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We are just from New York, Philadelpi the spot cash to plank down for what we boi We are determined to sell our share of I While in New York and Baltimore we happened to ru Our Millinery Parlor will be in charge of Miss Kathr come to her for Hats. Ou Jr Spri Spci We have the goods to sell and we have them at a pric thing for 98c then they will say. "I wonder if it is as good." S. I. TILL means to sell the goods, and when you go gone and your friend saved 50c or $1 on the same goods. The lmossible Is Becoming Possible. Some of our competitors say it is impossible for S. I. TILL to make any money on his goods at the prices he sells them at, but our great secret is in the way we buy them and selling quick for the cash, making the word IMPOSSIBLE a POSSIBILITY. Cotton Goods. Don't be fooled by some slick tongued salesman about cotton goods being high. They may be high with him, but S. I. TILL has cotton goods and wool goods and everything at the right price. Come and see before you spend your money. CLOTHING. Don't curse the man that sold you that high-priced suit, and then don't curse him again because it did not fit you; he can't help it; it was all your own fault. If you had come to S. I. TILL at first then you would not have to raise all that racket. Come to us for your Spring Suit, we will fit you and sell you cheap. Millinery Sill JOR DOLLARS. This you can do by seeing and buying from our large stock of Buggies, Wagons .and Harness, of all styles and best quality. We have a house full of them and must make room for our fall stock. If it is A NICE BUGGY you want at a right price we have it. If it is a serviceable FARM WAGON, we can supply you and guarantee prices and quality. In HARNESS we bought the best assortment ever shown ere and have the Prices to Suit You. We make good all we say, so you cannot afford to stay away f in need of anything in our line. We have A Host of Satisfied Gustomers, d wIll make one of you if you but give us a chance. Come to see us whether you buy or not, you will feel better. .P. HIAWKINS & Co. 'e GLENN -SPRINGS * MINERAL WATER. Nature's Greatest Remedy 4 FOR DISEASES OF THE Liver, Kidneys, Stomach F and Skin. Physicians Prescribe it, Patients Depend on it, and Everybody Praises it. FOR SALE BY I Mde an lnd Money on Loan .. Made s ta te. nabl interest ad Est a te. on or write to me. 3. .A.. W7V INBER.- Attorney at Law, M ANNING T S. C.Q .ia, Baltimore and Richt ight and are confident t] he goods in Manning th n on some good things and if yo ine Lavman. who is a Southern e that will move them. There a Friend, if you will get out of t to church or visiting and see sc The Almighty Some people say cotton is k king when it comes to buying goc the big values and you will agree is greater than cotton at TILL'S. 8HC Everybody knows about our S All $3.50 Shoes for $2.98. W factories thereby saving the middl One lot of 100 pairs Ladies $1 little out of date, but you can hay friends about them. Something in Men's at $1.25. was saved from the Baltimore fire. At all times. A big lot of Men's see them. Men's Field Straw Hats, big o Men's Panamas at 10c also. SOpening W Panola Dots. Editor The Manning Times:4 While we deeply deplore your deter mination to let politics alone, your cor respondent, believing that it is "ill4 wind which blows nobody good," has., after very grave consideration, deter mined to enter the lists himself and as4 "the little Palmetto" has never given4 a President to the United States, we think our chances for that ]ofty posi tion as good as Roosevelt's. In fact we are out for President: See? Failing in that, don't yo'u think it would be a good4 idea to get soma walnut stain, and bor-4 row a complexion that would insure a nomination from Roosevelt for some4 official position of about ten thousand a year. See again? So much for us, yet Brutus say*s "we are ambitious, and4 surely Brutus is an honorable man." During the recent meeting -at the colored church near Silver, two negroes4 became involved in a quarrel with the usual result, a cutting scrape. Rev. Bedenbaugh has been conduct-4 ing a few days meeting at Andrews Chapel. Mr. E. B. Randall, proprietor of the4 Sumter music house spent a few days in our neighborhood last week. Miss Evlyn Holladay of Charleston is4 visiting relatives here..4 Mrs. J. P. Felder and Miss Aggie Felder of Felders spent last Tuesday at4 Mr. C. W. Brown's. Madame Rumor has it that a hand some bachelor of Manning has been seen in our communinity recently4 Wonder if he is out for President too? Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Barvin spent a4 few days with their father Mr. Thomas4 Harvin last week. W. 4 Panola March 21, 1904.4 Best Cough Remedy fer Children. 4 When you buy a cough medicine for small children you want one in which you can place implicit confidence. You want one that not only relieves but cures. You want one that is pleasant to take. Chamberlain's Cough Reme -j dy meets all of these conditions. There is nothing so good for the coughs and colds incident to childhood. It is also ~ a certain preventative and cure for croup, and there is no danger whatev er from whooping cough when it is given. It has been used in many epi demics of that diease with perfect sue cess. For Sale by The R. B. Loryea Drug Store, Isaac M. Loryea, Prop. Pinewood Pickups. Edit~or The Mannin;g Times: Maj. H. B. Richardson came near losing his residence on the 14th, by the fire that has been burning in the ' Sand Hills. The only loss Maj. Rich ardson suffered was some fencingf and litter that was raked and piled in the w~oods nearby. Mr. A. I. Barron of Manning was in town last week. Mrs. J. Ri. Fletcher and Mrs. J. WV. Weeks visited relatives in Summerton last week. THE TIEs has been arriving late the past month. After a long illness Mr. Tom C. Cut tino has again launched out in the bus-c iness circle of the world. Thomas is now in business at Fair Forest, Spar tanburg county. His many friends here wish him much success in business and especially Tom's failing-Matrimo nial affairs. Rev. N. J. Brown will conduct Easter services at Bethlehem church April 3. There will be a dime reading at the home of Mr. E. P. Geddings Friday night 25th. All are invited to come. BUSTER. Pinewood. March 21 1904. You cannot cure faults by wateringi ~hem with tears. I. ILI aond, where we have spent some time select aat no one can show a NICER, NEWER, CL .is Spring. We do not claim to give you gold u will only come aid see, you will be surprised at some of ti lady, and one that is highly recommended, and we feel confid pening Ma ,re some folks that will give "Cousin Joe" or"Uncle Jim" $1 hat idea and come to Till's with the cash you will find this fa me of your friends with a hat or dress on just like yours at Dollar Is King. CL QT We also sell Boys', Men's u ing, but the almighty dollar is price. We are agents for Hays ds. Come to bur store and see tailors. See our Spring Samples that the almighty, shiny dollar Laces and E EOne lot of 100 pieces Emb match, from 5 to 48c yard, worth hoes. One lot of 300 dozen yards e buy all our Shoes direct from Laces in Edges and Insertings to e man's profits. All the new styles in Allover .50, $2 and $3 Shoes, some are a edges to match. e your choice for $1. Ask your These are a big job I got that ni n We have Remnants in Lawns. We have Remnants in P. K. 's 1T S We have Remnants in Prints. We have Remnants in Chamb sample Hats at 98c. Come and We have Remnants in Dimitie We have Remnants in Shirtin aes, 10c. We have Remnants in Pants C Tht's a. Come and P. Weean haeRsant3Prns WeTheaSmtereBnkningDmii Wead er atie Renatsi.Siri Ses, 10c. Se C.eRmatsi at The Sumtera BankingO.OO Whlolesale Grocers, Fertilizers. alld Farilers' Supplies. Sole Agents for the Celebrated Wilcox & Gibbs Fertilizers, Groceries, Fertilizers and Farmers' Supplies, and inviteryourinvestigation befre me king your arrangements oeartyo eeus. Wee ewill save you money and give you a Sumter Banking & Mercantile Co., Masonic Building, 2d door from the Postoflice, ~Something New SAbout Decorated Dishes 0 erse hav dstsontne th o11 rsystem of comeln ce tm suit yourconvenience. Buy as many pieces as y.ou ish or in l cheaper grade to the higher, and we hae nodubt abou pleas DOnT HEsiTATE to priee our goods before you buy else w here, as we take pleasure to quote you astonishingly low prices. Pictures Picture Frames. 8 FraJust reciea en e assortment oictures sanitur yon are looking for real bargans in Furniture we are the? Yours truly, S. L. K RA SN OFF, 8 THE FTURNITUTRE MAN.T [ng our Spring Goods EANER or more up-t dollars for 89c, but w te goods we are offering. ent that she can please and s& 1c4-1 .50 for a piece of goods or p 11 you will be better off. 50c or $1 less it will be too HING. nd Children's Clothing at a cu & Co. of Cincinnati, high clas now in. mbroideries. oidery Edges and Insertings t twice the price. Torchon, Valencines and Clun3 match, from ic to 24c yard. Laces and Embroidery in wid ANTS. temnants. rays. s. ;s. )loth. r, March 3( "Slab's" Ruminations. Editor The Manning Times: You and your correspondents to gether certainly gave us a fine pape Last week. Hurrah boys! Push TE TIEs. Help - the editor to prove t the world that what Slab said in hi Last is correct. 1t ain't much troubl, to jot down a few lines and it will hel) to liven up things. Among the severa correspondents last week, glad to se two new ones. But among them all was sorry to see only one touch on th4 subject so near to the farmers interest and that was our old friend "B." W said in our last, "cut down the acreage and if you feel lik'e you are obliged t4 make more cotton make it on fewe acres, and at ]ess expense per bale.' There's a lot of milk in that cocoanut and we farmers could get it out if we tried right. This scribe is of the opin ion that it would be well to cut dowi the acreage in corn as well as cotton Not that I advocate making less of an: crop that we plant; goodness knows the average farmer make little enough al ready. M~ake all you can of everythins you can. But I'll just tell you boys, t< plant 35 or 40 acres to the horse. an( just 2 or 3 hundred pounds of guan per acre, ain't the way to get at it Where you have been planting 15 acre Df cotton to the horse and using 400 lb Df fertilizer per acre, try an experimen this year and plant 10 acres cotton an< use 4oo pounds under, and 400 pound as a top dressing, and I believe tha you'1 be so well pleased that you wil decrease the crop and increase the fer tilizer still more next year. Our pool Did lands are starving to death just a: as they can; and if we'll feed them the: will feed us. Who can exp~ect a mat to do full duty on half rashions'. ThE same principle will apply to our lands A lot of the boys let .30 cents a bushe Fool em out of their cotton seed, but an glad to say tbat more farmers will havE seed to put to their crops this year that .n many a year before. Watch thE nan that puts his seed back in thE ground as a fertilizer, and see what i ~vill do for his crop and his starved ou and. JOHN SLAB. !othing Equals to Chamberlain's Colic, Chol era and Diarrhoea Remedy Bowel Complaint ln Children. "We have used Chamberlain's Colic 'holera and Diarrhoea Remedy in om ~amily for years," says M~rs. J.B.Cooke >f Netherland's, Texas. "We havE riven it to all of our children. WE iave used other mecdicincs for the same >urposeC, but. never found anythinfi tc o equal Chamberlain's. If you wil: 1se it as directed it wsill always cure.' 'or sale by The RI. B. Loayea Drug; store, Isaac M1. Loryea, Prop. Derivations of Some Common Words, One remembers how on the 15th of June, 1215, King John signed the great charter of the constitutional freedom of Brihiin and how after he had signed it he flung himself in a burst of fury on the floor and gnawed the straw and rushes with which the floors of those days were strewn. Now, what was "charta?" Originally nothing more or less than a sheet of papyrus strips glued together n's writing paper. So it is to the Egyptian reed that we owe our "charters," "charts," "cards," "cartes" (blanche and de visite), our "cartoons" and our "cartridges'-Lon don Chronicle. Notice. I have in hand some money to lend n reasonable terms. Apply to the undersigned. JOSEPH F. RHAMIE, Attorney at Law. and we-feel proud of our selection, as we had o-date line of goods than we are now showing: do claim to give more goods for your money. Ltisfy every lady in Manning and Clarendon county should they 0 a 31 iir of shoes or hat and when S. L Till will offer them the same Late to say, "I wonder if it is as good." Your money will be MILLINERY. 3 Our Great Spring Opening Wednesday and Thurs day, March 30 and 31-Opening Day and Night. Never before have we had such an assortment. We bought 25 dozen Ladies' Sailors at a price that will cause our competitors to wonder, if they could see what we are offering at 15 and 19c. One hundred Ladies' regular $1.25 Hats at 50c. Come in and see what we have before you buy. DRY GOODS. Five thousand yards Remnants in 25c Mercerized Waistings for 10 and 121c. Fifty pieces beautiful Dimities, 15c goods, we got them from the mills, at 10c. Twenty-five pieces 25c Embroidered Swiss Dots, 10c. Ten pieces 25c Waistings-at 19c. Ten pieces 40-inch White Lawn, worth 20c, for 12c. Ten pieces 28-inch White Lawn, wo rth 15c, for 10c. - Five pieces All Linen 25c Crash for Skirts, 15C. Ten pieces 40-inch Skirtings in cotton goods, only 10c. Fifty pieces Fast Colored Lawns, 5c. All the new things in Fancy Skirts for 15e to $1.50 yard. )and 31. ___ Our Millinery Opening will be on Thursday and Friday, March the 24th and 25th. ALL CORDIALLY INVITED TO ATTEND Miss Glessner Kefauver, the most competent milliner we could secure, will be in charge of our new Millinery Parlor on "The First Floor." We have the largest and best ~ selection that has ever been aebrought to this county. dslyo All aekindly requested to call and see our dslyo Thursday anid Friday, March 24 and 2.5. Quality, Style and Prices g Are Guaranteed. Summerton, S. 0.