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;al news the WAR wind. fio'-cn wind nw*;?pi? tn? country* And bring* <ii? blinding *now. _ 1U w$r Whiffl KW4?p? *h? country. tt'Hh fl*rc? advancing to?, g-nuy hide from lh? ;viWtf j^n th? war wind? no! irttoitorui u-ata ihu crop* to earth I fr?? d*? foaming Hood. Mfttorni break* the men j|k? oftt?. i tf,? rlvem flow with blood, may b'*ve the ralnptorw. \ (Ijwwur Btonn h eeda no hood. tji? north wind oom?i th? aprlng, r (Jm ?torm lit# *un, \ t Mr wind J<j?v6? uo living thing 1 0iu n^6 la run I u>t ?ar ctorin need* to blow hut It fully done. i who ?end* the north wind diiitf l?r#|??? b?. od hav? mercy on hi* itoul , m(? the war wind free. ?rPerclval P Mirde?y? Willi The Minnen junior bridge <*lni? !??*?! hii en ibie Bicetlng Tuesday afternoon at Wftice home ou llruHU ntreei with Kdtherlne ami Elizabeth Will gg honteHseK, The down pour of) did not prevent the youthful Ly ?|('vci?-<- ? from attending and the Cy ptriors. fragrant with spring L,, K^rc in striking contrast to the without-. After cards tlu> Iron* gervt^l dainty refreshments. i&krUimneih hy Young Folks. fc ftr) entertaining masked social pbeMat the home of Mr. and Mrs., tf. (Jootlale Friday evening last. 'hy RoseM Class of the First Baptist ,y tyiiooj. An admission ..fee of wits wan charged and home made |jr sold by the class, and cake and lyle.wrved fr<;tv_- Thu - roeolpts Ke very silt Isfactory. Miss Alma lilef is .the teacher of this class. * costumes were varied and Aiter pt and did credit to the partid-i nt*. Jack Nettles received the prize, box of candy for the heat disguise, i gentlfc and pretty little girl he" very attractive. Ruth Good ale n< a (lose second as a cute and at |jt&- little hoy. Maud IJlackwell tfred tlio-.consoliiiioii prize, a large or candy. The proceeds will he to the Extension League of the Baptist. Sunday' Xehool. } With Miss Kate Lenoir. Ijptfol in. every particular we* V meeting <>f tin* Hobkirk Hill (1hap- 1 |I). A. H., at tin' home of Mr. ami KG. H. iyeiiolr. with Mis* Knt*? Le vis the agreeable hostess. The vice pot. Miss Louise Nettles presided, i Miss Leila' Shannon acted a* see-l for. Mrs. Addle Adams who ha> a the Chapter's efficient secretary f'Kveral years tendered her realgna I. which was accepted with many I WML I SleUev. Mr. Harding asked for the Sof the basement room* in- the old Sit house (chapter hall) for n?iB p work. The chanter voted unanl ?My to vraiit this W<|nest. ?h. E. ('. von Trencko^*, thepupn*! jS'rejient, who has ltoen absent sol ?frame in for a few lutiiuta* only, enthusiastically greeted, and jfc'v welcomed by the chapter that fc?!ASwl her greatly. w. Kate <\ O'Ferrel, an ex-regent Ifce Athens, (.a,, chapter, wan . an P*e<i uuest of the afternoon, and y few well chosen remark*. tohl ?IVork In Georgia. P* M. A. Shannon read ah article lather Marion that *vas much en N: aud Mrs. A. (\ Am-runi gnrei |fcterestlii? paper on Andrew Main P- Several piano selections by Miss 1 INa Team and two amiga by M1** 1 F- Mills added further to the pleas- J Rot the afternoon. Mrs. Mills slug-! pThen You'll Remember Me," and piiiiK on the old ('amp-ground" as l*?001"*'- The social hour was. much I PN. the hostess serving ices and | llpiti febe Springs Hotel I Summer Resort and Hotel P milea north-east of ItoCk ^am, N. C. One mile town of Ellerbe, on prfolk and Southern R?"' Connects with Sea at Aberdeen. liable supplied with best market affords. Large puifortable rooms and beds; pavillion building lighted by electricity. r?e. health - giving spring I OPEN MAY 16TH. |- 1 HAMMOND, Mgr. S. C? PERSONAL MENTION. Items of Interest Gathered by Our Reporters. j' *1 IS. Mary Turner is vUlHng rvla> ti\?s tn Darlington. ^fr, ll. 'iv J ?iliiison. ?>f Shamrock, h | m * 1 1 1 Thursday lu Camden. Mm, C. C. HtMiro, of New York city, I is visiting relatives in < 'miihIih. Congressman I). K. Flnley, of York j vIIIh, wns in Camden yesterday. . Mr. Calhouij, of Ninety-Six, Is visit ing his sister, Mrs. C<m?|hm' (irlllln. Miss Alary Cart wrlght, of York vllle, is^he guest, of Mrs. Ralph Stevenson. Mrs. Arthur (irlftln, of (Ireenville, Is visiting her parents, Ml and Mrs. W. M. Shannon. Mrs. Uuy Hunter and little daugh- i ter, Jean, of Columbia, an* visiting rc-? latlves here. Mrs, Olyatoi) liugglns Is visiting her parents, Mr. ami Mrs. Manly Smith, of Hlshopvlllc. Mr. RliMtil Kennedy, >yju> was in Florida during the cotton season, Is at Ik iiiii1 for the summer. Miss 1^'iin Hoykin. at c?nm?u. the guest of her sister, Mrs. John <?. Barnwell. ? -Hock IIIII Record. Mrs. A. S. Thomas and children, of Clicraw, are visiting the former's pft rents, Mr. and Mrs. II. Carrison. Miss Helen t'helps, who has been teaching in the <lraded schools of Moorehcad City, N. C,, is at home for the summer vacation. Miss Jennie Sheorn, who has been under treatment in a Charlotte hos pital. Is visiting her brother, Mr. Willis Slworn and famiij* n? Mill street. An xcceedljigly heavy mill fell in the LugofC station Wednesday after- 1 noon. Much damage was done to grow ing clops by the washing of the land. Chief of the Fire Department W. M. Young aild Mr. W. F. Nettles will at tefid the State Fireman's tournament to be held at (Greenwood May IS. lb and 20. Mr. John Graham Hammond, son of /M,r. ami Mrs. J. S. Hammond, of Lu goff, left Wednesday for Rocky Mount, ? N. C., where he has accepted a posi tion as" bookkeeper in the Atlantic Coa^t Line Hallway shops at that place. ( 'oroiler Dixon held an lunuest over the body of Edgar Deus. a negro re siding ott the farm of Mp: II. H*. Roy ?kin. In the- Swift. Creek section, several days ago. The. negro had been sub ject to lits and It Is supposed he died while fishing. . In the last Issue of "The Davhlson iah," the college journal of Davidson college api>ears a picture of the. senior class of 1015. Mr. J. It. Dunn, soil of I)r. and Mrs. W. J. Dunn, of Cam den, is in the picture, together with forty other young men. Dawes-Walker. p the following announcement appear ing in Tuesday's Greenville News will be of interest to Camden people. Miss Dawes Is a native of England, hut, with her i>a rents, formerly resided in tCamdcn until a few yearn -ago the family moved to Greenville: "Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Dawes an nounce the marriage of their daughter, Hilda May, to Mr. J. B. Walker, Feb. 10, 1915." With Mrs. Davidson. The Wednesday morning bridge club wasr delightfully entertained this week at "Park View," the home of Mrs. Iieroy Davidson. The rooms were "flower-fllled, HU(l dainty refreshments twere wFveti~cffi~the Tfttractively ar ranged card tablea Mrs. Arthur Grif fin. of Greenville, and Mrs. Margaret iufaer were thi^tTonor gOests ? ?r thol occasion. "Gnbiria" at The Majestic. There 1m in "Cablria", the stui>endous photo MjHfctacle by D'Annunzlo that Is to be shown at the Majestic Theatre on Wednesday, June 2nd, a very tender lovo interest which starts at the beginning -of the picture and Is main tained all through the two hours and TjifFty nitniitPM whli'U n t>t* taken in ex hibiting the picture. A little girl, "Cablria," Is rescued from sacrifices to the God Moloch by a chivalrous Ro man patrician. They are parted. She becomes a slave to the Carthaginian princess. The patrician goes to fight in the battles of the Itpiuan Republic. Nevertheless he is true to the senti ment. which the l>eautlful little Sicil ian girl has inspired in him. In after yeat-s he rescues her from Carthaginian persecutors. He saves her from de struction and molestation at the hHnds of the furious high priest and finally when the storm and cflrnage of the great epoch Is cleared away he takes the beautiful girl to his home In Rome as his bride. His Fidus Achates is a collossal slave who helps him to preserve the girl. This slave's devotion to his pa trician .master furnishes one of the most i?athetlc episodes in the* si>eeta cle, ? adv. -> David B. Traxler, ft prominent real ?eatate man of Greenville, has been ap pointed postmaster* at Greenville^ W. I). Mctts was recommended for the position, but charges wor^ brought against him. by J. W. Norwood, a bank er of that city which resulted In him losing out Metts is now suing Nor wood for fttt.000 libel ? ' . ? . ? .? Beautiful line of box stationery just received, beat quality it G. W. Crosby's 00ATRR8 NOW IN FASHION. Zouav? and llvtero KffwU ? FmIutv of lingerie Krurkb. New Vojk. May II Nowhere I* the American Idea of dlrcetucss more strongly felt tlutn in ? l? ?i I??*h I'arl. offers a wealth of ideas and America selects one, After week* of hesita tlon, while the impuhirity of one style ?>r another in the prhvless ?olie?-tloii received after a i>crllous trip arrows tlu* Atlantic, quakes in the balance the American public, at last, places emphasis on one c^nxeii feature and the coatee drew* become* universal ; not a tailored creation aw the name implies, but a sheer confection of lace, net or batiste, top)**) -with a g ay Hilk or lingerie Jacket. So cavalier have fashions become, t he \ carry us back to the ('roinwclllan era, Like spirits of the old French empire, society in lingerie dresses trijis across the velvety lawns or loiters in old rose gardens. The other day, I chanced upon a party enjoying tea in . the far i i*nier of a green lawn under the shade of a mulberry tree; the u black wicker furniture, upholstered in broad strips, strewn with apple blos soms, was as striking lit effect as the frocks the girls wore. A vivacious dark -eyed Miss, who served tea at the glUKH-topjied table, carried off well the style of the smart coaft?e in a frock that bespoke the cou tlirler Jenny. The bodice of allover embvojdery, nipped in ut the waist as fashion approves, -showed from beneath the Jaunty Jacket of dark blue tall el a silk. The Quakerish iollur uiul cuffs of White organdy made a connecting .link with the billowing folds of organ dy, laid in deep crosswise folds, pa neled. ..with ...embroidery uud trimmed with Valenciennes lace, which formed the nklrt. That she was a devotee to the fad of fancy shoes, one could easily guess, for her pumps were the last word in style; the heel, back and vamp was of patent leather and the uppers of white kid to match the white silk stockings. Iteslde the low chair, a garden hat carelessly dropi>ed, glistened in the sun, for it was one of the new dark blue shiny straws. The oroiv" wax circled with tulle with jjopd lilies be neath and, like all other broad-brim med garden hats, it had /black velvet streamers attached to the back, McCall. One of the New Lingerie Frocks Made with ? Dark Blue Silk Coatee. - So diverge are the effects pained Willi these jackets, It 1h harcl to believe so many frocks have the same feature. Here, In a "oatee of "robin's egg blue tuff eta, fitted ?!?*r,ufeh the body, hav ing flaring tails, and "leg 'o mutton" sleeves set In with narrow frills re vived from Victorian styles. This is worn with a voluminous skirt of net. There is a frock of cotton crepe, em br&Idered and hemstitched in pink with coatee of pink linen ; while a model of voile anil filet lace has a jacket of black faille cut on the bolero order. Indeed, there Is no end to the mate rials. Dolly Varden taffetas, deep old world pink and brilliant blue taffetas, failles and moire silks make quaint coatees for crinoline frocks and not a few of the bolero effects are fashioned of lace or fine embroidery. There Is also a lace or fine embroidery. ^There is also a lace material, lately launch ed on the market for dresses of this type, the texture like a flue voile em broidered with garlands in pastel shades. Aside from the fabrics, accessories are no attractive, they in "no small measure account toi the - success of the lingerie dress, for there Is many a maiden who buys a frock that she may have the #l?dl6 that goes with It, Although 1t Is ail acknowledged -tact, waists arc gradually growing smaller, the girdle still follows straight lines. Loose crush girdles of taffeta, moire silk or primly-flowered belts of nar row grosgrain are pretty finishes for filmy frocks. T" The* handkerchief bag is another fancy, demure a a the daguerreotype from whlrh It Is taken I'sually, the hag i* made of material tin* saint' an tbv dress, ?*ul In a half circle, shirred an liu-li llowii from (Ik* liip and hung from the belt, with cords or rlhhon. The hayd bag, loo, takes on a new lieauty. Soft gathered nostels of flo wered, moire ami *trlp?*d silk, have silver tups, that stretch like a hrare let; white leather ban*** Hut purse* ami gold khl skin eases are lined with gor geotis flowered ami strict silks. Ma daiu Ij? Mode, not coutcilt with these features alone, insists that milady Im> up iv the ears In style this season and tntrodueoH the feather and tulle boas to wear with the new lingerie dresses. Life of mi Kdlter. He niisrs at 10 o'cloak in tin* MOID in#, dresses himself, taken his hat, already pierced with three of^ four bullets, and goes to a rc?tauraht to f$t his breakfast. After breakfast, ho returns to his offlee to read the morning papers. lie IIiuIh that ho is called a wretch in one, in another, a I in r. ami in a third, a villian. He Iftild :i? the thought of having something to do, ami slgtrn his mime to three challenges, which he always carries about him, to lie ready for emergencies. These ho despatches and wits down and writes an article, when he Is suddenly Interrupted by some Interloper, who at last Up Is comj?olled . to throw out of the win dow j At noon he learns that his challenges have beeh accepted for tho next day. At three, o'clock, he goes to fight a duel which had beem arranged the day before, kills his limn HlVd returns to dinner. On his way from dinner, he gets mixed up with a riot, and gets some bruises and woumlst When he reaches his sflncfoinh lie find* an infernal chine on his table. Without lunnl ftwtiiiK t lit* hIIkMi*! HtirprJjU1. lu' throw* it ulll of (It** WtlUtOW HO thrli Wlllt-S it It-mlri on III. Hat 1 ?'tills do))t\ III1 Utio* (o lilt' (liftttro. on 1 1 W?- way Iw 1* attacked 1?> three 1111*11 1 lu' kill* two, and hikes the third to I lie nearest sin I Ion house WUert returning to his offhe, <u three oV lot- k tit itltxht. hi' I it'll t h it iiiMii who I He* to roh him ; kills a dot; with a stone ; nh))ost diii over hy a hiit'k ney i'(nui), and od th?? thresh)), Id of hi* door ret-elves two mollis', Imllels io his hat ; limn toiiKriitiiiiitt'K him self on having passed a quiet day ; writes till ;! o'eloek in 1 1)? JiionvliiK ; retires to hod, mid sleeps trnmpdlly. liaffnt'.v l<edtfer. To Kiicamp at Ih1* uf Faints. At a qmotillK of (lu? 'pftlcors of (lit* National t.uard held in Columbia last We. Inesday, which wan attended hy <iov. Manning and Adjutant Cent'rul' Moore, It wtta definitely doelded Unit the First Itoglmetit to which our local .company Is attached would encamp on the Isle of Palms during the In 1 1 <?r pari of July' or the first of August. This decision meets \vlth the unanl mous approval of both officers and en listed men, who anticipate enjoying the many pleasures of a seashore re sort during their *?fT duty hours. From a military view point the Itde of Palm* Is an Meal place for a camp of iMHt ruc tion' ami will enable the men to receive the required Instruction and at the same time provide the pleasure and recreation to which they are fairly en titled. The local company, known as Company "M" exi?cct to carry a com pany of which the town and county may f<?el well proud. Men attending the encampment must he enlisted at least sixty days before the erteamp ment -ntrhw they hnre had prevlotts miljtury, training. NIWIAI. TWAIN I KOM ( AMI)KN l*?M?|>le From CmihiImi Hoard Hob J one* Im*>( SuiMky. About eight} |HH>ple from I'tiDHlOU ii lit} station* Ik' low wmiI (o s ii i) 1 1 ?*i* 1 ii xl SuiiiIm.v on a upM'tH I I uilii ? . \ ?? i III. \.ti I hwcstcru |i> bear Mir l(< \ Hub Jones, rho liobnl evangelist, wlio Is conduction it im*cting in a oi^laiUy constructed titln'ruaclc ? llli tin tin nienxe Keating capacity. The i m In was |ii charge of Messrs. J. K, tJHH* ami I,. S. Vinson, of ltomt*>rt*. Mr. < ? 1 1 1 in nKjuexts us to say tliat the train will lie run iiixn In on Sunday, May 2>'lrd, au<) I Up Sunday following. May 30tb, giving othen* the opportunity of heal ing the iu>tWl evangelist. Tbls train will It'll vo Camden al two o'clock In tin1 afternoon allowing to got d Inner before leaving, and will leave Sumter after the close of I be cvonlitg service. The Slimier Dally Item estimates (bat li,7(Hi men beard Hev. J one* In (be afternoon at tbe men's service. lb' heuan Ids remarks by saying- "I'M toll you, men, we're up fiKUliwt it In America." Ami said at tbe outset tbat be wus not alining bis remarks a I any one In particular, but tbat If tbe cap 111 any present tbey would have to wear It. Tb?' text wan from tbe <ith chapter <?r ? Jnliitlaiis; "lb' not de ceived, t iod Is not mocked. For wbat soever a man sowotli, thai ball bo also reap." And in quite a lengthy discourse lie tobl of tbe "Kins' of Men" in a plain way. Mr. Jones is a force ful speaker and held tbe Htriot atten tion of bis bearers. Mi*h. Win. Hcatty and baby who have been spending some time .with Mrs. Ueally's pa rents, Mr. and Mrs. T. W. I /in).', lnive rcturmMl to Florence. d'A N N U N Z I O's V/V' O * " "" * AT THE "ICE COOLED" WEDNESDAY, JUNE 2ND 1 j . 11 ? 1 . ? ; .? 11 1 ' First Performance 3:30 - Second Performance 8:30 Exactly as presented on the White House lawn, this wondrous contribution to the 7 Moving Picture Art receives greatest distinction ever accorded any amqsgment en terprise. There were present, The President of the United States, Secretary of State Bryan, Secretary of War Garrison, Treasurer McAdoo, Vice-Pres. Marshall, Secre tary of the Navy Daniels, Postmaster Geenral Burleson, together with their wives and other distinguished guests. "CABIR1A" had a run of eight months at The Knickerbocker Theatre, New York City, where it played to capacity every perform ance at $1.00 prices. What the New York Papers said: , ' ' aA Veritable Ben Hur" ? Evening Sun. "It Stands Alone" ? Herald "Surpasses Human Belief" ? Amy Leslie "Will Never Be Surpassed" ? Times \ "Beyond Anything Ever Attempted" ? The Globe "Nothing So Marvelous" ? The Eveinng Mail Seats were sold at The Knickerbocker Theatre eight w^eks in advance for this 1 Photo Spectacle. Only one day at The Majestic Theatre in Camden. Only two performances, one ia the Afternoon and one at night. Take# three hours m time to show the 12 Teeter ? - No photo play to equal this production ever shown in Camden before, and nothing will be shown again that will Oqual it, until we show it at The Majestic Theatre. . . - ?Jor-n- - \ -? - -K~ > TfJ-V-V V ' ? , S " tr- - ' . : ? - r . T" C. ?" ' ~ * -V ' Every Seat at Either Performance 25 Cents