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I UTOFF YI YOU say to the Eag "Get busy, make r Do you think I sp working that you i your roost after '% Put Your Eari ROLL them down the i leads to a, cashier' courtesy and atter deposits. STACK them in a safe where click many hoops of a success BECOME a member c HOME BANK SThe Season To Prepare We wish to say that we best Farming Implements to don, such as: Ledbetter Corn an< Si Cole Planters-ther K. P. Distributors Red Ripper Distrit And several other x tributors. One and Two-Hors Smooth Harrows. (All at the Very We also have a big stock of Field and Gard in many diff Ranges, Stoves, Oil Stoves,4 Vapor Stove--a delight We cordially invite you mense stock, believing t: * you in many of your wa Plowden Ha a. L.AAA':{{NfU ?YLS-aA 'A.w ?& -IR b11111111 les on your Dollars, noney for me ant my hours might sleep on e earned you?" iings to Work nterest path that s window where every lion is tendered your , live-wire exchange, sticks that roll the -! ful financial enterprise. | f our reaction plan. & TRUST CO. is at Hand and Plant! have a full lineiof the very. offer the Farmers of Claren I Cotton Planters e are none better utors nakes of Planters and Dis e Steel Plows Lowest Prices.) en Fence Wire erent sizes. md the Celebrated Wickless to all housekeepers. r inspection of our im Ibat we can please you nts. rd ware Co. I u AAAmp un1UUg, n. U CAMPAIGN PLANNED To Counteract Fight of Brewers and Distillers TO BE MADE WORLD-WIDE Program Announced From the Head quarters Presbyterian New Era Movement. New York, March 30.--Plans for a world-wide prohibition campaign to counteract an alleged plan of Ameri can brewers and distillers to transfer their activities to other countries after the United States goes "bone dry" were announced here tonight at head quarters of the New Era Movement of the Presbyterian Church. Especial emphasis, it was said, will be giver. to the campaign in the Orient, as, according to the statement, the Presbyterian Church "fears that the brewers and distillers have partic ular designs on China, India and other countries where the Presbyterian mis sions have been making great head way. The anti-liquor fight, it was said, will be waged by missionaries already in the field, as well as by special agents, some of whom already are op erating in foreign countries. In addition, to the anti-liquor fight in Mexico it was announced that the church also would conduct an inten sive campaign against gambling, cock fighting and bull fighting. Four representatives of the church, it was said, already are in Europe planning the prohibition fight there. The Rev. Dr. Charles Scanton, of ";i Ir:rg, general secretary of the ir: ' of temperance of the church. h, " ha ':ce of this work, and also is n with the International 1' oh it ,in Fe'deration campaign in Eure ramiel A. Poling, Dr. I). L. 'nis. ::and Capt. Edward Page Gas o rworking with Dr. Scanton. A similar campaign is being plann ed in Panama and South America by Dr. W. J. Johnson, while Dr. William B. Allison is campaigning in Cuba and Guatemala. Missionaries have started similar work in Korea, Siam and Japan. ---o IIUNGRY NEE)S THE MEAT Allies Consider Restoring 250,000 Hogs Held by Slavs. Paris, March 30.-(By the Associat ed Press.)-H lungary's increasing need of food, especially fats, is caus ing the American relief administra tion to give serious consideration to the problem of restoring the 250.000 hogs lost to the people of that coun try by the fixation of new boundaries. In the closing (lays of the war the Austrian-Hungarian people sent these animals to the southern provinces for fattening and all of them still are in the hands of the Jufo-Slavs. American oflieials hav'e opre')n vi ne !'otiations to determine' whether by purchase or barter - the hogs will be returned when most needed. A greater part of the difficulties created by the blockades and threat ened blockades along the Italian frontier disappeared in the past week and as a result food is moving to Czecho-Slovakia, Austria and Hun gary in greater volume. The distribution in Vienna and Budapest is progressing satisfactorily and the success of the United States signal crops in re-establishing wide spread communication will go far in preventing any further hitch. It is not possible to telephone be tween Triest and Vienna and there is an American operator at either end. Between Vienna and Budapest there is a dlirect American controlled tele phone. From Vienna to Prague a commercial line is open to the Ameri cans undler an agreement giving food messages priority. Communicartion wvith Belgrade is possible wvith only one telegraphic relay. There has also been established through navy tel(e graphic coimmnunication wvith Zara, the capital of Dlalmatia, and down the Adriatic coast. -0 SOLD)IERS AND WAR BRID)ES ra~nsport Aquitania Reaches New York With 5,591 New York, March 30.--TIhe trans port Aquitania arrived here today from Brest bringing 5,5,91 oflicers and enlisted men of the A merican expe ditionarv forces, sixtynine wvar brides, twenty'-three army nurses and 127 medlical officers andl enlistedl mnr base hospital No. 40, recruited in ILexington, Ky. The troop~s on board includled de tachmt-nts of the Trhirty-seventh, Eighty -fifth and Ninety-first divi.. sions. The largest unit was the IG66th field artilleiry brigane, coimmanded by Brig. Geni. B. F. Browne.. The 166th brigade comprises the 347th and 148th regiments, fifty offieers andu 2,708 men, wvho are among the tirst American troops to be ('quipped wvdh Amen can guns and also were armong~ the first Amrericans to returnr after iparticinating in the occupation of Germany. AD)VANCES TO RAILROAD)S Total by War Finance Corporation $14 5.000,000. Washington, March 30.---More than $10,000,000 in loans to railroads have brought the total advances furnished b~y the war finance corporation to $1 45,00)0,000. The Baltimore and Ohio yesterday received $4,600,000 on the security of certificates of the (diree tor general oif railroads and an addi tional $2,000,000 on the company's re funding andi general mortgage 0 per cent gold bonds of series B. The Erie Railroad Company at the same time borrowed $2,500,000) a~nd the Missouri Pacific Railroad Company $1.1 20,000 on certificates of the director gen eral. Colds Cause GIrip and Influenza LAXAIVEJBROMO QUININE Tablets remove the cae. Thero Is only one "Bromo Qrnnea E. W. GROVES iatunenr on hoi. 2nn.i __ost7Nestj Never But a neat-egg in a bank, hatches. A nest-egg of dollars hatches out Get a N( That Wil Set it to work hatching intreest. That's one part of the business of your nest-egg-on time deposits. The man with a savings account ha We invite you to let us help yo uc: BANK OF J BUY WAR SAV] WA TC 41 m W.D.LLOYD J Ford 0 Do not damage your ca: -parts that have neithe or the workmanship. V times a full supply of Genuine F Parts that will stand strain and wear. We a lowest prices p)ossible. We have emp~loyed an e be able to do the repair w, Clarendon Deale: Tiries, Accessories, Oils, MANNIN Will It P1 After Year ia question that occurs to buy a new plow. Avery Chill do glood1 wor-k "to the end of the chapter" beaue r Share, mnoidhoard, land- i side and standard are locked l todether so rigiidly by "The oi Loek T'hat Locks" that the ti plow h)olds its correct 8et and pitch, no matter how hard the plowing or how long v plow is used. f COFFEY & R] ggs Do Hatch many nickles and dimes. 'st Egg I Hatch this bank-paying interest on s an interest in life. reato that interest. MANNING NGS STAMPS H E S! JUST RECEIVED! a line of ELGIN, WALTHAM mnd other Standard 'lake Watches. These ire the best to be had mnd we invite you to :ome in and inspect )ur Stock. If it's good Jewelry you want, come to WELER, Manning, S. C. wners! - by using inferior parts r the material in them e have in stock at all ord Parts the proper amount of re selling these at the xpert mechanic and will >rk on all makes of cars Motor Co. Ps in Greases and Gasoline G,S. C. ow Right s of Use? you when you come to led Plows When you come to put on ew we'aring parts,tlicy slip ito place with ease andl "fit heC a %love," retaining the r idinal shape and Ipitchl of ic plow. Before you buy another low, come i and examine ie Avery. [GBY, "^ANNIG,