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MIL Th< BUY WAR S Came in Sat Famou is going like hot cakes in C and have two car loads in This car is malhing a now in the market for a any time you wish. ' Cutting C GRANT SIX $1245. Its economy and comfort make GRANT sIX the most useful car you can have right now Its record for durability and high used car value make it a real investment. 110171 LINEF TUESAY J SE] We will have our season are excep every Lady in Cia store and look our We have Hats to flu ful, and shapes that Big Opening we v SUITS, COATS alp surpasses all other the reach of ever: Wednesday, whet] see you in our story day and Wednesde WoNoEI AVINGS STAMPS ;urday, Another Ca: of the s Grant Si THIS CAR larendon. We have already sold several transit now--expecting them some time1 wonderful record all over the country an: ~ar we will be glad to give you a demon~s ~ut Weight and Was MORE and more people are tur LY.cars of light weight-cars GRANT SIX. They have discover< necessary weight is nothing but wa oil and tires. The GRANT SIX with its 114-i base is as large and as roomy'a would ask for. By skilled body de tually seems much longer' than it n Yet the GRANT SIX is not the of its size-Grant engineers have ficed sturdiness or durability. Its thousands of owners averag to a gallon of gasoline, 900 miles t.o oil, 7,000 miles or more from star tires. In comfort no six excells the Gfi Its 47-inch cantilever rettr sprint double-decked springs iig the sea make "riding comfort" words of re as applied to this car. I! & RI 01 Flers in Clarendon County for SIX AN D HARROUNCARI rv WAR SAVING SAMPS t.Y IND ?'TEMB Fall M tionally rendon shape; all heat ~are the rill also id CLOA r years, rbody. C per you e. Rem y will b rload xes car loads this week. h f you arc tration at ~te nling to the like the ~d that un ste of fuel, nch wheel six as you sign it ac ally is. ightest car not sacri e 20 miles a gallon of idard 32x4 ANT SIX. ~s and the t cushions al meaning OP] WEDNE ER, 24-25, illinery. The pretty, and county to coi s over. is; colors that very latest ft display our I LKS. Our line' and our prices some in next' buy or not, ember Ladies, e LADIES' D. ID E .MoB STATEMENT OF THE CONDITION OF THE BANK Of PINEWOOD Located at Pinewood, S. C., at the Close of Business Aug 31, 1918 RESOURCES Loans and Discounts ... -_$103,669.93 Overdrafts.-- ._ -- _ - -_ 2,453.19 Furniture and Fixtures - - 500.00 Banking House .- -.. 1,400.00 Due from Banks and Bank ers ------ --- --- ----- 27,182.31 Currency ----- --- ------.. 377.00 Gold -------- --- -- ----.. .. 10.00 Silver and Other Minor Coin .. .. . ... __.. .. 47.72 Checks and Cash Items ... 49.67 Liberty Bond-.....-.-........100.00 TOT AL $135,791.82 LIA BILITIES Capital Stock Paid In ... _ 10,000.00 Surplus Fund-.........-.--.....2,100.00 Undivided Profits, less Current Expenses and Taxes Paid--........-.__..3493.00 Due to Banks and Bankers 397.26 Individual De posits Subject to Check ... _$36,357.31 Savings Depos-< its--.........-25,534.25 61,891.56 Bills Payable, including Certificte s for Money Borrowed---.....----58,000.001 T OT AL $135,791.82 State of South Carolina, County of Ciarendon. Before me came R. A. Ridgill, cash ier of the above named bank, who, be ing duly sworn, says that the above ind foregoing statement is a true con-i lition of said bank, as shown by the ooks of saidl bank. to an R. A. RIDGILL. Sworn toadsub~scribedl before meC this 16th day of Sept., 1918. E. M. BRADHTAM, Notary Public, Mtagistrate. Correct Attest. 1. R. GRIFFIN, FIEO. TINDA L, l'. B. HTODGE, Directors. WILL ANSWER WITH GUNS Officials Speculating as to Foch's Next Blow Washington, Sept. 16. -Another blowv against the German lines as an answer to the peace proposal of the Central Powers is expected momenta rily by military officials here. The point of the expected attack is a matter of wide speculation by of ficers. Several simultaneous attack will be delivered, it is thought, with the Flanders front, the French opera tions about La. Fere directed at Laon aand the new American front across the mouth of the old St. Mihiel sa lient as the logical positions from which Marshal Foch wouldl strike. It has been significant to sonme of ficers that the British have not press ed very heavily on the front between Ypres and Doual, -.north of Ypres, there has been only minor ratla i. ?NIP NAY, styles this we invite ne to our are beauti d. At this rew COAT this season are within Tuesday or ae want to , next Tues LY at RIS NESS, MI by the Belgians since the Allied coun ter offensive began. British atten Lion has been concentrated to a large extent on clearing up the Douai-Cam brai-St. Quentin front, and many ob. servers here believe the lines have been straightened along this sector now for a new movement to the north [t has been noted, however, that Brit ish artillery has been pounding the German lines west of Cambrai witl special vigor recently, which may b . f eluee to a direct drive for the :apture of that city. Probably Along the Aisne Since the French are slowly making their way to a flanking position whic vould force the Germans to withdrau from the Chemin D~es Dames line pro teeting Laon, some officers believe new movement along the Aisne an< probably extending to the east oi Rheims is to be anticip~ated. It is pointed out that if the Ger muans were forced to withdrawv frona the Chemi Des Dames ,a swift ad vance frenm the Rheims front would :end to outflank the whole enemy line From that point to Verdun. There is no information of an of icial character as to Gen. Pershing's present oiperations. The greatest reti nence apparently is bemng enforced on >ress correspondents in discussing the ;actical dlisposition of the American irmy at this time and to observers tere this suggests that preparations ror' a new advance are wvell under vay. The logical objective, it is held .vouldl be occup~ation of the Briey Iron 'ields and an effort to encircle Metz from the wvest. If Ge.n. Pershing is noving towardl that goal nowv, it is ;aidl a joint attack by his army and he French army holding the Verdun' Front would be a probable develop nent. Such an action would he over ivery exte~ndled front however, and some further reconnoissance of the mnemy's positions on the immediate \merican front may be necessary be. 'ore it can be undertaken. HJUNS DELAYED) TiOO LONG [)idn't Exp)ect Americans to Attack st *Soon A mreican Army iieadqjuarters ir orraine, Sept. l6.-A German office; ;apturedi by the Americaxis makes in. :eresting revelations concerning th< 3t. Mihiel salient. He declares thai ts continuedl holding by the Germanm would have heeni and was a piece of mnsoldlierly pretentiousness which was >nly persisted in from political neces tity. lie was very angry abtout it and tssertedl that representations had beer niade to the great general staff as tc the imposisbility of holding the sa lient with the troops assigned to i in face of the American cot. 'tra tion which was know to be taking place, but at the time it was supposed that the occasi'on was not propitiou for attacking the Gcrmans and an3 readjustment of the German position; was postponedl until the morment foi a complete evacuation was I,. st. Ove's Tasteless chill TonEc resteres vitality anid eneargy by purifying anid en riching the blood. You can soon feel its Strength enine. Invideratltg Effet. Prile Ah. nager. SH[ WOULD BE f000 CHEE[R MISSIONARY Expresses Wbishl that Every llan and W.omen Knxew of Her 1Trials HAPPlINES R!.STORED Mrs. Hoogkirk Now Able to Fanjoy Herself and Recommends Tanlac As It Was to Her "I just wish that every woman, andI every man, too, for that matter, could hear of my experience," earnestly de clared Mrs. J1. B. Hoogkirk, of 325 Gates Ave., Blrooklyn, N. Y. "If' they all could hear and know, there w )uil niot be rearly .v many suff;-ring u.30.. pie in a few weeks," she added. This woman, made wondlerfully hap py by the benefits which came to her, wants to be a missionary of good cheer, and for that reason she told her experience, a chapter right out of her life. "I was not able to be like other women," she said. "'for nearly ten years I suffered with rheumatism. nervousness and a generalfly run down condlition. I had pains all through my bodly, I was unable to do( my house.. wvork, had al most no a ppetite, andl found no pleasure in my meals. My food dlid not dI'-st pr'operly, but sour. ein myW stome~xh, giving me head aiches, nausea, a had taste in my m'outh, and a dull tired feeling. ''One day a friend told me to try Tainhae and I did. To my surprise I began to get fine results right from the start. I gained four pounds on. the first bottle. My backache was re Ilievedl anrd the pains ceasedl. Soon I was able to do my housework. My ap -lpetite became goodl, my whole sys temn was built up and islept well. I ami not pale any longer andl I am able to enjoy m1ysgelf at home and( traved.. inig, andl wherever I go I recommrend Tanlac to others as my friend did to mle." Tanlac, the Master Medicine, is soldl by Dickson's D~rug Store, Manning; H. W. Nettles, Jordan; Shaw~ & Plow den, New Zion; Farmers' t~upply Co., CITY EDITOR'S WIFE FOUND DEAl) IN\ ROOM New York, Sept. 16.-Mrs. Charles .E. Chapin, wife of the city editor of the New York Evening (Vorld, was found dead with a bullet wound in her -head in her room at a hotel here this -afternoon. The police were unable to locate her husband..