The Manning times. (Manning, Clarendon County, S.C.) 1884-current, July 01, 1914, Image 3
for Sale at AIc0lu.
No. 1 Pmne Shinzles. sap.............-$2.50
No. 2-Pine 6hingles, sap,.........- $1.75
No. 1 Lats .....................$3.00
CuRl 4 4 Cypress Boards (very durable
for fencing and barn) ,'......10.00
The Sap Pine Shingles will last at least 8 years on a
roof wiih proper pitch.
j ADV ALDERMAN & SONS CO.
-7 AUGUSTA
AN ATLANTA'
nneing May 3dthe Atlantic Coast Line will iuaugu
a OUGH SLEPING CAR SERVICE between Wil
SOgldnte Saite Augusta_-"d Atlanta* in connection
~n6 as ebesemiedule fromnManni g in connection Wih
n< re~ se cze
7. P.
5 P.
~~U '- QP MYI
45. - ~~aix~ in le~pinkcars.~ni :0 .M
V ~~AtIaht 80 3i -Central
a 1n0g.l24 A.
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- Ti.AceFrtlzr itibtr
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~ 1tyo~ ani~& g Tri l heat Jr. Ci v ator.PJ
ThePlnetJroCltvaor ith Swes,copnddb
Th SpCu OnndTo-osoRs.
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ElieBuif Farsnir wallCihul
The oe nAmercttn Pilandotyrir.ene
ThTeoe Read Gai DroBatery.GAANED
The Edisoizer Distc.bLamr
(It'sonAg Hrow. ia tesn
Come PlanetetrusCultivator
The lant J. CutivtorwithSweps, ..
Musio Born of Sorrow.
There is no nation naturally musical,
according to Henri Bidou, critic and
historian. If a nation is musical, be
sys, It is because it has passed
through such tribulation that it bas
been driven to express Its sorrow and
anxiety In its airs .and compositions.
Bach, he declares, is the culminating
expression of sufferings induced in
Germany by the Thirty- Years' war,
fift years before Bach's time.
People sing "like cowards," he con
tinues, to keep -up their spirits in bad
mnoments, and he finds'that the real
countries of music are nearly all fron
tier provihees exposedto external vicis
altudes.
England he finds esempt to a large
extent, from the occasions In which
poets "learn in suffering what' they
teach in song" 'because It is pro
tected .ftom invasion by the girdle of
the seas. Music, then, he argues,'Is not
an art of peace; it originates in strife
andanxiety,notin tranquillity and con
cord. The overprosperous countries, he
discovers, "not- only have no history;
they have no musie."-Chicago Inter
Oceam
By the Author.
Rabindranathagorethe Indian poete
who gained the $40,000 Nobel 'prize for
literatur, is a well known fgure in
London society, and to a London cor
respondent he sld recently:
-"In India the, little children babble
wore attheage of five or six. Were
not like you. With you, if a full
grown man or, woman suddenly man
ages to write a few rimes the thing is
deemed almost a miracle.
,-I sat in a me:azine office the other
morning, while the editor opened his
WsaiL. He tossed a letter to M.
"'hata' the sort of thing I'm con
tinually ieceivlng. be said.
"The letter ran:
-Dear Ettor-The poem Inclosedis orig
nast zIe. and ibad no help in:tbidng
xut ame. It is. a true poem. I wrote it
myseif and therea sore where -it' came
5rkf IfIhad any in ~uce~nt. to think
mm out. You may say WOrigina at the
op ota.ame. for every word Is by
KWhe $kierse Wore Flogged.
it wrouldfhave needed a very alluring
aa of advertsement Indeed to at-t.
menthenm to the English army aImn
fkedgears ago. Writing of that period
writer: iogg ring a lot
it .sal. ssuanmut
Atat the otionds
eb eeed. aid Wellngton~hisi
heft it Aimrnt -4asebyh-by,
he tess the u1lc
nd One warthabeonry men
ging~to tbealo e low: 'IBMd
er . In .d?7. sentinel in
~~8tJains
Sarks sievrefltat be subeequently
fed avingmad. H1s om~nseansbea
4iylg thattesew teen
a gement or-agodd 3bi6 han
'r *bedeone.
T66 U ocavity
Wenta bArberisbop to bavehIs
r5~ e apedn, soerbad i
ais MaC rnobe chairs thane
h-droped tntY heavy slumber.
~aently the ha eartist was bay
asown trobasjaanlnpalatint
becust ~id after m-aking several
etasifelthongb fully beuseL
-'yncue ne.sir,"; said begnl
Iang~b daaniintthe cboha~bn
,ido'mindfwn*rngip Zan~t
ureouiwbl'e yuar asleep."
'aitsbrve~ieewile I'm asleep'
ixlatod. the-"itl,with a wonder
ug eEpresson. "Whiynot?
-ne..se,' .xIaisned the barber as -
oty-sgosible'"wben you fall into
Yumner your mnouti iopens sowide
hat I can't find youriace -iadel
Easy Tinma.
The mnan.wholearns roan gguge
lees not gaways- enlarge his mind. Af
irterndaSwass h'otel who spoke
mi inaccuracy;'was once asked ,what
ws ltenamtivetongue. Beiplelthat
de diotnoir. but hate4Pekspoke
"But n . whata language do O
hink? asked theepersistent uso
"I1 nera tink," wasethegremlptePlY
-Youth's'cmpanion
Only One "BROMO, QUININ4E"
1vBROMOQUIINE. Lokfor strot
W.GRcova..curesacomiacaeSY stop
nfl, en par
(j~r apoc
have' built the
1shoes bearing
Lunnecessay fo
teeand get themi
vry best styles an<
Children's. We a
Swarnt to ye YOT.
them__n our say-s<
1R
'p?
Seashore 'Trai
and---.
ThA Atlantie Co- ne lnato h : aura- e T Se a
makes Low Excurvsion ate.s 1)arleston
Comnee Sun diaz the nti: Coes; Le wil
inaugerate earfy Sunday trains fro ad Somre Char
leston, to coniu wolhathy i h oIrer months2-C$o
ing will biAhe selhdules an'pal wi"*ith the Sunday ext'eur
sion fares for tiere.-t- limited to return on tram leaving Charlemi.on at
:2.P. M ,of d...e of sale.
LV. Fi'r.-nee 6:30 A. M...................$2 00
- li'ter 6:30 A. M............... 1 >
L k ity 1:25 A. M. - .-1 50
8:05'A ............. 0. 25
Mnrnjno'~~~ soT0Al~ ~
nin3 7:'07 ....-......... -../ d
30 .M ...............110
'lkn~ks Otfr. 9:23 A r . ..--- - 65
Ar: Ch"lriestei *'.10:30 A.. t
Ptoportisonilv low- i As .Iibe made for thes: traine/frm
Af intermediat' noiots, tbe opening up a laree territry to the
seatsbre on Sundays, and they are o low that they are within the
reaen of every on?. For further particulars call on.
H. D. CLARK,
.Ticket Agent of tbe A. C. L at Manning, S. C.
GREENVILLE, S.'C.
A Colhge of Refinement, Distinctions and Character
--A Highsandarfollege
A large'and Able- Faculty
A Select Student Body
On the Slope o t Bq euidg10..1 -eotgioteSe'-level Beauifn
Groundsand Handsome, Modernly Equipped Buildings
A College of-Liberal Arts and.Siences,- offering Courses Leadang
to the D
A Conservatory of Mu4nsic,.offering Courses Leading. to -he De
gree of, B. Mus'Seioobsof Art, Expression andusiness
& A 1DEAL.COEGESFox.
LA'~L'i',. ~VOUNGOEN h
For free cataloggae and Aodd
le.Mee . svu e
m -
itedhi opou oe optl n fS.1is
anapptent ec ou dzkem
~ewel~o L ebqoaney-A06n A
i tWRhuppoetan edici me
- 1 m uon aso a s
WU -Hos--.'
- .~- (Mtma S Ma 8 E l
-e. s.,a -
it- and wit P.7 06hcaredt 4&b *Ookr'MnMaa~ safro
A-,l
RAu ata. s
searw~thblodsolonzdlors.
17 WH.L E.LP YO TO~ O-AT AT.I 0RC1eS$1
. roper Trainung of Boys Fillym ot .8wMve.C
DohnWhi.MatarGL, "Sve mn Do you v~lthink the monkto-a .tn
It.u ass ne hP?? peron; -setyn a. boy ometoo ytaymi.ed ne a of.his
e. AD ldiscu. as "Byeusftered Ata[o.u w cone~ tht in--fron of y
bu noVtomuh LP In toson.NhadbuthOe~ot oeatea
BedeMhoes4
106 you oneer -seabooe tvtor hi~t'akd.oemno
taheichol scte ake"By s itheea-a good sote-fon f
siat otat iuiwhyo too ison aa;btthy gotahe, fe
are Baelbyianuactrerewh
hoTyou nee see the tlo hidde.
to seach either foratese shoesgcomerigh
earsfo-thaiswso it Mens, Womens safd
wern api)o .NGWEAR SHOES -u
ir reuttiN o IhNstyoN li
1andi tng, bein Cevr paro
the ell rade Mar-makng i
- - - -;7--- A.
F.- ,
Grandest S ectacua
- - %
-.~~~0 Ti ej;. ..
.
THE CARL
- . . -
-- Z
-X:4r
- -
- -4-C*
-- \
.- .. .
- -- -7 --. 4LW
- - - -- -*t.
- -*
- ~- - - -
-- -
- -- - -
-2 * - -.
ed n b 700gs 2el Staes se
140ian wilebeats, 140elrphan
* .200 Performers, 50 clowns
Daring,~ Fearless,
Graceful
Equestrains Performing Evolutions of
Incomparable Horsemanship.
Circus, 4 Reels: Regular Program, 3 Reels. Admission, 15 and 25c.
MANNINO, S. C.
FridayJuly 3
a1
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