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The Biggest Store,: It is useless to explain Northern, markets. Of cou pockets, because during hi body has been expecting a ever before. We have now line in all departments am purchased at our store at impossible in this limited Ml LOHIN. Men's Suits, sold elsewhere at $25.00, our price........... Men's Suits, sold elsewhere at 120.00, our price........... Men's Suits, sold elsewhere at $15.00, our price........... Mven's Suits, sold elsewhere at $10. 00, our price.. . . .. .. We will close out our Spring and Summer Suits, regardli Trousers, the $1.50 kind, we will sell at 89c. Other Trousers, also Boy's School Suits, reduced in proportion. BNature's air estorer WRestores Gray Hlair to* Natural Color Sulphur is a Natural Element of the IHair~ When there is not a sufficient amount of sulphur in the hair, it loses its life, color and strength, turns gray, and falls ouit. There are many forms of sulphur, but only one kind that is suitable for * treatrnent of the hair and scalp, and that is the kind used in, prein WYETH'S SAGE AND SULPHUR HAIR EMEDY. We Have the Secret, and We ive You the Benefit of It at an Exceedingly Low Price For two or three ears mynair had been falling out: and getting quite thin, until the top of my head was BALDNESS entirely bald. About four months ago I commenced BALDNESS sing -Sage and su1p~mr. The first bottle seemed to CURED do some good and 1 kept using it regularly, until now *I have used four bottles. The whole top of my head is now fairly covered grih hair. and it keeps coming in thicker. I shall keep on using it a while longer, as I notice a constant improvemnrt. STEP'EN BACON, Rochester, N, C 50c. and $1 Bottles, At All Druggists Os:rea:d SWYETH CHEMICAL COMPANY * 74 CORTLANDT. ST., NEW YORK CITY. N. Y. A 25e Cake of Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Toilet Soap Free to anyone FE.,who will send us this advertisemlent with 10c in stamps to cover cost of wrapping and. mailing the soap. THE HOME BANK AND TRUST COD MYANNING, S. C. Banking as we have it now is of recent growth. Not very long ago~ i ere werefew anksand they were patronized only by men w bo did a large busme~ss. wl er h ade their savings in strong boxes or in hidden phte.,---such~ as loose brick in the tire place, the middle of a maittress, or a hole in the. gr'ound. Under the conditions of other times this was t'he best that conudb done: but time and again all of a man's capital or all of the~ saving.s of a htaniiy were s.we pt away by fire, storm or thieft. Sometimes the head of'thiefamfly. deu without dh~~isel" the hiding place of his money and his family suffered as a ra Uit. All of this is unnecessary now, and our bank wiil take yur money. keep itt safely for you and return it to you or to the persons in whouw !arvr yu draw checks at any time and in such amounts as you wish. In tmiw way you ar e abso lutely guarded from loss. Besides this, if y ou wish, you can detiosit yo on oneyi in the savings department and it will begin at once' to earn mo're moe V or you. HOM DANK AND TRUST COMPANY J why everybo rse, everybod; s stay, North big sale, but ii in stock the I i only ask yo a great savin space we will ...... 15 00 Se ........$12 75 Shoes, .... $.S9 50 Ti ......... 8 7 50 the $3.00 ~ss of cost. Men's 98c. Men's and Boy's, A: ficing pr r A H-ow Ho Won the Votes. A physician in a small town wanted to be mayor. Politicians told him he had no chance-the machine was against him. A few days before the election he printed the following card in the paper:. "To the People of Bingtown-i am getting old and have decided that be fore I die I would like to be mayor of Bingtown. I have no particular plat form to run on except that I want the office. I have lived here forty years, have paid my taxes without a murmur, collected what I could and forgiven and forgotten many omissions. If I am not elected I will publish in the Bingtown Herald what I know about people in this community." When the votes were counted the old doctor received all but three, and those three were cast by people who had r'oved into the town that spring.-St. Louis Post-Dispatch. The Property Man Knew. An English actor tells a good story of the old days of the touring fitup companies. They were at Oldhamn playing a melodrama called "Current Cash." One of the properties essential to the piece was a light rowing scull, with which the hero had to push him self off' into the stream. When the company reached Oldham the oar was missing, but the property man prom ised to have one ready for the even ing's performance, says the Pall Mall .azette. That afternoon, with evident pride, he produced from the sacred re ceses of his room a real human skull, and when it was pointed out to him that it was hardly what was required he declared in haughty tones:. "If that skull's good enough for 'Hamlet' it ought to be good enough for a piece like 'Current Cash.' " Thanking the Bishop. A vicar in England was taken sud denly ill, and his church warden was in great difficulty about getting a sub stitute when the bishop of the diocese, hearing of the circumstance, offered to take the Sunday services himself. The church warden, wishing "to do the right thing," at the close of the service went up to the bishop and after thank ig him stammered out, "A poorer preacher would have done for us, your lordship, but we were unable to find onel" The American Temperament. "You observe," remarked the host, who was showing the distinguished for eign visitor around Newport, "'that we Americans devote ourselves to pleasure regardless of expense." "'d hardly put it that way," retorted the witty foreigner. "Rather you de vote yourselves to expense regardless of pleasure."-B~oston Transcript. His Comparison. "Footlite is a good actor," said a playwright who was criticising a New York production wherein the hero's part was very badly cast, -'and in tils part he does his best; but, by Jove, doesn't he remind you of a man trying to play a Tschaikowsky symphony on a typewriter?" -Hopeless Case. "Why don't you make hay while the sn shines and" "ITub! If I tried to do that it'd just be my huck to get sunstruck."-Phila rhe Bge dy is happy t rT knows what bhebought up 1 tstead of callir iggest assorti ir inspection a .g. We would1I . quote a few SH O tz, Rice and Hutchins, May Mant *e will sell at-the following cut-pr e 85.00 kind Reduced to $4.00; the kind, $2.25; the $2.50 kind, $1.90 .1 Low-cut Shoes and odds and end ce to clean up. Sh'arp Banking. Everybody is familiar with the little savings banks for ten cent pieces. the kind that holds fifty dimes and cannot be opened until it is full. Such a bank was given to a little girl - and her brotlier, the children of a Washington officiaL. It contained one dime, a nest egg. The day was warm and soon the desire of the joint owners of the bank to convert the deposit into two glasses of soda water became all but uncon trollable. The question was bow to get the money out. Finally the boy destined, his father thinks, to become a Napoleon of finance-hit upon a plan and dragged his sister to the nearest drug store. There he explained tlbe situation to the man behind the counter and broached his plan of; operations. In short, he asked the man to lend him forty-nine ten cent pieces for a minute or two. The man was ready for a customer, produced the needed coins, and the little boy and girl went home pennIless and happy.--New York Tribune. The Blow on the Jaw. A man struck with any degree of force upon the mental area-of the jaw, although he -may be in perfect physic'al condition, instantly'collapses and falls to the ground, says a medical journal. The attitude assumed in recovery, which may be instantaneous or delay ed some minutes, is most characteris tic. He squirms about, raises his head and rolls his eyes in an attempt to lo cate himself. He tries to get on his side and elbow; he endeavors to rise upon his hands and knees. If he re gains his feet he staggers like a drunk en man, and should he proceed to re open hostilities he is usually prompt ly "put out" by his adversary. The blow is practically never fatal; the heart's action is never unduly acceler ated; the pulse and respiration are nor mal; the pupils are normal; there is no headache, no sweats, no cold extremi ties, no pallor-none of the ordinary signs of shock or concussion. When the Time Comes. Man little knows what calamities are beyond his patience to bear till he tries them. As in ascending the heights of ambition, which look bright from be low, every step we rise s~ows us some new and gloomy prospect of hidden disappointment, so in our descent from the summits of pleasure, though the vale of misery below may appear at first dark and gloomy, yet the busy mind, still attentive to its own amuse ment, finds as we descend something to flatter alnd to please. Still, as we approach the darkest objects appear to brighten and the mortal eye be comes adapted to its gloomy situation. -Goldsmith. When the World Is Full.. The mean decennial rate of increase in the population of the world Is S per cent, and at this rate the 28,000.000 square miles comprising the fertile re gions of the eairth, which Rlavenstein computed can only support 207 persons per square mile, will have their maxi mum population of 5,994,000,000 per sons in the year 2072. This estimate allows fourteen persons per square mile in the 18,000,000 scituare miles of steppes and deserts. Makes Kidneys and Bladder Right > know that Mr. Krasnoff has that means. Krasnoff's returi bhe biggest bargains for his trE ig it a sale we will give you ev aent of 'all up-to-date goods. nd we can convince you tha ike to give you prices on all o prices at random: ES. Ft on and other well-known best makes of Furniture is a side] es: in old-timers in that line $4.00 kind, $3.25; the $3.50 kind, $2.85; fore, sell all Furniture at the $2.00 kind, 81.25; the $1.25 kind* oe elalFriuea will be to your own benefi s High-cut Shoes will be sold at a sacri- of up-to-date Furniture, A that we will save you at 1 and the Automobile people know it. I am selling the~* only practical business Automobile on the market. II am offering - The Brush Machine .FOR $450.00. The most practical economical, and certain car made.~ GUARANTEED to go over 20 miles of our worst road with just one gallon of gasoline. We guarantee the springs not to break, no matter the load or the road. Write or ask us about this machine if you are interested. Atlantic Coast Line. Cheap Excursion Fares To The Seashore Resorts of the Carolinas. From Manning. IWeek End Excursion Rates. Tickets on sale Saturdays and Sunday forenoon trains until August 27th. $2.30 To Charleston. Limited retulrning to midnight of Tuesday follow- . ing date of sale. Summer Excursion Rates. Tickets on sale daily until September 3th. I ~ $7.65 To Wrightsville Beach.I $3.80 to Isle of Palms & Sullivans Island. Limited returnng until October 31, 1911. 24 page illustrated booklets each on Wri ghtsville Beach, Wilmington' and its environing resorts and the Isle of Palms, Sulliv ans Island. Mt. Pieasant and Chair leston may be obtained Prn HD.CAK Ticket Agent. Manning. S. C.I Or by addressing ::W. J. CR AIG, T. C. W HIT E. L Pass. Trafiic Mgr. Gen. Pass. Agent. 24 T \ITINGTON N I Biggest Bargains. returned home from the t means money in your de at home. Yes, every )n bigger bargains than We carry now the finest t all your wants can be ir goods, but this being JRNITURE. ne with us, on which we don't make any -profit, but be our trade demands of us to carry it in stock. We there cost, and if you contemplate furnishing your house it t to come and see us. We have now in stock a full line .rt Squares, Rugs and Mattings, and we cai safely say ast 20 to 25 per cent. on your purchases. Oe White Dress Fabrics. The Stock we represent in White Goods is the prettiest ever shown in .this town. Every wanted effect in all of the Sheer Fabrics is included SMessalines and Foulards Also the most desirable weaves and shades in Mlessalins and Foulards All the popular Novelties are shown at The Young Reliable's. Ladies' and Children's Ready-Made Underwear. Also a beautiful Line of Fancy and Tailored Shirt Waists. Come and look our Line over for values in Lace and Embroidery, we have the leadership. The important feature of our Goods is that our price is no higher for spring 1911 than 1910. . "The* Yo ntela l ."