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THE BEST IN M1ikS NIles and and OSI8iorses Are Always on Hand ! We keep the best Stock we can secure on the markets. We ask you to look over this line. FULL LINE OF Buggies. Wagons, Harness. Lap Robes and Whips. COFFEY & RIGBY Manning. S. C. WHY NOT HAVE A TALKING MACHINE? GET THE FAMOUS VICTOR Any Victrola From $16,50 Up. $10.000 WORTH OF VICTROLAS AND RECORDS IN STOCK WE ALSO CARRY THE Columbia Grafonola AND RECORDS. Deal with a house that carries a good reliable line. If you need any repairs you can always find this place. Beware of men that come to your home and offer to sell you a machine for $25 to $3b, when you can come to this house and buy a better and far superior machine for $16.50.. Buy a machine with a good motor. Day after day we have patrons coming to our place with machines in which the motors are broken and they cannot even get any repairs. Machines they paid $25 or $35 for have motors not strong enough for $5 machines. MACHINES SOLD ON EASY PAYMENTS. The Sumter Talking Machine Co. 26 SOUTH MAIN ST. SUMTER, S. C. The best line Ranges, Oil and Gasoline Cook Stoves ever showni in Manning. For the Farmer The best Corn and Cotton Planters, Guano Distributors, Harrows and all Farm Tools. One or two of those splendid two-horse D~isc lHar rows left at less than cost. -.Come and see. VALUABLE LANDS FOR SALE I have for sale the following lands belonging to estate of S. A. Rlgby: TIract (1): 279 acres at D~avis Station, being the place here tofore farmed by Mr. J. W. Childers. Tract (2): 115 acres adjoining lands of IR. J. Stukes, of William Witherspoon and of others; said tract being situated between Manning an~d Summerton and being the place formerly ownedl by Mr. Ashby Richbourg. Tlract (3): 32 acres 2 miles from Manning where the Man ning and Fulton and Raccoon public roads cross; said place ad joining lands of RI. H. D~avis; of Mrs. Ridgill and of others. Tract (4): 228 acres In Sammy Swamp Township known as the John F. McIeod place. Tract (5) :That lot in the Town of Manning known as the Central Hotel lot. 3. A. WEINBERG, Manning. S. C. INSTEAD Of SUGAR PAINLESS SUBSTITUTES Honey, Syrups, Molasses, and Sweet Fruits, in These Several Forms, Will You Economize With the War Commodity. There are many sweets to be used instead of sugar-honey, sirup, corn sirup, sorghum sirup, maple sirup, molasses, fruit sirups, and sweet dried fruits. Cereals need sweetening for most of us, but we need not use sugar. All of the sirups are good on them, and only a little is needed to give the flavor. They can all be used in cooking and delicious desserts made with them. Puddings can easily be made with out any sugar. Bront . Betty is good with any of the sirups. Put a layer of bread, then a layer of apples, moisten with sirup or honey, and re peat until the dish is full. Oatmeal Betty is an unusual use for leftover oatmeal that is very good. Oatmeal Betty 2 cups cooked oatmeal 1-2 cup raisins 4 apples cut in small pieces :3-4 cup honey or sirup Mix and bake for one-half hour. Serve hot or cold. Indian Pudding Indian pudding needs no sugar. It is a very nutritious dessert and can be used as the main part of a meal. 4 cups milk 1-4 cup corn meal 1-2 cup molasses 3-4 teaspoonful salt 1 teaspoon ginger Cook milk and meal in a double boiler for 20 minutes; add molasses, salt and ginger. Pour into a buttered baking dish and bake two hours in a slow oven or use a fireless cooker. Rice pudding is good with 3-4 cup of sirup to 3 cups cooked rice. Raisins may be added. Bake for half an hour. Honey and maple custards have a very delicate flavor. Corn sirup or fruit sirup may be used, too. Boiled Honey Custard 2 cups milk 3 egg yolks 1-8 teaspoon salt 1-3 cup honey Mix the honey, eggs and salt. Scald the milk and pour it over the eggs. Cook in a double-boiler until the mix ture thickens. Honey Drop Cakes Thse (akes are delicious. Try them instead of cakes made with sugar. 3-4 cup honey. 1-4 cup butter 1-2 teaspoon cinnamon 1-8 teaspoon cloves I egg 1 1-2 to 2 cups flour 1-2 teaspoon soda 2 tablespoons water I cup raisins, cut in small pieces. Beat the honey and butter until the butter melts. While the mixture is warm add the spices. When it is cold add part of the flour, the egg well beaten, the soda dissolved in the wa ter, and the raisins. Add enoulgh more flour to make a dough that wvill hold its shape. D~rop by sp~oonfuls on a b)ut tered tinl and1 bake in a moderate ov en. Soft Hioney' Cake 1-2 cup butter 1 cupI honey FRIED LESESNE, Attorney at Law, Loans Negot iated( on lHeal F~statie Securityv. Ollice Over hiome laink & 'Trust Co. AANNING, S. C. LOANS N EGOTlIAT1ED, (On First-Class Real Estate Mortgages PUJRDY & O'HRLYAN, Attorneys at Law, MANNING, S. C. J. W. WID)EMAN Attorney at Law Offices Adjoininlg "The IHerald" Bldg afR. J. A. COLE. D~entist, MANNING, S. C. Upstairs Over Weinberg's Corner Store, MANNING, S. C. D~uRANT & ELLERRIE, Attorneys at Law. MANNING. S. ( . J. H. LESESNE, Attorney at Law, MA NNING, S. C. RI. 0. Purdy. S. Oliver O'Bryan. PURIDY & O'HIRYAN, MANNING, S. C. Attorneys and Counselors at Law. To Cure a Cold In One Day. Tlake LAX ATI VIH DROMO Quinine. It stops the Cough and Headache and works oft the Col. Druggists refund mooney If It dails to cure. It. W. GROVE~'s signature on eackha bo.Jc I egg 1-2 cup sour milk 1 teaspoon soda 1-2 teaspoon cinnamon 1-2 teaspoon ginger 4 cups flour Rub the butter and honey together; add the egg well beaten, then the sour milk and the flour sifted with the soda and spice. Hake in a shallow pan. Sugarless Gingerbread Use gingerbread instead of the richer cakes. It requires no sugar and everybody likes it. 2 cups flour 1 1-2 teaspoons soda 1 teaspoon ginger 1-4 teaspoon salt I cup molasses I cup thick sour milk l egg Mix and sift the dry ingredients; add molasses, milk, and egg, and beat well; pour into a greased pan and bake in a moderate oven for 25 min utes. ['SE POP COltN-THIREE WAYS T'here is one good American food of which we have an abundance and we canl use as much of it as we like corn. Use all kinds and in maniy ways 'op corn is one of th. kinds everyone likes. It is a good food just simply popepd, and can also be made into such a wholesome, inexpensive sweet that it should be wisely used. hlere is tl way to pop it and several ways to use it. Shell the corn if it is on the cob and pop the dried corn in a covere-l iroa frying-pan or a reru!ar popper, sha;: ing vigorously. If a wire popper is 1 sedl, do not pop the corn directly over the flame or it will scorch. Shake it ,:uite high over tim. fl:.es, or bet.':r over coals or on the top of the stove. Take just enou h Cern to cover the bottom of the rep' er A cup of pop corn makes about h 'z:e iamrts when popped. Pop corn is good, of course, season ed with salt. A common way of serv ing is to mix a very littk melted 'ut ter and then sprinkle with salt. But have you ever tried it as a breakfast food eaten with milk or cream? It makes a good cereal. To make a sweet. of pop corn boil together I cup of corn sirup ar.d 1 tabl!espoon of vinegar until a few drops harden in water and1 pour it over the freshly popped corn while it is hot. As soan as it is cool enough to handle, grease the hands and form into ha!s. This amount of sirup cov ers 3 quarts of pop corn. Chocolate pop corn is delicious. Cook I cup of corn sirup for five miraut's. Ad.I 2 ounc'.; of chocolate two squares), and stir until m:1 ted. Cook slowly until a soft ball is formed in water. Heat until thick. hlave the popped corn in a g!'ased dish. Pour the sirup over it anl I form into balls when col enough to ha ndl^_. This an:ount covera 1 l-2 quart of pop ca:rn. Farmers' Bulletin 553 tells how to grow pop (orn. Why not have a few rows of pop corn in your garden next spring? ICSTi USIC Fl"O S1 131 31 .il Al F a milk should be used-none wastedl ' should furnish the maxi muum ,1 food to human beings andI does this better when used (direct, as c'ottage cheps e, prepa red hut term ilk, ori other by- prodlucts, t han when fed to animals an con (Ilverted in!to meat. Surplus skim miiilk, of cours', may be used economically to feed hogs, vet 1001 pounds of it will produce 15 POuis of' cheese', Produc onl'))1y 1.8 Patunlds of1 driessed pork if fed with corn. Skimi milk, if made( into cottaw ('heese ,furnishes nearly seven t imes as much protein and nearly as much en :rgy as the dr essed pork it would produce. O )f cou rse the most niourish - menlt is obtained when skim mninilk is usedl direct, either for d rin king) or' 'oo)kingi. As far as poss5ible, there fore, skinm milk should he usedl for human food and only the ex' 'ss 1(ed to live stock. - -------- ThatI we have the ph ys icalI resou rce's to win this war, if they ar'' properly conserved, I entert a in no doubt ; t hat w.e have these in larger mealsurie than any other nlat ion in the wori' is a nmat ter of coinmoin k nowle'dge. -See retary Houston. :SEC MILl, l'T SAVEC ITl I low ean the conisumer hlP the milk supply? By judicious use, good care, and by util iz/ing it. in all its forms.. That half cup of mnilk which wast poured into the sink todlay be-.. cause it wvas allowedl to sour-it weculd have mladle a subst,. n 'al amour t of c'ottalge cheese ori could have beer. In many households (juite a little milk is wasted--left uncovered in glasses-regarded useless because the CASTOR IA For Infants and Children in Use For Over 30 Years Always bears the Sirrnature of "BEST MEDICINE FORWOMEN" What Lydia E. Pinkham'p Vegetable Compound Did For Ohio Woman. Portsmouth, Ohio.-"~ auffered from irregularities, pains in my side and was so weak at times I could hardly g v t around to do my work, and as I had four in my family and three boarder:; it mace it very hard for me. Lydia E. IJ Pinkham's Vege table Compound was recommended to me. I took it and it has restored! my health. It is certainly the best medicine for woman's ailments I ever saw. "-Mrs. SARA SHAfw, R. No. 1, Portsmouth, Ohio. irs. Shaw proved the merit of this m' ine ;nd vrote this !tAter in order fl.. other s'ilTering women may find "a e as she dlid. 1 omen who are rufVeriniz as she was souiii no't drag alog from day to dty wit nout givin.p this famons root and h'mrb remedy, Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege t h e Compourd, a trial. For special ad.-iee in regard to such aihnentst write t, ILydie E. 'inkham Medicine Co , 'ynn, has. T' result of its fo"ty yea.rs t vonr service. ream has been skimmed off, alowed Lo sour-poured down the sink or hrown away. Iialf a cup of milk whole, skimmed or sour-seemingly a trifling matter, hardly worth the trouble to keep or use. lut if every one of the twenty mil lion homes should waste on the aver age one-half cup daily, it would mean 2,500,000 quarts daily for the country -912,500,000 quarts a year--the to tal product of more than 400,000 cows. It takes a lot of grass and grain to make that much milk and an army of people to produce it and deliver it. Maybe this estimate is too high. Sup post that one-half cup is wasted in on ly one out of 100 homes. The waste which this would make is still intol 'ralde when milt is so nutritious, when *kim milk can be used in mn.ak BEST Reaso nat Nothing but the into our prescription pounded just the wad RUBBER GOO TOIL and a full and STATI< We A MODERN S( We keep a CIGARS, TOBAC( BROWN'S I Below Bank of Manning. Fertil We are Maniufa, ouirold line of HI M1IXEDI FERITil Anunmoniatedl O< ash content aL cent. Also. COTTON SEED MEA AND r at attractive who wish to do0 ingd. See us before y< money. MANNING ing such 1:(e' ome so-in. i-i- i n cre. dishes, y,ben iu r milk ::m be wA :: bread ma.-Imrc or for eo : hee.:c OHIO MINElRS ARE FACING STARIVATION Columbus, 0., Jan. 7.---I)eclaring; that hundreds of Ohio miners' fami lies face starvation because mines are unable to operate on account of car shortage, Governor Cox wired Rail way Director McAdoo today to send a man to Ohio to survey the car short age situation. Many miners it was learned, have not been able to earn enough to pay rent, while their grocery bills have piled up so credit is no longer extend ed to them. U. S. WILL 'TEACH GIRLS SHOlTHAND Washington. Jan. (.---The govern ment, is going to open a school for ste nogra phers. Shortage of office help has com pelled Uncle Sam to train his own ste nographers and typists. Through the WaVshington office of the United States employment bureau, schools are to he established for "intensive" training of girls and women. Appli cants with the fundamentals of typing and stenography will be rushed through a course, and put in the of fices for which they are best fitted. Offices are to be opened Monday at :1.110 Pennsylvania avenue. Ther .. body iu t I i i i r raechine: t 1eaCoand usually causes rsi;,, ch pams:1 m the9 b ack , sour !i... ....., Sal 1:)V compion'3i1, cli'nsiveC b.ih or lass of ap)tite. Whein :, su 'cr fro-m tny of these ills, t.:. a few doe fGra:er Livar lu~r':1tor. You twill be s;u::ed I.vr q.ickly it restorc-. Va'or r 11m .; .. (Grang'r Liver c' ; :,.-e e : r. i c:1'em l and ror(due.4 n c" i! - (itresbf effect a. I thn.Im e - i ) cr rective va! :: re 0 e. m--1, , and :iri ':, ha freely 'ive.n to ch: '"' :u v ( So adults. Crager 1~ 'n - 11. r in aso f"- . fromi duno. t)%" b ,f it lasts long, and a fev/ dot'. .ev or dinary cases of Li iva. n- arger Liver Regulatt ; ii s1 L. .ruggists everywhere at 25c a I ::. R fuse all substitutes as there is no other medi diuo just!ieCr:anec Li ver Rcgulator. DRUGS ale Prices very best materials go s and they are com f your physician says. DS and ,ET ARTICLES COmplete line of DNERY. have )DA FOUNTAIN Full Line of OS and CANDIES. RUO STORE, Manning, S. C. izrs cturing( this year .ZERhS. >Ods5 with a Pot i higjh as 3 per L, ACID PHOSPHATE OTASHI )rices for those their owni mix >U buy and save