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IJHUANIANS ATTACK WITHOUT ANY CAUSE Contends That Former Are Occupying Several Localities on Polish Side of Frontier. Peace Talk Broken Off. Warsaw, Sept. 4.-An attack on Polish forces by the Lithuanians with machine guns and artillery in the re gion of Seiny, thirty-five miles north west of Grodno, is announced in Pol ish reports fro inthe northern front. The reports declare the attack was DuR/ iD R E REA] The 160 acres, 100 clear 203 acres, 100 clearc 50 acres, 40 cleared 430 acres, 65 cleared, 166 acres, 75 cleared 96 acres, 75 cleared 179 acres, 60 cleared 133 acres, 100 clearec 56 acres, 38 cleared, 21 acres, 20 cleared, 640 acres, 300 cleare 200 acres, 50 cleared 112 acres, 5 miles We 87 acres, 40 cleared, 15 acres, 10 cleared 25 acres, 20 cleared 21 acres, 15 cleared, 50 acres, 35 cleared, 42 acres, 30 cleared, 36 acres, 7 cleared, 24 acres, 10 cleared, 28 acres, 15 cleared, We also have several for sale. DuRAI P HONE 128 IMasec SAbsolutely f ~fi it's . ASK THE , SSee A. I. BARRC American unprovoked and that the Lithuanians had received orders to occupy Augus towo. The Polish press comments on the Lithuanian action as inexplicable, as the provisional frontier between Po. land and Lithuania has not yet beer reached by the Poles. The latter con tend that the Lithuanians are occupy ing esveral localities on the Polish side of the frontier. It is also announced that the nego tiations regarding the frontier and the future relations of Poland and Lithu ania have been broken off and that the Polish delegations are returning to Warsaw. LNT & F1 L ESI Following for So d, 6 miles west of Manning f d, 2 miles South of Manning 6 room dwelling, 1 mile Nor 1 mile North of Sardinia $5( , mile from DuRants Sidi 9 miles East of Manning $3( 8 miles East of Manning $ 1, 4 miles West of Manning $ 9 miles North East of Mann 10 miles North East of Man 1, 6 miles North of Manning . 10 miles North East of Man st of Manning $50.00 per act 5 miles West of Manning $7 4 miles West of Manning I 1 mile North of Remini $1 1 mile North of Remini $12 1 mile North of Remini $120 1 mile North of Renini $120 1 mile North of Remini $35.( 1 mile North of Remini $50.( 1 mile North of Remini $90.4 lots and a couple of houses i CALL AND SEE US. 4T &F1 MANNING, S. C. >t Lime ree of moistte KILN - DRII VIAN WHO HAS IN for delivered price Limestone 4 Knoxville, Tenn. With regard to the fighting betweer the Polish and Russian Soviet forceE the statement announces that betweer1 Wlodowa and Dubienka, on the center of the front, the Russians launched ar1 attack with the intention of forcing a crossing of the Bug, but were re pulsed. It is asserted the Poles have learned that a Berzec the Russians were compelled to fight under the pressure of machine guns from the rear. In the region of Belets, on the old Galician border, southeast of Zamosc, the Poles are advancing and repeat edly breaking the Soviet resistance. To the east of Lembeig the Poles ,O YD '%ATE ale: 110.00 per acre. $100.00 per acre. th of Foreston. .O0 per acre. ng $100.00 per acre. ).00 per acre. 50.00 per acre. 150.00 per acre. ing $175.00 per acre. ring $75.00 per acre. $200.00 per acre. ning $30.00 per acre. e. 5.00 per acre. 150.00 per acre. 5.00 per acre. .5.00 per acre. 00 per acre. 00 per acre. 0 per acre. )0 per acre. )0 per acre. n the town of Manning LOYD, _ stone re, because SUSED IT ~s, or write Z30mpany, NOTICE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of Clarendon COURT OF COMMON PLEAS SUMMONS FOR RELIEF (Com laint not Served) Mitchell Levi and Ferdinand Levi, co partners under the firm name and style of Levi Bros. Plaintiffs, against Boykin Cantey, Ben Cantey, Rose Boz ier, Irene McBride, Agnes Watson, Dorcas Martin, Willie Cantey, Es telle Wells, Stella Cantey, Reva Taylor, Samuel Cantey, Daniel Cantey, Ben Green, Julia J. Cantey, and Rena Ellis, Defendants. TO THE DEFENDANT Rena ElliE above named: YOU are hereby summoned and re quircd to answer the complaint in this action, which is filed in the Office of the Clerk of the Court of Common Pleas, for the said County, and to serve a copy of your answer to the said complaint on the subscriber at his office, in the city of Sumter, S. C. within twenty days after the service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service; and if you fail to answer the complaint within the time aforesaid, the plaintiff in this action will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the complain. Dated February 16th 1920. Wendell M. Levi, Plaintiff's Attorney. TO THE DEFENDANT Rena Ellis: TAKE NOTICE that the complaint in this action together with the sum mons, of which the foregoing is a copy was filed in the office of the Clerk of Court of Common Pleas for Clarendon County, in the State of South Carolina, on the 20th day of March 1920. Wendell M. Levi, Plaintiff's Attorney. have occupied the railway junction of Kranz (midway between Lemberg and Brody) after hard fighting. It was announced in Lithuanian ad vice son September 2 that the nego tiations between the Poles and the Lithuanians over the boundary had been broken off, the Lithuanians ask ing the Polish mission at Kovne to leave Lithuanian territory. This action the Lithuanian advices stated followed a Polish attack upon Lithuanian troops near Augustowo. o PICK COTTON EARLY Clemson College, September 6. The importance of gathering cotton early is illustrated by data from studies made by the United States Department of Agriculture, as given below and South Carolina farmers are urged to rush the picking in or der to save deterioration and there by prevent loss in value. Early Picking Makes Ten Acres Do the Work of Fifteen Ten acres of cotton picked at the proper time in the fall from October 1 to November 1 may yield as much as 15 acres of the same cotton picked in January, according to the special ists who have been conducting farm studies in the South for the United States Department of Agriculture. On a farm in Arkansas an acre of Boykin cotton harvested in the pe riod between October I and Novem ber 1 was worth $152 for lint and seed. In January an acre of any equally good crop of te same va riety was worth only $106. Express cotton gave $193 per ac're in Octo ber', but in January the crop wvas worth only $112. The result of delayed picking is chiefly a deter'ioration iin grade and quality. F'or examplle in a case where October fir-st cotton rated as "strict mi)idling." November first cotton of the sanme variety rated as "strict lowv middling.'" while on JIan uairw 21 th~e same variety c-lassed as "'Loodl ord~linar y" only. Flt HOGS~ IN TlIIANSITr ThIe innimum: feedl requirements of hogs in transit have heent determined by the Unoited States Department of A gricuIlure as follows: Not less thanti 2 bushels of shelled cortn or' its equtiivailenit ini ear c'orn or othetr gra in lperI single deck of not mIore than I17,000) pouinds weight and i"t less than 2 t -2 bushels (If shelled corn'i or its eqiuivatlent ini ear' corn or other grain per double ldck (If not more than 21,.000 pounds weight. Car load of hogs in e'xcess of these weights shouit ( he fed an add itionalI amount in the same pr'tootion. Where amounts very greatly in ex ((5s of those spec' iid are fed it is (qt ite pr'obabtle that feed will bte wast WH ESN A I,.OWED F"itEE 1RANGE GineasO areC kep~t ini the host breed inW (condi tion uIpon firee range. Trhey ry b'' 'onnned(''. how-ve'r, if nl'ee Wir'y, wit h sat :iWact-r resuls. One ex ten si v giuinea riser' coitfinted as Money bnck without question .. If HUNT'S Snivn fails in the treatmecnt of iTCHI, IECZEMA, ..iNGWORlM, TETrTER or o ih ar Itc~hing skin discases. Try a '/5 cse box at our risk. l)ICK(SON'S IIIJGI~ W'(lOlE many as 45 hens and 15 males in a'r acre pen throughout the breeding an< laying season. This pen is Inclose< with a wire fence 5 feet high and th4 birds prevented from flying over b the flight feathers of one wing being clipped. Within the pen is a grasi pasture with bushes here and ther< where the hens make their nests b3 scratching out a bowl-shaped hollov in the ground. The winters beinj severe, a roosting shed is provided having a cleated board reaching fron the floor to the roosts for the wing clipped birds to walk up. Most guinea raisers, however, allov their breeding stock free range of th< entire farm at al Itimes. This help: to keep the birds strong and vigorous During the winter the breeders shouk be fed a grain mixture of corn, wheal WE O Carload galvanizec 6, 8 and 10' lengths. ' very hard to procure square, for cash. In addition our st( heavy hardware is at have a complete line Gandy. Composition grades, and will api phone wire or letter. Sumter Railway Phone No. 368. nnuuunnunununuunun: OUR BANI THEY ARE INSEPARABLE A good future withou doesn't often happen, y Our institution is a and investing bank. We solicit the patron al attributes are likewis ly desire to become such You never regret m< use to regret when it is The Bank i JOSEPH S) T. M. Mot ATTENTION OIL MI Dnot forget that we jectos, Oil Cups, Lubri, high grades of Rubber 11 uine Gandy Belt; Pipe, and Boiler Tubes. COLUMBIA SU: 823 West. Gervais St. We Are Heat Nitrate a in quantities frc upwards. We he the past ten da age of this mate prices have ady1 past week it is s pared with oth Ri Get our prices I MANNING and oats'tvwle a'day. Whereiii seiio I feed is available on the range ak this i time of the year, vegetables, such as potatoes, turnips, beets, and cabbage, should be substituted poultry special ists of the United States Department of Agriculture suggest. Animal feed is essential to best re sults and can be supplied b yfeeding r meat scrap or skim milk. Given free range where the supply of natural feed during the winter and early k spring is ample, as it usually is in the southern portion of the United States, the guineas may be left to pick up a considerable part of their feed. Free access to grit, charcoal, and oyster i shell is necessary throughout the breeding and laying season. Avoid I having the breeders too .fat, but keep them in good, firm flesh. F F E R corrugated roofing in [his article is scarce and . Our price $10.00 per ck of mill supplies and your service; in belts we in leather, rubber and roofing we sell various reciate your orders by Phone No. 368. & Mill Supply Co. Sumter, S. C. ummmmmmmmmuuummmmunt Kand rour Future t saving is something that ou know. progressive money saving t tge of these whose person e-and those who earnest ney saved. There is no gone. Df Manning P~ROTT, President ZON, Cashier 11s and Ginneries I LLS AND GINNERIES -I carry a large stock of In 3ators. Also two or three I elt, Leather Belt, ant' Gen-. Valves, Fittings, Packing PPLY COMPANY Columbia, S. C. Iquarters for f Soda m ten tons and tve sold during ys a large ton rial, and while meced during the till cheap comn 3r ammoniates. >efore you buy. OIL MILL