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fQT Bale or Bent? ? room ttouse on Lyttleum street tfor OflCUpted ^ % S* l>uliow?) lot lOOx^&U. Hum uml itft ,B<*r y lM-( ?mtMott, ?H?y iwius; prlc? on application. ^|^Oo9 lot on Chestnut street (between Hoe) jupAii j , |)r. 8. <5. BeWP'a renldence.) One lot 00 ^ street, IQOxJJ&O, a bargain for ?|ul? k wilt*. B> M,. T-: -*. - V V ^-r- '? > '.*?'-?**' ' JC ' * " HI ?crea of land on, Adam* Mill rOftd 7 mlb** Kut <>f i in Two horse farm open and under cultivation, balance ct ill wood and pin-- tPUfr <>n?- 1 mom dWOlHlll, barn Uio cotton aii ii?'? bulldbica F< % Z 7t*r (61* '?? ? WW*I?. _g ,, M l> <>t land "J u? i K:i Soutbeuht or <aind?n on cam Partington publlo road, et opn stid uhder cultlvs O0 ?ir loiiK and short laftf timber, baluiirc ill wood one ; room dweUl.ni* md gWMes; $0d4 running 'u'.M through plac?\ Thlrt in a ?<?'?'? ^|}1 !aitn and can ???? U0,?;hl f?"' % 1X5 acres of land 7 miles from CiuihJsu on I)Hrllngion ( 1(|| loa,i, so ant's open ;<iui under cultivation, balance in ood with some pine timber. v..lS acres in pasture, under wire. |)|( ^our iDiiiti itwi'ljhiK, barn and st&bles, I:.<> anull nillmi louse *K0? ut-l-v Farm of K. end H. 11, Truesdul#, 11 miles north of CamdO'B, S- (' ? ,li'K tract contulnH 13J -acres; 75 acres open land mostly level; 1 4-r001W dwelling, 2 tenant house#, 2 *ood sprbu'h "f water, C. P. DuBose & Co. REAL ESTATE v SELL DO YOU WANT TO j JqAN BORROW I May Help You. LAURENS T. MILLS; CAMDEN. 8. C. I wish to announce that I have enlarged my stables on Kutiedgo street, by. haring quite an extension and addition lor the accommodation of my j>tock of buggies and wagons. ? ? ? ->Vl I Want Your Business in this line as well as in the stock line. i am handling \ . ax number of weli known . , . . ? ; '? v v" ' ?' Buggies and Wagons I eal] your attention to tlie "Virginia" and "Roland" Bug Sics which I handle. Also the famous "StudebakW' and "liOuisburg" Wagons. These are the best ' grades on the market. ? An Up-to-Date Stock of Harness When in the market for^a good buggy, a good wagon, or for horses and mules bo sure and see me. I am catc 1 inp to the needs of the public, and want yon for a ousto wior. \ Call and See me. IXM TOItN ON FINOKtl |*i<| NTS. \ arh-u* i ditis uiul 1,1m h Tliut to OllO'H hlHltiril'Mlioll, ^ Kxtituf nuhon of ih?* palm of th?' ha ad uild t he ' palmar toirfaco c?f tin* "lugcr* lovoalt, the existence ?.>f two Of IllKH Hllll ill tin* 111 ^oino aiv inoiv or le*.i tiau-v vt i snj in* i In- axis oi the 'limb, a ml aiv liU'i'.ulai , blfurn-ated and more aro nt anted in flexlonal movements. *? h? aiv muscular fo)drt, Mich an aiv found adjaeentt o all 1 l>*v joints on the side where tiior# Ik f lotion. The arrangement ol those larger Un?s has Kuarculy imy interest except In palmistry, j Hut another system of lines Is perceived, much liner, more deeper and also regular, m?ys Tho Now YoiW Herald, in certain parts these lloiw conduce i.? idi' in m ii< ati and com pi 1 QUI 0d designs, for Instatice, In the Il?;diy pan ol ili<> tint phajania fof the fingers and ttlSQ 1,1 tho base of 1 I "? IIIIKCIH. Those Hues are Uiiown a., pepU-t Ittry lines, la-cauj..' they me pro duced by a lineal arrangement In series of the papillae of the skin, forming curves, break*, bifurcations and anastomoses. I aspect ion <>t tin- designs <?i <l>e 10 flngors shown that tho designs are absolutely different, either' in the general appearance of the de signs or In tho detail of the Indi vidual lines. The designs on the end phalanges of the fingers are tho most interesting. Analogous designs are also ob served on tho nolo of a man's loot, especially on tho fleshy purt of the, toes, but these exhibit less variety than the fingers. These doBlgnH have been studied for a long time past. Kvoji In an cient times Importance was attached to finger IpiprlntH for the purpOBO Of establishing the identity of an individual. < In the seventh century the Chinese utilized Inked finger imprints for the signature of offic ial documents. The same process has been employed In all -ages by tho Turks. During the 19th cen tury this method of signature was adopted In certain English speaking countries and Is still used In Egypt, ?touinanla and many other coun tries, where the custom has long been observed of making a finger imprint on official Identification pa pers, passports and . various docu ments, tho Imprint being made close to tho signature or being used in place of the latter, if the person be illiterate. In France, as is wdll known, ever prisoner taken to the anthropomet ric department is asked to place hie fingers one after the * other on a sheet of glass, which is covered with a thin layer of black grease. Fie must then place them on a sheet of white e'rtrd board. The resulting imprints stand out us clear as an engraving and con stitute indelible marks of identity. It in maintained that the digital design never changes in the whole courBe of a man's existence, and that wounds even can not destroy the delicate filigree patterns or change (he aspect of the finger im print. The of the digital 'designs in , the s'atile individual and the infinite varlet> from one man to another Justify their use in for I ensic medicine to establish human identity, to fix some distinctly indi vidual to be identified and differen tiated from all others. Since the introduction of seccessful methods of classifying finger imprints they have been used to classify descrip tions of individuals dangerous to society, which are of especial inter est 40 courts of justice. Just as anthropology furnished Bertillon of Paris with his long and complicated system of osseous meas i urements for the purpose of classi fying in a ^definite order all the 1 characteristics of a malefactor, so jalso it suggested to Dr. G^lton, of I London, and to Vucetich of La Plata from the year 1890 the basis of a new systom of tabulating the criminal population. ! Uul while the anthropometric sys tem Is applicable only to adults and can not be applied with exactitude to women, the system affording on ly a number of more or less exact figures of measurements of bones, whiclOeven taken as a -whole, are completely insufficient to enable the identity of the subject to be affirm ed in the absence of other proof, tl\e imprints made by the 10 fingers on the contrary, afford a precise, shraple and absolutely personal de scription, and the method is applic aTe to both sexes. There is no por.^lbility of error in this system of. identification. The imprints are sup plic.l by the subject himself without the intermediary oT any Instrument \fiihout anything whatever to v i 1 1 - lute the precision of the process. And thpse marks of identity have 1 lie particular advantage that they may he found wher^ a --crime has Wen committed, thus giving the signature of the criminal. The trac es of the fingers left by "malefactors Ou tbu Hconu o( ?i crime, boiling ob JorU which they h*vo touched vy^th f 01 bleeding f inner* ofttmiu f.ut afford rfiti'oduclioii^ of tb?? ptt-'j ptlblly lliU'H, bUfflehntly rlciir to rmv'er It posbibl* l?y comparison Jo flint Ollt by whom, tin-no trace* huvo teen |?*ft SV'hon the tracob are n^ ? !i;.rly vistblo tbti'o urt- e?<riAiu >pu iul < beniMwl in ?>??? : ? whhdi will irnuer iiu'in iippim ut, ? olorlug them and tlxlntc ou tin* objeti, >v hat??v?>r it limy I >? ? I 'luj 'M pl inth bit \ <? ab <? ? ? l ? ?? u proved useful to the polb-o In i-?tah Mtthiiig tiio litonilly of mutilated bodb'H of unknown Individual*, the lerognltlou of wit f* in 1? froqueiitly left to tbu ijiancc of public IdeinUt ! -ilh.i, Ml a moi (Oil) The manifold advantage* of t he ?>'?tem of judieiui identification by f UiK**r imprint* hua U'd to it* udop' I Ion by a large number of State* to tin d. tt i iimm i?r t be juithropQwoi rip i>n>> y iiit |t u i,. at pre*en t ?..ndua|)y abandoned, Numerous ? ? tent If U? Hcniitle.i bav<- i * i 1 1 f i? d t<> i l.e exceUeiico 0f the HyutQlU, not ably in 1 00 7 the tail* Acadainy of TcUuues, which when eonHUltcd by vht Minim or of Justice, confirmed It; e superiority of tho finger Imprint us a meanti of idontlflcutlon In view of It h more genorul substitution for the anthropometric system. \ I * 1 1;\ Y WORTH "1 lt?- climax" Joseph M. W(*Ih'i,,k < MM tly ?.r Modern jjljfat, 'hi- little Kill who lost hor VOlce," mull is tin* Sobriquet of Ad ellna, the heroine Id Joseph M, We ber's brilliant New York ? success "The Climax," a stirring story of Bohemian life l>y lCdward Locke, with Incidental music by Joseph Car Ilreli, which will appear In this city during the coining theatrical season. The author Is Bftid to have given us something really new In theatrical conceptions. lie bus worked out his theme with humor ami Imagination, with a delicacy of poetic fancy, with truth to tho de mands ot' reasonableness In charac ter and situations', and with dramat ic plcturesqueness and structural effectiveness. There will be no at traction seen here this season better worth seeing in Its combination of Qualities that make up for pure en joyment. In - "Th6 Climax" tho eh tire action takes place at the Bohe mian apartments of I,ulgt Golfanti in New York. Adeline Von Haagn conies to Luigi, a voice culturlst, an lives with him and his son IMotro, a young musician of great promises. , Adeline is beloved by John Ray mond, a young doctor, who endeav ors to persuade her to relinquish her love for art for his devotion, but she steadfastly refuses. A Blight operation, upon her vocttl chords 4? found' neccssary, and t<> further his own ends and to obtain his heart's desire, the doctor, by mental suggestion, wills that she shall be unable to sing upon her re covery from the ordeal. iMetio, also loves Adeline, and he jias writ ten and composed "The Song of the Soul," inspired by Adeline, but when she tries to sing this song her voice fails her completely. This tragic note of the play is one that makes the heart swell up and seek relief in tears. Belloving that she can no longer become a great singer, she agfrees to wed the doctor, and in the pleasant excitement preced ing her marriage, she discovers that ahe has regained her voice, and "all Is well that ends well." KXCUKSION RATES Via Southern Hallway, J'remier (hai rier of the South. Atlnata, Ga.? Account National Commercial Gas Association. Tick ets on sale November 30th and De cember 1st, final limit December 10th, 1912. For information as to tickets,, rates, etc., apply to ticket agents. Why Fret ? in. the American Magazine appears the following: "Are the trains too slow for ytiu? Caesar, with all his court, never ?>xcoe<led the speed limit. "Are your wages too small? In Kurope people are content with tnak Ing n living. "Are you ugly? Cleopatra, though homely, bewitched two emperors. . * * "Are you cold? Tho soldiers of Valley Forge, walked barefoot on the Ice and snow. "Are you hungry? The children of Lntjia are starving for the want of a crust of bread. "Are you tired? Why fret about ii? Jacob was tired when lie dream ed tho angels of Heaven. "Are you sick? Suppose' you had lived two thousand years ago when sickness was fatal. "Are you poor? The Saviour of Men was not. wealthy. ^ _ "Cheer up! Praise God that you live in the midst of Tlis blessings! * { ? "Why fret?" ~ 1 0 Of the Season's Most Up-to-Date MILLINERY the Styles are New and Snappy The Prices Are Right Novelties of all Kinds and Prices Miss Mattie Gerald CHOICE STEAKS AND PORK SAUSAGE Can Now Be Found v.. & L DeLOACHE & COMPANY Near Hermitage Mill - . Plione 221 -J. II you grow p<?as a Star Pea Huller will please.and pay you. If you use Fertilizer see our Force-Feed Wizard Dis tributor. The hopper holds 100 pounds. If you plow cotton and corn see the J. 1V1. B. No. 20 Cotton and Corn Plow Stock. The swell* beam will not break or bend. Write us for circulars and priced. Our offer to the read ers of this paper will interest you. - v STAR PEA MACHINE COMPANY, Bennettsvilie, S. C. Still going on at the Opera House Store.