University of South Carolina Libraries
Always' Reliable M annig Rxperlences Going Back Sor Four Years. Kidney weakness can be cured. But wbat caused it once will cause i again. fet'e's a Manning woman who has bad several attacks, Several times in over four years Mrs Logan has used Doan's Kidney Pill. She says thit Doan's have never failed her. our years ago Mrs. Logan publicly endorsed Doan's. She now confirms her statements. What better proof of merit. Proved by years of experience. Told by Manning people. This is convincing testimony. Mi. R. L. Logan, Manninir, says: For a long time I had been troubled with my kidneys. I suffered from a lame and aching back and didn't rest well nights. One box of Doan's Kid ney Pills relieved me wonderfully. J am feeling much better now." (State ment given January 30th, 1911.) Over three years later, Mrs. Logan said: "I still use Doan's Kidney Pills and they do me a world of good I keep them on hand and couldn't get along without them." Price 50c. at all dealers. Don't sim pR1 ask for a kidney remedy-get nDos's Kidney Pills-the same that Mrs. Logan has twice publicly recom mended. Foster-Millburn Co..Props, Buffalo, N. Y. The Weakness of William. Carefully the burglar effected an entrance into the bank. Carefully he found his way to the strongroom. When the light from his lantern fell on the door he saw this sign: "Save Your Dynamite. This Safe Is Not Locked. Turn the Knob and Open." For a time he ruminated. "Anyway, there's no harm in trying if it really is unlocked," said he. He grasped the knob and turned. Instantly the office was flooded with light, an alarm bell rang loudly, an electric shock ren dered him helpless, while a door in the wall flew open and a big dog seized him. "I know what's wrong with me," he sighed an hour later, when the cell door closed upon him "rve too much faith in human nature-I'm too trust lng!" A Doctors Remedy For Coughs. As a cure for coughs and colds Dr. Bell's Pine-Tar Honey combines these ..emedies in just the right proportion 't do the most good for summer coughs or colds. A trial will prove the value of this splendid cough medicine. Dr. sell's Pine-Tar-Hon-y soothes the iri tibn. stops your cough., kills the cold :'~ e and d.es you a woild of ;ood. A 25 bottle will more tha-2 cenvince vou -it will stop your cough. At druz gists.-Adv. Originally From Siberia. s se rhubarb of our gardens is a aive of Siberia and for more than j00 years after its introduction into thia cour ry ..'as cultivated entirely t the use of tlhe roots in medicine. Care For Ch3lera Morbas. "When our little boy, now seven years old. was a baby he was cured of cholera morbus by Chamberl tin's Col ic. Cholera and Diarrhoe Remedy." Kwrites Mrs. Sidney Simmons. Fair . Iee, N. Y. "Since then otber mnem bNof my famiiiy have used this valu S"aemedicine for colic and bowel trou K eis wish good satisfaction and I gladly oreit as a remedy of excptional snrt"Obtainable everywhere.-Av Sad Fact. Ash cannot wither nor custom stale . the tafinite sadness >tf entries qn the fsht-hand page of the bank bock. Ohio State Journal. -Just The Thing For Diarrhoea. -"About twa years ago I had a severe attack of diarihoea which lasted over a week," writes W. C. Jones, Buford, a N. D. "I became so weak that I could j'not stand upright. A druggist recom mended Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. The first dose relieved me and within two days 1 was as well as ever." Many drugcist ree omnend this remedy because tbev know that it is reliable. Obtainable evt ry er here.-AdV. Little of Value In Poverty. There is no doubt, of course, that povert.y develops much that Is pre 'clous in life, not talent nor genius ilone, but valuable qualities of char acter. But It does vastly more harm than good. Win Sloan's TLinment Relieve Pain? Try it and see-one application will prove more than a column of claims. ames S. Ferguson. Phila . Pa., writes I& have had wonderful relief since I used Sloan's Liniment on my knees. To think after all these years of pain one application gave me relief. Many thanks for what your remedy has done for me." Don't keep on suffering, ap piv Sloan's Liniment where ycur pain is and notice how quick you get relief. Penetrates without rubbing. Buy it at any Drug Store. 25c.-Adv. Of The Successful Busi ness Man is a good one to follow: Tou can't go far wrong if you walk in his :foot.steps. No man of affirs today is without a commercial bank account: no business, however small, can afford to be without one. If von have not an account, get in line for success by opening one with to)day. Home Ba k alu Trust Co Whnvr Youa Need a Genzeral Tonic Take Grove's The Old Standard Grove's-Tasteless chill Tonic is equally valuable as a General Tonic because it contains the well known tonic propertiesof QUININE and IRON. It acts on the Liver, Drives out Malaria, Enriches the Blood and Bu~lds up the Whole System. 50 cents. Th Wuinine That Does Not Affect The Head Because of its tonic and 1axativre effect. LAXA TrIVE B OMO QUININE is better than ordinary Qinine nddoes not cause nervousness nor ingn head. Remember the fuil name and Io te agmtar of E. W. GROVE. 35c. OUT WITH THE FAULTFINDER! He Is One Unmitigated Nuisance That Is Everywhere and Has Ex - isted Always. The world's greatest nuis:n -e is the faultfdnder, for he is conspicuous ev erywhere, John A. Sleicher observes in Leslie's. He does not hide his light under a bushel nor speak in a whis per. His mission is to be seen and heard. The Creator in six days made the universe, and when it was finished de clared that the work was good. Yet, since its creation, the world has been 'full of faultfinders, who do not think it is good enough for them. The peculiarity of the habitual fault finder is that he has no reason to find fault. He disturbs the serenity of those who are happy and who would enjoy peace and contentment but for him. Nothing satisfies the faultfinder, and no era has been free from his tantaliz ing presence. The faultfinders exas perated Mose's on the mount until he dashed to pieces the stone tables in scribed with the first written laws of God. But the Ten Commandments remain the law of God and man. The faultfinder is the bane of the family circle. He undermines affec tion, destroys peace and breeds discon tent. He Is the fly in the ointment, the unwelcome intruder. He makes the task of the genuine reformer more difficult. He blocks the path of progress. He cumbers the statutes with unnecessary and unworkable laws. He dictates de structive policies to those in authority and makes them cower before his vitri olic tongue, his poisonous pen and pes tiferous persistence. No church has been without its fault finders, no social organization; no shop, factory or office, and no move ment for the public good is exempt from his intrusion. The faultfinder is found everywhere, scattering the seeds of distrust, poi soning the minds of those who will listen, marshaling the forces of unrea son, casting shadows on the sun, dim ming the light of the stars, mocking the hopes of humanity and challenging the goodness of a beneficent Provi dence. Out with the faultfinder ! We have no room for him. Mother of Vice Presidents. Discussing the candidacy of Fair banks, one of our esteemed contempo raries jocularly referred to Indiana as "the mother of vice presidents." The claim is unfounded, for this distinc tion belongs to New York. Our state has been the home of no less than ten vice presidents: Aaron Burr, George Clinton, Daniel D. Tompkins, Martin Van Buren, Millard Fillmore, William A. Wheeler, Chester A. Arthur, Levi P. Morton, Theodore Roosevelt and James S. Sherman. What is more, four of them were presidents later Van Buren by election, Fillmore and Arthur to fill accidental vacancies and Roosevelt to fill a vacancy and also by election. But Indiana can claim only four vice presidents-Schuyler Colfax, Thomas A. Hendricks, Charles W. Fairbanks and Thomas R. Mar shall. In the running mate rivalry, however, Indiana leads New York in one respect. Since the Civil war she has furnished three unsuccessful nom inees for vice president-Hendricks in 1876, William H. English In 1880 and John W. Kern In 1908-as against New' York's two-Whitelaw Reid in 1892 and Sherman (who died before the close of the campaign) in 1912. Syracuse Herald. Meaning of the Ballet A recent contributor to the Unpopu. lar Review reminds us soberly that. as the democratic state cannot rise above the level of its voters, and as nationality means for us merely the will of the people, It might not be amiss to guard the franchise with rea sonable solicitude, and to ask some thing more than unlimited ignorance and the absence of a criminal record as Its price. .If every man-alien or native born-who casts his ballot could be- made to know and to feel that "all the political forces of his country were mainly occupied for a hundred years in making that act pos sible," and that the United States is, and has always been, the nation of those "who willed to be Americans," citizenship might become for us what It was to Rome, what It Is to France the interpretation of honor, the sym bol of sel-sacrfice.-Agnes Repplier, In the Atlantic Monthly. Spooks Took Him to the Hills. Clairvoyants, whom he frequently consulted, convinced Fred Sherman, son-In-law of William C. Nevin, presi dent of the Nevin Candy company, that a fortune lay within his grasp in a prospect hole, high on the Medicine Bow mountains In Wyoming; so Sher man went there with his twenty-two year old bride, Edna Nevin Sherman, who was fresh from high school and society, and took up his residence In a dilapidated log shack with a dirt roof through which rain and melting snow poured in muddy streams. Months of life in this rude shelter obliterated Mrs. Sherman's love for her husband. This is the substance of an apswer filed by William C. Nevin to the $10, 000 alienation suit filed against the candy manufacturer.-Denver Rocky Mountain News. Seek the Man. Hokus-Those two girls used to be bosom friends, and now they scarcely speak. Pokus-What's his namne?-Life. Drives Out Malarla,-Builds Up System The Old Standard general strengthening tonic. GROVS TASTEI.EsS chill TONIC, drives out Malaria,enrichethblood.ndbuildsupthe sys lem. A true tonic. For adults and children. 50c. For 'roup--Mothe rs Always Keep This Handy The day of the Croup scare is over for those parents who wisely keep 2oley's oe ad Tar Compound in the home ford ?1instant use. Mrs. Chas. Reitz, Allen's Mills. Pa.. writes: "I have used Foley's Honey and Tar Compound for the past eleven years nd would not be without it. It has saved me many a doctor's bill for colds and croup." If toward nightfall the little ones grow hoarse and croupy, if their breath ing becomes wheezy and stuffy, giva them Fole' Honey and Tar Compound. rd off an attack of spasmodic croup by its timely use. * If you are awakened by the hoarse brassy cough that means croup, give nce.y'It will ease the little sufferers eukly, cut the thckchokin phlegm and peaceful quiet sleep. ****ZYUr uer Zs a 'stea4. Dintrenn' Drug Store. Children Cr The Kind You have Aiwa in use for our .:0 A!' AU Counterfeits, Imitatio Experiments that t:i~ie v Infants and Children-E What is ( Castoria is a harmless si goric, Drops and Soothii contains neither Opium, substance. Its age is its and allays Feverishness. has been in constant use Flatulency, Wind Colic, Diarrhea. It regulate assimilates the Food, giv The ChIldren's Panacea GENUINE CAS Bears t In Use For The Kind You I THE CENTAUR C4 BETTER THAN ANY POCKE For Absolute Safety, the Old Lad Plan Was Pretty Well Perfect. It was in the Pennsylvania depot Jersey City. A man who had been b asleep on one of the benches for so time suddenly roused up, carried hand to the breast pocket of his e and then called out: "I have been robbed! Someone I picked my pocket!" "Have much money?" asked an i lady who sat near him. "Over $40." "Sakes alive! but what a loss. Si you had it when you left home?" "Of course I am." "Didn't leave it under your pillar, change your coat?" "No!" "I noticed you feeling around yc xoattails before you went to sleep. B ter look back there before you g up. He carried his hand back, and I seconds later held his lost wallet to sight. He began to apologize a stammer, but the old lady threw er hands and checked him with: "Young man, you orter be ~mC eerful, you might of accused me tealin' that money, and it would ha een a nice thing for my church fo] o hear of, wouldn't it? Whent ews got home to my old man hi have been so ker".ustrated that he ave forgotten G. feed the shoats ilk the cows, and there's no knowi ow he'd have got along locking he house and going to bed." "Oh, I shouldn't have accused yi a'am," protested the man. "Wall, I'm glad on it, and being his excitement has come up abc picking pockets I guess I'll see If oney and ficket is safe." And she reached down, slipped of clfskin shoe from her right foot, a eered intently into It, with the: nark: "There's a ticket and there's a d ar bill, and I hain't been robbed. Ji ry it, young man. Beats coat tail a al other pockets all holler. Got tand you on your head to git It, a very time you sot your foot down y kow it's thar. I've carried $17 ver New York that way, and getc live and safe." OHN G. DINKINS, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Manning, S. Office in Oid Court House. . H. L SSE ATTORNEY AT LA' MANNING. S. C. . 0. EDWASH. M. PERRI "DWARDS & PERRITT, L. CiVIL ENGINEEI ND SURVEYORS. Otfie Over Banik of Manning. MANNING S 0. W.C. DA VIS. J. W. WIDEM) A VIS & WIDEMAN, -. ATTORNEYS A T LAW\v, * MA NNING. S.C. NANNING. s. C. . U. PURIDY. S. OLIYSUi 0 zitT URDY & OBYN Attorneys ounselors at Law. MANNING, S C. G. T. Floyd, URVEYOR and CIVIL ENGINEE Ottice over Hirschmann's Store. OANS NEGOTIATE Onh First-Class Real Esta ortgages. Purd~y & O'Bryan, .\ITO)RNEYS ATP LAW X, \Tatnzn ing S. I l. .I. A C:OL M, D)ENTIST1. Upstairs over WVeinberg's Corner Stc MANNING. S. C. y for F tcher'S w~4 b,' y BOa., Lz ...:. v cA has been a 5- 1:,b: .a i; nature of I has e tmae .tuder his per )ow 2)v Ce to dceci ye in tsl:13. nsa ani nutasgo " re but ith aid enlangei. z health of xperience against Espcriment. 3ASTOR~ IA znstitute for Castor Oil, Pare Ig Syrups. It is ileasant. It Morphine nor oher .Narcotic guarantee. It destroys Worms For more than thirty years it for the relicf of Constipation, all Teething Troubles and s the Stomach and Bowels, ing healthy and natural sleep. -The Mother's Friend. TORIA ALWAYS e Signature of Over 30 Years lave Always Bought MPANY. NEW YORtK CITY. rs STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, Y County of Clarendon. COURT OF COMMON PLEAS. Charlton DuRant, Plaintiff, at against af Allen Blackwell, Defendant. ns Under ana by virtue of a Jugdment at Order of the Court of Common Pleas, in the above stated action to me di-. rected, bearing date of Aug. 14, 1916. Las I will sell at public auction, to the highest bidder for cash, the )Id Court House at Nanning,in said County within the legal ho'.rs for judicial sales. on Monday the 4th, day of Sept., 1916, 1 the following described real estate: ire All those two lots of land in Man ning, Clarendon County, South Caro lina, known as the McDonald Lots, or same being bounded on the North by lot said to belong to Charlie Mack, East by residerce lot of Willie Walker, South by the Manning and Fulton Pub ;ic Road, and East by lot of the Color et- ed Graded School. ?e Purchaser to pay for papers. E. B. GAMBLE, en Sheriff Clarendon County. u TheStateofSouthCarolina, ,'t County of Clarendon. COURT OF COMMON PLEAS. he Charlton DuRant, Plaintiff d against d Joseph R. Sprott, Defendant. or UNDER AND BY VIRTUE OF A ng Judgment Order of tbe Court of Comn up mcon Pleas, in the above stated action, to me directed, bearing date of Aug. y, 5th, 1916, I will sell at public auction, n'to the highest bidder, for cash, ac Clar endon Court House, at Manning, in as said county, within the legal hours for ut judicial sales, on Monday, the 4th ny day of Sept. 1916, the following de scribed real estate: a All that piece, parcel or tract of land Slying, being and situate in the County of Clarendon, in the State aforesaid, Scontaining five acres, more or less bounded North by public road leading o- from Manning to Kingstree, East by tst lands Joseph R. Sprott, South by lands ad of Joseph R. Sprott and WVest by lands to of Mrs. B. A. Walker. nd Purchaser to paty for papers. E. B. GAMBLE. Sherift of Clarendon County. ut - - _______ fiow To (Jive Quinine To Children. FEhBRILINE is th~e trade-mark name given to an - iprove Quinp. It is atTasteless Syrup plas. Children take it and never know it is Quinine. Also especially adapted to adults who cannot take ordinary Quinine. Does not nauseate nor cause nervousness nor ringing in the head. Try it the next time you need Quinine for any pur Spose. Ask for 2-ounce original package. The name FEBRILINE is blown in bottle. 25 cents. Good Looks are Easy with SMagnolia Balm. Look as good as your city cousins. No -matter if you do Tan or Freckle Magnolia Balm will surely clear your skan miftantly. N Heals Sunburn, too. Just put a little on your face and rub it off again before dry. Simple and sure to please. Try a bottle to-day and begin the improvement at once. White. Pink and Rose-Red Colors. 75 cents at Druggists or by mail direet. -- SAMPLE FREE. LYON MFG. CO.. 40 So. 5th St., Brooklyn. N.Y. IJ-MERIORNMSON 'p CHARLESTON,.S.C. THE 1EST FERTILIZER to useithisyearis a mixtude of equal parts of Acid Phosphate and Cotton SeedlMeal. This mixture will analyse NINE per cent. available Phosphoric Acid, and THREE AND ONE-HALF per cent. Am monia, and nearly if not quite ONE per cent. Potash. We are prepared to furnish -both the above materials and also Blood and Tankage. and we solicit inquiries. ilING OILI NILL Manning, S. C. ;There's a great variety of useful articles required in the kitchen for cooking purposes, and we have them all in superior quality. Kettles. Tea and Coffee Pots, Broilers, Saucepans, Fry Pans, Cake Tins, etc., we have in the most excellent makee. They are of the finest block tin, and formed in a way that - makes them most durable. Whether you need a whole kitchen outfit or an odd thing, it is here. We Have! A Full Stock of Buggies, Wagons, AND H arness in stock. and ask your inspectiorr. Get our prices beforeyou buy. -. Everything guaran teed. Highest prices paid for ;COTTON SEED! D. M. Bradham & Son Seashore Round Trip Pares Prorn Manning. $7.80..................... ...To Wrightsville Beach $385 ............................ To Isle of Palms $3.85....................----.--.:.To Sulivans Island. $7.60.................... ...----.To Myrtle Beach. $4.45...............-.......To Norfolk, Vi.1 Sumter Tickets on sale frem May 15 to October 15, inclusive, limited returning until October 31. Liberal stop-over priviliges. -. Week-End Excursion Fares. $2.75......... .........-.--........To Isle of Palms. 2.75 ........ .....-------.......Sulliva's Island Tickets ou sale for all trains on each Saturday and r forenoon trains on each Sunday from May 27 to Sept 10, inclusive, limited returning to reach original starting point prior to midnight of Tuesday next following date of sale. Sunday Excursion Fares. $1.30 ... ....-----...... .........ToCharleton. Tickets ou forenoon trains on each Sunday from June 11. to September 11, inoclusiva. limited returning on train No. 178 scheduled to) leave Charleston 8:23 p. m. The dates or sale, schedule and further particulars cheer fully furnished upon application to Atlantic Coast Line, The Sandard Railrod of the South. Ambition It is the ambition of the officers of THE FARMERS MUTUAL PROTECTION ASSOCIATION of Sumter, Claren don and Lee Counties, S. C., to make the organization invaluable to property owners, tt sell FIRE INSURANCE at the lowest possible :cost. to save money for its members and to become the most dominant factor in the commercial life of our community. HAVE YOU JOINED IT YET? There is a director in your Township. Sumter Trust Co. AGENT, Sumter, South' Carolina. FOR THE NEW CROP OF WHEAT OUR EX CHANGE IS AS FOLLOWS: For one bushel of clean wheat that will grade 60 lbs. to the bushel, we give. 35 lbs. high flour and 12 lbs. of bran. Those who want low grade flour or shorts with their exchange, we allow 1 3 more for each pound of high grade flour, or an exchange as follows in any proportion: 30 lbs. high grade flour, 7 1 2 lbs. low grade, and 12 1-2 lbs. bran. Where all low grade is taken we allow 521-2 lbs and 1 1-2 lbs bran. CLARENDON ROLLER FLOUR MILLS. VINoL! A MODERN TONIC.. It is recommended to Improve the Ap petite. give tone to the samach, build up that run down condition and promote strength. Order a bottle today. Dickson's Drug Store The Bailey-Lebby Co Machinery. Mill and Plumbing Supplies. Automobile Supplies and Accessories. 6. & J. VEEDOL Tires and Tubes. Oils and Grease. CH AR LESTON, S. C. "Time tells whati youdidyesterday. a.Make to-morrow bettel V by startin a Banlk account to-day" If. for no other reason than the unforeseen demduds'incident ohuman life. you owe yourself a Bank account. Il's a duty, because you haven't the power tojpredict the futue but youi have power to start a Bank account and fortify for thfuture. Besides we want tohelp worthy ,young men to succeed Bintoday with1 S. The Bank of .Manning.