The Manning times. (Manning, Clarendon County, S.C.) 1884-current, November 21, 1906, Page 6, Image 6

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Cut says many a doctor to his lady patients, because he doesn't know of any medi cin- that will cure female troubles except the sur geon's knife. That such a medicine exists, howeveris-proved by thousands of cures made by Cures Womb Disease it ia- saved the ives of many wea k.-cmen and rescued oth ers fr:ni a lifetime of chronic sick V, s. It willI cure you if you will give it a chanzc. Try it. Si by all druggts .1ndJ jd ers i t0 o~ls CAVE UP? SUPPORTER. prtfr four S. J.Chino - N. Y. " -Ju dotr said After Can !"y sup Open An Account With Us. You can then pay your bills with checks which we return to you the tist of each month and which are thus made a receipt in full for every dollar you pay out. You can always make change with a check. Bak of Sumnmiterloi, ,Summerton, S. C. 1he Bank of .aimgll , MANNING, S. C. Capital Stock, - $40,000 Surplus, - - 35,000 Stockholders' Lia Dility, .. - 40,000 to Depositors, $115,000 SAVE' your money and start-a Bank Account while you are young, You will be so'rprised to see how r-apidls your .BANK ACCOUNT will grow when you once get used tc saving, eve a little, systematically, No safer place for your money could be found than this Bank. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLIRA Clarendon County. By- James M. Windham. Esq.. Probat' .Judge. W HERtEAS. Abe Levi andH.J Harby made suit to me, to gran t'hem Letters of Administration of th( estate of and effects of W. D. Gamble These are therefore to cite and ad monish all and singular the kindret and creditors of the said W. D. Gamn ble, deceased. that they be anc an)pear before mne, in the Court of Pro bate, to be held at Manning on the 22i day of November next after publicatiol thereof, at 11 o'clock in the forenoon to show cause, if any they hat e, wh2 the said administration should not bi granted. . Given under my hand, this 7th da; of November. A. D. 1906. [SEAL.] JAM ES M. WINDHAM, Judge of Probate. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA County of Clarendon. By James M. Windham, Esq., Pro bate Judge. IN THE PROBATE COURT. HTEEREAS, Jas. H. Hawkins mad< ~suit to me to grant him let ters of administration of th< estate of and effects of W. D. Gamn ble. These are therefore to cite ani admonish all and singular the kin dred and creditors of~ the said W D. Gamble, ,deceased. that the: be and appear before me. in th< Court of Probate, to be held at Man ning, on the 22d day of Novembe. next, after publicatio'n thereof, at 1: o'clock in the forenoon, to shov cause, if any they have, why the said administration should not b4 granted. Given under my hand this 7tl day of November, A. D. 1906. JAMES M. WINDHAM, [SEAL.] Judge of Probate. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure Digests what you eat i0LYEYEPTAJ for ck.udren; care, esure. Jto opite KodoI Dyspepsia Curc Fortunate Missourians. len I was a druggist at Livonia. 31..- writes T. J. Dwyer,now ofGrays ville, Mo.,"tbree of my customers were permanently cured of consumption by Dr Kings New Discovery, and are Iwell and strong today. One was trying to sell his property and move to Ari zona, but after using New Discovery a short time he found it unnecessary to do so. I regard Dr. King's New Dis covery as the most wonderful medicine in existence." Surest Cough and Cold cure and Throat and Lungr healer. Guaranteed by druggist. Z0e and ii. Trial bottle free. Sold by The Arant Co Drug store. Cats. A man of cats declares it is the worst of luck for a pet black cat to forsake your home. A woman of cats asserts it is the best of luck. In the middle ages Satan's favorite form was a black cat. Witches always have a cat as their familiar-a stray black pussy in preference. If a white cat races across your yard a child is going to die. If a stray cat of any color takes up with you, making your house its home. you will have good luckv Napoleon Bona parte showed a morbid horror of cats. The night before the battle of Water loo a black cat passed near him, and at the sight the great warrior was com pletely uunerved. He saw an omen of defeat. Henry III. of France swoon ed whenever he saw a cat, and one of the Ferdinands of Germany would tremble in his boots if aii-. mless tabby got in the line of his vision. Among the Romans cat was a symbol of lib erty. The Egyptians held the animal in veneration under the name of Aelu ris, a deity with a human body and a cat's head. Whoever killed a cat. even by accident, was put to death. Diana *assumed the form of a cat and excited the fury of the giants. Tellowtail Fishing. There are no "between rounds," no breathing spells. with the yellowtail. He is fighting for his life desperately. no quarter given nor asked, with an amazing staying power akin to that marvelous faculty of the leaping tuna. The angler is far more likely to be the first one exhausted; the inches of line gradually granted to the "pump ing" rod are earned by the sweat of his brow and the semiparalysis of the bi ceps. "Have I got a fish or a devil?" ex claimed a weary Englishman after a half hour's work, with Sir Yellowtall still gamboling at the end of 200 feet of line. And many have shared his astonishment while "catching" these animated galvanic batteries. That man has lived and lived in tensely to whose bending rod a half dozen lusty yellowtail have capitulated in a bright afternoon. May his re maining history be ever so humdrum or prosaic, that crisp encounter wil illuminate the dullest moments.-F. L. Harding in Field and Stream. Brazil's Jungles. The jungles of Central America and Brazil are masses of vegetation so dense that it is practically impossible to penetrate them. Swain and his par ty when crossing the isthmus of Da rien labored hard with their hatchets and machetes the whole of one day and achieved but half a mile. In many parts of Central America the under growth renews itself so rapidly that it is almost impossible to keep a road open through it. In one instance in Honduras a road sixteen feet wide was made by engineers and laborers through a' jungle, the underbrush and vines being cut away even with the ground. Two weeks later, returning to complete the work by laying stones on the roadbed, they could not find the road, the vines having completely filled the vacant space. As Seen From a Balloon. Sense of danger you have of course none, for you are so aghast at the dan gers run by your dear ones below from motors and bicycles and trains and gas works and all the other things ter restrial that all concern for your own safety goes. And the shocking air they breathe and the horrid little wormlike trains that burrow in and out of dark looking holes-how u healthy the whole earthly existence seems to you as you glide motionless through the air, with white clouds be low you stretched out as a sort of sil ver carpet at your feet and above you nthing but a limitless expanse of deep blue sky :-Bystander. Velvet. Telvet is manufactured by placing in the loom rows of very short threads of the material designed to be employed, whether cotton or silk. These are then caught up by the cross threads in the weaving and fastened in such a way that the fleecy ends present themselves all on one side of the fabric. The man ufacture of velvet is so slow that for a hand weaver a yard is considered a good day's work. The machine made velvet is of course turned out much more rapidly. -Corrected. "No," remarked the man who had traveled and had returned to the place of his birth, "the village is not what it [used to be. Many of the old landmarks have vanished." "What landmarks?" asked the native resentfully. "Why, the town pump, for instance." "Call that a landmark? I call it a water mark:" Parental Influence. - "Sir," said the young man, "I trust you will object to my marriage with your daughter?" "Why so?" queried the astonished parent. "Because." explained the young man, "if you do I think she will egnsent to have me.--Chicago News. What She Said. Jack-I thought you were very at tentive to Miss Banker. Tom-I was, but after what she said I shall have nothing more to do with her. Jack What did she say? Tom-She said -"No." Purity of Bread. It cannot be too often repeated that -of all food that comes to table there is nothing so pure as bread. - London Bakers' Times. Hewho lives after nature shall never .be poor: after opinion shall never be rich.-Senieca. Cured of Bright's Disease. Mr. Rlobert 0. Burke, Elnora, N. Y., writes: "Before I started to use Foley's Kidney' Cure I had to get up from twelve to twenty times a night. and I was all bloated up with dropsy and my eyesight was so impaired I could searce ly see one of my family across the room. I had given up hope of living, when a friend recommended Foley's Kidney Cure. On~e fiftv' cent bottle worked wonders and before I had taken the thir2 bottle the dropfy had gone, as well as all other symptoms of Bright's St. Napoleon. Many people ignorant of the true his tory of the church will be scandalized when they read the title of this article. Let them read it to the end. There was in Corsica som'e hundred yearis ago a very pious family called the Do napartes. Their first child was born on the 15th of August, Assumption day. and as he looked very small and feebvle they wanted himi to be baptized without delay. Their priest consented to perform the ceremony, but as it was customary to give to a child the name of the patron saint of his or her birth day the good priest could not and would not call him "Assumption Bon:a parte." In his embarrassment he look ed carefully over the "Lives of the Saints" and finally found the name of a saint martyr who in the first centu ries of the church had been stoned to death on that very day of Aug. 15. Of course neither 'Mr. nor Mrs. Bonaparte objected that their firstborn child should be named Napoleon, having thus the high patronage of a brave martyr of the early Christian church. Letter to Philadelphia North AmericanI. A Blunder In Poets. Tennyson is not the only poet lau reate whom Regent street has known. Southey relates a ludicrous scrape into which he and Campbell fell one day in the Quadrant. Campbell wished to relieve a poor woman and rushed into the nearest shop to change a sovereign. The shopkeeper was attending to cus tomers and delayed to oblige him, and the generous poet lost his temper. Thereupon the shopkeeper jumped to the conclusion.that be had two rogues to deal with and rashly sent for the po lice. Campbell stood In helpless fury, but when Southey explained things to the constable that worthy, who happen ed to be a Glasgow man, at once ex claimed, "Guidness, mon, is that Mais ter Camell, the lord rector o' Glaisgie?" After that it was difficult to separate Campbell and the shopkeeper, so warmly were their hands interelasped in explanations and forgiveness. - Westminster Gazette. Cornish Fisherznen. In the estimation of the average Cornish fisherman rabbit is an omi nous word, and should it happen to be used by any one in their hearing when they are on their way to sea it Is suffi cient to send them home again for that occasion for fear of accident. In Corn sh fishing circles many tales are told of disasters that have followed defi ance of this superstition and persist ence in.putting off in their boats after the unlucky word had been spoken. Formerly the word church was equal ly obnoxious to the fishermen and was sedulously eschewed In conversa tion, on the water particularly. If a case arose, as sometimes it would, in which a sacred edifice had necessarily to be referred to, "cleeta" was used nstead of church, and whatever was ominous or evil in the sound of the latter was Imagined to be thereby avoided, The Innkeeper of .England. England's unpopularity with the Englishman-and the American-is largely due to the country innkeeper. "If any class of public servant ought to be made to pass an examination it is certainly the licensed victualer,' writes V. V. V. in the London Sphere, for at present any man may obtain a license without any knowledge of cooking, housekeeping, sanitation-any knowledge of anything but of the due pulling of a beer handle. Moreover, his wife may be the most incompetent of housewives, even for her own family. On the continent Inrkeeping is an art to be studied. In England it is too often the refuge of the man who wants an easy chair 10 sit in. An Hour Before Dawn. A curious mystery is the temporary uneasiness of animals about an hour before dawn, no matter at wvhat hour this occurs. Children turn and moan, elderly people awaken and turn over for another sleep, cocks crow, dogs be come uneasy and horses and cattle move about for a short period, when stillness returns for a time. What is the cause? Are the animals affected by some magnetic wave which pre cedes sunlight an hour or so, or Is the habit one of heredity passed down through numberless generations from an original wild state, when an alert ness just before daylight was neces sary for protection from enemies? England the Land of Flowers. I know not why Italy rather than England should be called the land of flowers. The truth is that the English people are an art loving one and that in England more than in any region of Italy or country of Europe flowers are in evidence everywhere and, with the grasses and plants and universal vege tation, are more intimately and peren nially intertwined with human exist ence itself.-Naples Ii MIattino. HIs Personal Appearance. MIamma-I'm afraid that young Wild er will not make you a good husband, Clara. Clara -Why not, rmamma? amma-Because it seems to me that he rather neglects his personal ap pearance. Clara -- Yes, that's true, mamma, and I'm glad you mentioned It. I'll see that lie makes his personal appearance here every evening after this instead of only twice a week. Innuendo. "Maw, what is a reprobate?" "Ask your father. Johnny." Now, why should a man become in censed over a harmless little episode like this?-Louisville Courier-Journal. Amiability. Bogg-Did he hurt -hbimself whea he fell downstairs? Fogg-I think not. He died without making a sound.' Harper's Weekly. ___ A Mountain of Gold could not bring as much happiness to Mrs. Lucia Wilke, of Caroline, Wis.,as di. one 25c box of Bucklen's Arnica Salve, when it completely cured a run nng sore on her leg, which had tor tured her 231long years. Greatest an tiseptic healer of Piles, Wounds and Seres. 25c at The Arant Co. Drug Some Little Excuse. "What have you to say as to thIs charge that you kissed this girl?" "I admit it, but there were extenuat ing circumstances." "What were they?" "Shc sat in .my lap and threw her arms around my neck."-New York Press. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. he Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the cignatu of a e AN ODD BIRD SPECIES. She Does the Courting and He Most ol the Nursery Work. Wilson's phalarope is very common in nearly all parts of the northwestern prairies wherever ihiere are grassy pools or sloughs. It is a quiet, beauti ful little bird, with no immodest out cries, feeding prettily along the moist ma:.rgins of the sloughs and not dis tressing itself over our presence. From nearly every standpoint this phalarope, like all other species of its class, is an anomaly among the birds. Ap pamrently a land bird, it has partially webbed or scailoped feet and is a good and graceful .swimmer. The female is the larger an'd handsomer of the pair. She does the courting and he most of the subsequent incubation and nursery work. le is duly meek and obedient, as becomes the husband of an amazon, for so worthy and strenuous a young female as she will not tolerate a buck hanging around idle when there Is plenty of useful work to be done. For her part, to lay eggs so big that the chicks are clothed and able to run at birth is all that should reasouably be expected of her. Their marital rela tions are otherwise scandalous from our point of view: Two or three idle, vainglorious females are often seen devoting themselves to one little male at the height of the nesting season, and no one seems to be sure w1 ther or not he is the husband of - one or all of them. Anylhw, they are all head over ears in lo.e with him.-Her bert K. Job In Outing Magazine. INDIAN 'REMEDIES. Peculiar Medical "Methods Used In the Far East. Great virtues are ascribed to the claws and horns of certain animals. Tigers' claws are in great demand with the common people. One or two claws may be worn near the loins, but should one possess a larger number the fortu nate owner makes a garland of them and wears them around his neck. Deer's horn ground into the paste Is an. excellent balm for pain and swellings. A more curious use Is found for the same substance; It is sometimes made into a powder which is supposed to aid the growth of stunted women. The joints taken from the long and slender tail of the black 'scorpion are supposed to keep illness at arm's distance when children wear them on their waist thread. A red or swollen eye is cured by hav ing It touched with the bolt or chain of a door. A remedy which I have seen applied with considerable effect in more than one epileptic fit is to place a bunch of keys in the palm of the suffer er. I have heard It said that the fit passes away as readily If the keys are placed on the head. A rather quaint remedy in the case of a sprained neck is to use an iron measure for a pillow. Sore throat Is cured by spitting on redhot iron, quite the simplest and least expensive cure known to the native doctor. Peacock's flesh and pig's ghee are the best medicines for acute rheu matism.-Madras Mail. The First Steam Power. The power of steam was known to Hero of Alexandria, who exhibited what seems fromn the description to have been a small steam engine to Ptolemy Philadephus and his court about 150 B. C. Pliny describes a small boat built by a "magician" of Rome which moved by means of a wheel "driven by a pot of hot water." Watt's invention of a rotary steam engine was patented in 1700. The first railway locomotive was built by Trevithick in 1804. The first practical locomotive was perfect ed by Stephenson in 1S20. As early as 1707 Denys Papin built a model of a steamboat, which was destroyed by a mob of boatmen. The first practical steamboat was built by William Sym ington in 1802. In 1803 Robert Fulton in connection wvith Chancellor Living ston built a steamboat, which was tried on the Seine. In 1807 the Cler mont began trips from New York to Albany. ________ No Influence With Him. During a municipal election in a town in the west of Scotland a young lady who was canvassing on behalf of one of the candidates called at a house, the door of which was opened by the goodwife. "I have called to solicit your vote on behalf of 41r. --," said the young lady. "But it's not me that's got the vote. It's me man," replied the woman.. "Yes," said the young lady, "but I thought you might perhaps use your influence with him." "MIe inilooence him?" said the good wife. "I hiv nae inflooence wi' him. Only this morning I asked him to wash 'the floor afore he went out, and he wadua dae it." No Hurry. The minister was shocked when the young woman declined an introduction to some of his parishioners. "Why, my dear young woman, did you ever think that perhaps you will have to mingle with these good people when you get to heaven?'' "Well ," she exclaimed, "that will be soon enough."-Life. Another Way to Put It. "Ater all" said the moralist, "the almighty dollar is man's greatest ene my. It"' "If that's so," interrupted old Ror Iy, "I guess that young wife of mine merely loves me for the enemies I've made."-Philadelphia Ledger. Not Intended. He (after introduction)--Allow me to inform you that I am the last of the great family of the Van Siltens. She (thoughtfully) - Delighted to hear it, Tm sure.-Le Rire. Nothing to Fear. Mothers need have no hesitancy in continuing to give Chamberlain'sCough Remedy to their little ones, as it con. tains absolutely nothing injunious. This remedy is not only perfectly -:afe to give smnall children, but is a m~edicine of great worth and merit. It has a world wide reputation for its cures of coughs, colds and croup and can al ways be relied upon. For sale by The Arant Co. Drug store. Brokenx Englisha. Teacher-What are the parts of speech? Tommy Tucker-It's--it's when a man stutters.--Chicago Tribune. Do what you consider right, what ever people may think of it, despite censure and praise.-Py'thagoras. Torments of Tetter and Eczema Allayed. The intense itching characteristic of eczema, tetter and like skin diseases is instantly allayed by applying Chamber. lain's Salve and many severe cases have been permanently cured by its use. For sale by The Arant -Co. Drug An Awful Cough Cured. "Two years ago our little girl had a touch of pneumonia. which left her with an awful cough. She had spells of coughing, just like one with the whooping cough and some thought she would not get well at all. We got a bottle of Chamberlain'sCough Remedy, which acted like a charm. She stopped coughing and got stout and fat." writes Mrs. Ora Bussard, Brubaker, Ill. This remedy is for sale by The Arant Co. Drug store. LEAD GLASS. The Processes by Which It Is Cut and Polished. Designs to be followed by the cutter are first drawn on the blank or plain glass with whiting and water and then traced with red lead and turpentine. The first cutting is classed as "rough ing" in the glass factory, when the glass is cut or ground out wherever there is. a red line. The first cutting or roughing is with a soft steel disk on which there flows a small stream of water and very fine sand. The disk is in a lathe, and the glass is held by the hands of the cutter, andAen his ability to firmly hold the glass and true eyesight to see that lines are fol lowed depends the quality of the arti cle. Cut glass in blank or plain form is known as lead glass or best metal glass, crushing or collapsing like sand instead of shattering or breaking like window or lime glass. From the roughing or first cutting the article being cut goes to the smoothing process, the same lines or cutting being followed on two stone disks, one of Graigleigh or gas stone imported from England and the other of blue stone, the finest cutting being done with the latter. The polishing is done with wooden disks, from which the glass goes to an acid bath and thence back to the polisher, who uses a chemical compound like putty, and finally to a felt disk or wheel, then the brush wheel and finally the wash with water. ROBBED BEN FRANKLIN. His Description of 'the Stolen Gar ments and the Thief. The following advertisement is taken from the Pennsylvania Gazette, No. 532, wherein the reader of Feb. 22, 173S, was informed that the Gazette contained the "freshest advices, for eign and domestick, printed by B. Franklin, Post Master, at the news printing offices. near the Market. Price, 10 shillings a year. Where ad vertisements are taken in and Book Binding is done reasonably in the best manner:" STOLEN on the 15th Instant, by one William Lloyd, out of the house of Benj. Franklin, an half worn Sagathee coat lind with.silk, four fine homespun shirts. a fine Holland shirt ruffied at the Hands and Bosom, a pair of black broadcloth Breeches, new ,seated and lined with leather, two pair. of good worsted' stock ings, one of a dark color, calmbrickNHand kerchief, marked with an F in red.silk, a new pair of Calf skin shoes, a Boy's-new Castor Hat, and sundry other things. N. B.-The said Lloyd pretends to un derstand Latin and Greek and has been a schoolmaster;. He is an Irishman, about 30 years of age, tall and slim; Had on a lightish colour'd Great Coat, red jacket, a pair of black. silk breeches, an old felt Hat too little for him and sewed on the side- of the crown with wthite Thread, and an old dark colour'd wig; but may. per haps wear 'dome of the stolen cloathes above mentioned. Whoever secures the said Thief so-that he may'be brought to Justice, sh'all have Thirty Shillings re ward and 'reasonable charges. paid by B. FRANKLIN. Triplets In China In some of the southern provinces of China there is a superstition that If triplets are born one of the three chil dren will eventually become a noted rebel. In order to grvoid that direst of Chinese curses, bad son, a "wise man" Is sent for. in order to decide which of the three children Is the destined black sheep. The three infants having been conveyed into a perfectly dark room, the "wise man" takes three -pieces of twine, eachi of a diffrent color, as white, red and black, and, entering the room, ties one of these pieces of string around a wrist-of each baby. The one which when brought out into the light is found to have the red string on its 'rist is drowned like a puppy. "Book of Advertisement." The "Book of Advertisement" would at the present day mislead most read ers 'by its title. It was prepared at the command of Queen Elizabeth and printed In 1505. The purpose of the book was to define the doctrines, disci pline and ritual of the English church, so that uniformity should be secured in Gret Britain. "This book was the di rect origin of a denominational title in England, for, after Its . publication, Sampson, dean of Christchurch, in Ox ford, and Humphrey, professor of di vinity at Oxford university, with oth r, dissented from some of the doc trines it contained; hence they were called nonconformists. A Pinless People. A member of the Chinese legation, clad in splendid, pale hued silks, was talking. "Pins," he said, "cause un tidy habits. We have no pins in China. The right way to fasten things Is with buttons and buttonholes or with loops and frogs. To fasten things with pins is to make use of an untidy makeshift. To employ pins is to become lazy and slovenly. We have no pins in China. Certain foreign manufacturers shipped iillions of them to us In the past, but we sent them back. We had no use for them. ~We were too neat" Youthful Impressionism. "One of the lads In my Sunday. school class," writes a correspondent, "had been to a musical service and had heard there a violin solo In which a number of the notes were played with finger instead of trie bow-pizzi cato, I think, is the musical term. The boy described Is as 'a piece with a hic cough In it.'"-Manchester Guardian. Rural Excitement. "Was there much life In the country town from which you camey' ' Well, I guess! You ought to have seen the gatherings in our cemetery of a Sunday."-Harper's Bazar. Show us the man who never makes a mistake and we Will show you a man who never makes anything.-Waylanld He Was Realistic. A newly enrolled volunteer was rath er alarmed during his first experience of a sham fight, especially as heheard the colonel in command declare that everything was to be done "the same as in Actual warfare." No sooner was the first blank cartridge fired than the frihtened soldier dropped his gun and too to his heels. "Hey, why are you running awvay?" shouted his captain as the man dashed by him. "It's all right, sir. I'm doing the same as I would do in actual warfare." -M id Answers. The new Laxative that does not gripe or nauseate. 'Vleasant to take. L Do You Wai PERFECT FITI ING CLOTHES ?1 THEN COME OR SEND TO US. We have the best equipped Tailor ing Establishment in the State. We handle High Art Clothing golely and we carry the best line of Hats and Gent's Furnishings in the city. Ask yourmost prominent men who we are, and they will commend you to us. J. L DAVID & BRO,, Cor. King & Wentworth Sts., CHARLESTON, - S. C. Geo.S. Hacker &Son MAiUACTUsan ords C2 ICI Winding and BulssaSialn, Undertaking. A co plet s o h nd h ars b e nedp o eco ty als WU H I-OUCM SHAIN SALOON - Doorsh shttd Bihda, cMstoerial,.. CHARCUTTINGC Sashneighntes and Crs A co let st ino viastsi o fn s n be spe tendedM . A. J. Wie uea W. B.J. L.INWELL. CMealin Timed BlsC sro DHENTISTOM ANING, SALOC. P oe o th c7 or.f i HAIJ R.N GETIGER MSANING S. C Phone o.h 6. tes n W. C DAVS. . A. WEBER. MANNING, S. C. Phompt aNon gie oolctos JOHN . FRASN. S.EOIGER'R. MANNING, S. C. PhnLENo.NE, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, MANNING, S. C. OH WLOS F .MEt&R~~ ATTORNE onesAT Law, IMANNING, S. C. eATTORNEY AT LAW, MANNING. . C ATTORNEY AT LAW, MANNING, S. C. Hocky Mountai ngTe S.ggC. O.icedivc-r evisy Stope. ATTORNEin AT LAab I c- fom. n en h a nc enied e byc 1jL.ISTa lDam coiwAT, M.adison, Wis. GOmDnN !JUGGETS FOR SALLOW PEOPLE IN cures Stomach and Liver trouble and xative fit Syrup chronic Constipation. The Arant Co. Drug Store. The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over 30 years, has borne the siginatUre Of and has been made under his per sonal supervision since its infany A11owno one to deceive youin this. AU Counterfeits, Imitations and "Just-as-good" are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children-Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other NarcotiC substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea-The Mother's Friend. CENUINE CASTORlA ALWAS: Bears the Sinature of The KiM You HaveAlways B in Use For Over 30 Years. THE CCTAUR COMPANY. 7 MURRAY dTRCET. NEW YORK CITY. Buy Land! The short crops in the vicinity of Manning have calse_: prices this fall not to advance as they did last year.Now is thee tor's opportunity, as with reasonably good crops and prices ex year's land will go much higher. Others think as we do.- A. here are two orders recently placed with us .by two menfrom other counties, and the kind of men this county needs-: First. A fai'm. within easy reach of a high school and good churches, properly improved and costing from five to ten thousand dollars. Second. A farm of from one to two hundred acres, withini reach of a common school and good church, costing from, three to: five thousand dollars. If you can't pay cash we will help you to borrow the mroney~ Manniing Real Estate Agefey E. D. Hodge, Manager. Ouice over Bank of Manning. S. R. VENNING Jeelr ...Denler in... Watches, Clocks, Jewelry,'Spectacles, Eye Glasses and all Kinds of Fancy Novelties. I make a specialtyo WEDDING and HOLIDAY PRESENTS9 and always carry a hadoe line of-. Silverware, Hand-Fainted China, Glassware and numerous other articles suitable for Gifts of all kind. CCME AND SEE T"H'EM. All Watch, Clock and Jewelry Repairmng done promptly and guaranteed. ~g ~ I~ll 9!CII ~s. MANNING..S.C. ALCOLURAILROD. DAILY ENCEPT SUNDAYS Effective iMay 1st, 1906. NORTHEAST.-READ DOWN. SoUTHWEST.-READ UP. No.1. No.3. No. 5. . No.2. No. 4. No.& Mixed. Mixed. Mixed. -sTATIONS. Mixed. Mixed. MIxed. A. M. P.M. -. - 200 7 45 .... L .... ....Alcolu.......... .Ar25 S00 ..... .. 2 05 7 050v........2 ....--. McLeod'........... 2 5 .... . 2 15 8 00 . .... ....... . Harby *.... ..... 201 7.40 ........ ... . 2 20 S.5 ..... 7 --.-- -- DuRant*........ ... 18 7 35 .... .... ... 2 45 8 30 ..... 2 .. .....Sardinia....... ..... 13 7 10 ........ . 2 55 8 40 .... 14 ,....... New Zion*............ 11 7 00 .... . 3 00 S 45 ..... 1 ........Beard*............... 10 6 55 .... . 3 15 9 00 .... 17 .... -.-.Seloc.*............. 8 6 40!.... . 4 00 9 45 ..... 1 ............. Hudson*............. 4 615 ...... 4 30 10 15 .... 5 c.. ... Beulah... ......... Lv 0 . 600 .... . P. M. P.M3 .M * All stations except Beulah and Alcolu are flag stations for all trains. Mondays, No. 2. F~as o Tuceas, No. L.Stras o..adN.3 Wednesays, No. 2 and No. 3. Thursdays, No. 2. R. P. ALDERMAN. Trafflic Manager. For Convenience and Safety, You should deposit your money in a good bank. As for safety, we have Burglary and Fire Insurance. Time Locic, Bonded Officers and Regular Examinations, and our con tinued growth is evidence of the confidence reposed in us by the people of Manning and the surrounding country. Deposits October 1, 1904, $38,154,82. Deposits October 1, 1905, $72,559.67. If your patronage has in any way contributed to our success,, we thank you for same, I i' y.ou are. not already our patron, you are invited to become one. Bank of Clarendon, xing,s.o. BRING YOUR TO THE TIMFS OFFICE