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Edisee's Talking Pictur?i, Op?r? Houi?, Tuf?d*y Might, N?f,3? The troniendouB huccohh of Kdl *ou'u Klnotophone, or Talking IMc turen, litiH brought on (ho uhiiuI ruwh of ho called talking pictureg, Kdl moii however, In tho only man produc iPK actual talkliiK plcturOH thai Ih pictures and record h which were mado at. tho same time under1 per fect synchronizing condition*, \V lion an ICdlHon Talking Picture Ih made the adorn rehearse lines* mi <1 actiOu until they aro perfected. Then tho play Ih talked, Hiing and acted before the camera while the phonograph, phicod above the cam era, records every sound that Ih mado. lOdinon alone employs thin mot hod of recording and therefore haH the only genuine Talking I'lc turott. The Wizard hmw at a glance that the greatest difficulty (hat the talk ing pic u res would offer wa^ the in vention of a phonograph (hat would bo sensitive enough to record overy Bound and could still be placed out of range of the camera. 'J'he wealth of data accumulated during the in vention of the phonograph several yearn ago hodii enabled him to Holve the problem and to announce hi* latest remarkable aOblevement the urtion of night and wound. ISdlson's Talking Pictures will be seen and heard at the Oamden op ora hoiiHo next Tuesday night, Nov ember 2Dth. There will bo no mat inee, owing to railroad connections, which will put tho company here too lato for an afternoon performance. Prices: ItoHerved seats GOc, gen eral admission, children 25c, adults 3*c. We Pay Highest Cash Prices for * *$ m m Don't give your profits away-- ship direct to us by express and get your money next day. We pay highest prices for green and dry hides of ail kinds Beeswax, TalloW and old Metals, old Rubber and Furs. Try us with a ship-" ment now. Send for Price List. CAROLINA HIDE & JUNK CO. CHARLESTON. S. C. etter read SATISFIES A Better Appetite We manufacture "better bread" exclusively Ask Your Grocer for It ^TELEPHONE 49 CAMDEN STEAM BAKERY A. J. BEATTIE, Prop. NEW 1914 Prices on Fords RUNABOUTS $547.70 TOURINGS - $597.70 Full Line of F ord Parts Caseings and 1 ubes on 1 land. D. C. SHAW CO., Sumter, S. C. PHONE 553 CONSIDER THE CAT. The Only Animal Man Hn Neve' 8?%n Able to Conqutr, Thole Is Jl|>l OUC illtllMrti 1111111 hit# U#?r?>l'. CO|n|tir?Vd. lie vet' run ??Uii|th?f, 'IVllllifll'M UUO \'\ri \ ??! f >?T lir < Ullir III*' *i.lke III liaili III' else tied fur from hoi nun iialilt a lion. uih' and on** <?hi> > ??i Mxi'ii t*' it?v i/r i? xiihinii 'I'llc borne. tile <||IU, (lit* ?U\V. lilt* k|m?|'|) ( 1 1 4 ? | . (Ill* |'||.; (il. raliir (lit 1 {(Ulllp I l|OI|H|)lldH III ,U'il it* HgO 'filt'V Inn** ever wittee worked f<M ump m fed film, or li<i|l> They have Inm'Ii lit" it ii i|UI**| |o||l'l| IIUll i|lll|Ml*Ht lollf llg, slil N IV Tilt* elrplllllll. fill! If It M lllNIIIIIH II SI'I* ! tint jim' luivv <?V Imt junkie lords, Tin* flon. Mir lltfcr, (lie w.'iir ilt?* lll'lir. llllij Mlli'll other XII MIC heiiSt* iiH have out yielded sen lee in imin ti ivu hI II II k i?Wa> III terror f rqiii the !>4t t ii of I civilization mill it ft* l< II It'll tin sight lint ope mIiiuIi* >i ii I nut i Halms iiiiiu'h protection, shares his food nud hearth; | wanders irt will ii nd iintiiolrxf <<d through h ii nut n . haunts, h ml doe* alt solutely no work In retijrir. obeys no orders. nnd dot** not even mu'V^ a* loud or clothing. #hls only exception to h. world of servants unit of Retired enemies I* tin. linlllCStlo ('lit Think ft over. The nil will imi work It will not guard your home. Ifs thxli and fur nerve no use. lu one useful act is the catching of iiiIch and ruts. And these It slA.vs and eats beeaiiHr it wantH to: not to liplp out Its owner. Kor example, ft does not bring ft* rap tured prey to Its owner to eMl. Nor wfll II hunt rodents union* It happens to feel llUe doing mo. The rut won't work. It won't ev<?n learn tricks unless It happens tn waul to. And no one can pnnlHh or torture It Into learning any trick It domn t want to learn That Is why there ?re almost no trick cats In arilmal shows and why tin* few that are there do such very simple tricks. A dog enn he tortured Into do ing tricks A rat can't. * When some animals hwume man's slaves and others tied from him, the cat did neither, ft simply took nil the favors nnd ad vantages man had ro offer, and refused to do one lick of work In. exchange?. Heat a dog nnd he will fawn on .von Rent a cat and It will attack you and then desert you. Yon nin't conquer thf? eat. You can't make ft work, ? New York World. English Weights and Measures. Other things besides fish have their own peculiar measures. (iunpowder, raisins it rid butter are sold by the bar rel. but the weight varies A barrel of powder weighs 100 pounds, of raisins 112 pounds, of butter *224 pounds. You can also buy butter by the firkin of fifty-six pounds, while a firkin of soft soap Is sixty-three pounds. "Stones" are not always the same. A stone of glass Is five pounds: a "customary stone" Is eight pounds, the "letr:il stone" fourteen pounds. A "fodder of lead." depends upon where you buy it. In London or Hull yon will get only nineteen and a half hundredweight. In Newcastle they will give you twenty one and a half hundredweight and In Derby twenty-two and a bulf.? Loudou (J lobe Look For the Pearls. I)o yon know that perhaps within a stone's throw of your suburban homo pearls may bo found. Sara Savage Miller has an article In Suburban Life on "Fresh NVnter Pearl Fishing" Sho says that almost every stream and pond throughout the United States contains one or more varieties of mus sels In which pearls are found and tells of a carpenter of Paterson. N. J., who found a magnificent pink pearl weigh ing ninety three grains In tho waters of Notch Brook. It was bought by Tif fany & Co. for $1,800 and later was sold to tho Empress Eugenie. Since then It has been known as the famous Queen poj\r| ? . He That Keeps Hia Lawn Well. Show me the man whose lawn Is In good condition year by year nnd 1 will show you one whoso wife did well to got him. 1 For let mo toll you. friends and fel* j low travelers to tho tomb, there are more sticks and bones, clothespins and crooked wires upon a lawn. Horatio, than are dreamt of in our philosophy.. And ho that cheerfully endures tho slams upon tho bread basket that the ! lawn' mower hands him when its cut ! tors clop possesses moro than Chrls ' tlan fortitude? it mounts up to flfty ! tude.? Eugene Wood in Everybody's Magazine. Locating the Bar. A grimy looking stranger entered a hotel "Where's the bar?" ho asked of , Pat. who was standing at the door "What kind of bar?" asked the lat , tor "Why. refreshment bar; of course! j What do you suppose I mean?" "Well." drawled Pat, with a twinkle, j "I didn't know but yon might mean a ? bar of soap."? I/ondon Answers I ! ~ - ] Keep Tennis Balls Dry. Tennis balls can be preserved in usa J bio shape for an Indefinite length of I' time if they are kept absolutely dry I They lose their resiliency and become ' "dead" before they aro worn ont for t the reason that dampness decomposes ' the rubber.? Popular Mechanics. The Hard Knocks. I "This ojd world at |y only an I anvil and life a sort of Plutonian blacksmith, that, with rnrylnc blows, strikes us into form The blow that hurts us most may shape us best" The Mend. like tho stomach, is most ! easily lnf?s-t?><1 with poison when It is empty.? Jean Paul Ulchter PARTITION SALE. Stale of South Carolina ' uiiuiy of Kershaw in the court of Common Pleas. Walter Jorm, commonly known :ih Waller liarber, Infant, by hia * gUttrdian o4 i iumi, A Jvtt (irsio ry, I'laln i Iff, .W-.HIIlM . W. M, Phillip* ail. I W t Clybuin, Defendants. ' * in pniMiaiKc (f an o&ler of his Honor, Judgo it. W. Memmlngor, of dun November 18th, 11)18, I will offer for sale at public outcry, to 'ho highest bidder, before the Court If >iiko door, In the City of Camden, County of Kershaw, State of South Carolina, during the legal bourn of Hale, on the first Monday in Decem ber, 19 J 3, being the I hi day there of, the following described real es i ato All that certain piece, parcel, or tract of laud lying, being and sit nii t in lln! County ofr K<;rshaw, Htaie aforesaid, containing two hun died and forty-seven (247) acres, more or less, and bounded North by lands of George Faulkenberry ; South by landH of William Scott; Want by lauds of John W. Ingram; and West by lauda of George Small. Terms of Hale, Cash. L. A. Wlttkowsky, Master Kershaw County. Nov. 13, 1913. PAliTlTlON SAhK. State of Soufh Carolina, County of Kershaw In the Court of Common Pleas. Perry 'Phillips, Birdie Phijllps, Abne Phillips, Noah Phillips, Willie Re becca Phillips and WiHiam Travis Phillips, Infants, by C. C. Bmlth doal, their Guardian Ad Litem, Plaintiffs, A^uin^t Mat tie L. Phillips, Defednant. In pursuance of an order of his Honor, Judge It, W. Memminger, of date November 13th, 1913, I will of fer for sale, at public outcry, to the highest bidder, before the Court House' door in Camden, in the Coun ty of Kershaw, State of South Caro lina, during the legal hours of sale, on the first Monday in December, 1913, being the first day thereof, th following described real estate: All that certain piece, parcel or tract of land lying, being^and situate in the County of Kershaw, State aforesaid, containing one hundred and five (106) acres, more or less, and bounded as follows: North by lands of George Roberts; South and West by lands of Mrs. Wesley Broom; and East by lands of Burrel Bradley; and being the same tract of land conveyed to John J. Phil lips, deceased, by B. A. Hilton. Terms of Sale, Cash. L. A. Wlttkowaky, Master Kershaw County. ? Npv. 13, 1913. ' I / PARTITION SALE. StAte of South Carolina /County of Kershaw |n the Court of Common Pleas Eulai Perry, Daisy Driggers and Jes sie Hamntonds, Plaintiffs, ' ' Against J. J. Sanders, L. R. Rollings, Mrs." A. P. Stover, Mrs. Lou P. Robert son, Sallie I. Rollings, Carrie Twit ty, E. J. Duncan, Dr. J. W. Itol linga and A. H. Duncan, Defend ants. Under and by virtue of a decree in the above stated case, made by the Honorable It. VV. Memminger, Presiding Judge, of date November 13th, 1913, 1 will offer for sale, at public outcry, to the highest bltkler, for cash, in front of the Court House door, in the City of Camden, County of Kershaw, State of South Carolina, during the legal hours of sale, on the first Monday in Decern^, ber, 1913, being the 1st day there of, the following described real es tate: All that piece, parcel or tract of land containing one hundred and seventy-six (17 6) acres, more or less, situated in the County of Ker shaw, State ot South Carolina, near the town of Blaney; bounded North- | west by property of the estate of J. C. Rollings, and by property now of Walter Brown, formerly of - the estate of J. C. Rollings ; East and Southeast by lands of G. H. Baum, B. H. Baum and D. H. Baum, and lands of Branham; South by lands of Branham, and by lands of Sal mond; being lands heretofore known as the '"Allen" lands; all of which will more fully appear by reference to plat of W. B. Twitty, surveyor, of date Spetember, 1911. W. W. Huckabee, Sheriff Kroshaw County. November 13, 1913. ESTATE SAIiE. State of South Carolina f-ounty of Kershaw. We the sole heirs of the estate of the lute Annie G. Price, will sell at public auction in front of the Court House door in the City of Camden, on Monday, December 1, 1913, at 12 o'clock, the follow Ing . described real estate of the said Annie G. Pxice, deceased : ' All that piece, parcel or tract of land, situate, lying and being in the County of Kershaw, and state of South Carolina, containing one hun dred and eighty-eight (188) acres, and bounded as follows, to wit: North by the low waters of Twen ty-five Mile Creek, East by tho low waters of Briar Branch, or lands of J. W. Wood and C. B. Nettles, South by lands of Pat O. Bowen and An nie G. Price jointly, heretofore; on West by Poplar Branch, S. II. Ross and J. T. Ross. Terms of sale, cash, purchaser to pay for papers. W. M, Price, ~ C. A. Bowen, B. A. Bowen, E. E. Thornton, R. E. Nottles, P. O. Bowen. OHtndrn, S. C., NOV. 13. 1913. Send us that next order for job printing. You've had dreams of making money easy. f-r ;r" yzr\*zc?.; ? ' ><$& ?; ?'? rrVi : r ' *'/. h ' ? .??; ? ? ?/.- ? ; *'? '. V- -. Some one has said that dreams always reverse. Not so? follow the Pierc ing Arrow to your dreams fulfillment. SALE * . ? V ?' i ?.1. ? \ * .V- '? Continues Until Wed'day NOV. the 26th Baruch-Nettles Co. The Store That Sets the Pace