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Wants-For Sale i?k s (^,w? 23 ..?,iith* old. with young oalf For oth ... information ?H*d?ew <1. l> Muun, jjt, a, u??l?-?i. ft 0. 40ifttspd 1.7,? <\|.K?<>?? tint' mule. Apply tin* t. J . roH .sAI.B*?,nut nl Ittixl. i.-ii milw <a>.i of I'^uihKmi ucai' ill ii>imlN ohuivh. About 75 a?re* ,tin.- iur. picture, Fu other ii? fotun&ti0ii .1, I1, llatoliff, Kontc 1 [.iii^niW, iH. O. 30-l?,J-pU OK sAI.B?I In??'t*S ill?' No. 11 and 12 t0?K staph' cttotoM **ed At 00 per <"? *'? *>? Kewhaw. .Length of stflp)'1 1 "'10 to 1 3-8. YioUl good; .'iiU ?,? jtu-k. Cash with order. H. L. sl. w? ?! i. KtftahW* s. y> ifMJl -?? / Ol< SAM*/?Os'o. 1 jtcavine bay. bright and beautifully vurqd at $40.00 pop ton. I- W. Hoykfo- 30-31J W \ ' ??} F0IC SALB??T have a Inr>j4* stook of yarioiH braud-s of bicycle tire*. 1 am ?v?<r?toeked on these goods ami will s?)j ihem at Kreatly reduced prices. Stokes Hioyele Shop, Camden. 8. C. -18 i ?, (? j fOK SALJ?r-*H) fru^-ls Ktfmwm big; 1*.U K>ng wtaple cotton wed. Basy to j iD? k and very early. Absolutely pure, j liriuging $1 p?'r jx>und to<lay. $-1.00 )MT 1> ujfln?]. Fob. Jtmibert. J. >2. Cvtllln, ({Hubert, S. O. 48tf )K SALK??Wood of all kind, cut any length. IMivered $7.00 cord. J. O. Crow, (V.ssatt, S. C. 43tf OK KKNT?An attracttivcly furnished huiiM- for rent chirtng the summer nmnUiS. l%m M-J. W-l-2 ifA\TKl>?'IV) buy one good young mule Uiiso. single wagon at reasonable ijiriof. Mrs. ltt W. White, 1214 Fair Street, Camden, S. C. 30-pd )0.MS WANTED?Two or three fur ished <>r unfurnished rooms wanted. Address Tin* Chronicle. 30-31 I'ANTKU?l>ealor for Mathews full au tomata! elect light plants for coun try home*. Anyone interested, cither [t>ii wishing to sell or purchase for own u rite Karnes Blcctric t!o., Itock Mum. sc. ts.-> . 'ANTED?Eight or ten good laborers to work on public roads. Will pay $35 per month and board. Apply to T- F. H or ton, County Com missioner, Kershaw. S. C. IAXTKI)?You to know that Worth JMoh' will positively grow your hair Lwhtn other prejwration* fail. Hoe ?Mine. K. K. Helton, ot the Worth More Blair INirlor. .X;H> linrad Street. Agents |want?'<J. - , ?JOtf' IE\T WANTED ? For Worthraore Hair Preparation.' Se? or call on iMadam K. B. Helton, 1713 Gordon ?Street, Camden, S. C. 20t? >ANS?-on improved real estate, easy ^ertns. K." vonTresckow, Camden, (' ' 43 JKKS ADVANCED IN PRICE?On fcfcm-h 8 tires advanced 20 per cent. Uv purchased $2,000.00 worth on the l?l<! price ami wHl Rive. our cufitomers this advantage an long an they last, this means one-fifth of the purchase t>i*i<*v sav?yl and means the same ap >ii\ iiik tires ttt dealers <vst. We don't Jiink (his lot will last more than two peek*. \V. <>. Haysf Oarage. "<01 OKAt.K 1IATTEBY REPA1KS?We Mn repair any make storage battery. buy a new one until you are nre yours cannot be repaired. Kx lii u .uion ulid *est free, Heard's lJat k-ry Service, West DeKalb Street, i ?auiden. S. Phone 118-.I CKSHAW COUNTY Open For Good Man?A good payiiik business open pr a good reliable, energetic man be ?n rhe ages of 2(> and 45, selling I* igh's Good Health Products di t i" the farmers of KershawCoun V??u must furnirth A-l references i?i* 1 primal bond. If interewted write ii"?t i?> State Solicitor W. T. Powell, 7v I'.M.vt Street. Spartanburg, S. C. 50-52 no: TO Al'TO OWNERS ? We ? in transit such tune a yd labor tools and machines as follows. shaft grinding tools to save ik shafts that have, been cut or r<us?-d. cylinder grinding machine bit will grind out all makes of cy ? In much more accurate and smooth ? Ixiring. valve re-?eaifing machines, ? ksliaf.t and conneoting rod reamers, ^ ' i. Hays Garage. 50-1 ?- j : ? I l> VKKKS?W e are prepared to do | work at a reasonable price. All i K tfunranteed. Give us a trial, j *!' ?!:? and Kirkland, Camdefi, S. C. j 20tf. ^ I MII.I,?1 wish t?? announce that luive in ojM>ra(tion my grist mill ''' ?'in prepared to do^ your grinding IT. Itrit Croft. 50-51 CLKANED?Have your old hat '.?n<-rl and rebWked into the latest style. It can bi> done and we ll I" it. Send them in by parcel Columbia Hat <'??.. 1211 Lady | Columbia. S. C. 50-1-2-3-pd SI I I)?Thoroughbred stallion Ilork p' rgi.nt.Tfsl No. 40923. For terms I P' v T It. Mruce. (Hnnden. S. C. j 48-3 \<?K BATTERIES RECHARGED >"ur battery is no good <lon't j im w one until you see us, we j i'k<* nil "xeliange with you that ! ?ave you money. Itatteries r?-' "'d rebuilt. Agent for Presto- ' 'Utteries. Heard's Hattery Ser-j ''araden. S. C. Phone 118-J F ' P MONDAY?Two ha; mar**1 M'-- t >wr>er can get mmo by pay '"r this ad and expense*. I.. .1.1 l.tn WotftTitle, S. C . 51 Mountain Children in Kaincoata pf Leaves. Australia being considered a continent, then I'a|>ua (British New Guinea) Is* the largest inland In tb*? world. This terri tory is made up of the mulnlund of pnpua Itself and many small Island groups. Papua lies to* the north of Australia, and Includes the much talkedof territory formerly called Ger ronn New Guinea. It is a land of won derful scenery, of strange peoples, of the grandest commercial possibilities, it is the richest asset of the common wealth of Australia, writes Thomas J. McMahon In the Illustrated Ixmdon News. ' Through tli** center of the Island runs a great mountain chain, termed the central mountains, many of the summits running from 6,000 to 10,000 feet in height. These mountains are covered all the year round to the ut ? inost^ peak^vmi-the dure. Under the bright blue skies of the tropics and the flashing sun, they are at all times grandly imposing, standing out, as they do. like masses of burnished gold. Away in the sum mits, seldom traversed by the white man, are most uncommon scenic beau ties. The effects of sunlight and m.sts to be seen in looking over the great valleys are wonderful In the extreme. Such mist effects are not to be found in any other part of the world. s"I"e day tourist* will flock to Papua and to the wonderland of Its mountains. The mists are remarkable, coining and go ing, folding and spreading, rising and falling, changing from a snow-white to grav, and sometimes In the flashing of sunbeams to brighter colors. At time* with magic suddenness the mists van ish, leaving the mountain tops above and valleys below standing out sharp and clear, and revealing the great red gaps in the hillsides, from the amazing landslips that are ever going on, ac companied by noise like the booming of great artillery. Mountain Villages and Valleys. Round about and all along the moun tain-sides are hundreds of small native villages?brown *pots for all the world J? The nests of *ome giant bird. These villages al*<perched on the ends of spurs, and even on the very brinks of precipices, and are approached only by hidden tracks, such U the cauUon nf the natives to guard against the sud den appearance of any tribal ene y. The valleys are superb as seen from the mountain spurs nnd looking over the dense, dark Jungles through which nre streaked flashing bands of silver, Z courses of the mighty rivers so numerous in Papua. Beginning In some mountain torrent?some waterfall, per haps?these wide, swlft-flowlng rivers rush to the sea through Jungles that are thicklv planted with an amazing varletv of commercial timbers, and from which some day soon thousands of sawmills will be sending to the coun tries of the empire immense quantities of timber and the pulp for paper. The mountain-sides are walls of moss and fern. Giant trees of Im mense girth shoot up. the branches n.lcklv festooned with bright flowering creepers, the great trunks gripped by mooter vine, will, s?ms. and leaves whose lenplll an breadth are measured In feet. Wg > h the branches sounds the ^range ? - musical caw of the gorgeous Bird of Paradise; for this bird of the most hriU.ant plumage-more brilliant than nnv other bird in the world?is, after all" but of the meiin. low fnmlK of the common eroW Papua- U the only country in the world that knows I t J? J Z home of the Bird of Paradise^ There Is n wide variety, and the law protects the blr.l with such sexer tv ( hat a very henvv punishment Is in- . ftlrteft for it. or even for steal- I '?rs nnde'r r*n r<*li* ^ouTlcts" Hfid customs oRieer* 1 . vi'rv dlllfien'ly f..r nnv hidden j jil,i>n:ice ..rtallof ? bird will he worth h,.tidied. of nonnds?one reason Av they are sel dom seen In ladles' bonne,. nrnvtidaj . Some Wonderful Insect*. ,1,1. erla.,,1 nf I>?I>?a ,be Wand ? .peelalt.v. .he clan, batter nT Tbe?e many-colored in from twelve to eighteen inches from win, .IP >" ? bev bave bodies the si?" "f " v?',nl MM. SlH-lmens of these butterflies .re to I* ?ecn ta the collection of the lute Huron Rothschild, who sent out to Papua a scientist to collect WW* In sects ami birds. Another marvelous Insect. of the cricket class, Is whrtt I# popularly called the "Six o'clock" bee tle. This little -creature exists abun dantly, und Is -really wonderful In Its habits. It gets Its-name from the fact that every night at precisely six o'clock it gives forth u resonant, fur-reaching chirp, exactly Ilk*' a haul electric hell. At six o'clock otic will begin, und In a few inlntites the mountains will re sound with the deafening noise of ihese punctual timekeepers. Hut long after the Insects have ceased to chirp, the amazing echoes of the hills will throw hack the sounds, lusting for several minutes. Travellers in douht as to the correct time SCt their watches to this insect's- evening chirp. A companionable little inlte also -known only lo the mountains or rupna Is the "Bell-frog." which produces the notes of a hell, sweet, soft, and clear, and all day long can he heard the mu sical and friendly tinkle. A tiny gray frog from under a stone is responsible, and gives out Its cheerful sound us a warning that Its home, Is not to be dis turbed by u cureless foot. In the mountains of Papua roam a plKn?y siy.ed people, the pure Papuans. They are a race quite distinct from the coastal peoples, and with customs that lire very primitive und strunge. Though small, they are perfect In stature, and the young people are quite good-look ing. They are now fast coming with* In the pale of civilization, owing to the splendid work of the traveling magls trates of the Papuan administration? a very fine body of civil servants. A few year8 back, before these magis trates got In touch with these people, they were constantly at war, one trlb? lighting another, sometimes destroying or wiping out whole villages, or, more often, killing the men and carrying of! the women. Men and women drese very meagerly?In fact, their main cov ering is necklaces of dogs' teeth or shells, with a long white bone pencil stuck through the lower portion of th* nose, and called "nose-sticks. The men paint their bodies with red and yellow pigments, and carry big bow* and arrows, much bigger than them selves. The women, always very sub ject to the-men, are silent and shy. and do not decorate themselves much. In time of widowhood or family mourn ing they blacken their faces and hair, already very black, with charcoal, giv ing them a most grotesque appearance. While the natives of the coast lands of Papua demand tobacco as a present, the hill peoples delight in common coarse salt, und. given a handful, they will treasure it up to make It last a? long as possible. Huts Built Up on Pole The native'villages have the hut* built up on poles, and, while the family live on the upper story, pigs wallow in awful filth below, and, in consequence, It Is possible to smell a village mile* away. These people are very fond of dogs and pigs as pets. Pigs are nat ural to the island, but ilogs are not. and this is how the natives came to get fherp: Many years ago. when Papua (then called New Guinea) was only oc casionally visited by some plucky Brit ish traders, a dog belonging to one of them prowd an immense attraction to the natives; and the trader, seeing a good opportunity to make money?or rather, a cheap way to get large sup plies of copra (dried coeoannt for oil), of which the natives hud plenty to gar ter n.^iv ? w cut "to Australia and in one 'or nv#4qirmrmntrfwv'ft* twtt'igivf"tip ail the mongrel dogs that mold be had. Hp -ot quite a slop full, anil returned to Papua, doing a roaring trade, every <|ck celling for at lea-t over twenty p0?nd??or rhat value in copra. In turn, tlie coastal native* bartered their rlogv to th#? mountain natives, but the breeds from mongrel* have deteri orated until the wretched things row seen are hairless. ugly creatures, petted while alive, but much* prized after death for their teeth, which make the principal native jewelry. Papua will presently loom large in commerce, for it is a 'and of mar^el ons resources, and Tf? soil i? of rich fertility. Every tropical plant product thrives wonderfully, and British enter prise has shown that, with wise nnd prog,-ive administration thls^ Island should he one of the bright est' of the British empire. THE MOST BEAUTIFUL CAR IN A MFAUCA THE driving cohipartment in the Liirclv mont four passenger model is a revela tion to most people -a blessing to the man behind the wheel. It was designed for luxuri ous ease and that means there is arm room, elbow room and leg room in abundance, ; Most cars, you - know, are obliged to com promise on seating space?but not the "Larchmont". It was designed to make four people supremely comfortable, and a com bination of long wheel base and closer coach work has accomplished just this result. PAlGE-DETROIT MOTOR CAR COMPANY, DETROIT | ' ' ' CAROLINA MOTOR CO. (Inc f Camden, S. C. % Hest iti the Long Ku;t Many a man who would not buy a tire because it was cheap will buy an inner tube simply because it costs a dollar or two less. \et the performance of the tire is often dependent upon the service rendered by the tube. It is a wise economy to equip with Goodrich Red Inner Tubes in the first place. | | SI . I I ? I I ? I r ~ * (Goodliriidhi prJ INNER i\m tubes *7"hf R F Gootfnrh "Rubber Company, Akron. Ohio 'MnkfTt of the Silvertown Cord Tire