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We Are Headquarters for Nitrate of Soda in quantities from ten tons and upwards. We have sold during the past ten days a large ton age of this material, and while prices have advanced during the past week it is still cheap com pared with' other ammoniates. Get our prices before you buy. MANNING OIL MILL. Manning's Colored Drug Store ! Beginning September 1st, the name Brown's Drug Store will be changed to the Man ning Drug Store. We sell Pure Drugs and Toilet Articles. PRESCRIPTIONS A SPECIALTY OIL MILLS AND COTTON MILLS We have a large stock of Cotton Beam Scales complete with Frame made by Howe Co. Also lot of Cotton Trucks. We carry everything in the way of Rubber, Gandy and Leather Belt. Large stock Pump Jacks, Pumps, and Cylinders. Try us on some of our Special Friction Surface Belt, will give you s'r vice almost equal to Leather Belt. Columbia Sugply Co., 823. West Gervais Street Columbia, S. C. Mr. Farmer! Is your Home Sanitary and up to-date ? Are you giving. your Family's Health the proper considera tion? We are in position to give you Light and Power, Water Sup ply, Modern Plumbing System, Sewer disposal. Our Engineering Department is at your disposal, at no cost to you. If you are interested, and you should be, let us know and our Representative will call and see you. DIXIE ELECTRIC AND PLUMBING Co. 9 ~MANNING, S. C NEARS RUMBLING Of INDUSTRIAL STORM Strikes Straws Showing Direction of Wind, Says Garretson MATTER UP TO CONGRESS Says Labor Not Seeking to Overthrow Government, But Demands Government Act Washington, Aug. 11.--Nine-tenths of the energies of labor leaders are given to the job of sitting on the lid, Austin B. Garretson, former head of the Order of Railway Conductors, tes tified today before the House Inter state commerce committee, which is seeking to solve the problem of how best to handle the railroads after the war-time period of federal control. Sporadic strikes throughout the country, Garretson said with great earnestness, merely are straws which show how the wind is blowing over a sea of industrial unrest. Rumblings heard in many quarters do not mean, he said, that laboring people want to overthrow the government, but indi cate a demand that the government function. It is largely in the power of Con gress, the witness declared, to allay the feeling. Action Necessary. "But it can not be (lone by inaction,' he shouted. "Somehow the A merican people are not prone always to do to (lay what may be (lone tomorrow, un less an emergency forces its to act, and then we break all records." Describing himself as a man who had been pilloried by the press from the Atlantic to the Pacific, Garretson told the committee he had traveled a long way to speak in behalf of the Plumb plan which would give labor a voice in-the management of railroads the people would own. But he did not regard the Plumb platn, he said, as more than one factor in stilling the spirit of present-day unrest, nor did he think it would 'change human na ture or other things that can be elimi nated." Unusual Attention. "I am not a dreamer of dreams,' he told the committee, which gave un usual attention to his testimony, for his appe'rance on the stand put a new breath of life in the railroad hearing, now apiloaching its second month. The usual method of dealing with wit.. nesses was abandoned, largely at Gar retson's request. lie had no state ment in written form, when he started to speak, as he expressed it, he did not know where he would stop, and for two hours lie was subjected to a rapid cros-fire of questions from a dozen members, and for each of which lie had a quick reply. Mr. Garretson, who had been waiting since early last week to be heard was called to the stand after Glen E. Plumb, the man who framed organiz ed labor's bill, had concluded his testi mony. Plumb Plan Limits. There was no desire, he said, to ex tend the Plumb pain beyond those in dustries in which men worked with their hanids. Hie wanted the mien who run the railroads to have a voice int their mianagemient; lie wanited politics climtinated, andl in the general d iscurs The QuinIne That Does Not Affect tite Head Because of its tonie~ and laxative effect, LAXA TIVlt BRttOMO QU ININE is better than ordi nary Quinine and does not cauise nervounsness~ nor ringing In head. Remrernber the fulituntne and (bok for the signature ot JR. W. GROVE. 30c. Professional Cards JNO. G. DINKINS At torney-at -l.aw~ MA NNING, S. C. DuRANT & ELLERhiE Attorneys at Law MANNING, S. C. R. 0. Pturdy. S. Oliver O'Blryan PURDY & O'BRYAN Attorneys and Counselors at Law. MANNING. S. C. FRED LESESNE Attorntey at Law Oflice Three Doors Below, Post Office MANNING, S. C. DR. J. A. COLE, Dentist, MANNING, S. C. Upstairo Over Weinberg's Corner J. W. WIDEM AN, Attorney at Law MANNING, S. C. Ii. C. CUjRTis, AtoreyafLaw MANndiNG, S. C. Office Over Leon Weinberg' Str. * * * * * * * * * * * * /, *r * \v \ * f* Sion of this last subject the witness declared that there was no polities in the action of the American Federation of Labor in seeking to nave the post master General removed because this vieu, he said, was expressed by Re publicans and Democrats alike. Admitting that the rour- great rail wa % brotherhoods supported President Wilson in 1916i, and smiling throwing in the added infornation that "with all of my Republican affiliations I am 'uilty, too, Mr. Garrison insisted tnat was purely an "art of citiz;'n ship." A fter the quest ion of presidential polities had been raised Mr. Garretson said this might be his final appearance before Congress, and for that reason he wanted the record to carry a denial from him of reports, long current, "that the brotherhoods with a gun inl one hand and a stop watch in the oth er" had held up Congress and forced thog* h ncmeto h dm *o ih orlw "Teewsn*orco fSntr orRpeettvs*ytebohr h *d, esotdpudn h a *l oepaietedna,"m *hleg nbd opoeohr wi*. Mr arto tsiidtabe *ivd te itrtt o m rec m *o eeah obe if /hi w ma*ol aegnea a sDre *o'G n r lIie i fot oo t i *ucssu oprtodf h lrpr *is -- - - - --* FARER /lI RISII *itbrAg . nadiet en * prfteigao/ f:er h *elfosuf nthsct tanr *a rcsadd o rprynre mesrsa* eiedb tt.lw *ead "Tthod Seec *e ea Shnge * 6doe ual E*nmia '* o dne a' * ni Tthb sion of his las subecth witess thi dtionof te Amr''a menlft on of Laor i seekng t hav 'ihePot maste Geneal rmovei becusti W.bjen P.~ LEGGra~ Daler, Mann, oo in. (a rC.o ini ti W. L.D4 pegging shoes a Toda) "The World's 'Gri W. L. Douglas shoe shoes in the world. anteed and the i againstunreasonabl retail price is star of shoes before the W. L. Douglas shoe style leaders ever made of the choice by the highest paid in this country. Y< the quality of W. They are always woi for them. $4.00 lbrams' Departr Manning, S. \ urray I.ivingston, city ordinance ofl cers today arrested thirty-two farmers charging them With isidemeanor. The arrests were made at markets in dif ferent parts of the city. The defand ants will be arraigned before a police magistrate this afternoon. .\I)VEi'TISE IN TlHE TIMES -------o ---- KOI.'CI.AK'S .l1y IS IN HA) SHlAPE Washingtuon, I). C., Aug. 11.---Con plte collapse of the Kolchak move nent in Siberia was forecast reports reach ing Washington today. The Kol chak forces have fallen hack almost 2(n) miles from their former advanced lines and Omsk was said to be threat ened with evacuation. Failure of the Allies and associated governments to get adequate supplies to Admiral Kolchak, the advices said hadl forcedl hi m to fall hack steadily before the greatly superior Hlolshieviki STO] Sand look ov ~have to sh our line ne: come to ton Sbe you are Smarket jus Iwhat we h; ** but would & i privilege ar i of showing I anyway.W I you onlysu i will give y i Prices and a ways in line aus when in r** **** ******** * * * * * uglas started s a boy of seven.* hie is* * atest Shoemaker." * * are the best known * The value is guar >urchaser protected * e profits because the nped on every pair* y leave the factory. * s are recognized as* ywhere. They are * st selected leathers, skilled shoemakers* >u can depend upon L. Douglas shoes.* rth the price you pay , * * to $10.00 * * ent Stores, * **************a* forces composed of veterans whos of tiers include many Germans who fled to Russia when the armistice was signed. Oflicials here are known to regard Kolchak's effourts at an end unless by outside governments andl it was sugestedl that the l'resident might call the attention of Congress to the imminence of Bolshevik control of all Siberia. SAELL k'665 . COFFEE-* P*N er wn t we* ow yo in* *ttm o )uda staedsr s oy sevie. tierms al at. Soepakerh ( Sathebetwn own