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The Shoe Sale of the times is now on in full blast! Is Creating a Big Sensation-Ne Remember---This is Not i TAN STRAP PUMPS $3.95 Rice and Hutchins make, medium heel, tan.Strap - Pump, Brogue effect, $6.00 value, Efird's Price $3.95 MEN'S DRESS SHOES- --LOT NO. 500 Men's Semi-English Lace Shoes, Mahogany Calf Leather, welted- "soles, rubber heels. Values to $7.00. Efird's Price $4.98 LOT NO. 1437 Ladies' Brown Calf Lace Oxfords, military heels, welted soles. Values to $6.00. Efird's Price. $3.95 TEN BI COUNTER NO. 1 Ladies' Lace Boots, High Heels, values to $8.00, all sizes, Tan and Black, Efird's Price $2.98 COUNTER NO. 2 Ladies' Dress Boots, all this season's best styles, values to $6.00. Efird's Price $3.85 COUNTER NO. 9 Men's Scout Work Shoes, Elk Leather, one you would expect to pay $3.00 or $3.50 for. Efird's Price $1.98 COUNTER NO. 5 Ladies' Strap Pumps and Oxfords, all leathers and newest styles, values to $6.98. Efird's Price $3.85 S mADDEI.NG from the Kansas City Star, a Repub- 24 N H IN I LninU0 -lican newspaper, with reference to the lik ABOUT WA N Kansas State anti-lynching law. The ha Star says: "Kansas towns are find- otl ing the State's anti-mob law a cost- ab ly statute. Kansas City, Kansas, has cei (by Special News Correspondent) 59 suits pending against the city now di totaling $949,978. Twenty-six of of Washington, D. C., Feb. 7.-The these are the result of trouble in the ear President. seems to have taken a leaf packing house strike. The suits the from the back of a certain Congress- range from 5 to $25,000. Indepen- of man who used to represent a li:- deuce, Kan., has had judgments e- ma soul i District in years gone by. When- turned against it for $37,250 and oth- tel ever any man became annoying with er suits arc still pending ns a result zai his epposition to the Congressiian, of a race-war outbreak there." nei this member got. the fellow a job -- Strane that mst race-wars occur Dr job goedi enough to put him out of the i otenRpbia ~ae. L tight lie didn't believe in rewardig--t his triends so much as in penion1ing RgrMsahuet eulcn his enemies. President Harding hi ate nteHuL nJnay3 so i mnvemrd as to secure the con-ta eblee ta h ialdi sent of Senator Kenyon to a Unite-l ~odcs~eegtigpoe evc C States~ Judlgshiip out in lowva-which truhteVtrn'Bra hnci removes one of the leaders of thethywrgtinsxmohsao Farm Bloe in the senate. It will be 'a hth lotogt httesr iteresting to watch the mnciting vc fsxmnh g a o om away of that same Farm Bloc unde--go si a en i otsbfr the seductive influence of life-long ta ie nohr~o~s eamt a app~ointments. Most. meon are so un- t~ httesriei orrsnet eertain as to their political future [adn eaePeietta n o that they are easily caught by thedeWisnadthttisgovnvi life-tenure feature of the jobm. K~eny- wre on wvill secure the place' long held by .Judlge Wail ter I. Smith. Smith wvas a ekn ftefnyslre nlrh conspicuous and gro)wing figure init' hpin ~nwr Congress when he was given therd hih .seso J1udgeship; lhe has hardly been heard i hsclm atwe,.ansR v of since. So it will be with K~enyon;Mno lios h betRpbi h after a few months he will have to i h ossi:" hn ti a fall from am tenth-story window ortietathseubcn ossoplk Itake the Presidency oIf a base ball dpaigteenomuotrg-B league to get his namnie in the paperse ht r ntncesry"i but he will have a life-time job. An- hg-aa'idatres oteI9 other good man gone wreong, but it le gives the D~emocrats and Progressives ls.Js e ek g odt ' Iowya a chance to get together and ~a oln bu i a ne h r select his successor. Amalgamation I nd n lvr fAaaa e i is the only logical thing for these mnl~ h os ftefcwee c two bodies of voters seeking the sameupnTytiofelwr gesdin end-l---the dlefe'ct of the reactiona rvy .terlsbeaeddt rvn eleament no win t he ltepubillican saddle,.n ebrqoigaohrMme TIhe nmem of Ilaroldl D. Wilson wvill uiir fafrta~ odmgge.(i g(,ddowninah.stors hsdthudgmenwhore m brokeNorthern Republicanlseates.aLe bamiuet.at te Quncy lous stat epresn tate ouse of Kanucy, 0n tonby onfsctin th liuo. "f~~sthoughe belieed bya Mr. Wialdinfr GrandOld Msoldis t wer ecedi getting poe evc shc to theI'art, boy.-- itoug the eer f.anura han opy rt ofh eer gettin Rixymondths ao _y Wilso by te pu nd sacehatieal adjought ofa the sers- whf l~eenthissanme ~ . vice o Aix~rm months anws oth thim I i~ti ofMisehiS~tsforsimlygord ar, hdensigx opyh befor a va doinghis sorn dtytider te that meoime. wn ihler wod sen the it-m teddthat thathervicefisepooresssitce th anoter Wlso whogothis aila rsingntecamenuarresident hih un-r& No.160 Pensyvaninvene, ashhdecivedn ano publiity ismgong yiu irmtom, I. C, fr eghtyeas o unoterekingsf thisfancyalriesd cae example pi~speity And byti~that400 orppn Bonaf, ofhic ee isae so wayaFam Blc inthe enat wa vtras, werem fastme-ou tomeson- as not eede inthos das to ~ tann, of sylltinos, withe emoriepul-cohe the armr i hisrigts. ~ dcare inrte ose spai: aItn ibt weca "lock-ps."at thselicdtat Hen allp nik thed facingitiese eomete foutrage-Bre Whenthe rit-lynhingAct o u saaies piitnhat areeno necessare it(1 LII)I te Snate itwoul bejuWtlik ofl Idiana a ou h ,00 inad sdeen hle I'a harisn moe t anendtheunovedh-fore Probrnlys t he os9a ommttin anassalt n th o sti-i Just Mmal few week Ohio Wo theeU ~uti of he (JitedState."ao thowlreinaot big the Un r te ine -- wheredi and Oiserty are nlabmaor- tie recently pass ~ ~ mined theythlouse, r fOish o the pfatewerng ior Johnonof issssipipritediuo Lthenofoor lawr utested bi the Cngresionl Recrd aextaturew ofAsylumt ailtoemaouney, do west Styles -All Sizes-=Lowest Pi Sale of, Odds and Ends I LOT NO. 1573 Ladies' One-Strap, Baby Louis Heel, Tan Pump, Craddock-Terry make, regular $6.50 value, $4.95 LOT NO. 1439 Ladies' Dark Browh Lace Oxfords, perforated toes, military heels, welted soles. Values to $6.50 $3.95 ' LOT NO. 502 Men's Mahogany Calf Semi-English Shoes with perforated toes, welted soles, rubber heels. Values to $7.50. Efird's Price $4.98 G SHOE COUNTERS OFFER EXCEPTIONAL I COUNTER NO. 3 Ladies' Lace Boots, Kid and Calf Leathers, new 'tyles, values to $7.00. Efird's Price $4.85 COUNTER NO. 4 Ladies' Felt Bed Room Slippers, best colors, values to 2.00. Efird's Price $1.48 COUNTER NO. 6 Ladies' Comfort Lace Shoes, broad toes, com fort last, flexible soles, rubber heels. Values to 3.98 $2.85 EFIRD'S-Sells Shoe - -SUMTER, Si J of the innates sleep on the floor tars valuatici and the assessment e catt and the tubercular patients down to where it' did not, in actual ve not been separated from the practice, average more than 20 per iers. There are hundreds of cur- cent of the value of real property. For e cases of insanity there that re- all purposes a farmer paid about $16 ve no treatment for their mental per year on a well improved farm of order. And all the while the State 160 acres. But the evil days came Ohio is making heavy profit off and they came with the advent of a :h soldier from the money paid by Republican State administration, Federal Government for the care About one hundred thousand Demo those men ad boys-boys who went crats either stayed at home on dec rehing off to the war, who crossed tion (lay, 1920, or went to the polls seas I fight the battles of civili- nd voted the Republican ticket. They ion, si ing on the road-your did not know when they were well ghbor's son among them, perhaps. off. That performance brought the E. W. North, superintendent of l ngview admitted in a statement suifrtefrttm nffyyas t these things are true. te a h oenr a ae rhree years ago the Republicans, vtsgtacaka i)adbt the middle of President Wilson'sHossfthLeilur.Oeo ond term, won the House andl got t6frtei riso hsRpbi trol of the Senate through briberycacotlwsanireeofax. he bribery being in Michigan, i a oeb asn h ses crc a-sent was p~urchasedl for Tru-metreanitusal thwy n HI. Newberry. Then they raisedfrm 0to10erctinhev ~rent cry for the President to sum-iusoinesfth Sae. Ad a Congress in extra session so that vrtoalheeiablulyn y could (do nomething to help the ipoeeto eei hc h 'iers, with bonus legislation, pro-pelerciefrtexradino ion for the wounded, sick, insanethipokbos-drncmnga I so on--so Wilson called Congress.aveybdtmwnthwolcu his opening address, in April, 1919, tyi ufrn rmasvr aeo asked Congress to provide for the bdaliitain hlers and revise the -tax laws, FrKnaa ela isui ich had been enacte4 in haste inh oa i eypai; te a wartime to provitde money toclahosanlptifretos ry on the war. At first it lookedJoicsan prcplswchmd 3 Congress wvouki acquiesce, butMsorite la-aedndbt ;s Penrose took the position that would enable the Republicans to gvre tt nteUin 4. a President (of his choosing) in 0 "if we let the people sweat." So rhAnilcigAt lrvdc y let the people sweat, andl theythtteCuyinwchhelcin still sweating, and the insane, the ocr hl efnd$000 hc , the disabled, the penniless sold-shlgotte faiyft.lt are doing full share of the sweat-laetdngobuwhentig n Kansas the people are sweating to fti il a ititca ler many burdens, one of which istaignnyhosdsfnere heavy load of State taxes in ad- we ewoeteblbti ok on to heavy Federal taxation. TheliehwllhvtornnteSat ple are holding county mass meet- a ag etNvmebcueo 's to try to dlevise means of relief t~ ehia oiino h ten m the county andl state taxes. They t eititMsorweepn'h uld look across the State line and rrlvtr wl e hnea dly the history of state and coun taxation in Missouri. For about BerDe.lewl ar ev y years thq Democrats controlledhadcpndteoswilbgrty t State and Democratic ideas pre-agithm led; the State became a fine ex- Ol'ATV MAK IN it of the results of ap~plied Demo cy. The state debt, saddledl on 0"LA IOAC commonwealth by the Republican 'pet-bag administrations .at the (Cniudfo paeTe) se of the Civil War, was wipedl out, were the dlebts of nearly all the pwrdajcie.Gnlmn e nty though some of these latter hl h ihvlesblw led re incurredl for railroads that werewhtunoare.Alyuhvet 'or built. Missouria while steadlily(0istfal(waalwohime ueing her tax and~ assessment ratesBeodtegenpsueadflw , only cleared off these debts, but igsrasta hl eyusi o It up the largest cash per capitawilprerealhodutftfly ool fundl of any State in the Un.-utiwegtheobcofrrss ;she built up a splendid StateedipithsC-erivmomnt iversity, including schools of Mini-Wht(0whe nAchrso , Medicine, Law, Science, Agricul-ye, seIeyoca(lenlo e, JTournalism, Pedagogy, etc., five neArn uat normal schools, capable institu- Socoftehigtbaohsa ns for the (leaf, te inisane, the cnpihd thsbitcte n nd. She .got the .State .tax ratetwnthogutobcdo;tha cen 5cns ntehu~re(0-~t ea aufracturingpeteFr if o caxit come, Lend MalOrders Satisfaction Garanteed. ices--Over 5,000 'Pails Included Put .a Sa of 't Stock LOT NO, X03.. ' Men's Mahojany Calf Lace Shoes, medium broad t' welted soles, rubber heels, Values to $7.00. Eird's Price $4.98 LOT NO. 505 Men's Vici Lace Blucher Shoes, flexible soles, soft kid leathey, medium ,round toe, rubber heels. Values to $7.00. Efird's Price $4.98 LOT NO. 1440 Ladies' Brown Calf One-Strap Pumps, military heels, welated soles. Value to $6.00. Efird's Price. $3.95 7ALUES COUNTER NO.-7 Men's Work Shoes of best tanned Elk Leathers, broad toes. Values to $4.98. Efird's Price $1.98 COUNTER NO. 8 Ladies' Elk Lace Shoes, for hard wear and damp weather. Values to $3.98. Efird's Price $1.98 COUNTER NO. 10 Children's,i Nurses' and Boys', Elkhide Shoes, heels, welted soles. Value to $6.00. Efird's Price. " $1.98 s for Less -EFIRD'S )uth Carolina that have given employment td tens Co-operate together along sensible of thousands of people; it has built lines. Let's make ourselves self schools colleges and great' education- supporting. Let's make our grain al institutions of various kinds; it our meat, our feed for the stock and has educated our country boys and everything we need to .live upon, at girls; it has made farm life happy home. And then plant what tobacco and prosperous it has built high- we can make and handle good, not-to ways upon which our farmers haul exceed the demand. When you have their crops to market; it has helped to (lone this, then y'ou will be wise and maintain our county, State and Na- prosperous, you wil -Ihave no need to tional Government; it is one of the retain a, "California Corporation largest resources of revenue the Na- Lawyer" at a probable salary of one tional Government hus. hundred thousand dollars a year. A word for Co-operation. Let's Southern Tobacco Journal. Speaking to YOU! Have You Too Much Money ? Of course not. You need more. Put your surplus in this bank and it will earn more. Then in the decline of life you will reap the rewards of early early thrift. Come in today. This is a banik that believes in the people it does business with. Are you one of them? Home Bank& Trust Co. CHAlRLTON DuRANT, President T. M. WELL$, Cashier.