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.THEE TH EYSI BUSY WITH PLANNINC U New Outfits For School! On every side now is heard the pleasant buzz of excitement of getting ready for the new school term, and long experience has taught us just what is most is needed - For the Girls- - For the Boys Sweaters, Dresses, Shirtwaists, New Fall Suits, extra Pants. new, crisp Fall Fabrics of every description, Shoes, Oxfords, Shirts, Blouses, Shoes, Stockings Hosiery, and they are all priced and everything needed to com at a very low margin. plete his School Outfit. We take great pleasure in fitting the boys and girls. Send them here for the "Better Values" O'Donnell Dry Goods Co. SUMTER, S. C. There is Danger in Sudden Spurts There is Safety in - Steady Growth Spasmodic plunging in * money matters often brings financial distress. Depositing your savings in this bank brings ultimate success and comfort-notI so spectular, but safe, sure and devoid of risk of any kind. Have you a savings ac count with us? ? ~HOME BANK & TRUST Co. Put it to any Power Task While th3 Fordson Tractor has power in plenty to drag plows and harrows through the heaviest soil, it is light encugh, small enough and so easily controlled that it can handily be put to mary tasks about the farm, that will save you time, money and work. In fact the Fordson will do every power job, both drv-bar and belt, more quick ly and at les3 cost than it can be done with any other form of power. So every month the whole.year 'round the always dependable Fordson will prove itself a paying investment, because of its capa bilities, its economy and efficiency. We will gl':-"y explain and dernorstrate to you the many Fordson money-mak ing, tirne-saving features. Call, write or phone. Clarendon Motor Co. F. R. Dingle W. C. Plowden 'On~ cord by covering the 61.1 1-2 miles in fell the latest arrival in his 18-day 27 hours elapsed time, which, in the journey the attenuants are unable t) opinion of Albert Jacobson, expert in tell. it is suposell that he became charge of homing pigeons, means less weak and Was obliged to Stol and than 16l hours actual flying. This bird search for food and shelter. That he bore a message from Mayor Thomp- was able to resume his flight and fid son to President Harding. Tie speed way i regarded at Beltsville as a re with which he covered the distance illrkable cxlibition of the homing in seemed to indicate that he realized the Stinet. importance of his errand, but when he arrived at the home loft lie was so (AREFI' L SELECTION LEM8ENS overcoml)e1 with mlodesty that he slip- BROOlDiNESS, ped in Without open ringing the signal. Supt. Jacobson had been making hour- Broody liens, like wayward childreii, ly pisits to the loft and found hima r ra ici ltt l i aet there, and the record was oflicia lya la0)leoI':un'' ictollwa e locked at the homing pigeon club,.aet owtI hm hti h n The shortest actual flying time ever o h itt~.cnen feeyai mnadet before between the two po its b~osail(itI salc1111'mi was 25 hours,.ots a h i~e~tne111dV~t The secondl birdl, be'aring a message ml 'oi 'saI bc to Contessman Bi~ntten, arrived Aug. Ut t ttsI)pr a fAgi 7. A not her, bearing a dluplicate mnes- lit ) ltll1Ih trtI oscl i sage, reached Dry Fork, Va., where it rd~\Y0 kIYb ae 1 beenm exastedl and was taken iniigd 11Ilitllslttitt by a farer Wthat m isadventures be- \ sc l(tao lllli P rofessional Cadus (h . a - JNO.. G1. DIN KINTS dfo ts StIi itov' Attorney-aut-Lawv ;tei, o o1-ia lo hc MANNING, S. C.vet.Atuloftecr-atish DnaIIANT & FJLltERI 1 iotltiio :Vi' )I v 1W' Attorneys at Law ''uti i dt tlt00; 011 ) MANNING. S. C. tti tcl'1ls ltIyo~ It. 0. Putrdy. S. Oliver O'B~ry san si!)ItI~~it tth 1111-5I-tt PUJRDY & O'BRtYAN fws sec t~ ~tttUe-t Attorneys and Conntselorsi at Lawy. Pi t tit)tllto yI~ ~rl~.I A. MANNING, S. C,'l'll tefc hthitstn FIlED IAESESNE eitortttIlt it"(-tl Attorney at Law MANNING. S.C.WhtC ue MONEY 'TO L.OAN On Real Estate--Small and Large trblsaedeseytoi Loans. Long 'Terms,.reso h bod o' o J. W. WIIEAN hsaIshv oonrle MANNING. S. C.fo uhtobe ytkn H.S.S. tC.aledCURTIS,' hi ddvj hAattorney-at-Lawrusces MANNiNG, S. C. 0. .S .ttyu rgls WEINBAERG & STUKES 5 S S J. A. Weinberg Taylor H. Stukos Attorneys--at-LawTeStnadBodPrie feANteNItetNrrialinhis18da TH AMERICAN LEGION WEEKY NEWS LTIER The body of Frederick W. Galbraith Jr., national commander of the Ameri can Legion at the time of his acciden tal death at Indianapolis, Ind., in June, will not be interred in Arlington na tidnal cemetery at Washington, D. C., according to advices last week from the widow and brother of the late commander. Burial will be made at Spring Grove Cemetery, Cincinnati, 0., where the body was placed in a temporary vault following the largest military funeral in America since the Civil War. With the practical closing of the harvest season, the employment of flee of an American Legion post at Aberdeen, S. D., where I. W. W.'s tried to cause a general "strike" among farm hands, has closed. In three weeks the Legion served 1,017 free meals, found jobs for 617 men, gave 304 places to sleep, gave 373 free baths and 12 treatment by the poit physician. Th., city election in Birmingham, Ala., way be postponed at the request of an American Legion post of that city. The service men want to vote. When a law exempting them from poll tax was declared unconstitution al recently, the men were disqualified as voters. Thirty thousand world war veterans of the state are affected. Evidence of the plight of unemploy ed service men was carried to cultured Boston, Mass., last week when Ar mand T. Gaudreau, University of Maine graduate besought the Ameri can Liegion employment bureau for any work that he could do. Previous ly Gandreau, dressed in his collegiate cap and gown, appeared in the streets of the banking section, selling news papers. A silver reprolduction of the historic statute atop Castle San Angelo, Itly, mounted onl a pedestal of stone fromI Mount Grappa, will be brought to the American Legion by General Armado Diaz, commander of the Italian arnics when he attends the Legion conven tion at Kansas City in October, cable dispatches declare. To seni back to her home on the Rhine the German widow of an Am erican doughboy, wearer of live battle clasps anid cited for valor, the Ameri can Legion of New York is raising a fund of $250. Tle veteran met his bride while with the Army of Occupa tion and through illness left. her prac tically plenniless upon his recent death. .Josephus Daniels, former secretary of the navy, and Charles R. Rorbes, national director of the bureau of war risk insurance, spoke on the same platform in addressing the state con vention of the American Legion of North Carolina last week. The old Grand Pacific Hotel in Chi cago wVill be taken over by the Am eroaan Leg.ion of that city for the ex clusive use of, hom'ess and jobless service men in plans now being work ed out by the Legionnaires. Accomo <ations will be provided for 1000 men. When President Harding visits Bir mingham, Ala., in October, he will be attended by an honor guard of 1,000 members of the American Legion, drawn from each of the 80 posts of the state. The parents of Merle Ilay, one of the first three Americans killed in the world war, will receive no insurance because their boy died before the war risk act became operative. The Ain erican LTegion of Iowa, Hay's home state, has 1)etitioned for the parents' relief and is seeking to find any other pa rents who sons "d(i ed too soon.'' Mlic'h:el 1E. Cassidly, member of the A mericani Legion Post at Bisbee, Ari.. zona, ancd morale (itlicer at Camp Codiy, New Mexico, durim!i the wvar, was hist week ap~poinited(, applropr'iately enough 1pro1hiiton director' for his arid state'. SI'IlHIOUS (CIIECKS SENT lOM~ PRI1SON Ossining, N. Y., Auig. 2').-Cn t who deal1t in) spurious cheeks beftore looingj inmates of Sm..: o'' pris oni hiave coninuedi1i'( to ply their t:-ad behind pr'ison wal!.1, i was fcern'ed todnay' when it developed' thbat cheeks totalling $14 ,000 n been fore'(al by prisoners ass~i .'e to olice it) Tjhree nitn have b 'e': lac)~ei ..ol itar ci1,(onfinemen, I. Wai V'rden '.us hasbi begun an inivest ~"at on. Iihm nc~heck s torn fromi~ th' ba0ck of thi. pis~-on check hoa v etre sai I S.> have been used by ti con~iVais. in the past eight. weeks an m ve tr eight. of the forged ..h) 'eks we're sai to have bey.i re. I to the' 1'''K Y P'IGEON JFIND:S WAY 11OMEH AFTER EIG~ITEEN 1)AYS Seveniteeni hiys bellind hiis fastest ('oilaiotn11, a wid(-buiffete(d buit pluck v homning p igeon pushedI thriough the trap t hat r'ings the autonmatic hell at tlie I Jiiitedl States D~epart ment of Ag riceulture poul1try h}msbanrty farem at Beltsville WVedne'sday imorning hear mg a mei(ssamge fronm~ Mayo r 'Thomp isoni of C~hicaigo, to (Congr'ssm10ial Martin'i E., Mal~dden, of lllinois. lIe is the third to reach home out of 10) birds fromi the farmll, wvhich wee( liberia ted as parit of the Clhicago P agent of P'rogress. .July 30. One of these broke ai wold's reC G. C. COOPER, Licensed Optom~eterist EVES Carefully YRxamined, Glasses Fitted, Broken Lenses Duplicated. Satisfaction GQ'aranteed. SUMTERL S. C.