University of South Carolina Libraries
iyiii.ii?Mi.ii iii ? - PERSONAL MENTION. Mix* A unit- Mi km -11 I.f Charleston )? the Ktiest of Mi*1* K'dalie \ulen, Mivt Harriet l'atKi *ott who ha* been vUiting Mi"* I let 1 n lit'Hth ha* re turn- d to In r Itoine ill HarnwHI. \li It. !> 'I'm jij) and lit tie Aleth-a 'J'rsipp have 11*'^! wi-vk t<? , vjn.lt lu Suui t. i Tr.-iii tli- i- they will *:<. i<> Waynes villi* , to HpHiiil ahout throe week* VSCStloU. Mr*. I<. T- Mill* and eliildreu have returned from a visit to relatives and friend* lu Newberry. ?< , IWu? To Mr. luid Mr*. Henry Savage, Wednesday, July 1Mb? a daughter. < Mr. and Mm. S. M. Latham, of (Jre.en viH*. S. 0., have moved to Camden to make their future home. . Mr. Latham i* Ui?w with the tjent'* OS., (The Mfu'n Hluip) hh salesman. He was formerly with tin- J. 0. JoAtR <\unpany of (JreeiiviHe, and ha* S|H*Jt a number ? >f yeans mi the South and Houthweft cat?rt(lK tu this cla*s of trade. ?Mis* lletta Heath and Harriet l'at tei>K?u attended the ?lance at Heathwood, (voltmibia, Tuesday night. Majestic To Close. Maiestic Theatre will close Mon day, .lub Hth, for ten days during \rhjch time u number of improvement* will he made in the house, and one hundred and twenty five .more ?eui? will he added. , This theatre Will l?e the fii><t in the South to use the new Kureka Screen, a screen which in being used in the Strand. Itialto. Ilivolt and the I^iwe Tfrea tires in New York t'?ty. the I. owe Theatres in Philadelphia, Mal limore and Washington. This is naid to be (lie nn?>Jt perfect screen ever of fered on the American market. iNew Projection maehiues are already here, ami an entirely new out lit will be iu ?t n II ed thi'ouifhout the house Leadvlllc'fi Interesting Spots. The tahle u ln'i v dusli Hillings wrote hi* stories of mining camp life, the hotel where Ti <ns Jack ? 1 i ? ?? 1 . mnl the gnmldiug. house where u millionaire miner lost his fortune on the roulette wheel, file smile (if the places the pi oik i i s uf Lend vllle, Colo., ijeliyht to point out to visitors. One of these landmarks Is the Vn r'? tv theater, Where t'hnrles Vivian. fiu\u?ier of the KIKs, entertained the gold miners of enrly days. Vivian went to I.oadvlllc for the honed! of his henllh and was always sut-roumh'd by a . etuiKeiiial erowd of the cump'}> elite. Wheti he died there, he was buried In the shadow of Mt. Mammoth niMong the pines, and the funeral was said t? be the largest in the history of Lcadvllle. -His body whs later re moved to the Klist. Then Perhaps She Felt Bettor. A stupid young man. supposed to h? crttckhrnlned. who was slighted hy tin girls. very modestly asked a youuf-' lndj If she' would let him spend tin evening with her. she angrily replied. "that'? what 1 won't." "Why/* replied he, "you needn't h< so fusr ; I didn't menu tills evening hut some stormy one whi n 1 cwn't ?t. y where else." MIKTAKKN FOR. BURGLAR Young Prosperity Mjyn Fatally Shot In Abdomen. IVosperit \ . July 7.? Krister Hair, son of H. II. Hair, was sliot ami fatally wounded here littft night by (!. \V. ftiniird, who mistakenly took lirm f.?r a burglar a party <>f which Kinard was a member was trying to rupture. Hair and several young people were at the home of a friend oppoiute the store of Mr. Kinaril when /they noticed three men go behind Mr. Kinard's establish men f nnd later heard them break in the store Several iinii including Mr. Kin ard. who ha<1 been notified. surrounded the building t<> rapture the burglars and when Mr. -Hair came around the corner Mr. Kinard shot him with a shotgun. t hi nk :nu him a* on. ? ?>f the burjjarf. T?ie load took * fTert in the abdomen imiirf i ; r i nt? t h ? ? ? ri ! ? ?? t : n ? r 1 ' >o t i : n . ? . Y.'Uiitf Hair wn? given tir-t aid by local ? di- ;i:ii and ! ;i t ?? r rushed tov a (\> ?uid' ;i "i! f . r an operation. After v? ?,.i if. j, ?i_*? ji>n rt u : ?ft in the abdtunon '<? ?: t' ! I.- < .i I !?.-?. ta! ?? n w t h ? :? a.i - r ? ? * ? ? ! i ,i r i f the woimib-?l : 1 1 : i * i tfi'i i \ ? up i,. ?; ?? II ? do-d iib -ut 10 U th:- morning a message t" rola f i Vi-1 1 A 'fl !'t- t I ? ;1 \ his !,f. w--1. ?? ,i !? S ir the i: '??'?tines and ?l"!ii:i''!i wre I . t ? ra'.Iv t ? . r ? ? \>> pi making it imp"^(K,< t<> ?ave him. Mr. Hair w a < one . . f 1 1? e most popu lar \oung me.ii ..f th** community and ha* many friend* who are grieved at t-he a evident He Vrt* h member of The Fight v-firvt Division and served in France. TT> only returned from foreign poil last week and had been at home just a few day*. Mr. Kinard is a well known merchant here and is grief stricken over the accident. Young Hair i* survive*] bv his fnther and mother, Mr. and Mr*. IV P. Ilair, and a brother. At the University of Chicago. The remain* were brought here fhla afternoon from Columbia and wlM be interred at Prosperity Cemetery tomorrow. Two of the robber*, who were the CIUM of the nhootlng escaped, but the third was captured afteT a truffle. Sheriff Bleawe arrived on the acene shortly after the fa^al affair aini la searching for th# otVer two men. TIIK AMKRIt'AN INDIAN i tvod CJom to Nature and Did N??l N? ? tl U> Show 1 1 hn tli** Way. T?' <>l?e Jiff liU* luiti lit.UKliiil ill YiimI limited b> Ixirk wall*. and whole frol know ouly tin- akphtlft of city pave* tioMrt*, tin- great f?irea*. in bill a jumble of ir e?*>, that neeih ptniuing autl trim-. 4ii i T<? him, h tree i? ju?t a tfW, ariK.I nothing tod tin- trouble is. there art' entirely fr?o many of them. The <lewy frewhneH* of mahleuhair fern* in onlj a tangle of uxelen* weed#, ami trailing vino* are Jiwt nouM'tiliing to t>rip up on and atumble over. lint to one wboMe life ha* been eloi?e to nature in her changing uwmkIm, the wooih are great libraries of open booka, every page (Mutant* some WQUd<Nt* ful Mtory, for the <uie Who ha* learned tu read tbeui. The tvee* are old frientl* who*e live* toiicb bin in a most Inti wiate aivl personal way; and the wlul tiling that carpet fhe earth iim? revela? tiona of beauty and (oortneK*. Of all race* of uien, Phe American Indian, probably .lived juNt a little clowr tf. the great. thrriWHiig heart of nature, and nbMprbed more <?f her secrets than any tit lirr. FrouF his earliest childhood, the wood" were liiH schools of learning, ami the education he waived enabled him ? to I to Id his own tho daily struggle for e>(itftoi ?<???. Everything around him hold Some fMKT'rt that ho must master and iMhdoiivfytud, if ho wan to get the host out of life. The -plants. tho animals, the t ft 'oh, tho hi ix K and tho mineral* iniiAt closely olvscrved, ho th.oy may ho of service to hi in when the occasion r %< 1 1 *>< I for help. Tho signs of earth and sky UMMt ho correctly road, and in a way, must he<*>mo a part of Ids v o ry being. From centuries of life in tho. open, and with his existence depending i.ii llii' knowledge gained from observ ing thi" objects around, ho- developed an .u-iitoness .if sight and hearing, that was <?>irid only to the instincts of the aui m:i in <th fmBohr0f4. Wjfli bloodhound sagacity ho could follow tiho trail of man or beast with a sureties* that was little -'liohf of ii.uoan.uy. Ho could see tihiugs. that to tho white man woro in visible. What to tin* eye of t'h o pale face was untrodden grass, and undis turbed Mingo, became before tlie glanc-* i f an Indian, a Complete nsvird. down to tho NUiialh-si dotail, of tho unseen traveler*. Hy reading tho footprint*, which to' the white man (lid not exist at all. he could veuttuire a pretty safe guess as to tho iHiiiilli'r. tho sex and tho p.moi of tho maltors of the track*. Tin- last <>f those deductions whs ea a? a White man wvubl turn his toes out in walking, something an Indian never did. Their souse of direction, and tlolr power * of traversing many mile* i f unbroken floras, without path* or familiar landmarks. was something a setter could neither enderstand or omu late. The Indian wias Hr-Vesflosy he ing. a ii<1 m aincd farther from his home than the average White man of today, even with the help of good ronds and railway trains. When out for game, he diil not hesitate t/i wander far, and (.? penetrate regions tmknowfj^ and Grange to him. with the same' daring that kept Oolumbus from turning hack. These extended wanderings have been known to take thoau clear across the continent from the lakes of Canada to the (lulf of Mexico, hunting during the day. and keeping wherever darkness overtook t'lusii. Ln these l.?ng. lonely journeys the Indian seemed t\? he guid ed through the pa'tihloss forests, by nomo sense that was as unerring as the needle that guides the sailor over the waste of waters, (The time of the day or the night was as dear to him as if tickM ? >ff .in the dial of a clock, and the main pointx of tiho compass were ever present in his mind. Even if clouds obscured the sun or t'he jiolar star. as he called it. "The s*tar that does not walk," for days a t a time, it made little differ cttCC with linn, and caused n?> halt in the journey. He had 1mm to consult the leaves, tin- m? ? ss on the tree trunks, ??r t ! i ? ? thickness ?.f the bark. to ti '.1 him in what direction la.\ inrt.h. Two . r ni.irc Indians traveling or Imnt iia* ' c.uild separate when they ?t:i - *>t .. it j;i the morning, and agree :n?e' it t a rertsiin i>?>iiit at sunset, an I t wa- tin- rarest thing that the z\ ??<;?. was not. reached by all nt at- it \ he sano time. Tin' Indian was a g. .,.<1 walker, hut he chid not walk if ther* was a way of riding, so we ti in i that much of his traveling was d.ute on the waiters of the rivers and lakes that formed a network over the coinrtry, and in a canoe so frail that the slue .,f a white man would go era-dung through ithe ^bottom, and in which a novice found it hard to keep his balance But in this egg-shell if fair, the Indian did not hesitate to st.iwt nut on a trip of hundreds of miles on the most turbulent streams, and to shoot long rapids of whirling foam and jagged rocks. If a faTl was en countered that was absoli^tely out of the question, "he would carry bis canoe around the o>*ft rue* km . and take to the water below. Ilin mind had to he Hterally saturated with the lore of the woorls, ??o that he could at an in.4t?rtt's notle?, pot bis finger ion the partinilar facta and uae them to advantage. ? C. A. David In Oreenrine Dally New*. N Within full view of many bat hern an ! witliiu ? tylf mile of the heart of Ou. (nut. live p?{>*on? were drowued in M,> iasippi Hound Mm. Ina Thotnaa, while 200 yard* rroih *hor<*, xti'jijH-U ii?tu a chaunel twid four othar* lo*t their live* a>tt"mptiug to aave her. i i iinVu.m of CofMon In Kmhw* Couni). Saluda, H. i\, July 1010.? Act oul i iik to a refund i**?ucd hy li. B. llarf of the linked HtatW liureau of Or op K>tt iiua ton, the condition of cottou in South Carolina on Juue 25, wan 7K per cent "t normal. The condition on th** correwpouding date of lat*t year wan Ki per oeut, 71 per cent in 1017 and 71 |>er ceuft in 1010, the teu-year average being 77 per cent. * The erfti Hiatal acreage whoWK a de crease of 11 I?er. cent compared with last year, the total acreage planted and. Htanding on June 25, being 2,700.000 Hf| Th?4 condition rej>orted for Kertdiaw County is 7H. In eigWt or ten of tin extreme eastern coyn'tieH, embracing th?* 1'ec l>ee ttection, and In about the Bam>' number of co untie* in the northwestern part of the Htate, covering most of the Piedmont aectioa, condition* range from "fair" to "excellent", while iu the aouthery, western, central and north cwrttal counties conditions range from "very i>onr" fo "good." Ju?t what effect the excessive rain* of the lafct week iu June will have on the crop re inaiiiH to he Keen. On the well worked and well fertilised farm# there will prob ahty W h ii nhtioriiin) growth of the j?la i?t at tb?? eipninr of fruit, but lu why**' i?l?iit 1* *iualt it nonual plnut win )ikrt>y be imMliM-e<t. th?* fruit in* ?>f *iiiiii' to be (Iftermiuwi by iiub Wf nt'hrr c?nitUtlon? hihI rstvut of <uftiv?tio?. * ' ? ? * . % v ? ? '> . . , v ; ? " ' ? Wants-For Sale FOR S,\IiK ? At baivatn .pricea, ?U building*. lumber, doora and window* at N<on*b Camp Jackson. Alw> two JVO.OOO gallon water tauk?, four 12 li?iw power ga# engine*; two WoHth I Often 2 l-iuoh stroke pumps; one 250 k?11oii liowwer and tank. Ad dress Lewis Roofing <'??.. Columbia, i i i ft it; LOST ? Between Haile and MiH Streets lant Thursday or Friday, one liflir of tortoise kIu-11 Hpeobacles Finder pleasn return same to thin office and receive _V2||Wanil. In. I(H\VARI> ? I put Home bundle* in a car through mistake, couaisted of two Milk shirtwaist*. and noine other Mnall articles. A reward will be paid if returned to The Chronicle office. Mrs. Klla Ration. Imgoff, S. C. ltp FOR SAIjK? -Fime grade Jersey cow, froli in milk. Will stdT^Tor "$100 cash. Apply to J. J. McKenzle, Cam den, S. O. * \VANTFI> ? Young nuiu or youth who is not afraid of work> extydlent op portunity to learn electrical business, on outside of pla-ut. Apply in ovn handwriting to W. B. Allred, Manager, CaMidwj W|t?f and 7,igbt Caim ATTKNTION auto OWN'KKH ? Fink tire* a guaranteed an follow*; Jtt'g L ular black iimi-tikkfci, 0,000 >uHra; Red Top uon skhlK. 8,000 mile* , ?*prq <ii? ? 10, (MM) milcii. We will p<-raonaMy guarautee thut yoy will get ?u?tire aatisfaction, W. <>, Ilay'a Oarage, Carodeu, 8. 0. . 13 10 TO A I TO 0WNKR8 ? Wc now have five good mtH^hauics iu our tfhobt and ran attend to your repaint with greater dispatch than in the pa?t year. Tq Ferd owner* we wlab to atate that we art* under contract with the Ford Motor Co. to handle geneuine Ford parts only. >Ve Hell and guarantee Philadelphia Diamond Grid atorage batteries (or eighteen montha. The price ia no higher thau the other roakea. When ; in need of a atorage battery come in and let u? demon strate thia perfect battery. W. (). \ Hay'a Oarage, Camden, 8. C. 1ft I'KIV VTK UKSSON8 ? A few more pu pi la will t>? taken for aununer coach* iug if application i? made immediately. Call Mimi Etta Zfiup at Phone 13-14 RKI> CROAK 8H1NGL.R8 ? ?;a!i One Oh-Four. We hare the beat that can be manufactured. Mi.l town yard old McCreight lot next Oour House. J)avid P?g? and Co., Office Crocker Building tf FOR SALJfi ? KxUra heavy. ?two horae wagon with broad tiree. Can be Been at my yard. Price $30. Apply to lienry Savage, Cainden, 8. C. 9tf. BUTTER ? Finest grade of creaaaary * tmtter, made at Getty'a dairy, at 00 ocnta per pound: I^ang'a JHigh Grade Grocery, Cqgufen, S. C. 5tf. FARMER ' ' ' ' ' V ' ' ' 1 Are advised to list thei cotton with us to get bi prices. We sell direct to the Mil for the farmer for pmei or future delivery. See ub at once. Camel Cotton Co, Crocker Bldg. Camden, S. C, roil KENT ? House oq Hroad ? known as the Willjiun.s Hotel, aesftiou August Int. W. Hvbiu l?A8TllHKlNO? If you biv* ei ^ pasture it will pay y6u to w? 8. F. BrasiugUn, Camden, 8. (X 11 HOUR KODAK FINISHING. rolls developed 10c; packe 20t prints 2 l-2c, 4c, 5c ; eulargiaj j up. Specialists ? we do notk}a|j kodak finishing. All work guai to pleaee. Eastman Kodak*, ? Supplier. Columbia Photo Wa Co., 1111 Taylor Street, Colt S. C, BKICK FOK SALE? Just rtoelTtdi car loads of brick. J. L. Quy ber Co., Camden, 8. C.* BUTTER ? Finest grade of ?.v butter, made at Getty'B dairy, centa per pound., Lang's High Grocery, Camden, 8. Q, AN ice-cold bottle of Orange-Crush gives sparkling satisfaction to parched palates. . ? .? >**'/ - '"V -1 Orange-Crush has a carbonated piquancy which makes it an irresistibly delicious drink. You can be sure of the purity of Orange Crush because it is made from the fruit oil, pressed from fresh ripe oranges, and such other wholesome ingredients as pure granulated sugar, carbonated water and citric acid, which is a natural acid found in oranges, lemons ana grapefruit. , ; ? . Orange We suggest that you try an ice-cold bottle of Orange-Crush today. You can obtain it wherever soft drinks are sold; either by the bottle or case. We bottle , Orange-Crush under stri<5uy sanitary conditions and personally vouch for its purity. A case in tKe home will bring joy to every member of the family. * Camden Coca-Cola Bottling Camden, South Carolina