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COME TO THE Mouzon Grocery. EARLY JUNE PEAS, FANCY SWEET CORN, BARTLETTE PEARS, CALIFORNIA PEACHES, PINEAPPLES, TOMATOES, BEANS, Etc. All kinds of Flavorim-s. Candies, Crackers of all kinds, andi fresh. BUCKWHEAT, PANCAKE FLOUR, Catsups. Pickles, I[ince Mieat, very choice Apples in quart caus, Tapioca, Vermicelli, Postuin Cereal, Cigars and Tobacco. The best of Groceries, and Vegeta bles of every variety. The finest grades Of Tea.and Coffee, Housekeepers. give me a trial and I will please vou. P. B. MOUZON. Po0S Hacker &S0n MANIFACTURNItI OF oo ~ I cCc -~ .,, LAJ Doors, Sash, Blinds, Moulding and Building Material, CHARLESTON, S. C. Sash Weights and Cords, Hardware and Paints. Windsw and fancy Glass a Specialty, Do Youl Wait PERFECT FITIlNG CLOTHES? THEN COME OR SEND TO US. We have the best equipped Tailor ing Establishment in the State. We handle High Art Clothing solely and we carry the best line of Hats and Gent's Furnishings in the eisk your most prominent men who we -are, and they will commend you to us. .L DAVID & BRQ,, Cor. Kiug & Wentworth Sts., CHARLESTON, - S. C. We promptly obtain U. S. and Foreign frereporl on ptentabli. For free book P~at*ndTBADE.MARKS "'o Opposite U. S. Patent Office WASH INGTON D. C. DR. J. FRANK GEIGER, DENTIST, MANNING, S. C. 'Phone No. 6. CDAVIS, ATTORNEY AT LAW, MANNING, S. C. J. S. WILSON. W- C. DURANT WILSON & D1;RANT, Attorneys and Counselors at Lau-, MANNING, S. C. The Times DOES NEAT Job Printing. GIVE US A TRIAL. MONEY TO L.OAN. I am prepared to negotiate loans on good real estate security, on rea sonable terms. R. 0. PURDY, Sumter, S. C. Carolina Portland Cemeni Comnpany, Charleston, S. C. GAGER'S White Limec Ca pnequal fo quality. strengti ani age and Standard Cooperage. Also dealers in Portland Cement, Rosendale Cement, Fire Brick, Rooting Papers, Terra Cotta Pipe, etc. Rring yonr Job Work to The Timie office. THE CAR. SICK HORSE HOW A RAILROAD JOURNEY AFFECT ED- A HIGH BRED HACKNEY. Donfire's Trip to the Horse Show and Why It Ended So Disastrously-Ter rifying Ride In a Wheeled Box After a Hothouse Trainin=. The story of what happened to a high bred hackney when he was sent by rail to the Madison Square Garden horse show is told by Sewell Ford in "Horses Nine." Bontire was the hack ncy*s name, but he did not look at all fery at the moment. The author says of him: In his stomach was a queer feeling which he did not at all understand. In his head was a dizziness which made him wish that the stall would not move about so. Streaks of pain shot along his backbone and slid down his legs. Hot and cold flashes swept over his body, for Bonfire had a bad case of car sickness-a malady differin from seasickness largely in name only -also a well developed cold comipli cated by nervous indigestion. Tuned to the key, he had left the home stables. Thcn they had led him into that box on wheels, and the trou ble had begun. Men shouted; bells clanged; whistles shrieked. Bonfire felt the box start with a jerk and, thumping, rumbling, jolting, swaying, move somewhere of into ':he night. In an agony of apprehension-neck stretched, eyes staring, ears pointed, nostrils quivering, legs stiffened-Bon fire waited for the end. But of end there seemed to be none. Shock after shock Bonfire withstood and still found himself waiting. What it all meant he could not guess. There were the other horses that had been taken with him into the box, some placidly munching hay, others looking curiously about. There were the familiar grooms who talked soothingly in his ear and patted his neck in vain. The terror of the thing, this being whirled noisily away in a box, had struck deep into Bonfire's brain, and he could not get it out. So he stood for many hours, neither eat ing nor sleeping, listening to the noises, feeling the motion and trem bling as one with ague. Of course it was absurd for Bonfire to go to pieces in that fashion. You can ship a Missouri Modoc around the world, and he will finish almost as sound as he started. But Bonfire had blood and breeding and a pedigree which went back to Lady Alice of Burn Brae, Yorkshire. His coltdom had been a sort of hot house existence, for Lochlynne, you know, is the toy of a Pennsylvania coal baron who breeds hackneys not for profit. but for the joy there is in it, just as other men grow orchids and build cup defenders. At the Lochlynne stables they turn on the steam heat in November. On rainy days you are ex ercised in a glass roofed tan bark ring, and hour after hour you are handled over deep straw to improve your ac tion. You breathe outdoor air only in high fenced grass paddocks, around which you are driven in surcingle rig by a cockney groom import'ed with the pigskin saddles and British condition powders. From the day your name is written in the studbook until you leave you have balanced feed, all wool blankets, fly nettings and coddling that never ceases. Yet this is the method that rounds you into perfect hackney form. All this had been done for Bonfire and with apparent success, but a few hours of railroad travel had left him with a set of nerves as tensely strung as those of a high school girl on grad uation day. That is why a draft of cold air had chilled him to the bone; that is why, after reaching the Gar den, he had gone as limp as a cut rose at a ball. The Music of Thunder. The bass of thunder is considerably lower than the lowest sound produced in an orchestra - below the zero of' music, we call it. at which all positive apprehension of musical sound ceases and our senses are merely conscious of a roar. In observing the music of thunder our attention, however, may be most profitably directed to the ex presson rather than to the notes. The musical diminuendo~ is more perfectly represented by thunder than by any other form of sound In nature. After the first clap is over the ear will pursue with pleasure the rolling --away and gradual fainting of the peal, until at immeasurable distance it sinks into Si lence. CHURCHES OF MEXICO. 'Ilhey Are Great Curiosities F'rom an Architecturai Standpoint. From an architectural standpoint the churches of Mexico are the most won derful churches in the world. Archi tects from all over the world have been astonished and puzzled by the miracles in stone. There are great arches and domes composed entirely of small pieces of stone cemented to gether. According to all the rules of construction, these arches and domes ould not have been built In the first place, and in -the second would not hold together for a minute, yet they are there and are as solid as though built of steel. It remained for- an assayer from Denver who had settled in northern Meiico to solve the mystery. He culti vated the friendshlp of a priest and persuaded him to aid in his investiga ions. Together they went through the musty records stored in the church vaults, whlich run back for two or three centuries, and there they found what appears to be a truthful and ery plausible explanation of the won derful feats of architecture. It was recorded that when one tier of stone was laid about the base of the buIlding earth was carried and heaped p to the level of the highest stones; another tier was then added and more earth piled up on each side of it. This process was repeated until the dome and arches were reached. Then the earth was rounded off to the desired shape and the stone cemented together on the surface of tile ground. When sufficient time had elapsed for the mor tar to set and become as hard as the stone itself, the workmen dug out the dirt from the church, and it was ready for the finishing touches. .abor must have been cheap and plentiful In those days to perform such a stupendous task, and there is ample rason to believe that it was cheap and plentiful.Washington Star. A Cold. There are some things in the world that one can't understand. One is that you catch a cold without tryIng; that if you let it run it stays with you, and If you stop it it goes away. -.Proved? "Your son is a philosophical student, "Yes, I beleve he Ts. I can't under stand what he's talking about."-De EXPERTS WITH THE WHIP. One Man Could Crack Off a Snakelo Head at Twenty Feet. "That crabbed Old German, Schopen hauer, who said the crack of a whil was like a drink from the bad place would have found but little to com plain of if he had postponed his pass ing for awhile." said a thoughtfu man. --for the whip is getting to be ai awful scarce article in this age. I sup pose the whip will finally pass out o: existence altogether unless it is put t4 a new use. Of course the small ridin; whip, the kind which jockeys use ii urging the horses they ride, will b< used as long as horsetlesh is used. "But the kind of whip the old Ger man had in mind was of a larger, Ion ger and older type, the kind the o: driver uses even now in some of thi more remote sections of the world Whips of this kind generally swin, easily on the end of a long handle Frequently the handle is eight or tei feet long and is made of hickory o some wood that is supple enough t bend in the green state. The whip it self, which Is generally four and si: plait rawhide, is from ten to fifteei feet in length, with a sea grass cracke on the end tightly twisted and knotter at spaces an inch apart. It Is this art le that makes the noise of which the old German pessimist complained, an: a whip of this kind In the hands of ai expert can be popped until it sound like the crack of doom. In a quiet foi est where timber men carry on thei work this noise is even fiercer than it 1 in the cities. -Teamsters in the cities still use th old whip to sonic extent, but it Is grad ually going out, and the sharp crack the sea grass is rarely heard. "Speaking of whips, I am remindet of the marvelous accuracy some mei acquire in the use of whips. I supposi the Eskimo has reached a higher stand ard of proficiency in this respect thai any other class of men. I have seei boys of this race pop a silver half dimi at a distance of twenty feet every tim they swung a whip. They can simpl: hit anything they want to hit as loni as it is within reach of the whip. Bu here in the south I have seen ox car drivers crack off a snake's head at : distance of twenty feet, and they co-l< do it whenever it pleased them to di t."-New Orleans Times-Democrat APHORISMS. He who flatters you is your enemy. Cardan. There is no index of character s< sure as the voice.-Disraeli. Laughing cheerfulness throws sun light on all the paths of life.-Richter There is no calamity which righ words will not begin to redress.-Em erson. Experience Is a keen knife that hurt, while it extracts the cataract tha blinds.-De Linod. To forgive a fault in ,another i more sublime than te be faultless one self.-George Sand. Hope is so sweet with Its golde1 wings that at his last sigh man stil Implores it.-De Ia Pena. It is a great misfortune not to hav' enough wit to speak well or not enougi judgment to keep silent-La Bruyere. It is better to suffer wrong than di it and happier to be sometimes cheat ed than not to trust.-Samuel Johnson Juvenile Logic. The logic of childhood is frequent; as convincing as it is refreshingly orig inal. M.rs. L.'s little daughter is ver; much given to reasoning things out t herself and seldom falls to arrive at; satisfactory conclusion. Some week ago she gave a party to a number o little friends, and when the time cam for them to go home she politely askel thenm if they had enjoyed themselves All replied in .the affirmative with th exception of one conscientious maid who said frankly, "No, I didn't; I hai a horrid time." "Did you really?" sal the small hostess in a puzzled tone. don't see why. I had a lovely time but, then," she added reflectively, suppose I ought to, 'cos, you see, it Wa my party."-Brooklyn Eagle. Getting to the Point. John (sheepshly)-I-I s'pose you') be gittin' married some time? Betty (with a frightened air)-Oh, dare say I shall some time. "I dare say I'll git married too." "Oh." "P'r'aps we might both git marrie< at the same time." "Woudn't It be awful, John, If th parson should make a mistake an! marry us to each other?" "I-I shouldn't mind." "No; neither should I, to tell you th truth, John." Blagpipes In Nero's Time. Bagpipes are generally ascribed t Scotland, where they have been in us for a long time, but it was an instru ment upon which the ancient Greek and Romans played. Nero is said ti have performed upon it, and an ol1 piece of Grecian sculpture represent a player on the bagpipes dressed In the fashion that is known today as tha highland costume. Was Man Made For Microbeat Some contend that the earth wat made for ants rather than man, since the former are so much more numer ous. Others still, reading about hoy many million bacteria inhabit ever; cubic Inch of air and water, are in cined to assert that the world-an< man, too-was made for them. EacI variety of living creature probabl: thinks everything made for it.-Balti more Sun. Two of a K~ind. "I took great pains with that pud ding we had for dinner," remarked th young wife. "And so did I, my dear," rejoine4 the husband as he poured out a doubi dose of cholera mixture.-Chicag The Novel Reader. Coddle-Whenever I see you, you ar. reading a novel. You don't mean t say you remember all of them? Short-Dear me, no! It's because on't remember them I like to reat them.-Boston Transcript. You can always find some one t< agree with you even If your conclu ions are not complimentary to your self.-Atcison Globe. JIhis Only Comment. "One wife too m-any!" exclaimed Mrs. Wederly as she glanced at the head lines of her husband's paper. "I sup pose that is an account of the doings 01 some bigamist." "Not necessarily, my dear," replied her husband, without daring to 1ooli u.-Toronto Moon. It was to combat and expose quacks and fools that laughter was Invented. WHEN THE SEAL DINES. Jugglery That Would Put the Hu man Performer to Shame. The keeper who was going to feed the seal had reached the edge of the tank and was holding the fish tantaliz ingly at arm's length over the water. The soal was all interest and attention. Round and round the tank he darted, flipflapping, sidewheeling, leaping out of the water and performing all sorts of aquatic stunts, all the thile keeping up his guttural yelpings. There was no question about his appetite. He was hungry and didn't much care who knew it, and his beady little eyes were all intent on the keeper's every move. - "Why don't yer t'row him a feesh?" demanded a boy spectator, growing impatient at the keeper's leisurely ac tions. "All right, my boy; here goes!" And, suiting the action to the word, up into the air went one of the fishes, dropping toward the center of the oval. The seal at the time was at the ex treme end of the tank, considerably beneath the surface, but even there he must have been on the alert, for hardly had the fish left the keeper's hand -hen swish! a lightninglike somer s:ilt, a shadowy streak through the tank, and quicker even than thought the seal's gaping, whiskered jaws and a length 6f his eely looking neck were protruding from the water immediate ly under the tidbit, which disappeared into his willing maw to the accompani ment of an intensely appreciative smack. It was all so quick and well calcu lated that the auditors stood amazed. Without even the suspicion of a miss the performance was repeated as rap idly as the keeper could toss the fish. But the fun, fast and furious while it lasted, is soon over with, and the seal, after he had his fill, immediately lost all interest in his surroundings and waddled out on to his platform and curled up for an afternoon snooze. Philadelphia Ledger. FIRST PICTURE BOOK. ' The Daring Idea First Conceived o7 Johann Comenius. Three hundred years ago a German sevant had a wonderful vision. At that time children were taught to read by force of arms, -so to speak, through I hardships and with bitter toil on the part of teacher and of child. It seems curious that the first real step toward lightening the labor of children as they climb the ladder of learning was the product of the Imagination not of some fond mother or gentlewoman teacher, but of a bewigged and beti tled university doctor. It was Johann Comenius, however, who first conceived' the daring idea that children could be taught by the aid of the memory and the imagina tion working together, "by means," as he quaintly expressed it, "of sensuous impressions conveyed to the eye, so that visual objects may be made the medium of expressing moral lessons to the young mind and of impressing those lessons upon the memory." In other words, the good Herr Doctor had the bright idea that picture books could be useful to children. Comenius made his first picture book and called it the "Orbis Pictus." It contains rude wood cuts representing objects in the nat-i ural world, as trees and animals, with little lessons about the pictures. It is a quaint volume and one that would cause the average modern child not a little astonishment were it placed be-I fore him. As truly, however, as that term may Sbe applied to any other book that has since been written, the "Orbis Pictus" was an epoch making book. It is the precursor of all children's picture books, and modern childhood has great 1cause to bless the name of Comenus. Household. spuruheim and the Students. Spurzheim, the -father of modern jphrenology, while staying In Edin Sburgh, where he had a great vogue, was the victim of a laughable hoax. A Snumber of medical students submitted for the opinion of the phrenologist the plaster cast of what they said was a remarkably formed human skull. As a matter of fact it was the model of a big Swedish turnip (called in the Scot tish tongue "neip"), and of this Spurz heim gravely wrote out the phreno logical character. A few days later the following skit appeared in the leading journal of the city: The tide of fame to Spurzheim's name Rolled o'er the Qerman deep; The tide was spring; but, fickle thing, It now has ebb'd. to "'neip." Why the Editor Skipped. An editor of a small American paper Srecently stated that he had been kissed by one of the most beautiful married women in the town. He promised to tell her name in the first issue of his paper next month. In two weeks the circulation of his newspaper doubled. -But when he gave the name of his wife he had to leave town.-Fourth Estate. Mistaken Identity. I "I think I have met you before, a Aren't you timekeeper for the Bloss & Goss company?"t "No, sir; I am a singer of topical1 songs and know nothing at all about keeping time."-Kansas City Journal. Ha OR.MGPPF'E ormail 25 ents to C. ,.L DR C. J. 2lOFFE~TT-Dear Doctor.* U !oacZers) to our little gr-and child with ce-e alnepst nuzgical, anad certaissly moie -cc eeruscal. Yours tertreal Row Bickmro Seuithern Methoedist et *1 wan n frie-nds and thk- 'nlie. geawr Wedding, Birthday or T:: in~ the fnture, as w..ll as the past, I ainm pr Watches Clocks Sterling Silyer Fine China Wedgewood Sp s plte', and it wil! afford mue pleentmre to m Special and prompt attention Atlantic Coast Line L . Watch Inspector. - -- BRING TO THE TIM] Al An Invisible Enem Malaria is an invisible atmospheric pois ted with the gases and microbes arising from damp cellars, sewer pipes, badly ventilated I ble matter, and we unconsciously inhale 1 they are taken up by the blood and circulate Malaria gives no warning of its coming seen, and no violent symptoms appear until completely at the mercy of this hidden foe. be following us night and day, but often th< its presence is a chilly, creepy sensation sometimes followed by a slight fever, and r depressed feeling. The blood soon becom< and weakened by the teeming millions of i irregular, slow circulation is the result. ] blood gives rise to innumerable and serious t enlargement of the spleen, loss of appetite a pallid or yellow skin, boils, carbuncles, absce LoIVILLE, KY., March 26th, 1902. For sevem1I years I suffered with Chills and Fever, caused by Malaria in my system, and each smmer for several years I would relapse. Finallymy physician pre scribed S. S. S. In all, I took three bottles, and they entirely cnred me, and I have never been troubled since. I am sure no other medicine could have given me so complete and immediate relief, and I cannot spcak too highly of S. S. S. My partner in business is now taking S. S. S. for an eruption of the skin and generalrun down condition of his system, and though he has taken but one bottle, already commences to feel better. 93I West Market St. I. SHAPOFF. system through the blood, and a remedy neutralize the bad eflects of the poison offer that can accomplish this is S. S. S., which L miatter, but keeps it pure and healthy. It s poison, and keeps the blood in such a vigor are allowed to accumulat:, but are promptly During tile spring is an opportune time t for the hot, sultry summer days will cause crish the blood and weaken the constitutior needs a A< relieve j and buil gish blo( and dig recuper great vegetable remedy. Its freedom from 1M:Trial troubles and perfectly adapted to t -- a have any symptoms of Malarial p~ your case and advise you without < T1E SW A ler h TeKn You Have Always Bought odoI Dyspepsia Cure Digests what you eat. ~ P A THE R. B. LORYEA DRUG STORE. Money to Loan.HO That has ever be rgs eTY A s tAls a very c APPLY TO WILSON & DuRANT. Nothing has ever equalled it. From the best man Nothing ca-n ever -surpass it. Large and va Dr. King's ~~n New Discovery For p~si*a j. A Perfect For All Throat and From 1 to I* Ax Cure: Lung Troubles. W aean Money back If it fa. Trial Bottles free. ( F The R. B. Loryea Drug Store, Which is the bes time toplant and Winthrop College ee Scholarship and En trance Examinations.p The examinations for the award of acant scholarships in Winthrop Col- _______ ege and for the admission of new stu ents will be held at the county court Louse on Friday, July 10th, at 9 a. m. A pplicants must not be less than fif-CA O I een years of age. When scholarships are vacated after uly 10th, they will be awarded to those aking the highest average at this ex mation. The next session will open about Sep ember 16, 1902. For further information and a cata gue, address Pres. D. B. Johnson, tock Hill, S. C. ajuljl TT' Cures Gilolera-infa~1urn, 'Fire Dlarrhoea,Dysentery, and ? h BoriToblso the Bowels, Strengthens - the Child and Makes it DuggitS, TEEThING EASY. MoFEirT, M. D., ST. LOUIS, MO. MaMM*JaALSO ] K, F~t a 0/ s.I Carload Lot d Jewelry. / ally to h owi that when in nee.d of a Christmas Present, N N pa.-d to 7:pply them. My line of _.. Diamonds Jewelry Cut Glass ectacles and Eye Glasses - ietoall Repairing in my line N OL SOEM, SUMTER,. p and con YOUR Dining, Fori ~~ tion, ii FS )FFICE n. The air becomes infec the marshes and low lands, iouses and decaying vegeta hem into the lungs, when d throughout the system. ; no immediate effects are the unfortunate sufferer is This invisible enemy may first intimation we have of running over the body, Ln always tired, drowsy and s deeply poisoned, thinned nicrobes and germs, and an ['his condition of the roubles: ,torpid liver, aLd feeble digestion, a__ sses, indolent ulcers and pustular and . scabby skin erup tions of various - kinds, are common symptoms of Frequently the health becomes so and such a lifeless. condition ensue person loses interest in his surroufa faith in all human remedies. allowed to remain in the system, ays dation for other diseases that - fatal or permanently wreck the h Malaria can only be worked that can destroy the germs and micr the only hope of a <dure, and the oxii. ot only purges the blood of all morbid, earches out and destroys every traceo4 >us condition that poisonous matters-i expelled from the system. o begin the fight against this invis ble the germs to multiply and still , and now more than ever the good blood purifier and bracing tona"% ourse of S. S. S. at this particulan *ou of Malaria and its attendant evl, d up the system, purify and strefth )d and quicken the circulation, when t -stion improve and all the vital poNee .te under the invigorating tonic inflaeYN all minerals makes it the ideal.in" 1e most delicate constitutions. 7 poison, write us about it, and our Ph harge. Book on Blood and Skin ?' T SP-iF COMPANY A KRE IN THlE R EINS & CO. have now on hand and in-stic1 te [SES & MU< mn brought to this'market and will continue to iee ands. oice lot of UJGG3IES. -(OPEN AND TOP) nufacturers in the South and West. Tied line of , to suit the same. rin stock the Celebrated iedmont Wagors~ e, with gear to suit the same. imber of GRAIN DRILIB~ on hand. The rmer's Favorit t made. and would be glad to supply our farmersJ3 be sur'e of a good stand that will withstand the sev *e us right now and get what you want. .HAWKINS & M [A PORTLAND CDIE CHARLESTON, S. C. sole Selling .genats trick, Fire Tile,f ck, Bull-Read an Lii Special Tiles. - INEST PREPARED FIRE CI~ 3.Less Than Carle TOgeUGHFAlofJfI Lefween rhe RTHAND&UT Florida-Cuba. ssenger service unexcelled foil uxus ifort,equipped with the.ltst fPulm Sleeping end .Thoroughfare.Cars. 9 rates, schedule, maps or any~infor ite to WM. J. CRAIG, GJeneralyPassenger Agent, W~iri~ The Straini of Itowiniz. A medical paper discusses the "health of the oarsmen" and comics to no very definite conclusion as to. the .effect of training and racing on the after life of the varsity oar. Some years ago the late Professor Morgan, in his little work, "University Oars," gave the re sults of an investigation regarding 255 who were then living out of 294 who had taken part in the boat races. And his returns seemed to show that oars men were rather benefited than in jured by the discipline and struggle. It must be remembered that the pre liminary sifting of the torpids, the eights and the trials weeds out the weaklings at Oxford who could not stand the strain. And every rowing man knows that the trained man who tumbles back in the boat after a hard fought race is as fit as ever within a minute.-London Chronicle. His Forenoons Began EDarly. When Philip D. Armour engaged a new secretary, he did not tell him at what hour in the morning to report The Young man appeared at 9, but found Mr. Armour at work. Nothing was said about the secretary being late. The next day he presented himself at half past S, only to find Mr. Armour ahead of him. So on the day following he came at 8 o'clock, with the same result. Determined to be on hand before his boss, he came at 7:30 the next day, only to be greeted by Mr. Armour with the question: 'Young man, will you tell me what you do with your forenoons?" Edible to Him. "You say," tittered the fiancee of the, vegetarian, "that you could fairly eat me. Now, isn't that- contrary to the tenets of your Uelief? "Not at all," asserted the vegetarian. "But If you ate me" "I should simply be eating a peach." No use talking, the meat diet isn't the only thing that makes the mind active.-Judge. Avoiding It. "We women," she was saying again, "suffer in silence." "I can readily believe that you do suffer in silence," the man replied. "You take so much pleasure i'talk." Philadelphia Press. A Vandy Trick. UBessie," said the teacher to a small pupil, "can you tell me what memory is?" After a moment's reflection the little one replied. "Memory is the thing peo ple use to forget things with." CASTORIA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of ,e WfH EN YOU COME TO TOWN CALL AT SHAVING SALOON Which is. itted np with .n eye to the comifort of his enStoniers....-.-. HAIR CUTTIY(I IN ALL STYLES, SH AVINci AND S H A M POOI NG iDone wi'th neatness i disp atchu. .. .. .. A cordial invitation is extended... J. L. WE1LLS. Manning Times Block. New Tailor Shop, I have opened a new Tailor Shop in the building occupied by Ed Rhodes as a restaurant. CGcaing and ?apairing a i990 2 Come and give me a tria!. I give good work and guarantee sattisfaction. Respectfully, CLARENCE WILSON, Manning, S. C. FiRE.' LIFE. ACCIDENT & BURtGLARY INSURANCE. Tailor-Made Clothing. FIT GUARANTEED. A FULL LINE OF SAMP'LES. Also Ready-Made Suits, Mackin toshes and Rain Coats. J. L WILSON. Nortwest R R .0o' . C. TIME TABLE No. 7, In effect Sunday, Jan. 15, 1902. Between Sumter and Camd~en. Mixed-Daily except Sunday. Southboun d. Northboun d No. 69. No. 71. No. 70. No. 68. PM AM AM PM 6 25 9 45 Le.. S'zmter . .Ar 9 00 5 45 6 27 9 47 N. W. Junctn 8 58 5 43 6 47 10 07 . ..Dalzel... 8 25 5 13 7 05 10 17 . ..B.orden... 8 00 4i58 7 25 10 3.5 . .iRemberts.. 7 40 4 43 7 35 10 40 .. Ellerbee .. 7 30 4 38 7 50 11 05 So Ry Juncta 7 10 4 25 8 00 11 15 Ar. .Cam.den..Le 7 00 4 15 (S C & G~ Ex Depot) PM PM AM PM3 Betwee'n Wilson's Mhl and Samiter. Southboun -1. Northbound. No. 73. Daily excelst Sn day No. 72. P M Stations. P M 3 00 Le.... Sntr......r 11 45 3 03 ...N W Junction... 11 42 317...........Tindl..........110 3 30.........Packsvile........10 45 405...........Siver..........1020 4151 1000 410 ........ Millard . .... 3930 5 0.........Su merton . . 9 2 5 45..........Davis.......... 00 6 00.........Jordan ......... 8 47 (1 45 Ar... ilson's Mills.. e 8 30 PM AM Between Millard and St. Paul Daily ex:cept Sunday. Sothbound. Northbound. No. 73. No. 75. No. 72. No. 74. P M A M Ntations A M P 11 4 15 9 30 Le Millard Ar 10 00 4 40 420 940 ArSt.PaulLo 950 430 PM AM AM P'M TIIOS. WILSON, President. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure Digests what you eat.