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THE CAMDEN CHRONICLE U. I). Nile* and / , ; PuhlUdier*. K. N. Mellow ell S Published every Friday at U<H> No Hroni! Street, and entered at tbfc (torn den postothce a? tWdd clam* ninll mut ter Price |H?r annum $1.80. < .? unit <i, S. September .t, II# 17. TEN PAGES THIS WEEK Tin* uuyi who <*4irrW'n a pistol ??<??? hi>t11111??n the mail who mm* Hi" turn In Ilu* roud at i!?** rate of slxt> miles jkt hour, miyn llii' 11<iini>i?*n I lerahl. All moruiuu newspaper* earrylng the AnHoeluted Press dispatches scoop ml cho International on the charges brought a! Washington against John 1*. Grace. Tin' ('liiirli^lon "American" was Hilcnt on l In* iViuttcr. Tin' movement to hint' Senator l*a Follette cnjh'IUsI from th*% I'nlK^il State* Senate Is getting lo I??? some thing more (hiin mere talk. The move ment has swept Senator Gronna and Senator Stone Into romlemnatLou also, Petitions for the expulsion of all three have heen presented by Senator Wads worth, of New York, on h??hnIf of numcroUH bodies In that State, other organisations are taking action. Thcs* men. It Is alleged are traitors to the United States, in that They are help ing the Germans hy their op|?oKitioii to war preparations. For years officers of the ariny, hoth in the dHcharge of their duties and outside, have behaved In a very ar rogant way toward the civil popula tion. Time and again while 1 was in Germany waiting in line at HonieJ ticket ofllcc, an ofllcer has shoved him self thead of all others without even ja protest from those ? waiting. On one occasion I went to the races in Merlin with my brotJier-in-law oikF bought a 1m*x. While we were out looking at the horses between tin* races a Pru?4hin olllcer and his wife seated themselves in onr hox. I call ed the attention of one of the ushers to this, hnt the usher said that lie did nut dare ask n Prussian officer to leave, and It was only after sending for the head usher and showing him my Jockey club badge and my pass as ambassador that I was able to secure possession of my own box. There have been many instances in Germany wnrrc officers, having a -light dispute with civilians, have instantly cut the civilian down. InstaiK'OM of this kind iiud the harsh I real men t of the Germans by ing in the, army, undoubtedly created in Germany a spirit of antagonism not only to the army itself, but to the whole military system of Prussia. From Gerard's Four Years in Germany. We hope the Kaiser will rule a year for every hair that there is on Ever ett True's head, but remember Kvcr eft is bald headed?(Jrwrnvmnl Index Information eoines that the German are sorry they invented war .'as. Shucks, they haven't started being sorry yet, n<> matter how virr,\ they are Savannah New . 5 ? . -'t i '?? ? v" "sV*"'jiv!) i.! It lM t(> lit* regretted fllUt UU* of thi' county and town ^I?<>%v?mJ m> III tU> patriotism yesterday when the mruj left here to join tilt* Ntitifua) Army. Thciv was hut 11 wen* biiHifol at p.*? pie at rtlf station to see them oil Hji-j I ltO|M* tl)Ht W licit ?t Hot |lt?l* eO?ll)ljjo|?t leave* Camden that ?? tarue crowd v.*ttl Itr present. Other tmviiH glv?* tlirlr boy* rousing send-off*. ami ilici'v is 110 reason why Camden should no* 1 uk?* jnore Intercut in these Matter*. h would imiko I he boys f****! Iietter, to nay 1 he An effort Ik lielug made to net the farmers of Kershaw comity to agree lo I>liint a* small apionirt of tobiuvo an oilier year, It Ik wild thai (lie lands j of Kershaw counly arc suitable for the throwing of tills crop, and if the fanners could he Interested enough In this crop it would mean a la rue amount of money put in circulation in this hcc tion In the dull summer, A suggestion has been niatlu that Mie o|d Southern depot could lie made into a warehouse at a very small amount of cost, and there is no doubt that the Southern would urant the u-** of this bulldluu at a nominal charge. v (?nice and Heard?.two of a kind. A report from Merlin .states that "the emperor and empress of Oermany have J placed a large number of their val uable Jewels at the disposal of the lteicli?tag to use them in diminish* inu Ceriminy's obligations to foreign countries. KXTKNSION WOKK. Wlnlhrop Is now prewired to enter] more effectively during the year 11)17 is into this Held of Extension Worjt. Two people, Mr. Orvllle (J. Brim and Mrs. lletty S. llmwne, will give prac tically Illicit* entire time to the ser vice of those who are now teaching. The following lines of work are to be deVeJoped as rapidly as conditions will permit : 1. Study Centers. Gatherings of six or more who wiwh to take up] some definite line of study will be visited bl-wiH'kl.v or monthly by some member of the faculty for discussions and conference. (\>rres|M>ndeinle work both for the purpose of obtalninu credit here and for professional or general Im provement. ('o?)|N'ration with rural schools. Mrs. lirowne has uiven up her work with the Oak Keltic Snhool to trivc her time to the working out of some rural problems in co-operation with 11 number of schools ihmii- Rock Hill. A11 \ rural teach or in l lie State Is in vlted to write Mrs. lirowne concern-' inu any-topic of interest to them. I. Professional talks and discuss ions before county tiwhors" associa-j tioiis and other professional or com munity uatherinus. Ccncral lectures. Certain mem ber* iiiv available for a more formal t> 1 m? of lecture suitable for women's clubs, rally days, uraduntions, etc. A bulletin explaining more fully this ticid of work and i/lving in detail the help available will be issued soon. Tills will be sent free upon request. We invite correspondence concerning any of tilie lines of work mentioned here. Camden Opera House, Wed. Oct. 10 Tin- oiu- bit: musical cumrdx . ? 1 |li?- and our that is seldom soon outride of liio InTtfv l iticv Charles I >illiiiuham's Original New York (Jlobt' Tluvihv Production <>f Irviiiu Merlin's <!r??iitrst Success STOP! LOOK! LISTEN! A ('"Hiimiiv of "?<? People. al! stars. and the ino<t beautiful l'ari>i<an MorivO Chorus in the World. F. D. CAMPBELL, Jr. Cotton Buyer s For Maybank & Co., of Charleston Platform located in rear Rhame Bros, at J. B. Steedman's old stand Will endeavor to serve the public in the most efficient manner ?w 'J' ? -1 ' 1 3ft CKNTK A<iKKKI> II'ON Meeting of Tho*e Interested In Growing And Market li if. I New OiU'iu*. (M. *J. A< price of .'{(> cents a jkmimI to the fanner was agreed uiK>u at a meeting here 'ate today of men' liiuycskid hi marketing and growing cotton In Hi southern slate* as being justified by !)??? present SI'llillU price*' of manufactured cot loll products, The prh*e was suggested in an atni?'(??tiiK'iit to 41 resolution adopted jtist i n?*\ loiisly will oh de clared against price regulation of cot ton by Congress or dcle^atljjg of tills authority to any otlier body. Although the amendment, Intro duced hy 1<, 1$. Jackson,. director of tIn* <irorgla bureau of markets, met with Muno op|M>sltloti, It was recog nized as a compromise and was al most unanimously adopted. Uiihuc cessful efforts to have tlio amendment read ?t.*> Instead of .SO cents were made h.v I'). W. I>aI>i?h of MayesvUle, s. C., and other leaders In tho movement to secure a .'Mi-cent minimum. Following the ad v let) of John M. I'arker, state fooit administrator, the delegates/ adopted a resolution pro viding for the appointment of a coin mittee of seven to confer in Wash ington with Herbert Hoover, food ad ministrator. regarding cottonseed prices. , Hesolutlons also were adopted en dorsing tlie movement to havo hales of cotton standardised throughout (lie cotton lielt hy making them of the uniform size of iV4 Inches long hy -7 Inches wide. While many of the delegates early today advocated holding of cotton for minimum prices ranging from .'10 to 12 cents, general sentiment was against such action. Addresses hy Senator KansOcll. state food adminis trator Parker and William Ii. Thomp son. president of the New Orleans dock hoard, op|>osed the tlxlng of a minimum price. < J rowers were urged hy Senator Kansdcll and Mr. Thomp son to hold their cotton, market it judiciously and if* necessary ls>rrow money on it In *tcfrage. The Christian spirit is eternaliy op posed to war. It must he. Its goal! is the recognized brotherhood of alii men. lint is it unchristian for one! brother to defend a holy cause from j the assault of another brother whose! unrighteous attack, so far as the first I they especially desired it to lie ouri not of good??Our Dumb Animals. | <;knkral nkws notes Key. W i 11 in in Sta tes Jacobs. of 1 ! loiisldii. Texas. litis becil named t?? ? -iccc'ImI his f:i t.bet*. flu* 1 tev. W. IV .Jacobs. ;is head of Thornwell Orphan age ;tl Clinton. S. C. ('ceil Bradford. ;i young white man employed at tlif Sumter Machine^ Oonipany's plant at Sumter. met with a fatal accident In a peculiar manner Wednesday evening. An emery wheel burst and n fragment struck him in tin' ht-ad. lie regained consciousness hnt later died from the abrasion. Iiis skull was not fractured. A 'JO foot cement roinl\\a\ will ho hnilt from Columbia to Camp .lackson, th?? county and Federal government will pay for l^hi* work jointly. The cost will he around $4S.(KM>. I >. It. Cole, of Wiinishoro. lias been iiwarded a verdict of $.xoo. for damages claimed hy water hacking oil his land hy the Southern Power Co. Major A he T/evi. a prominent. citizen of Manning. <1 i??? 1 in a lntjcpitnl in New York one day last week. He was in his r?r>th year. Miss Aagatlui ^W'il ?>n, ..f Sumter, was Uidly burned last Wednesday while on a visit to friends at Bishop ville. Her clothing came in .contact with an ojm'U grate. Hon. H. o .I'unly. <?f Snintei*; while hunting squirrels in the Watereo river swamp n<?ar earner's Ferry, lKH'ft?nie lost and liad to s]k>ii<1 the nlglit In the swamp. IV If. Stall, solicitor "t' :he Third circuit, has tendered hi*- resignation and has heen ordered to report for duty at Host on. lie has been appoint ed to tlie rank of Major.* .lames C. Perlox. formerly managli.g editor of the Greenville I>aily News will leave 'soon for Kranoe for ser vice with the Y. M. C. A. on the western front. I-'raniT A. McLeod. of Sumter. 1 wf been api>oliited hy Governor Manning to succeed P. II. Stoll a* solicitor of the Third circtiit. Hh hard Prlnglc, a negro, was struck in rhe head and had his skull frac tured with an iron bolt by Joe Mont gomery. unotlrer negro, in Sumter Fri day. Tnie to war conditions both the I'niverslty of South Carolina at Co lumbia and WofTonl college .*t Spartan burg have added the military feature to their course,, this year. Military drills and discipline will l?e provided for the boys by regular commandants ap|M?inted by the ffovernment from army officers. LONG WEDdlNGS IN PERSIA Ceremonies, Continuing Several Day*, Among Most Curious and Elabo rate In the World. The marriage ceremonies which hoi emnise u wedding among the Moham medan* of Persia are among the most curious find plnboTntc vJn the world. Any American bridegroom, who dis likes what men nre wont to describe as the "funs and bother" of a formal wedding Hhould regard the ease of his Persian brother and take heart. The Persian ceremony may take from sn?< to two weeks for 11h comple tlon. Often the betrothal Ik a matter of many years' standing, having b?k?u arranged by the parents when the prin cipals were still young children. When the time for the marriage arrives the guests are summoned by l^rt'.lds, who go about the neighboring villages, bearing gtfts of apples, cloves and roses to accompany the Invitations, When some powerful personage Is to be Invited, the father of the bride groom does not send a herald, but goes himself, bearing tin rich a present as be can afford to give. Before the wedding there Is also a curious little business arrangement eu tered Into. This Is the matter of "kaben," or th# price of divorce. A sum Is agreed upou In advance by the payment of which the future husband can put aside his wife at any tliue. When It is desired to make the divorce ifhllcult, the kaben Is set at some Im possible sum or oommodlty. The hus band may be required to give the bride a hundredweight of mosquito wings, or one of his arms or legs, be fore he cau divorce her, a condition which generally makeB the marriage a permanent afTair. The actual wedding festivities ex tend over days. The guests are given rooms in the house and served with rich foods and sweetmeats. Musicians ayd dancing girls are hired to enter tain them, and if the families of the bride and groom are rich the favorite sport of the Persians may be staged by a pair of professional wrestlers. After the celebration has lasted three or four days the bride rides heavily veiled to her new home on horseback. Sho Is followed by porters bearing her dowry on their backs. The wedding celebration then continues for several days longer. The Russian Peasants. The taking over of some of the czar's landed possessions recalls the fact that Albert J. Beveridge, in his book, "The Russian Advance," pub lished a few years ago and in which he gathered political, social and economic facts, states that even then the Rus sian peasant was looking forward "to a second emancipation, giving them new additions of land absolutely and without any cost whatever to them selves." When the peusant ceased to be a slave he did not comprehend that he was still not free to use his mas -Lur-H tools or ^to?cu^from the Innd owners's forests timber for his use. "The most curious situations," says Mr. Beveridge, "are even yet arising, growing out of this Inability of the peasant to comprehend the obligation as well as the benefits of his emanci pation. Liberties are taken by the Rtfftsian peasant with the property of a Russian proprietor which would not be tolerated for an instant by an American in the same situation. In nil of this there is not the slightest impertinence, not the least Intention to wrong the landed proprietor, nor the faintest conception on the part of the peasant that there is anything immoral in what he does. He or his fathers did the like before, and he just con tinues to do the same as a matter of course." New Medical MarveL Of all the remarkable medical in novations, probably the most marvel ous is a new antiseptic solution per fected after ten years' work by Dr. Wilfred Fralick of New York; Dr. Os car Eckstein of the University of Ber lin, and Dr. A. C. Allen of the Univer sity of Chicago. It is superior to the famous Carrel Dakin solution because, in addition to everything that preparation can do, it can be \ised on the brain and in the abdominal cavity and can be injected directly Into fhe blood without dan ger. The last named quality makes It of startling significance in the treatment of blood poisoning. While to put the Carrel-Dakln solu tion into the veins of a patient would mean certain death, the new prepara tion, a chlorinated solution of per manganate of potash, can be run dl Vectly into the blood stream without disturbing anything there except the evil elements meant to be attacked. The Qrouches. Two men sat glaring an<f glowering at each other In a provincial Y. M. C. A. "Who are the two grouches?" a salesman asked. "One Is our hotel proprietor," a na tive answered, "and the other is the editor of the local paper*" "What's got their goat?" "Well," said the native, "It seems that at our school treat last evening the magician asked for the loan of a handkerchief, and somebody handed him up a big square of muslin. "The magiciun unfolded the square and said : " 'Thank goodness there's at least one clean sheet in this town.'" And ever since then the editor has insisted that the magician was allud ing to the hotel bedclothes, and the hotel man has insisted that it was the editor's pa{?er was being knocked.? Washington 8tar. Every pound goes much farther A POUND of old ?tyle hulls con tains about y. pound of real roughage and about ]/+ pound of lmt. After being eaten, tne old stvi? hulls swell to twice the weight, or V/* pounds." a jumiut ol . I . QUCKtYF ?OTTONSECD W V HULLS \ UNTLKII also doubles after being eaten but as they are 100 per cent roughage, the original pound becomos 2 pounds? not pounds. Therefore, a pound of Buckeye Hulls goes a third again as far as a pound of old style hulls. In other words, you only have to feed ^ pound of Buckeye Hulls to give the same .food value as a full pound of old style hulls. ? ? Other Advantages Buckeye Hulls cost much less per No trash or dust. ton than old style hulls. Sacked?easy to handle. Buckeye Hulls allow better as- They mix well with other forage, simulation of other food. i They take less space in the bam. Mr. Ban Faulk, Do than, Ala., prefers Buckeye Hulls to old style hulls because cows like them as well, they at* cheaper, they agree with the cows, and they go farther, ona tack lasting as long as two sacks of the old style. I To secure the best results and to develop the ensilage odor, wet the huUt thoroughly twelve houre before feeding. It is easy to Ho thu t>j wetting then down night and mOrnine for the next feeding. If at anj time this cannot bo done, wet down it least thirty minutes. If you prefer U feed the hulls dry, use only half is much by bulk m of old style hulls. Book of Mixed Feede Free Gives the right formula for every combination of feeds used in the South. Tells how much to feed for maintenance, for milk, for fat* tening, for work. Describee Buckeye Hulls and gives directions for using them properly. Send for your copy to the nearest milk Dept. K The Buckeye Cotton Oil Co. Dept. K Atlanta Birmingham Greenwood Little Rock MemphU Augusta Charlotte Jaeheon Mecon Selme , A trunk containing sixty quarts of contraband booze was captured Friday by Chief Black of the Charleston police department. Jury Failed to Agree. I {oil Oak. l|>\va. Sept. 2K.?The jury in the trial of the Rev. Yynn J. (Jeorge Kelly, charged with murder in con nection with the Villisca axe slaying*, was discharged by Judge Boies at i :U5 p. in. today for failure to agree on a verdict, after . dell I >e rating since late Wednesday.? Capt. Max V. Tliierichens, former commander of the German commerce raider P rinse Mital Friederiob, was / found guilty Monday in Philadelphia of violating the Mann white slave act, in bringing a woman from Ithaca, N. Y.. to Philadelphia for immoral pur-" poses. Sentence was deferred ]>endlng n new trial. Negro Woman Shot. holly Elms a negro woman of the Lngoff section is in the Oamden hos pital suffering from three pistol wounds. The shooting was done by Kllen Holden a negro, man who has l>een arrested and placed in jail. The shooting is said to .have been caused by jealousy. Lost Certificate, This is to certify that certificate X?. <iL\ three shares of series N'o. 1 of The Camden Huifding and Loan Associa tion. of Camden, s. t\. dated Oct. 2, 19KJ. has been lost, and that after publication of this notice required num ber of times I will apply for anothei* certificate of said shares. \V. A. CLARK. Camden. S. C. Oct. 3, 1017. Tom Stroud, the negro who shot I killed J. tl. Williams, <>f Chester,] boon captured an<l pineal in toed tcr county jail. A 2(),00() acre tract of land la northern portion of (Greenville con is to hp taken over hy the ward men* for the artillery range, artillery range will he used lery men from Greenvill$ . burg, Charlotte, Columbia and At Failing fce*ve& And now the leayew are to fall. There is nothing In toe tlmt so reminds us that time Is lug and ourselves going with the falling loaves. It is really?I em 11 time for one to see a leaf tering down through the air to ground. It is a reminder that way we are all going?falling \ ground and soon disappearing gotten. But the J bought she one of hope rather t.haJi of for tlie very circumstance <d) spire everyone to live a Itetter truer life, mid make the world er because the leaves fall. The I have done their share in the work. They have brought beat the woods and fed the fruits! flowers through the summer. ' have earned their rest, but they I something else to do, and that make music for the footstep move through thejn. The nH the deep leavra of tlie forest itj fated nowhere else. It fln<te ion in no instrument unless It heartstrings, where no sound fe ?Ohio Stkte Journal. >T. ation?S ,''nv'te<' to <a" at our 8tore and see the new in our beautiful line" of Fall Millinery. its clas?ey 8re wor*'> see'?8'-??each model is a gem COME EARLY ion u,Ji aSk you t0 come early and make your sel? chonco Ue have a large7 nulnber from which ye"< noose. *>? ? ,.x bpfnr!i>7ne Patterns this Fall are along lines n< Pu out, and will excite your admiration I??ner you come the more exclusive will this i? IOn' Miss Nelle Haynes, will be with usal hat Zn ' a",d rU be to show you just nat you are looking for. ^ ? Miss Mattie Gen