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THE CAMDEN CHRONICLE PubllduKi E v*ry FruUy Per Annum t . fl.OO II. p. NII. H, f JU, A. MWDowell, ? . > Publlhliera. H. N. McDowell, . ) E?Uf*4 m inm4 cUm m|I i?H?f ?< tU il l loo N. Broad Hi. - 'Phono aw < 'lUIUitfP, S. -Nov. Hit, 101 to ODU \i>vi<;htihi;i(k Tfc? < MirlHhiiHK I <mi<. of Tho cJbronlcio win be pubiiuhed no*t Friday, December 1 8U). Our adver tiser# aro re(|U6(itv(|'niQ hgvo their ?0|?y In not later than Tuesday of ? **X< w?tok. This issue of J ho Chron icle will be noi.it to inany citizens throughout the ?county containing 'hi hlg double page ud inniouncliig our circulation contest and chrlst mas advertisers will roup tlx* bene* fit from them- extra papers. Call uh ov0* i ho phono and our ud vert in* Ing man will come to boo you. JOdltor Nells CbritfUmsoh, rttuto Senator from Uoaufdrt county, wan married la Jlpston Tuesday lifter noon to MIhs Katherlne Wales 8?rat ton, of (hat city. The Spartanburg police raided ,<? nuin her of social clubs a few days ago and captured a quantity of hoor. The Ilorald Is authority for tho statement that tho police guarded tho treasure all nigbt, That's nil very well hut what wo want tp Know Is who gUftVded tho police? '?affney liodgeiv The discharge of a flagman be cause ho sent In a bill to tho (leor ;',la railroad for Go cents for two lunches, instead Of 25 rents for one, was one of the two incidents that recently caused <ho employes of the nyBtein to strike and cost tho Stato, tho railroad and -it ho employes combined a total of $350,-. ?on, accord 1 lip tc? testimony In the arbitration hearing. Information comes from Wash ington that the new nlckle, which Ik to supplant the five-cent colli now In use, will he put In circula tion within a Hhort time. An In dian head will adorn tho face of tlic new nlcklo, while on tho rover bo Hide will appear the figure of a buffalo. The design is intended to honor- the disappearing Indian and buffalo, linked together in Ameri can history. Senator 'rillmiin was a yisjtor to Charleston last week and while there stated to ;i newspaper repor ter that the prospects for Charles ton a?wl for the Charleston navy yard were very bright indepd, and ' that he intended doing everything in his power to improve the yard. He has lately been trying to get an appropriation for building a wall on . ? 11 1<> tlie Cooper river a( the yard entrance for protect ion of. small torpedo- craft, during stormy weather when h heavy sea is running. ? THK TOW N SIM KIT A (Jooil Tiling in 10 very Way and M rays, Too. One heai'H much nowadays about town booKting" and "boosting cam paigns." It is a vcrj good talk and should l?e repeated, over and over again. if we roof for new en terprises as the boys . root for an athletic team, nothing could stop 'lie growth of the community. Even for selfish reasons that spir it of loyalty pays. . Kvery new' enter prise that can be built up in Haver hill, every public improvement, every store, factory and farm, ev ery public service corporation, all professional service, all faithful la bor, i he entertainments that are uiven, the churches that are support ed, and the societies thai are con ducted, loyalty to the products that are manufactured in Harverhill ill help to make this ? community more attractive and liveable. They' attract new residents and they; hiiKl oM ones to our homes. Audi there will be. more than ever to) brag about and to enjoy when we ije.t the parks and boulevards. The tie between !he people living in town on u lit to h?> one of loyal -friendship. In towns where there is a fraternal spirit between the people, there grows up a feeling of affection for that community. If you move away from such a ' own you never forget the cordial wel come you meet there, and >ou never cease to speak a ?o<-d word for it All of which makes life pleasantor. I and, from the sordid viewpoint, i! ' good advertising bath for 'he community and the individual Haverhill, Mass., Gazette. Trespass Notice. All persons are forbidden to huu i aquirrels or birds or to deface tim her by cuttfcig or in any other wa> on any of my lands or any lands In my possession. H. Hall, Rethune S ( ' , No*. . 1 . :tt. ; THK IIUH1NKH8 HITUATION ImluntrW uud Trade Activity Hhowat No Mich of lteco*Mio?. j industrial and trade activity t hIiowh no r?*ce**ion. In iuidw??k the Iron Ago stated that "steel, con ditions thus fa r show no change w liloli ran bo cOMldftTOd due to plans announced fv early legisla tion on duties, The iron and *teel companion will undoubetedly begin 1913 with the great eft tonnage** on their book* ever known at the be Klnoing itt a year. Tf?e loading In terest now bus more than SJ,0Ov,OOO ton* of rail* booked for 1918 de livery and the present month In ex pec ted to show an increase in the trust's united order*. The export 1 1. 1. 1, in iron ^nd steel Ih noicwm thy. Tlio Dalkan war has caused no eeaaation of it, and, lu fact, peace would brjng probably Inereas ed foreign trado inasmuch as there w||| |>o now construction work to repair the dost motive effect of the campaign. While our export* of eopper are still comparatively Hinall, Owing to the narrow Kuropean do* mand, donrie*ttc QdRiuinptlQo remain* close to the record-breaking level. Report* from textile manufactur ing copiers and the wholesale trade an- heing < lo.scly wai ( Ik (I to <>?? serve the effects of tho annuonce ment of early tariff revision. Ac tual facta In the proHont ?ltuatlon Indicate no shrinkage of business tia yet. Tho cotton goods market seems Impervious to the depressing Influences of a threatened reduction. Tho i?i 11 Ih are well Bold ahead and prices remain firm, In Home <juar? tors, the mil 1 h report an Increase In the demand for standard goodb during th/? past fortnight. Fine goods mills in Fall Kiver report rather poor average results In net earnings for their last fiscal year, owing to changes in women's styles, the 54-hour hiw and increase* In wagon, but the COttoh manufactur ing industry on the - whole seems at present in a flouriBhing condi tion. Judging by the decline in the preferred eh ate* of the Afueri* can VVoolon Company, tho greatest apprehension concerning the future exlBtB in the woolen , Industry. While orders may become more con spicuously of the hand-to-mouth sort this winter, both for woolen goods and for raw wool, in view of im pending changes in duties, the pre*-.! ent activity of the Industry in tui tion iable. The woolen yarn trade is strong and active. General trade lias just now unseasonable warm weather feo contend with, but It Is better than a year agfO in all soc tioiiK, particularly in the West and South. Tho unseasonable tempera tures, however, are favorable to ag - riculture, especially in the winter wheat section, while household coal consumers In the Northeast are being- benefitted, in view of the short supply and high prices tor an thracite. Railroad earnings show a still further increase in transportation business. Returns o* all United States roads for the first two weeks in November show in gross an in crease of t).f> per cent compared with last year, and the gain is well distributed over the country. For the second week of November alone 37 roads report increase of 11 per cent o^er last year. Net earn ings, of couVse; are a different mat ter. The award of the arbitration bOard ia the case of the locomotive engineers east of Chicago, is expect ed today and an increase in wages of from ft to 10 per cent is gener ally anticipated. An equivalent in crease will undoubetedly have to be given later on to other classes of railroad trainmen. This means aiv, increase- in operation expenses find the corresponding reduction of net earnings. Batik clearings last week were over 1 li per cent more than a year :igo, notwithstanding the extreme dullness in stock specu lation. Springfield .Republican. Pitt rick Patriotic*!. Albert T. Patrick, who is serving ;i life sentence in Sing Sin? prison i"<m* I lie nuii'dfi' of William Marsh lvii?', an aged millionaire in New York on September 2 3, 1900, was pardoned last Wednesday night by [ Governor I)ix. Patrick, who was saved from t he electric, chair by the j late Governor Biggins in December, HM'Mi, has made a remarkable fight | for freedom. A lawyer by profes sion, he protested when Governor Higj* ns commuted the death .sen tence to life imprisonment , declflr | ing that the governor had no legal | right, to cancel the original sentence j and impose a punishment of life i imprisonment. "There has always ! I been an air of mystery in (his im portant case," Governor Dix said. "Quoting jjupjn the minority opin ion of the' court of appeals,. 'The atmosphere that surrounded the de fendant showed that a fair and im partial trial was scarcely possible." I trust that Mr. Patrick will devote his er. ^''uics to a complete vindica tion <if . his declared innocence. Hurinn the p.mt year I have given much consideration :o this'case and am convinced that tli* defendant I? entitled to have full pardon." 1* <> II K X T. 10 i glity acres of lan on Stockton IMandtation. known as Summer House place; good dwelling, .water, out buildings, etc. Apply to C L. Winkler, Camden. S. ('. Send us that next order for fob print int;. I?r. Alfrttl A. l*??t (<>l*soii, and Dr. K. II. lvorrisoji DKXTISTS Succok^otk U> l)r, I.#. \V. Alston Offices in tlu> Untitling IMiono 1H"? <X>TTOK PICKKH IH HUC(?KHH. I Ikc^nt itomoiittUwtloii by Mjublne Hhuwti (iood 1(cmi1U, { The fiuo I'riee Campbell, oottou ? plcklu" machine which Thoodore II. I'rlco, of New York huw been ! demonstrating la Hobeson and Klch mpTJfl ' ountles Iiuh proven a buccohs. j 11 seenm Ihttt orders have been giv j on for one hundred of these ma- ; irlilueu. An accouut went out from . Maxton says: During the demons! ration )??'??? Mr, Trice counted out 25 qotton rows, which represented one acre j on Mr. A,. 0. MeKlunon's farm. Hfi then r*n over ?lx rows twice. The second picking yielding only 10 pound* of need cotton to the *ix row#. This left Home still on tllfl stalks and on tho ground, but the quantity was very Inappreciable. To hIiow what wuh ntlll left, he had a ; negro man and h iu children to go over one of the rows,. tyioy picking all coUffp frotfi the ground and elsewhere, taking a great deal more can* than hand pickers ever do, and Eft a result only four pounds need cotton wa? gathered from thin and a Utile of this taken from ' ho , ground had fallen from stalks on the adjoining row? on either Hide, i The field from ^yitlcb 'his wuh picked was good average gotten j and will make a hale to the acre, hence the flight per ee nt of the cotton wasted Is seen to be incoU* j slderable. These careful tests wore made to moet tho criticism that I In machine wasted a great deal of cot - ? ton and left. some on the stalk, critics were convinced that the ma chine was a succobs after, seeing the tests made. As yet the machines are, in price, , out of reach of tho small farmer;., ?though the farmer on a large scale can easily make it pay for Itsell in a short time, as It costs only I a f cents a hundred to* pick with it.j whereas, yon now pay from aO cents to $1 a hundred, and a great many times are unable to get ii picked nt all, thus losing it entire iy. The machine is a mammoth one weighing more than two tons and has a horse power from 35 to 38. With all its size and weight it is thoroughly adapted to working in almost any kind of soil, but, of course, works better in the more level sections than where it is ex tremely hilly. The price of $5,000 i is considered reasonable when its accomplishments are. considered, although perhaps when they come into iliore general use they can and will bo materially reduced.-? Row land, (N. Sun. INDIAN CHOKSVS Worth $U,000,000 Started in With a Capital <?t* S200. The richest American "Indian in t ho world has been- discovered. lie is Lon C. Hill, 53 years old, a "full1' hlood" Choctaw, and his claim to being. the Rockefeller of red men is based upon his possessions val ued at $G, 000, 000. Hill lives in Harllngton, Texas, says The Chicago Tribune. In fact, he ow'ns the town, but it is only a mite in the midst of his vast estate, which extends to Brownsville, 25 miles away. He lias 1 1 motor cars i to make the run from his residence in llarlington to his business office in Brownsville. | This Indian Croesus is a living [testimonial that members of his | race need not be wards of Uncle I Sam unless they so choose. He started his empire on a capital of ' $200, and has never received any j thing from the government., hike so many of his "white brother" captains of industry, lie is a self made man in every sense of the 1 word. Not only is he a shrewd | business man, but a clever lawyer as well, practicing his profession in addition to overseeing his big ranch. Hill was one of the chief factors in blazing the trail for civilization through the Ulo Grand Valley, but of his early experiences he refuses to talk, contenting himself with shrugging his broad shoulders, about which his long black hair falls In a most picturesque manner. "It's [all past now," he will s ay. "and what's the use of talking about lt?M There is one thing, however, about which he will never hesitate to talk, and that is the price of sugar. As a sugar grower and re finer thai is, of much :nore interest , to him that the l'uct that he has risen so far above the members of j his own race, and even above the i great majority of the "conquering j white men." -Popular Couple Marriott. A very interesting marriage of : popular young couple took place At ! the Probate office on Monday morn j ing last, the ceremony being per-a ! formed by Probate Judge McDowell. | The contracting parties were Mr. ? Hoy Stanley, a most excellent, young ;iu. and Miss Katie Hayes, a very attractive and interesting young lady both of near Blimey. Mr. Stan ley is to be congratulated , .upon winning so fair and pretty a bride i and the bride is to be congratulated upon the good judgment she dis played jn her selorttnn of a" husband. The Chronicle wishes them a long nnd happy life. CITATION. State of South Carolina, uuty of K?r#l)uw, H> \V. J 4. McDowell, Esquire, J'i<? bate Jud^. WIIKUKAS, J. M So v, <1 1 , pfttfl Miii to MP tO grunt him Jitters of Administration of the Estate of and effects of John W, Seegers. These are therefore to oite and admonish all and singular tb* IfiA* dred and f-redltors of the said John \V Soo?ers, deceased, that they t)^ and appear before me, In the Court of Probate, to be hold at Camden, H. C., on December II, nex after publication thereof, at eleven o'clock In the forenoon, to show cause, If any they have, why the said Administration should not he granted. Clven under my hand, thin 20th day of November, A. 1)., 1912. \V. U M( DOWIOLU Judge of Probate for Kershaw (Jo. Published on :.".Uh day of Nov., and <5th day of December, If) 12, In The 0am den Chronicle. CITATION. State of South Carolina, < 'mini \ of Kershaw. By W. I,. McDowell, Esquire, Pro Judge. WJJEKEAJii Samuel Hoykln made suit to mo to grant him Letters of Administration, of the Estate of and effects of Harwell 13, ? Boykln, , Those are theroforo to cite and admonish all and singular the kin dred aujd creditors of the Baid Pur wel| R, Boykln, deceased, that they bo and appear before mo, in the Court of Probate to be held at Cam den, S. C., on December 10th, next after publication thereof, ai eleven o'clpck in the forenoon, to nhow cauBe, if any they have, why the said Administration should ?Qt be granted. (liven under my hand, this 26th day of November, A, I)., 1912. w. Mcdowell,, Judge of Probate for Kershaw Co. Published In the Camden Chron icle on the 29th of Nov., and -Oth day of December, 1912. TAX NOTICE. Office of Treasurer Kershaw Co., Camden, S, ('., Sept. 20, 1912. Notice Is hereby given that the books will be open for collecting State, County and School Taxes from October 15th, 1912, to March 1st., 1913. A penalty of I per cent will be added to all taxes unpaid January ltd, 1913, 2 per cent. Feb uary 1st, 1913, and 7 per cent March 1st, 1913. The rate per centum for Kershaw* eouift-y i? as follows: Mills. State taxes . ? . . .... .... 5% County (axes . . . 4 *4 Special taxes 2 Vi ltoad taxes . . . . . . 2 \\ School taxes .... . 3 Total 17%'| The following school districts! have special levies: .Special school lax Dist. No. 1 4% Special school tax Dist. No. 2 1 y2 Special' school tax Dist, No. 4 3 . Special school tax Dist. No. ti 4 Special school tax Dist. No. 7 2 Special school tax Dist. No. 8. 2 Special school tax Dist. Nt>. 1 0 f> Special school tax Dist. No. 11 5 Special school tax Dist. No. 12 4 Specihl school tax Dist. No. 13 4 Special school tax Dist. No. 1 5 * 3 Special scliooi tax Dist. No. 17 3 Special school tax Djst, No. 1 8 3 Special school tax Dist. No. 1 <J 2 Special school tax Dist. No. 21 2 s Special school tax Dist. No. 22 4 Special school tax Dist. No. 2 4 3 Special school tax Dist. No. 25 3 Special school tax Dist. No. 2G 2 Special school tax Dist. V?- ^7 ?? Special school tax Dial.. No. .28 2 Special school tax Dist. No. 4 0 8 i Special school tax Dist. No. 40 8 Special school tax Dist. No. 4 7 4 Tin* poll tax is $1. All able-bodied male persons iron the age of twenty-one (21) to sixty (GO) years, both inclusive, excep residents of the incorporated towns of the county shall pay two dollars ( ? 2 ) as a road tax, except minist ! ers of the gospel aotually in charg of a congregation, teachers employe in public schools, school trustees and persons permanently disablei in the military service of this State and person^ who served in tho lato war between the States, and all per sons actually employed in the quar antine service of this State, and al ^students who may be attending any school? or- college at the time, when the road tax shall become due. Per" son 8 claiming disabilities must pro sent certificates from two reputabl physicians of this county. AH Information as to taxes wll bo furnished upon application. D. M. McCASKII.L, County Treasurer Pay your subscription to The Chronicle and vote for the young Indies in the Piano contest. SAWYER'S KID, 'c: % : ' ;;y . ? *> \ \ -/jx r\ ?? XSZ. v ? What '* more auiioyiiiK than using cheap lead i?? ndu ^ cheap, Hofl paper, soft paper which liMlgl JOUr jwn and K|>r<?j| ink'/ Hoy our grade paper, pens and pencils, uml make vfrit, lug a comfort. If you want your children to learn to urifc easily, furnish them with good quality tftetloneiy. ( tonne t<' t)i( 11 Drug store, Slake OUU lhug Store YOLK I)*Ug Store, Sawyer Drug Company! Porter - Snowden Co. Cotton Factors and Commission Merchants. 90 E. Bay St., Charleston, S. C. All Cotton Handled on Commission EXTRA STAPLE COTTON A Specialty Would be pleased to receive consignments from you which will receive our very Best Attention. Why arc gossips like kin^ts and queens? A breakfast of sausage woil ? . ' ' - ? Jj b? tho right thing, and, if w manufacture ? fit for the Kill A nice slice of bacon neitti too fat or too lean, well crifj before taken, would be fit lj his Queen! They make a rof breakfast! Try them some ing! } Hchuuso they have so many 8ul>Jeete ! Campbell BroJ IT'S GOOD TO i BE WAR! especially when the thormoi tor Is hovering around the * mark. That is the time tl you want coa), and plenty Send lis yonr order for any of coal you want, and it ! delivered promptly, and W will got full value for your ey. That is our guarantee. ; CAN SUPPLY YOUR; WANTS; Any Kind Any Size Any Kind Any Lenjtl COAL. COAL WOOD WOODS ? . ' Jfll Special prices made 011 Coal, Wood and Coke, by the ** Am now sawing wood in lots of 5 cords and up. A llmltofg Pl>' of the best Johnson C?rasu Hay baled for sale. - . ? ~ ? - order to ' - S. M. MATHIS Office Phone 58. Residence Phone