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B For PATRIOTISM "Actions spec words-Act- Doi FISH ! AT ' WEST END In connection with ou GROCERIES of all a Fish House. Frc nice Fresh Fish ev Bass, Whiting, and King I We will sell by the sti Call Phone 79 an want and we will s Prompt. WESTEND Phone 79. BUY Saving Help Win Buy Thrift Sty Buy a Baby B( It will be worth $5.O( This is 4 per cent. coi Go to your Bank4 or any progressil and ask for infor w. S, S. SOL.D This space patric -to War Savings Manning Oil Mill Trying to instill m~ind the fact tha Hardware and 'l description of mi ity than can be cured and at a mi We have long 1: the qreat bare tHardware and for bench or agr We have Tools f low prices. ENOCH MORGAN'S I SONS CO. Buy SAPOLIO For t ECONOMY k louder than 't Talk --Buy Now al L F EISH! ! HE i' ft GROCERY. at r Full Line of FANCY ( kinds, we have added C 4. m here you can get eryday. consisting of Mullets, Trout Wiackerel. -ing and pound also. d ask for what you erve you. Deliveries at it, GRCERY, Manning, S. C. all t St e ti SC StampsW D iP the War S m at imps at 25c. ON >nd for $4.15. U" I on January 1. 1923. f i nmpounded quarterly. I er, Post Office. A m ie business man o " mation. [ t EVERYWHERE ! 9 tically donated Committee by nothe public t we are selling rools of every ach better qumal- s elsewhere pro ich lower price, is >een known as C~ rain house for ta Tools. whether -* icualtugral work. o or all trades at F] in ce L. W. FOL Established Ove I wish to at public and to mers that th L. W. Folsor tinued under 1 by his son J. I has long be with his fath< The repute ability alwa will be scr served. Your patrol Write for < Watch Inspect( Sumtc OODS TASTE BETTER COOKED nounced today by -TOBACCO TASTES BETTER are expeteed to wveight tons of shi TOASTED making a total of will be available svar is won, throug Since the day of the caveman, who for foreign goods iked his meat raw, civilization has can do without. earned a lot about the scientific treat- The largest sin nent of the things we eat. of savings is quel Naturally none of us would now tonning, the restr estimated to save >refer to have our meat raw, our p0- wood still can be atoes as they come from the ground, nied as (eek load o iur coffee unroasted. essential imports. And natu.rallyr follown th.e. gre adi h Inclusionf over recntlymad by he Aen- toninh restrls an Tbacc Co-tha toaccotas estimappecio ae This wonderful ew idea-simpleo iurcllfeat in tiosws f s etaiprs Ad i rcngat he fo s LUCKetdY. Iclso o u Tove gre temade Thf mei ta t he rsrctdls an obccl C-ha tobacco tate aypreIbeI Bulhis ondellnew flv iremly "N*'t"~ ifealgreat rinventions-acc usl ased for prcigte famou pipCKY.f )acai K TRIKE Cigarette-aeotas aste like a pipe, sed in dlifferent degrees by every BES ividlual of every variety, however, can be dlevelopedl by pr~oper man ment and careful selection of eding stock. turkey hen that begins laying in middle of March will usually fin- j laying her first litter early in U 11, her second late in A pril, and I third litter about the third wveek vlay, depending upon01 the number of s she lays andl the pr'omp~tness b which she is broken up on be ing broody. Some turkey hens We I be made to lay four or five litters, -- -. this is not usually adv'.isable as kil1 of < Its hatched later than .June do not have it. e a chance to develop for the ________ nksgiving and Christmas markets are not sufficiently mature the awing spring to be usedl as breed- W 'urkey hens can easily be broken Linle of heir broodiness by confining them two or three days to a ciOop wvith B * lat bottom. They wvill mate soon 'r being let out of the coop) andl in laying in about a week. Tur hens and chicken hens usually are d to incubate tur-key eggs, al igh incubators are quite generally :1 wvhere turkeys are raised orf a te scale. DITIfONS TO JLIT OF RIESTICCTED IMP'ORTS nu Vashington, April 21.--Additions pie of CI the list of restrictedl imports an guiarant ~ASTORIAF For Infants and Children I Use For Over 30 Years 1 e ER VUO PROSTRATION lay be Overcome by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound - This Letter Proves It. West Philadelphia, Pa. -" During the dirty years I have been married, I have been in bad health and had several at tacks of nervous ; prostration until it seemed as if the organs in my whole body were worn out. I was finally J persuaded to try LydiaE. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound and it made a well wgman of me. I can now do all my housework id advise all ailing women to try ydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com )und and I will guarantee they will rive great benefit from it."- Mrs. RANK FITZGERALD, 25 N. 413t Street rest Philadelphia, Pa. There are thousandsof women everr here in Mrs. Fitzgerald's conditi. iffering from nervousness, backache, adachcs, and other symptoms of a inctional derangement. It was a ateful spirit for health restored which d her to write this letter so that other omen may Lenefit f:om her experience id find health ta rhe has done. For suggestions in regard to your con tion write Lydia D. Piinkham Medicine Lynn, Masc. The result of their . years e::p c: xco ii , t your service. ICREASE TURKEY CROP AT LITTLE EXTRA COST equirement of Range Usually Limits Production to Farms-Number of Farms Producing Turkeys Small -Bronze Variety Most Pop ular Among Poultry Raisers For those who are favorably situ ed for raising turkeys, a more prof able side line scarcely can be found. enty of range is necessary. to raise Lrkeys, so this usually limits the op rtnity to the farms. Turkeys are eluded in the Department of Agricul re's program for increasing poultry -oduction, and specialists of the De irtment point out how and where in eases can be obtained. Turkeys are especially suited to the ain and stock farms where there is uple ranging ground abounding in ich turkey food as grasshoppers and her insects, weed seeds, waste grain ich as is left in the fields after har -st, and nuts of such varieties as echnuts, chestnuts, pecans, pine ts and acorns. On such farms the esent prices of grain affect the irkey raiser but little, for with the ception of what is used at fattening - me the feed consumed is largely of ich a kind as would otherwise be asted. With but little additional outlay to e farmer many more turkeys could id should be raised, Federal special ts say. The small number of turkeys r farm in the United States is sur ising. Accordng to the census of 10, which is the latest that has been ken, only 13.7 per cent of the total ' imber of farms reported any turkeys all, and on those farms reporting rkeys an average of but slightly rer four breeding turkeys was found I !r farm. Some farms by nature of e crops grown on them or because of C ifavorable surroundings are not laptedl to turkey raising, but most rms couldl easily hanirle a breeding ck of from 10) to 15 henl turkeys ' da tom, raising from 75 to 150 l ch year at a good profit. Trhrouighout the Middle West, where1 ost of the turkeys are raisedl, it is ausual to see a flock of more than ' On a farm, although in Texas, where ore are prodlucedl than in any other ate, flocks of several hundred are ther common. In sections of the muthwvest andl on the Pacific Coast a w.* persons hlave engagedl in turkey ismng on a large scale, rearing a ousandl or more every year. TIhere e not, howvever, enough turkeys -. isedl on the Pacific Coast to supply e local dlemand. This is true also of ses e Atlantic Coast States. Prodluction ind New England, once famous for its an( rkeys, is very greatly reduced. agt Owing. to the fact that the Bronze bre rkey is the heaviest, it is more plular among turkey raisers than the her varieties. Since turkeys are sold ish weight the heaviest birds bring Ap e greatest returns. When a large her mber of pleople are to be served, as ini hotels, restaurants, andl boarding egy uses, the demand is for heavy wvit rkeys. For family use the demand con for small or medium-sized birds, can iless they are to be marketed local- but among ecustomers wvho dlemanld small you0 ds, it is far more profitable to has ise the, heaviest. Regarding other Thi aracteristics, it is quite generally and sortedl that the Bronze is the hardi- foIl t variety, that the Bourbon Red and era hite HollIandI are the most dlomestice d that the White Holland is thle of >st plrolific. These qualities are pos- fr a s ate of Ohio, City of Toledo, bet Lucas County, as.be senior J.Ceney makes oahthat he key seio artner of the firm of . J.hus eney & Co., doing business in theth ty of Toledo, County and State usej aresaid, and that saidl firm v/ill pay lr e sum of ONE HUNDRED DOL KRS for each and every ease of Ca- Al) rrh that cannot be cured byr the use HALL'S CATARRHT ME'DICINE. IANK J. CHENEY. ' Sworn to before me and subscribed to my presence this 6th (lay of Do mber, A. D. 1886. A. W. GLEASON (Seal) Notary Jublic. Hall's Catarrh Medicino ic taken in.. mally andl acts through the Blcod on e Mucous Surfaces of the System. nd for testimonials, free, i F. J. CH10NEY & CO., Toledo, 0. Ala og b alljlrugistSI54 cement! SM,. Jeweler. r Half a Century. inounce to the our old custo e- business of n will be con :he same name 3. Folsom who en associated 'r. ition for reli is maintained, Lpulously ob iage solicited. :atalog. )r for A. C. L. r, s. C. the war trade board as the effort has been to include those 'elease 15,700 dead- of which there is an ample supply on ipping for war uses, hand, which can be prodluced at home, 1,657,000 tons hich or obtained overlan from adjacent annually until the countries. h lessening demands The new restrictions effective May which the country 13, do not permit the importation of goodls originating in other countries, gle item on the list but coming through designated coun >racho wood used in tries where the restrictions are not iction on this being applicable. 28,000 tons. The brought in if car in vessels unfit for The Quinine That Doss Not Affect the Head does not mean that ltiean ls ocasnrvunsnr ascathe effots e toni n in cude efe thosAX hIni t i in ead. su the f l y e a.d hortae wil resu Too the nrstrctonsI~ effective May. 131SntTemtth motaino Taeevr had anno Thatostfect whea vatBoRt come icN stveer u r i mayen' of sric er o te v:eno beoftag e leulty ookf the a t iles .W.O .3c ~.Bah~&SilT