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NOTICED BIG CHANGES IN JUST A [E DAYS Greenville Man Tells of Long Strug, gle with Dread Ills HE TRIED FIVE YEARS Medicine Failed to Give Desired Re lief-Took Tanlae and Now Endorses It Regarding the great relief thai Tanlac gave him from stomach trou ble, which after five years developed into pellagra, F. S. Crumley, of No 8, Buncombe St., Greenville, gave the following statement: "I spent Several weeks at a Gov ernment pellagra hospital at Spartan. burg, but after I came home what I ate continued to hurt me. Gas formed on my stomach and I had pains in my abdomen. My appetite was not goof and I could not rest at night. "I began to take Tanlac and it soot corrected my stomach trouble. In r couple of days I could tell a big dif ference. My food was digested, gat stopped forming on my stomach ant those pains left me. The Tanlac soor got me so I could eat as much as any one, my nerves were quieted and I be wan to sleep soundly at night. "Tanlac is a fine medicine for stom ach trouble, and I am glad to recoin mend it to all with such ailments." Tanlac, the Master Medicine, is solk by Dickson's Drug Store, Manning H. W. Nettles, Jordan; Shaw & Plow den, New Zion; Farmers' Gupply Co. Silver; D. C. Rhame, Summerton. The Quinine That Does Not Affect the Hea Because of its tonic and laxative effect, LAXA TI V$i DROMO QUININ$i is better than ordinar: Quinine and does not cause nervousness no ringing in head. Remember the full name an( look for the signature of E. W. GROVi. 30c <WILL BEI A Caro NILES you have ever laid y( in the next few days see this lot. They a We also have in a Buggies and H to be had for the Mo service assures you goods we handle. The Be~ Reasonal Nothing but the into our prescription pounded just the was RUBBER GOG TOIL and a full and< STATIF We A MODERN S( We keep a CIGARS, TOBAC4 -__BROWN'S II Below Bank of Manning. DRAFT METHODS WILL BE CHANGED Registrants Will Not Have to Claim Exemption SECRETARY BAKER'S VIEWS Proposes That Government Determin' Status of All Affected by New Law Washington, Aug. 9.-New draft regulations under which the govern ment would do the selecting rather than leaving it to the registrants, are under consideration by the War De p artment. This was disclosed today y Secretary Baker after he had ap peared before the Senate military committee to urge .prompt enactment of the new Selective Service Act ex tending the age limits to include all men between the ages of eighteen and forty-five.. The War Secretary made it plain that he is not satisfied with the pres ent system under which the registrant must claim deferred classification, as many men with dependents hesitate, for patriotic reasons, to make such a claim. In this connection Mr. Baker said he was inclined to the opinion that the marriage relation will in it self constitute defererd classification. What Mr. Baker has in his mind is to lay down a set of questions which the registrant would answer, and then have rules which would take care of the classification. He is understood to regard this as the fair and equitable system. The discussion on the draft ages be fore the Senate committee, Mr. Baker said. followed much the lines taken I by Gen. March, chief of staff, and Provost Marshal Gen. Crowder. The committee, he added, did not indicate any disposition to question the neces of the action so that the War De partmient can 'quickly get the men necessary to win the war. "There was some discussion," Mr. I Baker said, "as to whether it was the . intention of the department to extend the work or fight order to include classes of persons in various profes sional occup.tions .1 told them there iERE SOON I14 f the Best id HORSES ur eyes on will be here Don't buy until you re beauties. tock the best line of Wagons* Iarness ney. Our long years of of the quality of the ;t Drugs >1e Prices very best materials go s and they are corn your physician says. DS and IET ARTICLES :omplete line of 3~NERY. have )DA FOUNTAIN Full Line of 1OS and CANDIES. RUG STORE, C Manning., S, Keep Wel Do not, allow the poisons of undigested food to accumulate in your bowels, where they are absorbed into your system. Indigestion, con stipation, headache, bad blood, and numerous other troubles are bound to follow. Keep your system clean, as thous ands of others do,- by taking an occasional dose of the old, reliable, veg etable, family liver medi cine. Thedford's Black-Draught Mrs. \V. F. Pickle, of Rising Fawn, Ga., writes: "We have used Thed ford's Black-Draught as a family medicine. My mother-in-law could not take calomel as it seemed too strong for her, so she used Black-Draught as a mild la, ative and liver regulatof.". . We use it in the family and believe it is the best medicine for the liver made." Try it. Insist on the enuine Thedford's. 25c a pack age. E-75 was no present change of the work or fight order in contemplatic.n. I said that when I decided the baseball case I thought perhaps other forms of amusement and entertainment might require an extension of the order to be on a parity with the baseball situa tion. But that was rot :n ti'ur mind. "They had heard from outside sources that the department was con sidering bringing professional classes, like lawyers, newspaper men and oth ers who were not actually engaged in producing war supplies, under the or der." Effect on the Colleges The committee, Mr. Baker contin ued, was especially interested in the effect of the extension of draft on col leges, and also in the question as to whether young men from eighteen up would be drawn indiscriminately in class I or placed in a deferred class by age and drawn later, giving them some added months to come to ma turity. "I told the committee," said the War Secretary, "that no fixed policy had been determined upon by the de partment, but that the purpose was to allow the president to defer in class I the call of the younger men. I have always considered, as you, perhaps, remember, that nineteen was the proper minimum, and I have come to the eighteen minimum only because it seems necessary to get the men." -W-S-S OPTIMISTIC IN LONDON Credit Given Americans for Success es in France London, Aug. 13-The general feel ing here is that the importance of the successful new battle cannat be over estimated. It is regarded as the turn ing point of the year's campaign and perhaps even the turning point of the whole war. It was only a month ago that all the talk of the British military crit its wvas whether the Allies could hold on in the face of the great German effensive which the German p~eople had been told was to finish the war. The initiative has now been taken from the enemy, and within the month the Allies have engaged in two im portant battles with conspicuous suc cess. It is not too much to say that the A~ mericaoniarmy has been the chief factor in this result. The experienced milItary critic of the Westminster Gnaette says only what all soldiers who have seen Amer ican mettle put to the. test are say ing, that the American troops are eqjual to any in the world, The moral effect of their appear ance in France, even though a compar atively small proportion of them is yet on the fighting line, has bee'n the transfor-mation in the British and Frer'ch ar-mies of determination to re sist into the confidence of victory. SAYS STATE OF WAl EXISTS IA'nine Declares Russia at War With Eniten te Washington, Aug. .- A merican Consul Pole, at Moseow, har informed the State IDepartmecnt that L~enine, the Bolshevik premier, r-ecntly de clar-ed before a gathering of Soviets in Moscow, that a state of war existed between the Russian Government and Fntente Allies. In response to questions from the Allied consuls, Tchitcherin, commis sary of foreign affairs, said the pre mnier's statement need not lbe declared a declaration of war, b)ut that it rath er was a dleclaration of a state of de fense on the part of Rtussit similar to the situation that cxistedl at one time with Germany. ICE FAMINE IN NORFIOLK Norfolk, Va., Aug. 9-Nor-folk is to dlay facing the most serious ice situ ation in the history of the city. Ilo tels, restaurants, hundreas of soda fountains and thousaads of homes have been without ample supply of ice during the past two days and suf fering is intense, especially in the con gestedl sections of the city. A committee investigating the sit untion today recomroendled the abro gation of all con tr:"et s for ice made prior to the hot w..ve now gripping this section, the guarding of the ice making plants by home guards and the distribution of ice cards by the po CADI] The BROC of I Cadil For Lee, Sumter demonstration the Seven Standard Color The CADILl Automobile more need L We now have in Brockii J. F Manning. - E V E Has but THE Has Thi ena you ma] mo: by say cen inte on . timi dep The Home LLAC= 1 KINTON IV danning, S. C., ha lac A; and Clarendon cot latest type Passenger ouring C LAC is essentially thi refinement and efficie e said. stock a 7-passenger B iton M< BROCKINTON. Propi R Y i Friends, the MAN WITH I ; MORE frie s bank bles to [ke riey t rest osits. Bank ani EIGHT [OTOR CO., Ls the rency inties and has for idillac ar 9 Cylinder a last word in ncy. Nothing elgian Blue Cadillac. tor Co., -etor. South Carolina. WIONEY nds. I Trust Co.