The Manning times. (Manning, Clarendon County, S.C.) 1884-current, October 18, 1905, Page 2, Image 2

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Having recently made changes in on the market this Mammoth Stock < wear. and they must be sold if at a Sac Dress Goods. Ve have a large assortment of Black and Colored Dress Goods running. in price from 15c to .2.5o the yard. Any piece of them will he sold it a Big, Reduction. Wash Goods. .00 pieces Flannellettes, all new styles, never sold for less thai 10c: for this sale..................... . . One case Red Seal Ginghams. yon all know the price is i Oc; for this sale we mark them.......... One thousand yards Light and Dark Per cales, best qualities: all go at one price............... Two thousand yards light and dark Out ing Teazle Downs: these we mark for this sale. One case Apron (inghams go in this special sale at............ All of our best Calicoes, for this sale marked................--.-. Two cases Hill aind Androscogin 7c Bleach. Io yards to customer at.......... 7 There are many other lines inclu Gioves. Corsets. etc.. that the limited s display at prices to please you. T H ???0? And inspect my immense line of' ? Dry Goods, Notions, 8 Hats, Caps, Shoes, Clot hing, Etc SThat ar e daily arriving, it certainly will be to y Sinterest to do so, If prices and quality are of ?I do not hesitate to say that I can please the n~ fatidious,. MyaDres Goods IDepartmient SIs filled with the newest and most fashioniable gt to be had. I will now enumerate a few of themi: Dirigo All Wool Venetians, Silk Poplin, Mohair, Mohair Florentir Broad Cloth, Brilliantine, @Pebble Cloth and Dress Silks, Etc. I All departments i miy store of generalr chandise is filled with the newest and latest good prices thatt will make for me strong and lasting tomers. Yours truly. j LOUIS LEVI w1.?m~? 3re s Great Rc FLA MM .-ALV our business that create heavy demand: f Merchandise, which constitutes ever rifice. 250 ready-made Sheets, (Mohd awk 5al ley) full size. for this sale marked at.... 2-50 Utica Mills Sheets. ful size, extra heavy : the price.................................. Silks. This stock is too numerous to go into detail. Ask to see them, that's all! 0018 Oooworth of MUSLIN UNDER , WEAR. It is a manufacturer's samples, bought cheap, and you will get the bene fit during this sale. Embroideries and Laces. This line is our hobby and we always under sell them all and when we advertise bargains in Embroideries and Laces you know what that means. Mattings, Rugs, Shades, Lace Curtains. This department is one of the most complete in South Carolina, having in stock 200 rolls MAT TINGS that will be sold very low. RUGS from $1 to $25 that will suffer the same slaughter in price as other lines. We want to call your especial attention to our SHADES AND CURTAINS. We have every thing .in Nottinghams and Bobinet Lace Curtains from 75c to $6.50 per pair, all of which will be marked down for this sale. ding White Goods, Linens, Towels. Quilts pace will not permit us to mention. Coi IINOK S Surnter, - - s. C. L. B3. DUR..N-. Rl K. WIL i-:t. President. Vice- Presidem.t THEDURANT HARDNAR -Opposite Court Housm S We invite the people of Clarendon to visit our st 8 when they are needing anything in our line. We hi our business in order to meet the increasinhr demar: IRant will alw~ays welcome his friends from Clarendoi HOUSEFURNISHINGS. HARNESS. SA DDLES,: BELTINGS of all kinds. BARB WIRtE at prices v Inset. Shlsourmen's toofDWA. We have just received a carload of Elwood F'i( IDevoe's Celebrate g JAP-A-LAC, the - Delight for r Furnitur THE DURANT HARD Ou I MarVest TimeH iOt i YOU NEED OOD' S1 We have just received a full line of one and t PIEDONTAND HIACXN that we propose to sell at close figures. These V S We also have in our wareroomus an excellei od Buggies from the best manufacturers, and will as before buying elsewhere. OUR HARNESS DEPARTMENT is well stoc b le Harness, Collars. Whips, etc., and we are an: lie that wve want to merit their confidence. When the weather gets cooler we will have iL 6, We guarantee what we sell and ask your pati rier- MANNING, S. m-REAL ESTATE F AND INSURANCE. One Emnpi i hspecli faiiiesoobyn nil seli c s~omtce for ter Yr biesicite e. -:0 w her:ver located. placed in good strong Companies. .\1e-s on Yiorbness soiitd 8:30. Moneyto Loan. 01LH Easy Trerms- oo APPLY TO DIgei W tilsoni & DuRanu'. m6J5J LEY3IORATAR NT:-UC. ,orgaization a for Ready Cash we are forced to put ything that Men. Women or Children Clothing. We now ha ve the largest and most complete tock of Men's and Boy's Clothing in Suniter and ike other departments we have marked them .lose. It is a side issue with us and we can there fore give you more for your money than any on else. All we ask is a conparison of prices and Vtles. You will then be convinced. Shoes. We can tit any foot and furnish any style: our shoes are all guaranteed. Millinery. This department is overrun already with buy ?rs because we have the most correct assortment it the most reasonable prices. Give us a trial and be in the majority like many others who buy their biats here. Ready-to-Wear LOAKS, SUITS, SKIRTS. They are all here n abundance of style and quantity. If we have't ?xactly your size we guarantee to make them tit. rhe prices will please all classes of buyers. . Hosiery. Underwear, Handkerchiefs. ne along and you will find them all on T0 FkZ F.4, I. M. P 'PIOTT. Secretary. ELIHCOPE T>reeor eriitanymarr edopairifin ive added more capital otherondelo o naywymv ds, and our~ .Ar. L. B. Du- e orgr hi oildte sds AR.\ING IMPLE.\ENTS, I sabdsmtma setal IA CHINERlY SUPPLIES, mri ypo.Te hudisi hich cannot be duplicated. Jtt en toc o eoigti d Fecina. Guns. Powder.felnadtecaolyrmvitb lantloeadfeanintrs Paints.l Housekeepers'Ireeeainwlnobeatdusn, aaking old mdae a New.prcieohoitlt.Tesmais AECOMPANY, i nysmahe n RS U-me. wdoohrwsehoehmarsceI agou ar ghngwhchraulnbteeetobrn t ssrten o thstatandardsmwiha oen shininiandwillnelsucawidhyouu iostAoNov.o h ou l eetprpry ou ossadMlselehywl evstdwt Be GrainuI Drilrariithetorrewitclawss agol chep gApyate. n ahsscainwilgoupetr ,te sofrthen Worbtl. d ors r estveytmd out oaynhthesihotbinigthmitocn ereitns inite d Io iudcnatwt oiesca ie ouoieys and e . husraetr biedt asIan in h aeadyspsuapsewhic wil nts~e makhatmat omoeseheretanun Fro a uu gr th yacsomd t oia iefo thei youh areeduatedirealrIt forsand gadWces who knoing it. retmlitudes ofn andwomen S- all oershes country ae no ln sie cluded fom social-without csipl fro. Traeofeforms any raefu aInr-n re GramseDrillninined-to clafsncourse. ~ly sed pat ofonese e Th oee tatothey' caniet breais Icep pl t th e lieaon-hm itre n r e~ thorg their sve. te s dub ---areales , uch tht I e m ard ti fne. Itnis and ytm-an snatallyo athis mortifaton and remoing depia feiong evtery lmihcave been samvedi b iiiin ofthe Voienl y eduateing intom her sodwl fou-in~Moititv~ i ng~ if ad proeritly ed eat oringe to dean to cloeadrean nteprtt inoall overeius trege nl to n wilecome accusto edious ther frsonsiunest the forms of socalierem ceebut toenjoyrges iuce uponth pthice ofveopiglie.Tesmahe doandBlader runh with otaeroo minds it t meant, ea_ hch they threwn eupated, and heari O~s'"in foers ind filike sthlrenwillr Cures if ather onetth accusomed ethed ~ts youeat. Iet sol symparther and terabr -----res. that Iae tiae to ollswc PARKER' do thewisbe. fuTher huan fae it HAI BLSA th heart ith theossom wIh oetat shining, and will be such wiythei t i~ur~,tg~,wth ,you will coseet it andope r ofit Pails t Restoe noty suggsnsha ve givlenirely.uon"your no assooatitnsYwlltgrow Coeithe ~ ~laz thm withoutbrinin Ltem inBton tinubed otc ihpliesca ie THE CURVED BALL. It Is the Atmosphere Which Causes Its Eccentric Shoots. Most any ten-year-old youngster can curve a ball, even though he does not know why he can do so except that the leather must be held in a certain way. Possibly a half dozen of the major league twirlers know something about the science of the <irve, but comparatively few understand why they can produce their "benders." The Scientific American gives the follow Ing as the scientific explanation of the matter: "The pitcher in the field tells us that the ball curves because he gives it a twist, but scientifically this will not do. Why will the twist make the curve? If a ball were thrown in a certain di rection and if the foirce of gravitatioir were not at work the ball would con tinue on in a straight line forever. Some force of resistance is then at work when a ball is made to deviate in a curve from its straight course. If a feather is dropped in a vacuum in an exhausted receiver of an air pump It will drop like a shot, but if it is drop ped out in the air it will go down ir regularly and slowly, shifting fr'om side to side. "It is the atmosphere' which causes the ball to curve. Bearing in mind that the atmosphere is a compressible, elastic gas, we find that when the ball leaves the hand of the pitcher with a rapid rotary motion it 'impinges upon a continuous elastic cushion,' and this moderate resistance, or friction, changes its course in the direction which is given to the rotary motion. Take an outshoot of a right handed pitcher, for instance. He impresses upon the ball a rapid centrifugal ro tary motion to the left, and the ball goes to the left because the atmosphere, compressible and elastic, Is packed into an elastic cushion just ahead of the ball by the swift forward and rotary motion, and the friction, which is very great in front of the ball, steers it in the direction which it is turning." A NOTABLE MEETING. Held In the Interest of "Woman's Rights" In 1701. The first recorded public meeting in the interest of "woman's rights" was held In the town of Medford, Mass., in 1701. The gallery of the church was occupied by the young unmarried peo ple of the congregation, one side and one half the front gallery being given to the young men, the other side and the other half being given to the young. women. But in the seating in this eventful year the young men were giv en the entire front of the gallery as well, and the young women were only allowed one side of the gallery. Then it was that things began to happen. Treatment like this wasn't to Je tolerated even for a moment The blood of the future mothers of the Revolution was fully aroused, and the young women made such an uproar and commotion that it speedily became a town matter, and a town meeting was called to restore to them their rights in half of the front gallery. The young men of the day were bit terly opposed to extending any new privileges to women, and the fight ex tended beyond Medford. Shortly after the introduction of "pues" into the churches, by whfch families were sep arated from the remainder of the con gregation, the selectmen of the town of N~ewbury gave permission to a group of young women to build a "pue" in the gallery of the church upon their own side of the house. This extension of privilege was resented by the young bachelors to such a degree that they broke a window of the church, forced an entrance and hacked the pew in pieces. For this act of sacrilege the young men of Newbury were fined $10 each and sentenced to be whipped or pilloried. But they were manly enough to confess their folly and ask pardon, so this part of their punishment was omitted. So you see the "woman's rights" movement isn't a modern one.-: Boston Herald.. W5-AT THE SIAMESE EAT. ice and Putrid Fish Highly seasons. ed Their Main Food. Siamese food principally consists of tried, frequently rotted, fish and rice done into curries which comprise a lit tle of about every kind of condiment and especially a very popular sauce called namphrik, .a chutney-like and thoroughly mixed thing made of red pepper, shrimp, garlic, onions, citron, ginger and tamarind seeds. The only reason for the fish being putrid is be case the natives like it so, for fish are plentiful in their rivers and fishermen numerous, though their wvays of catch ing are rather amusing and antique. One favorite method, borrowed from the Chinese, is beating the waters with long bamboo sticks to frighten the fish into an eight or ten foot squarish net which is lowered into the river from a framework on the bank by a system of whels and ropes and pulleys and hoisted up again when the catch is complete. I must confess that when the fish in the curry chanced to be dried instead of decayed I found the concoction decidedly toothsome. In fact, a really good curry is in a class apart, and one must go to India or the far east to get it at its best. Some times the natives eat p)ork and often times chicken, but for the most part rice and the fish curry constitute their chief diet, supplemented by the fruit of the country, of which there are many kinds-mangosteen, mango, pineapple, banana, orange, breadfruit and that most healthful and serving of all Si amese fruits, the papaya, which growz back from the water and Is a greenish oval melon that suggests cantaloupe when opened.-Outing. A Daredevil Ride. often ends in a sad accident. To heal accidental injuries, use Bucklens Ar nica Salve. "A deep wound in my foot from an accident,'' writes Theodore Scuele, of Columbus, Ohio., "caused me great pain. Physicians were help less. but Bucklen's Arnica Salve quick l healed it. Soothes and heals burns l'ike magic. 25c at The R. B3. Loryea' Drug Store. Notice of Discharge. - We will apply to the Judge of Probate for Clarendon County. on the 17th day November, 1903. for Letters of Di.+ ciarge as 'Executors of the Estate of Tempy Tindail. deceased. Lonus JOHNSON. A. A. TINDAL. Executors. October 17. 1903. Notice of Discharge. 1 will apply to the Judge of Probate for Clarendon County, on the 17th day of November. 1905, for letters of dis charge as guardian for the state of W. D. McClary. .Jr.. a minor. W. D. McCLanx. Guardian. Our Customers Pleased With Our Plain Figure System, On numerous occasions we were highly commended for ou r new system of marking out goods in plain figures and we are pleased to state that we see more satisfied cus tomers daily coming out, of our store. Scores of them * urged us to place our plain figure mark on our Clothing; wherefore in compliance with their request we place plain J marks on Our $5.00 Men's Pants..................... 65 Our 4.00 Men's Pants. ......................2.85 Our 3.50 Men's Pants.......................2.35, 1. Our 2.00 Men's Pants.......................1.65 Our 1.00 Men's Pants....................... .85 Our 12.50 Suits ............................8.85 Our 10.00 Men's Suits.............. .........7.30 Our 5.00 Men's Suits .......................3.75 We have just received Ten Cases Womn's Butteor Shos which we secured at a bargain that enables us to sell the E $2.00 quality for........ ...................98c. g $1.00 quality for ...........................69c. Do not miss a pair of them. Remember we can save you money in every line. We have 50 dozen Men's Fleece-Lined Underwear, - heavy weight. You can have them as long as they last for 35c piece or three for $1. Twenty-five dozen Ladies' Fleece-Lined Underwear, better goods, 45c or three for $1.25. You cannot afford a to overlook this bargain. Watch our window display. Yours truly, jRASNOFF: lUIICANTILE : coo MANNING, S.C. ALCOLU RAILROAD. DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAYS. Effective September 25. 1905. READ DOWN. READ UP. oI o3.N.3 No.. so.. PNo.. ixedl. L'ass. Pss. I- STATIONS. MaedO.. Pass. Pas. A. M. P. M. P.2 M. P. M. A. M. P. M. 10 15 7 00 7 45 0 Lv............ Acou............Ar 25 4 30 8 30 11 20 10 20 7 05 750! 2............ .McLeod*........... .... 23 4 10 8 15 11 05 10 25 7 10 7 55 5 ..............Harby*............... 20 4 05 S 10 11 00 - 10 30 7 15 s 00 7...............DuRant............. 18 4 00 8 05 10 55 11 00 7 35 8 20 12.......... ...Sardinia............. 13 3 30 7 35 10 25 11 10 7 40 8 25 14 ............Gamb1e *............ 11 3 20 7 30 10 20 11 15 7 45 8 30 15 .............Beards*.............. 10 3 15 7 2 10 15 11 25 7 50 8 35 17 ............. Gibbons............ . 8 3 05 7 20 10 14 11 55 8 20 9 05 31............Hudsons* . ...... 4 2 45 7 00 9 50 124545 5 3 25 Ar.........Bethehem..........Lv 0 2 30 6845 9 35 P. M. P. M. P. M. j P. M. A. M. P. M. *McLeod. Harby, Beards and Hudsons~lag stations for all trains. Mondays. No. I and 3. Mondays, No. 2. Tuesdays. No. 5. Tuesdays, No. 4. Wednesdays. No. 1. w' .das No. 4 and No. 2. Thursdays. No. 1 and 3. ThrdyNo. 2. Fridays. No. I and 3. Fridays, o. 2. Saturdays, No. 5. Saturdays. No. 4 and 6. p. Ri. ALDERMAN. F. L. COLLINS; G. F. & P. A. Superintendent. SSUMMERTON' HlARDWARE CO., SUMMERTON, S. C. SJ. C. L ANJ-IAM, 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 stor~e. For shoes, go to a shoe store. For groceries, go to a grocery store. For medicines, go to a medicine store. For HARDWARE and its kindred articles, go to a HARDWARE STORE. Faints, Agricultural Implements, Pumps, Pipe, Stoves and Stoveware, Harness and Saildlery, Crockery and Glassware. We have them all. S Our long residence in the county is our gularantee of fair and honest treattment of our customers. We hav e recently associated with us Mr. J. M. Plowden form erl with the Dillon~ Hardware Company, who thoroughly under sta'nds the hardware business and will take pleasure in giving the Spublie go benefit of his experience. S. R. VENNING, Jeweer. ... Denler in.. M WATCHES, CLOCKS, JEWELRY, SPECTACLES, EYE CLASSEs AND ALL KINDS OF FANCY NOVELTIES. I make a specialty of WEDDING and HOLIDAY PRES ENTS and always carry a handsome line of. Silverware, Hand-Painted China, Glassware and numerous other articles suitable for Gifts of all kirnd. COME ANO SEE TH-EM. All Watch. Clock and Jewelry Repairing done promptly and