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+ jI THE+ -+ + + PEOPLES BANK 1+I + OF MANNING. Urges its customers to think of + i+ + ;I devoting a porton of their lads + and time next year to the + + + i+ TOBACCO AND TRUCKING Our Reputation'.UINS + ~ BUSINESS+ Our high financial standing, our re- + sources, all make it apparent to the The price of T O B A C C + discriminating man or woman tha + at Manning Warehouses, attheir . This Bank, + recent openin.- ib ,.I the argu is the safest place for their money. En- ment needed on the TOBACCO trust your account to us ana you will -be the recipient of every attention and We will endeavor soon to give + courtesy. vou the experience of one man T on fonr acres of POTATOES. + The Peoples Bak O.+W OF MANNING. + Woodmen of -the World. i++ Meets on First Monday nights at 830- Dr.King's New LiVe Pills Vistinz:Sovereigns invited. The best in the world. ei11h Oii1 Ciligge IN 8 l00 0 801D Ii-0l0. CHARLESTON, S. C. Departments of Medicine and Pharmacy. Owned and Controlled by the State. 86R9910 00 WON[ IS81,1014, 010s8 J000 Mll.195 Fine. New Building,~ready for occupaney October 1st., 1914. Ad Ventageously located, 'opposite Roper Hospital. one of the largest jospias in the South, where abundant clinical is offered. Hos pital contains 218 beds. Practical work for Senior Students in Medicine and Pharmacy a Special Feature. Large and well-equipOed -Laboratories in both schools. Department of Physiology and Embrology in affiliation with the Charlesot Museum. Nine full teachers in Labratory Branches. Six graduated appointments each year in medicine. For Catalogue, address, - OSCAR W. SCHLEETER: Registerar, Charlestou. S. C. AO0IFOR 50c. ABSOLUTELY GUARANTEED. youwant to get rid of that COLD or LAGRIPPE -ustpurchase Twelve of our Capsules, compounded by us. If taken as directed and they fail to cure, we wi t gladly refund your money. - DICKSON'S DRUG STORE, - Alcolu Railroad Co. STI 1E TABLE, NO. 13. Sanuary 1, 1914. Read Down. Rea Up. S No. 1 No. 3. * - '. w Lv. 1:00 Lv. 7:50 0 Alcolu 25 A r 7:50 1:05S " 7:55 2 McLeod 23 Lv. 7:45. S.1:10 " 8:05 5 Harby 20 " 7:40 " 1:~0 " 8:10 7 DuRant 18S 7:25 - 'a 1:35 " - 8:25 12 _Sardiniia 13 " 7:05 : " 1:45 " 8:30 14 ~New Zion 11 " 6:55 : 6 1:55 " 8:35 15 Beard 10 -' 6:50 * " 4:30 " 8:50 17 Seloc S 6 :35 2:45 " 9:05 20 .Paroda Jt 5 " 6:20 - 2:5Q " 9:10 21 Hudson 4 " 8:15 __ 3:00 Ar. 9:30 25 Olanta 0 " 8:00 No. 1-daily except Saturday and Sunday. No. 2..-daily except Sunday. No. 3.-Saturday only. ****All stations except Alcola and Olantai are fla.i stations fo r all trains. These trains run only as above stated. All mixed traims. P. R. ALDERMAN, T. M. Alcolu, S. C. TO AUGUSTA AND ATLANTA Commencing May 3rd, the Atlantic Coast Line will inau~g rate THROUGH SLEEPING CAR SERVICE between 3X mington, Florence, Sumter, Augusta and Atlanta, in connecti with the Georgia Railroad. * Following is the schedule from Manning in connection w the new service: Lv. Manning, 7. 37 P. M. Ar. Sumter, ~ . 20 P. M. Lv. Sumter, 9. 80 P. M4. Ar. Orangeburg,.. 10. 53 P. M. Ar. Augusta. 1. 40 A. M. Ar. Atlanta, .. . 'J0 A. M. Passengers may remain in sleeping cars until 7:00 A. M. Returning, the train leaves Atlanta, 6:00 I'. M., Cent Time; and arrives Stamter, 7.2'0 A. M., and Manning. 110.'-4 A. Connections are made mn the Union depot Atlanta with 1 "Dixie Flyer,"' (leaving there at 8:00 A. M.) which is a solid tn; 'to Chicago, carrying sleeping, din ig and ob'ser1vation cam r; a also through sleepmng cars to St. Louis; and with tue --Soutai lantic Limited," (leaving at 7.12 A. M.) a solid tramn to _Ciiemn carrying sleeping and dinning cars: also through sleeping cars Louisville and Indianapolis. Connections are also made in Atlanta with the Atlantat West Point R. RZ. for Montgomery, Mobile. New Orleans and Southwest; with the Southern Raiway, for Bi.rmigham. Memip and the West and with other diverging lines for points in Sol Georgia, etc. For reservations, tickets and schtedules t(o any Western (1 L.ination by this new and attractive route, by old and reliale hn aplv to 11I. D). Ca i.R Ticket Agent of the Atlanmie Coast Lmer Te c.:ada ai to ea of the South. \ -- deBestMedicineMade .iieyad BdderToubles" LS BaIcache, S hZe'umatismn. KI-alneys and. Bladder. For Sale by All Dealers CYPRESS SASH DOORS BLINDS MOULDINGS AND MILL WORK Hold on to Your Money T: and in times of adversity it will hoid on to you. Every business man should have an acpount at a good bank where it will be safe when he needs it. Besides the advantage of beinig able to draw againist it by check is worth something. This bank solicits the accounts of merchants and individuals. Homew Banik anid Trust Co 1G. T. Floyd, SURVEYOR and CIVIL ENGINEER :Office over Bank of Manning LOANS NEOTIATED :On F'irst-Class .Real Estate Mortgages. Purdy & O'Bryan, :ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Manning S. 0. c. H. LESESNE, ATTORNEY AT LAW, MANNING, S.. C. fN buying -den pa - or a pc I ~~est youi r have built t (style and fit, I'shoes beari unnecessary f NI. ~ ,~~You don't 1 here and get then a very best styles a: I Children's. We want to see YC t ;them on our say For Sale at Alcolu. No. 1 Pine Shiriges. sap... ........$2.50 No. 2 Pine Shingles, sap, .$.........SL75 No. 1 Laths................ . 3.00 Cull 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 with proper pitch. D. W. ALDERMAN & SONS CO. Prosperih PH IIIeels DI The Cole Corn and Cotton Planter. The Cole Corn and Grain Dropper. The Cole Fertilizer Distributor. The Rex Fertilizer Distributor. The Victor Fertilizer Distributor. The Acme Fertilizer Distributor. The K. P. Fertilizer Distributor. The Gant Fertilizer Side-Dresser. The Cole Fertilizer Side-Dresser. The Iron Age Harrow. The Handy-Andy Horrow. The John Deere Drag-Harrow. The Planet Jr. Cultivator. The Planet Jr. Cultivator with Sweeps, The Syracuse One and Two-Horse Plows. The Chattanooga One and Two-Horse Plows. The Celebrated Stag Brand Paint and Stains. The Beautiful and Sanitary Wall Coating "Alabastine." The American Field and Poultry Wire Fence. The Red Seal Dry Battery (GUARANTEED) The Edison Mazda Elec. Lamp (It's only rival the sun. Come and let us SHOW YOU. - I. TieMUNa Hrwe Co. CHICORA COLLEGE GREENVILLE, S. C. A College of Refinement, Distinctions and Character A High Standard College A large and Able Faculty A Select Student Body On the Slope .. the Blue Ridge, 1000 feet above Sea-level. Beautiful Grounds and Handsome, Modernly Equipped Buildings, . --- A Collexe of Liberal Arts and Sciences, offering Courses Leadng to the Dereesrvato A B ,B. S., and B. Pead gree of B. Mus. Schools of Art, Expression and BusinLEssFO COICORAYOUNG WOtlEN. For free catalogue and announcements, address REV. S. C. BYRD, D. D.. . - GREENVILLE, S. C. Blood Poison* Scrofula, Malaria Skin Disease Because it Purifies RAnD WEAN NOTED 1EO113 E 01 1PPMAN'S GREAT REMEDY-P. P..P. F. Vldaz.gsy.LI MnANries abbiAH SeooC ftE Svna o n. o fIste edigbpuer S heaton.w esevstakso hoesnd ,thP ..cmltl ue . i.Ito yourneveriseenthavitalforlhrd -. aisho-thha is whyre finhbt iswas tat.Pe P yare ihModpo m ad oes. m aareal whot. ro reputtinohest S o esqalty ~ hyou nee see the tlo hid. rs to seach either morateseitshoes-come~ righ eahfor shethatis easo it Mens, Woe'an wearngWEar SOGEAR SiOS-u lan ningtan bein evrypiro NO SLUMS IN NEW YORK. /erdict of an Expert After a Search Through the City. I have made an amazing discovery. It is the result of three days and aights of going to :ind fro in New iork-somctuies alone and sometimes with a wise but not cynical (etective. And the amazing and disconcering dis eovery is this: There are no slums in New York. You can Iind crime and criminals: you can lid vice, poverty. drunken ness, disease. but you cannot find a slum-such slums s blacken and fester,. in Antwerp. Genen. Naples. Paris. Loilou and mauy another old world city. The rotson is that you cannot have a shin without tilth, and N'-w York is a clean city. Neither ,-rime nor poverty nor crowds make a slum. You must have filth as well. and that is what New York hasn't got. I loo!ed for it east and west and north. from river fr-ot to river front. Everywhere. anywhere. were crime. vice, mean poverty Everywhere thieves. rogues. outcasts. men and wo men isolated from their kind by sin or mere suffering. but no slums. Dirt. of course. is relative, but the tenements-even the old 'nests of low houses lined with fira escapes-were abitable human dwelling places. And the niglt going detective declared he could show me nothing worse. I want ed to see the fetid.caves where wretch edness lay moaning on garbage heaps, the windy gaiTets where it starved, and there were no fetid caves. In the old streets and the dingy courts of Paris you can still find hun dreds of them; you have but to walk peeringly through the street of the Three Gates or the street of the Iron Pot; you have but to go into the suburbs that lie outside the fortifica tions-for year by year the centrifugal force that stirs in every great ag glomeration of hunian atoms .has thrown Parisiin beggardom into that dreary circumference. But in the washed and lighted un derworld of New - York there are no slums. There is not one slum that half deserves the name. Wretebed ness all you please; hunger in the streets =md on the housetops, it may be, but none of those gangrened holes of filth without which no real slumi can exist. I speak almost with the decision of an expert, for I spent many years prowlingiy investigating the 'slums that rot and blacken the surface of Europe from Moscow to Lisbon. Vance Thompson.in New York Sun. THREE EMPIRES. Monarchies That -Practically Sprang Into Bejng-Overnight. Prior to Jan. 18, 1871, the German empire, as we know it today, had no existence. Instead It was a jumble of kingdoms, states, duchies, grand duchies and principalities, all joined together by a like language and com mon political aspirations, it is true, but otherwise quite separate and distinct. Then came the historic ceremony in the -Hall of Mirrors at Versailles. Per is had just been captured by King William of Prussia, and it was held to . be a fitting time and place to proclaim him the first German emperor. Never since the dawn of history was an em pire born more dramatically. B ia strange iroziy of fate, too, its birth took place amid the ruins of the French empire, itself the creation of a day, or, rather, to be strictly accurate, of a night. France went to bed on the evening of Dec. 1, 1851, a republc. When it awoke next morning it was an empire. During the hours of dark ness Paris had been occupied by troops, and -the prince-president had become Napoleon III. - Equally sudden and almost as sensa toal in its way was the birth of the modernGreek empire. After the yoke of the Turks had been thrown- off .in the war of independence the country became a republic. But the people soon tired of that democratic form of gornmnt and promptly proceeded to assassinate their first and only pres ident. Then they met together, elect ed a king and settled themselves down to be ruled by him in a quite orderly and contented fashion. High. Cost of Living Again. Prosperous ex-German (on visit to fatherland)-Donner und blitzen, what are you givin' us? Forty pfennig for this sausage! When I went away a few years ago I used to pay only 20 pfennig. The Waiter-They was differeni sausages. The P. ex-G.-Precisely the same. The Waiter-No, you're wrong there. The old ones was bigger.-New York In Good Cornpany. A. contemrporary wants to knowi what's become of the old fashioned man who used to say. "I says, says I.' When last seen..he was standing or a street corner in close conversatior with the old fashioned .man who says "Seee to me, sezee."-Cleveland Plait Dealer. Home Secrets. Teacher-Tommy, next time you art late bring an excuse from your father Tommy-Who? Pa? Why he ain't any good at excuses; ma finds him oui every time.-Boston Trainscript. Posted. Ilowever did you hear such dread ful things about Mrs. Hluber?" -Touorget she wvas once my deares f-iend."-Fliegenide Blatter. The world does not regnire so mued to be informed as to be reminded. Hlannah More. MOTORCYCLES ! Sum merton S. C. K L LTHE CORJ H I AND CUR ETHELUN51 E DISCOWER AEANAL~hROATAN LU.LNG TROUBLESJ G'/A ANTEE'D SAT/$FACTORY OR MONf V REFUNDED. Week=End Summer Excursion Rates to the Seashore via the Atlantec Coast Lie, the Stan -dard Railroad of the South. Round, Trip Rates. From Manning, S. C. to Washington,D. C. $19.60 To Baltimore, Md., .....................19.60 To New York City..... .................28.60 To Boston. Mass .. ....... -33.10 Tickets on sale every day uit Septeober 30. via Norfolk aud Steamer. wit!h fitra return limit October 1i, 1914. TO ISLE OF PALMS, S. C.-$2.20. Tickets on sale for air trains each Saturday and forenoon trains each 'Sunda. until September 13th, 1014, limited returning to midnight of Tuesday next following date of sale.. TO WRIGHTSVILLE BEACH, N., C.--.$7.75. Tickets on sale everS dazy until September 30, lmIn ited returning until October 31, 1914. For summer excursion rates to many mountain, lake and pleasure resorts, and for any other inforta tion, reservation, etc., call on H. D. CLARK, - Or address Ticket Agent W. J. CRAIG, T. C. WHITE, Pass.- Traf. Mgr. Gon. Pass. Agt. Wil'm'ington, N. C. W C, R. Sprott, F. D. Hunter P'resident and Treas. Vice.President and See. 111111 OILILI Mantnng, So C. MANUFACTURERS OF SCotton. $eed. P o cts AND H Geilizers Ht at G-a e pies.-A - ~ ~ -- -- - - - - - - - SCottnk Sour SProlus ~HighTGrdeilertilizers. Whc cminesait yorfidnpeconistency, an couSrintes ney. TebgmnWhv the lates lil manswithsthe httle's Molaeaises welomd. ourldrs -ats apnto boreasnand dpoitosak. ou pr poseistoMikersn amuea eefts in thei om - luyin gera and its guarnsa-tisfct in Bankul ofn TugRepitory HaoresTh bid man Hebiole ardte Flle . .~mnWhte ltrolare adike welcome Owrdoosh wre iectrersd deosibytr a rs a mndti gnraadfa pth rons.piulr ei ~ vte 0Uto arriveecknx aconday.s, Arook, andorpie Wagnd ouses makell you austodaer-gsiess theReaon a thusad saisfed cstolier wh