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Pablished Wednesday and Saturday ?BY? OSTEEX "PtTBTJSTfTXG COMPANY SUMTER, S. C. * Terms: ..52.00 per annum?in advance. Advertisements. Ope Square,: first insertoin_51.00 JBvery subsequent insertion-.50 Contracts for three months or long er will be made at reduced rates. All communications which subserve private interests will be charged for as advertisements. Obituaries and tributes of respect Will be charged for. The Sumter Watchman was found ed in 18*50 and the True Southron in ;i866. The Watchman and Southron ptow has the combined circulation and influence of both of the old papers, \nd is manifestly the best advertising medium in Sumter. AMERICA, DRUG TRAFFICKER. It is evident to any one at all fa Xnihar with present conditions that the drug trafic is flourishing within the United States, to an .alarming de gree. What is less/well known is that heavy shipments off narcotic drugs are 'laeing sent. Regularly from the United States to Oriental-countries. It is said fchat most 'of these shipments go to ? Japan whence they are'smuggled into Phina. 'I* * . ' Such news, is far from reassuring. China herself is^upposed, to be mak ing heroic^>ff$)rts to ihrow off the drug habit wnlfeh has kept her people enslaved., for centuries, j5he has is sued appeals to all civilized nations to help h?r"r in^checking the traffic in ;crags. tt-;seem/?-ineredible that the TJnited StjrteVe?n be''guilty of thus ignoring her pleas. Ttie fact that the business?s.-eawied<?*-by ^private indi viduals is^littlVato' -*the" ipoint. This r^erely i^?rlctesVnegifgehce and in flifferenee. ^mojig! ihose'in authority, fwhose business; ^it . is to- check such .traffic, tilt:?* ? *~ ? ?y. One reliable informant records that 'in less tha'd three'yea.-s/ including a . , . ..... part of 1^20,-^ew.. York, manufactur ers -shippe^-.-tO Japan, via Seattle, over-thr^e^toths bf morphine and over five" tons of cocaine. The China Club of S?actie has learned that during one ? period ? -of. five months enough riarcotics were shipped from Seattle to' give "a. single dofft to each of the ^Oj??O^yO. ?^a.bitants of Chiaa. ? There must .be -coIJusiOn On all sides, in the-United States. Japan and China? since for every shipper there must*be a -r<*ceiver and every receiver in turn becoipes a distributor. There may be some excuse of custom or haited advancement to palliate this state of ? things, in the Orient, but nothing can qualify the shame of ica. " GOOD- WILL IS COl^OMBIA. A recent meeting in New York, at ided by. people interested in de veloping Colombia's markets, called sirikihg? testimony to the good effect the. ratification of the Colom .treaty is having in a business way. * Ail of the. $25,000,000 paid is be "spent on public works, and it Wift serve as the basia of perhaps $100,000.000; of credtt for building railroads and highways and making river and harbor improvements. This will help to open up Clombian re sources to American development, and the new friendliness feit toward Americans by the natives will pro mote thtt-.good work. The extent. of those resources has never been appreciated in this coun try. Says Earl Harding, head of the Colombian Commercial corporation: **Whfen we wake up to the fact that the big American oil companies are ?preparing to spend eventually several hundred million dollars in pipe lines, refineries and drilling operations; that American packers have gone into the country to tap its vast plains Where cattle still ran wild; that the piatl?nm supply of the world outside of Russia comes from there, also the principal emerald supply; that there are untouched mountains of copper, jtin, iron and great deposits of excel lent coal almost at the door of the Panama Canal; that about $3C.?>ijo,000 a year of the world's finest coffee comes from Colombia?then we begin to realize what a business bet we have fceen overlooking and what a good investment is this decision to pay at las? a debt long overdue." All this is not necessarily a praise worthy reason wbv the long-deferred payment should have been made. The primary reason was, or shouid have j been,' moral. Eut here is renewed j evidence that sou are ne^i and d cency pay financially in international rela tioifs, as they do in piivate business relations. THE VICTOR FOL K MR. MILK. Health education for children as it is known.today is a very different thing from the dull physiology and hygiene studies of a few yea? " hack. Not long ago the Child Health Organ ization of America conceived the plan of per?onifyrng the idea that growing boys and girls require the right sort of food and care. A big para?e "was. arganized and moved down Fifth Avenue in New York city, to the interest of grown-ups and the wild delight of children. Among the sights of this parade were Teapot and Coffeepot, effectively chased by Mr. Milk Bottle, who shout ed as he lashed them. "At least a pint of milk a day.*' Oatmeal and Double Boiler were there, close chums, while Paddy Spinach. Charlie Carrot, Bobby Onion, Henry Pea, Sammy String Bean, Billy Beet and Tom Celery romped all over the street. The boys and girls understood what it was all about, for the cry of one urchin was echoed in various forms many times. "Oh, look! They're vegetables. And milk is chasing coffee." In picture and pageant and pos ter, Healthland and health maxims are becoming almost as popular as i the Land of Oz. Learning to sleep with windows open, to drink lots of milk, to brush the teeth regularly and to follow all the other health rules so simple to perform, so far reaching and important in their re sults, is much more easily done under I this system, where all is a joyous game, than under the old method. One eminent child specialist has said. "Childhood is the golden period of life in which to teach health." Lists of bones and horrible pictures of the effects of alcohol and tobac co on the human interior are not nec essarily incentives to right living. The positive suggestions put forth tv re cent health plays are far more effec tive. It is well that the innovations have come. They are needed, and the children will make the most of them COUNTY COURT CAMPAIGN. The campaign committee of the Rumter Bar Association has arrang ed for a series of meetings this week and next week in the interest of the County Court. The election will be held next Tuesday, June 14th. and it is up to the qualified electors of the county?those who can produce regis tration certificates and tax receipts for all taxes due and payable for last year ?to say by their ballots whether or not Sumter county shall have a Coun ty Court. The schedule of meetings to be held and the list of speakers that the committee has enlisted to present the arguments in behalf of the court are printed elsewhere. A large ma jority of the Bar Association favor the immediate establishment of the pro posed court and some of strongest and most persuasive advocates of the loca bar have been called into service to present their case to the voters of tht county.. The committee has invited those- who are opposed to the estab lishment of the court to divide rim* with the representatives of the bar and state their reasons for being ir? opposition. This is generous and i evinces a disposition to give the op position fair play; but it goes wifhou. saying that there will be few volun teer orators to accept the challenge, for there are few laymen endowed with the gift of speech, and even those who are thoroughly convinced that the weight of argument, as wel. as right, justice and expediency, ii. against the establishment of the court at this time, will not care to en ter the lists against such an array ol forensic champions who have spent years in the business of waging word:, warfare and have grown expert in fighting hardest when they have a bad case. The advocates of the Count? Court have wisely chosen their field o battle, for it is plainly to be seen tha: in this war of words they have a tactical advantage and can over-bea* the opposition with a flood of oratory, if they cannot demonstrate beyond a shadow of doubt that the Count> Court is necessary to the best inter ests of the rank and file of the tax payers of the county. We have invited any or all of the advocates of the County Court to re duce their arguments to writing and have extended to them the free us* of the columns of this newspaper it. order that the case for the preposition might be laid befox'e the voters of tie county in cold print for their carefu. consideration. This matter is one that calls for calm deliberation, ami not oratory an?d special pleading, and ! it is to be regretted that the advo cates of the proposition, with two ex ceptions, have chosen to take the cas. to the hustings rather than presem definite, written statements of then reasons for advocating another court ut this particular time. In view of the probability that th< campaign meetings will be entirely ?n< -i'.ided and thai the opposition wrti have no champions to controvert the pleadings of the representatives of the Par Association, it will be well for tie laymen to eaimh and deliberate!;, weigh and consider ail that is said in favor of the establishment of (h? County Court, sift the chaff from thi wheat, and then vote as their jud rnent dictates is best for the taxpayer. of the county. It will he viel! to keep always in mind that the County Court cannot b? run for nothing, that the jud'fe is to receive $3,000 a year salary; the stenographer $Li'0u a year and the soil cito. t|360 a year. The jury will cost $">4 a day, and the court will i be in session perhaps fifteen to twen ty weeks a year. In addition to per ? diem the jurors will receive mileage I and the witnesses in the crimi nal side Of the court will also receive ?per diem and mileage. The baiiffs I will likewise draw pay. And there are i probably other expenses that will have to be paid. They should also remember that ' the congested condition of the circuit court is due as much to the waste of time in former years, as it is tot he in crease in business, and that therefore the need of another court to transact business is more ai>i>- rert than real. They should al*?o remember that a great deal of Lhe litigation that burdens the courts is of the damage suit description, ard that in justice to the rank and file of the people of the state, these eases should never go into the courts to be tried before a jury. Damage suits should T/e adjudicated under the provisions of an employ ers' liability and 'compensation law, such as a majority of the states have had in successful operation for years. Damage suits are the most expensive form of litigation to the taxpayers, and the interests of these who have such causes of action would be better subserved by an en.polyers' liability law, anyway. We do not need more courts to take care of damage suits and similar litigation, but a law to free the courts of th-s burdensome encum brance. They should also remember that a court calls for jurymen, and that eighteen men will be summoned to serve each week that the court is in --e?sion. If you find it pleasant and profitable to leave your business to serve on a jury, then your opportun ity for this occupation will i>e multi plied by the establishment ol the county court. Service on a jury is a duty that a citizen owes the common wealth, but it is an extraordinary duty and no one should be called upon to give this service with undue fre quency. They should also remember that the members of the bar look at .this matter from an entirely different; point of view. No one should ques ione th sincerity and good faith of vhe members of the bar in advocating '.he County Court. They are conyinc d that the court is necessary and ; will ultimately work out to the best nterest of the public- and that in time .t will not be a great financial burden. But attending court is the business ind avocation of the lawyers, and vhen they find that they are hamper id in their business and their possible income curtailed by the lack of great r facilities for carrying on their ?uwness, it is but human for them to ?cnclude that the entire body politic a suffering. Ninety-nine out of every lundred laymen would occupy the ?ame position and would view the matter in the same light were they members of the bar in the active practice of law. Give the lawyers full credit for sincerity and a desire to do the best thing for the public, but don't forget that they are looking at things fiom a different angle. Finally remember that taxes are already bigh. that taxes must be paid, and that every additional mill makes .he burden greater. The county court vill necessitate the levy of approxi nately one mill additional for a period ?jf years?until the congested docket is cleared, if it is ever cleared. Is this a time to increase taxes, with the ?resent financial stringency cramping ill lines of business and the boll wee il staring the cotton farmer in t:.e face? s. c. court is overruled! U. S. Supreme Court Upholds Contention of Western Union Washington. June 6.?The Supreme 2ourt has upheld contentions of the .Vestern Union, that it cannot be held 'able for damages caused through ?rrors in transmitting messages while) rs lines were under government con-1 trol. overruling the South Carolina) court. HAEDING'S RETURN TO WASHINGTON Valley Forge, Pa.. June ?.?Presi lent and Mrs Harding who have been isiting Senator and Mis. Kuox left cor Washington. Postoffice Robbers Placed on Trial Thirty-Eight Defendants Ar-; raigned in Court at Toledo j _ I Toledo. <).. Juno 6.?The trial of hirty-eighl defendants accused of| ?ompiieity in the million dollars post office robbery was begun here today. Famous Evangelist Visits Kock H? I Dr. Leu (3. LJrotighton, of Knoxville, | the famous evangelist, will deliver a i daily evangelistic message- at the For- j ty-fourth Annual State Convention of the South Carolina Sunday School As sociation which is to be held at Win throp College in Kock Hill on June ?, 9, and 10. Why the Court Docket is Congested Example of the Prevailing Methods of Conducting an Examination of a Witness A member of the Sumter Bar sent . * in u copy 6f "Case and Comment, the Lawyers' Magazine.'' with the follow ing article marked for attention: Examining a Witness. This is not a Weber and Fields dialogue. It is a verbatim record of an examination in a Kansas <!ily court. Von need not .augh unless you want to. Lawyer for the plainiff: Now, Mr. Smith, will you please tell the jury if you ever saw this land Answer: Yes, sir. Question: Yes. sir? Answer: Yes. sir. Question: How many times did you go to look at this land? Answer: Twice. Question: Twice? Answer: Twice. Question: Who went with you? Answer: Abe Martin. Question? Abe Martin Answer: Abe Martin. Question: Hold on a minute. Was that the lirst time or the second time? You said you went two times, did you not ? Answer: Yes, sir. Question: Two times? Answer: Two times. Question: Well, did Abe Martin go with you the first time or the second t;i-ne? Answer The first time. Question: The first time? Answer The first time. Question: And who went with you the second time? Answer: Abe Martin. Question: Abe Martin? Answer: Abe Martin. Question: Then Abe Martin went with you both times? Answer: Both times. j Question: Who else went with you | the first time? j Answer: No one. Question: No one? Answer: No one. Question: By the way, Mr. Smith, you said you went in a buggy? Answer: In a buggy. Question: One horse? Answer: Two horses. Question: Two? Answer: Two. Question Both times? Answer: Both times. Question: And Abe Martin was with you? Answer: He was. Question: He was? Answer: He was. An hour's patient Attention had elicited the full information that Mr. Smith and Abe Martin went to the country,, twice, in a buggy, to look at some land. They did? They did.? Kansas City Star. The above extract from the pro ceedings of a Kansas City court if? reproduced under the heading "Quaint and Curious." but to one who attends the sessions of the Sumter county court of common pleas it sounds fa miliar, usual and ordinary, it would j be an easy matter to find in any one j of dozens of cases that are of reo- j ord iti the local court specimens of ! "expert" examinations just as ridi culous as this. It is this method of conducting business in our courts that results in the waste of time, piling up of court expenses and the conges tion of the docket with untried cas^s. Every man who has served on a jury knows from experience how time is killed without consideration of the fact that every minute is costing the taxpayers good hard money. One More Killed at Tulsa, Okla. R. L. Osborne Died From Effects of Shot by Military Guard Last Night Tulsa., Okla. June 6?R. L. Os borne died today, as the result of being shot by a military guard last niuht. British and Germans Confer Together _p_ Commanders of Forces in Silesia Meet to Discuss Conflict Be tween Germans and Poles Oppelin Silesia. June 6.?British and German commanders are to confer as the result of the situation follow ing the conflict between Poles and Germans. Yale Coach Resigns Surprising; Action on the Eve of Annual Regatta With Harvard New Haven June ?V ?The resigna-j tion of Guy Nlckalls the Vab- coach, caused surprise ;is the Harvard Re gatta is unh eighteen days away. CA UPEN TIER PLAN NING RING RATTLE! Man hasset t. N. v.. June t?. Carpen-| teir is mapping <-iit his battle cam paign !?> mPempsey much Marshal r'oeh might plan. __ Marriage License llecord. A h'eense to wed has been issued to j Mr. A. H. Turbeville of Marion, S. C, and Miss Edna Rodrigue of Gable, j S. ('. One of the eternal mysteries is how your neighbor can afford a better car. ?Jefferson City, Mo., Capial News. WEEKLY MARKETGRAM. V. S. Bureau of Markets For Week Elided .Juno 2. Hay. Demand very quiet. Eastern mar kets dull. Some accumulation in central western markets during holi day causing declines of 50c to $1. Country loading, very light. Arrivals { mostly of low grades which are hard I to sell. Quoted June 1, No. 1 timothy J New York >'-'.*. Chicago $22, Minne apolis $19, Cincinnati $20.50, Atlanta $21?. No. 1 alfalfa, Memphis $26, Atlanta :<::?':. Omaha -Sie. Xo. 1 pra iije, Kansas City $14, Omaha $13. Feed. Bran and middlings weak and quot ed lower. Corn feeds strong on high em corn prices. Alfalfa meal un changed. Linseed and cottonseed meal steady. Demand for all feeds light. Export sales hi&h protein feeds tailing off. Stocks of nearly all feeds in?dealers hands and in storage ample; of alfalfa meal, light. Goood pasturage conditions in principal feed ing sections causing hand to mouth buying ami poor inquiry for deferred shipment. Western markets report fair eastern demand for linseed meal. Ground barley strong. Beef pulp draggy. Quoted: bran $15, mid dlings $15, flour middlings $20, Min neapolis; 25 per cent dried brewers grains %2'.K Argentine middlings $18. linseed meal $36.20, Philadelphia; lin seed meal *3 2 Buffalo, $29.50 -Min neapolis; gluten feed $27 Chicago; white hominy feed $22 St. Louis, $ M Chicago; No. 1 alfalfa meal $21.50. No. 2 alfalfa meal $27.50 delivered eastern markets: 26 per cent cotton seed meal $30 Atlanta. Dairy Products. Buttel- markers steady during the week under lairly active storing de mand., but pi ices practically unchang ed. Closing prices, 9? score: New York 29c; Chicago 2S 3--K; Phila d? Iphia ana Boston 30c. Cheese markets are not active but | fueling is better and tone of market firmer. As sooon as current receipts begin to show full grass flavor trade is expected to pick up. Pastures in good shape and quality improved. Wis consin primary markets prices now average almost lc higher than a week ago. Twins U 1-4C; Daisies 15 l-4c; Double Daisies 14 3-4c: Longhorns 15c; Young Americas 15 i-4c Fruits and Vegetables. Sacked round white potatoes down 10 to 15c per 100 lbs. at Minnesota shipping points, closing around 60c. Chicago cartel market nearly steady at 'Jn to 70c. -'.outh Carolina Irish Cobblers continued to decline in east ern markets, closing at $4 to ?4.25 Philadelphia; down 50c per bbl. New York at $3.75 to $4. Texas and Louisiana sacked Bliss Triumphs S2.75 to $.1.50 per 100 lbs. in middlewestern cities. Texas yeilow Bermuda onions down 5 to 35c in consuming markets at 90c to $1.7f? per standard erat?; $1.4u to *1.75 in eastern centers; 90c to $1.5(1 in Middlewest. Califci.ua Salmon Tint cantaloupes $2.75 to $3.2:") per standard crate of 45 melons, carloads f. o. b. cash track at shipping points. Hauling heavy. Prices $7 to $9 per crate in most con suming markets. Delaware and Maryland strawber ries, various varieties, steady in east ern markets at 11 to 18c per quart. Kentucky and Tennesse Aromas down 50 to 75c per 24-quart crate Chicago at $3.50 to $3.75. Florida Tom Watson watermelons, medium size, slightly lower at $500 to $800 per ca: New York; S4o0 to $800 Pittsburgh. Cotton. Spot cotton prices declined 6 points the past week, closing at 11.4Me per ih. New York July futures down 22 points at 12.07c. Live Stock and Meats. Chicago live stock prices declined 5c to 10c per 100 lbs. the past week. Beef steers advanced 25c; butcher rows and heifers averaged about steady; veal calves gained 50c to 75c. Lambs up 75c to $1; fat ewes practi cally unchanged; yearlings up 25c to 50c. June 2 Chicago prices: Hogs, bulk Of sales, $7.70 to $8.10; medium and goood beef .steers $7.50 t $8.65; butcher cows and heifers $4.50 to $8.75; feeder steers ^t;.7."> to $8.25; tight and medium weight veal calves $7.50 to .??!?.:.".: fat lambs $8.75 to $ 12.5o; yearlings $6.75 to $10.5u; fat ewes $3.25 to $4.75. Storker and feeder shipments from 11 important/ markets during tin week ending May 27 were: Cattle and calves :!2,'. ::7; hogs S.074; sheep IS.414. ? With the exception of mutton east ern wholesale fresh meat prices ruled jflrm to higher. Beef advanced 75e tt. $1.50; veal $1 to $2 per M?0 lbs. Lamb and poik loins ranged stead} to si higher; mutton lost 50c to $1. June 2 prices good grade no-ats: Beef $14 to $16.50; veal $lC to $17; lamb ro $27; mutton } i l to $1^; light poi k loins >2n h> $24; heavy loins $15 t.> $19. (.'rain. Chicago July wheat advanced 1 during the week, closing at $1.40 2-4; inp, corn 4 i-4e at 67c. Itains in southwest resulted in easiei market the first of week with trading in July restricted by nervous fluctuation in May future which closed at ?1.87 on the 21st. tin highest point foi the sea son With uncertainty in May re moved; bullish crop reports and good export demand. Jul\ wheat trended upward ilie rafti i nan i?f u '?<?!;. Ingles erop report indicates yield of 2..N. "OO.oou bushels in six states. Ingles estimates that while farm reserves lib eral small holdings at terminals and mills uiil make total carry over much beh?w average. Practically all ?u Kansas n >\\ received from drought. Harvest m>v? under sva\ as fa- north as Oklahoma, and about to com mence in Kansas. ?'"in some* ha* firmer with vvheai imt undertone not strong; offerings light. In Chicago cash market No. L' red wilder wheat $1.62: No. 2 hard $1.65; No. 3 mixed corn 66c." No. 3 yellow corn 66c; No. white oats 41c. For the week Min neapolis July wheat up S l-4c at $1.3$ 1-4: Kansas City July 12c at .v!.3:5 1-4; Winnipeg July 14 :j-4c at SL7S. Bishop Instructs Episcopal Clergy Must Not Re-Marry Persons Di vorced. Would Uphold Law Greenville. June 1.?"Because I be lieve that the law of the .state of South. Carolina reflects and upholds the ideal and standard of marriage which Christ Himself has taught us. L have ruled that under no condition will I give permission to the clergy of the church in South Carolina to /-?marry divorced people," said the Rt. Rev. Wm. A. Guerry, bishop of the South Carolina diocese of the Episcopal church in addressing- th * annual convention of women of the diocese here today. Bishop Guerry said thai he ha 1 stated this position at previous times but that .-:o many new lergy have joined the ranks in this state and so many applications have come to him to permit the clerk to remarry di vorced people thai he felt it his duty to l eite: ate his position at this time. Tie- church, Bishop Guerry says, allows the rema riage ot the inno cent party where a decree is granted because of adultery. However, he said, :"in Soutii Carolina :he. law of! the state pet mils no divorce and no marriage of people divorced in oth er states," a.nd for this reason he fels he must take this stand in duty to the state as well as to the church. The convention of the church ser viee league, being held jointly with the main convention, closed its ses sion today, after electing officers as follows: Mrs. James H. Cain. Colum bia, president; Mrs. John Gary Evans, Spartanburg, vice prseident; Mrs. G. L. Dial, Columbia, and i.rs. W. B. Chisoim, Jr., Charleston, Second and third vice presidents; },ir;r. S. M. Irfoy, Columbia, secretary, and ?Irs. T. V. 11 annaford, Charlea:on, tieasurer. Tonight a reception was tendered the visitors by the Rev. and Mrs. Prank A. Juban of Christ church. Greenville, at which MiS3 Alice Gregg, missionary to China, was c gue^t of honor. Th. convention cio^e* tomorrow afternoon. The friends of Miss Bessie Hood are delighted to see her out again after her recent operation for appendicitis. Mr. Henry Thomas, who graduates this year at the University of South Carolina, is adding another honor to splendid record w hich has been made by many of Sumter's sons and daugh ters who have been students at various colleges and universities of this and itber states, he having been chosen ai class valedictorian on account of his excellen scholarship standing and his reputation for oratory which he has merited. Henry, it is remembered, won first place in the Sumter High School Oratorical contests of four commencements ago. He has done .splendid work along this line at the University of South Carolina having taKen an especial interest in all phases of oratory. Miss Virginia Thomas finishes also her pest graduate work with honors at Randolph-Macon College. Miss Thomas was an honor graduate of Winthrop College, and held the po sition of president of the student body which is the highest honor that can be conferred upon a Winthrop stu dent. She has been this years' Y. W. C. A. president at Randolph-Ma con. Harvey Oders Prize on American Constitution. London. May 13?The American ambassador, George Harvey, is offer ing a prize of 25 pounds sterling for an essay on the constitution of the United.Stat. s. The competition is open to under graduates of the University of Lon don of not more than ten years stand ing. A Toronto professor says he ha.-, a fluid that will make a man tell all his secrets. So had w??a couple of years ago.?Sagiaaw News oourier. Two hundred employes of the Leeds plant of the Xonot.ucket Sib; Mills, Northampton. Mass., haw struck ration- than accept a wage cut if 15 per <vnt. It seems to me we ought to re peal the tax op. transportation which last year yielded more than $252,000, O?? in taxes on freight and passeng er fares. According to a census taken for taxation purposes, Germany now pos sess; s :'...::>1 picture palaces divided between 2,104 towns. In 15S2 New Mexico was explored .net named by the Spaniard Espejo. who founded Santa Fe. the second oldest city in the United States. The giils ask w-hai they shall do to prevenl blushing. one good way would be to wear more clothes?Flint Join nal. College men may become great, but seldom by degrees.?El Paso Heraid. ' The. first ten commandments are. the hardest." says Life, which sound's ! >eealogiea 1. ? Petersburg 1 ndex-Ap peai You Will Save Money by Purchasing YOUR TOBACCO FLUES At The Sumter Roofing & Sheet Metal Works Office and W:orks 11 Council St. Phone 1074 * ~