The Manning times. (Manning, Clarendon County, S.C.) 1884-current, February 21, 1912, Page 4, Image 4

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MALARIA headache, biliousness, in digestion, rheumatism, pimples, blotches, yellow complexion, etc., are all signs of poisons in your blood. These poisons should be driven out, or serious illness may result To get rid of them, use - E59 Thedford's Black-Draught the old, reliable, purely vegetable, liver medicine. r Mrs. J. H. Easler, of Spartanburg, S. C., says: "I had sick headache, for years. I felt bad most of the time, I tried Thed. ford's Black-Draught, and t now I feel better than t when I was 16 years old." C Your druggist sells it, in 25 cent -packages. t Insist on Thedfor's t t No Cause For Hurry. t When Martin W. Littleton was pre- I paring the cose of Harry Thaw for trial he sent word to Thaw one day that he would see him iu the prison at 3 o'clock .Iat afternoon. Littleton T reached the Tombs an hour late and F found Thaw highly indignant because 0 of the delay. C "What on earth does this mean?' de-, f manded- the prisoner. "You're an hour late for this appointment." t 'Well.- explained Littleton calmly. i "I figured that I would certainly find t you here. no matter how late I was " New York Tribune. Different Viewpoints. b Old Lady-There is one thin. I no- r tice particularly about that young man who calls to see yoi He seems to b have an inborn, instinctive respect for t woman. He treats every woman as s though she were a being from a higher t sphere. to be approached only with the b utmost delicacy and deference. s Granddaughter (sweet eighteen)- S Yes, hes horridly bashful.-Four Leaf Clover. None but the Best. Uncle Rasberry walked into a drug a store. "Gimme one o' dem plasters h fob my hacit." he-said. t "One of the porous plasters?" -No. I don't want one o' de pores' d plasters. I wOmt one o' de bes'.-Et- a chan-.e. t Almost Lost His Leg S. A Stid of Niron. Mlieb., will never *a forge:, hie errible esx posure to a merci less stormn. --It gavi. me a dr eadfuit cola."' he wrrites, "tat caused severe pains in my chest. sc' it was hard for me a to breathe. A neiahbor gave me several ti doses of Dr. King's New D~iscovery which brought greaLt relief. The doctor a~ said I was on the verge of pceumonia, but to cont-inue with the Discovery. I did so) and two bottles completely cured me." Use only this quiek, safe. reliable medicine for coughs, co~ds. or any throat or iung trouble. Price e a..nd St.00. Trial bottle free. Guaranteedf by all droumists. tI Pleasarnt For Him. b: Blowe-B~ut I asked you, my dear girl, to kteep our little affair seeret for f the present. His Intentiedl--I couldn't i help it. That hateful Miiss olduhn said s Ithe reason I wasn't muarried wa be g cause no fool had asked me. so I up c -and told her you had-London Tele- B graph. ________F *A Case of Arbitration. s A rat and a sweasel fou~nd ain egg. They arbitrated about it. A cat w'ast the arbitrator. Hie promaptly awarded the egg to the rat. The rat ate the egg. The cat thea ate the rat. The cat be-' lieves -in arbitration. The rat does't. -J.apan MIusashino. Had It All Over Again. "The other night I went to an ama- t teur theatrical performance, and then I went home and had a terrible dream." "Whar did you dream ?" . "I dreamod that I went to it again." Domestic Note. - Gibbs-So your wife's will is law. Dibbs--Yes, but I can sometimes bribe her not to enforce it.-Boston Tran script. A Warning Against Wet Fee. Wet and chilled feet usually alicet the mucus membrane of the no.e, throait and lungs. and la rilpe, bronchitis or a pneumonia may result. Watch catreful- a' ly, particularly the children. and for the racking st ubb~orruct rouhs give Foley's Honey and Tar (ompounci. It soothes the inilamted membrres, and hesis the couch quick-ly. rTak nosb stitute.~~ -__ Fixing the Thermometer. When a thermometer falls without breaking and the mercury becomes y separated in the tube and thus fails to register correetly, the best and quick- m est way to repair it is to put the ther mometer into a small saucepan of cold water on the stove; allow the water to heat until the mercury is forced to the i top, and then remove from the fire,.t and when it settles the mercury will o go doavn the column unbroken . Foolish to Close.e "Why do you wish to close this show?" demanded the beautiful av tress. "It's losing money." replied the man- e ager. k "What of that? The critics all say l that I look lovely in my part."--Chica- .It go Rlecord-Herald. F'or Infants and Children. The kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of, FOLETION~fTAR Steer.th e-tne Condor. The enormos strength of the condor s equaled by his voracity and bold tess. This immetise bird often poneces tpon small aniias, but from the have anL bluntness of his claws he is mable to carry :vything very' heavy. o he contents himself with fixing it Lgainst the ground with one of his -laws. whib with the other and his >owerful beak he rends it to pieces. rorged with food. the bird then be omes inenpable of flight and nay be .pproached. but any attempt at Cap ure is furiously resisted. An Ameri an traveler in the Andes encountered . large condor just after it had fin shed a hearty banquet on a young heep a)d oolishiy attempted to seize he bird. with 1:tt result that lie re eived a gash from is claw. Then he alled up his two guides. and the three nen maneuvred to take the bird live. Jti every attempt was frus rated. i in the end one of the men iled it by a blow with a hatchet. Some Indian Chiefs. Spotted T::11 was a strong character, wise :nd really great chief. le ;ould bave been a statesman. diplo antist er able governor if he had been wvhite mnu. Crazy Hlorse was the incarnation of roity-a tleree. restless warrior. ro had mu::de a great reputation as a aecessful leader of raids and war par lcs and had beoa:ne at the age of euty-six the recognized leader of he Oallalins. the must warlike tribe f the Sioux natiaon. Sitting Bull of the Uncapapas * * * as the embodiment of everything hos i to civilization. a perfect type of be savage Indian. a natural born lead r of men. cunning and courageous. Chief .Joseh was the highest t'pe of ie Indian I have ever known. very ndsome. kind and brave. le was uate an cratcr and the idol of his ibe.-General Miles in "Serving the epublie." New York City's Seal. A n who has done research and riting :n New York city history ex lained the other day the significance f the two barrels on the seal of the ity. Of the four spaces cut off by aur windmill bkades. set at right an les to each other. two beavers occupy ie upper and lower. while a barrel is I each of t!:e spaces to the right and e left. "I cau understand the meaning of e windmill arms and of the beavers, ut why should the city of New York e represented by a couple of beer bar 1sy' son: ane asked. The barrels are not beer, but flour arreis. In early colonial times under e English New York got the exclu .e right to bolt flour. which brought ie town such prosperity that the flour rrel was naturally an appropriate lection for the city seal.-New York n. Don't Miss This. If a woman has one daughter, who es away, the 'Mrs. misses the 1iss d the MIiss misses the M1rs. If she as two daughters and both are away ie Mrs. misses the M1isses and the isses miss the Irs. If she has three ughters and two are at one place ad one at another the Mrs. misses le MIiss and the Mi1sses, and the Mliss isses the Mrs. and the Misses. If is four daughters she has and two re at one place, while the other two 'e away from home and separated. e Mrs. misses the M1iss and the isses and the Mliss, and the Miss .ad the M1isses miss the M1isses and ze M1rs.. while the MIisses miss the rs.. and the MIiss misses the Miss ad the Misses and the Mrs. So they ould all better remain at home with te Mr. of the Mrs.-Judge. V'hen Hats Were Taxed. Hat t,.<~es were always more~ et ~tive with regard to men's headgear an with women's. Queen .Elizabeth xed the blocked beaver out of ex tence, and Pitt's hat tax of ITS4 ought a substantial revenue. Stamps rc fixed inside the crown of the hat om threepence to 2 shillings, accord to its price, while the penalties for lng unstamped hats ranged from 0 to ?20. and the punishment for unterfeiting a hat stamplvas death. at an attempt to tax women's ench straw hats of the watteaui yle signally failed. They were auggled over in large quantities, and fore this could be coped with wat au hats went out of fashion, and the x was a dead letter.-Lonldonl Chron-~ Women Street Cleaners. 1any women in M1unich suiport emselves by street sweeping. Most the recruits of this army come fromi e country. strapping daughters- of all farmers or laborers. and the task a coveted one to those stout and olesome young women, so that there always a waiting list. They dress a kind of uniform--Tyrolese hat of en, with a fegther at one side, blue -tticoat, red jacket and a neckerehief.. As She Figures it. "This is the first time I have seen >ur wife in ten years." "Yes. She is considerably changed." "Well, you must consider that she is year older than she was ten years ~o."-Houston rost. His Delightful Bu!t An Irish editor in speaking of Ire nd and her woes said: "Her cup of misery has been for es overflowing and is -not yet full." The Other Way. "What on earth's the matter? Cuu urself while shaving?" No-o. I should say that I shaved yself while eutting." Shocking Sounds th' earth are sometimes heard 'ce ea. terrible ear-thauake, that warn ;he coming pe'r1. Nare r's warnings' ct~.ek 'ns you tho- K'idneys nieed at tion .f you woi'jd escape~. theseC dan ros mnaladi1es. Drhopsy, Dhiaietes or 'ight's disease. TPake FVleearic bitter once and see na'caeb-: il andI li u:- best feeliing. return. "My onre iedi great beeed:- ronm the-ir use for due and blasddert troul. wrirtes act'r~Bondy. South~ Rockwood.I lie.. isertainly ai grea.kidney m'-dicine. v it. 50 cents at, aU druvat' 'There are very few real opitimiists,' marked the contempitiie citizen. 'What is your jdea of :a real op 'A a:m who can walk to wvork julst: cherfulty as it he were cbasing a. Itf ball."-Washington Star. Friends and Foes. Dear to me is the friend, yet can I ate even my very foe do mue a. ied's part. 31y friend shows me hat I can do: my foe tenehes mn" S'oan s Liniment is a relia ble remedy for any kind of horse lameness. Will kill the growth of spavin, curb or splint, absorb enlargements, and is excellent for sweeny, fistula and thrush. Here's Proof. "I used sl..ns Liniment on a mule for h .. and cured her. I am nc.r n ''outa lottie of your liniment; 1. : ore uf it than any other remedi wr i BAILY KIRBY. Cassatdv. Kr. j.:;a: n,_ . L -e::s the best ma-e. ~ . ': : sioe boils of a E :: -: . . killed a quarter c- - r:ae t!:s v as awfully bad. I : .I d raw. sora necks on three : i healed grease heel on a ...::: G. H iven. Oaklad, Pa., .Route No0. I. L2INIMENT is good for all farm stock. .QIv ho;:s had hog cholera three days before egt vour liniment,. vhich I was advised to t-. I h uscd it now for three days and my hogs :r. almost well. One hos cied before I co: the liniment, bt ] have rot l. st any sance. A. J. ' %jC-CRT1[Y, dvM Ii. Sold by all Dealers. IXI Sloan's Book oa Horses, Cattle, Hogs and Poultry seat free. Address Dr. EarlS. Sloan Boston, Moss. The Very Best Make. A commercial traveler remarked the other day to a storekeeper: "Get your self a cash register. It will keep strict and accurate account of all you re ceive and all you disburse. It will show what you save and what you squander. what you spend foolishly and what you spend wisely, where you should spread out and where you should retrench. what you waste and how you waste it" ~But," said the storekeeper, "I've al rendy got a cash register which does all that and more." "Whose make is It?" asked the sales man, frowning. "God's make," the storekeeper re plied. and with a smile at once rever ent and gratefkil he nodded toward his handsome wife seated in the cashier's cage.-Exchange. A Feat With the Feet. Place a cork upon the floor. Meas ure four lengths of your foot from it and, standing at this distance, attempt with one foot to kick the cork over and rec-over position (both feet togeth er) so that the foot that does the kick ing do.es not touch the floor till it has returned to its mate. The efforts of any one trying to maintain an equilib rium in performing this stunt ivill arouse considerable mirth.--Woman's \Wrld. How Cold Affects the Kidneys. Avoid takiue cold if your kidneys are sensitive. Cold congests the kidneys, throws too much work upon them, and weakens their action. Serious kidey trouble and even Bright's disease may result. Sutrengthen your kidneys, get rid of the pain and sorer~ess, build them up hy the timely use of Foley Kidney Pils. Tonic in action, quick in result. Niasks and Faces. {Masks are of very ancient origin. In a tomb 3,000 years old at Mycenae Dr. Shiemann found two bodies with faces covered by masks of gold. One of the masks represented the head of a lion. Among ancient Greeks the lion mask was a sign of distinction. With the Peruvians of old it was a mark of royal lineage. In a grave of considera ble antiquity in Peru a silver mask was found on the head of a mummy. The mummy of a prince who lived in the i-eign of Rameses II., discovered in a small vault at Memphis. in Egypt, had a mask of gold leaf over the face. Blamed a Good Worker. "I blamed my heart for severe dis tress in my lefs side for two years," writes W. Evans, Danville, Va., "bet. I know now it was indigestion, as Dr-. King's New Life Pills completely cur ed me." Best for stomach, liver and kidney troubles. constipation. headache or debilitv. 25c at. all druggists. Long CSsIo-nS Sn tfne t.-cr= A irecent nineteen hours' sitting of the house of commons created a sensa ton. But it is almost a trifle com pared with what happened in the spa cious days before the closure was in troduced. There was the Irish "night" of July 31 and Aug. 1, 1877, when the chaplain, arriving to read prayers at noon for the Wednesday sitting, found the Tuesday sitting still in progress "Ah" said Erskine May to him, "we Iare past praying for." But the record was achieved by the forty-one hours' sitting of Jan- 31 to Feb. 2, 1S81. Uses of Time. "I saved tea minutes a day at lunch for twenty years." "What of it'" "Oh, it was well that I saved all this time, for now I spend two hours daily in the anteroom of a dyspepsia special ist."-Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Striving Vainly to Please. --I suppose those garden seeds I sent savd you quite ai little mnoney," said the a.ffable statesman. "No," replied Mr. Growcher; "I Shadn't the heart to waste 'em, and the result is that I'm in debt for garden jmplements."-Washington Star. Afraid. 'Yes, I proposed, but she said I'd have to ask her mother first." "And did you?" "No; I was afraid the mother might accept me."--Judge He Kept Quiet. Householder - Ilere, drop that coat ad clear out: Bur'glar-You be quiet r I'll wake your wife and give her this letter I found in your pocket. New Yci'k Mail. He who brings ridicule to bear :gainst truth finds in his hand a blade , ithout a hilt.--Landor.I Baffling Boston. After ten days we were able to find our way around Roston. but not across it. If you start to walk out in Boston you always come back to the place from which you started unless you try to; then it is almost it!poss1ble. The transportation is fine. after you hve committed it to memory. The hospitality of Iloston we shall always remember, but :ot its street :ar (irec tions. A Boston stfeet car acts like a broncho. You never know whether it is going through the air like a bird. un der the ground like a mo!e or beneath the bay like a fish. The motorman seems to make up his mind Is he goes along. The Boston language is sibilant and stylish. The Boston people love the soft boiled "r." Out west folks pro nounce "r- a good deal like a dog chewing a bone. In Boston they deal as gently with it as they can. as if it were not to blame for being in the language, although it doesn't belong there.-Horseshoers' Journal. The Old Oaken Bucket's Gone. One day's excursion out of Boston Is southward.through the birthplace and ancestral home of the brilliant essay ist Quincy to the boyhood haunts of Woodworth and the scenes which In spired his sweetest lyric. In Seituate. by the village of Greenbush, we tind the well of "The Old Oaken Bucket" remaining at the site of the dwelling where the poet was born and reared. Most of the "loved scenesiof his child hood-the wide spreading pond. the venerable orchard, the flower decked meadow, the deep tangled wildwood may still be seen. little changed since he knew them, but the rock of the cataract has been removed and the cascade itself somewhat altered by the widening of the highway; the "cot of' his fathers" has given place to a mod ern farmhouse. and the "moss cov ered bucket that hung in the well" has been supplanted by a convenient but unpoetical pump.-Theodore E.- Wells. "Literary Shrines." An Inherited Weakness. "Your daughter is improving," said a music teacher, "but when she gets to the scales I have to watch her pret ty closely." "Just like her father," said the moth er. "He made his money in the gro cery business." Served Them Right. He-They have dropped their anchor. She (on her first trip)-Serves them right. It has been hanging over the side all day long. 'Tis not your posterity, but your ac tion-s. that will perpetuate your mem or'.-- Hutchinson. The Sound Sleep of Good Health is n.i f.r those sufferinr from kidney dilments and irregularities. The prompt se of Fol'y Kidney Pills will dispel backache aiD6 rheumatism. heal and trengthen sore, weak and ailing kid eys. iestore normal action, and wiIh it health and strength. Mrs. M. F. Spals bury. Sterling, Ill.,'says: "I suffered reat pain in my back an.1 kidneys. could not sleep at night and could not raise my hands over my head. But two bottles of Foley Kidney Pills cured me." 'Lincoln's Passes. Lincoln's humor ot'ten got him out of trying situations and tempered his re fusal of favors, as happened during the ivil war when a gentleman asked him for a pass through the federal lines to Richmond. "I should be hap py to oblige you." said Lincoln, "if my passes were respected. But the fact Is within the last two years I have given passes to Richmond to a quarter of a million men, and not one has got there yet." _______ __ Heart Failure. "Turrible thing happened to Bill in the poker game las' night." "What was ity' "Heart failure." "You don't mean it. "Yes; he held four heairts and drew one card: gor a spade "-Brooklyn Ea Poor Business. "The milliner. aIs insmu.l is six weeks behind wit'h my fimt ' "Serves you rightf." :rwled her bus band. the- e'nunent em;:na te "You 'oen i del ifberait ely place a big construction' order'- withlout a sign of a penalty clos'- "- W::siin.:tn H1erald. An Unusua! Bequest. Among the most eeeentrie of testa tors are those w;ho make bequests of their bodies. In 1871 a MIr. Sanborn of MIedford. M1ass., bequeathed his body to- Professor Agassiz -and Oliver Wendell Holmes. requesting that it should "be prepared in the most sci entific manner known to anatomic science" and-placed in the museum at Harvard. Hie ailso directed that his skin should lbe mrade into two drum heads to be presented to nis "fr-iend and patriotic fellow citizen. Warren Simpson." on condition that he beat on them the national air of '-Yankee Doodle" at the foot of the monument on Bunker hill at sunrise every 3ith of June. On one drumhead was to be* inscribed Pope's '"Universal Prayer" and on the other the Declaration ef Independenc.Exchiange. MST BELIEVE IT When Well-Known Manning People Tell It So Plainly. When public endorsement is made by a representative citizen of M\anning the proof is positive. You must believe it. Pea this testimony E'ver-y backache suffere. every man, woman or child with any lkidney trouble will find profit in the r-eading. William Hill, Mlanning. S. C, says: "Doan's Kidney Pills did me a great deal of good and I am pleased to reco m:end them. Aly kidneys were badly disordered and the kidney secretions contaed sediment. I also had back ache and pains in my loins. When I heard of Doan's Kidney Pills. I began hei use and it was not long before the back ache and lameness left me together with the o:her'z symptoms of kidney com-' laint. I know what Doan's Kidney Pills will do and I am convinced of their merits.' For sale by all dealers. Price 50 ents. Foster-Milbu rn Co., Buffalo, Ne w York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name--Doan's-aud The State of South Carolina, County of Clarendon. COURT OF COMMON PLEAS. Copy Summons for Relief. (Complaint Served.) The South Carolina Loan and Trust Company, Plaintiff. Against Duvall W. Elliott, John L. Elliott, Carleton E. Elliott, Roderick M. Elliott, R. S. EllioLt, Wayne V. Elliott, Dargan P. Elliott, John M. Elliott, Cleo F. Elliott and Richard F. Elliott, Defendants. To the Defendants above named: You are hereby sunioned and re quired to answer the Complaint in this action, of which a copy is here with,served upon you, and to serve a copy of your answer to the said toiu plaint on the subscribers at their of fice, 120-122 North Main Streer, in the city of Sumter, k. C., within twenty days after the service hereof, exclus ive of the day of such service; and if you fail to answer the complaint within the time aforesaid. the plaini tiff in this action will apply to the court for the relief deumiaded in the Complaint. R. D. LEE, 11. H. FICKEN, Plainitit!s .\ttornleys. Dated January 12th, A. 1., 1912. To the Defendants l)imvali V. Elliott. John M. Elliott and Carleton E. Elliott: Take notice, That the Summons and Cominlaint in the above styled ae tion were dul V filed in the office of the Clerk of the Court of Common Pleas for Clarendon County on the 20th day of January, 1912. R. D. LE, H. H. FICKEN, Plaintiffs Attorneys. Careless About Appendicitis in the Town of Manning. Many iManning peonle bare stomach or bowel trouble which is likely to turn into appendicitis. If you have consti pation, scur stomatch, or gas on the stomach, try simple buckthorn bark, lveerine. etc.. as compounded in Adler i-k, the new German appendicitis rem edv. Dickson's Dru-z Store staes that A SINGLE DOSE of this simple remedy relieves bowei or stomach trou ble almost INSTANTLY. Infection In the Home. A German medical journal draws at tention to a possible factor In the spread of Infectious conditions of the mouth, nose and pharyns that is insuf ficiently recognized in many bouse holds. It points out that- common ta ble utensils. such as forks, spoons and glasses. which come Into contact with the mouth. are usually washed all to gether. often with little care, and dried on the same cloth. This gives great opportunity for the distributidn-of in fective ,rencies. For this reason par ticular c:rte should he exercised in fam ilies where any member may be suf fering from an infectious disease to sterilize Ia: table utensils used in boil ig V ':fr People who complain of natchin.t cold'- in many instances are merely celhing infection from little understood and easily preventable sources. The Infectious germ is so minute that the eye does not detect Its presence. It Is necessary, there fore, to keep up a constant effort for the destruction of hurtful germs and germ carriers by introducing as far as possible the precautionary practices of sanitary science Into domestic use.~ -Philadelphia Record. Juggling a Photograph. "We're sometimes asked to do queer stunts with our pictures," said a New York photographer. "&bout the most unusual was a trick I had to play with a photograph taken of a large gathering of some organization. The committee in charge of the affair wanted one prominent man to take a conspicuous place in 'the group and so arranged the group. At the last min ute a less desirable member of the or ganizaton crowded in and got the choice position, making him the most prominent person In the finished pho tograph. In desperation the com mittee came to me to help It out.~ When I suggested changing heads and putting the head of a prominent mem ber on to the body of the undesira ble one it was delighted. Fortunately it was a seated group, and the' man's figure didn't make much difference e ther way. The exchange of head was a great success, and the commit tee got a lot of praise for the way it had me Juggle with that photo- 1 graph."-New York Sun. We solicit your Cleaning and Pressing work, and promise prompt and good service. We have employ ed pressers and c!eaners with experience, and all work entrust ed to us will be guaranteed. Send your clothes to the B'on-j Ton Pressing Club. Woodmen of the World. Meets on First Monday nig~hts at Visiti:Soverigns invite.. LOANS NEGOTIATEDl On First-Class Real Estate Mortgages. Purdy & O'Bryan, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Manning.S. C. Ous G. CAPERS. (ort South Carolin:). Ex-Commiussionler Internal R':vn"ue OSEt'R D. WRItGHTi'. APERS & WRiGHT, AT ORNEYS AT LAw Evans Building. WASHINGTON. I). C. Teepuhonef Main 6691 CHARLTON DURANT, ATTORNEY AT L.xw, NANNING, S. C. j Propt attention given to collections GG L. DICKS5ON. M. D. OFFICE 11I A. M. to 2 P. M. Dr.King's New Life Pills -rhe mes-, the wnrid. '( T H E H MANNING HARDWAE COMPANY I Where Can be Found f The Celebrated Prosperity Farm Implements. The Beautiful Sanitary Wall Coat ing--ALABASTINE. The High-grade Paints and Varn ish Stains. The Incomparable 0.1 K. Stoves and } Ranges. The Matchless for Strength Ameri can Wire Fence. The Everlasting Hickory Leather Collars. The-Full Stock of Hardware, Enam elware and Crockery. The Hearty Welcome for all our Many Friends, at The MAING HARDnARE COMPAN g @@0@@@@0 @@@@@@@@@@@@ JUST ARRIVED. One Car of Select Horses and Muels! More coming, in a few days. When in Man- C ning call at our Stables and let us show you what we can do for you. We are still C headquarters for the best Buggies, Wagons, Harness, Etc. COFFEY & RIGBY. | TIRE TROUBLES; are unavoidable, but we can help you through them. .We have a large stock of New Tubes and Tires on hand, and the prices are right. In fact, we are able to supply all your wants and thank you for.your business. - -~--H. H. BRADHANI. SC. R. Sprott, F. D. Hunter, President and Treas. Vice-President and Sec. Manning, S. C. -MANUFACTURERS~ OF Cotton Seed Products AND High Grade Fertilizers SComplete Line.: SI HAVE ARRANGED TO CARRY A COMPLETE LINE OF AUTOMOBILE SUPPLIES.e on hand and11 have b)ought themx r-ight$ so as to meet the competition of the big dealers. Everyth ing I carry' is airight in every respect and will be sold at ae reasonable profit. Tires. Tubes. Prest-O-lite Tanks, Horns. Lamps, anid in fact anything , you want, and the price is right. . Stop withU us and get your Oils. Gr-eases and Gasoline'. ' d H. . radham : *9~* 000 FOR SALE ! ERE IS A BARGAIN! 605 acres of Clarendon land wil sold cheap, 300 acres cleared id stumped. - This land is well located for rming. Church and schoolnear. For particulars address, C. F. RAWLINSON & CO., Davis Station, S. C. PPAREL SHOP OR MEN ND LADIES Everything of the best fcr the personal wear and adorn inent of both seses. We fill mail orders atrefully and promptly. )AVID )UTFITTING COMPANY, Charleston, S. C SW. K. TAVEL, Civil Engineer AND Land Surveyor, Sumter, S. C. fice Over Bin'r of Samer. - . C. DAVIS J. A. WEINBERG. )AVIS & WEINBERG, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, MANNING, S. C. . J. FRANK GEIGER. DENTIST, MANNING, S. C. H. 0. PURDY. S. OMJVEZt 0 URlYAN. URDY & O'BRYAN, Attorneys and Counselors at Law. MANNING, S. C. H. LESESNE. J. W. WIDEMAN, JR. .ESESNE & WIDEMAN,. ATTORNE'iS AT LAW, MANNING. S. C. lacker Mfg. Co. SUCCESSORS TO 6eo. S. Hacker & Son, CHARLESTON, S. C. We Manufacture Doors, Sash and Blinds; Columns and Balusters; Grilles anid Gable Ornaments; Screen Doors and Windows. NVE DEAL IN Glass. Sash Cord and Weights. Foley Kidney Pills What They Will Do for You They will cure your backache, strengthen your kidneys, cor. rect urinary irregularities, build ap the worn out tissues, and liminate. the excess uric acid that causes rheumatism. Pre rent Bright's Disease and.Dia. bates, and restore health and strength. Refuse substitutes. Dickson's Drug Store. KU LL THE COUG H AND CUREmhLUNGS GUAAANT E!D S~AT/SACTORY yR. .3. A. COLE. DENTIST. Upstair~s over Bank of Manning. MA NN ING, S. C. hone No '7. For Sale-One lot in the Town of oreston, containing two acres, with a welling thereon. and a tract of land ear Foreston containing ten acres, all de said property is deeded to Zinck troom. a'nd will be sold on reasonable arms. Address Louis Broom, Man ing, S. C. R.lING'S N~EW DISCO VERV Will Surely Stop That Congh.