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HSRB I AM AOAIN, AN OLD FRIEND BACK I AM NOT A "NEAR ? But ? thoroly (trmtnU* LAGERED BREW Made of barley and hopa ONlOf Juet Ilkr> th? beere of 40 yeara ago. then by opera tion or our new (Nov. t, 1919) Patent Vacuum Procaee the high wrlnea only are re moved, hut not any of the brew hotly; which haa all the flavor, anao and gfomg. Hence MlNNIfiilAlf A la de lightfully EXHILARATING Be Sure To Try Some ? We ahlp to any Tart of the U. 8. ] QOLDKN QRAIN JUICE CO. Mlnneapelle, U. t. A. Lkin^ST M DuHKfci tOiViANY \Vlinli'sitl?> I ?isl nlnifor* ft&t <<?<!'Vltit SI., Columbia, S. (*. riioiii'H X I -?'? Legal Advertising FINAL DISCHARGE. No tiro is ber?-by flvon that on? month fiom thin date, ?u Friday, February 27, 1020. I will make t<? the I'robate (5ourt of KithI/hw County iny llnal return an A < I in ( ii f k t ra to r of the estate of Luther Uuloy. deceased, ?iiu| on the ?ame date I will apply to tlo* said Court for k linal dischark'' a* t>ai<l Administrator. \V. M. It ALKY, Administrator. ('minion, S. Jim. 'J I, 1020. NOTICE TO DEBTORS. All |nnti?h imlfl?l?'tl to tlu* rstnt*' of Mi Siisif KlllOtt, dv'CiHsfd. mv hrroliy notified to huiKo payment to the under vijCU?i!,' Hltd h11 parties, if any, having claim* againat tbo *#id ?*Ktnt?* will pre m-u! tin-in duly attested within the tlipo proscribed bv low. 101, LION 11. TlDWRLL, Qnatitypd A(h?iiiiMratf{x. ('uuub't), S, .January -Oth, 1020. ?12 11 fWi, IHSCIIAKGK Notice is/hereby given that one mouth FIRESTONE TIRES Prestolite Batteries and Gas Tanks Attention Auto Owners We have enlarged our Battery Department to twice its size. Have just received another shipment of service batteries and can now furnish a service or new battery to fit any car. ..Don't lay up your car, let us furnish you one while yours is being recharged. Phone 118-J. Beard's Garage and Battery Service Distilled Water /Free Air Guaranteed Accessories Adirondack Mountains Paul Smith's Hotel COMPLETELY APPOINTED COTTAGES FOR KENT I*Y MONTH OR SEASON GOLF FISHING BATHING STATE ROADS SEASON JUNE TO OCTOBER An dross M. F. WHELAN, PAUL SMITHS, MGR. N. Y. I'iM.MHiili Interview ;tt The Kirkwooii from tl?U (late, on Monday March JBtl 111^0, I will make to tin* Probate Cou of Kershaw County n.y Until i^tnn\ i 1. 11 11111aii .f t!??? prrs,?n and estate . lkNINIlin Thome lie, the suit! Jioicidll Thorn?, having attain**! bin majority. J, R. ilHASNI'.V, (Jiardian. Ciimdon. S (V. I ??!> 18th, 1! 'JO. CITATION , -0* State of 4*outb OsT'Iua, County of Kershaw. Wherea*. h. A. \Vittkow*ky luyf'te h1 to mo t<> si'unt hint Letters of AdAjjol' (ration of (be rNiate of ?mi o Bitaao A. Wittkowsky. Thtae are, therefore, to <-it?* ami rt? m-'iiMi nil iiikI oingu'ar tin' kinclrt and creditors of tin- *aUi >Su*an A. Wit kriwsky deceased, ttnrr thoy bo' and ap pear. before mi', in the Court of 1'n hate, to l>i! hold at 'Camden, H. (3, oi March 2nd, next after publication therr? of. at II o'clock in the forenoon, t' show cause, if any they have, why th< said Administration should not b? granted, Given under my hand, this 17th day of February, A. I). 1020, W. L, MoDOWKIA;, Judge of I'ro-bate for Kerslvaw County. Published on the 20th and 27th days of February, 11)20, in the Camdeb Chronicle and posted at the Court House door for the time prescribed by law. Xiniuumschugy is the word coined by the Navajo Indians of Utah fur motor car, and It is likely translated to mean wagon that goes with a "chug". Fire of unknown origin destroyed the plant of the Alabama Oil and Guano company at Opolika, Ala., Inst Thursday night,, entailing a (property loss of $150, 000. : l_ Tlia Wonders of America By T. T. MAXEY MAMMOTH CAVE, KENTUCKY. MAMMOTH CAVE, the largest of a number of caves In Kdmondson county, Kentucky, Is said to be tho largest cave knowu. It extends for almost a mile below the surface of the earth and contains about 100 miles of passage ways. Here are displayed perhaps the greatest and grandest ex amples In the world of the wonderful work of water In underground sculptur ing. Its discovery was another case of the hunter and the bear?date about 1800. The bear, wounded, crawled ! into the cave and escaped. The hunt | er followed and discovered the cave. A visit to this cave is certainly a unique and wonderful experience. No where else can it be duplicated. The interior Is a tua/.e of domes, pits, halls, chambers, pillars, temples, cascades, caverns, crevasses, stalactites and stalagmites, carved stone and other characteristic and peculiar phenomena and fairylike forms fashionable In cave architecture. There.are lakes and rivers in It?one can boatride on'the Keho river for half a inlle. The lofty limestone roof, 00 feet high in places, and the battleyiented shores reflect and magnify every sound. The Giant's Coffin Is the largest rock In the cave. It is 18 feet thick, 43 feet long and weighs '2.000 tons. Mainmotiv Dome, the largest and most impressive of many. Is 2X0 feet high. Many varie ties of animal life are found. Including eyeless fish and blind crawfish. The air is good and the temperature even? about 54 degrees. There are several routes through the cave, the longest re quiring a full day. Beauty - Strength - Power - Comfort In The Powerful, roomy, strikingly handsome, the new 1920 H aynes more than ever comes ijp to the expectations of the thousands who have waited for it. The four factors o: car character?beauty, strength, power and comfort? arc wonderfully combined in each model. Time-tested excellences in motor chassis through to the 1 ?ast detail, the Haynes?America's first car?satisfies its expectant friends. There are twenty- d\ year> of success behind the Haynes, and this means ev erything (/? its owner. lie can pin hi* faith to the organization that builds his car. i:>ju "UK;irr siv ( >f>cii ( ";i n I ? :r ? ^ < a r 7 I'ar 1 ? I 'iMir (lo.irt. ? [i? *s< n^'-r ( * 1??-??-?J I 'm ?-> ' IJ?? I I'.'is'i'UP'T Si '!;>?! 7 I$.'kV?0 1 .????????-?.!?. 7 I'HSSi'IIKi | ? I I'i rex Mill \S r??>? I<? ti \\ !ii"<mn SlA1lflMr<1 I )(!??? MTtfTI* Prices i^.'o i.k;ht twki.vk" < '[^n Cars Touring Car--7 1'assonjtrr 1 i ??a?I -1 ? ? i" K<>tir door*4. 4 I'aKsengrr t'lovpd ('?rs ('< in ?t PansrnfcPr ........... $-1000 Si-'liiii 7 I'assrnjfr-r .. - $TJO<) C< r<l Tin-s and Five Wirp NVhrf Is Stand*rd Ivjuipfn^nt. THE HftYNES AUTOMOBILE COMPANY, KOKOMO, IND., U. 5. A. CAN NOW MAKE IMMEDIATE DELIVERIES Moseley-Taylor Motor Company Camden, South Carolina TRAINING FOR DISABLED MEN Govern-nt Will Help in Educat ing All Entitl 2(1 to As sistance. : ? \J. .. I ,,. . i NEW RULLS ARE MADE PLAIN Great Opportunities for Rehabilitation Now PlaceJ by Government With in Reaih of All Wounded and Disabled. \V;iEllington.?In onlt'r to .reach the thmiNiuitls of disabled v* *?*>rvU'0 iilW who are villi In need of \ocatlonal ed lieu I inn and i mining, Lieut. Col. M. C. Smith of (lit* office of tho assistant to tin? secretary of war, has begun the nation-wide d istribution of a pamphlet which sots forth clearly the great op portunities for rehabilitation now placed by the government within reach of the wounded and disabled. For tho first time tho federal vocational act has been stripped of Its legal verbiage. Details and facts which ex-soldlers and ex-sailors should know with ref erence to their desired vocational ed ucation aio given In simple English. There are two classes of disabled men entitled to vocational educatlonr* rlioso who cannot follow their former culling und those whose disabilities arc not of such a nature as to entitle them to certain financial benefits. The llrsl ? lass are entitled to allowances which range from $80 a month for a single''man without dependents to $150 a month for a man with a wife and six children, or other dependents. It Is only when a man's disability Interferes with his following his for mer calling that he Is entitled to the maintenance allowance. But other disabled men, if their disability be 10 per cent or greater, are allowed free tuition and books. All applicants must furnish legal proof of honorable discharge from the service. A certificate of discharge, or extracts therefrom certified as true copies, or an affidavit, will be accepted. Help in Making Choice. When a man's eligibility for train ing has been established, he is assist ed by skilled vocational advisers In making the choice best suited to his needs, lie may even have a tryout or preparatory course In a shop or school. Training Is given in agriculture, indus try, commerce, transportation and oth er professions, as well as "training on the Job" In manufacturing estab lishments, Industrial concerns, offices and oh farms. District vocational officers may an thorlze transportation and Issue meal and lodging requests to cover the time for which a man Is detained by the district office for examlnatiln. A disabled man eligible for training itiid maintenance will receive traveling expenses, school expenses, fees and hooks, and $80 a month, or more If he has dependents. While being train ed at a factory, a man Is paid the same allowances for himself andj?fam ily as if he were taking school train ing. . No - deduction is made because bo earns wages for his work. Prior to a man's entrance Into training, he and his dependents are not entitled to support, and If they are In dis tress. the matter should be reported to the Red Cross. When . Entitled to Compensation. A disabled man being trained can receive compensation from the bureau of War risk only when the amount of compensation from the bureau is in excess of what ho would bo entitled to from the federal board for voca tional education. In such cases the man if paid the difference, so as to make the amount received equivalent to the amount which the bureau of war risk insurance would pay If he were not in training. The amount paid a man under his insurance will not be affected in any way by the fact he Is taking vocational training. After the course has been complet ed. the federal board finds a perma nent position for the man, and keeps In touch with him. A man who re ceives no training pay from the fed eral board continues to receive the full amount of that compensation ' to which he is entitled from the bureau of war risk insurance. The war de partment especially desires to contra dict the wide-spread rumor that a man loses his compensation because he takes voeatfonai '? ruining. His actnal money?Income cannot be diinlnlshori but it may be Increased. In the pamphlet are given the ad dresses of all district vocational offi ces and public health service phy sicians, as well as a table of money allowances to meet all cases of de pendeney. Kaiser's Castles Tupned Over to People's Uses Berlin.?All (ho famous hunt ing castles of (ho ox-knlsor %nro hrinjf n?n varied into |iIh?*om of soetnl us?fnTne$s. Tho Lolno chntenu. nenr'Hnnover. In whirh (ho Imperial family used to Mvo when Wllhelm visited (hut oltv on hunting trips, Is to house part of the Kustnor museum's o;:hih Its. Another rhntoflu Is now r home for undernourished rhll dr*t while a thlr?1 ha* boot luriie<t Into an nrt pillory. Produce* Orttu Cotton. Daltou, (H. J-IB.?C. V. O'Drianf, i rainier reading in the Pleasant Grove istrlct of thin ^>unty, claims to have 'iuitiu'cil cotton tlic staple of which is ' Iironoiioeed green, thus attaining the hjeotive lonjf sought l?.v agriculturist* ind scientists. The *a>nple? of this ''iridescent col on" is a beautiful ffreeo color nud of /ery lino texture and fiber, resembling anitvwt>ol. M.r <?'11? I?? ut has oxfor years tn his effort to product) a cotton pluut touring a f?W<l ffoer tyj aunouncwl tto iurUutlou <4 a full <rop of hl> u*w mhi?U yt*ar. Attw fbQOttttf ftve t iiui'.s at ^ W?n Jw?e? Walton, wouu<Mqg^ uu wuideutlttod tntn wtu #hol ^ Mantly k?IU'<l l>y tlx- ottWr night In Jfrwy U?ty. X. J. ma" U Mlev^d to have been Chicago has a now type of ujoto,| .with ? covered upper deck fiutirt],, <ftO?*d wkth gVttHH. WE have on hand today two cars of brick, and an invoice for one hundred thousand to arrive in a few days. J. L. Guy Lumber Co. Mills Near Seaboard Freight Depot ?S/ze Most "Beautiful Car in/bnerica Motorists Refer to It as a "Revelation" We have been well repaid for the three years of earnest effort devoted to the development of our new six cylinder motor. For we have been told?and there fore have good reason to believe ?that we have established a new standard of excellence in engine performance. Owners of the new Paige Glen brook speak of its six-cylinder power plant in most unusual terms. Its power and flexibility are tatked of only in superlatives. Its depend ability and low operating cost are acknowledged r.o remarkable, fact, i from every standpoint, it is. considered as little short of "a rev elation in motor building." ' The Paige Glenbrook stands as an investment of the highest typ^ among five-passenger motor cars. Its position of prominence testifies to the approval bestowed upon ic by motorists in every section of 1 the country. Essex, StX'55, Larchmont, Six-55; Glenbrook, St* >42. Complete Line of Enclosed Cars ? PAIGE-DETROIT MOTOR CAR CO. DETROIT, Michigan CAROLINA MOTOR CO. (I?c Camden. S. C.