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We have ju Extr MULES a and can fill any order. extra nice Southern d car to feed and they v the size and quality an move. Our stock Har gies and Wagons you invite your inspection studied the needs of o of years, and we feel suit our customers in You Da Ma Br( For 16 per cei 32 per ce: Muriate < AND H1i Mixed I We have close prices save yournoney. BE you buy. BAGGETT Matnn BUY Savin Help Wirn Buy Thrift Buy a Baby It will b~e worth $5 This is 4 per cenit. Go to your Ba or any progre and~ ask for ini W. S, S. S01 This space pai to War Savin Maningi Oil I6 No Worms in a fleltity Cil d Ah ~le n troule with w nm hav v (;RV~ TsTlJs S hl T 'ONIC iven reruk proe the (ilcaton, and ct aenera ron gt enlng Tonic to the whole system. Nature will th towoffr dsel teworms, and the eChid wll t received a car a Fine ad HORSES 'In this lot we have a few rivers. We didn't buy this rill not stay long. We have cI our prices will make them ness, Mowers, Rakes, Bug will find complete, and we before you buy. We have ur customers for a number we now have anything to our line. rs truly, dhaM & Soil Sale ! at Acid, nt Acid, )f Potash 1H 6PADE rertilizers. on these goods, and can sure to see t s before & BOMAR, nu, S. C. WAR 'Stamps the War I Stamps at 25c. Bond for $4.15. 00 on January 1. 1923. 30mpoundedI qularterly. nker, Post Office, isive business man fo raatio n. 0 EVERYWHERE ! riotically dIonatedi js Committee by lil. n-veryn~ BULDINIIUP OUR WOMANHOOD Given Up to Die by Her Friends, a Young Lady Recovers Her Health and Inoreases Weight--45 Pounds. A Powerful Nation Needs Strong Healthy Women. A nation Is -no stronger than its women. Hence, it is the duty of ev ery woman wheth er young, middle are, or in advanced life to preserve her health. If you are sick and suffering don't wait until to morrow but seek relief at once-to day. Tomorrow your illness may take a ch/onto turn. There Is a remedy for almost every ill. Thousands have found Peruna to be that remedy as did I.:iss Clara Lohr of 21 N. Gold St., Crand Rapids, Michigan. She writes a friend: "I don't need Peruna any 1 more. I am all well after taking * C bottles. I weighed ninety pounds before I started and was poor and weakly. I had such a cough and spitting all the time that I never expected to recover. i My friends gave me up. I could eat 1 nothing. Now I can eat and weigh 135 po-:nds. I most thankfully rec ommend Peruna to my friends." Miss Lohr's letter is an inspira t!on, a message of hope to suffering women. It tells you that you too may be strong and well and vigor ous. Peruna may be had in either liquid or tablet form. Ask your dealer. If you value health, do not accept a substitute. Dr. Hartman's World Famous Peruna Tonic is what you want. The Peruna Com pany, Dept. 79, Columbus, Ohio, also publish Dr. Hartman's Health Book. The book is free. Write for it. Your dealer will give you a Peruna, Almanac. - SPURNED GERMAN OFFER Venizelos Boldly Answered Huns' At tempt to Bribe London, Nov. 19.-Eliphtherios Ven-. izelos, prime minister of Greece, speaking in London, referred to a conversation he had at the beginning I of the war with the German minister in Athens. The German minister had I come to him because he was aware of the declaration M. Venizelos made that if Bulgaria attacked Serbia, Greece would go to the assistance of her ally. "The minister showed me the great dangers Greece would run if she car ried out her plan, because she would have opposed to her not only Bul garia, but Germany," said M. Venize los. 'I replied that I was exceeding ly sorry to hear that, but it was our duty to go to the assistance of our ally and we should carry out the duty. "The German minister then asked me if in going to Serbia's assistance I was looking forward to any benefits that might accrue to Greece. I re plied 'No.' He then said: " 'But if Greece will remain neutral we are in a positon to give her very great and substantial benefits.' "I asked what were the benefits Germany would offer us. I put that question knowing what the answer would be, but I wished it to come froin him. He replied: " 'Germany will give you Monastir f and as much more of Serbi". as you want.' "I said to the minicter: "You wvil allowv mc to .translate "our offer into my own words. What you do is thia-you ask me to dishon or my signature, to dishonor my coun -try and to violate its obligations to. wvardl Serbia, and as remuneration yuffrme a Part of the corp~se of wiceh I am expeOcted to k ill. My 'country is too little to commit so great an infamy." MUSTr PROD)UCE FOOl) More Need T[han.Ever for Food Since Advent of Pence Clemson College, Nov. 19.-M\'r. D). W. Watkins, acting director of co oneCrative extension wvork in agricul hire and home econom ics for South C arolina, authorizes the publication of the following: in spite of thme scourge of influenza, Itle greatest camp~aign for food pro d cuction that this State has seen ih' inow under wvay. On Septem rber 17, Orficils of the State Council of Do fense, the State food aidministration, lhe State Farmers;' U~nion, the State I . nkers' Association, the State Comn no ssionler of Agriculture, Commerce ar.d Industries, and the C'lemson Ag ricultural College Extension Service, l pese'nting Clemson Agricultural .I llege andl the United States Depart I-enct of Agriculture, met in Codumbia ar d dlecidled on a program for food 'This program reqluests each farmer lthe State to pirodluce enough food and feed on h is farm to supply his needs, and if possible a small amount fo'r sade. '[hese organizations request ed a 15 per cent increase in the acre age of wheat, a 10 per cent increase in the acroayr of oats, and a 1 0 per' Icent inecre in pork prodluction. jTh e is much ne'ed of food in c4ieas since the adlvent of peace. Many miore peoiple in Europe must now Ibe fed by the U~nitedl States. T1he Speop~le of Nort-hern France and Bel-4 -gmum, of Alsace-Lorraine, of Serbia and of the reconstructed Austrian and 1lungarian States must now be fedi. Reports from Russia indicate that a great famine is imminent and may be-4 come acute next spring. Ini addition we must continue to suply our own Allied needs until another crop can be producedl. '[here is no chance for plea tiful food supplies for several years. Hence, the im p ortance of the present campalign to the popnle of this State. STREET RAILWAYS STAND ; l)ldn't' Declare in Favor of Public. Ownership New York, Nov. 19.-Street rail way companies in the United States lave not gone on record of public )wnekship, reports to the contrary, iotwithstanding, according. to J. H. Pardee, president of the American lectric Railway Association. Mr. Pardee, in a statement here to lay, declared that a resolution by J. D. Mortimer, of the Milwaukee Elec .ric Railway and Light Company, re iting the present condition of the ndustry and its inability to continue ;ervice unless substantial relief was afforded it, and recommending to nember companies that they afford very facility to States and munici pailties for acquiring existing trans iortation facilities," was adopted at >ur conference here on November 1, gut was referred, on Mr. Mortimer's >wn motion to the executive commit- ' ce of the association for such action is it saw fit to take. So far no ac ;ion whatever has been taken upon it. "A further resolution," gontinued %1r, Pardee, "reciting the conditions hat now prevail in the industry, and he necessity for measures to revise .he basis of the relations between the itilities and the public, and instruct. ng the President to appoint a com nittee to study and report upon prob ems of reconstruction, was intro luced by P. H. Gadsden, president of he Charleston Consolidated Rajlway nd Lighting Company, of Charleston, C. This resolution was unanimous yy adopted. -W-S-S MONUMENT TO AMERICANS , Paris, Nov. 15.-President Wilson vill be invited to lay the cornerstone f the proposed monument at the south of the Gironde river commem rative of the help given to France by he United States in the war. A national fund for the purpose has een started and now amounts to 300, ;00 francs. iTATION OF LETTERS - OF ADMINISTRATION STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of Clarendon. 3y J. M. Windham, Probate Judge. Whereas Douglas A. Sale mpde suit ;o me to grant him Leters of Admin stration of the Estate and effects of NVilliam B. Wall, These are, therefore, to c!te and ad.. nonish all and singular the Kindr-cd mad Creditors of the said William B. Vall, deceased, that they be and ap iear before me, in the Court of Pro )ate, to be held at Manning on the 8th clay of November next, after ublication hereof, at 11 o'clock in the orenoon, to show cause, if any they ave, why the said Administration hould not b: granted. Given under my hand this 4th day f November, Ano Domini, 1918. J. M. WINDHAM, Judge of Probate. CAM Solid Carl Hors Ever B They're all ujOod Prices and( Terny buy now. Comei our Big Stock 01 tBuggies, Coffe LT FA] I am offering for sale a number y. Descriptions of'a few of these v 'RACT 18-22--66 Acres, 240 clear woodland, in CIarent 8 miles from Manr roon dwelling and 6 'timber on the tract. PRACT 18-19-67 1-2 acres, 3-4 ac Sumter, 1-2 mile fr road, leading to Pir TRACT 18-55-Tract of 105 acres, 6 Road, 1 1-2 miles fi from Sumiter. Good tobacco barn, good Price. LRACT 18-57-Tract of 200 acres, 1 Clarendon County, Raccoon Public Roa LRACT 18-61-Tract of 130 acres, 7 miles from Mann miles from Gable, or 4-room main dwell barns; school hlouse per acre -- TRACT 18-62-Tract of 170 acres, J ty, 5 miles from A] Sardinia-Manning P ing, 2 tenant houses [RACT 18-64-Tract of 29 acres, 2 one mile.south of R Public Road. Price PRACT 18-70-Tract of 936 acres, 4 ty, 2 miles from Bic and 8 miles from 1 Road; 5-room main barns and stables. Price _ [RACT 18-76-Tract of 343 acres, 2 2 1-2 miles from ] Road; 8 tenant houa Price _...._.. iRACT 18-84-Tract of 164 acres, of partially grown i ty. 7 miles east of Public Road. Price FRACT 18-85-Tract of 433 acres, 3 Pinewood, 19 miles wood Public Road 7-room dwelling. 7 house, and necessar subdivide into tract acres with 90 acres about 50 acres clear high state of cultivi cated. Price . ..... [RACT 18-86--Tract of 32 acres at ini-Summerton Publ Charleston Public R ably located right per acre . . IRACT 18-87-Tract of 448 acres, Pinewood, 7 miles Charleston Public R1 timber on tract. Pi We are offering other tracts in Ion counties. If you do not find wl you are looking for, and. we will mal R.B. E REAL EST. 6 N. Main St. farm Lands, Business and Resi Reailt E IN MONI oad of the V A NAA esDM rought to M4 ones---Stout, Heavy I t, any kind you want. M is on them andI it is to in andl let's talk it ove Vagons, Ha MANNING. S. C. (Y WAR SAVINGS STAM of desirable farms in Clarendon ill be found below: ed, balance in timber and Ion County, 2 miles from Jordan ing, on Santeo Public Roadd tenant housess Some good pine Price ...------.-.-..--. $15 rest clearea,. 18 1-2' miles from am Pinewood, on neighborhood ewood-Sumter Road. Price---...:$90 5-70 cleared, on the Brewington crom DuRant's Siding. 13 miles 4-room house, one tenant house, irtesian well, grape vines, etc. | cleared, balance in timber ii^,0 2 1-2 miles from Manning on 1. Two tenant settlements. Price $20, '0 cleared in Clarendon, County ing, 5 miles from Alcolu, 3 1-2: Sardinia-Manning Public Road ing, 2 tenant houses; several and church convenient. Price, ------------------------$33. 00 cleared, in Clarendon Coun colu, 7 miles from Manning, on' ublic Road; 6'-room main divell barns and stabls. Price, $35. per acre. ) cleared, in Clarendon County )mini, on Remini-Wright's Bluff ----------------------------$1,400R 00 cleared, in Clarendon Coun ontville, 4 miles from Foreston,. anning, on Bloomville-Sumter dwelling, 15 tenant houses, good School and church near. ----------------.---.---- $28,000 30 cleared, in Clarendon County 'inewood, on Pinewood-Remini es. Fine land in good condition..$50 ----------------- -----$35,004 14 acres cleared, with 75 acres ip old iields, in Clarendon Coun Alcolu, near Manning-Saranta ---------------------,35 per acre. 40 in cultivation, 1-2 mile from from Sumter, on Remini-Pine and A. C. L. Railroad. Good tenant houses, good barns, gin y outbuildings. This tract will s of 250 acres, 200 cleared; 117 cleared; and of 6f acres with ed. This is first-chass land in a tion and especially desiranly lo ----.----------.----$100 per acre Remini in the Fork of the Rem ic Road and the Camden )ad. This is good land and desir at the station of Remini. Price -------------- ------------ -$140 128 cleared, five miles from north of Remini, on Camden oad. 4 tenant houses. Some good ice ------------------- -----$7500 all parts of Sumter, Lee and Claren at you want in this list, tell us what to it our business to find it for you. ELSER, \TE BROKER Sumter, S. C. lence Property, Timber Lands and r Loans )AY! ery Finest [lues! aLfnmlng. ellows, Medium ~e have the rigjht your inte-rest to r. Don't forgjet ,ress, Etc. ~Igby, ps.