgn labor. Recent industrial in vestigations have disclosed that the proportion in New England textile industries is now nearer four foreign ers to one American - 4 Here we have "protection" for for eign capital and for foreign labor at the expense of every sewing woman, overy householder, every man. wom an and child In ths United States. IRVING FISHER FOR WILSON - ? ? Noted Yale Economist Appeals to Fellow Progressives With Clear Logic. SAYS TARIFF IS THE ISSUE 4 Contrast* Three Party Program* and Declares Democratic Attitude the Only Progreeelve One. By PROF. IRVING FISHER. (Not*.? Dr. Ktskwr 1* the noted author ur on economic* of Yel* uulvorwlty. Ilr we* a im-mber of t'reiddent Hooufvelt'* aationul conservation commission. Kd. J I write not a* a Democrat but as an independent Progressive and In the hop* that my letter may help otljpr Progressives who are watering to make up their winds to vote for Wty wra. Bo far ap I can sec the only hope of progressive legislation Met* in the election of Wilson My reasons, In brief, follow: 1 DMADIXKJK IN CONQIIKBB ? If it were possible to elect Mr. Taft there would merely be repeated the same deadlock with coogress and fall are to secure progressive legislation which has been experienced in his first term. If It wfere possible to elect Mr. Roosevelt even leas could be accom plished, for the reason that he would not have a sympathetic congress. I. DEADLOCKED ELECTION ? To ha Bt 111 mora practical, we should con*' sl4?r that the result of us Independ ents voting for Taft or Roosevelt in stead of for Wilson may be to pre vent any one of the three from being elected. 8. THE TARIFF.? If, on the other hand, we Independent Progress! veB unite for the most part in voting for Wilson he can be elected, and, if elect ed, can accomplish substantial legisla tion, because with him will be elected a sufficient number of Democrats to give a majority in both houses. To this my Bull Moose friends reply that not all Democrats are progressives and will not carry out a progressive platform. This argument overlooks the fact that the paramount issue of this cam paign Is the tariff and that progres sive tariff reform means progressive tariff reduction. It is just because the Democrats have been a party of negation, so far as the tariff is con cerned, that they, If anybody, can be trusted to reform It downward. Mr. Roosevelt would be equally un able and far more unwilling than Mr. Taft to reduco the tariff. In his seven years in office he left the tariff un touched. and now he speaks primarily as a pr9tectionlst and not as a tariff reformer. He yields grudgingly to the demand for tariff reduction, but gives no clear argument for it. Instead, ho repeats the old fallacious arguments to make our poor workmen believe that a high tariff raises wages. Governor Wilson and his party; on the other hand, are ardent tariff ro formers. In this respect the Demo cratic platform is th& ollly progressive platform of the three. Why should we blind ourselves by the Introduction of numerous other issues which could not be settled in the present campaign when wo have before us the greatest Isbuo of all, the tarifT, which CAN be settled? 4. ISSUES ECONOMIC? Wilsons grasp of the problems erf the hour far surpasses that of Roosevelt or Taft. Mr. Roosevelt has frequently admit ted that economic problems such as the tariff, the cost of living, the cur rency and the economic problems con nected with trusts not only have no attraction for him, but have never been understood by him. 5. THE PEOPLES INTERESTS.? Wilson Is more truly democratic than Roosevelt and more untrammeled in his devotion to the Interests of the , people as a whole. . . . Those who accuse Wilson of recently adopting new democratic doctrines because their popularity would help him por^ sonally should learn that, on the con trary, he adopted thom (in his fight to democratize Princeton university) when their unpopularity in the circles la which his activities then lay nearly threatened to destroy his influence and career. 6. PURE FOODS. ? Governor Wil son and the Democratic party have ? shown a greater interest than either Taft. or Roosevelt In the protection of the consumer against food adul teration and other Injuries to the pub lic health. Dr. Wiley, although pre viously a Republican, now has decid ed not only to vote for Wilson, but to help him actively in the campaign. 7. THIRD TERM.? To elect ? Mr. Roosevelt would deal a fatal blow to the useful tradition against a third term. . Nor do I think It alto gether Improbable that if Mr. Roose velt wore again elected president bte would, whatever his present Inten tions. gradually assume the role of benevolent despot. His natural tem perament 1b that of a dictator. I write as one who still holds per sonal respect both for Colonel Roose velt and President Taft and In no spirit of personal hostility to either. I believe that all three candidates In tend to do right "as God gives them to see the right," but I think neither Taft nor Roosevelt sees the right as clearly as Woodrow Wilson. ruch-Nettles Co Ladies Coats and Suits * > ' - -* v' v f. :'*? v ' v.. Correct Fashions Showing Unusual Savings Coats made of the finest tweeds, double-faced cloth, chevoit and fine black broadcloth, the smart three quarters or 45 inch Coat, as well as the ever practical and stylish full-length garment, is shown in a variety of styles and materials. Suits We are PrePared with so extensive a * variety and such excellent values, that the task of se lecting them is made easy and pleasant. <Jf Never be fore have the fit and finely tailored finish of Women's Suits received such careful and expert attention. An unrivaled assemblage of handsome tailored suits in the newest cuts, including cutaway coats. semi-Noir* folk styles to be worn with or without belt, the ever ' . t fv'r popular plainly tailored suit and many modifications of it, with braid bindings, vel vet collars, belted backs, * ? ? . ' ?'*' ? 'rf ? ? ' fancy buttons and hand some frogs. Materials are Men's Wear Serge, Broad cloth, Zibelines, Mannish mixtures, Tweeds and En glish Novelty Clothes. CV ? - * . J ..? . - ....... - Each day we are receiv ing new Coats and Coat Suits. We are pleased -to show you the line at any time. ..... ; ., ' ?