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- ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT A-et Atdegetaboe mBa""s" valstin ANoucyfotr SM Eact Copy of Wrapper. Would. Be Second Choice. Little Helen-had received -a package hrough the.mail from. her .AuntEdith' ontaling- patterns. for -two dresses f lie pInk6aad, one blue. One-was in- 2 ended for her-agd the -other for her attle -sister, Dorothy. While examn lug the dresses, she exclaimed: "The 1 Ittdearmay have her choice,-but ' take e pink-one." DaUy Thoug!*. What your heart thinks great Is great The- soul's emiphasis Is alwayS' riht-Emensaa The Actor'.s Mistake. Toole-the English actor; used to get of a good thing occasionally. At did - ner at a country hotel he was sitting next .t- a gentleman who had helped bmself to an extravagantly-large piece t of bread. Tool.tookit up and began. to cut a slice frm it., "Sir," said the' iidignant gentleman,. "that Is my bread." "I beg a thousand pardons, sir," replied the actor. "I m1stook it for the loaf.~ india's Ahe~nInuiv Wealth. India offers a great field for futur* supplies of aluminum. There. are -pgeat deposits of laterite and bawzite from which aluminum is derh~ed. It is sai. that the Indfan product could be placed on the market at a Sgure - bura little more than halt that ofthe resent quotation. ;-The use ~of this *metal is handiciapped by the cqst' at* present, and if the metal could be secured at. a lower cost its field of usefulness would be greatly expanded There: are many comparatively ac cessible points where factories for the extraction of aluminum could be 1 eated. ARRIVED ( We have ali body. Small want to get r come in and:] * Among the Driving Hors and Draft Hc with most a mule line, so Full line of B1 Lap Robes, I Cofft 70 or Infants and Children. e Ki.&.You Have d Always Bought e=a the of t lt t For Over Tirty Years SSORIk< TIM OgulAUf 02UP*UY. NEW YORK GrWY. Parnell Loved Washington Gri. Charles Stewart Parnell fell des. serately in love with a Washington ole; but she said she would marry *0 one but an ambassador or some hmous Man. Within a few. years tom. that time Parnell was arried po the crested wave of enthusiasm ad his fame was worldwide, but no ne ever knew the -.name, outside of OUticl circ ~, of the man tbia road 1oman married. Vast American- Industries. Private cpial irveste in -timbe 2nds, mills,'logging railroads, and otl: r forms of equipment In this count I 'ach an.enormous aggregate, and the ::.b-r industry, which employs 739, i3 persons and has an annual output 3'ued at one and one-sIxth billian dol ars is the third largest. : What Will Th Have you ever stopped to ti y our. life's work will be? Are y Smoney crop for the winters of o Sj An investigation will you ti ideal place for keeping.your fu for every farmer to have a strot may want to borrow one of thes loan for you, on good security, any red.tape. Drop in to seetus Make the call friendly-you do, time yoi2 come in to say "hello.' SRememaer Us When on Have 1 You.When:Youz -BANK OF TU ~Headci IN MONDAYI ~use or mule t4 and large mu 'eal value for 3 et us show yo bunch are s( ~es, Saddle, H rses. tWe can nything in ti don't fail to e iggies, Wagoi Ste. ~yR Manning, 5. C. ' Byod.Engne A, eopany in Phladelphia waalay ig "Madame X." at the same time iat Bernhardt was playing It, and :e manager desired his players to see ie divine Sarah In it. They could et away only on one day-Friday. So ie Philadelphia- manager went to ;rnhardt's manager. and asked him if : would be possib.t for Bernhardt to lve a Friday matinee. -Her manager. ager to please the Philadelphian, but ubious. finally agreed to -ask Bern ardt. When he had explained, she eadily agreed to give up her after oon of rest. Her manager went back ) the lobby 1h a daze. "Bernhardt. Is more than mortaL he is capable of the work of ten ien," he told the Philadelphian. "be going to give that extra .matinee 'riday." Suddenly the ticket seller poked. his ead out of his eage. "Extra atinee Iriday!" he yelled. "Good -gracious! Vhat does that woman - tbnk.'I'm iade of?"-Green Book Magazine. Wood and Water. All wood contains more or less wa r. Even the driest wood known con als two or three pounds of water D every hundred pounds of weight. bsolutely dry wood is unknowanfor he beat needed. to obtain'It would dis olve the wood and convert It intorgas ad charcoal.- An eminent Swissau bority on the characteristies of..wod elleves that a suffleptly poweful ad perfect icroscope, could.:ltabe made- would show. that the, ultimste rood.ell .Is compoedof ritAkgtke ;rains-of 3Ugar or salt and tha. thin ilms of water hold the crystals -apgrt, ,et bind them .nto a.mas. A ggod nicroscope, shows,the..wod . ceg. and eveals Its spiral . banulages a- dits >penings and cavlAt._but .no intrl-. nent.yet, wAde. reveala,.the-..ultimate :rystals that, as many believe. do ex st, and that would explain why watet annot be.expelledkfrom -wood wJthout westapping .te-Voo4 elf. Timidity of the KM. The horse is by nature a timid a na,;as,- generally speakng, al l nals are to whom nature. has -g9"e wers of swift fight as their chief eanstof .sel -preservation. Of course ndividuals differ in this respect, but e rule Is so general that It should iever be lost.sight 9f lMtrainJng. That he horse cantbetraiAedo-,war sInply hows the extent to wbich his natural mpulses can be modided and subdued >y the art of man. Breeds or horses differ in regard to latural timidity. The pure bred Aub s beyond all comparison ,tbe- most earless horse, in the, word.- Itje pos able. that -this-may be owing in part .o the fact that his natural develop nent was for long ages in an open ountry, where he was not. In constant langer from unseen foes. but chiefly I hink because' he Is..a highg. evolp:. onary type han-ya otber 4orsa. Farm and Fireside. -Harvest Be? . ink-of what the harvest of r storing away part of your d age andrmisfortune?. at our bank would be an ida safely. Jt's a ood plan g banking connection. You a days; we can negotiate the t right .rates and without, next time you're in tewi). i' have to do business every [oney and We'llReinemh er NeedMoneyr, RBEVILLE. OCT. 25. > suit every les. If you rour -money u this, load. veral Fine arses, Farm furnish you te horse or ee us first. s, Harness, igby, ate of South Carolina County of Clarendon. URT OF COMMON PLEAS. B. Odoi, Plaintiff against. B. Covingt , Detendant. Decree. UNDER AND BY VIRTUE 0F A 'id-gment Order of the Court of.oia, .on Pleas, in the above stated ac on, to me directed. bearing .date of. 4ov. 9, 1915, I will sell at public auc ion, to the highest bidder, for.eash, %t Clarendon. Court Honse, at Man. ling, in said county, within the legal hours for judicial sales, on .Nouday. be 6,h day of .1eeember. 1915, being alesday, the following described real ,state: All that bertain piece, parcel or ract of land, lying being and situat, n.;the county of Clarendon and .the state ot South Carolina. containio One. Hundred and Forty-five acres, more or less, and being bounded and described as follows:. North by lands of J. E. Kelly; East by lands of :J. E. Kelly and J. Grier White: South. by isnds of-Mrs Rosa Weinberg and.Neill 0'oaell;. West by lands of J. M. (Graham, formerly lands of M.' Levi kndn as:'the -Richburg tract.' For . more. particular description of said' tradt;of land, attention is direceVd ) pjlat.of.same made by E. J. Smiwt.Sur-. 7eyor, dated March 2, 1909, ret;rded 1n Plat book No. 2, page 66 in oike.of. Clezk.of Court for Clarendon Countv. South Carolinas also to deed- from W E:DanIelsto.B. & Odom, recorded in book.F 42 page 486, 'office of Clerk of rt for aforesaid- County, June 9, 1910 Purchaser to.pay for' papers, - E. B. GAMBIFA Sheriff of Clarendon County. STATEFESOUTH GAR. .COUTOF COXMMX PLEAD. P. Moses,PlatA f West Parsow;n . : Anderson, D. NOTICE. OF SALE. Underand-by virtue of a decree of I the Court of Common Pleas for sato County and State rendered in abov stated aetJon dated the 28th d*y of tptembar 1915 it me directed, 1, E. B.' GaibJe, Sheriff of Clarendon -.;ounty, wil sell at public outery to the highest bidder for cash in front of -he Court/"Hcuse door a Manning, South-Carolina, on the 6th day of Ie cemier 1915, being salesday, withi the ,egal hours for judIcial sales, the fol lowing des6rpo ~reAl estate: All that tract of land situated in Clarendon Couot., Stae of outh Car olina, containing one hundred .-and sixty-five (165) acres, more or less, ad joining lands of William Withersoon, of Pinckney Martin, of Dorsey P80n, lands formerly of estate of Rufus. run sonan'lands of others, and lying on trhe Telegraph Road; being all tbat tract of land conveyed to West Parson by Kate D. Briggs by deed reco i2.ofca-of Clerk- of-'Court for sad Cmunty in book M. 3 on page 200. less *hose,.two parcels thereotconveyed to Pinekiey Martin anA'Dorsey Parson by degA reeprdedjn said offie AI Book Q.on pA g..60 ac Book . n pace 602: and or's mnoireparticular. descrip tion of the tiract df land herebv conves 'edreferenceis.had to the said records of said deeds. Purchaser to pay for papers. E. B. GAMBLE, Sheriff Clarendon County. The State oti South Oaroea, COURT OF COMMON PLEASL Neill OIDoinei,. as .Treaanre&'of the Board of Trustees of the Tuomey -Hospital. Plaintiff - against Joseph H. Burgess, Bank of Sommer ton and J, W..Broadwav,.Defendants. NOTICE OF SALE. Under and by virtue of a decree of the Court of Common Please for said County and State rendered in abov.e stated~ action dated the 28th day of Sepember 1915 to me directed, I. E.. B. Gamble,' sheriff of Clarendon County, will sell at pubhc outcry to the highest bidder for cash in front of the Court House door at Manning. South Carolina, on the 6th dlav of December. 1915, being salesday, within the legal houysf injudicial' sales, the following described real estate: "'All that tract of land in Clarenaan County, in said State, lying on Nelson Ferry Road, containing one bundred and eighty two acres, more or less,.arnd designated as lot No. 1 on a partition plat made by W. A. Burgess. Surve'yor November 26th. 1902, the said land be ina bounded by and adjo.ining lands originally allotted to A. P. Burgerss, other land of J. H. Burgess. lands of 0. C. Scarborough.:and of othbers." Purchaser to pay for papers. E. B. GA MBhE,. Sheriff of Clarendon County, STROF SOUTH CAROUINA, By. Couotj of Clarendon, BJames M. Winidhamn, Es. Probate Judge. WHEREAS, Sue Hail Dayis mad4esuit to me,,to grant her Letters of Ad minira5tion of the F~state and Effects of Daniel Beasley Davis. These are therefore' to cite and ad nonish all and singular the kindred and Creditors of the said Daniel Besley Davis deceased, that they - be and appear before me, in the Court of Probate, to be held at Manning on the 22nd day of November next, after pub lication hereof, as 11 o'clock in the forenoon, to show. cause. if any they have,, why the -sai Administration should not be granted. Given under my hand this 9th. daty of November Anno Domini 1915. JA MES M. WINDEA M, [SEAL] Judge of Probate. STATE OF SOUTH DAROUNA, Countj of Clarendon. By James M. Windhamn, Esq., Pro bate Judge. W HEREAS, T. M. Mouzon and P. B. VM ouzon made suit to me, to grant them Letters of Administration of the Estate and effects of Theodore W. Bralsford. These are thei-efore to cite and ad monish all and singular the kindred and creditors of the said Theodore W Brailsford, deceased, that they be and appear before me, in the court of Probate, to be held at Manning on the 18th day of Nov. next, after publication thereof, at 11 o'clock in the forenoon, to show cause, if aniy they hav.e, why the sapid admninistra tion should not be granted. Given under my hand, this 3rd day of Nov. A. D. 1915. JAMES M. WINDHAM, I SEAL.]Judge of Probate. Pies Cured In 6 to 14 Days Your druggist will refund mnoney if PAZO OINTMENT falls to cure any case of Itching, lldeelngorProtrudigPiles In6to 14d*a . RTATIOF SOUIH CAROLINA I County of Clarendon. COURT OF CO-MjMON PLEAS ombahee Eertilizer Co. Phiminiff, -againsr. Joha.S. EvanQ,.Henry H.-er as adin n is; rator of t-he Etaie .f %1 J. Hee, J d-ceased. and the Baik of Ularrv don.,:Dy~egn~ . NO.TICE OF..S..LE. I Under and by virue of a de cree of rbe 2ourt of Common Ple-as for said Dout'y and .State.renderid in ano%. stpted atc:ion dated-~the 7th *ay nf-June l915 to me directed, f, E B. G-imrle, 3heriff of Clarendon County. will sel it public outcr to the hign-st. bidder or cat-h in frot of the Court Hoo-e -oor at Mannuma. South C.ar lina. ou .he 6th day of Dec-ember 1915. being ) ;alesday, witnin the iega hurs for judicial ,als, the toll wirg d- ritbed real .s'at-: All that tract of land, lyingr, being tod -ituated, in Clarendon, 'ouniy, State of South Carolina. con;aiuiuig ,hree hundred and efaht (3G8) awr-s, rnore or less, and bounded as follows: Torth by lands of Epps. formerly of es mate of Josiah Flemming; Eizt by ands nowor formerly of M.,tUomery Fllwood: South by Black 10v-r wamp; and West by lands if Mrs M V. Evans. The said d.:-crab -d raet of and is all of lots number. 1 and 2 as ;own by plat made by E. J Smith. surve3or. dated Marcj 17 h 1908, which plat is recorded it bi.-e o' C - k f Court for said 0-ur.t) in pl h.. .k lumber 3 on page 29 Also a 1 tba' tr.Aut of land si- u.ited in - .iarendon County, Stat-- of ,-outh Car. )ina, containinr one - undred aid Ifty-four (15* acres, more or less, and bounded as~follows: North bv lands of 1. J. Cantey; East by lands of Mrs M. V.. Evaps; Sodth by Black River Swamp an4.West by lands of Mrs. S. 3. Smiih The said -describt d tract of laud is all of lot, number 4 as shown by said plat made by E. J. Smitb. Surveyor. ForI a more..particular. descript.ion of the: lands hereby mo tgaged reference sb- Ibe had to said plat dr to said recor'd of same in said offee. Purcbaser to pay for papers. E, B.. GAMBLE, Sheriff of Clarendon County. Notice of Discharge. I will apply O the Jule of P-olate fo.: 0 a, e, don oum .. on ' he .nt d,. ofr*.em'ier 1915. . -11 ,-'rk a mi . tr. rs o d;c a'-:e ., a:m ni-.% of of tha es.ate'of W. L Wa L-;, d. -eased.Wats Julius H Wat s. "Administrator Turbeville, S. C., Nov 4, 1915. Of The. Successful Busi ~Sness Ma is agoo1 oe t folow yo ca't*z g line successfuenn Bne i Nomoo ~stodayi ihot Hlomei Bankund Trust C'e NEIHOME ill. NO OThER LIKE IT. NO OTHER AS COOD. Purchase the "NEW HOME" and you will have a fle asset at the price you pay. 'The elimination of repair' expense by superior workmanship and best quafly of material insures life-long service at mni. maim cost. nsist on having the"NWHM . WARRANTED FOR ALL TlIE. Known the worl.d over for superior sewing qualities. ot sold under any other name. THE NEW HOME SEWING MACHINE CO.,0RIANGE,MAS8, Ladan Dals NEGOTIATED! If you want to buy Farm Lands or Lots in town, Or if you have a Farm or Town Prop erty for sale let us handle it for you. J. Hi. LE-SESNE. JOHN 6. DINKINS. to Offices mn Old Court House. fut - Ithe Bs I =A8 BACKACM-E KIDNEYS AND ALADDERE War upon Pamn Pain is a visitor to every home and X usually it comes quite unexpectedly. But you are prepared .for every emergency if you keep a small bottle of Sloan's Liniment handy. It is the greatest pain killer ever discovered. ~ Simply laid on the skin no rubbing required-It drives the pain away instantly. It is really wonderful. Sload's- -- Liniment R u - SP -K SORE US Dont Forget To Call -AT CITY TAILOR SHOP. To get your Fall Suit, our Fall and Winter Sutples is now in. We use the faiious Brunter. Woolen. and we are prepared to .iv you atruarantesi job. W- alzo do CiedniniLr PresDg. -iin and French Dr. CD-ning Rei' irin.-. A I* - ingT on all kinds of garments. Al work gnaranteed. F. C. WILLIAMS, Prop. ,PHONE No. 1. - OLD BAKERY STAND e"W der Car I - *Electric Starting and Lighting The new Maxwell is equippedwith the Simms . Huff Electric Starting and'1.ighting System. This system is a single unit type, combining in one instrument the generator and motor. It is the simplest, "sure-fire" powerful 'self starter made and has about one-half the wire of ordinary starters. -We a're waiting to take you for a - test ride in the car that has broken all low "First-Cost" records, and is breaking all low "After-Cost" records. F.O B. OETRIVtOi E. C. GROSS, Agt., Manning. .1 "Time tells whatl you did yesterday. s -Make to-morrow better by starting a Bank account to-day." If, for no other i reaon than the un foreseen demndsnc inicide buman life, you ow'e yourself a Bank account. I's a duty. because you haven't the power to predict t: ue but you have pow'er to start a Bank account and fortify f 'future. Besides we want to help worthy young meni to succee gintodaywith 31. 'he Bank of Manning. - Homing Instinct of Crab:. Who would believe that among- crea tures having well developed domestic instincts we must include the humble crabs, the "spiders of the .a." as Vic tor Hugo calls them? Once- under wa ter, we might expect one part of the sea to be as homelike as another. but that only shows how little the average human being understands a erab's point of view. Some one. however, suspected them of the homing instinct and, so tried the experiwent of catch ing a pair of them on the Yorkshire coast, in England, and, after markin them; carrying them south fifty mile.s or more, returning first one aoj then the other to the water at differeut points on the shore. Tucn the York shire crabbers carefully searched their traps as they made ~each ha'ul, on the lookout for the possible return of the wanderers. Strange to relate. one day not one, but both of- the crabs -were caught a second time, having made their way back across the intervening miles of sea bottom to their Yorkshire home.-St. Nicholas. Waterspouts. The waterspout at sea and the tor nado on land are manifestations- of great instability of the atmosphere in a vertical direction, caused 'ither by an abnormally warm' surface layer air or an abnormally cold layer at the cloud level, says Nature. The former .cause is common in summer; the lat ter occurs both inasummer and winter and. is usually associated with a "line squall" or . V shaped barometric de pression. The waterspout shows the track along whici, surface air passes spirally unward to restore equilibrium. The commotion. of the 'sea is due to the exceedingly vi tent ehafacter of the phengmenon. The funnel itself Is probably composed partly of moisture dondensed out of air by the sudden diminution of pressure which occurs and partly of sea water in the form of spray. Sometimes the middle portion of the- visible funnel is absent, but there must -in that case be a corre sponding complete funnel of rotating air from the surface of the cloud. Melancholia. Melancholia does not mean depres--'. sion of spirits.. A man may be as de-,-7 pressed as It is possible to be. and:s;1M) -nlo'tia're melancholia. Melanch If oespondency on accoun-d afpai ' de lusioUS. One of the two typ2 delu sions of melancholia is-that the unpar lonable sin has been committed, that :God has been offended beyond redemp ;tion and that hell Is to be the ultinate. _goal; the Qtber is that of. impending poverty. Everything-is lost or is -about to be. The patient and his family are koing to end up in the poorhouse. His acts alone have brought'about this -ter rible calamity from which there is no escape. It can be readily seen that a person having delusions of this tyke must be necessarily depressed. There. is probably no form of Insanity- Ii which- the anguish of the patient eqjals that of the melancholiac. Life is one continuous horror.-Exchange.' Pan-America. ' . The combined area of pan-America, exclusive of Canada, is 12,000.000 square miles, of which the Latin American countries occupy . approxi mately 9,000,000 and- the United States 3,000,000. This physical extent of pan America Is better- realized when it is compared with that of Europe, which has 3,750,000 square miles, wit. Africa, which has 11,500,000, and witbh Asia. which has 17,000,000. Pa'h-Americas - real greatness, sig, nificance and power in world relation ship are emphasized by appreciation of its present population and the future possibilities for a vast increase. .Itse twenty-one nations can now boast of a pophnlation.- of 180.000,000, of which.2 100.000,000 are living in United States territory and 80,000,000 In Latin Ae lca.-John Barrett in North Ame Review. .- - Defining an "'Is your hus art?" "Art! Hed from a hair cu "Why, I und he was an art "Patron! b a club sandwich What does he mes "Why he aysit thousand -1 year to pay masters the smooth deale. to buy-and that makes - patron."-Cleveland Plain Dea Obeying Directions. "Good heavens, John, what mnade -you pick out such an ugly woman to - send home? She scared the baby al- 4 most into fits." "Just did what you told me, Maria. IYou said you wanted a plain cook, and I got the plainest one to be had."-Bal -timore American. .A Strenuous Singer. It is possible for a singer to be too -strenuous. All students of musical his tory know that the famous tenor, Ru bini, actually fractured his collarbone , while singing a double forte on B flat Explained. -Proud Father-That is a sunset my daughter painted. She sptudied paint-' Ing abroad, you know. Friend-Ah, that explains it. I never saw a sunset like that in this country.-Puck. Those Girls Again. Edith-Miss Oldgirl says she has just reached the marriageable age. Sin ' You don't say! I wonder what dc. ed. her!-Boston Transeript. Thrift is not a virtue of to'morrow, ,but of today. Constipation Is to be dreaded. It lepds to serious -. ailments, Fever. Indigestion. I'ites. Sick Headache, Poisoned System and a 3coro oi odhcr troubles follow. w Don't let Constipation .last. Keep your Kidneys, Liver and Bowels healthy and active. Rid your system of fermented, gassy foods. Nothing better than Dr. King's. All Drugf ists 25 cents SATISFACTONOR MONEY BACK I)tHow To Glive Quinine To Children. FEBRILINE is the trade-marke name given to an imnproved Quinine. It is a Tasteless Syrup. pleas .i ant to take and does not disturb the stomach. Children take it and never know it is Quinine. r Also especially adapted to adults who cannot .take ordinsry Quinine. Does not nauseate nor it thue nervuses nocingig in the head. Try -- pose. Akfor 2-ounce original package. The. name FEBRILINE is blown in bottle. 25 cents.. L ECTDREI IlE S's* B IT TER AND KIDNEY&.