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EST( o Lo k 0 We are goi sale the folio Ladies' ShoeE Every pair is of the best They are not being offere or what they cost, but at A-57--19 Pairs Ladies' Dark Tan l1igh Top Boot, value $12.50, re duced to .... .- ...... _......... _......................-- .$6.95 A-56--16 l'ibs Ladies' Patent Vamp Dark Gray HIigh Top, But ton !ioct, value $12.50, reduced to ---------------- .-36.95 .A-55---2 Pairs Ladies' Dark Gray High Top Lace Boots, vale $12.50, reduced to ------------------------------------$6.95 A-35-10 Pairs Ladies' Black Vamp Oyster Gray, Top Lace Boot, value $9.50, reduced to ------ ----------------------- ---$5..5 A-51-10 Pairs Ladies' Dark Tan Walking Boot, Lace, value $10.00 reduced to ----------------------- .....-------------------$5.95 A-33-12 Pairs Ladies' Black French Kid Lace Walking Boot, Cloth Top, value $7.50, reduced to ------------------ t.95 A-53--25 Pairs Ladies' Patent Vamp Dull Kid Top Button Boot, value $6.00, reduced to -----------------------------.$4.50 So if it is 4 and prices y money to buy this Sale of Z BULTMAN Sumter WINTER PREVENTS CLASH. . INESE 1915 COMMERCIAL OF THE ARMIES ' AMEICANIIOST _________Wash i.;,ton, D. C., --A ---are, ham War Activities Confined to Raids and carved ahlet expressgg appreciatic Artilleryof the courtesies shown them by Artiler l~iel Beaus of U~. Departmernt of Commece hug Weather been received from the Chins e Con AP;II~i.R: 't'1.':S N ITLY mrc~J Ccminirtzion which touredl th AERIAL BATTLS IN IALY country from May 3 to Jun 30, 191 San Friancisco, St. Louis, Buffalo, Di The Peace Negotiations Between Bol- loth, and a number of other cities thu sheviki and Huns at, Brest- entertained the commission have be.: Litovsk Continue sumilaly remembered. Winter has settled down in ear--ii5iJ~'o lpcito ohi n nest over all the important war IihadCieei euiul a fronts and beyond artillery actions, cre.I h w pe onr which are being carried .out over veryenmldfgiofteA rcnax limted sections, there has be-en littlethCiosreuli-aninheb fighting either in the west or in theercrrsaeild(nmsrpr cast.sntntaLietBelndahie Only, patrol e-ncounters are- repiortedlit~if ~iit. lletllti rn along the British I in lines and artil- i coldsg fhn avn lery acion at t wo points on the Frenchanlilakelwtbaceamli front. In Italy the terrific artillery'liwthgdfgus.T one and infantry fighting has given way toiadeeuino h alt to aerial warfare, which, however,(itillyCneth ndg though it is spectacular, has little di-. 'eirae avn enacso rect b)earing on the progress of the frhnrd fyas campaign, when confined to c-ombatts oftee " mril between indiiv iduaIs or situadrions. rclst h ieia i'i 1 F-or nearly a month now the fronts invht(iiit0(1vritt1Ct in 1France and Belgium have beeni al- ocsinfCheefnairsn most snow-bound. Thus the-ln hm erhnstagase truhAe awaitedl German offensive, with the ia uiescnestoyas'i heavy reinforce ment s whlich G'erma nya linurgosvnleni transferred from the Itussian front wt iwt eouinzn l to the wvest, has been (delayed forn(efincadhuneso te weeks, if not possibly for mlontihs. rtu- he mn hm~a Peace Negotiationsn Ceg-snte .oh T1he peaci(e neg ot iatIions between the o ecin sin ho con Bolshe-vi ki an mlhe re-presenta tiv~es of t iUiar y fnms a no the Quadriuplle All ia ne at Brest - t i -vlp. -nuIi h e ILitov'sk coot in ue, but wit houit defiite*Cai rs ih h oacitCa results. A not her dh-lay in the assem- ~sirsosll o h eeteai bIling of the -onost it u(-nt assemnibly isatmt orstr h acu likely beca use Of th(e issuancet( o1 a pwr..dr h g(hn-I u t decree at. Petrograd providing for newW io' ra s.mrfat ai elections to) r'eplace mem-nbers of thebatiesoI sbuisssnSrt const ituent asseminbly, who are deenmed Stl nn ,S a ~ n Tva not fit to re presenit the interest ofhirc-ndatwsalosoCia the wvorkmen andl peasants.bsi-swrIl Accord ing to re-ports from the Rus.. lh -iilacm11ise ertr sian capital, Northern Russia is to re-MrDaiYivllblogrmi ceive am ple foodi souppli.es from Uk-Ie ytoewo er i lqe raina through the reconciliation of thetraolton fhe anydrss Bolsheviki and the U~kranians. It ismaeOnytoeworlie h alIso semini-officially reported fronmget(ifecnei h aga(se Petrograd that the Hlolsheviki have flyap-it h avlu k taken control of Novo 'Icherkask, c~Panp fti ~g ital oif the provinc-e of the Don Cos- M.Yi iel hw sacks.Acointo r.'.V.KWoh To P'reiierve Communication rpeoftecmisnwa 'The Londo(n Daily Mail report-s thc-.eanhvadwatobu"Th establishment by the British govern-thcomsinhulhaeoet ment of informal relations wvith Max-Amrc tolan rmiewllf im Litvinoff, recently appointed byAmrcnCieetatad th the Bolsheviki government at Rtus-acodnto r.NeCh-evi sian ambassador at Londlon. The ex- cara ftecmisoado planation of this, according to Theoftegatctn mnucur; Mail, is that possibly Lenine andshudhaeispotsvihnou TProtzky, if they retain the dec facto sd gny power, bight eventually give heed to the counsel of the Allied governments, IIISIl A and it is not desirable that commouni-SEPIGNI)P cation with Petrogradl be cut off. - Drives Out Malaria, BuIlds Up System ta~ ao .Buo' or The Old Standard eneral stren thenin; tonic, orcweystda mrngr GROVE'8 TASTE EStS chill T0 IC, die soutth Uio taonhecsabea Maiaria,enrichesthebiood,andbuiidsunthesys-, tew Atre onc. oradlt ad h~lre. a esedahngo. 'C.,n-Atablen hnt L.isten! * ag to put on wing lot's of - s quality and the right style. d for what they are worth a price to clean them up. A-32-7 Pairs Ladies' Black Dull Kid Cloth Top High Lace Boot, value $5.00, reduced to ._.._- __._- ___, __---------$3.95 A-63--12 Pairs Ladies' Patent Vamp Dull Top Button Boot, value $4.50, reduced to ----------------------------------- $2.95 1-1.-23 Pairs Ladies' Patent Vamp Champagne Top Button, value $8.00, reduced to -------------------------------- $5.10 13-15-2 Pairs Ladies' Dark Tan Suede high Top Lace, value $9.00, reduced to ------------------------------------------$5.50 13-16-6 Pairs Ladies' Light Gray with a Gray Cloth Top, High Lace, value $9.50, reduced to .. _._ __ _ __. -._ _.._ .$5.50 We have a lot of Ladies' Button and Lace Shots in Patent Leath er, Dull Kid, Gun Metal and Vici Kid Shoes at $4.00 and $4.50 that we are going to offer in this sale for --------------$2.65 1 Also a lot of Gun Metals, Patent Leather, Dull Kid and Vici Kid, Button and Lace, from $3.00 to $3.50 that we are going to put in this sale at ---------------------------------------$1.95 style, quality :u want your for you, visit adies' Shoes. SHOE CO. S. C. come here to arrest Jim Miller, whom OA U METT he followed from Florence to Man nin then to Summerton, back to Manning, to Lanes and then to Charleston. In Charleston he lost Miller and yesterday morning went to " the Union station to return to Flor- Fuel Administrators Will Cut Down s ence when he found his man asleep on the Supply to Less Essential a bench with his hat pulled down over Industries his eyes. Calling the patrolman sta tioned in the depot the arrest of Jim SUFFERING IN BIG CITIES Miller, alias Paul Smith, was effect ed. t Miller is acused of receiving goods Apportionment of Coal Will be Left n under false pretenses. Some of the Largely to the State Fuel, 1 missing goods were found by Detec- Administrators tiv Busch in a local p~awn shop wvhen - ~an investigation was made here. Con- Washinigton, Jan. 13.-Curtailment stable G;unn stated that there was al- of coal to the less essential industries so5 a wvarrant for his prisoner- at Man- in Eastern cities as a means of re ning and he has information that the lieving the fuel famine will be begun man is also wanted in Geor-gia. early this wveek. Reports today to Miller, according to the officer, the fuel administration told of contin poe san organ repairer and in this ued widesp~read suffering in New way gainedl entrance into homes. "lHe York, Philadelphia and other cities. 'is a slick coon," said Constable Giunn, Apportionment of coal will be left as he departed with his prisoner.- Ilarge lyto federal fuel administrators ~Charleston American. ,in the states in wvhich the supplies are 5 __________shor-t. They will wvork on general in nCIN ST LFIHIGO UM str-uctions from F'uel Administrator n hN TL II'IGOIM Garfield to supp~ly first householder-s, andl next indlusties p~roducing war IPeking-Ferreting out and round- materials. Many unessential indlus ing u') opium hidden awa y' from the tries probably will be required to shut Iauthoril ies stUl '-ontmaucs in China dcown at least three dlays a wveek un and another bonfire, the sixth of its til the fuel crisis is over. kind, has just been celebrated for Production of bituminous coal in tahing wre gathered 1,016 cases, con- the first wveek of January returned aiig6,100 ounces of opium, '1,614 almost to the level of early December p~ackets of morp~hia, and 7,000 smok- before the sevcre weather began to im r ing and manufactui-ing instruments. pede0 operations. The. average daily It is to he hoped that demonstrations production was 1,847,000 tons, ac of this kind wvill eventually prove the cording to the United States geologi determination of the major-ity of the 'cal survey. Production of beehive coke Chinese to rid themselves of this Iamounted to 515,000 tons. Losses for ~cur-se, and inv'ite the symp~athy anidl the anthracite industries were larger -.coperation not only of the remaining than in either soft coal or coke, the few of their countrymen addicted to week's shipments amounting to only thce habit, but that of foreign nations. '27,517 cars. Friends of China's welfare bo0th at 0 home and abroad hear wvith misgiving NOTICE TIO CRI)ITORtS reports of .Japanese opium growing m i Korea and the pr1offer- of morphine Alpesnhaigcim aant all along the borders, but hope that the eseofns. havisclaims agcaist sChina's evident (determination to put will lestthem.J Tdule, atteased the evil prac-tice behind her will have wilh rsen hmduyatstd n its moral effect on her neighbors, if ths owing said estate wyill make notdirctl, a lest hrogh he o-payment to the undersigned cqualified ercie efectof te sntimntsof te eecutors of the said estate. ciilze orld. -TIDLE T. M. TISDALE, Executors. ll CON'l'UOL D)URING WAR ONLY Manning, S. C., .Jan. 14, 1918. Railroad Executives See No Reason MINT FOlR PHILIPPINES for Extension t ----Manilla, P. 1.,-The recent shortage New York, ,Jan. 3.--Railroad execu- of subsidiary coins has brought be. r tives ,representing 177 roadls and 90 fore the Philippine public the neces. b, per cent of the mileage in the United sity of establishing a mint for the e States, at a conference held here to- coinage of local money.' A bill is now e (lay to consider plans for safeguard- before the legislature asking for an m, ing the interests they represent while appropriation of $100,000 for the es -under federal management, decided to tablishm en t for such a mint in Ma ask Congress to limit government con. nilla, and no doubt is felt that it will trol to the periodl of the war. The meet unanimous approval. As long session was executive. The executives as the United States mints will fur r could see no reason, it was said; why nish coins on a cost basis, so that government relinquishment of' the seignio-sre of profits goes to the a railroads should not be fixed for the island government, the muint is of .duration of the war as has been thie doubtful real utilhty, but its estab fease with indlusties which have come lishment is a normal ohtgrowth of po tuncle rfecderal mcunagement, litical sentiment. ' D~RTSEINTHE TIMES ADVERTISE IN THE TIME8. WEll8ARCOW ALN' PASSES llP ALONG " 'Get Tanlac,'. a Friend Told Me,". Says Palner TOOK GOOD ADVICE "Am Now a Different Man," He De clares. "Now Rid 'of My Troubles For 29 years, more than a quarter of a century, F. E. Palmer, of No. 7 Elizaneth St., -Binghampton, N. Y., N. Y., has been a valued employee of the Wells I nrgo Express Company, and a'man with a record like that has, of course, proved his ability and in tegrity beyond question. 'T his is the sort (f main whose en-. dorsement is worth a t eat deal an 1 it is a matter of pcile that men of this calibre endorse Tnalac. "I feel just like a good friend felt for me-I want to help the other fel low who may be suffering," Mr. Pal mer said, and that is the spirit which moves such men and women. They want others to share their good for tune. "For the last six years I have felt myself slipping from the path of health," he continued. "Indigestion and catarrh had attacked me. My ap petite became poor, my fiod did not taste right and I would suffer after eating. I grew nervous and was get ing run down. I did not feel well and would get up feeling achy and dull. I knew it would not do for me to keep on that way. 'Get Tanlac,' a friend told me, and I took his tip. Ngow I am entirely well of my troubles. I don't feel any more indigestion and my ca tarrh has disappeared. I can eat any thing without fear of it hurting me. My sleep could not be better. Tanlac has done the work for me and I give my statement now to others. Get on the Tanlac Special and start for Well ville, I tell them." For themselves, the well known men and women who endorse Tanlac would not talk, but the bond of sym pathy between such people is strong. Once relieved themse:ves, they want others to knosy of this new recon structive system purifier and stomach tonic which, because of its record, is called the Master Medicine. Tanlac, the Master Medicine, is sold by Dickson's Drt-g Store, Man ning; H. W. Nettles, Jordan; Shaw & Plowden, New Zion; Farmers' Sup ply Co., Silver; D. C. Rhr.me, Sum merton.--adv. Statc of South Carolina, County of Clarendon The State Life Insurance Company and That Sumter Trust Company, Plaintiffs, . against E. R. Plowden, I. D. Moise, B. M. Oliver, The Coe-Mortimer Com pany; The MacMurphy Company, 1). W. Alderman & Sons Company, and Manning Oil Mill, Defendants. Under and by Virtue of a Judgment Order of the Court of Common Pleas, in the above stated action, to me dIi rectedi, bearing (late of December 10th, 1917, 1 will sell at p~ublic auc tion, to the highest bidder for cash, at Clarendon Court House, at Man ning, in sid County, within the legal hours for judicial sales, on Monday the 4th day of February, 1918, being ~sales (lay, the following dlescribe d real estate: All that tract of land situate in Harmony Township, Clarendon Coun ty, State of South Carolina, wvhereon E. R. Plowden resides, containing sixteen hundred andl ninety-two (1692) acres, more or less, bounded North by lands of Alderman, former' ly of Levi; East by Black River Swamp, the edlge of the swamp being the line, South by Pocataligo Swamp, and West by lands formerly of Mose Samuel, Appelt, Alderman andl others, salid tract of land being delineated on IPLANT T( 10,000 X 4 I-2s0. TIi KATZI FOR BA] SOLD)< CIE#O RA fl1OGS Two White MA, aud One Negro Ac cused of 'bI t Crime Willianm Jennings ht been arrest ed, tried convicted and sentenced to pay a - fine of $100 or serve thirty days on the chain gang; Ed Holladay, white, has been arrested, released on $100 bond and fled the country, and a warrant is out for Dallas Baker, white, all charged With selling meat unfit for human consumption, viz., hogs that had died of cholera. . Holliday on Friday inquired at the Dixie Market if they would buy two dressed hogs and made a sale for future delivery. Saturday night about 8:30 o'clock Holliday atnu Jenpings ap peared with dressed hogs for-which Holliday received pay. Shortly after wards when Mr. James, proprietor of the market began to cut up one of the hogs he found that the meat was not in good condition. He immediately notified Health Officer McGagen, who condemned the meat and called in Dr. Morse to make an examination, who stated that the meat was diseased and unfit for use. The matter was kept quiet until Tuesday when Holliday and Jennings were arrested. Holliday was released on $100 cash bond furnished by Mr. C. L. Cuttino, on whose place Holli day hes been living. The next (lay Jennings was tried, convicted, and sentence of $100 or 30 days imposed. Holliday did not ap pear for trial, and it was later learn ed that he fled the country. He is said to have been seen in Columbia Thursday, and an effort is being made to capture hinm. During the trial of Jennings it was brought out that Dal. las Bakre, white, was implicated in the transaction. A warrant was is sued for his arrest, but he has not yet been apprehended. Mr. James, of the Dixie Market, is out about $35 by this little deal in pork, as no money was recovered from Holliday and Jennings when they were arrested.-Sumter Items. a plat compiled for D. W. Alderman & Sons' Company by E. J. Smith, Surveyor, June - 1909, less three hundred acres thereof as described in the mortgage of E. R. Plowden to the Fork Land & Timber Company, which mortgage is dated January 15th, 1909. 2nd. That tract of land, containing three hundred acres, more or less, bounded North by lands of Levi yd E. R. Plowden, East by lands of E. R. Plowden, South by the edge of Pocata ligo Swamp lands of Louis Appelt and lands of Thomas Moses. The said tract of land being a -portion of the described in the Complaint, ahd being the land accepted from the first par cel above. The land will be sold in two parcels, first all the land except the (300) acre mortgage to Fork Land and Tim ber Co. Purchaser to pay for papers. E. B. GAMBLE, Sheriff Cuarendon County. Stat or South Carolina, County of larendo n O'Donnell & Company Inc., Plaintiff, against Thomas N. Miller and Manning Oil Mill and Charlton DuRant, Defend ants. Under and by virtue of a judgement Order of the Court of Common Pleas, ir the above entitled action, to me di rt ted, bearing dint of Septehnber 29th, li''4, I will sell at -public auction, to the highest bkid,~r for cash, at Clar endlon Court 14ouse, at Manning, in saidl comnf,- within the legal hours for judliciai sales, on Monday the 4th (lay of February, 1918, being sales (lay, the following real estate. All that piece, parcel or tract of land lying, being andi situate in Clar endon County, in said State, contain ing two hundred and thirty-one acres,' more or less, andl bounded and butting as follows: to-wit; North by lands of estate of Mary C. Jayroe; East by Tindal's Mill Pond, high wvater mark being the line; South by lands now or fromerly of W. N. Stukes; and West by lands of J. W. Mims andl lands of M. R. Broadway. Purchaser to pay, for papers. E. B. GAMBLE, Sheriff Clarendon County. )BACCO! ARDS p Cloth IE YARI )FF'S, R GAINS.