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~be Amantais Elues. JANUARY 17, 194. LOUIS APPErLT. APRIL 21. 1915. MANNIG. S. C., SEPT. 1, 1915. PUBL5tED -EVERY WEDNESDAY I. I. APPELT, EDiTOR AND PROPRIETOR. Governor Harris last Friday received a letter from a Troy, Y., medicine firm saying that a a result of the lynching of Leo Frank no further supplies 'ould be shipped into Georgia, util this brutal murder- is re enged." Some few days ago a Boston firm wrote W. E. Cham purchasing agent, for the ciy of Atlantarefusing to quote Pces- on certain tools desired, action against the The trouble with most young is that they do not under 'the dignity of manual la bid. They do not realize that nasad fortune may be more y gained outside of the so .lfInearnied- professions than ierand that it is just as noabe to swing a hammer or ' aplow as it is to make 2& in court or to amputate The lesson young men 7 be taught as early as !&that it is not so much man.does for a living as hedoes it, and that manual isasdhonorable as any other S egard to our schools, pa ve duties to perform, they can ill afford to neg They should show to their that they have an in ie school. Theyshould carefully he reports the teacher, should see ae children are in school syand punctual, should ' encourage their chil de al teirschool-duties and well. should Co wih the teacher in se ngthe prompt return of their home after school is ; should make make a ~y visit to the school- and *fey with the teacher and in regard to same. ~4e~ de awake business man. taid capitahst and all 7rinterested in the town's should put forth every o77 unprove the town and it place for homes, to en neweaterprises that have a foothold in our 9ne of the best -means of a home concern is -~ethome pationage, but are ma'ny in our town who otd this: Let it be remnem -every dollar spent in - ng a home enterprise tthe prosperity of our lht and with the growth of a u~ prosperity comes the in value of real estate. local paper is the opnly ain'tified with home intpey * t takes note of; eve1g h.p - ai your to~wn, aigc you a, geel1y, ;ecord of of interest transy~r !the place. It furnishes a - compendium of its his aaethe longer it continues * wre are its interests inter with yours. It gives your 'notoriety and reputation 3 knapusitn close rela vmg indicator of your daily and a chronicier of all from day to day and by year. Stand by it and i to go on improv nd adding to yoar prosperity If you want your t)Wn to ime oeimprove it. If you want town lively, make it. Don't tosleep, but get up and work sO~i.talk about it and talk voal. If you have property, ~DpOOit, paint your houses, shj~e your surroundings pleas Eii~nyou;will be worth more a the market. If you are doing eioaby well advise your friends to'come and invest near 7you. Work steadily for your h ome dealers. Keep your money Sat home as much as possible. -and. it is likeiy to help you in re turn. The successful towns have been made by the property .owners pulling together, Public improvement is an investment that pays. Don't waste your time over dirty quarrels and hold ~Cjtbut work for some good ~ you will find yourself bene GRAPE JUICE GOES OUT. A diflomatie dinner at Wasti ton is once more conventional and agreeable. Grape juice has been banished from the board of the Secretary of State. When Mr. Lansing entertains he gives his guests something to drink that does not offend the palate, however much it may distress the prohibitionists. "Wine will be served at all diplomatic ban quets where the Secretary of State is host " is the anfrounce ment made by Mrs. Lansing, who added that she and Mr.. Lansing are not extremists in the advocancy of temperance, In other words they are exem plars of temperance. Well, there is no falling off in the qual ity of American diplomacy un der restoration, not that anyone may notice. Possibly the good humor of Count Bernstoff and th'e improved disposition of the German foreign office may be due in measure to the better ban quet service of the Secretar y of State.-Charleston Post. Notice of Election. State of South Carolina, County of Clarendoa. Notice is hereby given that an elec tion will be held on the' 14th day of September, A. D. 1915, at the voting precincts fixed by law in said County, upon the question as to whether the manufacture and sale of alcoholic liq uors and beverages shall be prohibited or continued in this State, as provided by Act No. 76, to submit to the quali fied electors the question of the prohi bition of the manufacture and -sale of alcoholic liquors and beverages in the State and to provide for the carrying of these provisions intopffect, approv ed the 16th day of F ruary A. D, 1915. Notice is further given that pursuant to writ of election issued by Hon. Andrew J. Bethea. President of the Senate, dated May 21st. A. D. 1915, at said time and places a special election will be held for the purpose of -eket ing a State Senator to fill the unexpir ed term caused by the death of the late Louis Appelt. There shall be seperate and distinct ballots at said election for such ques tion and office, and there shall be sep erate boxes in which said ballots are .to be deposited, and each ballot box shall be labeled in'plain Roman letters with the question or office voted for. The qualifications for suffrage are as follows: Residence in State for two years, in the County one year, in the polling precinct in which the elector offers to vote, four months, and the payment six months before any election of any poll tax then due and payable. Pro vided, That ministers in charge of an organized church.and teachers of pub lie schools shall be entitled to vote af ter six month's residence in the State, otherwise qualified. Registration: Payment of all taxes. including poll tax, assessed and collec tible during the previous year. The production of a certificate or the re ceipt of the officer autborized to collect such taxes shall.be conclusive proof of the payment thereof. Before the hour fixed foropening the polls, Managers and Clerks must take and subscribe to the Constitutional oath. The Chairman of the Board of Managers can administer the oath to the other Managers and to the Clerk: a Notary Public must. administer the oath to Chairman. The Managers elect their Chairman and Clerk. Polls at each voting place must be opened at 7 o'clock A. M., and closed at 4 o'clockP. M., except in the City of Charleston, where they shall be opened at 7 A. M., and closed at 6 P.M. The managers have the power to fill a vacancy: and if none of the Managers attend, the citizens can appoint, from among the qualified voters, the Mana gers, who. after being sworn, can con duct the election. At the close of the election, the Man agers and Clerk must proceed publicly to open the ballots -boxes and count the ballots therein, and continue with out adjournment until the same is comn pleted, and make a statement of the result, and sign the same. Within three days thereafter, the Chairman of the Board, or some one designated by the Board, must deliver to the Comn missioners of Election the poll list, the boxes containing the ballots and writ ten statements of the result of the election. ,Managers of Election:. The fpilioging Managers of Elect~ion hiave been ap pointed, to hoh( e.. elegtion at the var ionus precincts in th sa ( County. ~ulton at ?ipawood. R B Richardso; Jr, A A Laurence, J Qalvgry at Rodges Crner. If J.IHiodge,lBD Griffin, JB Stukes. Friendship at Panola. .I HT Coullette, C W Brown. J M Richardson. St. Paul at St. Paul. Julius King, D C Mason, R L Gayle. Santee at Jordan. P 1! Mitchum, Jno. H. June, C F Rawlinson. St. James at Davis X Roads. G I Lesesne, Frank McKnight, J E Rowe St. Marks at Duffy's Store. G GFrierson, C W Thames. M L Alsbrook. Concord at Summerton. F R Dingle, H H Windham, M L Shirer. Sammy Swamp at Paxville. T PBrown, C M Thigpen, P A Hodge. Manning at Manning. A C Davis, W 8 Plowden, R L Rid gill. - Mt. Zion. at Wilson.. Hubert White, Gleo. M.~ Melspighk W j West, Brewington it Foreston... J Col. Johnson, E M~ Fulton, S M Haynesworth. Plowdens Mill at Alcolu. W WJohnson, WP Gardner, J J Barfield. Harmony at Chandler's. J HWitherspoon, B B Odomn, A R Chandler. Midway at Barrow's Mill. R P Barrow, Hugh McFaddin, Dow McElveen. New Zion at Boykins. S E McFaddin, P M Gibbons, L P Hardy. Douglas at Turbeville. D N Buddin, W J Turbeville, T M Beard, Jr. Sandy Grove at McFaddin's Store. W J McFaddin, E S Langston, John H Baker. The managers are requested to call at the couirt house for boxes on Satur ay Sept. 1st, 1935. The Managers at each precinct amed above arc requested to delegate ne of their number to secure Lhe box s and blanks for the election. E. S. ERVIN. P. B. H ODGE. T. M. BEARD. Commissioners of State and County Eletin for Carendon County. O UIR PUBL W. D. On Co-opera W. D. Lewis, p: in a recent address "The Farmers' paign for cheap mc cial system adapte union has always farmer and, realizir as to require the Farmers' union b4 together to build money and, as a res the statesmen are now shaking hands o "The Farmers' union stands befoi glorying in its achievements and boas service to the men who follow the p1 of organization summoning every yeom ness it stands for education and co-ope and the babies; in government it si At the moment it directs the attention housing and financing the present cot salute King Cotton, a sovereign in wb is involved and a ruler whose scepter t at whose loom nature weaves, and a. millions kneel and sing his-praise. S -your country by Joining the union an nomic force that is uplifting this stat the plowman's h.ope. Without organis be helped by others, and through orgal - "We have just passed through the known in.the history of the cotton ind last year was greater than that of the war, and the European conflict is by prices that hovers ardund every cotton farmers to deeds of commercial valor. the cradle; look upon the loman who own destiny squarely in the face. Ia easily beset you, awaken from the let seDnes a poverty and arouse thoughts I dning with a determination that wins, ts no other road to success except th1 OUR PUBL F. C. On The Ad Mr. F. C. Ho tion, who is one marine commerce, to the developmen "Ships will go avoid ports surrov therefdre, for a cc shipping world wi free ports at strat many has done so has built up a car s . seriously threaten one of the three German free'ports, no in the world, Its total foi-eign commet that of New York. "The free port would offer great o1 made possible by the recent currency banking, and would tend to shift the country. And America, by the logic of for the world's fnancing, just as Londc ago, when it shifted from the cities ( center will only move to this country goods'as well:as of money. For credit created wealth in transit or change so ent upon the opening up of American : the world. A port should not operate but to develop the p'rosperity of the c tages, Mr. Howe brings out the Import shipping and linking us with South Al eludes: "The most important gain is the d commodities by bringing great quantil tion or export, as trade needs demand. ing houses, which can hold goods for a tariff dues (often equal to the cost of the trade demands of the whole worl and shift to America an increasing a international exchange. "Finally, America Is the natural e Its seacoasts -face every other contine of raw materials and foodstuffs. In i tion it Is in a position to compete WI (and this is always overlooked) must And credit balances cannot for any p1 can only be paid -by exchange of weal IOUR PUBL ..~ On Railroads co-operation Is to theory but yieldi speak the word be difficult still to prac vision to be progrei preaching co-operat come the railroads of the soil. A recent paper of the Norfolk & W that we reproduce that roadway to en ment of the road L "We are now dealing with two of 1 farming and land transportation. Th wealth. When they fall the whole co It Is that these two should fully und4 not only for their own commercial adv nation. "The farmers and the railways al It is difficult to eqonceive of greater a of firmly fixing in the minds of both t are mutually dependent and that the perity of the other, but that suspici various interests of both. Many of th ways have fully recognized this relatic "In the study of economic conditic . rom the birth of our nation down to 1 ished at the utter lack of the eo-op idea--and not only that, but extreme more apparently dominated in the diE nues of enterprise. This was a condit No statute law,- or even written conw those inalienable rights of the individ "The mutual advantages of co-op4 are many and varied for both the ra peculiarly deperdent upon rapid and are always comparatively bulky and give farmers a worldwide market for standing of the fundamental improven tial to the prosperity of any agricultuw wde markets are made possible onl5 such as is offered by the railways. "So the farmer may conclude that his most potent allies, he is doing go country. ..rer 'While thr'eleaves In the. fez The farmers and railways shall BIG FIRI NOW ON AT FOLSOM'S JE S. C., AND WILL CO2 This stock includes Ster] ware, Cut Glass, Fanc: China, Brass Goods, W This will offer you an ext: to purchase goods of tt heard of prices in this ci STI1CTLY FOR CASti. L. W. F( No. 11 North Main St. FiLEYKIDNEY PilS FOn BAC-KACHE KlDnNEYS AMD' OtAnnEm IC FORUM 11 Lewis tive Marketing Plan esident of the Texas Farmers' Oflon to the farmers, said in part: inon is the pioneer force in the cam ney, warehouse facilities and a finan I to the business of farming. The stood for the best interests of the Lg that the task was so monumental combined efforts of all forces, the w the horn and called all hands more warehouses and supply cheap alt, the farmers and business men and rer a bale of cotton. -e the public today proud as a king, Jug of Its possibilities of rendering a Dw. The union sounds the bugle call an to rally around its colors. In busi ation; in the home it stands for Sally ands for constructive statesmanshIp. of the farmers of the South to ware ton crop. Fellow farmers, arise and ose reign the prosperity of this state urna the fleecy fiber Into gold. A king i imperial potentate at whose shrine rike for your home, your family and d becoming a part of the great .o and nation. The Farmers' union Is Ltion he can neither help himself nor aization he is all-powerful. greatest slaughter in crop prices ever istry. The loss to the southern planter freeing of the slaves during the Civil no means over. The phantom of low field in Texas ought to encourage the Look upon the face of your babe in 4 stands by your side, then look your jy aside the petty diffrences that so iargy of indifference that steeps your rom their dumb cradles and be up and and rally around the union, for there ough organization." IC FORUM Howe rantages of Free Ports re, Federal Conwsnne of ImUigrS of the best American authorities OD in discussing the relation of free ports t of sea trade said in part: hundreds of miles out of their way to nded by a trif wall. The only way, iuntry with a tarf to compete In the th a free-trade country Is to establish gical points along Its coast line. Gen, , and In a comparatively short period rying trade which before the war Was fg Enfland's supremacy. Hamburg, r ranks as the second greatest seaport c in 1913 befng only $6,000,000 undet iportunity for financial operations, now act. It would stimulate international financial center of the world to this events, has become the natural center n became that center several centuries f the Netherlands. But the financial when it becomes a clearing house of the world over is created by currently that our financial expansion Is depend sorts to the clearance of the wealth of to yield a return on the Investment, ountry" In recapitulating the advan mne of the free port In developing our nerica, Asia and Africa, and then coh-~ reet gain to America. ItwlU cheapen le of goods to our doors for Importa, It will stimulate this growth of export n indefinite period without payment of the article itself) t~r disposal to meet L. It will upbuild international credit ad ultimately a predominant share in suntry to be the counter of the world. t; It is the greatest of all reservoirs on and steel and standardised produc th the world. But international trade be reciprocal. It cannot be one-sided. colnged period be paid in gold. They IC FORUMI DasseI o-operating With the Farmer a theme that lends itself most readily stubbornly to practice. It Is easy to t difficult to understand It and more tice it. All canbe selfish butit takes sive. The organized farmer has been on for l4! these knany years, but now talring co-operation In the language read by G. E. Cassel, publicity agent stern railway, is so full of horse sense It in part and urge the farmers along itinued co-operation with the manage Sall problems of mutual interest. he most gigantic occupations of men ey are the basis of pretty nearly all itry fails. Therefore, how important rstand each other, and work together acement but for the prosperity of the 'enatural allies in all their interests. arvice to the commonwealth than that lie railways and the farmers that they >roerity of one depends on the pros m and misunderstanding destroy the s most progressive and far-seeing rail n and dependence. n in all branches of human endeavor, rthin quite recent years, we are aston erative principle-the 'work together' selfiness and purblind prejudice has brent branches of trade and other aye lon that government could not remedy. tituton, can do more than safeguard ration and sympathetic understanding Uway and the farmer. The farmer Is cheap transportation. His products frequently perishable. The railways their products. An intelligent under lent of railway transportation Is essen al community. Worldwide and nation by regular and cheap transportation when he co-operaties with the railroads, d for himself and much good for his est and foam on the river,' flourish forever." E SALE NELRY STORE, SUMTER, TINUE 2 WEEKS. ing and Plated Silver r and Hand.- Painted edding Presents, etc. -aordinary opportunity is description at un NOTHING CHARGED-. )LSOM, - SUMTER, S. C. J Jr.Ming~,'s New Life Pills The baetin the world. IHE$T COURAGEi. lhe Bravery That Goes Hand In Hand With Cowardice. J MEDICAL VIEW OF HEROISM he World's Estimate of True Valor, it Is Claimed, is Superficial and Silly as That Which It Stamps With Ap proval Is Lack of Sensibility. "What Is true courage?" asks the kmerican Journal of Clinical Medicine Lnd answers that the world's estimati >f courage is superficial and silly. "Highest in the world's scale of hero sm," it says, "is the cool, careless au Lacity that marches up to the mout >f the cannon with a flower in Its cal tnd a frivolous song on Its lips, a. ;erene as on parade. Such bravery I, -eally the very lowest in the scale, Il deed it be in the scale at all, excep1 n the sense that zero Is a part of th4 cale. It is not courage at all, bu heer lack of sensibility, either fron gnorance or from accustomedness. I s in quality the same mental attitud n which the Ignorant, impassive min worker walks around in the fire damps md when they explode he, too, be :omes a popular hero. "Next highest in the world's gauge next lowest in the true scale-is th :ourage that dares a quick danger In: sudden emergency. In Itself this I hardly a more genuine brand of cout age than the first, except that It ir volves a more or less unselfish disc plining of the man previous to the d( mand that Is made on him. Even s< it is more a matter of habit than 0 quality. The fact that there is no tim to count the cost robs It of any delil erate merit. Many a man, In fact, I surprised into a heroism which is rei ly no part of him. Certainly It is n high grade of courage. Rather, let u say, It is a negative sort of quality, t which if a man does not respond a demand we conclude there Is some po itive quality of poltroonery about him "Still lower in the world's estimatio -still higher In actual worth-is th courage which calmly and deliberatel holds Its course of duty in the face c almost certain calamity and misfoi tune. the quiet resolution to meet one fate in the face of foregone disastf and disappointment, the steadfast se ting of one's face to go to Jerusalen Of all forms of heroism none will a surely win the love and confidence < human hearts, which Is worth a hm dred times the admiration of huma minds, than this. Higher yet In the true scale-low( yet in the popular guage-is the con age that sustains ~Itself, as it wer upon nothing but Its own unconquer ble stamina. The man who, though hi fights be all defeats, still fights, wb though he has been a failure in ti past and knows himself (as many keenly sensitive man knows himsel to be a failure and Is doomed to be failure for the rest of his life, rises p: tiently and indomitably every morniz to face the inevitable defeat of the da with equanimity and sweetness-thei s a courage, my masters, of which tl kings and victors of the earth are ne capable. "But there Is a yet .higher quality courage, the highest of all In the tri scale, but so little esteemed in the po; ular mind that It will hardly be a corded a place In the scale at all u: less, as I said in respect of the fir type, to be zero is to be a part of tJ gauge. It Is the courage of cowardic the bravery of the man who is afral but who in mortal funk and abje fear, with throbbing heart and swei ing brow, forces himself to do tl thing from which he shrinks. Thj which the world sneers at as cowar Ice, is the highest courage of all.] fact, It is the only true courage, for sets all the agonized effort of a max soul against all the fears and terro that the powers of darkness can bri upon him." First IndIan West Pointer. The first Indian to receive an a pontment to West PoInt was Day Monac, aCreek. He was born inkA bama and was a cadet of the Milita academy from Sept. 18, 1817, until Jr 1, 1822, when he was graduated a2 appointed a brevet second lieutenant the Sixth infantry. On the expiratit of his graduation leave on Dec. 1822, he resigned from the army to I come a cotton planter In his nati state. ' During the war In Florida 183 against the Seminoles, Monlac 1 came captain in a regIment of mounti Creejr volunteers and became a maj in that regIment Nov. 13. 1836. I was killed six daxys later in the bati of Wahoo swamup.-New York Sun. CASTOR IA For Inufants and Chikdrea In Us. For Over 30 Years Always bears ~ ~ .. Signature of , .i((C 6 ul Old Sores, Other Rhemeriae Won't Cur Porter's Antiseptic Healing Oil. It reliev Pain and Heals at the same time. 25c, 50c, SL I BIC The Biggest A Complete a STOCK J]~ We sell hundred show that we satisf for the Bicycle. MAIL ORDEF 455 MAIN ST. LOST CITY OF PETRA. May Have Been the Resting Place of the Children of Israel. Petra, lost city and called by the few white travelers who have seen it one of the wonders of the world, lies in the Arabian wilderness, a shadow of its once princely self. Almost forgotten, it is believed by historians and archaeologists to have been the place where the children of Israel lingered for twenty years when they were on their way from Egypt to the promised land. Although it is be lieved to have contained at one time a population of 500,000, it is now one of the Interesting places of which ex plorers know comparatively little. It has no modern history, and, strange as it may seem, It lay absolutely forgotten as far as Europe was concerned for fourteen centuries. In the centuries long passed Petra L was an important trading station for the caravans that nioved between Persia and Egypt, and India and the holy land and Syria. It is built in a colossal bowl of pink, and its palaces, temples and tombs are carved out of solid rock. Certainly some of its carv ings are 0,000 years old. Its walls pre serv'e the history of architecture, for its structures date from the days of cave men to the magnificent buildings of Greece and Rome. Today Petra has about thirty in habitants. They keep a few goats, go beyond their city into the desert to trade with passing caravans and, alto D gether, lead a miserable life. They have made trouble for many travelers who attempted to visit them, for a legend survives that a Pharaoh of Egypt hid his country's treasures In the Kazneh, the beautiful building - which Is today known as Pharaoh's 0 treasure house. For many years they tried to keep e white travelers from entering the city, 'because when the treasure was found a they said it belonged to them. But to I day they welcome visitors. Nominally 0 the city of Petra is a personal posses s sion of the sultan of Turkey, and it is 0 theoretically against the law to re move anything without his permission. I But there is nobody to stand watch ' and guard the historic treasures. Every a traveler helps himself, and the natives e assist him in his search, hoping to de y rive a few cents for their labor. Argonaut. THE NEGRO AND THE BANJO. There Was No Affinity Between Them - In Old Plantation Days. if To represent the negro in his comic - aspe-ts and in his sentimental moods n was what the minstrels pretended to do, but the pretense was often only a r hollow mockery. Even the musical In r- struments they affected, the banjo and , the bones, were not as characteristic of - the field hand or even of the town dar is ky as the violin. , Indeed, the bones cannot be consid ie ered as in any way special to the a negro; they were familiar to Shake ) speare's Bottom, who declares: "I have a a reasonable good ear in music; let us I- have the tongs and the bones." And Z the wise recorder of the words and 7 deeds of Uncle Remus declared that he e had never listened to the staccato pick 1 Ing of a banjo In the negro quarters of t any plantation. "1 have seen the negro at work," so f Joel Chandler Harris once asserted. e "and I have seen him at play; I have -attended his corn shuckings, his dances - and his frolics; I have heard him give nes -the wonderful melody of his songs to t the win,1s; 1 have heard him give bar- hol e baric airs to the quills (that Is to say, __ , to the Pan's pipes); I have heard him L scrape jubilantly on the fiddle; I have t seen him blow wildly on the bugle and :- beat enthusiastICally on the triangle, e but I have never henrd him play on the . banjo."-Brnider Matthews In Scrib nrsMagazine. no's __ -______ last 's A Rival to the "Marseillaise." sa Writing in Musical OpInion, Gerald g Cumnberland says: "The records of his tory contain, but few examples of great " works of musical art created during a wh tIme of war. The 'Marseillaise' Is one he . such. example, and Sir Edward EIgar's Wa Id 'Chantons. Belges, Chantons,' Is an- - . other. Greatly as 1 admire the former y undying melody, I do not believe It is y n any respect greater than the latter." d ed n Real Chivalry. of t n- "I want- you," said the fair society the ~L, leader, "to give me a plain opinion tho ie- about my picture." for e "Madame," said the gallant cavalier, e n bowing, "to speak In plain terms of ar '- that portrait would be impossible."-ae d Baltimore American. e Always take the short cut, and that Is the rational one. Therefore say and do everything according to the sound est reason.-Marculs Aurelius. to How's This f the We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward forsb any case or Catarrh that cannot be cured be F.l 3J CHEFE F& CO., Props., Toledo, 0. lka - We. the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney off( for the last 15 years. and believe him perecly~ honorable in all business transactions and alnnu cially able to carry out any obligations made by 2od - ET & TRUAx, wholesale druggists. Toledo, 0. of ( WALDNG, KINNAN & MAatrN. wholesale drug- Dol Tol~ Ctarrh Cure is taken internally, acting Hui *directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of -T Lhe system. Price 75c. per bottle. Sold by all s pruggists. Testimonials free.Bo al'FalyPills are the bestBo YCLE TIR] Values To Be Had At The Closest Prices. L.50 to $4.50 eaci s of these Tires every month, y our customers. We sell an S FILLED THE SAME DAY J'IDALE, B LABOR SUNDUAYI, SEPTEMBER 5th. SERMON ON THE GOSPEL OF LABOR BY REV. J. A. ANSLEY AT Baptist Church, 11:30 A. M. LLLUSTRATED ADDRESS. The Child Life of the World 76 Colored Steroptican Views' AT 8:00 P. M. First Fall Opening! SEPTEMBER 7th. 8th AND 9th. Of The Newest Designs In Stylish Millinery!I Featuring Street Hiats, ranging in price from $2.50, $3.50 to $5.00. We will be pleased to have you call. Our igh-grade Millinery at very modu'ate prices will appeal to you. The Misses Wilkes, 4.3 South Main St. - - SUMTER, S. C. ,said the neighbor sympathetic- TT FSUT AOIA "your baby suffers from sleepless- Cut fCaedn does he?" y," responded the haggard and INPOAECUT w eyed man; "he doesn't. He s to enjoy It. I'm the one whoInr:Eteof osle oes d es."-Ladies' Home JournaL.casd Yes, She Will. cannot say 'Yes,' Harold, but IPrsatoOdeofthPobe 1always be a sis"- Cuto irno ony ae h ster to me? No, you won't." 1t a fAgs,11,wd nst s, Harold. I accepted your brotherteetofaov syldeae,1wl nght."-Lehigh Burr. sla ulcScin o ah ewe An Evoiution.Alta icprclo rc fln omen are never p)ugIlists."ynbig n iut I lrno aybe not exactly. But I know oneconySuhCalicnanngf said her husband was a prize. Iften()acsmrorlsndhud as she is now a prizenghter."- e n utn sflos owt ot hington Star.d f hma iso;Eatb Notice. tetatdsrbdi edfo .M he books of Reac?.tration have clos-Dai.ecuoofte saeofMr d the books are now in the handsdaete4hdyofMr,19,ad e clerk of court, 30 days prior to lection. according to law. All rcre nBo -,ng 8,i h who failed to apply to the BoardofieothClrofoutorC en newals, can't do so now until af-docunySutCali. e election on the 14th of Septem .M.WN H , All certificates issued since 1908 Jdeo rbtCaednC. .C alid.E. D HODGE. Charmn oad.STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, Notice.County of Clarendon. oticeis heeby gvenNtatROusuan COURTNPL. EL . M~on, ecrtay o St Ie Pre: Msaeo aioes, Plie-f underigne wil ope boos ofaistd nin Colectn Copanyatursuatn t otr ander. ofnth e oaE e f haitn u~ntinMeuigCSorter efaendoacnt dte h Xa 1 'cok nThrda, el OTICEcin OFo SAh E.we Monday, Shepthmdayrof1Sptember,191 :apta iktobeOn TouAnd UthaR pAece parcelTUE OFac olA idre Dolr eah.lomng leas ind sthae abov taed J. 0DIN NS cont, Soue dircted, benairing atef H. I.ELLEB teenr15ar s, 915, or iles, ad pblicd eacin, btothigest blwtidde forth i'd o Cororatos.ba larndo ofrThoaselsn ast nyn - in ad ounwimhain: Seaousb fasor judcia sales, aMnday hestb 6tlay of J.S.Eember, th5ei saes-in dathe ctn~ described eal es-M taie xeuo:fteett fMr dAed thath piece ofparc 1914 tado lacodsted in ookre4,dnan 386,n tye ?5! Stten cofny South Carolina. cnann landse r formery f Epaes ofLei Sutgylad of baexslaendor o., B.uC. nChairmanby BoarofWeiber Notice.i~le Ace ywshere ALSOhtpusun AllitheoritotCorpleaintsrestuad estateovestdSacdectatigeft.Stfteh saidrEivnedhorterlJopAnlebooorter Shorteroi andttoealathetreaSestateoi ofarehdrltonuntyaof whichnHarve ate12foctc on Threrursdsezedytestdher av.o SSFACTION 115 Amounhrtrbenttehubndo thetsaidtBinkkio beSOnrterhaudanh faterff teosidporiathors,.J AlenShreranhPtonrhrtr Puchsertfayfocppes nd repeat ordersE.BGABE y and everythinguSterif ClarendonCn t atper cetfrayMerlprosesPoinif approed r aaein st estl Ervi hourter, and wewlle Sho-oter at 'TOTICEitF SALE 9-9UNE ANDG, BaViRTUE OF J uinienTt oes ot ff The ou alo Cauofmm on i ain theaove t ated Quatn Canddoescout cause nevosnt M noin riing seaid. enywthi the lel aoursn lo r tdiia sigaues o Monday thOe.