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d rauht
S the ,best all round medicine
;' ~ , used." w ftes J. Ar.
' teeman, of Pattonville, Teas.
Isfered 1rrib'y with liver
ouble, and could get no relief.,
he doctors said 1l had con
8IIpton.' I couldl not work at
all., Finally I tried ) "
HEFORD'S
'BLAC*Km
DRAUGHT 4
and to my surprise, I got better,
ai.d am to-day as el1 as any
man." T h e d f o r d s Biiac'k'
Draught is a~ general, cathartic,
vegetable liver medicine, that
has been regulating irregulari
ties of the liver, stomach and
bowels, for over 70 years. Get
a package today. Insist o-, the
genuine-Thedford'%, E-70
DR. J. A. COLE,
Dentist,
Upstairs Over Weinberg's Corner
Store,
MANNING, S. C.
Phone No. 77.
C. O. Edwards. : H. M. Perritt.
EDWARDS & PERRITT',
Civil -Engineers and Surveyors,
Office Over Bank of Manning,
MANNING, S. C.
%. T. FLOYD,
Surveyor and Civil Engineer,
Office Over Hirschmann's Store.
LOANS NEGOTIATED,
On First-Class Real Estate Mortgages
PURDY & O'BRYAN,
Attorneys st Law,
MANNING, S. C.
W. C. Davis. J. V. Wideman.
DAVIS & WIDEMAN,
..A torneys at Law,
NNING, S. C.
DuRA T & ELLERBE,
Attorneys at Law,
MANNING, S. C.
JOHN G. DINKINS, '
Attorneys at Law,
MANNING, S. C.
Office in Old Court House.
J. H. LESESNE,
Attorney at Law,
$MANNING, S. C.
R. O.Wurdy. S Oliver O'Bryan.
ttoreysandCoundelors at Law,
fANNINGS. C.
TOWNSMAN, IF YOU .
OWN A FARM, READi THIS
We hope that every city man who
a farm will try in future to put
yWhite tenants into white neigh
roods. -Onily by developing pre
giving white farmers a sulcient
ber of white neighbors for ade
tely supporting white schools,
rches and social life, can we de
a ,ih type of rural civilization
white farmer needs white
ors. It's not enough to have
istant, limited and non-social re
tia we can have with negroes. I
nht a neighbor who will go with
me to my farmers' meeting and get
Ipiration with me and talk with me
but the things we heard discussed.
Wataneighbor who cani light .a
tw~dtorch o' nights and come
*with his wife or boy or girl and
[ ith me and -mine while we plIan
e thin s..: I' want a neighbor1
e boy 1. be a the corn club
t.y boy and-who will go to the
Lgs ,with him and spur up my
to do his, best. 1'ant a neigh
whose w ffe will go to the meet
of the United Farm Women with
wife andc come over' 'andl help en
in when niay wife has the Unitedl
Women meeting with her. I
~a *neighbor whiose girls will be
, g irls in cnning club work,
'enor'lie -niy girl's roonimate
en jie goes off to co;iege. I want
b~llor who will supports. the
oland church arid Sunday school
inyr race -andi help them keep.
4XWjnt a neighibor who shares
aspratonsof .my race and
perte ithme as a citizen
pes. I ah a ne ghbor who cn:
of cooperative enterprse. I
~Aihbor. who will join me in'
'ti'peit society. I want a
Sith whoni ,I can sit down
I~thand ',all& at. niy fireside as
-oI~ver plans for marketing
orcoinig our work. I want
,I nI Aar tog' a hnest :rl ar. by
i (l. I want'
0. h boi yw da0 go with me com
racle like, to the state farmerp'. meet
ing, 6w jo n me in some. request I
haae, to nj ke of the county commis
6ione'rs, or comfort me as a brother
when death or sorrow comes 'to my
house. I want a neighbor whose fine
sturdy , sons . and daujghters I can
watch growing up and see ~ their
beautiful friendship with' ny own
boys and girls a promise pf 'yet closer
ties between tpy neighbors and me
a prome of new. home-nests when
he and I '1y b passed away.
These ar the things the white far
mer or tenant craves, Mr. Landlord,
and if 'you w ill put yourself in his
place. you w llN elp him get them.
The Progreshive Farmer.
WHY A FARMER SHOULD
DEPOSIT HIS MONEY
We have been urging, farmers to
start bank accounts, and it is inter
esting to see what effect*this system
has oi the business man with whom
Mr. Farmer has dealings) We believe
this effect is pretty well stated by
Mr. Hamp Williams, a prominent
Arkansas hardware merchant, who
id recently: \
."If, after a farmer has bought a
bill of goods, he takes out his check
book and writes me a check for the
amount, I 'naturally place' a higher
estimate on hi than I would if he
had paid 'me the cash. ,He conveys
the idea' to me that he is a business
farmer, and I wonder if he has con
siderable money in the bank; but if
lie pulls from his pocket a little
greasy wallet and takes the money
from it. I can usually size up his
pile. If he makes a mistake and pays
me too much cash, he must depend
upon my records to show the trans
action, and if my system of doing
business is no better than his, we can
never tell. On the other hand, if he
gives a check, the mistake is easily
founid."
In this connection, too, let us re
pent that the thing to co this fall is
not to pay your debts and' then de
posit the balance of your crop money
in the bank, but to deposit ul this
money in the bank and then-pay your
debts by check.-The Progressive
Farmer.
o -
Why Not "A Country Library.
Guilford County, N. C., has set a
good example of town and county co
operation. The county commissioners
there and the authorities of the city
of Greensboro are cooperating to
make the Greensboro library o county
library instead of a city library. The
commissioners have appropriated
$1,250 a year to help support the
library on condition that all white
residents of the county have equal
privileges in getting and using books
on call, and that six library sub-sta
tions be established at six postofices
in the county. Fifty volumes a're
sent to each postoffice for one month
and then a new lot of fifty is sent.
Of course, these six sub-stations are
so situa d that nearly everybody in
the co ty is now in reach of the
world's best literature.-The Progres
sive Farmer.
I l'OR
ar
At the mo
JAMES
WATCH1VL
28 King St
H{' AEMO81 [OS HOPE
IN\ REPATID FAURES
Charleston Man Declared He Was Up
art Down All: Night Long.
"ALMO 'P DROVE ME CRAZY"
Charleston Railroad Man Declares
That tit Last He Has. Conquered
His -Troubles.
"Tanlac has done .a great' deal. for
me. Since I began taking it I' have
gained ten pounds in weight and I
do riot suffer ith any of those dis
tressing ailments and I am steadily
improving in health and strength."
In . these words, W. H. Lewis, a
Southern Railway section foreman, of
44 Drake St., Charleston, summed up
the great relife Tanac, "The National
Tonic," had -given hini. Mr. Lewis'
statement follows:
"My system was generally run
down and out of tone before I began
taking Tanlac. I was a sufferer with
indigestion and nervousness. I had
contended with indigestion and stom
ach troubles for about twenty-five
years and, it seemed that nothing I
took would give me permal ent relief
and' generally I failed to ret relief.
I have takeli a great ma 'y different
medicines an \have bde treated by
physicians, but, I conti ted to suffer
with my stoma .
"Gas formed i gr at quantities on
my stomach ai I was troubled a
great deal with ins around my
heart. At night was very restless,
and my sleep w- s broken and unre
freshing, and I vas up and down all
ight long. ains 'n my abdomen
also added to my tr ubles and dis
comforts.
"I was su ject to sev re attacks of
nervousness and when my nerves
were in th t condition, a d noise, if
it continuel a while, woo almost
drive me c@azy.
"The Tanlac advertising had caught
my eye, and finally I decided to take
it, even if so many other medicines
had proved disappointing to me and
had done a lot to kill my faith in
medicine. 3ut Tanlac proved the ex
ception to this rule. Tanlac has (lone
a great deal for me. I have gained
ten pounds in weight and I do not
suffer from any of those distressing
ailments as I did. My appetite is
good and I digest what I eat and I
do not have those pains after eating
as I once did.
"My nerves were quieted by taking
the .Tanlac, and I was also improved
so much that I can sleep well now
and I feel much better and more re
freshed in the morning now than I
used to. In every way I feel a whole
lot better.
"My wife also took Tanlac, and it
gave her just as satisfactory results
as it gave me.
"I am glad to recommend Tanlac,
because of the results it gave my wife
and myself. Tanlac has been of great
benefit to both of us, and I highly
recommend it."
Tanlac, the Master Medicine, is
sold by Dickson's Drug Store, Man
ning; L. W. Nettles, Jordan; Shaw
& Plowden, New Ziovi; Farmers' Sup
ply Co., Silver; D. C. Rhame, Sum
merton.-Adv.
FBI BE
erwai
~dJes
at reasonable
goods, write
AKERS AND JE'
reet, - -Char:
ESTABLISHED 1855.
T"REE WAYS FOR MERCHANTS
TO COOPERATE WITH FARM
ERS.
First; provide--greater conveniences
throughout the town for the coun
t,ry peoplQ to use while in town on
butipess. "With all the shade trees
hosted "$5 Fine for Hitching Here."
and all the grass plots posted "Stay
Off lhe Grass," and no vacant lots
near the business centers, country
people often suffer great inconven
ience's in finding suataile places for
keeping their stock walie in town or
in finding a place free from (lust and
filth tb eat their own dinners, which
it is often necessary to carry with
them.
Provide rest rooms where the coun
try women and children can go- when
through trading; where the mother
can leave the smaller children which
she is often forced to bring with her
while she does the family shopping;
where country people uno find it con
venient to bring their lunches will
have a suitable place, free from dust,
filth and fllies in which to eat; a'com
mon meeting place for country
friends or town and country friends
to find each other.
2.--Alerchants should encourage co
operation among farmers.--There has
been no single hindrance to. the (ie
velopment of cooperation among far
mers more effective than the attitude
of the business world. Directly an:l
indirectly the idea of cooperation
among farmers has been discouraged
and even broken up in many in
stances by underhandei efforts when
necessary. A reconstruction of both
business and agricultural methods is
absolutely essential to the highest de
velopment of the South's unlimited
resources. Better rural conditions
are - fundamental in tWe South's de
velopment. Larger profits from farm
ing is the only hope for the "Where
with" to make rural conditions bet
ter. Copperation farming is the only
mtjiod that has proved. profitable to
the masses.
3. Merchants should help each
county feed itself.-The merchants of
every town could render valuable as
sistance by being able to inform the
farmers of the fact that they are hav
ing to bring into the town from out
side the county a certain number of
bushels of oats, corn, Irish potatoes,
so many bales ofhay, pounds of meat,
butter, so many hundred cans of to
matoes, peaches, etc. They could help
the afrmers to standardize their pro
ducts so as to meet the demands of
the markets. The farmers as a whole
throughout the South now but little
about preparing their products for
the market. The ,merchants know
what their trade demands, when they
have to make their purchases, etc.,
and this information given to the
farmers will stimulate a greater ef
fort to supply the demands of the
market and thereby save sending
thousands of dollars outside of the
trade territory of any town.--J. T.
McKee, in The Progressive Farmer.
0
Good for Constipation.
Chamberlain's Tablets are excellent
for constipation. They are pleasant
to take and mild and gentle in effect.
Obtainable Everywhere.-Adv.
IT IN
velry
prices for
to
~& CO.,
WELERS,
l.eston, S. 0.
'Y N7l NI'J "DI
re
Is a. Bot1'ie FN
6e r.,,tire P
- 6 e-t-Vi l.
8 mt ;f Cc-C 1'2 Boltin
SHOOTING AT PINEWOOD
Night Watchman I. I. Thames Shot
Negro Saturday Night and Another
One Monday Morning.
Pinewood, Dec. 1.-Night Watch
nan R. R. Thames shot IHarrison
Pugh, colored, in the right thigh Sat
uhiay night. The woun:d proved to
bt only a ilesh wound upon exami
flat~ton.
Perfect balance of
contributes to ei
efficient perforn
The light weight o
the absence of b
the use, instead
parts and well d
ings.
This lightness me
Car weight and tii
ly calculated,
greater tire mile
As a result the ca
very notable rect
maintenance, ai
rep~ail.
In and of itself it
strong incentive
It will pay you to visit
The gasoline consump
Trhe tire mileagei
The price of the Tomi
complete, is $785
The price of the Winter Tour
including reg~ular mohair tc
SUMTER iA
Opposite Claremont Hotel.
SUMT E
.P0 0 ,
* 0*
SGe
L
orW1 -1 iieI
IT 111*
C I ii, ry
Where'
t'lieerr Thalin es shot his second man
aon-lay 'rorning, when ne attempted
to -rest a cotored man, who gave
Miain 1" .1at. wch:mt a b :!!et fr"om tI
night watchnmn's pis;tol .toppedl th:"
fleeint colore: man, the ball passier
clear lhrough his bo ly. The w"o. n
ed mntu wast: place.I onl at passm.-_
tyro f treiht an-,1 men to a ho.
pital i: Sumter. Hi e is iomg as e
clac <n oui hi expected.
CAR
light strong parts
onomy as well as
ance.
f the car is due to
eavy castings and
, of pressed steel
esigned steel forg
ans less gasoline.
e size are careful
and this means
~age.
r' is establishing a
rd for low cost of
id freedom from
constitutes a very.
to owvnership.
usq andl examine this car
tion i.. unusually low,
s unusually high.
ing Car or Roadster,
(f. o. b. Detroit;)
ing Car or Roadster compllete
'p is $960 (f. o. b. Detroit)
10TOR Co.
-- South Mai Street,
R.,S.C.