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THE CAMDEN CHRONICLE PublUbad Every Friday lVi Annum . ? 1",,w 4 H. I>. N1U<n, . ... . ) I.. Mrl>owrl|, . >' !'u l?l M. N. Mi HomoII, . . ) Utw*^ u m c?4 cUn mU miim *l iIm F??<oHU? d f win, S<Mlli C?r?t?M. '<-s^'v-i v* ' UOtf N. ltro?<J pi. - 'I'luim* 219 < 'aiuil? ii( s. < , N"v. 'Jt'2, 1 1> ? 15. Last Mondny's^cdition of tho Ohai leeion p<h?i contained forty-eight pages well filled with rilAdtnK mat ter ami a big display of adK of < Charleston's 1 i v?? merchants. It wuh indeed a credit a bio edition of iIiIh ??xceJIeni mi; si,/U <;irn:it ti n. There ban boon a great dual ol discut-sloh lately (partly caused by <ho articles appearing In the local paper?) in regard to tho Sanitary Hlaugl tor I'oii, And some ol' tho pur i U'h ;]tt''it'i't<'<l Hti'in n, think <h;il we have done them an injustice by publishing the fa?!s about the t on dltioiis existing. This paper stands at nil times for tho interests of the people of O/Mndon and Kershaw <ounty, and when we learned that things were not as they Hboubl be , we did not hesitate to nay ho. Tbo ordinance requires that all meatH sold wltbin the city limits must be butchered at the Central Slaughter I'cn, under the supervision of an experienced inspector, but as an In spector ban not been elected tho work baa been done entirely by no groes, and in a number of cases the meat delivered to tin* dealers baa been moat "un-Hanltary." A represent at ive of Tbo Chron icle visited the slaughter pen this week and found the building an ??loan an could bo desired, and whh aHHured by a member of the Board of Health that an Inspector would bo elected on next Monday night, which will no doubt greatly relieve t he (situation.. Wbllo wo are still opposed to the ordinance, (for the reasons stat ed last week) it' wo- are to have such an ordlnaneo, then let.lt be enforc ed to tbo letter. The Merchant** ANHocintiim and Doudbeuts. Wo feel that too much can not be said about what the Merchants association is doing to put the dead-beats out of business, it keeps a faithful record of the standing of every man in Greonwood, and it evon takes in the woman. If a mem bor of the association wishes to know the financial standing of a fellow all ho has to do is to rail up the Secretary and be has the whole thing at hhi fingers' ends. When a man moves to Greenwood, tbo secretary lowks after bis record in tho place whence he came and he keeps that information on file for the benefit of the members. Now, it strikes us that this is a mighty good thing. It is ealculat - ud to tfave the business men of the city thousands of dollars and we have no doubt but that it has saved them many a dollar. And, the fellow who will not pay; lo' hi in it should he a stimulus, and cause him >'.o conic-, across more promptly. A man's reputation in t lie financial world is worth a good deal. The man who has pluck, eurr gy and honor Is never hard mil. II can get financial help whenever he needs it. Money is on the look out for such men. Hut t lie dead-heats! It is very shy of them. Indeed it takes wings and flies as soon as it sees one of them standing around. Hut we must ask pardon of the readers of- the Daily Journal for chunking up so constantly the peo ple who will not pay. We just can "Ot keep ffom it. We despise the dead-beat, slle Is a leach upon the business inter ests of every community and be should be put where he can not stink the life blood out of home peo ple Greenwood Journal. IY?v*|h*n* Notice ?nd liewanl. | All parties are hereby forbidden i<> tre?pan? on my lands north "of (?urn Swamp for the purpose of cul tinu timber or tvood. ! will pay S2S o<> r<*wKi'tl for evi dence to conrici any one for violat ing thi? notice .1 |<\ Kirkland. Camden. S i No\ 7. 1012. We have a limited supply of hard coal in nut and furnace si/.<* When the pric?? Is hi^h t?'n cheap. com pared (o what it com l 'hone S 1 have opened up on 1..^ raime, a plumbing; s^hop, and will he please to furnish estimates on any work in 'hip Hue. ? Respectfully. I > I .. 1 );i hne> . Order* Taken for Cake. Spct-.Ial order* for J..id j Hoitt more and I.ord Jialtimore Cake can be plated h> telephoning No. 4 0 I'DUIJC >IKV ! I'm uulioiih IguluM .\riHjiNhiiih \r \l)IU' T?mi Kff?H'4|?tt, Tli<? attempt to uHiiiuusiutti?< Col HoomvvK at Milwaukee and tho | bubm ijtM ni r?pprt that i|litor<li nary measures are being taken in consequence to protor.t the life ? of I'retidont Tafl have nerved to draw attention to the fact that In these days uo public man Is ever quite safe from tho attack of anarchists or cranks, Hecognltion of thin fact is, perhaps, Iohm apparent In this country than In Engiuud and on I 111- Continent, says The New Vork Herald. lint even In the United State# it 1m obvious that precaution ary measures against the bullet of the assassin must he tuken. Kn gland has never been ho vlgl lant in the protection of her puU M f> wen * 81 |))0 Ioih benn for tho last year or two. (Juards are con Htantly thrown around all of those who are prominent in the govern ment *wjth HV Without their eon U9M The London Hketch of ro cent dat< ' ommentH on t h?? neces sity for providing armed guards fo the lettdiuK figures of the country and makes the auuertion that the women of KnglAnd are In some meauure responsible for til? an xlety felt for the mifety of dlfttln i gulshed men. Referring to tho guard that in constantly at the el how of Lord Kitchener. It is doubt ?loss quite necessary. "The precaution taken to safe guard Lord Kitchener while on his return to Egypt within the luat few days have been described hh unu sual. Possibly If Inquiry wero made In the right quarter it would be found that not the precautions, bu the dlHcovery of their existence, constituted the 'unusual.' There Is more shepherding and shadowing o our notabilities than is known to most of us. ^ Every one Is aw tire that ineni i hers of the royal family, whether at home or abroad, are guarded night and day, but during the lust year or so an unobtrusive protec tion has been extended both to most members of the governmen and to imperial figures such us Lord Kltcvhener. It Is doubtles quite true that Lord Kitchener kicks against his civil guard ; \ they all do. They have to be guarded in spite of themselves. It Is not for our warrior pro consul to say that he will not be guarded; he Is u great state insti tution so long as ho Continues In harness and must bo protected, like tho Dank o( England and the Crowi Regalia. None of us l'orgets tha the breed xof fanatics Is not ex tinct, There are three misguided sons of Egypt .undergoing Imprison ment- at this moment for complicity In a plot against Lord Kitchener' life; and if was but three years ago that, at a reception at the imperial | Institute, the mad Indian. Dhlngra discharged . his infamous mission a I the cost of life precious to the em j plre. if be frets under benevolent ! survellance. Lord Kitchener is in ' good company. ' "All (ho Cabinet in England is j now guarded night and day as if ; oat h " wore a (V/.ar of Russia. Our j t?ill for secret police work is Itwiv i ier today than it has boon since I l'Vnlanism was rampant. And the ? irony of it is 'that women make necessary much of the expenditure "AVhcn our notabilities visit th j continent they are stiil under tit I closest supervision. Scotland Yar I lias no secrets from 'Paris," and Her ? lin and St. Petersburg exehangt I confidences with ''London and New I York. We all wondered, perhaps ' how it was that when a certain j dangerous anarchist suddenly quit j ted his quarters in America the i other year, his house was raided j and found to be a bomb factory, and | that tho police were ready for him | when he landed in Hamburg with a j plot against the Emperor William | up his sleeve. It was at St. Peters 1 burg that the counter move was set i on foot, and the fact came out quite ' unexpectedly in a totally different 'connection. When the book robbery j at the Astor 'Library, in New York, ' was being investigated, the chief (witness for the prosecution was a j Russian spy. j "it was shown that - the Russian j government maintains secret agents j in all the important libraries in i America to watch the . persons call lug for books on auarchy. Hut the j best of guardians themselves need protection, and the chief detective ? of Warsaw, has told us how it is done. When we had received his ?"VOth Terrorist sentence ? ? f death he confided his secret to a friend. His | projector is a tame anarchist. This youth was implicated in an auar ehist murder. At the 1 1th hour, he w\m.s provisionally pardoned, <>n ihe understanding that his life should be secure so long as his chief lives, but that he dies if the latter comes fo a violent end. ' In England we do n?f r< ? i ?? k our sleuths into regulation blue and big Uoott* to advertise their vocation. The excessively numerous corpa of gardeners meandering about ? U? kiouikIh of l^ord Morley'a house at Wimbledon three years ago. after the murder of Sir Curium Wyllle, wnre In reality emissaries of Bc?t land Yard, Junt as were the caddl ne* with eiiormouubulglug poeketH who iiwed rewtlouHly to accompany Mi llalfour over the links in 1 ip laud during hi* perilous Chief H< 1 retarlat. Kv?ry "caddy" a heavily armed secret police officer "And the right that I<ord Aber deen acted an coachman and the present Lord (lladstone a? footniair to the CI. O. M., on tho latter's driVf from IJawardeu to jlbtlghtmi, they were the private delecthvs, than whom Oludstone would havo no other. though a straight ''tip hud gone down from the Home Of fice t list t an attempt wa? to be >n:nlr t-o jihhumhIii ti te him in connection with the death of O'Donnell, exe cuted that day for the murder of Carey, the Informer. . "Defiance of precautioiiH Iium more jLhan once produced safety, Lord Morley dodged hlu guards ?" Ireland, and t bus escaped snares. Ho did W. K. FVirester, who once, giving the detective tho slip, took the only route for which hie wotild he assess! ns wore not prepared. And Oladstone, walkinK home by an unuHual way from Carlton Bonne Terrace, mlBHcd Townsend, when the latter lay waiting ready to fire the pistol at him, found In his pos BCHHion by the officer who wuk out to see the HtatcHiuan to IiIh home by the accuBtomed path." ;>/? Why In It? "The ad m^n wonders why it in that a man will "stand for" errors In the work of a Hlgn painter that would drive him forever away from a printer. Painters* "sign writers' make all kinds of errors, errors of punctuation and Kpelllng and ab breviation and style and they "go." The printer or ad. compositor who lets them go out of his shop gets the Job fired back at him and .1 "cussing" to boot. "For instance: There's- a sign in a prominent place in this city in which the word "restaurant" is spelled "restaraunt," but it stands because a painter did it. Now If a printer had printed that firm some letter heads or the compositor had set his ad. that way ? ! "This isn't a: kick; It's just a Von der." ? Anderson Mail. / "THK CiHKAT 1UVKK" Mississippi is . the Most Itomarkable .Stream in the World. ? The river lying wholly within ihe temperate zone is in this respect more fortunately situated than the morn fertile valleyed Amazon, since the climate here, varied and some times inhospitable as it in, offers conditions of Unman development there denied. f The main stream is 2,51)0 miles in length; that is, a I 'out 10 times that of the Seine, says So.ribner's Magazine. As Mark Twain has said it is "the crookedest river" in the world, traveling 1,3.00 miles to cover the same ground that a crow would fly over in 675. For several hun dred miles it is a mile in width. Back in 1882 it was 70 miles Wide when the flood was highest. The volume of water discharged by it into the sea is second only 4to the Amazon and is greater that that of all Kuropean rivers combined -(omitting the Volga). The amount is estimated at 13ft- cubic miles nn nually; that is, it would fill annu ally a tank 130 miles long, 130 miles wide and 130 miles high.! With its tributaries it provides, somewhat more than 16,000 miles' of navigable water, more than any other system on the globe except! the Amazon ? and more than enough i to reach from Lake Superior to; Paris by way of Kamchatka and ? Alaska ? about three-fourths of the' way around the globe. The sedi-| ment deposited Is 400,000,000 tons,; enough to require daily for its re-' moval 500 trains of 50 cars, each carrying 50 tons, and to make oach year two square miles of new earth over a hundred feet deep. The area which it drains is rough ; ly a million and a quarter square miles, or two-fifths of the United! States. That Ms, Germany, Austria-! Hungary, France and Italy could be set down within this area and there would still be some room to spare. It has the strength, for the most part |> ii t to no use whatever, of i?0, 000,000 horses. The difference between high water and low water is In some places 50 feet, which gives some impressions of the range of its moo'diness. Trespass Notice. All persons are forbidden to hunt squirrels or birds or to deface tim ber by cutting or in any other way on any of my Innds or any lands in my possession. H (\ Hall, Tlethune, S Nov. 15. 3t". OliJJJKIi PQK HPUatAJU HKMHION tXHJBT OF < X>MMON I'l.K.lH. The State of South Carolina, lit Th* Supremo Court. Whereas the members of the ('am ill it li. u have prem-nti-d 4; petition requesting me to order a special (< I III ul III. < QUli of Coiiiimou I'll an for the County of Kershaw, ^IS? morning on Monday I ho eighteenth day of November, next, and contin uing tor t wp week* If Ho much ? line he necessit ry: And, whereas,' it appears that there should he such special term "of court: f^ow, therefore, 1, Kugeiie U. (Jury, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of South Carolina do order dial nald C#url ho held Kugeuc IJ <iary, Sept 27 , \f J0 < hief Justice. KHTATK HA lilC State of South Carolina, County of Kershaw. Under and hy virture of an order made hy W. 1, McDowell, Judge of Probate for the County of Kershaw, State aforesaid, hearing date Octo ber 28, Hi 1 2, I will sell at public auction on Wednesday, the 20th day of November, 1912, In the town or Kershaw, < omtnc m;lng at 10 o' clock a. in., the following personal property belonging to the estate of the late h, C. Hough, to-wit: 10 shares Kershaw Oil Mit. stock, 10 shares capital stock Uanlc of Kershaw, 25 shares stock build ing and Loan Association of* Ker shaw, all Rent cotton on hand, all notes and mortgages held an collat eral on personal property, 1 Bid ell engine and boiler, i sawf mill and fixtures, 1 70-saw gin, feeder and condenser, press, boiler and engine, 7 horses and mules, 3 wagons, 2 log carts and a lot of farming imple ments. Terms of sale, cash. ? - Joe Hough, Oct. 28, 1912. Administrator. FINAL UISGHAlltiE. 4 Notice is hereby given that one month from this date November 30th, 1912, 1 will make tQ the i'ro ; bate Judge of Kershaw C'ounty my | final return as administratrix of the J Estate of M. B. ltabon, deceased, and apply thereto for letters dismis ' sory of the same, j Florence Itabon, ? Oct. 30, 1912. Administratrix TAX NOXICJK. I Office of Treasurer Kershaw Co,, i Camden, S. C., Sept. 26, 1912. Notice, is hereby given that the I books will be open for collecting : State, County and School Taxes from October 15th, 1912, to March j 1st., 1913. A penalty of 1 per cent i will be added to all taxes unpaid [January 1st, 1913, 2 per cent. Feb j uary 1st, 1913, and 7 per cent j March 1st, 1?13. The rate per centum for Kershaw j county is ay follows: Mills. I State taxes 5% 1 County taxes 4 Vi ; Special tajes .... ...... . . 2 *4 ; lioad taxes .... . . ... %Vt j School taxes . ? 3 ? Total .... 17 3;' The following school districts 1 have special leviesi Special school tux 1M*?. No. 1 -4% | Special school tax Dist. No. 2 1 yA I Special school tax' I)ist, No. 4 ;{ ! Special school tax Dist. No. 0 4 Special school tax Dist. No. 7 2 Special school tax Dist. No. 8 2 Special school tax Dist. No. 10 5 Special school tax Dist. No. 11 5 Special school tax Dist. No. 12 4 Special school tax Dist. No. 13 4 Special school tax Dist. No. 15 1 Special school tax Dist. No. 17 '?i Special school tax Dist. No. 18 2 Special school tax Dist. No. IS* 2 Special school tax Dist. No. 21 2 Special school tax Dist. No. 2 2 4 Special school tax Dist. No. 24. 3 Special school tax Dist. No. S Special school tax Diat. No. 26 2 Special school tax Diat. Jfo. 27 ? Special school tax Diat. No. 28 2 Special school tax Diat. No. 40 8 Special school tax Diat. No. 46 8 Special school tax Dist. No. 47 4 The poll tax is $1. All able-bodied male person* frou the age of twenty-one (21) to sixty (60) years, both incluaira, ex,cep residents of the incorporated towna of the county ahall pay two dollars ( $ 2 ) as a road tax, except minist ers of the gospel aotually in charge of a congregation, teachers employe in public ichoolB. school trustees and persons permanently disablei in the military service of thlB State 1 and persons who served in the late I war between the States, and all per ,80m actually employed in the quar antine service of this State, and~al students who may be attending any school or college at the timo when the road tax shall bccomo due. Per sons claiming disabilities must pre ! sent certificates from two reputabl physicians of this county. AH information as to taxes wil ? be furnished upon application. D. M. 14 oO A SKIDD, County Treaiurer I ?AM WI>?? y"" <?< ?'<""' "?"n,uch *,,u N*""'! lu,v?. .....1 IN.I*' '? rol,ow U,,lc'"i **" """" * ? . ill. ill dm''. The W"|?< ' '?>"?? ?ly?lH'PHlu conn. (lorn I*, Im.n|t HIOOHWU, T?k.- WUMXHtot ',?? Unit bJ?M? |j ,.V. , ?vo,k,..l ?tom?cl. U..<l the I"?""- >"?? l*w ? UikH) " 11 '? lo" ? ? ? , ' I \\Y never fill preHcrlpllont* with ilttpDr* or <>Ul druRs. Mak.- Oi l' "'UK SI"" YOUR l?UK SU>r?. Sawyer Drug Company! Porter - Snowden Co, Cotton Factors and Commission Merchants. 90 E. Bay St., Charleston, S. C. jl I II I ? I ' | !?' ? ?>;? All Cotton Handled on Commission - "... X ' ? ?' r f EXTRA STAPLE COTTON A Specialty V ? . . ? ' 4 ? s - Would be pleased to receive consignment* iron you which will receive our very Best Attention. Tilings niton returned* but never ?' borrowed"* Thanks! THANKS! The specially appointed for Universal Thankegfrll^ not far distant and we aw I ing special arrangements to] vide our patrons with all Ko<*rl things in our line, will help make the Tbi iug dinner a big sue will than^ you for your giving orders! Campbell Brot IT'S GOOD TO j BE WA especially when the ti>er? . I ter is hovering around the mark. Tjhnt 1b the tin?: you want coal, and plenty < Send us your order for of coal you want, and it ^ delivered promptly, aad will get?^ull value for your cy. That is our RuarflI,t*J fit YOUR WANf * J" ??S Any Kind Any Leaftkjl L COAL WOOD WOODf Am now sajw^ oa-_Caal^_Wood and Coke, by thejj piv raT&W ,n w59wS?r?p: A eat Johnson Grass Hay baled for *?le. Pl>P??s| order to 3 S. M. MATHIS I Office l'hone 58. ? .thnnm Residence 1'lioue^aH