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Downy Comfort Prepare for tomorrow by sleeping tonight. Restful slumber is assured on a COTTON DOWN Mat tress?a satisfactory mattress at a reasonable price. Gbektin Spring St Maltr?*s Co. Muufutiinii ? AtUaU (1) . For Sale By CAMDEN FURNITURE CO., Camden, S. C. CLEVELAND RELIEF' FUND J. K. Lang, Grocery,' Camden, 5.00 W. L. McLeod, Greeley ville,. . 5.00 Citizens of Spartanbutg. . . . 28.9TT Pupils of 2nd and 3rd Grftdes, Mt. Pleasant, 3- .0 1.00 Class in Current History, Leesburg, Florida Vj. 5.0P I J. I). McDowell, Charleston, . West Virginia 10.00 Presbyterian Synod 130.00 K. of P. Lodge, No. 96, Waynes boro, Ga. ...... 15.00 T. E. L. Class, Johnston Bapt. Church, Johnston, S. C. .... 5.00 The Grafts school, Red Cross Asso., Charleston, S. C, 20.00 S. M. Gibson, Youi ?;s Island 5.00 Palmetto & Fidelity Ins. Co., Agents, Suffolk, Va. (citz.) 95.50 of Suffolk, sent through P. Moses, Mgr., Sumter, S. C. Mary F. Quinn, Imola, Cal. * 10.00 Dr. H. T. Cook, Greenville... 5.00 Employees Augusta Chronicle 22,50 Headers Augusta Chronicle 16.00 Bernard M. Baruch, New York City,, N . Y 1000.00 Presby. Church, add), eontr. Florence, S. C. . .* 6.00 Through Chamber of Commerce Anderson, S. C. 28.14 'Krhest Lomonsj, Gitinesville, Florida 1.00 Alva B. Gross, Gainesville... 2.00 Everett Clementz, Gainesville ' ^.00 Mrs. W, G. Swartz, Gainesville, 5.00 Louise B. Kirkland, Gainesville 9.00 A. J. Boyknv Camden 5.00 W, B. Falls, Clover, S. C 5.00 Lewis M. Grists Yorkville. . . . 5.00 ! Sam M- Grist, Yorkville 5.00 I^ewis. Roth, Yorkville 5.00 Carrie N. Barnett, Clover, S. C. 5.00 Bible Class, A. R. P. Sabbath School, Yorkville, S. C 42.00 Citizens of Clover .' . 36.00 Clover Leaf Council Jr. O.U. . A. M., Clover, S. C J . 25.00 Bible Class, Bullock's Creek Presby. Sabbath School..!. 13.15 Bible Class, A. R. P, Sabbath School, Yorkville, S. C ?9.50 W. G. White, Yorkville ...... 5.00 H. R, Mackorel), Yorkville. . . 5.00 I J.. B. Pegram, Yorkville, . . . . . . 5.00 I J. A. Tate, Yorkville 3.00 R. D. Dorsett, Yorkville..'.... 2.00 [ Jinl McGiH, colored, Clover 50 1 E. L.#Wood, Filbert, S. C..... 5.00 Mr. jtfnd Mrs. W. W. Jackson. . 5.00 From Filbert, S. C. Mrs. May Carter. 3.00 1 W. L. Pursley . .". 2.50 J. C. Lilly 2.00 [Cash ...... .. .... ....... 2.00 ! W. N. Biggers 2.00 O. B. Paxton 1.00 D. C. Wood 1.00 S. W. Gordon . 1.00 Will Ferguson ?. 1.00, E. V. Templeton 1.00 M. B. Hall .V 1.00 Hugh G. Jackson ' 1.00 J. Roy Grayson . .. 1.00 T. S. Stowe . 1.00 B. L. Youngblood .... 1.00 Jno. Q. Haii-, 1.00 H. C. Thomasson 1.00 W. W. Lynn , . . , . 1.00 T. N. Thomasson 1.00 J. A. Carroll 1.00 G. B. Dickson . . , 1.00 S." W, Thomas ............ 1.00 Bob Ingle 1.00 J. M. Stowe ..f 1.00 George W. Brunson, Camden. . 10.00 C. V. Bovkin, Charleston.... 25.00 W*A>, McDowell, Camden i.,.\ 5.00 Xeore F. Evans, Greenville. . . .\ 10.00 Lula #H. Kelly, Norfolk, Va., N ^ sent contributions of Wm. M. Porter, Newport News, Va. . . 5.00 Live Oak Camp W. O. W., Columbia, S. C.. ... . 50.00 W. A. Gaskins, Roanoke, ^/a., turned over 'by Mrs. W. L. Ga skins... 1.00 At llethunr Tuesday. At Bethyne School House on Tues day, Juno 2t>th, tho womun and girls of the homo demonstration and girls' clubs of the Hethune, CassaU und Timrod Clubs will celebrate Commun ity Day together under the ?us|>i<ta* of rhe Ke,rshaw County Home Dem onstration Department, Mia# Jennie Boyd* home demonstration ..Utf?llt> Mrs, l)o?a Dee Walker, specialist in food conservation, Mrs. S. O. Plow-' den, 'Pee Dee District Home Demon stration Agents Miss Dandrum and Miss Christine South, State and As-, sistant Home Demonstration Afents, Mr. J. W. Sanders, County Agent, and quite a number of Camden's business and professional men and women of the Chamber of Comeree, Retail Dealers Association, and others have been invited to attend these exercises n nd me expected to be there. The Community Day will start just before noon and there will be *.de lfcious lunch served and' a very inter esting program has been staged. Cam den, the county seat, and these three hustling school districts will be brought into closer touch for mutual understanding and closer cooperation between city, town and 'rural sec tions. . ( Harficld Indicted. Darlington, S. C., June 1U ? John Rur 'field yesterday was indicted by the Darlington county' grand jury on the charge of murder in connection with the shooting from ambush two months ago - of Prohibition Enforce ment Officer Lee Youmana. The case was set for trial tomorrow. Barfield together with lien Hall, Rochelle Hall, Rozier Hall, Russell Parker and Silas Hawkins, was in dictVd also on a charge of conspiracy to violate the prohibition law. The case also arose out of the killing of Youmans, and all of those named ex cept Hawkins^ are white. All except Rochelle Hall pleaded guilty, but were not sentencod. Alexander Stamboulisky, premier of Bulgaria, from- the time the peas ant government was established in 1918 until he was overthrown about ten days ago, was killed Friday in the village of Vetran near tfis native town of Slavovitza. He was shot in the course of an attempt of peasantB to rescue him from guards who had captured him the previous day after a three-days' pursuit. Stamboulisky was rescued, but in a subsequent at tack of the soldiers on the peasants was shot and killed.^ With an area of 607 square miles, Florence ranks twenty-seventh in size among South Carolina counties. > A VICTORY FOR AMERICAN MOTORISTS M . >> * - ? The Crude Rubber Monopoly weakened when it came in contact with public senti ' 1 mcnt. The press of the country "today re- ? fleets the determination of the American motorist that tire prices shall stay at a - -reasonable level ? and that America must ? w produce its own rubber. _ ? * ? . j" - "V '? Jtrestom CUTS TIRE PRICES 10% ?? We announce a 10% redaction in tiree and tubes effective June 11. The lowered cost of erode rubber and the special Firestone manu facturing and distribution advantages make this possible. , ? Firestone factories are organised on* a basis of large volume, and effective production. Costs are down but quality is at its peak. Stockholder workmen are daily bvilding many thousand of Gum-tapped Cords. ? the best Fire Stone ever produced, and we believe, the leader on the market today. '* Firestone cords t6ok the first four places and eight of the ten money positions in the Indianapolis sweepstakes, May 13, without a single tire failure. Firestone Gum-Dipped Cords have set new standards in mileage, traction, comfort and safety. Car owners have expressed their ap proval of the extra value 1n Firestone G?un Dfpped Cords hy Increasing their purchases 194% in the past six months. We have re placed many expensive branches with ware houses. We new have 108 distributing points which are delivering Firestone tires to the oonsumer at the lowest cost in our history. Follow the tide of economical tire buying? equip with Firestone Gum-Dipped Cords ? and learn what Most Miles per DoHar means te you today. J Get a set of these Gum-Dipped Cord s from one of the following dea $ W. Q. Hay's Garage, Camden, S. C. ? > ''.m; -v vf TREASURE SEEKERS 0 J SOUTH Sraxll It Nov* Land of 1'romiot That Deck on a Thoke Who Woo lh? Fickle Goddeks, P^tuno. Treasure seekers are turning their e>rs toward the oil) gold cdtittl again. 'Mils time the> are not thinking of the sunken hulks of overloaded ships throes i ?- intuitu under ihui might by Mo iiu* imwl miracle of luck still bo salvaged. Nor have they hoard another series of maudlin whispers of a hoard of pirate gold Just found by the crew of t; rum runner hunting a bidden harbor. Yellow gold and flat slabs of feath ered emerald engraved by Indiana be tore the Spanish Mag and the Catholic cross were curreld Into t tn? American do not Interest them. It's the repeated news of new dia mond Holds that have been opened ro cently between the mouth of the Mag da lena river and the headwaters of the Klo Grande of Hrur.ll that Is tilling the veins of those wluV seek sudden wealtW with a fever to And a fortune in blue day bed's or along the banks of streams that rise somewhere Inland In mountain ranges that border jungle*, the New York Sun states. Footloose adventurers everywhere are looking up ways and means of reaching a likely port along the gold coast somewhere between Caracas and (>>(?11111', or of arriving In 11 raaU some where between Hahla and Sao Paulo. NEW IDEA IN WATCH MAKING i f ' ?? ' T . Discovery, It It Announced, la Capable of Revolutionizing the Pres ent Industry. Not leng ago there was announced ? discovery deserlhed by the director of the. International bureau of weights and measures as being capable of revo lutionizing the watchmaking industry. A successful method of regulation, remedying the variations in time of a watch duo to the expansion and con traction of its parts caused by varia tions 'of temperature, la the result of the Invention of C. 15. Gulllaume. This so-called "secondary error" al ways has been one of the great ob stacles In the attainment of perfection and precision In the watchmaking In dustry. The chief feature of the Gulllaume process is a change in the nlloy used in the com]>ensating parts. Then mini mum expansion of nickeled steel was found to be' Increased by the addition of 12 per cent of chrome as well as a small quantity of tungsten, man ganese or carbon. By mounting n spiral of this steel -nick el-chrome al loy In the wateh, according to t/e French announcement, the problem of compensation has been solved nnd the "secondary error" removed. ? Washing ton Sjtar, To Develop Canada's Clay Deposits. . ? Numerous varieties of valuable clay deposits, some of these being brick, tile, earthenware and Are days, have long been known to exist in Saakatche wan, Canada. To promote a knowledge of these deposits and to encourage their development, the provincial au thorities have recently Included 8 course of ceramics In the curriculum of the Saskatchewan university. Thui although there are no pottery-manufa<* turlng plants In this province at prea ent, the people of that section of the Dominion are obviously aware of the possibilities In the situation and are taking steps to make Saskatchewan one of the leader! in the manufacture of brick, tile, pottery, or other prod ucts of the ceramic Industry. ? Populai Mechanics Magazine. Valuable Blood Medicine. Golden sen! Is classed u? the great est of blood medicines and during th* war the- root went up to $0 a pound In the list it in rated at $3.20 to $3.30. The wild ginseng root is listed at $11 to $12. In early days it was a eourc* of revenue to many a pioneer and 11 was bo much hunted that a special Implement, the "sang hoe," was made for its digging. The larger part oJ the ginseng goes to China where lt? utilization is something of a mystery. A number of plants other than gin seng, ordinarily rogarded as inert weeds, are now being cultivated. Shows Way to Save. A Chicago savings bank has adopted an unusual "ballyhoo" that attract# crowds daily. In a glass caso mount ed on a dais outside the bank Is seated the life-size figure of a boy about six or seven yearx old. The figure, op erated by electricity, keeps depositing coins In. a small savings bank. So lifelike Is the figure that within a few f pet of It one might easily be lleve it to be that of a real child, and the expression of the face shows Just about as much enthusiasm at depoxlt Ipg pocket money In a savings bank a* does that of a real child. Shoes Shlned bi^Electricity. Shoes can now be^Pfdlshed by ele<^ trldty. The entire process is per formed without hands by an Ingenious machine. In which the dropping of n coin In the slot starts the dusting of 'the shoes, applying of polish, brushing to a shine and rubbing wltb cloth* to a satinlike finish. Record in patents Issued. Exactly 113,597 patents, the largest number on record, were filed In th? I fiscal year ertded June 30, last year | ?'"C^rdfnit the fommi^lonfr f?f ents. The previous record was mad? ' fn 1021, when lOT.WW, were filed/ Th? expenses, -the ?mml*sl?nor states ? Papular Mechanic* MsgatJn*. * 1 Woman I lie* PromT Injuries. Kershaw, June 17. Mrs. T. M. Hob ?rta, who was injured yesto.rday in an automobile accident near hero, died today. She .sustained a broken | collar bono and never reacted from the ahofk sustained when the auto mobile, in which she was riding, was overturned 1>> tlio breaking ?>t' n in dins rod. The .other occupants of the car will recover. The accident occurred about throe ' liiil oh from Kershaw, and Mm. Rob erts , h(Jr husband, ujufcthrco children wte.ro in the car. Mr. Roberts is a farmer living in the Midway section of I .ancaster county: ^ Cherokee county led the State in butter production. -per pens on in 19?.^ with an average of iiJJ.ti pounds.. Have You Noticed the Difference in the Ice Service Since Mav 1st ? Patronise tho Green Wagons. Honest Weights, Cour teous treatment and Real Service will get the business. That's why ours grows every day. A. K. BLAKENEY ICE COMPANY I * Phone 241 DeKalb St. 1 r Progressive Business ? ? ? "* ? ... . We realize that this institution must play an important part in the future economic growth of this city. We are serving many of the most progressive business concerns in this city and have ample facilities for serving more. We offer an extra measure of Service. USE OUR BANK Loan & Savings Bank Don't Only Wish to Save But? DO IT! 4, . Building castles in the air? dreaming of riches, power and affluence is only wast ing time. To accomplish anything worth while, ^ requires action, and lots of it. Success is) not attained by procrastination, but by dil-i" igence and^letermination. The only way to have money, is to save money. The time tir> start is now. No better place can you make your first de posit than in the First National Baak,f where every courtesy, assistance and ad vice will be gladly accorded you. NOTICE! m I have on hand an ample stock of Nitrate of Soda at an attractive price. "T W. M. WOOTEN ~ \ - ? -r-rr- * - . -- . -