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Today at tto* Ma Jostle Theatre Vic Uor flUKO* fmm<#rtol oIhmmU* ?U>? with flu- |K?wi?rful w-il |litos Karntuo Hit ??vui Vul J^u. ?i? i v. v TIk* UuMxian Hovlet gavoramont I# n??w i?unU?yinn with t1*> IV>1os an to oil mniKiltv looking to a n?tuni to l*vuv. Make Our Bank Your Financial Home Our time, service, advice and experi ence in money matters is at your command. Your account, protected by our ample resources, will receive ever, consideration and attention. The First National "Bank invites the accounts of those who are desirous of forming a strong helpful banking .connec tion. Growth in Three Year# DEPOSITS Feb. 28, 1918 - - - - $365,623.77 Feb. 28,1919 - $448,080.42 Feb. 28, 1920 - - $743,776.35 V. .1. Shannon, lYes. 8. W. VanLandtagltam, Cashier S. Taylor, Assistant Cashier BROWN AND OX-BLOOD SHOE POLISHES BEST FOR HOME SHINfeS?SAVE THE LEATHER THE BIO VALUE PACKAGES Also PASTES and LIQUIDS for Black, Tan and White Shoes THE F. F. DALLEY CORPORATIONS LTD.. ? BUFFALO. N. Y. Cletrac . %8S3S&j Catch Up With Your Plowing By Using the Cletrac ' % Plowing, harrowing, mowing, harvesting, snaking logs, thrashing grain, sawing logs axnj any other job where |K)wer is needed is the .every day task oif the Oletrac, the tractor you will eventually buy. It dc velops more power than it's actual rating. Has < moi controlled motor. Proves its supremacy in ^atv] and mnd. The priee is only $1^96. l>et \w> tell you what it is doing foi others and can do for you. Write to THE CAROLINA TRACTOR & TRUCK CO. 1214 Assembly Street. Columbia, 8. C. ALEX. G. CLABKSON, BOYKIN, S. C. * i &*les Manager for Lee, Sumter, KSrshaw Conntiea M?tien Tlw Omitide Wfcw Writuur A*re?rtieer? \ttrillion Confederate VrtemuK. TUoKf wi||.. be a moot 1 us of Caiuy Klcluud Kirk land I Twite d Confeder ate Veterans gt Camden oil Kmimlay, ue\t. thr 10th day of April, All volt" hi us ;ijv earnestly reqftoeted to atb-nd AUv \\h.? tftn't at tend ate iv quested to send In their annual dues for the year, and oilter business of I importance will l>e brought up for their <*on*dderation. VV. V UussoM, iVmuiiandcr. a. i>. Ki'nntii.v, Adjutant' I.KK COUNTY NKWN Tho <Vmmon l'hni* Court will ooii* veno for tho spring term on April 12, Judge Kicc, presiding. Jurors have been drawn for two weeks eourt und \vo presume It will hold for tho full time as tho docket Is heavy* Supt. W. M. Scott after a long ve vero attack of 11 n with pneuinouia> is hark at his p<\st hi thO echol room ami whlh- somowhat redmvd in avoir dii|H?ls is none thr less alert. llov. H. S. Fountain hud charge of tho i.'raded school wblk* supt; scott was sick. Kvory tilling worked very Mttodtbly.. ttlidcc his etliclent manage UHMlt. Mr. C. A. 1 hikes or liranchvllle, with his wife and two children, has moved into town and will oooupy tho now house of Mr.' Player on Coiwur Street Wholesale Oil Company, being distri butor A>r this section of gasoline and lubricating oils. The friends of Mr. (.Jus Woodham will bo pleased ,to know that after a very severe and critical fight with ! pneumonia brought on by an attack of influenza. is now out of danger and Is recovering slowly ami unless a re lapse, will soon be up again. j . Mrs. Junto Ktiu-kcy, wife of Mr. <\ I.. Stuckey, after an illness of only a few days, died March Lllth, 1Jl'JO, at her home at Aks>t. ller funeral was eoudiU'tiH! hy ller imstor, Kev. \V. V. I?lbhlc and her remains laid t<> rest in Hotblehein cemetery on Saturday. Her death was a great surprise and shock to her many friends and very few know of her illness. Tier husband and daughter, Miv. Norma Cross well, both were ijl at the time >\?lth 11 u which mil do Ifer death all the sadder She was ad ovoted wife and mother and a consistent Christian whose de light was In fulfilling the demands of her Master. \ Dr. J. E McLure accompanied by his friends, F. (1. Melxvwl, E*p., and Dr. X. Y. Alford, got back last Satur day from a short pleasure ami busi ness trip to Florida. Thoy roiport n nioft delightful time spent among the truck aiid fruit growers in the Land Flowers.. It is wonderful, they say, how those old sand hills are being transformed into Orchards and ilelds that yield a harvest of gold. I^yids that once sold for $1 an acre now soil from $100 to $1000 per acre. M$\ F. II. Yates was unfortunate in getting one of his fine mules burned i*I) in his stable last Saturday after noon about 4 o'clock. Mr. Yates was working in his garden when he saw his barn on fire and by the time he got there the heat was so great he could not get to the stable door to let the mule out. The door to one stall was open and one mule esca<])ed. lie had jiist paid $900 for the pair. He also lost all his flue oats, hay, and choice cotton seed for planting. To tal loss about $1000 with $300 insur ance. The supposition is that some one passing threw a cigarette stump or match among the loose hay. Marriages. . Married on April 4tJi, 1020. by Pro bate Judge W. L. McDowell, Mr. F. E. Warts ami Miss I lefts ie Belle Spears both of (\imden and Mr. Hebron Clin ton Stokes, of Bethune, an*i Miss AlMe Viola Isom, of ULshopville. NOTICE TO 'tti&TORS. All parties indebted to the estate of K. M. Bowers, deceased, are hereby notified to make payment to the ufl dersigned, and all parties having claims against the said estate wih pre sent them duly attested within the time prescribed by law. MltS. MAItY A. VINCENT, Qualified Administratrix Camden, K. C., April 7th, 1920. NOTICE OF ELECTION In Crescent "School District No. 39. State of South Carolina. County of Kershaw. A petition signed by one-third or more of the resident electors and a like number of resident freeholders of tbe age of 2\ years having been tiled with the County Board of Educa tion asking for an election In School District No. 30 to determrine whether a tax of three (3) mills additional shall be levied on all the taxable prop erty in said District for school pur poses and the jietition having been granted we the undersigned Trustees will hold an election at Crescent Scftool Houms on Monday April the ueth, 1920, after giving notice of same in the C4mden Chronicle for two week* and posting notices h> three iwblic ?places In the District. Polls will open at 8 a. m. and close at 4 p. m. Those who reside In the District and present their registration certificates and tax receipts wHl be allowed to vote in this election. The election will be con ducted on the order of a general elec tion. J. M. MARTIN B. T. HARBISON O. W. MILES' . Bd. Trustees Dlst. No. 39. Camden, 8. C., April 7, 1920. SPRAY T1IK ORCHARD For The Purpose of {Vmibaltluf ^ WttW III r?M>h(rs, Plums, hihI Apple* Tho Unu) for tUu first appliontiou of summer spraying for tho oontrol of A^rgut in "jH'av h?'s. plnuis, apples, ami pciirt should not l>o o\orl<>kod. slnoo tho ipmlity of tho friilt of the on hanl is wholly doj>oudont upon such care. Tho solution for spraying iH'aehos, plums, apple*, and pear* is tho same for tho tlrst summer abdication, but tho time for tho appllortriou Varies koiqo what In eaoh ease. Arsenate of load, <?r a poison iua<lo of a mixture of arsenate of load, quick 1iuio, and water mixed in tho follow ' liiK pio|w?rt Ions is ustsi for this first spray: ( * Arsonato Of'lW^ v . - 1 R>. Quick Ume (lump) ,... . . . i! ttw. Water , f?(> ual In tho use of wot paste 2 lbs of ?tr si'iiun- of load is used instead of one. Make, a thin past** of the arsenate of load, and slake tho lime to a white wash (warm water giving the t>eat ro^ suits In slaking) pour together and dliluto to Dillons. This mixture should be stirred during tho process of spraying. For poaches and plums spray when about throe-fourths of tho shucks have sllpi>ed (about 111 days after tho tree is in full ploom) ; and after the bloom parts have fallen and before tho bloom eup Closes up, in ease/of tho apple and lH'ar, It is imperative that the appli cation l>o umdo at Hie proper time tf results are to 1h? exiKH'toil from spray ing. y \ ? / ?~T"~: Jv W. Sanders, Oounty Agent. Tho New York assembly has voted by an overwhelming majority to <?ust the five socialist assemblymen 'who have Ihhmi under Investigation for some time past and tho ousted assemblymen say they will take the matter to t*K> court of last report. "Having a Pull!" Haven't you, time and again, heard .someone sa^ of a man or woman who had reached the top of busi ness success, HHe has a pull!" Ten to one, the "pull" was a Savings Account, and the thing that helped him climb upward was Pur pose and Persistency?and not "personal-pull " You've got to depend upon yourself. Where one man geta rich in a day, there arc hundreds who get rich alowly by saving constantly and consistently. Try it yourself! Open a Savings Account and see what will happen. One dollar is all needed to start. The hatjit is an easy one to form. WE SOLICIT YOUR BUSINESS Loan & Savings Bank OF CAMDEN, S. C STRONG SAFE CONSERVATIVE ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICK All iwrtios liulcflytiXl to I ho <*<tnte of j. A. Shanklin, ihvoasod, arv lu?rt*>y notitUM to iimko payment to K, 11. Sliankllu, Administrator, Career, S. ("3., mnl aH imrth** ihavinfc claim rf apaliart tho Hai?l ewtato will prosont t-hom duly l a Moated wttliln tlio tdmo proscribed l?y law. ~ , c R 11. N11ANK UN. t^ua titled AdtubidHtrator of th<> lOstnte of J. A. tthanjtlin. Oa unlet i, S. O., April 7t.li-, 1020. FINAL l)IKCII/\K(iK NotNv Im ImtNi.v tflv<?n that Olio uumth from this <lato, on Moiulaj, May 10th, WliO 1 will lutjkc to tho.Fro 1?at?* <V?urt of Korshaw county my final rot urn aw A<lminsfrator <>f the ostato of Mrs. IjouIsji S. I/Jinj;, OoceUHori, ami on the samo (into I will apply to the <Vmrt for a filial <16 sahl A?l?nhtist rator. W. 1 >. M(ilW)U"AM;, (^umlcn, S. -4'., April Nth. lHi!0. The paft that fine steels play in a M A X WELL There is a definite reason for the brilliant performance of a Maxwell car. Lift the bonnet and you see the simplest of engines. Examine clutch and gears, and you see supreme simplicity. The definite reason for Maxwell performance and endurance is the fine steels, those steels built to Maxwell's own formulas, that combine quality and rare strength, that defy time and the repairman. I ? This is the story of the Maxwell, the real cause for brilliant performance and long endurance. These steels do not burden the engine. They make its tasks easier. They flatten out a hill for the engine. The combination of light weigiit and great strength?the ideal of Maxwell construction?is thus achieved. # And to obtain that rare combination of strength with quality means costly steels. So you will find that, pound for pound, the steels in a Maxwell equal those in any car built. That is why the rise of Maxwell has been so marked; why nearly 400,000 have been built; why 100,000 are being constructed this year; why these will fill but ^ of the demand. Carolina Motor Company (Inc.) Camden, S. C.