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PENN SPELLS CHEWING TOBACCO Because Penn's is packed air tight in the patented new container-the quality is sealed in, So Penn's is always fresh. Have you ever really chewed fresh tobacco ? Buy Penn's the next time. Try it. Notice the fine condition-fresh -Penn's. NEWS PARAGRAPHS FROM WASHINGTON (By Special News Correspondent) Washington, D. C., March 20-The President has returned to the city from his fishing, boating and golfing trip to Florida. A great many Wash ingtonians regret that he did not find time to commute the sentence of the half-witted boy, Melenry, under the death sentence bore. The heart-brok en mother had walked to Washington from a distance to ask this of the President, but he had just left for Florida. From all accounts Mr. Hard ing had a delightful time, freed from the cares of State-his arduous daily grind. He was the guest, on a pala tial houseboat, of a young Washing tonian who was famous a few years ago for his wild driving-a veritable road burner. His late father's will created a "spendthrift trust," but the heir has found blow-holes in it. One of his friends recently lost $60,000 worth of choice liquors by thieves, but the supplies on the houseboat are said to be intact except where shrinkage was due to "natural causes." Per haps a hatch was left open. Danger ous waters for an or'thodox Baptist, down Havana-wvay. The lateist gossip ab1out the Presi dient records Iim ais being the posses sor' of fifty Piris of trtoutser's, inc(ludt ing folg kn icker's. FItnough to equip at centip~ede. Is it any w'onder the Na tional A ssociation of Tailors was so Joud in hiis praises ? A few more such <usitomers andt they (could( cut a mel -on. Un fortunately, conditions in the country generally are so bad that many a fellow wvouild he in a sadl pre dlicament if the precssin'g-ir'on shtouldl happen to beC too hot. Every time the Republicans carry an election ni Maine they loudly an nlounce that Mainie is the finest poli ticalI harionmeter' in the landmI-that ''as Maine goes, so goes the country.' Of couirse Ma inc is as reliably Republi ('an its Geor'gin is Decmoerati('. Every on1e(' expet'tS Matinett to go Rimpublic'1an, andl whent I )'mocr'ats ('arry elect ions Foutr ('itie in' th e State hav(e (lected m~ayors this tmnth anti all fouri of them we're D~emocrat s. Tlhe smallest majority (I 50) wats inl h'aco, but the Detocrats got six of the seven wairds. In Bath the miuiotitIy was four' to one. RepublIimi leaders dlot't talk a bout it, XPECTK MOTHER1 For Three Generation-, Halve binde Child-Bir th ,yEasier By Using - Wliff FOR tiOOKLET ONt MOtERrto'on AntOyig jASy,,gg, RRAOFIE LD RgGUAtOR Co. g'n . 9 -. TA. A but if four cities in Georgia were go Republican the country would informed that it indicated a huge R publican landslide. And it would. There wil be no bonus legislatio While enjoying the scenery from tl houseboat in Florida the Preside: found means to bring Speaker Gill to his view; as a result the Speaks will not aid his Republican brethre to put the bill through the Hous The Senate leaders announce ' thi they will take no action on it unt after the fall elections. They pla to let the needy veterans wait unt the leaders can see what effect th bonus situation will have on the vot ers; the President would be glad t see a number of recalcitrant Repub lican Congressmen defeated. He i sure he could better control a smal Republican majority than the prenen unwidely and miscellaneous collection made up in Some measure of grote sque political accidents and misfit: from districts usually represented b7 seasoned Democratic Congressmen of long service and proved ability. Though the President shows mor( backbone in standing against the sol (iers' bonus than he was supposed to possess, he yields readily to the de mands of the ship-owners who also de sire a bonus. But they are rich anad powerful and can reach his ear. The Wall Street Journal daily reflects the desires of the big corporations and the few dozens of men who are all powerful in big business. It says: "There is no way of passing a sol diers' bonus, and if there were a way the bonus should not be paid,. In any form it constitutes the rawest bribe ever offered to the voters, while it prostitutes patriotic service to the level of the meanest panhandler. But President Harding's program for building up a merchant marine will appeal as sound to all but the dema gogue. The money used to subsidize shipping would he in the nature of a national defense." The President ac curately reflects the mind of Wall Street. It is still true, as when Israel roamed the valley of the Jordan, that "the ox knoweth his owner, and the ass his master's crib." The Newberry case will not down: Townsend of Michigan and Freling huysen of New Jersey are both op posed for renomination on the ground that they voted to establishe the prin ciple that a man could bribe the elec torate and unblushingly admit it and then sit in the Senate, posing as the equal of men honestly chosen in the manner provided by the law. If these Senators who voted for Newberry accessories after the fact--should escape defeat in the primaries their chance to get by the general election will be exceedingly slender, for all good people of all parties will unite to rebuke them fro their contempt for the proprieties and their abase ment of the Senate of the United States. The seating of Newberry was the most damaging blow that has been struck at the root of our system of governmenit within a generation; to find wvorse examples one must go back to the purchase of the Presi dency by Mark Hianna in 1 806 and the theft of it from Tilden in I1870. Hlylan, New York's Democratic mayor, must be a pretty good sort of m)1ayor', a fter all. The Rtepubl ica n State Senate has votedl to increase his salary~ from $1 5,0001 to $25,000. This admninistration has completed its first year; the President says that it's great atccomplishmnlts "speak for themselves." If they do, their voice remains unheard by thie great major ity of' the people, who ar'e practically agreedI that it has been a year' of wasted and misslpent time, and~ that the people who voted Harding into t he White House have not even "had a run for their money.'' To hear the voice of these wonder~tful but unlisted accompl)1ish men ts, the ear of the pub lI wd ~ oulId hav~e to Ibe equipped with MJ di.0m's newv invention, wh ich is said to he so capablle of multiplying sound thit it ciin hoear anolecul w.uhen it turn over fort an tother 0 The Presir-t may have thought yService If yonr startinug battery is beyond recpa ir we teil you so. If, on the ot her hand(, an examii nation shows ,that it would paty . you to have it repaired, we 'will give you a first-clatss jolt amith sanme at I cotiont that you would re ceive if you were buying a new b atte ry. Summeton, S. ('. toi-ranhirnn..Ehi1 * U Indigestion e - Many persons, otherwise I vigorous and healthy, are - 't bothered occasionally with 'r * indigestion. The effects of a disordered stomach on the system are dangerous, and pr#Ipt treatment of indiges. U I * tion is important. "The only a medicine I have needed has been something to aid diges tion and clean the liver," writes Mr. Fred Ashby, a - McKinney, Texas, farmer. "My medicine is Thedtord's fBLACK-DRAUGHT for indigestion and stomach trouble of any kind. I have * never found anything that touches the spot, like Black. Draught. I take it in broken * doses after meals. For a long * time I trie4'pills, which grip. * ed and didn't give the goed results. Black-Draught liver a medicine is easy to take. eabj to keep; inexpissive." Get a package from you druggidt- today-Ask for and U insist upon Thedfora's-the U only genuine. .; * Get it today. a the list of achievenients so tedious that he had no time to eneumerate every great blessing flowing forth to gladden the happy and pFosperous toilers who make the welkin ring with their shouts of approval as they cast their sweaty !caps in air. Or could it be that the list is like the short and simple annals of the poor and would remind the public that the administration has been trying to dip away with a teaspoon the ocean of our difliculties? What is the answer? Here it is here is the list of accomplishments completed to (late: 1. The appropriation of twenty million dollars from the grain cor poration's funds (profits made off the wheat growers) to relieve starving in a section of Russia, while starving at home is overlooked. 2. The passage of the maternity bill with most of the good features left out. 3. A good roads bill. 4. The Alaska bill, turning over all of Alaska's resources to the Sec retary of the Interior, so he can re ward the friends of the Administra tion to his heart's content. 5. Buying a Senate seat for New berry at $200,000 per. To list the failures would require columns. The tariff bill is dead-lock ed; the re-apportionment bill failed in the House because the Republican cacucus could not agree on it. The sold1ier-bonus bill has been dead-lock ed repeatedly ami no prophet is so bold as to predlict the outcome. But the ship-bonus (in this case the money would go to the rich and Powerful ship)-owners) is being energetically Pushed by the P~res ident. (It all do (Continued on pag three) NOTICE OF D)ISCHARGE I will apply to the Judge of Pro bate for Clarendon County on the 3rd day of April, 1922 at 11 o'clock A. M. for Letters of Discharge as guar' dlian for Martha Jane Gamble, for nerly a minor. A. L,. Burgess, pd- Guardian. New Zion, S. C., Feb. 28, 1922. A[DMINISTRATrOR'S SALE Pursuant to an order of J. M. Wind ham, JIudge of Probate, L will sell at public auction, to the highest bidder,.' for cash, at Forest on, S. C., at 11 )'(lock A. M. on lFriday the 24th day 4t March, 1922 the fol lowing ner sonal property, to wit. I lot of mer ehantd iso consisting of shoes, men's lothing, overalls, can goods, cooking ut ensi Is, crockery ware, women and hliId ren's wea1ring appearal, medi 'inces, t~wo fert il ier distributors, ilows and plow parts, 1 lot of' coffee, I Pair of scales, stoire fixtures and all na'rchandlise belonging to the Estate >f J. E. Graham, deceased. Also I actrola, 1 piano, I shot gun, 1 auto nobilec, 1 lot of' plows and plow tools, Itwo-horse wagon, 1 one-horse wag m, f6 cows, 3 calves, 2 mules, 2 tona ,f cotton seedl, 1 small lot of hard vare, 194 c'nkes of soap, 1 small lot f jewelry, I lot of smoking tob~acco, check protector and one lot of ac ounts most of them unsecured. Iforace D). Graham, 0-3t-e-. Admninistrator-. 'oreston, S. C., March 7, 1922. SUIMMONS NOTICE tate of South Carolina, County of Clarendrona. Courat of Common Pleas. Summnnons for Relief. 'roline M~ack, Pla intiff, vs. ;hs Withlerspoon, Defendant. 'o Thea'. lefendant A hove Named: Y ou are hereby S-unimoel a ... quired to answer the complaint: lp this action, of which a copy is her with served upon you and to serve a C1Y of your answer 'to the said com plaint on the subscriber Jno. G. Din kins at his office at Manning, South Carolina, within twenty days after the s rvico 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 complaint. Jno. G. Dinkins, Plaintiff's Attorney. Dated March 3rd, A. D. 1922. To The Defendant Gus Witherspoon: TAKE NOTICF1 That the Sum mons and Complaint in the above stated action were filed in the office of the . Clerk of Court of Common Pleas for Clarendon County, S. C. on March 9th, 1922 and are now on file in said office. Jno. G. Dinkins, 11-3t-c Plaintiff's Attorney TRESPASS NOTICE Pursuant to provisions of Secbica t 241, Criminal Code of South Caro lma, notice is hereby given that the v lands of the Brooklyn Cooperage e Company leased from the Santee J River Cypress Lumber Company in 1 Clarendon County are posted, and p persons entering without autthority fi upon the same will be prosecuted. a Brooklyn Cooperage Company, b 29-c Georgetown. S. C. E c NOTICE OF BANKRUPT SALE p In the Diatrict Court of the United States, for the Eastern District of v South Carolina. In Banki'uptcy. - Notice of Sale. In the Matter of: J. C. Dennis, H. M. Dennis, and J. R. Dennis, individually and as co- a partners trading as J. C. Dennis ai & Sons, Bankrupts. Pursuant to an Order of Robert J. ' Kirk, Esq., Referee in Bankruptcy, made in the above entitled matter, dated February 24th, 1922, notice is hereby given that I.will offer for sale at pubhic outcry to the highest and last bidder therefor, for cash, subject to the approval of this Court, before the Court House door in the Town of Manning, in the County of Clarendon, " HE WHO LOOKS BEFORE I All new bu our own w wood, gem Cy "THE I It's equal against a lo For true e< "last," situ Eternal" at BUY THE GE Often middle 01 the case"-bu CYPRESS, the1 that defies dect means double in lumber. You can tell g by the trade-n the responsible Association. L< Write tis for list of FREE PLA and nlo substitutes" from ye Sou Manu 0 177 Gra YOUR LOXCAl DEALERt WILL SUlPPT Fou 1.-thst glorious feeling that comog withn a clears pure, ruddy corn plekion. i the- District aforesaid, on' Monday, pril 3rd, 1922, at twelve o'clock M. lie following described real estate: Lot, and building in Town of Turbe ille, Clarendon County, S. C., describ ti as' Lot No. 42 on a plat made by oseph Palmer, dated January 26, D11, and recorded in Plat Book 2, age 105, said lot measuring and contng on Main Street thirty feet, nd running back one hundred feet, ding occupied by the Turb-eville ardware Company, and being' en tmbered by a certain mortgage to ic Bank of Turbevillo, securing .the rincipal sum of Five Hundred p500.00) Dollars and Interest. Lot and building in Town of'Turbe ille, Clarendon County, S. C., de !ribed as Lot No. 77 on a plat'mnadIt r Joseph' Palmer, dated January 2Gth )11, and recorded in Plat Book 2 ige' 105. Said lot measuring and onting on Main Street thirty feat id running back one hundred feet id 'formerly occupied by J. C. Den ;HICHESTER S PILLS. TIREINyour DgatNo idingis bestamonran boses, sealed with aloe Ribbon. Dror d -a m ousI. :.pfl 1 DTake tno other. fu of yorn P rugit A~rtis.iE DIAOND TD Lfor i o yeaknowns t,'stestAlways Reliale SOOBY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE T'E LEAPS BUILDS OF CYPRESS ilding is best rorld -famous line ow ans are t be sure it is " Lrue "Wood Etern iy, lasts practically or treble your m, enuine "Tide watei lark below on t mills that are me >ok for it.. NS for farm buildings-~but in the meantin ur local lumber dealer--no matter for. Addres THERN CYPRE facturers' Associati ham Bldg., Jacksonville, Fl ,Y YOU. IF iIE IIASN'T ENOUGHI CYPRE! w eanesaa FM eh12 12 250 Pimples 736' Blackda& ad3 Boils! No reward is offered, because they are lost forever! No question will be asked, except one question, "How did you lose them?" There is'but ond' answer,-"I cut, out new tad treat ments and guesswork; I used one of the most powerful blood-cleanse p,, blood-purifiers a n d f l e a h-bul known, and that is S. S. 0.1 Now t . face is pinkish, my skhit elear as rose, my cheeks are filled out and mt rheumatism, too, is gono!" This wil be your experience, too it you try '. 8, S. It is guaranteed to be purely vegetable in all its remarkably effec tive medicinal ingrediepts 5. S. 8. means an new history- for you from now on! H. S. S. Is sold at all !drug stores In two sizes. The larger size is the more economical. nis & Sons, and being encumbered by a certain mortgage to Mrs. Bertha Baird, securing the principal sum of $1500.00. and interest. Tract of land in Clarendon County, S. C. cont.ining eighty-three acres, more or less, and bounded- on the North, East and South by' M; J.. Mor-. ris, and on the West by estate of J. F. Turbeville, being the tract of l nd conveyed by deed recorded in B6ok M-3, page 543, and being encumbered by two certain mortgages, to, wit: One, to Lee and Moise,- securing. the principal sum of Two Thousand!($2,. 000.00) Dollars and interest, and. the other to . J. T. Stukes securing the principal sum of -Eight Hundred andi Fifty ($850.00) Dollars and interest;. The foregoing described real prop-" perty is to be sold in three separate lots as above described, and the' same. shall be sold subject to the lien of the mortgage encumbrances now on the same and hereinabove particularly mentioned. The purchaser or pur-. chasers thereof shall be required to: immediately comply with their said bid or bids, and should they fail to do so, then the same will be at once re sold at the risk of said first bidder or bidders. The purchaser, or purchasers thereof shall be required,to pay for all necessary deeds of conveyance, In eluding revenue stamps, etc. Leopold Strauss, Trustee, 13-c Sumter, S.. C. AND BUILDS FOR KEEPS." done with Southern ~NAL" Lee policy s later 'on. as well as the Wood i THE JOB. just right for Tide water" al," the kind forever and Dney's worth "CYPRESS e product of mbers of the e insist en "CYPRESS what purpose you buy, S S -iwtcrnCe s - jyou can identify I o t by this marks El T LET Um NOAma OanunE