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THE CAMDEN CHRONICLE I'ubllHtiml Kv?'fy Krliiuy, Per Annum .. $I.W> If. I>. Mien f I'tiblMiers. K. N. McDowell, . . ) E?Ur*4 u m?v?4 <Um mM mIIk ?t ik? ?( Cl?<w, S?a<k I'iffilu. 1 1 on N, liroud Si. - 'I'lione ISO CmiiIhi, S. July H, 1011. Report* received lit Clcmsou College Indicate iliat South Carolina will have a flno frlilt crop this summer. Thin In 4*H)H>ciall,v trutf of apples and js'iichos and tin* outlook for grapes Is also good. Fruit production Ih iucrciislng In this stale rit|?l?i)y. |ly Hot being appll-?'l of < ? s | ? I < ? - 1 \ cm being stored. In a barn Hit chief Wal lace a la I captain J H lileiin, of C|>ar lotto, N. < were i us t it 1 1 1 1 killed a.lul several others seriously wounded \s ht|e j lighting 11 tire In Charlotte Wednesday, chief Wntkiii* of the ( iiiimIcii lire de partiueiit publishes u notice ill another place In today's pupcr j-cipiestiiig that tltoae having explOsI ves stored apprise him of their exact locution. Should Cole Mease he returned to t lut t "livery stable" and peace declared in Mexico tin* newspapers would lie hard put for front page stories. It is scarcely kind to jump on Mr. ttkharils for hohlJng fnpt to his Joh as railroad commissioner while run ning for governor, If Mr. Richards is defeated lie will .still have ids name on the state payroll, while if lie is elect ed iie will he in a position to pass along his railroad commissionershlp to some faithful friend and campaign worker.- ? Sumter Item. The Fid it or, iiersonally, does not ob ject to real good automobiles running past his house at 100 miles per hour, but when these fellows who drive "wrecks" shamble by, at a reckless unit, throwing nuts and holts and mon key wrenches through the window panes of his house, lie objects, serious ly, indignantly and furiously. No man hankers to lie killed with a back-date gun. ? Marion Star. The newspaper men who are cov ering the campaign have new mimes, lis a result of the attacks by Major John <?. Richards, chairman of the railroad commission,- and a candidate for governor, on what lie has named, "the newspaper oligarchy." A. I). Oli pb a nl of The 'Columbia State has des ignated the three newspaper men as oligarchy 1. and .'t. .1. A. Duly of The < 'olunihia Record Oligarchy No. 1, Caldwell of The News and Courier and (Jreciiville Daily News as oligarchy No. himself as 'Oligarchy No. and ? J. It. Calvert, the Western Fnlou muTi who is making the rounds with the campaign and handling press copy, ax chief siave of the Oligarchy. Richards and Carroll Siiums, also running for governor, are the only two out of the UO candidates who have attacked the newspapers so far. HOW TIIK CANDIDATES STAND. The candidates for Governor are placing themselves on record upon tin? groat questions of t" lie* day. Tliriv is no mistaking their stand. Charles Carroll Sims says ho favors tho policies of tho present adininistra t Ion and If ho Is elected ho proposes to continue thorn. .1 no. i!. Richards is Hat I'ootcdly op posed to compulsory education, and Is not even willing for tho people to vote oil the (paction, lie has given up State wide prohibition, and now advocates loeal option with teferellee to the j whiskey business. Manning, drowning, Mendel Smith ! all favor local option in tlie mat ter of compulsory education: that Is. tliev favor allowing cacti county votel on the question for itself. Manning and drowning likewise favor local op* tion with reference to whiskey selling. I rhy Is an adminM rat ion man strict ly. Ilis chief aversion is a cotton mill, though what lie proposes to do with thorn wo have never heen ahlo to loam. Charles A. Smith stands alone In ad vocating a law that will give the ]>oo plo of tho State tho benefits of the Webb law with reference to whiskey, lie is and always has been a State wide prohibitionist and favors a State-wide elect ion on tho question, lie also fa vors a State-wide vote on tho matter ?of compulsory education. ? Cllnkscales Is out-and-out for a State wide law for compulsory education. He is making this the chief plank In his platform. In the matter of law enforcement. Browning. Cllnkscales, Cooper, Man ning and both Smiths are outspoken. They will put n stop to race track gam bling and other flagrant violations of law. Sims, Kichards and I rhy are strangely quiet on these matters. Duncan devotes his time to discuss1 ing something which ho calls "the sys tem." Just what It Is, 110 one has ever been able to understand. He has run for Governor Heveral times lioforo, and always on this platform. ? Abbeville Medium. THE NEW RULES. Mr. Smith Had to fie Shown; Then He Wat Satisfied. . y~ Jollli Itoy Hjqnlfli to tl?0 were la ry to enroll IiIh name iin ii member of the IlardKcrnhble < -1 1 1 1 ?r With | m*ii in htind lie wrote with ii flourish "J. It. Sijilth." "You miiHt write your full name, Mr. Smith," kindly suggested I he hcc retary. "What tnr'f" If Mpif r?*?| Mr, Smith. "That'* tin* panic I go by; cveryb<?dy klldWH UK' l)V lllllt nil What's tin* use of nil Hint?" a, V "The mil's say ho," repltwl the seere f(?r.\ politely. Mollis somewhat luol 1 1 tic I by the kindness ami good sense of tin* secre tary, Mr, Smith took Up t )i<* pen again ami \\ roll', "John It. Smith." "That 'isn't right yet Mr. Smith," saiil tho secretary. "Tim rule* jlny you must sign your full inline. ahl .\Jr SmIMi, Jjtg lie glared at I ho secretary. "What you wit lit jne to sign my full minm for?" "I don't want you to slgn^ a nyt hlng," promptly responded thi' long suffering ? secretary, beglnnliig to lose Ids pa Men ce In losing so mm-h time with Mr Smith's 'signing; "hut the rules require if. I presume there |h gissl reason for it. Anyway my duty Is to : get every man to enroll correctly so that ho cun vote in the primary," Am Mr. Smith wanted to be quite .sure of his right to vote at the pri mary, lie ileehlei) to take no ehanceK; so he took up the immi tin* third time and wrote "John Hoy Smith, and de parted. Mr. Smith Is ordinarily a reasonable man ; a good business man and upright and square, hut he is hard bended sometimes, like most other men, and so he felt he had not lieen treated rlglit in being required to ? sign his 'full name ' to Mm* club roll in order to be entitled to vote. When he met his neighbor Jirown he was still wrought up over the matter and ex pressed himself freely and forcibly to Ids neighbor, ami denounced the "/ooj ru|e." lie had too much sense to think there was any "trick" in it, and was too honest a man to pretend to think so. Mr. Brown said: "You don't liked! because you could not sign the roll J. it. Smith; Is that what vou don't 1 1 keV" "Yes," said Mr. Smith, "that is just it. There is no sense iu it." "Maybe there is." replied Ids /iel?h bm\ "There Is :i .1. |{. Smith in the iil'.vL township, you know. Mis najuc is James It. and yours Is John It. and there Is a John It. Smith iq. another township whose middle name is Itob cit. \\ lint is to hinder one or both of these men from voting in your name if ii Is on the roll as "J. it. Smith?" "I hit everybody in the township knows me," said Mr. Smith, "and both the other Smiths are ^louest men, so far as I know, and would not cast a' fraudulent vote." "That may be all true," and Mr. 1 1 row n, "in a small town like this or out iu the, country where everybody knows everybody else; but when you come to large cities, .where a man may not know ?'Yen his next door neighbor, and where politics is a regular busi ness. it Is a good idea to throw every safeguard possible around the ballot," so a sto secure a fair and honest eleer . t ion." "I hadn't thought of that," frankly spoke Mr. Smith. "And now since I have come to think of it, I believe it is a mighty good rule. And added he, it i>? no t rouble to sign one's full name anyhow. 1 just got put out about nothing because I -listened to some of the fault tinder- and did not think for myself." .Most of thi* trouble in politics comes people do not think for them selves. A I Joy's rockets. The contents of a boy's pockets arc a pretty good indication of the hoy's character. says The Mother's Magil/Tne, ami any mother who studios thoih oa re fill I y will liiitl foml for thought in plenty. The hoy with a mechanical turn of mind will he pretty apt to treasure in his poekets a good sharp knife, a six ineh rule, a jwneil, and some hits of wood, wire and twine. lie will also, he apt to have a half dozen queoi con trivances, the result of his ihventlve i lien Ins, j The idle, thoughtless hoy will put I anything and everything into his imck 1 ets. without regard for "rhyme or rea son." Articles wholly worthless will i predominate. The degenerate, and the hoy who has fallen Into had company, will treasure cigar stuhs. cigarettes and matches, broken pip? s, tohai-co. had pictures and bad literature. ) The teachers in our great public schools realize clearly that to know a I hoy must first know his pockets. They | have made some astounding discover ? ies, some pathetic ones, some that were I tragic and the study of the boys' pock I et.s has been of intense interest. Hlste Harbare, a young white girl, has l>een arrested at Greenville charg ed with the murder of her infant. NO BETTER INVESTMENT Thaiji College Education Says President Riggi of Clemson. ( 'IfiiiMoii July 2. ? President VV. M Hlggs, of rU'liiKoii College had occasion recently U? make a st a tcment rc8|>ortJng the value of h liM-nica) col' lege *?< III* *n t Ion to a iuii |i. "A young iiih ii," said l>r. Klggs, "run make no Isdtcr Investment tliun In it technical education. Viewed otere l,\ an a matter of business, even If he ban to borrow tin* money at Interest, lu* will find that IiIh increased earn Ing capacity will iierlntps even the lli'Kt year after graduation b?* sutliclcnt t?> repay the loan, It Is a poor hush ness policy to wait to earn the money necessary to pay for an education with an earning <y parity only one-half or one-third that of an educated man. Kvory year of untrained, uneducated labor represent* a direct lljiaiiclal loss. ?Kvery I toy of ability and ambition wIiohc parents are unable to pay flu ids edncalion should g et some friend to Indorse bis note at the bank ami begin preparation t hit t will make for greater earning capacity and a fuller life. There Ih no time to lone. The world Is looking for 1,00" horsepower men and Is willing to pay for them. Already there Is a surplus of the one horsepower va rlot.v. "A college education is no longer a luxury for the rich, but rather u ne cessity of the poor boy whose parents can give him little or nothing to atart on. In eai-rfTTTTf capacity a college ed ucation represents at the outset a cap ital of from $15,000 to $30,000, depend lug on the energy, character and per sonality of the possessor, and the cap ital increases with every year of Its elliclcnt use. ,* "A college diploma has come to he regarded by the business world not so much as an evidence of knowledge as evidence 4hat the graduate possesses and Is trained in those qualities of abil ity, Industry, ambition and character tlwit are likely to make for success. "There never was a time In the his tory of the world when exi>ert knowl edge was so much in demand, so indis pensable to individual success and so highly compensated. For the untrain ed await the positions of low* wages, long hours and poverty. ? ; "Clemsofi College brings within the reach of every boy In South Carolina the henelits and possibilities of a 'tech nical education, lie is here offered an opportunity to enjoy some of the good, things of life. The way is provided , whereby, if he has the ambition and capacity for knowledge, he need not continue in ignorance. Here, at a cost lower than at any similar institution. I can a young man obtain an education second to none, if he Is seeking an ed- 1 ucatlou that will prepare him for self- 1 sustaining, self respecting citizenship." Waste iu Life Insurance. ? Editor Chronicle ? A very progenlous source of economic waste to our people Is life insurance as conducted by other than' fraternal societies. In the last several years there has gone out of; South Carolina as payments on life J premiums the emummus sum of forty seven million dolhirsT^-'-Qiit of this only about twenty million hiishetiu return ed to pay death claims. Eleven million to the polite plug-hat gentry to ?:i flier up the sheckels from our people and sixteen million sticks to the pockets of the plutocratic companies mostly in the North. There is one small South ern state that contributes annually sev en million dollars to this fund' over and above the death claims, agencies, etc. This represents an amount far in excess of the cost of the entire State government. The insurance companies should be compelled to reduce the pre miums by law or they should be made to put into our State treasury half* of the surplus gatherings of .their agents, and If this was done we would have to pay very little taxes for this fund would be nearly sutllclent to run our State and county government. The commissions to agents could be reduc ed by half and then they could enjoy more ease and luxury than the toilers in the Holds and factories of the state, mail thus, al*o, the army <?{ agent* would Ih? redutvd for they are wow be [jiff (Mild far moie than it OOfttft to maintain ii'?- ..landing army And wvjr of the nation. Wu HtHttk with horror of the devaa tut! lUMll hj I lie iiiiimIi of Slier inHu'K horde throuKh our mnn?y Houth during the civil war, hut I wake bohi to state that ai?M>e (hut time our peo pie have paid it greater tribute lu money to the horde* representing Yankee capatOlstM than Sherman de stroyed in Ida march to the aea. There Is an easier way to re|ad thin Invasion than we had to repeal Slier man, aud we have the ability and man hood to do so when our people si?e the need. J. t). Moseley. The florae's Point of View in Hummer. If a horse could talk he would have many things to say when aummer i<?liies. lie would tell Ills driver that he feels the heat on a very warm day guile as nrtich as If he could read a i lifiiiioiiicter. lie would say, ---"(Jive mo a little water hiany times a day, when the heat Is Intense, hnt not much at a time If 1 it in warm; If you want me to keep well don't give me any grain whn you bring me warm Into the stable, just a half do/en, swallows of water, and some hay to eat until I am cool. "Don't water me too soon after I have eaten jn.v grain, wait an hour. Especially do I need watering between nine and ten at night. 1 am thimtler thn than irt? almost any other time Of day." He would nay,'? "When the sun is hot and I am working let me breathe once In a while In the shade of some house or tree; If you have to leave me on the street leave me in the shade If possible. Anything upon my head, be tween my ears, to keep off the nun, la bad for me If the air cannot clreu- ! late freely underneath It, unless It Is j 11 sponge kept cool aud wot If you | treat me as you would yourself, and do not clip off my foretop, you need not have much fear of losing me by a sunstroke. i> "If on an extremely warm -0ft.v * give evidence by panting and signs of exhaustion that I am being overcome ! with the heat, unharness me, take me I Into the shade and apply cold water | or even broken Ice, wrapped up in a j cloth or put In a bag, to my head, I sponge out my mouth and go over my j legs with a cool wet sponge," ?lie would talk of slippery streets, . and the sensation of falling on cruel j city cobblestones ? the pressure of the , load pushing him to the fall, the .bruis- i cd knees and wrenched joints, and the ' feel of the driver's lasli. lie would tell of the luxury of a fly ; net when at work and of a fly blanket ; when standing still in fly season, and of tin? boon to him of screens in the stable to keep out the insects that bite and sting. i He would plead for as cool and com fortable a stable as possible in which to rest, at night, after a day's work un der the hot sun. He would suggest that living through a warm night in a narrow stall neither properly cleaned nor bedded is suffer ing for him and iw?or economy for the owner. He would say that turning the hose on him is altogether too risky a thing to do unless you are looking for a sick horse. Spraying the legs and feet when he is not too warm on a hot day, he would find agreeable. He would say ? "Please sponge out my eyes and nose and dock when I come in tired and dusty at night, and also sponge me with clean cool water under the collar and saddlp of the bar- ' ness." ? our Dumb Animals. A Masonic einblen pin which he lost thirty-three years ago . has just come back to William M. Bird of Charleston from Madison Wisconsin, having been restored by a Mason of that city who picked it up two years ago iu the rail road station at Chicago. FINAL DISCHARGE. Notice is hereby given that one month from this date on Saturday, the first day of August, 1014, I will render a final account of my actings and doings as Administratrix of the estate of F. It. Alexander, deceased, to the Probate Court of Kershaw coun ty, and on the same day will apply for a final discharge from my trust as such Admlnstratrlx. All persons having demands against said estate will present them for pay ment on or before that day, proven and authenticated, or be forever barr ed. Mrs. Belle Alexander, Administratrix. Camden, S. C., July 1, 1014. Pitgah New# Note*. Rettilwt, H, .hinf 60." ?? Tli** ilw t rUutf tft<jrm tliMt parsed ' here lant Thursday night w a* a brilliant diapley Of ??!??< 1 1 1? lt>. Qlli(6 h light r?tn f?*l I hut it did some good, for it eooled i lie air for a time. It lift* hot that people ('4>uhi not work. Tills 1h the lant of June and (lie day* are jetting shorter. Koon the crop* \v|il be laid hy and the farmer* will liave to rent aoine, for they work now all t h?? time. We hear of HevHfttl Koing to Camden Friday to hear (lie candidate* Hi>eak, Mr, Albert KogerH, who ban heeu vialtlUK here return*) to IliHhopvJUe last Friday. Mr. J. K. jMil're went to Caiuden Saturday oil ImikIiiokk. Mr. < icorge Kogorn was here a whort tllii*' Inst week* Mr?. Haljle Gpodale, <?f Camden? spoke to the ladle* of Swift ('reek church In.st Sunday morning and at IMwkhIi In tl)9 iftmWMQ. Ktorm vloudl k?*pt many from tfolng to IMhkmIi ICcv T. I. V&e pn'nrlu.l ill tile hli'iuv of Mr. H. H. Kvhiih Hgndig ^ Mr. Kv?iih' many frtfiHln will Ih? glad to know be 1h In k?*mI lu*uUh. Mr. Ilt'in y I ninlup. who hv. s j?8t MOW Hmtthvlll* wan bitten by h mad ?loK lust Saturday. <I??k bit ,VM u | tloKH before tt WUH killed, Its limit ' WH8 wmt to Columbia for examination. Miss Mary Allen, of Columbia, wlu> lias |hh>u vlMltlng l?y Mister, Mr*!,. s. ? Vinson of UiIh returned h?mjj la?t Frtduy. MARY E. HAMPTON KKUI8TERKD NUK8K Durham, N. C. ; i>tt8H??l StuU li<j. of South Carolina; DOftt, gradual* ot UnpOln Hospital, New York, N. Y. Hfictidence Old Campbell Ave., 'I'rh'phoiu' 2864, Camduu, 0, / To AUTOMOBILE and Machinery Owners ? WE WELD BROKEN PARTS of any kind of machine better than new, it makes no difference what the metal is or where broken. OUR SHOP is fully equipped to execute any kind of lathe work, etc., and all work turned out by us is fully guaranteed to be as good as new and in a great many instances better than new. HAY'S GARAGE East Side Lower Broad Street WANTED -To Buy Cattle Highest cash price paid for good cattle ? fat or poor ? all must be free from cattle tick. Camden Beef Cattle Farms FRED PERKINS, Special Partner L. I. GUION, Proprietor Fur man Fitting School, Greenville, S. C. * Thorough Preparation in Scholarship and Character . A nigh standard training school for boys and yonng men, preparing thoroughly for col lege or technical schools, or lor active life. In the hoalthful Piedmont. Positive Christian rt--. jiiuuoncos. Athiotic grounds, oat-door gymnasiutn; basketball, foot ball, baseball, track teams. Students must make average on class work to play. Cross-country hikes; inter-school contests. On cam pus of Fnrman University; access to modern library. Dormitory affords all modern conveniences.' Specially trained instructors resid ing in dormitory. Military regime. Small classes ; strong personal relationship between instructor and student; close personal attention and instruction. Literary societies, religious life. Aim: to mould substantial Christian character and to instill worthy ambitions. For catalogue address R. C. BURTS, B. A., Headmaster, Greenville, S, C. Wr Our ?*"?"?? ArlUi-.tU ..d B?.l?,? b.tUr Writta* nlway preferred bocau4 ofthStoowSFttLntSS 0ar ?% "THE SOUTH'S BEST" To^SfSSBSiH.; Cool Off With " ' -.*> . Refreshes = - Stimulates ? A delightful flavor all its own. m In Iced Bottles Anywhere Bottied hy CHERO-COLA BOTTLING CO. camden, s. c.