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'ilinusness, Sick . Clcanses the &ystem e, Sour Stom- Uthoroughly and clears sallow complexions ofI Torpid Liver and SlO ~fIl~~l Chroni C onstipation. Laxa pimples and blotches. to I. live Frui Srp It is guaranteed Pjaasant to taO he W. E. BROWN'& CO. ARANT'S DRUG STORE The Licensed Druggist, Sells Everything in JUST ARRIVED!and MEDICINES car of the celebrated On First-Class Real Estate t enmortgages. ID AITORNEYS AT LAW, e* Mannini u Si Cl en C.lardo P N Club. eryeaning, Pressing. Doefng and Re pair Work done in first-class manner and at reasonable rate. Member's ~Oer 1, 000 in use in Clar- 4 So No pugQse 101:I. 'vAffl C unty All kinds of hizh-grade Tailoring. endonCouny. IGive me a call. '[Pbone No. F4. Owne ofMANNING. S. C. are loud in their - -Winthrop College praises of them. & & NNNING HARDWARE -C0h on Friday, July 1, at 9 a. m. Applicants Ak are cleareLmust be not less than -fteen years of 1W Wr1W 1 1W W 1W1W age.W When Scholarships are vacant after July 1 they wll be awarded to those making the higrest average a this examination, provided they meet the coditions goverin, the award. Applicadts for scholarships sholn thlre iest blaewhsa are,.-prlarsh y ewoods, e tah q tuition The next session will open A m eleared for action. I am a w in the September 21 1910. For farther in irad. Imd ~mve-a plechd toc ofeverffiggfor-masloc and catalot e. address -the farm or in the hoisehold. ROk I=, S. C. y-invite aninspection of my stock of ~BOS -Go~ds., mcYYGoods, u eHESTRA SelsEvertin anyhr 7.Notions, Shoes, Hats, wfffiea-mt nwhr Otranae Frt-Cls.elEtt -hn ,crockery,T, Kf rPI I" Mortgaes.PcicDacs ;.UUU66de ULLL HteijUWare %tc Address.' WAYMAN A SMITH. MBox 45, anning, S. C. 0Cago Discsg E. eaea asthechepes. ten on' bu frm m. IforClenn t, Prsn teing andRe pairmorkeonepieirslass anne andI-fllyreaizetha Iust todo usness ae, oreaioera.Mme' ~p~tw~r. Giise mava call . 'He. 87L. WAYfor. S Gurdian yourfrade ~~~TANNINGe, . . C. ~ 90 -- -a TMetexaminaeion fondheawar oft vat and forN theodmsn of e Worldent onFidy Jl 1 t . .Aplcat age.isihi n Sorhi s re aan We 'wishatoethanlyo1rtcstomerslfor therdebera Ehoeryhing o the est ra aidwe ansav yo mneyon nyartcleinthe odponoersn he aard. ~.9zWe hve jst loaed to cas o Bugiespnto icW ail ordoerss areuld - arite eogPresidentbJohnsonrbeforewihe andxamination forrScholarshcpmexamina Our buyer isenowlnrshepsestrendoths week0wend DAVI Septmber21, 910.Foranr hrf:n andmaHorsesdOU T loINe.adrs ChRockton, S. c. Pull Lii~e ofilivfrlChenleagPlwntandaPyoweRe laat reasonable raaes. We oiily ak forWyouripspectionoPiouriStok De-cFl, a squaredeal, smllticektoandDqsikhaales of aily coaheue of Probate feord ntrec of thehdi NK CARE DO. MnngofC Jnea 19 or iaetes Thf disg tinnd gowt an opraton thalosGouarmdciwn fo ruBase Gm as a dolar, spbalefofoimeeflydae itnnot We wnt o beyou bakers ifyou re ot zrea~ aW. . OWNAMBLE, v~ ae, omeandsee s ayho. i isneveutorlaeian.o lsgod hig or ousefrbOePH ie S. C.,MaI6 110 W.ER O. WR~H. NK OF CHE DN Manig S.NC. .Aet o seondMnda igts LA, iig~e to oup Sthocis com dpet te pinso evte -d yoe ca aeyumnyo n ril postory acine gi ve th bes te wit e ATiN TLW ofa kaany dea~3lter ivatn the county , asticaotesMNIG .C an bwesand I ma-mah e gr a nest ss ourcac competitorsetingient ,l~cios sle atace eoess.sci~iblne t.Ty ' .___________ We Yo'uyafr yornstion tof ouTkbe-Tms ~ AI Home Course In Poultry Keeping IV.- The Modem Science of Incubation. By MILO M. HASTINGS, Formerly Poultryman at Kansas Experi ment Station. Commercial Poultry Ex pert of the United States Depart ment of Agriculture. Author of "The Dollar Hen." [Copyright. 11O. by American Press Asso ciation.] ARTIFICIAL incubation has been practiced in Egypt and by the Chinese for several thousand years. but has been developed in this country only within the mem ory of the present generation. Because of the great extent to which incubators have been advertised, the large circulation of poultry books put out by incubator manufacturers and the favorable views of the poultry papers, which get their chief support from in cubator advertisements, the general impression is that artificial incubation Is a greater improvement over the nat ural method of hatching than is in reality the case. Hens or Incubators. One of the chief claims of the arti ficial Incubation is that by this means chicks can be produced at any season of the year. whereas hens brood caly In the spring and summer. This ad antage is not great, however, as most inexperienced people believe, for chick ens hatched in the winter are difficult to rear, and because of the evening up of prices due to cold storage, as re ferred to in a previous lesson, the use U=.L POEM=D MGM sELEaw= P019 zATu of incubators for hatching winter chicks is not particularly proftable. The second Important advantage claimed for Incubators is that of sav ing labor, or. in other words, they en able one person to hatch a much larger number of chicks than would be pos ible with the use of heas. This claim is worthy of consideration. It is, in fact, the chief reason why Incubators have gained their present standing. As to the percentage of hatching and the vitality of the chicks, the aver age Incubator, especially in the hands of the novice, will hardly equal the natural methods. The writer made an extensive study of the results obtained with incubators by Knsns farmers. The results showed that about as nsany farmers failed with incubators as suc eeded with them. The percentage of eggs that hatch either In incubators or with hens is commonly overestimated. The extraor dinary hatches at poultry shows are usually arranged by setting two incu bators and testng out the live eggs just before hatching and putting them in the one machine. A 00 per cent hatch of all eggs set for the season Is good enough. any very large and successful poultry farms have lower averages. The advisability of purchas ing an incubator will depend upon many circumstances. All those who breed Leghorns will require Incubators. With the Plymouth Rocks, Wyandottes or Ehode Tsland1 Reds I should favor hatching with hens until the poultry work grows to such size that this be comes impractical Eggs For Hatching. There are many superstitious no tions prevalent regarding the relation of the shape of an egg to Its vitality and the sex of the forthcoming chick en. Such notions have .ao ground in fact Eggs having weak shells that might become broken In the nest or nusually small eg should be dis carded. If there are more eggs availa ble than we wish for a sitting It will be better to select the fresher eggs than to be overparticular about shape and appearance. The eggs for batching should be stored in a cool, dry location and shifted or rolled about occasion Eggs exposed to freezing tempera ture If not actually frozen may still retain their vitality, but It Is generally considered best to keep them at a tem perature between 40 and '70 degrees. If kept too warm eggs dry out rapid ly and will not hold their vitality. A good rule is not to set eggs over two weeks old. The Idea that jarring, as by thunder, will Injure the hatching of eggs Is Awithout foundation; like wise the advice to let eggs rest after shipping has been proved to be ground Accomodations For Sitting Hens. The convenience of the arrangement for sitting hens has a great deal to do with the success of the batching. By all means I should advise that a place be provided for the sitting hens away from the general poultry house. This may be in c. separate room or building, where tiers of boxes are used for the nests and feed, water and dust wal low provided in the room. The nest boxes are open on the top, not on the side, and a board is laid loosely across Sand Swept Asr-. In the arid lands of central Asia the air 1s reported as often laden with fine detritus. which drifts like snow around conspicuous objects and tendsi to bury themu in a dust drift. Even when there ?s no apparent wind the air is described as thick with fine dust, and a yellow sediment covers every thing. In Khotan this dust sometimes so obscures the sun that at midday one cannot see to read fine print with out a lamp. Sarcastic. The Manager-I've got a new Idea for a melodrama that ought to make a hit. The Writer-What Is It? The Manager-The idea Is to introduce a cyclone in the first act that will kill all the actors. Hardly. An English political speaker was ad dreing an audience. Urging his hearers to give utterance to their vews, he said, "If we remain silent the people will not hear our heart tM to confine the hen. The ben; are set in groups, so that those sitting on eggs which are to hatch the same time may be given their liberty at once. The attendant has only to re move the board from the nest, lift off the hens and return in a hour to see that there Is a hen on each nest. Another scheme for the easy han dling of sitting hens, the plans for which have been largely sold, consists in constructing a series of outdoor I nests and runways made by setting foot wide boards on edge about one foot apart. The runways are covered with laths or netting except the one in which the nest is constructed, this being protected from the weather by another wide board to form a roof. Each hen thus has her individual nest and a runway, In which the hen may exercise and dust herself to get rid of lice. Old fruit cans are used to pro vide food and water. Such an arrangement for sittizig hens reduces the work of caring for them to a minimum. and if the nests are well protected from the weather and the ground where the nests are located thrown up so that the water will not run in the results are usually better than with hens set indoors. The nests should be arranged so that hens may be ahut on them when the eggs begin to hatch, or the restless hen will frequently leave the nest with the first few chicks and allow the others to die in the shell. Essentia!s of a Good Incubator. In the case of artificial Incubation we have a number of points to look after that do not concern us when hatching hens. The first to be observ ed is uniform temperature-103 Zor all eggs in the machine at ail times. The second consideration and one that causes much more trouble in practice is to provide just sufficient circulation of air of just suffclent dryness to cause the eggs to lose water by evap oration at the normal rate; otherwise the body of the chick will contain too much water or not enough and die in the shell or shortly after hatching. The novice can do no better,-as far as this and other points of incubation are concerned, than to follow the direc tions of the maker of his machine. The following discussion of the points of a good incubator are given to help the poultryman in selecting a I machine or in deciding whether be is capable of handling the problem of artificial incubation successfully rath er than for the purpose of teaching hiz to run any particvular incubator: The case of the incubator should be built double or triple wall to with stand variation in the outside tempera ture. The door should fit neatly and should be made of double glass. The lamp, both bowl and chimney, should be made of heavy metal mater.tl and should have a wick sulfielentlf -wide to maintain the temperature of the incubator with a low blaze. Thelamp s generally placed at the end of the machine, though there are some good incubators now uede with the lamp placed undernesL-- the machine. The heat Is got from the lamp to the eggs by means of a circulation of hot air or a tank of hot water. The hot air ma chines seem to have proved most sue cessful In practice, and the majority of well known makes are now of that type. It Is easier, however, to make a cheap hot water machine that will retain the heat than it is to make a hot air maehine. This is because the1 tank of hot water holds the heat against sudden changes In outside tem perature.I Regulators composed of two metals,! as aluminium and steel, are best. Wa fers fied with ether are more sensi tv, but weaker In action. Hard rub ber bars are frequently used. The In-1 cub~tor needs no arrangement for turning eggs, as this Is not as Impor tant a part of the operation as Is fre quently stated, and the eggs can be roled around rescily with the hand EN OF THE HATCN. at ths. time the trays are taken out to) be turned end to end, a precaution necessary to equalize any effects due to different temperatures In the vari ous parts of the machine. Cooling the eggs, upon which many incubator manufacturers lay considerable stress, has never been proved to be of bene fit A good thermometer is essential in running an incubator and is best lakd face downward on top of the eggs. Thermometers hung in a fixed position above the eggs frequently fail1 to register the temperature of the eggs themselves. The best location for an incubator lsj in the cellar. The more even in tem perature this cells! is kept the better. The cellar should not be so damp as to warp the Incubator, but, on the oth er hand, should notl be entirely dry. If there is a furnace in the cellar or it; is in any way heated open water; should be exposed in a warm place. The ventilation of the cellar is not as Important as Is ordinarily Imagined, for chicks need i ery little oxygen. The Increased evaporation Induced by too much ventilation is a greater evil than lack of fresh rir. Never Learned How to Live. There are people who go through life looking for slights, and they are' necessarily miserable, for they find grievances everywhere. One has the Isame pity for such men as for the very poor. They are the morally Illit erate. They have had no real educa tion, for they have never learned how to live. - Sad Thought. He-Why are you so sad, darling? She-I was just thinking, dearest, that this is the last evening we can be to gether till tomnorrow.--Chicago News. The first sure symptoml of a mind In~ health is rest of heart and pleasure felt at home.-Young. Willing. Jane, at the table we wish to be 'served with alacrity." "All right, mum. Will you have it after the soup'r-London Answers. Kindness is the golden chain by Iwhich society is bound together. Cover crops in Orchards. Clemson Extension Work.-Article VI. The importance of planting cover crops in our orchards is beinc' more ful ly appreciated each year. yet in some of the principal fruit districts of the South we find many large orchards where no cover crops have been planted. The re sult is the soil in these orchards is be coming more impoverished each year by the leaching of soluble fertilizers by sur frce washing and for want of humus. In most cases the orchards are located on the more elevated land which is hilly or rolling with sandy soil and clay subsoil On such soil it is hard to prevent sur face washing entirely, but it could be reduced to the minimum by the proper use of cove., crops. Not only do these cover crops prevent surface washing, but they utilize the soluble fertilizers which would otherwise leach out of the soil. When the crop is turned under, it adds considerable humus to the soil and the fertilizers required -to produce it be come available for the use of the trees. The plants used as cover crops arc of two distinct types, leguminous and non leguminous plants. The legumes, such as clover, cowpeas and vetch. in.addi Lion to furnishing humus have the pow er of collecting nitrogen from the air and adding this valuable fertilizer to the soil for the use of other plants. The non leguminous plants, such as rye, oats and turnips, do not collect nitrogen from the air but when sown in the early fall con sume soluble plant food during their growth which would otherwise be lost by leaching and which is returned to the soil when the rover crop Is plowed under in tme spring. Most soils where orchards are planted are deficient, in both humus and nitrogen and therefore a leguminous cover crop should be se lected. If the tras make sufficient growth without the use of nitrogenous fertilizers then a non-leguminous cover crop may be planted. I think I am safe in saying, however. that there are few commercial orchards in tbe South that are not in need of both nitrogen and humus. To accomplish our purpose of adding nitrogen and humus to the soil and to prevent surface wash ing, we should have both a winter and summer cover crop. Rye followed by cow peas will give best results on poor soil. The rve should be sown in the early fall in order that it may cover -.he' ground as soon as possible and prevent surface washing. The rye should be turned under not later than the last of March. This may be accomplished by double harrowing with the disk harrow and this method is preferable to plowing as itavoids the danger of plowing too deep near the t.-ees. A strip of land six to ten feet wide between the rows of trees should be prepared and the peas sown broadcast about the first of May. Early In September the pea vines should be worked into the soil by means of a disk barrow and the land can be seeded to rye or crimson clove". After one or two crops of rye and peas bare been worked into the soil, crimson clover or hairy vetch may be sown ir stead of rye. Crimson clover makes an excellent cover crop from September to May. As soon as enough seed have rip ened to reseed itself, the clover should be w.3rked into the soil with a disk har row if the clover is allowed to occupy all of the space between the rows of trees during the months of March and April, it will retard the growth of trees to some extent, and therefore I think it bes to turn under the clover early in March. My planis to fertilize and cul tivate the trees early in March, leaving a narrow strip of clover in the middle to reseed itself. A strip two or three feet wide will produce enough seed for the entire middle. After the seed have ri pened. the clover is worked into the soil with a disk harrow and the land may be smoothed and the seed scattered over the entire middle by means of a tooth arrow. Hairv vetch is an excellent over crop and may be treated in the same way as crimson clover. The seed are sown in August or Sep..ember and the crop worked into the soil in the spring. If crimson clover or hairy vetch is to be planted on land where neither of~ these crops has grown before, it will be necessary to inoculate tbe field by se uring soil from hind where retch and lover have previously grown. This soil may be scattered over the land- in the same way as fertilizer immediately after sowing the seed. and then mixed with the soil and seed by means of a woothb harrow. Wheat, oats and barley make good cover crops, but they do not thrive n poor laud as well as rye. In no case should grain be allowed to mature in the orchard as it would rob the trees of moisture and plant food at the very time they need them most. When a good crop of cowpeas, retch or rimo'c clover is added to the soil, we are at the same time greatly enriching the supply of nitrogen which is our most expensive fertilizer. Prof. C. t; NEWMtAN S. C. Experiment Station. A Man Wants To Die only when a lazy liver and sluggish bow els cause frightful despondency. .But Dr. King's New Life Pill expel poisons from the system: bring hope and cour age: cure all Liver, Stomach and Kid ney troubles; impart health and vigor to the weak, nervous and ailing. 25c at~ all druggists. The First Fork. The first fork? The fork, as a mat ter of fact, did not appear as a table Implement until the seventeenth cen tury, though as early as the thirteenth century gold and silver ones were made for special purposes. The ordi nary diner was only provided with a trencher, a napkin and a spoon. For knife he used his own, which he car ried about, and, worse, there was no second trencher, no second spoon. When the several courses came along he exercised his ingenuity and mopped his trencher with his bread. His spoon-well, we ourselves lick postage stamps!-London Chronicle. Comparing Notes. Mrs. Slowboy-My husband's so lazy that if It wasn't for me I don't believe he would get up in time to go to bed. Mrs. Bounder-My husband's differ eut. He scarcely goes to bed in time to get up. A Regular Tom-Boy was Susi-climbing trees and fencer, juwpig ditches. whitling, always get ting scatches. cuts, sprains, bruises, bnmps, burns or scalds. But laws: Her mother just applied Bucklen's Arnica Salve and cured her quick. Heals every thing healable -Boils, Ulcers, Eczema. Old Sores. Corns or Piles. Try it '.5c at all druggists. His Jo'o. Joe-I have got a good job at last. Ben, me boy. Ben-What be doin'? Joe-Oh, l'm a cashier In a p'lice orfis. and? a rattlin' good job it is. Ben-A cashier In a p'iice orfis. Joe. What's that? I never 'eard of that afore. What's yer dooty? Joe-Duty! I counts the coppers as they come in.-London Answers. Pretty Icy. "So she treated you coldly?" "Coldly! Say. I'd have had to have a sextant and an artificial horizon to be able to find out what latitude I was in if I had been there for that pur pose."Chcago Record-Herald. DR.KING'S N!EW DISCOVERY Wil Snrely Stop That C000h. The Cnfcderate Moinmeat The movement so long neglected has at last begun to erect a monument to the memory of the heroes who wore the gray,-soldiers whose record was the marvel of the civilized world. Clarendon now proposes to place upon the court house square a suitable mark of its pa triotitm by having erected a shift in honor of those who responded and laid down their lives upon their country's aitar. All contributions sent to THE M.ANNIN TIES will be acknowl'11-Qd through its columns. J. H. Lesesne ..................$1000 Louis Levi...................... 10 00 Fred Lesesne ... ........ .... 10 00 Mrs. E. Appl:-.................. 1000 David B. Jones.......... ....... 10 00 D. L. Green............ ........ 500 C. M. Mason.................... 500 R. F. Ridgeway...... ..... ..... 1 00 J. M. Strange.................. 500 W. T. Wilder...........-.... 00 R R. Harvin. Tadmor. Tex. 10 00 Lion Fondles A Child. In Pittsburg a savage lion fondled the hand that a child thrust into his cage. Danger to a child is sometimes. great when least regarded. Often it comes through Colds, Croup. and Whooping Cough. They slay thousands that Dr. Kin,'s New Discovery could have saved. "A few doses cured our baby of a very bad case of Croup." writes Mrs. George B. Davis, of Flat Rock, N. C. "We al ways give it to him when he takes cold. It's a wonderful medicine for babies." Best for Coughs. Colds, LaGrippe. Asth ma. Hemmorrhages. Weak Lungs. 50c. $1.00 Tria: bottle free. Guaranteed bv all druggists. .%as in rawn. In the delightful days ofyore a vote frequently fetched hundreds of pounds. roor electors would not wait for an election, but would borrow from the candidate sums of money, for which they would give promissory notes. And when the reform bill was spoken of to some electors in Stafford they expressed their pleasure at it and hoped that there would be introduced into the bill some plan for the better payment of poor voters! For the con enience of would be K. P.'s seats used to be procurable for E5.000 or 6, 000 cash down, while toward the close of the eighteenth century the borough of Garton and many others were ac tually publicly advertised for sale by auction. The sales were not for a sin gle parliament but the fee simple In cluded the power of nominating the two representatives forever.-London Globe. Chinese Names of Places. Chinese names of places often define their character. Thus the terminal "yang" means fortess, Pingyang the "fortress of peace." "Cbeng" means a walled city, as Fenghuangeheng the "Phenix waled city." "Shan" Is a mountain. "hal" the sea. "kuan" a camp; thus Shankakuann is the -.noun tain sea camp." A "ling" is a moun tain pass; Moffenlnz near Mukden. is the "heaven scraping pass." The suixes tao" and "to" Indicate inds: "po" or "pho." a harbor; "wan," a bay; "kang" and "ho." a river; -kow." a port; -fu," a first class city; "ju," a provincial capital. "Pel" s north. "nan" is south. "king" Is cap ital. These sufmxes help to explain such familia names in these days as nantao, Chemulpo, Tallenwan, Yangtseklang, Honihn inkow, Che fu, Anju, Peking. ami Nanking.-New York Tribune. The Suspect's Declaration. Parson Whites precautionary nmas ure of protecting his chicken coop with chied steel bars was futile, for that very night four more of his choice Leghorns disappeared, leaving the sev ered and twisted bars as the only vis ible evidence of the theft. However, his suspicions pointed toward his next door neighbor, whom he had sneen prowling around his yard that day, and accordingly he had this suspect up in police court the next morning. "If the prisoner can file an alibi I'll let him off with a suspended sen tence" announced the judge at the end of the evidence. "Can you file an alibi. Ham?" "Aht guess Ah kin," eagerly rejoined the suspect, "If It ain't any habder den Pason White's chicken coop bibs!" Brooklyn Life. Commane Julius A. Pratt Past No. 143 Dept. III., 6. A. R. Mr. Isaac Cook, Commander of above Post, Kewanee, Ill., writes: -'For a long time I was botherec with backache and pains across my kidneys. About two monts ago I started taking Foley Kid tey Pills and soon saw they were doing just as claimed. I kept on taking them and now I am free from bacitache, and, the painful bladder misery is all gone. r like Foley Kidney Pills so well that I have told many of my friends and com rades about them and shall recommend them at every opportunity." W. .. Brown & Co. She Didn't Dance. In 173G a gentleman living in Hamp shire. England, named Samuel Bald win, died after a rattler stormy and most unhappy married life. In his wil he directed that all his vast estate be given nis wife on condition that she should dance upon his grave from time to time. As the will further instructedl that his rernains should be taken by boat to the Needles and from there cast Into the sea. this, of course. pre vented his widow from fulfilling the co:ditons of the wii. and thus lost her the property. He, however, had his revenge for the various tempers she had exhibited during their life to gether and for the remarks she often made that she "would yet dance upon his grave." - Cinci:.uati Commercial Tribune. CASTOR IA For Infanits and Chilren. The Kind Yen Have Alvajs Bought Bears the Signatre of His Mental lr.capacity. The Court-So ycu ask divorce from this mian on the ground of mental in. capacity. What proof have you that h's lnsane? The Woman-Who said he was insane, your honor? The Court -Why, you say he is mentally Incapa ble. The Woman-Yes; incapable of understanding that I'm boss. Enthusiasm Dulled. ~Don't you feel as If you would like to leave footprints In the sands of time?" asked the ambitious citizen. "No" answered Mr. Crosslots gloom ily; "out where 1 live the mgd Is eight een inches de-ep, and I don't feel as if I wanted to see another footprint as !on as 'I jive."-Washinton Star. Folev Kidney Pills are antiseptic, tonic and restorative and a prompt cor rective of all urinary irregularities. Re fu-,se uitutes W. E. Brown & Co. The Baik, of Maiming, Manning, S. C. Capital stock........ ......... $40,000 Surplus..... ...-......... ... 40,000 Stockholders' Liability ........ 40,000 Total Protection to Depositors. $120,000 START YOUR BOY in the right way. Good habits instilled in the youth will bear good fruit in after years. Whether it be ge small account of the boy or a businessaccount of the man that is entrusted to us we can guaranteed perfect satisfaction YOUR HOUSE. Then if re comes you will be saxed many a worry and MANY A DOLLAR. In this age of the world when the pro tection of a good Fire Insurance Policy costs so little, and the risk of fire is so great, it is simply poor business to go uninsured. If. 1 FIND WMi'll E. C. HORTON, anager. Hacker Mfg. Co. SUCESSORS TO Geo. S. Hackr & So, emuArmT S. c. We Manufacture Doors, Sash and Blinds; Columns and Balusters Grilles and Gable Ornaments; Screen Doors and Windows. WE DEAL IN Glass. Sash Cord and Weights. A. J. WITE & CO., Sucessors to W. E. JENKINSON CO. UNDERTAKERS. We have bought the Undertaking Department of W. E. Jenkinsn Co. ad will keep'on hand a. complete line. of Coffins and Caskets.. We are also prepred to do Embalming. Will also carry a line of Picture Mouldings and Glass for framing pictures. - Under Masocic HaIL. A. J. WHITE & CO., A. J. WHITE, JE., Mgr. W HE N YOU COME TO TOWN CALL AT WE LLS' s H AVING SA LOON Which i ie iha .nsto~nerw. .. .. HAIR CUTTlEb 1N A LL STYLES, SH AVINGi AND SH A MPOOING Done with neatoon and di'ipmtch.. ...-.-. .,zxtended... Maning Times Block. j H. LESESNE. ATTORNEY AT LAW, MANNING. S. C. DR. JOHN H. MORSE, IVETERNARIAN, rh'uate Univeri-y Pennsyh-nnia.) Surater. S. C. ce 'Phone. 12. Reaidence 'Ptoan. DR. J. FRANK GEIGER. DENTIST, MANNING, S. C. DR .A. COLE. DENTIST. Upstairs over Bank of Manning. MANNING, S. C. Phone No *7. Dr. King's New LifePlils The sat in the world.