University of South Carolina Libraries
STEITI I V . Y Ijl- right can 1:Lusd IIJAJ 5TWMAJINT1 A~~~r) f. m C, -ti;5i - WITH t GRALL0EATGRAND * ALL CP' WILtL GIVE T "Y- " N Ne tl 7-tJE5TI RANE FREE If you call at our store during our Majestic Demonstration W-ek and allow us to show you the many advantages andl su perior e calities of the Great and Majestic Range, and will purchase one -the regular price, we will give you Free the beautiful and useful Suotvenir Set of Ware illustrated in this advertisement. This ware naade to match the quality of the Majestic Ranges, and we know ladies will see the beauty and utility of this set. especially the t4 three pieces, which are entirely neOw and cannot be hard alone purchase, except at a very high price. The prices of Majestic a1ges are the samne. but we give the set FR EE with each Majestie Utge bought during the demonstration week only. ONE WEEK ONLY. No ware given after demonstration week. THE SMANNING IIARWAIE COIVPANY eWhere Can be Found The Celebrated Prosperity Farm n SImplements. The Beautiful Sanitary Wall Coat- l i ng-ALABASTINE. The High-grade Paints and Varn Sish Stains. The Incomparable 0. K. Stoves and : Ranges. The Matchless for Strength Am.eri can Wire Fence. The Everlasting Hickory Leather K Collars. The Full Stock of Hardware. Enam z elware and Crockery. SThe Hearty Welcome for all our pr Many Friends, at The SMANNING hARDWARE COMPANY g SAtlantic Coast Line. Standard ra roadmof tie South. '.mie th Naio G i Spot" thrturih the S dates of Virginia. North Carolina. South Carolina. GEORGIA. Alabama and FLORiDA. 5Four Famous Traiins New York and Florida Special. (January to April. "Florida and West Indian Limited.'' "Palmetto Limited.' "CatLine Florida Mali. Dining Cars. a la carte sevi ;how '.r wrho :~ e . York. to both Port Tampae andU Klid1. - .:na .r.: ' "i I; * ships to and from Havana. ' Folder" address. I WV. J1. CR AIG. T.~ v. il i T'F. Pass. Traffic Mgr., i~n ' .~ n ER-BUtR'N COOKER. STEANMER. CULLENDERA nq ft w hm adnits water a~t the bottom. Nc n on lo :. : i same time daLi1ingk off all the watl ordinary Cender. It also fits Oil top of ma1 t. 5, 7 TC x t r a TUE MAjOSTIC IS-OZ. Al I ron M arble.. Caop p er Nicekei-plated T e lph,-wit. vih cover 1,ettle. iandsomlely nmekeled 0 hohs on cover. o)uts-de, uinued on tnside MIC Marble- THE IAJESTIC Pater 1 uddin= Pan. Never-burn WAred DriPPin for the Pan.-Size of pan 14% in- x 20 Made speckuy forthe Majestic Se Reasons Why The G Should st. It has the reputation of being 2nd. It not only has the reputati' and we will prove this to you if yo 8rd. It is constructed of malleab and of Charcoal iron, material that than steel, is riveted together air air enters the range. thus uses ver 4th. The reservoir alone is wort other reservoir made. It boils 15 g tea kettle, with pocket against left sets on a frame. hence cannot weal it can be moved away fro:n fire. Ma jestie rangts use less fuel hot ter: costs practically nothing J lon(: bakes better: easier to keep cl than any other range on the mark the above statements are true, wol Come in Demonstration Week LOWO Fruit and Old Age. Ph-siologists claim that growth from infancy to old age is a process of grad- . ual ossifcation and that the stiffness t f a:e is caused by the deposits of cal car-ous matter or earthy salts. There fore a diet c.ontainling a large propor tioni 41 these salts. food rich in nitro e. such as the cereals, beans, peas a and meat. increases the natural tend' t ency to ossinication, says Health. ?0 or this reason a diet made up largely of t1 fruit. which contains a minimum aout of this calcareous matter, 1s e-illc!!y best adapted to persons in o adlvaPcing years. Large caters add to y te libilitry of ossific deposits fromn e oeorkin:: the eliminatinlg organs by an excss of nutritive material untila the healthful activity is destroyed. and the whole system suffers in conse quence. Old age indicates less .fooda and a maximum amount of fruit as the Sunken Ships Mark His Grave. There are many monuments to the "father of the British navy," Sir Fran cis Drake, throughout the world, but is tomb" is in the great deep upon which he made his everlas tng fame. Heie dl Jan. 2S, 1505, in hi2 ship the1 Delance, near the town of Mom~brU de Ds est Indies, and in a leaden ofon his body was lowered into the waves some six miles from shore. As a last honor to him two of his ships, with all the prizes that were in the fleet at the time, were sunk beside his casket. At the time of his death the great admiral was in his fiftieth year nd in the prime of his physical and intellectual powers. Since his death t e 'ritishi navy has never been with ut a ship bearing his name.-EE ehange. __ _ _ _ _ _ _ A Judge and an Egg. Tudes on the bench have been as saulted. A litigant once threw an egg at the late Vice Chancellor Malins in Sglih court. The judge had the prsence of mind to duck his head, nd at the same time he established a eputation as a humorist by remark ig that the present must have been intended for his brother, Bacon, thel -ic chancellor, who was sitting in an adjoining court. Lots of Talk. "What we want," said the peace pro mter "is a system that will permit cndid discussion to take the place of actual confiict." "Don you think." inquired the man w ~ho was~ reading the sporting page, "that orur professional pugilists have come~ petty near solvin~g the prob Trrasparent Salt. 1e island of~ Santo Domingo there Sa ren :be salt mountain-a mass of crstlliae salt nearly four miles long etim~ated to contain nearly 00, 00,.9 tons, and thie crystallized salt s -ai to be so cleoar that medium szed prnt can be read througli ! b1ockt a ot thiek. Sympathy. PoetAll my life seemed to go intd tait poem. I was pe-rfctiy exhausted en I hadi fiihed wvriting it Edi -i smatize with you. I was :w s:1: sme condtUon when 1 - trney -.md 8 adder' Hight D DAINER-The Perforated Cooker. thing can burn. Food can be lifted out r. The Steaner or Cullervier !hown on essel, and is un'a a steamer. 3 THE MAJESTIC 1I-oz. All I Copper Nickel-plated Coffee pot. Randnoniely nickeled on outside and tinned on inside. b TWO MAJESTIO Patent :g Never-Burn Wired Dripping . Pans. Size of pan 9 in. x 12 in. . Made specially for the Majestic Set. reat Majestic You Buy the best range money can buy. )n but IS the best range made. u will let us. e iron, material you can't beat, resists rust 300 per cent greater ight. No heat escapes or cold y little fuel to do perfect work. h the price of range over any allons of water; is heated like a hand lining, and is movable and out. When water gets too hot heat more water-and heat it >r repairs; lasts three times as Lean and gives better satisfaction t. If you know positively that ld you buy a Majestic at once? and We'll Prove It to You. EN HA RDi MANNIN The Puzzle of the Pre. There used to be an aged elevator ian who operated one of the lifts In e e house wing of the capitol. Most b Shis passengers were either repre- t ~utatives or newspaper correspond- e nts. The old man got to know all V 1'th correspordenfts very well and It wavs had a cheerful greeting for 1L et. It was often noticed, too, that eseemed to be greatly interested In s beir onversationl. iC One afternoon, as three of them step- '1 ed out of the elevator, Sereno Payne fNew York stepped In. As the car I ent down the old elevator man turn- 1 d and said: -1r. P'ayne, I can't understand bout those newspaper men. They 1 "Wha's the trouble with themy'" sied 31r. i'ayne. "Well 31r. Payne, every day they C de in this car one feller will turn o another and say, 'What do you I :now today y And the other fellow I -1 answer. 'Not a -- thing. Wan?ti yo you knowy' Then the first feller ll answer. 'Nothing.' And yet, Mr. ayne. the papers are just full of iews every day. It beats me where hey get it." It beats ine too." said Mir. Payne. rooklyn Eagle. Old Time Strawberries. Straw.rries hatve initroved very muh in flavor since the lifteenth cen ary. Until lhen the only strawber les eaten were wild strawberries of ind whichl would never tinid a mar e t uow:d(ays. By 1480O. however, they rere beinning to be cultivated, for aolinshed re'cords under that date a articularly tine erop) grown by the bishop of Ely in the grounds of his palace now covered by Ilntion gardlen. He quotes the Dutke or (;io)cester as saying to the bishop: -'ly lord. yo e 'er:: ;.ood strawberries in your arden in Ilolborn. I require yout to let us have a mess of them." This spech was; copied almost verbaitim byv Shakespeare in "Richard IIL." still. even the bishop's fruit wvould not ap peal much to modern connoisseurs, for the garden strawberries at that period were only transplanted wildlings, the plants being sold at about fourpence aushel.-ondon Standard. Origin of the Piano. The pianoforte was directly evolved from the clavichord and the harpsi chord. In 1711 Seipione MIaffel gavel aetailed account of the first four in truments, which were constructed by artolomeo1W Chrustofori. It was 2aedl by him the pianoforte and was firt exhibited in 170P. MIarius, in Fran~e. exhibited harpsichords, with hammer action, in 1710. and Schrote-r, in ermany, claimedJ to have invent ed the pianoforte between 1717 and 172. 1arius was at first generally credited with the invention. Pianos of that period were shaped very much lie the mnodern1 grand variety. The firt square piano was constructed by Frerica, an organ manufacturer of Saony in 175S- The first genuine up' riht piano was invented in England ad the United States by John Isaac Hawkins an Englishman, in ISO00 Detroit Free Press. Ofice Ov-er Bank of Sumter. CIIARLTON DURANT, ATTOR'NEY AT LAW: UMANNTNG. S. C. Majesti Begi PEOPLE YOU KN C R Breedin Jno D Gerald E E Hodge Plowden Hardware Co.: ajestic Range I bought of you or anything like the price paiu Plowden Har entleen--The Majestice Ra claimed for it A splendid You ARECOP , s. C. General Bate's' Unlfghted Cigars. eeral William B. Bate of Tennes ~after distinguished service in be afof the south was governor and ien United States senator. His bray ryin battle was attested by a dozen oufds, and in a single engagement ire horses were shot from under 't was a habit of the old warrior," da man who knew him -well. "to ninully carry an unlighted cigar his mouth. but few of those who tced It ever knew the reason of Uis Ilre to smoke the weed. At the tti of Shiloh he and a brother were tadig side by side when the broth r sked General Bate for a light, as ,ehad a cigar, but no match. The neral lit a match and handed it to iskinsman, who had scarcely applied to the tolsacco crc a cannon ball ame hurtling through the air and eered the smoker's head from his ~y. The terrible tragedy of Shiloh's ody field was why in all the years at followed the surviving brother ;a neer known to light a cigar." Our First Steam Warship. The Fulton, which at the time of her ostr1tionl in the early thirties was lssed as a "steam battery," was the rt United States warship that was )rpelled by steam. She was built un erthe superintendence of Commodore ~Itthew Galbraith Perry and at the me of her completion In 1837 was re ;aded as one of the world's wonders ~yway of naval architecture and pow ~rat sea. The Fulton was the cause fno little speculation on the part )fEuropean powers, for at that time h was looked upon by other nations isall but invincible. When this won e of the sea was put In commission Cmmodore Perry, then holding the ak of commander, was put in com and of her, and he presently came to bcalled the "father of the steam ay." The Fulton was built pri mrily for defense of New York har bo, but she served as well to demon state the practical utility of steam poer for warshlps.-New York Times. Silent Lawyers. It Is almost a maxim nowadays that a awyer's real importance at the bar is n inverse ratio to his prominence inthe papers. The truth Is that law yes of great Importance seldom now adys appear in court In the old days thegreat lawyer was the eloquent layer today the great lawer is the llnt one Then bar reputations were made literally at the bar. Today they aremade in the offices of the sk~y scrpers neighboring on Wall street. InEngland a visit any day to the law corts vil be repaid by the sight of soe famus K~. C. assisting -the court Ina dramatization of the trial chapter from "Alice In Wonderland." Buht you miht prowl for a month within the preincts of the New York courthouse witout encountering a lawyer whose nae would signify anything remark ableto the historian of the New York 2.- ~Amricnf Magaz~ne. Common Colds Must be Taken Seriously fornless cured they sap) the vitaliry adlower the vital r-esistance to more serius in fection. Pr-otect your chihie andourself by the pr-ompt use of FI-' esloey and Tar Cotmound and note tuiek and decisive resuhts. Foru ui.cohs. e~ roup. whooping cogh oc n~hii and agfe, tions of the thr-oat, cht. and lungs it is an ever ready ane --AT OUR I 11ng OW WHO USE ANE) B A Johnson A H Br-eedin -im highly ileased with the nd would tot do without it T. F. COFFEY. are Co., Manning, S. C. g bouglht of jou has been all oker in evarr way. struly.: T. f. TISDALE. PAFIY tae of Souiti Carolina, County of Clandonl. OUVRT OF COMlDN PLEAS. . e ?e. I. C. Sr rar- aned D)avis D. oise. Exeentors ithe hist will liaitiffs. auuel Hampllton a1d H. Tr. Edens, tINDER AND BY ;IRTUE OF A Jugment Order of th~ouirt of Com mn Pleas, in the aire stated ae t o. t me direct ed. jaring d:ate oft .n 7. 1911, I wiIfelI nt lb eauet ion, to the hiisst bidder, for cah. at Clarenldon Curt House. at I nunin, in said coray, within the leal hours for judiciaiales, on Mn da, the 2nd day oi~ctober, 191 beng salesday, the folaving describ edreal estate: "All that tract, piec parcel or lot ofland, situate, lyin4.nd being in tetown of Jerveyve, county, of Clrendon, in said Ste, containmg oacre, more or lestbounded on' teNorth by lot No. 2East by land ofRev. J. B. Hlarme, South by White Pond street, -d West by I ~lariton street, this beg lot No. 2:3 na t of the villa; of Jervey nd. Tracts No. 4 ar.g on Block Bthe dimensions of tinsame~ being hwn by a plat of the '2wn of- Rem mimade by Pee Dee 3od and Ium- 9 prvement ~Co., recordcinl office C. oC. P., for Clarendonl)unty, said los being those purchad from J. 0. Lnhamn by deed record in said of eficin Book Q-3 page OC0 ~rd. Lot No. :3 in BloeB3, purchas- % edrom E. B. Gamble bred record edin said office, Book 3 page G89. thesaid lot having bee origimally bagained for by Sanmn Hampton - andE. B. Ganmble, and (mnble hav in~ubsequetly couygg hris inter tto the mortgagor. 4th. That lot of land iRemmni, i iaidCounty and State~neasurm12 I oy feet front on Maiu~reet, and onehundred feet in dept bounded outhe North by public rdl leadin todepot, East and Weeby A. S. >stick and South by M[astreet. Purchasers to pay for~ pai. E. B. G.NBLE. SherifY Clareodc~ounltY. The Confederate MonetUt. he novemert so long neieted has atlst begun to erect a mamlent to ete emory- 1f the heroes wlwore thne aya~-soldirs whose reee;was the mavel of the civilized worldlarenldon I ow proposes to place upbonie -court houe square a suitable m~arf its pa trioism by having erected shaft min nnr o those who respr~ndanld laid dontheir livcs unou theimtuty's I tt. All contrihutions se-to THE ~ aMANN TimEs will be ackwlee ed thugh its columunS-. H.Lesesne.......---- -~Uu ouis Levi.............--. 0 1' dLesesne ..-..-----. rr. E. Appelt....----.--- --10 00 Daid B. Tones.. ....... . -.1 0 00; DL Green..---- .-- - - . o0 M. l~ason.--...---------01 .1 Ridveway. . . 1 . . - 0 . M S trange.--.----. 00 - T T Wi ler. .. ... - 00? .I Harin, Tradmor. Tes. 10 001 . IP. St ~nge.....-------. 00 T. Touchber'y ... .- . ,-. 00 A. H r\llarin... . . -- - -.. m i00 rs W. M. arlieh...........--. 0" -. . D ais . . - . -- - -- - l 0 00 ;|' E T RIC 633 iTFu . n IT TERS m. I sta,~ ui Demonstration STORE VEEK< 5ept. 25-30. RECOMMEND MAJESTIC RANGES. T F Coffey CT Joye W C Davis J E Kelly Plowden Hardware Co., Manning, S. C. Gentlemen:-I have been us ing the Magistic Range, bought of you nearly one year ago. It is by far the most practical stove that has ever been in my family. It is most econmical in the use of wood. A few small pieces of wood and a couple of newspapers will cook a breakfast. A. H. BREEDIN. ONE WEEK ONLY No ware given after demonstration week. School Books For Clarendeoi CounIy Schools, f ON SALE AT THE 5,1 land 25c. Store3 By speciel arrangemnant this store has exclusive sale. of School Books,9 Schoolt uple Being he heviestbuyers of School Supplies in this setowe otfer special inducements in large quantities in the buying of Pen and Pencil Tablets, Pens, Pencils, ' Examination Blanks, Stationery and all other school requisites.9 SEE THE 5,10O AND 25c. STORE. D.Hirschmann. Elipse Shoes for Mlen. Alvin Brand Olothing. The Selby Shoes for Ladies. Howard Hats. Papp Shoes for Children,. Sterns Brand Voil Skirts. Eveythng ear aGuaranteed at Everthi. Hirschmannf's. T u his, s gand opprtity to buy yor Fall Cioth ing Soe, atsan Ldis'Wear, attelowest prices. Come in and look them over and be convinced. A large reduction is awaiting you in Clothing. D. irschmann.