The Manning times. (Manning, Clarendon County, S.C.) 1884-current, May 03, 1905, Page 4, Image 4
We are in our new quarters at the same
old stand, next to Jenkinson's, where we are
prepared to fill all orders for
Groceries.
We will be glad to see you and "figgef
on any bill of Groceries you may need, and
feel assured we can satisfy you both in qual
ity and price.
The Manning Grocery Co.
8 SUMMERTON IIARDWARE CO., g
SUMMERTON, S. C.
J. C. LANAM.- C. 11. DAVIS, J. A. JAMES,
President. Vice-President. Sec.-Treas.
OUR MOTTO: 3 L'S.
Live and Let Live.
For dry goods. go to a dry goods store.
For shoes. go to a shoe store.
For groceries, go to a grocery store.
For medicines go to a mcine store.
For HARDWARE and its kindred articles.
go to a HARDWARE STORE.
Paints, Agricultural Implements, Pumps, Pipe,
Stoves and Stoveware, Harness and
Saddlery, Crockery and Glassware.
We have them all.
Our long residence in the county is our guarantee of fair and
Sho nest treatment of our customers.
o We have recently associated with us Mr. .. M. Plowden form
erlv with the Dillon Hardware Company, who thoroughly under
stands the hardware business and will take pleasure in giving the
public h, bnna'it. of his experience.
With all its attra'ti &with its ad
E vent the problem of restocking the farm with tools anai~hip~t
E ments comes.
~ FARERSWe have never been in better shape to supply
youandMES yon during our eight years of business life among
C vo, an wecan confidently say that we have the best assort-*
E ment of goods-ever brought to Manning.
~ flh~l~f nEODIDI~nDQ The K. P. Distributors. This
C UANO~ DISTIUTORS. splendid distributor we sold ~
Shere for the first time last season, and owing to its strong con- -
E struction and accurate work became a favorite at once. All the
C agricultural papers unite in praising its fine qualities.
C The Cole Distributor is better adapted _to distributing around
C she growing crop; for this purpose it is without a rival. It can
be T he Spangler Distributor is a new distributor on our market;
Swe have many testimonials of its efficiency. Do not fail to see it,
Sas it possesses features that no other distributor has.
E Wte have in Cotton Planters as follows, all of which are too
C well known to require a description: DOW LAW and FARQU
:z HARl.
flflDMOur Corn Planter has attracted quite at
a OR PLANTERS. lot of attention. We sell the-"STAR.
C It is without a doubt a splendid success as a planter..
SWe are agents for some new Plows that are great labor-saving
C implements, among which are the SY RACU.SE Steel Beam two.
E horse Plows. We have them in three sizes in stock. We are also
Sagents for the "Watt'' one and two horse Plows.
C We also have a nic-e lot of Harrows and Cultivators and theZ
C celebrated RUJB1N JONES FENDERS
O We have everything usually kept in better elass hardware
C stores and are always pleased to serve vou.
Very truly yours.,
SMANNING HARDWARE COMPANY.
IWANTA MULE
Go to W. P. IIAWKINS & CO. for- the best. The'
luitve just got in a lot of fine ones. Pr-ices right and term
liberal.
.You can depend on what you buy of W. P. HJAWKIN~
& CO., for they are straight and their new Horses and Mule
are unsurpassed in any market.
Houest dealings and the best stock is our motto for sue
cess, if it is worth anything to you see W. P. HAWKINS 3
Buggies, Wagons
and Harness,
()ur salesrooms~ hav e been refilled with the view of en
tieinug pat-ronage an hscan onyb ecured by havin
what the peopleC want, and their linny's worth when the'
get it.
It will not cost yon a cenit to look through our stable:
anid salesl-omS.
Our prices will suit. and Cevthing~ yout buy fr-omt U
o'es witht our guaranltee.
W. P. H AWKINS & CO4
THE POOR OF BERLIN
HOW THEY ARE SUPERVISED BY THE
CITY AUTHORITIES.
Begging Is Not to Be Seen on the
Streets of tihe City, and Rags and
31isery Dare Not Lie About In the
Parks and Public Places.
"What," I exclaimed in Berlin, "are
there no poor in this city? Are you al
together without rags and wretched
nessY'
"My dear friend," said the German,
winking a heavy eyelid, "we are a very
clever people. We do not show our!
dust bins.
Berlin is ruled by municipal experts.
It has its wretchedness and its despair,
but these things are not permitted to
increase. To be out of work in Berlin
is a crime, even as it is in London, but
with this difference-in Berlin the mu
nicipality legislates for labor in a fash
ion which makes idleness all but inde
fensible.
The laws to this end may not com
I mend themselves to English minds, for
the Germans are not soft hearted in
such matters, but they have this en
gaging recommendation, they succeed.
Let a ragged man make his appear
ance in Friedrichstrasse or the Lindens
or in any of the numerous open spaces,
and a policeman is at him in a min
ute. "Your papers!" demands the man
of law. The beggar produces his docu
ments. If it is proved that he has
slept in the asylum for the homeless
more than a certain number of nights
he is forthwith conducted, willynilly, to
the workhouse and made to labor for
his board and lodging.
Now, the workhouse in Germany is
not a prison,.but the vagrant would as
leave go to the one as to the other.
The administration of the workhouse
is conducted with iron severity. Ev
ery ounce of bread and every drop of
thin soup consumed by the workhouse
man is paid for a thousandfold by the
sweat of his brow. So it comes about
that the man least disposed to work,
the born vagabond, finds it more
agreeable to toil for his bread in the
market than to fall into the hands of
a paternal government.
Berlin takes advantage of the sys
tem in Germany which numbers and
tickets every child born in the father
land. No man can roam from district
to district, changing his name and his
life's story with every flitting. He is
known to the police from the hour of
his birth to the hour of his death. For
a few pfennigs I can read the history
of every person in Berlin. Therefore
the municipality has an easy task. Ev
ery citizen's life story is known to
them, and every vagrant is punished
for his crime against the community.
Moreover, every person of humble
means is insured by the state. Even
clerks, shop assistants and servants
are compelled to insure against sick
ness and against old'age. This insur
ance is effected by the pasting into a
book of certain stamps every week,
and it is the duty of- each employer
to see that this contract is faithfully
obeyed. And the state has. at Beelitz
an enormous sanitarium costing 10,
000,000 marks (+500,000), where the in
valided citizen is sent with his pen
sion in order to expedite his valuable
return to the ranks of the wage earn
ers. It pays the city of Berlin to nurse
its sick and cherish its invalids. The
whole object of the municipality is to
secure the physical and intellectual
well being of its citizens, and on this
task it concentrates its labors with
amazing energy.
Berlin has a huge building resem
bling a factory where the unemployed,
whole families, are received and pro
vided for, but no one must take advan
tage of this hospitality more than five
times in three months. Consider this
point of view. If you are homeless five
times in three months you are dubbed
a reckless creature and packed off to
the workhouse. Private enterprise has
provided another asylum where the
homeless may come five times in one
month and where the police are not al
lowed to enter at night. I have visited
this place and seen the people who at
tend it, some decent. enough, others
criminal in every line of their faces.
There are many of these desperate
men in Berlin, many of these dirty,
ragged and unhappy wretches, doomed
from the day of their birth, but they
dare not show themselves in the decent
world as they do in London. They
slink into these asylums at 5 o'clock,
they have their clothes disinfected;
thev cleanse themselves under shower
baths; they eat bread and drink soup,
and then they go to bed at S o'clock
like prisoners to their cells.
Now, this system is a hard one, for
when once a man gets down in Berlin
It is almost Impossible for him to rise.
But it has this clear advantage-every
body feels that it is better to work
than to fall into the hands of the law.
Rags and misery dare not lie about
in the parks or scatter disease through
the crowded streets. If there is any
virtue in the unemployed the state will
certainty develop it as well as it is pos
:sible to do so. There is a central bu
reau for providing men with work, and
when a man knows that not to work
means the workhouse he solicits em
ployment here and elsewhere with such
a will as almost compels wages. In
one year the state has secured employ
ment for 50,000 men.
The oitizen is provided with sanitary
dwellings, with unadulterated food,
with schools and technical colleges and
with insurance for sickness and old
age. For a penny lie can travel almost
from one end of Berlin to the other by
electric tramway or electric railway.
Kis streets are clean, brilliantly light
ed and noisele 's; his cafes and music
halls are innumerable. He lives in a
palace. And all this is the result of
municipal government by experts in
sted of by amateurs.-Londonl Mail.
CASTOR IA
For Tnfants and Children,
The ikind You Have Always Bought
Bears the
Signature of , ,~4 $4
Value of Decayed Forests.
The decayed vegetation of forests
"has furnished to the fields their present
-fertility, upon which man depends for
food. In the tree growth of virgin
woods and in the floor of rotted foliage
beneath are stored the accumulations
of centuries. Nature does not care
whether this growth is useful to the
human race or not. It is left for us to
encourage the growth of such trees as
we find valuable to the exclusion of
others. Thus an economical use is made
of the resources at hand, and a new
conception of the forest arises. The
forest primeval becomes "woodlands."
while the new "forest" includes only
THE SUNDAY SCHOOL.
LESSON VI, SECOND QUARTER, INTER
NATIONAL SERIES, MAY 7.
Text of the Lesson, John xv. 1-12.
Memory VerseN. 5, G-Golden Text,
John xv, S-Commentary Prepared
by Rev. D. M. Stearns.
[Copyright. 1905, by American pIess AsODciation.]
Unless we include in our meditations
much that the lesson committee has
felt led to omit we shall have had but
a very small glimpse of the life and
teaching of our blessed Lord. Here,
for example, we have but one brief
lesson in the most wonderful of all His
discourses and one lesson from the
greatest of all recorded prayers-two
lessons from what has been well called
"the holy of holies of all Scripture."
le had eaten with His disciples the
Passover which He so much desired to
eat with them before He suffered. He
had Instituted.the supper by which we
are to show His death till He come,
He had girded Himself and had wash
ed their feet, teaching them to do to
one another as lie had done to them,
and now in these last words He opened
to them His heart as never before and
prayed for them and for us who be
lieve on Him through their word.
Knowing all that was before Him that
night and on the morrow, He seemed
to forget Himself in His desire to com
fort and strengthen them.
Could there possibly be more helpful
words for all believers at all times, as
sured that in the world- we shall have
tribulation, than the opening words of
this discourse. "Let not your heart be
troubled," and, again, "Let not your
heart be troubled; neither let It be
afraid" (xiv, 27), reminding us of .att.
xxiv, 0, "Ye shall bear of wars and ru
mors of wars; sle that ye be not trou
bled?" What roire powerful testimony
to our oneness with the risen Christ
can there be than an untroubled heart
in the midst of trouble?
We have heard Him say, "I am the
Light of the wo'ld," "I am the good
Shepherd," "I am the Door," "I am the
Living Bread which came down from
hearea," "1 am the Way and the Truth
and the Life," but now He uses a new
figure. "I am the true Vine," taking.us
back by contrast to such words as "The
vineyard of the Lord of hosts is -the
house of Israel and the men of Judah
His. pleasant plant," and "Israel is an
empty vine; he bringeth forth fruit
unto himself" (Isa. v, 7; Hos. x, 1).
Here Is the true Israel, the Vine that
never brought forth fruit unto Himself,
never pleased Himself, never sought
His own will nor His own glory, and
He tells us that we are branches-In
Him, to bear much fruit, that the Fa
ther, the Husbandman, may be glori
fied. -
Let us remember that He Is alone
with the eleven, to whom He had said,
"Ye are clean" (xiii, 10), and again in
verse 3 of our lesson, "Now ye are
clean through the word which I have
spoken unto you." These are true
branches in the true Vine and can nev
er perish (Jo'i.i x, 27-29). There are
those who, l'ough they may seem to
us to be bra aches, are not and.never
were branches any more than Judas
Iscarot. Such go out in due time, be
cause they were never really in the
Vine or the fold. They are* plants
which were never planted by God the
Father (I John ii, 19; Mlatt. xv, 13).
But there are true branches in the
true Vine which do not bring forth
fruit unto God. They are spoken of-in
I Car. 21I, 15, as having their works
burned and they themselves saved as
by fire or in I Car. v, 5, as having
the flesh destroyed that the spirit.may.
be saved in the da~y of the Lord-.Jesus.
Possibly those in I Car. x1, 30, who
were weak and sickly and dying before
their time are in the same class.
Instead of this, which'may. be the ex
perience of many, but need notibe the
experience of any, It is the desreof
our heavenly Father that we bear'fruit,
mre fruit, much fruit, to His .glory.
Patiently He waits year after year,
looking far fruit and doing all He.can
to get It before He ordei-s ithe tree cut
down or the branch taken away (Luke
xiii, 0-9), but If the self life persistent
ly predominates the order Is-finally giv
en, and men are often the-instruments
in His hand to remove and burn the
branches or cut down the tree. Let us
take heed and abide.
How simply and easily the branches
in a vine under the skill and care of a
husbandmnan .bear fruit! There is no
struggle, no effort, but just a yielding
to the wise care which Drunes and
causes to bleed and ties up here and
there, so as to obtain' the desired fruit.
What, then, is this abiding which is so
essential and without which all is noth
ing? (Verse 5.) If it Is not by effort,
how is it? I know nothing better than
the thought given forth by Hudson
Taylor on one occasion that it is weak
ness and not strength that abides. The
child that is too weak to climb out of
the crib is found by its mother just
where she put it. "His strength is
made perfect In our weakness." As
we look more closely we note that there
is an abiding In His love and in His
wrd (verses 7, 9).
The first step is to believe firmly.
"The Son of God loved me and gave
Himself for me" (Gal. ii, 20)- "Hie hath
redeemed me from the curse of the law,
being made a curse for me" (Gal. iii,
13). "He who spared not His own
Son * ** will with Him also freely give
jus all things" (Rom. viii, ii2). These
firm foundations being well grasped or
built upon, the daily life is just con
tnuing to believe these and similar
frths, and such believers will be filled
with joy, and the Spirit will work out
the fruit of righteousness (Rom. xv.
13; Phil. 1, 11). It is believing all
through, yielding, trusting,.obeying and
God workingsin uis both to will and to
do of His good pleasure (Phil. ii, 13).
Not an Odious Comparison.
The head clerk had been invited to
an afternoon wvedding and in order to
save time appeared at the office in the
morning fully "groomed" for the cere
mny. As he threw aside his over
coat he was disclosed in all the majes
ty of a swagger frock coat of the latest
cut, gray trousers fashionably creased,
patent leather shoes and white puff tie.
His position in the office made him
immune from comnients by the under
lings. who, however, regarded him with
seri comic admiration and longed to
say what they felt.
But the barrier was broken a few
minutes after the day's business had
begun and by a friend who dropped in
for a moment's chat. H~e was some
what lacking in dignity, for which the
clerks blessed hinm.
Good morning, George," he said
cheerily to the head. clerk. Then as he
took a second glance at the sartorial
"dream" he added: "Great Scott!
What's up? You look like a certified
check."
And even the head clerk joined in
the general burst of laughter.--New
GOOD POTATOES
BRING FANCY PRICES
To grow a large crop of food potatoes, the
soil must contain plen O otas t
Tomatoes melons cabbage, turnips, lettsce
--itt fact, all vegetales remaove large Quanti
ties of Potash from the soil. Supply
Potash
liberally by the nse of fertilizers containing
,t kss thas 10 per cent. actual Potash.
Better and more profitable yields are sure to
follow.
Our pamphlets are not advertising circulars
booming special fertilizers, but contain valu
able information to farmers. Sent free for the
asing. Write now.
GERMAN KALI WORKS
New York-93 Nassau Street. or
Atlanta, Ga.--saM" South Broad St.
Undertaking.
A complete -tocl of Caskets. Coffins and Fu
icral Supplic always on hand. Mv hearse will
e sent to any part of the county. and calls will
be. responded to by Mr. A. J. White. funeral
director and undertaker. nicht or day.
W. E. J ENKINSON Co.
6N PfHOSPHflTE
CUR12S
KIDNEY
DISEASES
URINARY
AND
Pa BLADDER
pg TROUBLES
vaFOR SALE lIT ALL
DlsFBRiSRRIES.
Open
An Account
With Us.
You can then pay your
bills with checks which
'we return to you the
first of each mfonlth and
which are thus made a
receipt in full for every
dollar you pay out.
ou can always make' change
with a check.
Bank ol Sumnmerion,
Summerton, S. C.
Te Bank of Manng
MANNING, S. C.
Dapital Stock, - -$40,000
Surpius. - - 30,000
Stocholders' Lia
ility, - - 40,000
Total Protection
to Depositors, -$110,000
BE PRESIDENT
of a Bank: Now is the time to begin
to sae, for
"Youth's the time fior taking pains,
That age may rest and count the gains."
Put vour savings away systematically
in a good. trustworthy b'ank, and you'll
be surprised at the rapidity with which
you pile increases.
D)irecting Funerals.
We have an up-to-date- Under
taking Establishment, and carry
a full line of Caskets, Coffins, and
Undertakers' Supplies, from the
cheapest to the best State Casket
Our beautiful Hearse is a great
addition in this department, and
puts us an a level with the larger
undertakers in the State, and we
have men graduates itn this pr'o
fession, sober and reliable.
S. L. KRASNOFF,
UNDERTAKER.
J. W. HERIOT,
FUNERAL DIRE CTOR.
Levi Block, Manning, S. C.
New Livery Feed and
Sale. Stable,
SUMMERTON, S. C.
I will always have on hand good
teams and vehicles to hire, and espe
cial attention will be given to the
onveying of drummers to ditierent
Bring your horses tfo my stables to
SW. S. Rhame.
Kennedy's Laxative Honey and Tar
Cures all Coughs, and expels Colds from
th..yste by ntnly mnovina thle bowelis.
Do You Want
PERFECT FIT1INS
CLOTHES?
THEN COME OR SEND TO US.
We have the best equipped Tailor
ing Establishment in the State.
We handle
High Art Clothing
solely and we carry the best line of
~irats and Gent's Furnishings in the
city.
Ask your most prominent men who
we are, and they will commend you
to us.
J. L, DAVD 1& BROS,
Cor. King & Wentworth Sts.,
CHARLESTON, - S. C.
All Pleased.
V E A R E PL E A SE D
to write your insurance,
You will be pleased to receive it.
The Best Is What You Want,
See me about your insurance,
either Life, Fire, Accident, Health,
Burglary or Plate Glass.
. L. WItSON.
Buggies, Wagons, Road
Carts and Carriages
RE-PAIRE D
With Neatness and Despatch
-AT
R. A. WHITE'S
WHEELWRIGHT and
BLACKSMITH SHOP.
I repair Stoves, Pumps and run water
pipes, or I will put down a new Pump
cheap.
If you need any soldering done, give
me a call.
LAIME.
My horse is lame. Why? Because I
did not have it shod by R. A. White,
the man that puts on such neat shoes
and makes horses travel ; ith so much
ease.
We Make Themu Look New.
We are making a specialty of re
painting old Buggies, Carriages, Road
Carts and Wagons cheap.
Come and see me. My prices will
please you, and I guarantee all of my
work.
Shop on corner below R. M. Dean's.
R. A. W HITE,
MANNING. S. C..
W HE N YOU COME
TO TOWN CALL AT
WELLS'
SHAVING SALOON
Which is fitted up with an
oye to the comfort of his
customers. .. ...
HAIR CUTTEW
IN ALL STYLES,
SH AVING AND
SH AMPOOING
1)one with neatness and
dispatch.... .. ...
A cordial invitation
is extended...
J. L. W ELLS.
Manning Times Block.
Northwestern R. R. of S. C.
TNiE TIABI.F No. 6,
In, en-ect Sunday, June 5, 1904.
Be.tween Sunnter and Camden.
Mixed--Daily excep~t Sundaiy.
South bonnd. North boiin d
No. 69. No. 7!. No 70. No. 68
P M A M A M P M
6 25 9 3; Le.. Nute . .Ar 9 003 5 45
0 27 9 38 N. W. Jnnetn 8 58 5 43
I; 47 9 59 . ..Dalzell... 8 25 5 13
7 05 10 10 ...lUorden... 8 00 4 58
7 23 10 21 . . Item berts . 7 40 4 43
7 3P '0 31 .. Ellerbee .. 7 30 4 38
7 50 11; SolRy Jnnetn 7 10 4 25
S 00( L. 10 .r. .Cam~den. . Le 7 00 4 15
(S U & G Ex Depot)
Bktween Wilson's Mill and Sumter.
Southbound. Northbound.
No. 73. Daily except San day No. 72.
P M1 Stations. P' M
3 00 Le...8nter.....Ar 12 30
3 d3 . .Sammuerton Junction 12 27
320..........Tinda1........ 1155
3 35.........Packsville........11 30
355...........iver..........1100
.....Millard .... 0
4 45.........Summerton .... 10 15
5 25...... .... Davis...........945
545..........ordan.... .. ...900
6 36 Ar..Wilson's Mills..Le 8 40
P M A M
Bewen Millard and St. Paul.
-Diyexcept Sanday.
Sonthbound. Northbound.
No 73. No. 75. No. 72. No. 74.
P M1 A M Stations A M1 P 31
4 05 10 20 Le Millard Ar 10 45 5 30
4 15 10 30 Ar St. Paul Le 10 35 4 20
PM AM AM PM
T1HOS. WILSON, President.
Money to Loan.
APPLY TO
Wilson, DuRant & Muldrow
Wanted to Sell.
Oce Hundred tons Prime Cotton Seed
~Meal at $23.50 per ton, f. o. b. St. Paul.
Clarendon, S. C.
WELLS &T EDENS,
,n Sumter. S. C'.
DYSPEPSIA CURE
DIGESTS WHAT YOU EAT
The S1 .00 bottle contains 2% times the trial size, which sells for So cents.
PREPARED ONLY AT TME LABOXATORY OF
E. C. DeWITT & COMPANY. CHICAGO. ]IL
~e 3M. B. Locryea Dr-ug- Store.
,& GLENN
SPRINGS
MINERAL
WATER.
Nature's .Greatest Remedy
FOR DISEASES OF THE
Liver, Kidneys, Stomach
and Skin.
Physicians Prescribe it,
Patients Depend on it, and
Everybody Praises it
FOR SALE BY
IF YOU WISH TO BORROW
Loans Made, Money on long or-short time, .
on on improved real estate, I am Oil
Improved in a position to serve you. Improved
Current rates of interest Real Estate
Real Estate- Iand reasonable charges.
Call on or write to
-. A.. w xIM C=
Attorney at Law, Manning, S. C.
Alderman Stock Farm..
For sale at all times. at prices to suit the farmer and of breeding and qual
ifications to suit the fancier,
SHORTHORN AND JERSEY CATTLE,
AND BERKSHIRE HOGS
of either sex and all ages. Corres'pondence solicited. Come and see our stock
whether you intend to buy or not.
.ALOOLUC, S. CO
D. W. ALDERMAN, Prop. SAM'L G. BRYAN, Supt.
INE-I0 IG EOT-A L
ARA Ca. QUGHFAR o f flL
4~(j~etween rhe
1NORTHAJNDS OUh
Florida- Cuba.
A passenger service unexcelled for luxury
and comfort,equippedwith the Jatest Pulkm
Dining, Sleeping and Thoroughfare Cars.
For rates, schedule, maps or any informa.
tion, write to
WM. J. CRAIG,
Gleneral Passenger Agent,
Wilmington, N. C.
beo.SgHcher &Son AhneEtrrs
TheorsingSashdr Bndireds,
Moligan ul ing Cu snwdiggo okad
MaeialBig rsn llyu olascf
CHA ESOS shC. ais assect elu
SahWigt n Crs. ot n ais olsitwit,
Windetc.andoFbn cleaned and pressed.
Alleyonrewsrknedrnestingsolicited
copartnrship uderothenamero
ldieng an cordilcm to aDr in'
th MasoenteLeialo, whe e w icv
ahey i was an Con rds. afOullOGSan 0 &tO
andLDompleeestoiklo
FRUITSorCONFECTIONS.
An evewn irm.ngt afrThR.BLyeDrgSoe
TIONERY an choiceNboksAforAth
L. L. WELLS&C,1JAWiBRG
J. ELBERTADAVIS
eI arepe to exed ad sreymet
they aill aklas ilaedon andful
adon col ties Vok roaadeu atnio ie
SummertonS.oC.,lFe.usn1905
Duiesswa Oroueat.,WM
SEE NING,10 SATRNC.
and everythingngeLtaidingato arfirs
stocklubfisCnowOdingOgoodaworkTan
TINEY ndchic boko ATrmpEaY ATu cLA rs u
hoh.irmttos, u.la NI NG ait, St., C.b lu
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