The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, March 23, 1917, Image 6

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UNDERWRITER TOOK THE BAIT Quaker** Shrewd, If Somewhat Un scrupulous Trick, Hud the Success He Anticipated. Komi' month* utfo the Companion told a litth tale of old i#rl\nieerln\; days, in which ii quick-thinking em ; ployee w in .;Ni'o\ i i t'tl n bunc osenim- j inivii!< < r cDiitluu Inio vori w?111 ?i |?i*i h> K.tlii'- V el \ li; id fliitll/ wWTlook llle owner of l In* >hi|? <?ii hk" way lo the! II11?I? i \'. ri(? i - itiid > a \ cd i'.ii I r??m ' M? ? useh ? pa.vnent of a heav\ pniiuuni. Aii Kirdili ljuu I t-r was man oh ?! < ! an ( anecdote ?> I I ho ?ai-"' polio I, I';' ? 'I * ? ? ? , jti?? same situation. which occurred j anion;; his <tw a people. '|'\ui (.niaio-rs, a mi?? r<? ii;11'! in 1 i"i ? I hp H'i'W T. 11 I' iiicctih* ill iia Mill, hi'iia ii j ii.il: business over tin ll' in :?k I lo* | merchant | ?i*? ?>?-lit l.v pio|i<< id l>> In I'rii'iid li? insure h(s vesm I, l"M or ii"' | I ? ?>!, w ho Ii i?11:*111 soon lo arriv?" : ' fact, Ii was already wIlKhily ,,s rd "? j Tin. | ?i? inium \\<ailtl luro <>.i i i I \ ho lti?h, kill iho limes were perilous and ihc Winkoo prlvaleers hud i'?Mi'iii|y taken many prlaes upon tin* i*?mt?? Un* \ I-", i I must cover. Tlio underwriter Ii, i | a I i?k 'I'll.' policy was made oiil. I.ui his mind was not made up. Final ly lo- pui iho paper Into his pocket, v a\ <nn : "1 will sloop on tho mntror. friend , JoM'ph, and tomorrow I will reium it j to i lire, signed or unsigned." 'I hoy parted and wont t<> tholr homos. He fore dawn an urgent mes senger clattered at tho merchant's door. lie was a brlngcr of had tidings. The vessel w as lost. It was, unless 11 w'iih insured, a heavy misfortune. If ? ?lily that policy had heeu signed the ? lay h. fore! lie had little belief that Ids hesitating friend would have de cided to take the risk; he was a cau tious and a keen person, with a repa int ion for sharp practice. IU)t Joseph j saw In that fact his opportunity. Sum- j iiioiiIiik ii messenger, to whom he said no word of his loss, he dispatched him with a message. Instructing him ctirc I till \ exactly what words to use. lie was to say: "Friend Joshua, neighbor Joseph de sires me lo inform thee that, if llieo hast not underwritten, thee neoiNt m l do it."' The message was delivered promptly and precisely. Friend Joshua, who had not signed, and had decided agninsi doing so. understiMHl it to mean that the ship had arrived safely, and Vij'" owner did not wish to pay the pre mium, now useless, unless the sinned document required him in honor and law to do so. That Is what the < nnn> Joseph expected him to think; and lie proceeded to act as Joseph had guessed he mluht act. He pretended not to 1111<I the poli- y where he looked for It i:i his olllce, slipped it stealthily ainoiiu a handlul ol other paper--, which he cant.i| careless!^ .with him into the next room, where Me went os tensibly to seek further, and there sly ly aJ^neil It. Presently he brought it l?H(ii and delivereii it to the messenger with t he message : "Tell thy master 1 had signed." It w:is not a pretty bit of business ? friend Joseph's trick was u little too clever?but certainly no one can syut pathiyo with friend Joshua. It was a ease of the biter blt^Yoiph's I 'oiil punlon Where No Taxes Are Paid. I lapp\ and free from the worries of war taxation are the people ot l.tttidv island, that little speck <>IT l'cveii ill the Kn-li-h channel, the "kinn" ?'f whicfTV Kev. Hudson I let veil, died a short lime ago. The reverend gentle toau adtntnistered the aflalrs ot the island from 1 s>*7 to HmM, as his lather, who bought the island In 1^'H for about S'.l.Ooo, diil before him. The inhabitants of lauiilv number :?nout forty and lead ?in uneventful life. They pay no tax?"-. are attaehed to no parish or union and have no poor. I he island has a romantic and lawless history mid was once considered an excellent harbor and refuge for murderers. Bard si ey Island, situated in the Irish sea. oiT the county of Carnarvon, is another spot where the tux collector Is unknown. There are about sixty peo ple on the island, who elect their own king. The Inhabitants are rnostlv en gaged in farming and fishing. The Island got its name from the tradi tion that it was the la>t retreat of the Welsh hards. In ancient times it had a reputation for sanctity and to be buried on 11- soil was an honor much to be desired. It Is believed that more than ,r^)iXHi "sjiin's [joined fhii privilege. Activities of Women. (Jrcat Brituin has establli-hctl schools v here women arc taught munition work. Scrub women in I In* office huihlinKS of the I *rjifI States Miimlwr over 1^. tfc>0. Mis* Marie I'eary. daughter of the discoverer of the north )M?le. Is flow taking up aviation. Nearly fi.OOO women are employed in the munition factories in this country. CJIrls who patronize the Cleveland dance halls are compelled to <*how birth certificates. Women are better than men when working on the difficult rvork of Mad- j Ing turbine engine*. Among the 17'J per?*?ns who will bo i granted diplomas t?> practice law In | Ht. Louis are three women. Flight of Imagination. "Do yuu mean to tell me you nrr jfo- j Inn to vote for prohibition?" "Yep." replb-d Uncle Mil Kottletop. "An' 1 hojx? they'll win. Then if they want t<? stay in j>ower. maybe they'll play p~!itlc* an' hook up wfth the 'icker interests same as the other i**r ticts d?mm: in t'u- [mat." POLICE GUARD INTERNED GERMAN SHIPS <'??!.|.hi uf police yminlln;-' iIm* (Jennun o?vnn j,''.*i'iK liners l'iii*> .'iu V11 ? ? ?! i i i !1 >mii Kix-nlj,' VN' i 111 i *11> i I' mi \ <*\v York. Tin* poller ?irt? proving t?ii iilit to i'm nnitnillty Kipijt<I in nn inlinir thr inter.ud liners. THE MATCHMAKER By SUSAN E. CLAGETT. Tin* moon was at its full and the old fashioned garden at Kllerslle was very beautiful this late September night. I'he Shelleys wen* entertaining the young people of the neighborhood. It was not a dunce, merely a supper par ty and after that the wonderful gar den and the tree shadows and the scent of lut<* roses and sentiment, And it was sentiment indeed. Some of it was very earnest. A Rood deal of' it was play, but so well played that more frequently than not it ended in a game of cross purposes that threat ened serious consequences. It was in Mieh a play that Warren Addison and Noll Iglchart were the prlneipal actors. The other boy and | girl were only accessories. They did not know it. j? \Varren had come from Baltimore to meet her here. She was late in urriv- j ing: When she did appear it was with 'a man lie did not know. The man and her lateness?-in Warren's mind an in-j tentinnal thing?made him turn to the, tlrst pretty girl in that garden ofj southern profitless. ? o I If they had known a llttle'mure of t life the two foolish things would not have had an unhappy moment, but <h" was sevt nU'cn and Warren not ?pj11? * l u cut y-i ?ne. She eried 1 ersc!' to s!?|? that night and Warren took tlo' early tram for l>allim.ore. Neither hail spoken ten \v?w"ds to the other. lTi:elc < harles was a matchmaker, lie wouhl have resented this if any one had had the assurance to declare it, for his matchmaking extended no further than his favorite niece and "that boy," as lie called Warren A<ldi ,son. Lie had done everything in his power to further a marriage that was violently opposed by the girl's father; had even promised to help them when 111ey wore ready to set up housekeep ing. This home looked farther away than ever after that evening at Kllerslle. Warren had not been in the country -inee then and Uncle Charles could not understand this. He questioned Nell, but could get nothing from her save a shrug and a toss of her head. It Wnrren didn't care to coine and was tired of writing, she wasn't going to worry herself about it, she declared. lie had not suspected the trouble had gone so far as that. He must do something to circumvent a ruthless late, r.ut what? lie miked the matter over with Aunt Mary. She was interested, but advised not to meddle. That was ex actly what he had made up his mind to do. however, and the best way to do n. lie decided, was to have a house party of his own. Very much pleased with himself, he ^??nt to < hur<-h the next morning and after service called two or three of the young men to hliu. Telling them of his intention, he was soon tho cen ter of a Muttering group of femininity nil delighted with tlie prospect of a week of gayety. And Uncle Charles did not maki them wait for thHr pleasure The, next evening found ^he gay crowd to his home. Nell and Warren were to all apjwar ances the gayest of the company, hut those who kuew them well felt there was something wrong oetween them, possibly revealed by the extreme po- j 11 ten ess of the one to the other. Whim two days had passed, and then a week, and^UnHe Charles saw no prospect of a settlement of iheir quarrel, he decided upon his Una I scheme, a ride to Annapolis?twenty seven miles axvay?dinner there <iu<l a return home by moonlight. Ho thought Nell a horsewoman. She was not. She was a coward about horse*, hut stronger than her cowardice wsis her I?ri?Jt?. and she sturted with the others, her heart In hor throat and clutching at I lie pommel w henever she thought the action would pass unnoticed. Her escort was on a newly-broken colt that claimed all his attention and whose unties, at Inst, made every horse in the party restive. There was no sur prise felt when he bolted and started a stampede down the narrow country road. Neil was the only one incapable of managing her horse. She tried, hut fright overcame her and the reins dropped. As they fell from her hand the horse slued mid she lay?a crum pled little heap by the roadside. A year later, the scene was again laid in the garden at Kllerslle. Under one of ihe trees sat a boy and a girl. They had been very quiet and the thought of that other night was ia the minds of both. Presently Warren spoke: "Nell. Nell, t?? think how near we came to missing this." She leaned a little toward him and her voice was low as she answered: "1 ?h? not think we would have missed it. dear. 1 could have stood it no louuei. I hoped you would speak. If not. love was more to me loan pride and I would have told you on that ride ' to Anna|Kdis." ; lie laughed a little. "And 1? Well, ; 1 was waiting my opportunity when ' vour horse shied. After that nothing 1 mattered." ; ' He gave a quick glance backward. No one was iti siuht and he leaned , over and touched her lips. j Which goes to -how that Uncle Charle? nasi keener insight into the ! ways di h'.wrs than had been credited to him. '.t'opyriyi !:?!??. l?v tho Newspa per Syndicate.) Our Increasing Population, t Census bureau experts estimate ;!>:?. the population of the United Si; I on January 1 was 101,205,31.1, and t'.iai ' by July 1 next it will be 102,017,..u2. On July 1 last year they figured the i population at 100,399,318. On tho basis of tho rate of increase ? between the 1900 and the 1910 cen suses the bureau estimates that there is an increaso of 805,997 in tho popula tion of the United States every tlx months, or an annual increase of 1, i 617,994. Tho census estimate is that tho population of the country is in 1 creasing at the rate of 4,433 a day? j 184 every hour and 3 1-15 persons ev ! ory minute. 1 Western states have led in growth, ! "Washington heading the list, with Oklahoma. Nevada, North Dakota and I New Mexico following in the order i named.?New York Independent. Miner? to Have Warm Meals. A large coal mining company has arranged to provide warm, substantial rneals to tho men working from 200 to 400 feet underground. An electric 1 range has boen Installed in one of the lowest chambers of the mine. In. this j are prepared hot lunches which are served in an underground restaurant ; at prices barely covering the cost of . the food. It has been found that thla not only adds to the comfort of the . men who had hitherto been compelled to eat cold food, but It also adds to i their productive capacity. A marked j increaso in the amount of coal taken out was noted tho first month after electric range was Installed. War Hit# Nlco Hard. llankruptcy Is storing Nice in the faro. tmy? a 1'arla mumper. Nice U tho lanll of HUUBht)^and smiles, but the world **?? other thing* to think about Just now than to bask In the nun. Generously, tho town has thrown 01)011 Us aoorri to the Kick una wouitdod, whos^ gratitude Is grout, but whose purse is Blonder. I'un frolic, giddy gaygty una spash ng spendthrifts uro essential if wheels of Nice Hie to run smoothly, and sluso tho war started Nice knows none of those. Tho Casino is closed. The city reupod a rich harvest from the spin of the roulette wheel and Hhe turning of the baccarat cards. All 4 this is stopped, and Nlco Is now bo tinning to feol tho pinch seriously. Effective Silencing Device. The sound dollecto? installed by the bureau of lighthouses at tho IJuffalo light station, to lesson tho distract ing noise spreading from the fog siron back over tho city. Is a saucer-shaped Plato of steel. 14 foot In diameter. This shield is given a vibration re ducing lining of asbestos board on the face toward tho lako. A spaco of four inches between tho stool and asbostos is Ailed with mineral wool, corrosion of tho steol by tho sulphur impurity of the wool having boon guarded against by suitable treatment. This silencing device bus cut off much of tho undcslred sound. Sword Swallower in the Navy. As a proof to friends of his un hyphenated devotion to tho land of his adoption. Slgnor Gregorlc Carcuiti, a awoid swullower and cannoqball jug gler, has offered his services to the United States marine corps in tho ovent of this country bolng plunged into a foreign war. "Now, If wo could only got Hosco, who oats 'em alive, to volunteer," said Recruiting Sergeant Putnam, "I'd foel that tho United States marine corps was pretty well prepared for any eventuality."?Philadelphia North American. May Be a Weather Sign. Thomas Warner cannot explain it so he took them downtown and placed them In tire show window of a Colum bus store. He owns a whito rabbit. Three little rabbits came to her houso to cair her "Mother" and to seok her parental care. Two of them are as whito as tho proverbial driven snow. Tho other one is as black as the ace of spades in a new deck.?-Indianapolis News. To Good Purpose. That Madame Sarah Bernhardt should"have become a French subject has puzzled n great many people. The seeming mjptcry is explained, however, by the fact that when "the Divine Surah" married a Creek in the early eighties she took her husband's na tionality. The famous tragedienne tells an amusing little story of two kind hearted old ladles who set out one day to buy a couple <?f seats for a "Bern hardt' matinee." On their way to the tin ;.ter they changed their minds, de tcrmined to deny themselves .pleasure :init to give the money for The seuts in i w o poor relations Instead. They <il<l so. A short time afterward. Mt, e-inu' the poor relations, they ven-j t ur<?< 1 t? > express a hope that the money ^ had been found of good service. I "Indeed it was." they were told. "We ? bought seats for the Bernhardt mat- | inee and enjoyed ourselves lm- I mensely !" Paris, Too! i Yeast?I see the normal daily con sumption of milk in Paris and its sub urbs cocr.-eds 1.000.000 quarts. Crimsonbeak?Why, I '(lidnt think milk was u good "chaser," did you? Citlxunn of Columbia got toother a fmv day* a?o and ralsod $50,000 l?y Kul>Mcrli>tlon for the purchase of 1,200 or I,500 ttcrvM of land war Columbia to tw iiro^oiirikT ~FWoral gov ornumni for uko as an uroiy cnntou mont, Tin* Columbia ptuipU* have jjroar Uojioh thai on? vf tbo Panton ine w I.s will In: UatUod at Columbia. The work of man Htfiuaer UtW*.*' liafhor, has rwu.,,<M| * !" <lrvi'lu|M?uHi? rhnt $$?? - to IlKhtDU Ik. -UUk,:tSj r?r ukh ana Koven.u^m *hl Iut (<> (la< cflHteru shorv a river wIuto olH!nu|<mti f* Will I><? I'OllclIII 1(^1. Watch Your TJ We Furnish 1 he Watch . You Watch the Time History states that Napoleon lost the Rattle o terloo because his Marshal came up behind time. Doubtless his watch was slow! AH of the world's great events have been achiel by men who were ON TIME You can not be sure of being on time with a faj timee peice. Get a good one. See us for a guarant watch. We have them, and they are the highest pr<^ of the watchmaker's art. One miViute late may mean great loss to you. C< to us and get a watch that you can trust. G. L. BLACKWELL Jeweler and Optician Special Notic Extracts from Contracts for Telephone Service: For tin' benefit of those who do not understand the- tem contract under which we furnish telephone service 1 wish to -ill follows: v FIRST. We do not aeeept contracts fAr a period of less than (I mfcnths, only when specified by the subscriber at the time cod is executed. SECOND. Contracts for less than twelve months will be |M 33 1-3 i)er cent, of the unexpired term, not to exceed-two ? rental, payable in advance on the execution of the contract TIIIKI). Subscribers discontinuing their telephones before the piration of the initial term of contract!, will be billed with V, 11 cent., not to exceed two months rental of Hie contract that! effect at the time of the discontinuance, as unexpired terui. FOURTH. We will move your telephone without charge only,I the expiration of the initial term of your contract. FIFTH. There positively will be no variations made from the I notice on contracts that are now in effect or hereafter executed.! wish to request parties signing contracts for telephone service,' read the contracts beforq signing same, in order that they thoroughly understand what is exacted on their part. I)o not forget that by paying your bills between the 1st an of the current month, you will save us a lot of trouble? ".ml rassnient. Southern Bell Telephone & Telegraph Coi J. A. Hough, Manager FIRE - LIFE - ACCIDEN CAMDEN LOAN & REALTY COMPANl Office Man Bldg. H. P. Fouat, Manager Telephone 01 DIPPY DUK ___ ^