The Manning times. (Manning, Clarendon County, S.C.) 1884-current, May 16, 1917, Image 2
'&peJ
The Right Medici
Does Better tli
Knife. Tribut<
ham's Vegetabl
Doctor Said Operation or ]
Des Moines,
have been in m,
Lydia E. Pinkh
fered from a ser
said I could not
My husband obj
try Lydia E. Pi
soon cOmmence(
and able to do r
mend Lydia E. ]
any woman as a
BLANoHE JEFFE]
Another Opei
Richmond, Ind.-"For two y,
female troubles that when going
with my hands on th6 steps, then
doctor said he thought I should I
thought I would not live to move
asked me to try Lydia E. Pinkhar
taken it with good results. I di
gained in strength, moved into ou
work, and raised hundreds of cl
enough in praise of Lydia E. Pinkl
M. 0. JOHNSTON, Route D, Box 19
Of course there are ma
surgical operation will relie
this, but the above letters,
amply prove that many opera
medicine in many cases is al
If you want special advice Z
cine Co. (couidential) Lynn, ft
read and answe ed by a womar
RECEIVE FUND FOR FIREMEN
Insurance Tax Amounts to More
Than $11,000-Many Towns Bene
fitted by Law.
Columbia, May 11.-Two score
South Carolina towns will receive
amounts from the firemen's insurance
and inspection fund to be distributed
by the State department of insur
ance. The total amount to be paid
to the trustees of the fund will be
$11, 492.83. The fund comes from an
annual distribution of a 1 per cent.
tax on the fire insurance premiums
collected in the towns named and the
semi-annual distribution of the tax
paid by brokers.
The following amounts are to be
paid to the trustees of the firemen's
insurance and inspection fund in the
towns named:
Abbeville $173.48; Aiken $170.58;
Andersan $671.51; Bamberg $113.82;
Beaufort $47.03; Belton $46.89; Ben
nettsvilleS132.12; Bishopville $90.20;
Blackville $38.60; Camden $257.06;
Charleston $1,812.91; Cherawv $187.29;
Chester $141.141; Columbia $1,261.07;
Darlington $207.14; Dillon $103.11;
Eaaley $99.28; Florence $322.27; Fort
Mill $30.99; Georgetown $230.77;
Gaffney $280.03: Greer $69.80; Green
ville $702.95; Greenwood $349.15;
Hfartsville $151.32; Honea Path
S55. 62; Kershawv $38.11; Kingstree
859.22; Lake City $109.03; Lancas
ter $129.37; Laurens $210.60; Man
ning $89.43; Marion $1l14.95; McColl
$93.96; Mullins $85.89; Newberry
$231.94; North Augusta $89.38;
Orangeburg $216.68; Rock Hill
$426.85; St. Matthews $2.10; Sumter
$ 192. 31; Seneca $57. 91; Spartanburg
$653.67; Trimmon~sville $541.06; Union
f ono ohe reso thn h
yo hvepwe t sat ouBn
lie yo we watyorelp aorthy ycoun
The Bank
ran4
eaticns
ne in Many Cases
an the Surgeon's
to Lydia E. Pink
Compound.
)eath-But Medicine Cured.
Iowa.-"My husband says I would
r grave today had it not been for
un's Vegetable Compound. I suf
ious female trouble and the doctors
live one year without an operation.
acted to the operation and had me
nkbam's Vegetable Compound. I
I to get better and am now well
n own housework. I can recom
?nkham's Vegetable Compound to
wonderful health restorer."-Mrs.
IsoN,703 Lyon St., Des Moines,Iowa.
-ation Avoided.
mars I was so sick and weak from
up stairs I had to go very slowly
sit down at the top to rest. The
tave an operation, and my friends
into our new house. My daughter
r's Vegetable Compound as she had
d so, my weakness disappeared, I
r new home, do all kinds of garden
tickens and ducks. I cannot say
tam's Vegetable Compound."-Mrs.
), Richmond, Ind.
ny serious cases that only a
ire. We freely acknowledge
and many others like them,
Ltions are recommended when
I that is needed.
!ite to Lydia E. Pinkliam Mcdi
iss. Your letter will be opened,
L and held in strict confidence.
$420.17; Walterboro $47.36; Winns
boro $66.45; York $111.18; total $11,
492.83.
O
Watch Your Churning Temperature.
Clemson College, S. C., May 14.
When the cows -(re on pasture, the
butter fat becomes softer. This
makes it churn quicker. Buter should
not come in less than a half hour.
As the (lays get warmer and the cows
get more grass it will be beter' to
lower the churning temperature.
When the butter conies too quick
there is a great loss of butter fat in
the buttermilk.
0
CROPS SHOULD BE
WELL CULTIVATED TO
CONSERVE MOISTURE
Clemson College, S. C., May 14.
Owing to the long dry spell and the
comparatively small amount of fer
tilizer used on erops this year, care
should be taken to see that the crop
gets the maxiniumn amount of the
fertilizer and as much of the mois
ture as posible. Grass- uses up a
great amount of moisture and the
farmer can't afford to allowv the
grass to take up the plant food
which he puts in the ground for the
crop. Frequent cultivation of the
land will kerep clown the grass and
weeds and will allow the corn and
Whenever You Need a Gleneral Tonic
Take Grove's
The Old Standard Grove's Tasteless
chill Tonic is equally valuable as a
General Tonic b'ecause it contains the
well known tonic proper ties of Q UINlINE
and IRON. It acts on the Liver, Drives
out Malaria, Enriche~s the Bllood aind
Buildu up the Whole bystem. 50 cents
ime tells what
did yesterday.
-morrow better
tarting a Bank*
iccount to-day?"
unforeseen demands incident to human
it.
the power to predict the future but
Account and fortify for the future.
g men to succeed. Begin today with $.
of Manning.
APPRECIATION 01 0TW
$I$IEtS QICKLY . WO
gas" Both Are Thankful for Their
Good Fortune.
MOTHER BROUGHT NEWS
Greenville Woman Gives Her Views
of .One Preparedness
Question.
"I had indigestion so badly that
often I would begi to hurt after I
had eaten only a few bites and at
times the pains. old- be so severe
they would almost draw me double,
but I - have not been troubled with
indigestion since I took Tanlac,". de
clared 1Mrs. C. W. Quinn, of 44 Ninth
St., Sampson, Greenville,. in a state
ment sli gave March 21st. "I cer
tainly did suffer with indigestion,
though, and my sister, who lives near
Campobello, had this trouble for
worse than I did, and sMe finally got
so she could not eat anything at all
and she had lost flesh until she was
almost skin and bones. Really, her
condition became awful. She looked,
like a skeleton, and complained of
suffering terribly all the time. I
never have seen anyone who looked
as badly as she did and yet be out
of bed.
"Tanlac had dune my sister so
much good I decided to take -it, and
it proved a fine medicine for me in
every way. I have. not been troubled
with indigestion since I took T'nlac.
"My mother visited me and told me
how Tanlac had helpe my sister and
also my sister wrote iic. My sjster
said no medicine could be better than
Ta'nlac for indigestion. She did not
give any details, but she wrote a lot
telling how fine she found Tanlac to
be. My mother said Tanlac just made
a new woman of my sister.
"I am to praise Tanlac, for it did
so much for us, and I think a bot
tle of Tanlac should be kept en hand
for any emergency."
Tanlac, the Master Medicine, is
sold by Dickson's Drug Store, Man
ning; L. W. Nettles, Jordan; Shaw
& Plowden, New Zion; Farmers' Sup
ply Co., Silver; D. C. Rhame, Sum
merton.-Adv.
Census Bureau, announced today.
This number of men between the
ages of twenty-one and thirty, inclu
sive, represents very nearly 10 per
cent of the total estimated population
of between 103,000,000 and 104,000,
000 on July 1, 1917.
Of these conscription eligibles the
bureau estimates Alabama will have
209,900; Arkansas 156,600; Florida
95,300; Georgia 255,400; Kentucky
202,200; Louisiana 171,000; .Maryland
121,500; Mississippi 175,100; North
Carolina 194,400; South Carolina
137,100; Tennessee 195,080; Texas
420,200; Virginia .186,400.
o -
GROW MORE CHICKENS
Home-Grown Poultry. is Cheap Meat
Food.
Clemson College, S. C., May 14.
Experiments have showvn that young
chickens can be grown more cheaply
to the frying age than the same
amount of meat can be purchasedl.
This is under normhl conditions andl
prices, but, with the abnormal con
dlitions that we have at the present
time, there is no question but that
it will pay everyone to greatly in
crease the production of chickens
this year.
Many people have the erroneous
impression that it is impossible to
hatch and rear chickens successfully
in the summer months. They say
that their chickens stand around and
"go to sleep," that the majority of
them (lie and that the summer rais
ing of poultry is unprgfitable. The
main reason why the chickens "go
to sleep" is that they are not receiv
ing a sufficient amount of animal
food or protein. Whenever chickens
look sleepy or droop their wvings, feed
them more cottonseed meal, .velvet
bean meal, pea meal, soy bean meal,
peanut meal, or meat scraps. One of
the best foods for sleepy chickens, is
to give every (lay one meal of cut up
meat after it has been cooked. You
can throw the table scraps to them,
containing small pieces of meat, or
you can buy a commercial product
which is known as beef scraps or
meat scraps. After a fewv feeds of
cut-up cooked meat or meat scraps
your chickens wvilI look entirely differ
ent. Trhey wvill recover from their
sleepy appearance and will ,growv
healthy and strong.
If,you feed your young chickens a
sufficient amount of protein, as above
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children
In Use For Over 30 Years
Signaturearf
cotton to get the greatest amount
of the fertilizer. The crop needs all
the moisture it. can get, and if shal
low cultivation is practiced, the mulgh
formed on the land will consetv. the
moisture that is in the soil,. as well
as kill weeds and rass which use a
considerable amount of water. aid,
plant food, which is needed for the
crop. , Don't let the crop starve or
go thirsty for lack of sufficient shal
low cultivation.
-0
HOME CANNING.
Clemsori College, S. C., May 14.
Every farmer should have a small
canning outfit for use in preserving
fruit and vegetables for winter. An
abundance of canned products of'
this sort adds. 'comfort and health
to the family, and often there is
enough surplus to give a nice little
income. It is seldom that canned
fruits and vegetables of fine quality
fail to commend a good price. With
a good fall garden one does not so
much' feel the need o1- canned vege
tables, but there are a great many
of, the tender sorts that will not
grbw at this season and must be
preserved in cans. Think also of the
number of fruits that may be can
ned. Even where one has neglected
to have a good orchard there are in
most localities an abundance of
blackberries, blue berries, huckleber
ries, grapes and cherries growing
wild. In case enough vegetables
have not yet been planted to furnish
a surplus to can, it is a good time
now to take up the deficiency. To
matoes, snap beans, lima beans,
sweet potatoes, and other vegetables
may yet be planted for canning dur
ing the late summer. Anyone in
terested in canning should write the,
Horticultural Division of Clemson
College for circular No. 27, "Home
Canning of Fruits and Vegetables."
--o
BE A FARMER PATRIOT
Clemson College, S. C., May 14.
With the packing house assured for
the state- this fall all farmers should
recruit at once in the army of meat
producers which wil put South Caro
lina on a shelf supporting basis, as
well as help feed the millions of peo
ple who are now dependent on the
United States for food supplies. This
is the time for the farmer to exert
himself more than ever to grow plenty
of food stuffs on the farm. The pos
sibilities of a good wheat and oat
crop are very poor, and this makes
it all the more necessary to prepare
to grow more feed stuffs and to grow
more meat than ever before. Be a
farmer patriot.
0
FOR YOUR CHILD'S COUGH
Here's a pleasant cough syrup that
every child likes to take, Dr. Bell's
Pine-Tar-Honey. If your child has a
deep hacking cough that worries you
give him Dr. Bell's Pine-Tar-Honey,
the soothing pine balsams relieve the
cough, loosens the phlegm and heals
the irritated tissues. Get a bottle to
(lay at your druggist and start treat
ment at once. 25c.-adv.
0 ..
GIV[E TIlE WORK STOCK
PLENTY OF WATER
Clemson College, S. C., May 14.
Three times a (lay is not enough to
water livestock. They should have,
esp~ecially in hot weather, an oppor
tunity of dirinking at least five times
dlaily--before each meal, and at ih
tervals of 2 1-2 to 3 hours apart be
tween meals.
'The animal that wvorks in hot
wveauecr on a 5 or 6 how- stretch
without wvater- suffers intensely from
th irst. Frequent water-ing prevents
water cholic andl other ill effects.
Never allow the animal to dirink(
when very hot. Always force him
undler such condlitions to dlrink a lit
tle att a time until satisfiedi.
SUHJECTI''TO CONSCRIPTION
Burea u Est imnates South Carolina
Will l~ave 137,100
Washington, May 12.--Ten million
men in the Unitedl States will be Aub
ject to the selective conscription on
Jul 1,wti thoges agreed upon
army bill, Diector- Rogers, of the
The Beauty Secret.
Ladies desire that irre..
sistible charm--a good
complexion. Of course
they do not wish others
~to know a beautifier
has been used so they
v buy a bottle of
Magnolia Balm
LIQUID FACE POWDER
anti use according to simple directiona. Improve
ment a noticed at once. Soothing, cooling and
refreahing. Heals Sunburn, stope s Jan.
Pink. WitUe. Rose-Red.
75c. at 'Druptlsis or byi malt dlrect.
Sample (either color) for 2c. Stamp.
Lyon Mit. Co., 40 South Fifth St.. Brooklyn, N.Y.
I-~
advine + ,also prov14e , vth
shade i' the summer months, iti4 and
possible to hatch chickens thru. the ren
summqr %in4 also, early 'fall. 'Zn imp
from 10 to 12 weeks these chieke can the
be killed and eaten, and they will pro- weil
vide " substantial part of the meat this
diet of; the household. The cost of at
the food consumed by baby chicks un- chic
til they are ten weeks df age should usir
not exceed ten cents each. Give the thei
baby- chicks all the scraps from the eles
table, moistening the bread with ' a . C
little sweet or sour milk and thicken- and
ing the hominy and vegetables with coni
meal. crat
If you desire to obtain the great- pou:
eat profit and pleasure from the Ext
chicks, it is well to confine them in lege
small crates for two weeks before resi
NOTI
Effective June 1, 1917, Po
2, 3 and 4 will-be discontint
Effective June 1, 1917, Mi
2 will be operated on follow
Leave Alcolu for Olanta Lc
Mixed Train
Stations No. 2 St
A. M.
Alcolu ----.-- 9:15 0]
*Gi-een Hill .. .. 9:25 Se
*Harby---....-.....9:40 *I
*DuRant --.-- .- 9:55 N4
Gable ---.....10:25 Sa
*% Sardinia --.---10:40 G;
New Zion .- .. 10:50 *I
*Beards -----. 11:00 *I
Seloc.. .-- .... 11:20 *(
Olanta -....... 12:00 A
*Flag Stations. .All trains
ALCOLU RAILI
P. R.
$11
FROM P
TO WAS
ACCOUNT C
VETERAN;
Selling
From Virginia and the
From Georgia, Florida
Tickets limited t
Y not later than m
sion of final lipni
be obtained by
Agent and paynm
'1For reservations
* ATLANTIC
TF. C. Wil
& '*Wilming
'~ *tic-e
AL ___ by
'~~~Sumtr Coca-Cola Dott ing Co
Ahe' ajeoial Mood tht the t
ive when' in the cratesn
roves the flavor and qu lit ' p
flesh. They 'should rain
rht from 60 to 75 per cent.,
gain -In weight is accomplisl~ed
much less cost than ;when
ks' are running at liberty and'
g a considerable proportion f
r food for repairing their mus;,
>mplete directions for rearitg.
feeding chicks, and also 'for
Ining and fattening them in
es, can be obtained from the
try bulletin published , by 'the
ansion Division of 'Clemson Col
, 'S. C., which is sent free to all
:lents of South Carolina.
E
issenger trains No. 1,
led.
xed trains No. 1 and
ing schedule.
:ave Olanta for Alcolu
Mixed Train
ations No. .1
P. M.
anta -- .-' 2:00
loc -- -- _- -- 2:50
,eards -- -- -- 3:10
aw Zion ---...-....3:20
rdinia -. 3:30
tble -------- 3:50
)uRant------.4:20
larby .- ---- -- 4:30
green Hill -- -- 4:40 '
colu--..-----4:45
daily except Sunday.
OAD CO.
Alderman, T. M.
Alcolu, S. C.
0.80
V1ANNIN6
HINGTON
ONFEDERATE
3 REUNION
r Dates
Carolinas,
June 2nd-7th, inc
and Alabama,
June 1st-6th, inc
n reach final destination
dnight June 21st,exten.
to July 6th, 1917, may
deposit with Terminal
ont of fee of 50 et.
EVERCOFFERED
COAST LINE
C. P.A. bi I
on, N. C. -on
% rrrEri
O ~2
It s
-tro ow i