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Vacc Scyo ab Hand B real Bad look 'err Suit C Hand I There's probabl) have it. Wei 411-ra W" wow I' I & *TO LI * Keep i Press * We use the n * every garment th * count of some ret * ed a lot of our pri SMen's Suits Sponged an< R Men's Suits Cleaned SMen's Palm Beach, Mol S Cloth. SBoys' Suits, small size, Pressed -.. Boys' Suits, small size, SBoys' Suits, large size, R Boys' Suits, large size, * Pressed .- --- Ties Reshaped, each - Ladies' Coat Suits Cie *Ladies, Coat Suits S * Pressed * Ladies'Capes Cleaned. 1. The rn (st Jacr .s rE ance(D'Po 2. se that everything na An -xprt tailer wil! be her I Hioffman I * Nimmer Ruilding ition Ti N you will be g ur Vacation Trip out a nice Suit ag ? We have a s and Cases. Corn i over. ases, $2.00 to gags, $3.50 to lots of other thin4 ?need. Try us f nberg 0OK R: Your C1 bed and Cle iost sanitary methods on the at goes out has our personal in: luctions in the materials we use ces, as follows in effect now: I Pressed 35c Ladies, Capes ---$1.25 Pressed_.. air and Cool Ladies' Plain ..---75c Pressed. Sponged and Ladies' Plaite ----25c Pressed~ Cleaned 50c Ladies, Plaite Cleaned '75c Ladies' Skirts Sponged and 3.ac.. Ladies' Drese 5e Ladies' D~ress aned $1.0 Pressed . ponlgedi and LadIies' Dress 50 Sc Middy Suits S $1.00 Middy Suits ( :<othe:' t hat ther s rs *rn by ch ani rj (,nly. w car yo ra-eu ' r.d on~ rir. us yours. :f noat donic to> your f~awfation return to e Aug'ust 25i ar~d i1 who will take# your rench Dry Che ime! oing on What Case or big lot e in and $27.50 $16.50 ;s you'll irst---We Co. IGHT )thes aned market. And spection. On ac we have reduc Sponged and 501 Skirts Sponged andl R --------25c R d Skirts Sponged and d Skirts Cleaned ~75c plain Cleaned.- 50c s Cleaned ---....--1.50 es, Plain, Sponged ant. ---.. ---- 50-Sc R es, Plaited -.- -- ..75c ponlged and Pressedl 50c 21eane~d . .... - ..$1.25 % C *e ar. and . in bes t o fipp r r their loss. 1 o.f eacvh caiiendar~ month our m-' wih comnpla int and if pos rnl(asIure for your Fall andt saning Co. I M~ NING, S C.ll THE MAKING OF i A FAMOUS bl MEDICINEt How Lydia E. Pinklham's of Vegetable Compound ti Is Prepared For 1 Woman's Use. t< 01 A visit to the laboratory where this successful remedy is made impresses 8! even the casual looker-on with the rell- c< ability, accuracy, skill and cleanliness which attends the making of this great c. medicine for woman's ills. p Over 350,000 pounds of various herbs 8 are used anually and all have to be gathered at the season of the year when their natural juices and medicinal sub- w stances are at their best. The most successful solvents are used to extract the medicinal properties from i these herbs. ri Every utensil and tank that comes in c< contact with the medicine is sterilized and as a final precaution in cleanliness v the medicine is pasteurized and sealed t in sterile bottles. ti It is the wonderful combination of al roots and herbs, together with the skill and care used in its preparation g which has made this famous medicine i so successful in the treatment of b female ills. The letters from women who have been restored to health by the use of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Coin- sl pound which we are cmtinually pub- R lishing attest to its virtue. 0 GERMANY TO KNOW HER FATE SHORLYC Stage Set for Closinig Scenery of. 'eace Conference SOME LATE INTIMATIONS V Paris Reports Speak of. Germany Be S ing Admitted to League in Near a Feature. i ti The stage is set for the closing S scenes of the peace congress, so far as the Germans are concerned. Within I a few hours it is expected that the 0 Germans will be told the terms, r brought down to an irreducible min- V imum, on which Allied and associated governments are ready to take up re- I lations on a peace footing with the new German republic. The period of five days after de livery of the reply of the Allies to the German counter proposals has been fixed for the signature or rejec tion of the treaty. Germany and League. b It is intimated from Paris that Ger many's admission to the league of ii nations is set for the "near future." f Previous d ispateehs had indicated e that the replyi to Count von Brock dorfT-Rantzau would merely state the .j conditions considered necessary for . Germany's entry in the league, such as fulfillment of the treaty terms and of Germany's international obliga tions, including reparations and the t payment of the Allied claims. 1 Important for Germany, as well as for the Allied countries, is a plan out lined in the answer to the German counter proposals. This provides for civil rather than military administra tion of the region on the left bank of the Rhine. Under the proposal au thority wvoukl be place; in a commis sion, consisting of one member for each of the great powers, thus ren dlering unnecessary the maintenance of a large occupational force. As Ger-. r many, undler the terms of the armis tice, stands obligated to pay the ex penses of the miilitary occupation of the Rhineland, the sums saved to her i by the substitution of civil for mili tary adm'nistration would be enor mou s. Austria's Reply. r Austria's reply to the treaty pre sentedl to her (delegates is dlue Tues (lay, but as the treaty in its prese.nt form lacks many important clauses, it is probable that a request for further time would be favorably considered by the peace conference. The coun (il of four will devote part of Monday tom considleration of the remaining see tions of the Austrian treaty, and ef forts are to be made to wvhip the comn pleted document into form as speedilyt aIs possible. .Bolshevik andl anarchistic disorders are reported fro~m Switzerland. Twvo peris. ns were killed and seventeen ' wound~ed, according to official leures, in : eris uprising in Zurich, in I h:all of just ice l'< ten :.nd the Iir;-h ives M801'TlH(CAJROLIN A CROP R EPORT Saluda, S. C., JTune 10, 1919. The government crop report inZuedl today through B. B. Hare, South Car "lina Field A gent, of the Bureau of Crop estimates, United States D~epart, ment of Agriculture shows that the wheat crop for the United States will be a bumper one, the total prodluct ion being estimated at 1,23f,00A,000 buish e Is as compared with 917,000,000 ( bushels last year. The conditions in South Carolina on June 1i , is estimaoted ait 81 per I mt of normal, or 7 per cent lower' tan on May 1, the reduction being tributed to excessive rains, rust and )inch bugs. The estimated product n for the State placed at 2,100,000 ashels, which, as Mr. .Hare has es mated is a ittle less than one-half Gi te amount needed to meet the us al requirements for the State. The acreage of oats in South' Car lina is estimated at 5 per cent less Vi Man last year, the condition on June being 86 per cent of normal. The ital production will approximate 9, )0,000 bushels. 4, The condition of rye is reported at T ) per cent of normal, apples 55 per or nt,' hay 88, clover 90, alfalfa 92, or ibbages 89, onions 90, peaches 54, - ears 58, blackberries 94, watermelons I I, and canteloupes 79. fa Farm work for the month of May t: as far from satisfactory. The ab- w armal amount of rain in the cen- I al and northern counties caused se- st ous delay in planting both corn and >tton, as well as the proper culti- A ition of early planted crops. Rain- G ill in counties of the Pte Dee sec- in on was lighter and farmers were of ble to harvest their grain crop in pI 0(d condition and give the much 2eded cultivation to cotton and corn, st yth of which have shown much im- I rovement (luring the last two weeks. fa The peach crop is very short, though bi ipping has been in progress in the g9 idge Spring section for several days. ai A number of hail storms of more ir less severity were reported dur- st ig the month, causing considerable h( amage to growing crops, especially 13 >tton, corn and unharvested grain. n h NOTICE W Notice is hereby given, that pur tant to authority vested in the un ersigncd by Hon. W. Banks Dove, vi ecretary of State, constituting them Board of Corporators, the Books of n e Bank of Paxville will be open at r te store of G. W. Curtis, at Paxville, ty . C., on Saturday, June 21, 1919, at g ur (4) o'clock in the afternoon. The roposed corporation to have a capital L tock of Twenty Thousand ($20,000,- h 1 0) Dollars, divided into Four Hund- n ed (400) shares, each of the par W alue of Fifty ($50.00) Dollars. THOS. W. GUNTER, a P. C. GEDDINGS, J. W. RHOME, b G. H. CURTIS, it T. R. OWENS, Board of Corporators. Paxville, S. C., June 1(1, 1919. h NOTICE. I will apply to the Judge of Pro- H ate for Clarendon County, S. C.. at d, is office in Manning, S. C., on Sat- s rday, July 12, 1919, at eleven o'clock n the forenoon for a discharge as - uardian of Sallie E. Richbourg non ompos mentis. L. N. RICHBOURG. tanning, S. C. S une 11, 1919. t: TRESPASS NOTICE. b All persons are hereby notified not s, a trespass on my Santee Swamp l ends. Those found trespassing will 0 e dealt with according to law. Per- j, iits may be had by applying to me. b J. C. Drose, u Post Offee, Wilson, S. C., R. F. D. C Residence, Bloomville, S. C. -26-4t-pd-. C'ITATION NO') iCE 'he State of South Carolina, :ounty of 'Clarendon. By J. M. Windham, Probate .Judge WH EREAS, Clarence N. Sprott 'I nade suit to me to grant him Letters r Adnministration of the Estate and f'ects of William Joseph Burgess. TIIESE ARE TH EREFORE, to cite .nd admonish all and singular the n(inredl andl Creditors of the saidb Villiam Joseph Burgess, deceased, h hat they be andl 'appear before me,a n the Court of Probate, to be held t Manning on the 30th (lay of June a ext, after publication hereof, at 11 C 'clock in the forenoon, to show cause, f any they have, why the said Ad( einist ration should not be granted. Given under my hand this 11th day -a f June, Anno Domini 1919. J. M. WIDHAM, r 3t-p Judge of Probate. F NOT1ICE. Tfhe qualifiedl voters residling in 'lowden Mill Sc.hool District No. 12 .'ill hereby take noti.'e that an elee ion wvill be held at the Enterprise chool House in said District on 'hursday, June 19th, 1919, for the urpose of voting upon the question f whether said District shall levy nd collect annually an additional pecial i.r'x of five (5) mills for gen ral school purposes. Voters will bring wvith thenm their egistration ce'rt ific'ates andl tax re eIipts. Polls wiill be openCf at 8 o'clock A. f. and close at 4 o'clock P, M. By ordIer of ,J. M. Montgomery, W. C. Smith, E. M. McElveen, Tusustees in and for .Saidl School )istrict. Alcolu, S. C. Jlune 4, 1919.24-2t-pd. Habitual Constipation Cured In 14 to 21 D~ays 'LA X-FOS WITM PEPSIN" is a specially >re pared Syrup Tonic-Laxative for Habitual ionstipation. It relieves promptly but hould be taken regularly for 14 to 21 days o induce rogular action. It Stimulates anad tegulates. Very Pleasant to Take. 60c mer bottle RS. KEVAR ADDED 20 POUNDS WEIGHT eenville Woman Tells of Remark able Benefit Tanlac Gave MADE, QUICK CHANGE inly Tried Eight Years to Overcome Her Various Painful Ailments "I improved in every way righ om the start after I began takin mlac, and I gained in weight from e hundred and seventeen pounds to e hundred and thirty-seven pounds an increase of twenty pounds-and soon was in such good health, so r as my stomach was concerned, at I could eat and enjoy anything I anted and digest it, too, even if had suffered about eight years with omach trouble." The remarkable results given Mrs. nnie Kellar, of 115 Murphy street, reenville, S. C., by Tanlac described her highly interesting statement, which the above paragraph is a irt. Continuing, Mrs. Kellar said: "I suffered from indigestion and omach trouble particularly, which had for about eight years, and I iled to find any medicine that would eak up the trouble. I suffered a -eat deal with pains mn my stomach id chest after meals and also a burn g sensation. Gas formed on my omach almost all the time. I had radaches so badly that I could hard endure them at times and my ?rves were on edge. My appetite d left me and I did not eat anything irdly. I had to be very careful of hat I did eat. "Then I began taking Tanlac be tuse I had heard so duch about the )od it was doing others in Green lie. The Tanlac made me better al ost from the start and I improved pidly in every way. I gained tden pounds in reight and the Tanlac rye me a grand appetite and I soon s eating anything I wanted. The adaches were broken up and my rves strengthened. My strength as increased greatly, and I soon was most a different person. "Tanlac is a good medicine-the st I ever took-and I cannot praise too liberally for troubles like I had. shall always take Tanlac when I Ave ailments for which Tanlac is !commended." Tanlac, the Master Medicine, is sold v Dickson's Drug Store, Manning; . W. Nettles, Jordan; Shaw & Plow mn, New Zion; Farmers' Supply Co., ilver; D. C. Rhame, Summerton. NOTICE. The qualified voters residing in ammerton School Distric. No. 22, ill hereby take notice that an elec <n will be held at Magist-ate Rich >urg's office in Summer'on oa Thurs y, June 26th, 1919, for the purpose voting on the question of whether id school district shall levy and col ct annually, an addi ional special tax five (5) mills for school purposes said district, one mill cf which shall under Section 1742 and four mills nder the High School law for South arolina. Voters are required to present their ix receipts and registration certifi ites. Polls open from 8 o'clock a. .to 4 o'clock p. m. By order of Board of Trustces in nd for saidl ditrict. H. A. RICHBOURG A. J. PLOWDEN L. E. BRAILSFORD rustees in and for Summerton School District No. 22. 2t. N6 .ICE. I will apply to the Judge of Pro ste for Clarendon County, S. C. at is oflice in Manning, S. C., on Sat relay, July 12, 1919, at 10 o'clock for discharge as adlministratrix of th< tate of JT. H. Lesesne, deceased. GERTRUDE G. LESESNE. lanning, S. C. one 11, 1919. Piles Cured in 6 to 14 Days Tupgst, ;efund money if PAZO OINTMENT fal:s , ure Ich ing, Bilind, Bleecding or Protruding Plice stantiy reileves Itchgig ''ies, and you can ve t :st ful sleep Ja ft the first app'ication. Price 6i,. CYPRESS ~~ SASFH DOORS MOULDINGS AND MILL WORK