University of South Carolina Libraries
IN T5) H . T What is safer than a National Bank Note- Nothing. Why is a National Bank Note accepted without (uestion in1 any part of tlhe coutry m whieb it may r hi: te Sitil because it is secured by a deposite with the Government. As Safe as a National Bank Note. A policy in the Creensboro Lire Insurance Company is as safe a National Bank Note because it is secured by a deosit or its entire reserve with the Insurance Department of North Carolina. Every policy issued by tie Greensboro Lfe caries this certileate above the signature and seal of the Insurance Commissioner: -This Poliey is re-istered rnd secured bv Iledge or bonds, stoclis or securities deposited with this dc partment as provided by low. A National Bank Note is secured by a deposit of Government Bonds. A policy in the Greensboro Life is secured by a deposit of the entire Legal Reserve, the Legal Reserve being the funds provided for the 1aturing Of all polices. The Difference to Policy=olders. The difference to policy holders in a Life Insurance C'ompany depositing the Legal Reserve and one that does not deposit the Legal Reserve is practically the difference between a man holdi:-g a Nationd aBank Note and a u.an who is merely a depositor in a. National Bank. So long as the bank is solvent, the deposit is good: but whether the bank is solvent or not. the National Bank Note is good because of the bank's deposit with the Government. The note of a National Bank continues to circulate as currency and is redeemable by the Government, even after the bank may have failed. The Law of North Carolina. The Greensboro Life onerates under the Registratioa Law of Forth Carolina. TIi.s hnv prescribes the kind of investments Life insurance Companies ma'y make and stipulates the companies availing themselves of the advantage of this law shall deposit with the Insurance Commissioner the net value of all policies in force. Under such a law. governing the investmen: of funds and their custody, solvency is absolu-ely guaranteed. The funds of the Company cannot be squandered in extravagrant management or invested in doulbt-'i securities. Alwy TVUShe Leaeder. Since beginning business the Greensboro Life has ever been the acknowledged leader of all of the Life Insurance Companies operating in its territory. The Greensboro Life not only leads in volume of business. but also in liberality and attractiveness of policy contracts. During its first four weeks in business (24 working days) the Greensboro Life wrote c ver $500,000.00 of business. -At the end of its first 12 months the business in force amounted to i4, 577.25S.00. When two and one-half years old the business in force had reached S8,400,000.00, while the assets had grown from 8125.000.00 to $324,679.76. These are the figures that show the Greensboro Life's leadership. The terms of its policies demonstrate the Greensboro Life's superiority over all competitors. GREES ,OR LIFE IS ANEC PANYE SUPERIOR IN QUALITY AND ATTAINMENT. Home Office: GREENSBORO, NOTH CAROLINA. The Greatest Subscription (01e? Euer d Gh ArI C t- %- 9 1 -an *1 00 TeMa 1 Tir.11 The Tri-Weekly Constitution Is The Farn'ers' Every.Otheri There Are Three Numbers Each Weas Ass -i, 6,WIth Be * (1.) MONDAY.-The news of greatest interest. - The Farmers' Balance of the nev Union Department, conducted in the interest of the great coopera- o w- a - ', e U:lildren's page, c tive order that is seeking to solve the farmer's economic, education- i al and practical problems. The Farm and Farmers' Department, 1 v-. ol -l !Yives conducted by Colonel R. J. Redding. I Qtv el issues Ui kee (2.) WEDNESDAY.-The news of course. The R. F. D. Carriers' I a An islmen Department, The Chicken Column and The Letter of Travel, giving fron t ie veit set of serals. A ha] views of strange peoples and their home-land customs. soie of fl"(, tes hs orist artists f ti Clubbed With The Tri.Weekly O w Constitution We Have C 1 V L .J' The first page shows a splendid colored county may of (2.) The second shct r cooso ~sa n1o 3 u t::s, of tic' r"Ilers of the boith North and South Carolina, with all the data that can siofs, and of o Pan:t r o t. well be shown on the face of a map. It is beautifully United St-'es map Al ' flier of t:;*v from the severance of the printed in colors on new plates prepared especially for The The Library Wall Ch, (3.) T', is she et gisec s ad W.id ini. ith the topnn with =:tal stri and slands, and a maps of te Rgvl-eofP n :-:0 :sp- i Constitution. land and atrs of tL e globe I: at MOU and Onvnient refrence into hemispheres. I, shows also a mp of the UL~teo S)taLtes tsented. reIn eif ma hes To Or omd the s f tfhe TTh eN.NTR. LibaWaC FrLR NEW ~s SPARE M1N1ENTS, A Macazinte G', V, Sao H~ U,,7 A Whi has been standing for the farmer ad the farm home SeIt Withn you subscribe Spare~~~an convenien reference 1 -:-:4c t fo teny~e easad t s ai lo o no more actual the rr:ice. in the first year oi i13 oxiste it ;ito a what you are going to gc circulation of a quarter o a miion a o F r 11-3 nn aZinc in America thaeet farm homes, in proportion to circulation, than any other pa- W :tangs. eNt prosy or To un epr O MdmAnds Nrs!,satewn Subsor: :!;.1"'-CCeCersb per pblised i Ameica.any mnaiO uh~*~ t~will -.r:n bulk big in the public ey( W hi ha been standing fornthe a rS th n s that are bringing t per published in America.1 There are departments for all phases of farm life, each feracy7 Thc's arti 'otnin":te personal rcalinis- It is crisp, breezy an containing the best at goes. ctchs of rs. Jefferson evaepiubls And With All These THRfEE CONS 1ITUWTCIN3 A %W EEK, Afi 7~E 5,p,:_F A MONTH, We hive eour own yearr of Paipts:, ine it jpto 0 n of news and county happeniofgs, anquarerofd a m nr 1 90-7 COUF GFRE.A=1 ru spare MRoment Tpea re tpis:mWeek:. uoc TayWeekl.DConztitution, Yearly Subscription P-rice .e D So Subscription Price ................. ....d t tL. - D o t an Le, Yearly Subscription Price.f................. .2 T s stlenlid papers and the mape a for Spnainnte Moes talyes Farm News, Yearly Subscription Price ...... ................. 1 0 4 6 New t Ho Ie Library Wal Chart, Easily worth............... 3 'E --a y ua g o5i t g YourHom Paer, eary Sbscrptin Pice.......... ~A~ - _ S a ine Get Amrichat DUVG' TEARS. PcuiaT Qce ULot!c Glob m tIt i : . y : . d t n u~ ~ ~ ~~~~( it h chmn itri' f vr-s d:. life whIith ren!y Se:n to )e lre mn.:.. ai to the .uin:iatedl thIui::ny ovthe wondrs that are ordina rily pwr formed 1 n Miinus on the public sige. Som of thema are so simple that by et:rying-, them (Iot at a pa lor enterai nmn.t a Igight bNy ci acieve Oie reptanti of a magici:m. Now. there areo ecuisltleub bles of ::ss kno-:n variously as S'Pince Ie e rt'; Jros' and as 'Dutch tear s.' parently thety are merely little oluies. of glass with elongated tails iiade by henting a small g's rod in a ll-me and allowing the molt.-n drops to f:i!l into wat' fter thv have coled-I ou anY p. the thiek Iipart with a ]iammer or ... et, yet you ainnnot break them. On ~ the other hIand. if you break a lttle piece fT their tails or touch any part of them wit quart: eryst::l they will disa.p pe:r into the surrounding atimosphere (tuicker thIn snow will melt on a hot fire. To the person who doesn't knoi how this has hnppened the perform nnee is so nstonishing as to seem un1i canny.--London Globe. SHAPED ALMOST ALIKE. Striking Similiarity In Contour Be tween Italy and New Zealand. Saving only for the fact that one is a peninsula and the other a group of islands by far the most striking sini larity in contour exists between Italy and New Zealand. The resemblance of each of them to a high heeled Well uington boot is almost perfect. Cape dell' Armi and Cape Reinga form the toes of the two boots. The bay of Plenty, in New Zealand. and the gulf of Taranto. in Italy. form the instep, while Cape Runaway and Cape Santa Maria di Leuco are respectively the points of the heels. The general shape of the calf of the leg is also the same and so is the curve outward to the somewhat gouty looking toe. The point of dissimilarity is of course the separation of North and South islands into two. It is easy, however, to see that if these two is lands were somewhat raised they would become one and would then even more resemble the Italian penin sula than they do now. A comparison of the islands of Ireland and Sardinia will also show several points of re semblance. but this is nothing like so striking as it is in the case of the two widely separated portions of the world above mentioned. Bumped His Pride. There is. a young man in Boston who can actually trace his family back two generations. Ills one falling is a de sire to be thought a descendant of one of "the old families." and his studio he savs he is an artist-contains a number of heirloomns. One thing in which he takes particular pride is a Continental uniform complete in every detail, with flintlock and powder horn. IIe was showing this to a young lady the other day. "MIy great-grand father wore this suit when he gave his life to his country during the brave days of the Revolution," he said. The young lady inspected the uniform care fully, but could find neither bulletI hole nor saber cut. She turned to him, with a charming smile. "Oh, was the poor old gentleruan drowned?" she asked.-Argonaut. LS ay Paper rs. All the news. The :mducted by genial Aunt he market reports. of the ps one posted right up to t of the month's story f page set of cr-oirs from e day. Sof territory. It also shows por world. It gives also a topographic panese war with the history of it iplomatic relations. rts are all bound together at the hanger, and thus form a splendid encyclopedia of everything pre Edited By Alfred lHenry Lewis or Humnan Life you know exactly t. You're going to get the only is devoted entirely to people, not -people, but men and women who ,men and women who are doing bemn fame or fortune. i entertaining. A dull line is its stitution, Monday, Wednesday one year and all of the above S AND o $2.5 )ont miss a copy. Address al( TIMES, Manning, S. 0. HARMLESS SNAKES. They Are Valuable as Aids to the Agriculturist. It ih not genierally known that the preservation of harmless snakes is as important ai the destruclion of the hosts of rests met with in farming and in aUnt:ket gardening. The national records contain sad his tories of the total or partial extermina tion of many animals which are useful or beautiful or both. Yet there are few animals more use ful in one way than snakes. If human ity alone provented the killing of harm less snakes, how can we justify it when they a-re proved to be useful to us? Consider tho economic relation of a snake to an. ear of corn or a row of potatoes. Snakes live - almost en tirely upon creatures which are de structive to growing things-that is, they cat literally millions of insects, small mammals and worms. Especial ly are potato bugs, worms, flies. bee ties, maggots, ants, grubs, grasshop pers. locusts and the larvae of these the food of most of our snakes. Of considerably over eighty dilfer cut kinds of snakes found throughout the United States and exclusive of the rattlesnakes and mocassins there are but two which can be termed danger ous. We exclude the rattlesnakes and the mioccasius because all are large. easily recognized forms. >vhich cannot be confused with harml . kinds. Liv ing in water, the moccasins are not of ten troublesome to farming regions and are confined to the, south from North Carolina around the gulf coast and the Florida peninsula and along the southern Mississippi, living in swamps. The two really poisonous snakes which might be mistaken for harmless ones are the copperhead and the coral snake. Of the two the copperhead only needs our attention. This truly poiP sonous snake is slender and has few features to distinguish it from harm less milk snakes. It is found usually in rocky hills or stone piles, old cellars being a favorite spot. But it should not be greatly feared, for unless at tacked or stepped on it will not bite, and it is seldom found where there is cultivation of the ground in progress. St. Louis Post-Dispatch. AMERICA'S MOUNTAINS. Grander and Greater In Variety Than the Old World's. North America has suffered shame fully from Alpine arrogance. Its mas ters have looked upon glacierless Colo rado. the ridges bulging faintly above the continental plateau; upon Popo catapetl and his sister titans reaching lthmusvard, upon the snowy dead e:raters of the Cascades, and pitied us iaericans that our lands o'*ered mountain sport for none but women and old men. Volcanoes? An inferior sort of mountain. The Appalachians? Moehills. But on their continent are fields for climbing greater in variety, wider in appeal to every sort of mountaineer. Alpinist included, than on any other of the world's six areas and among the summits physically attainable proba bly the hardest In the world. The Hfimalayas, with greater real eleva tion, have bases of attack discounting ly high, and the accepted Idea that thin air prevents climbing above 25,000 feet bars their tiptops. If South Amner la offers greater height and heroic weather, Alaska requires training in a sport quite new, a subarctic Alpining for which you must persist and endure like a polar traveler, work as and rope. cordel or pack cayuses across tundra. Its ten or more summits be tween 10,000 and 20.300 feet present the greatest effective height, the lon gest snow and ice slopes, in the world. All but Mlount St. Ellas and Miount McKinley. 20,300 feet. the highest on the continent, are- virgin. Mount Lo gan. IO.500 feet, Is the world's remain Ing Alpine problem. Swiss training alone will not win it. Climbers have avoided Alaska, oftener accepting chal lenges from Asia and the Andes. Al pinists must succeed in this ultimate field or come to Judgment for their condescension. Alaska lacks only that prohibitive elevation for which you may as well train in a laboratory vac uum.-Robert Dunn In Outing Maga zine. A Comb In the Claw. Many birds possess a useful comb in the claw of the middle toe of the foot This has been noticed in owvls, night jars, herons, bitterns, cormorants, gan nets, etc. It has been explained as a means of holding the prey securely. The comb is sometimes replaced by a curved blade with teeth, which run along the Inner side of the claw. Such a blade is found in razorbills, wild ducks, gulls, starlings and many other birds. Where a comb is required the inner edge of this blade becomes di vided into teeth. Young nightjars or goatsuckers have only the blade, but ld ones have a well developed comb. Appropriately Named. The boy in the paint store dashed hurriedly up the cellar steps and sought the proprietor. "There's a barrel leaking in the base ment," he cried. "and the automobile stuff is just pouring out." "Why do you call it ant omobile stuff?" asked the proprietor. "Because,"' gasped the youngster, "it's running over everything in sight" -udge.________ His Preference. "Now, Patsy, if it should come to a real issue which would you rather lose. your money or your life?" "Me lolfe. begorra. Oi'm savin' me money for me ould age."-Bohemian. It is better to be unborn than un taught, for ignorance Is the root of msfortune.-Plato. Dont couah your~ head o:I wil'n you en n gt a guaranteed remedy in TUee.4 [Lax:tive Couch Syrup. It is especially recommended for cil iren as it's pleasanlt to take. is a centle laixative hu- expellin.. the phiem from thme system. For eouchs. colds. eroup. whooipmu couan. hoarseness and anl bronch initrouble. (;uaraun teed. Sold by The Manniny Pharmac.y. The Earth's Shadow. The earth has a shadow, but very few ever see it, except in eclipses of the moon, or else few recognize it when they see it. Nevertheless. many of us have noticed on fine. cloudless e-venings in summer shorily before sunset a rosy pink arc on the horizon opposite the sun, with a bluish gray segment uder it. As the sun siks the arc rises until it attains the zenith and even lasses it. This is the shad ow of the earth. Turr.ed Dcwn. "Beg pardon. rsir," said the -waiter, with outstretched pahln. "bu t 'aven't you forgotten sommethmngs"~ --o. replied the departin:g guest, ~but I'm tryingr to forget it Good day.-Catholic standard and Times. DeWitt's Little Early I Esers. s ali. safe. sure little liver iills. Sold by W. ENGLISH LOCAL SPEECH. Peculiar Way the Names of Some Towns Are Pronounced. We Euglish are horribly phonetic and think nothing of spelling our name Featherstonehaugh and pronouncing it 1k1eechai. If you motor you must twist your tongue to the local speech. There is a quiet village in Kent that is spelled Stalisfieid and has achieved the distinction of keeping a railway staiion at nine miles distance. But If you ask your way to it you must call it Starchfell or you will never find it Iluntinlgdonshire claims the purest Ias Ijanover the purest Ger mnun. But by the peasants Papworth is called Parpor. And not far distant is another village of beauty. The mo torist turued upon a rough road and :.sked the intelligent laborer where it would take him. "That road," said the honest countryman, wiping his brow, "wiill take you to 'Ell, sir." The courageous motorist went on and found Ellsworth, which is merely El ser. The trouble as to the pronunciation of place names makes one very diffi dent, a correspondent complains, as to venturing upon pronoupcing any that one knows only by the eye and not by the ear. Being a Suffolk man, he knows that Waldringfield is Wunner ful and Chelmondiston Is Chimston, while in the adjoining county of Nor folk Happisburgh is Hazebro and Hunstanton Hunston, and visits to the west country have revealed that Badgeworthy is Badgery and Corn wood Kernwood. The result is that he would no't dare to make a shot at Uttoxeter or Bathampton, never hav ing happened to hear eCier referred to by a native. After all, there are unfortunate differences of opinion among Londoners, even as to South wark, Brompton and the two Brom leys.-London Chronicle. Mr. John Riha, of Vining. Ia., says: "I have been selling DeWitt's Kidney and Bladdar Pills f:r about a year and they give better satisfaction than any pill I ever sold. There are a dozen people here who have used them and they give perfect satisfaction in every case. I have used them myself with fine results." Sold by W.E.Brown & Co MAKING A BALLOON. The Way It Is Patched, Varnished and Powdered. A balloon consists of patches of cloth about a yard square sewed secure ly together. This is not because of any difficulty in making the fabric of a globular shape, for that could easily be done if the pieces were shaped like the skin on the. section of an apple. The reason is that no absolutely re liable fabric has yet been -invented, and there is always the possibility of the balloon bursting. Should this hap pen to one of these patches, the escape of gas will not be dangerously rapid. as it would be if larger sections were used. When the balloon is made it is care fully varnished, three coats being giv en. and each being allowed to dry thoroughly before the next is applied. If one coat is left moist the fabric will be attacked by a species of dry rot, which will make it as fragile as the paper this is printed on. In the early days of ballooning many fatal accidents were due to this defect, but now the utmost care is exercised. When a balloon is packed up for a journey, powdered chalk is sprinkled between the folds, as otherwise they would stick together and tear.-Pear son's Weekly. ManZan Pile Remedy comes ready to use, in a collapsible tube, with nozzle. One application soothes and heals, reduces inflammation and re lieves soreness and itching. Price 50c. Sold by The Manning Pharmacy. Elements of the Universe. Science declares that up to date the suns ond planets all seem to be built up out of identical materials. We are not acquainted with any element in any of the, heavenly bodies which is not to be found. for instance, on the earth. Helium, for example, first dis covered in the sun, was subsequently found on earth in the rare mineral clevite. In the handful of earth that you pick up at your feet you may be hold the contents of the universe. New York American. A Shave In China. The barberin China freque'ntly pur sues his calling under peculiar condi tions. No soap is used, the parts being simply rubbed with water and then scraped with a fearsome iron weapon made locally, which, though It might astonish a Sheffield cutler, yet answers the purpose very well.-Wide World Magazine. A Hindoo Legend. A Hindoo account of . the creation represents the deity as 'dividing him self in two and uTe- ing of one half man, the other woman. The legend Indicates, as many other things in the sacred books of India do, that the po sition of woman was once very differ ent there from what it is today. In the laws of Mann it is said, "Where wo men are honored the gods rejoice, but where they are not honored all rites of worship are unacceptable." Tickling or dry Coughs will quickly loosen when using Dr. Shoop's Cough Cure. And it is so thoroughly harmless, that Dr. Shoop tells mothers to use nothina else, even for very young ba bies. The wholesome green leaves ten der' stems of a lung healing .mountain ous shrub give the curative properties to Dr. Shoop's Cough Cure. It calms the cough, and heals the sensitive bronchiai membranes. No opium, no chloroform, nothina harsh used to in jure or suppr1ess. Demand Dr. Sboop's Take no other. Dr. W. E. Brown d: Co Hcr Discovery. Professor-Some of the grandest in vetions of the age have been the re sult of accidental discoveries. Young L~ady-I can readily believe it. Why. I made an important discovery myself, and it was the purest accident "I should much like to hear it." "Why, I found that by keeping a bot te of ink handy a fountain pen can be usdl .just the same as any other pen. without any of the bother and mess of filling It.'" A Timely Warning. Mr'. II. was recenitly presented with a handsome revolver, whose qualities he was testing by firing blank car t'idges into the air, when his daughter Natalie. aged six, appeared upon the scene. "Oh, papa," she exclaimed in great distress. "don't shoot at the sky; you might kill an angel!"-Circle. He Meant Well, But "Brains in woman should count for more than beauty." "Oh, but. Miss Sweetly, your beauty Is too strong an argument on the other side of the question." - Browning's Uaaine. Sour Stomach No appetite, loss of strength, nervonsw ness, headache, constipation, bad breath, general debility, sour risings, and catarrh of the stomach are all due to indigestion. Kodol relieves Indigestion. 7bis new discov ery represents the natural juices of digem tion as they exist in a healthy stomach, combined with the greatest known tonlo ind reconstructive properfies. Kodol for dyspepsia does not only relieve indigestion and dyspepsia, but this famous remedy helps all stomach troubles by cleansing, purifying, sweetening and strength the mucous membranes lining the stomach Mr. S. S. Ball, of Raienswood, W, Va.. SayS I was troubled with sour stomach fortwentYidUrs. Kode! cured me and we are now usnag It in mi for baby." FOR BACKACHE--WEAK KIDNEYS TRY DeWITrS KIDNEYand BLADDER PILLS-SrsaadS* Prepared by E. 0. DeWITT & O., ObleS W. E. BROWN & CO. Bank of Summeurton, Summerton, S. C. CAPITAL STOCK - $25,000 00 SURPLUS - - - - - - 8,000 00 STOCKHOLDERS' - LIABILITIES - - - 25,000 00 $58,000 00 IN OUR SAVINGS DEPARTMEI We pay interest at the rate of 4 Per Cent. per annum, compounding same quarterly. RICHARD B. SMYTH, President JOHN W. LESESNE, Cashier. P. B. Mouzon has one of the best Cold Storage plants in town. We are the house keepers deligh t. At our Grocery every thing is clean and fresh, and ol the best goods are handled. CANNED GOODS, OOFFEES AND TEAS, CAKES AND CRACK ERS, FRUITS AND CONFECTIONERY, CHOICE BUT TER, HAMS AND BREAK FAST STRIPS. Every thing that is handled in a First class Grocery. Ite is my object to please and I mnvite~ your patronage. P. B. Mouzon STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, ClaI'rdo6 County. COURT'OF COMMON PLEAS. Decree. W. Scott Harvin, Plaintiff against J. E. M. Hodge. Cassie C. Hodge, Ed ward S. Ervin, and P. P. Erymn, the last two named co-partners do ing business under the firm name and style of Manning Hardware Company, and Dunbar C. Ervin, Defendants. UNDER AND BY VIRTUE OF A Judgment Order of the Court of Comn mon Pleas, in the above stated ae tion, to me directed, bearing date of March , 190$, I will sell at pub lic auction, to the hig~hest bidder for cash, at Clarendon Court House, at Manning, in said county, with'in the legal hours for judicial sales, on Mon day, the 6th, day of April 1908, being salesday, the following de scribed real estate: "All that piece, parcel or tract of land containing five-eights (5-8) of one acre, more or less, and bounded on the North by lot of Lizzie E. Bell; bounded on the East by West Bonn dary Street; bunded on the South by Boyce Street, formerly the Man 'ning and Fuilton Public Road, and bounded on the West by lands of* liarriette LI. Setzer." Purchaser to pay for papers. E. B. GAMBLE, Sheriff Clarendon County. W.0. W.* Woodmen of the World. Meets on fourth Monday nights at 8:30. Visiting Sovereigns invited. DR. 5. A. COLE. DENTIST, Upstairs over Bank of Manning. MANNING, S. C. Phone No Ti. DR. J. FRANK GEIGER. DENTIST, MANNING, S. C. J H. LESESNE, ATTORNEY AT 'LAW, MANNING, S. C. J M cS WAIN WOODS, . ATTORNEY AT LAW, Manning. S C Oaice Over Levi's Store. R. 0. PIRDY. S. OLIVER O'BRY P URDY & O'BRYAN, Attorneys and Counselors at Law, MANNING, S. C. CHARLTON DLRANT, ATTORNEY AT LAW, 31ANNING, S. C. W. C. DAVIS. J. A. WEINBE.RG. DAv1s & WEINBERG, ATTORNEYS AT LAW , MANNING, S. C. Poina tterntioni given to collections.