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t V '-owo ALpCa e S milati -aen PIP; o -moi cs D si 3 a02 nessand.Co. nn I Opittul-rphie rXcr e NOT NAR79 C . Clairo Od SP? - aT Aperfect Remedy for: tion,*%Our Storah W; Normvs.fonisims. ness audA.GSS 0" 16~ a&.i'M NEW Ezact Copy o: W -,e r ~r:in.: thec me-ent- to perfo tre'%s advan::e is t-k-n o the' Ehat the feet t !: : - iarly sensitiv ::nd f, : jury to then - :m o i are based vnon ': . 1e is made to pl:e- eone fa ', j :1u low pedestal: Ue:: the ahe " fr' ! tiated gentiy. and he r:io~ this and plawes it beside the other-t-o get it ott of' harm's way. The hind feet are treated similariy in turn. the' fron, feet being Lit every time they are placed on the ground. In ihis wnav al four feet are Gnally placed upon the tub. The trick of inducing an ele phant to partal:e of a meal is ver simple. Animals will naturally eat anything placed before them. and it only necessary to open a bo:tle ot 'pop" once or twice and present It bc hand when the animal may be trusted to find out for himself how to get at its contents. In all such cases the essence of the training consists in i nite patience. kindness and constant repetition, showing the animal over and over agatin how a thing is done in precisely the same way and 'hen fore ing him to do it himiself.-Scienltific American.__ ___ The Old Man's Plea. He got eight years in Sing Sing. but nevertheless the plea for merey of .Jo seph Amos Washington Bruen was one of the finest prose poems ever uttered in the general sessions of New York. The old man addressed the court as follows: "Deed. yo' honab. I can't say much. Mah record nm sure against me. I bab served m.oh time than sixteen years in prik~on for de same offense. All I !'.e to remlark (an' I hope o honahi will aot be' too stern) is dat I just simply cant l:ep away from a hencoop nohow when I heah dem pul lets callin' Rudyard Kipling expressed the very same idea when h wrote those two familiar lines: ifor the wind is in the palm trees. an' ti-e temple bells they say: "Come you back. you British soldier: com'e you back to Mandalay!" The chicken habit -once formedisa tenacious and irresistible as the Br rma girl habit.-Bostonl Globe. Can't Beat the Head Waiter. "You can't get ahead of a head wait er" said a man who spends a great deal of time at one of the New York hotels. "Of course the tips at a hotel like this mount up. and, as there are several restaurants. if you giv-e $15 or $20 to the bead waIter of each one of them it is too much. I sweetened one head waiter, but neglected to give the autocrat of another restaurant any thing. Soon I found that it was very difficult for me to get a table in thait restaurant- The head waiter would always be loohing another wayo a table that I fancied hatd been n gaged. I got even by giving my wimt ers extra big tips. and it soon got sc that when I entered the restaurant half a dozen upraised fingers would beckon me. But soon the head waiter was on to my game. and it got so that almost every table offered me was claimed by the head waiter on the ground that it was reserved."-New York Sun. Railway Journeys of Long Ago. It was only the adventurous who dared to face a railway journey in 123. A writer in the Quarterly Re v-iew commenting on the proposed line to Woolwich, remarked. "We would as soon expect the people of Woolwich to s~uffer themselves to be fired off upon: one of Congreve's rockets as trust themselves to the mercy of such a machine going at such a rate." The third class carriage of those days was: a thing of horror. "It had no roof. and no seats." writes J. C. Wright. Into this the passengers were packed and had to stand during the whole -journey or, if there was room, to squat -on the floor, exposed to the rain or sun and bombarded by sparks emitted: from the engine. Second class passen gers were kindly advised to provide themselves with gauze spectacles and to sit as far from the engine as possi ble."-London Spectator. Had a Full Course. The sign in front of a Harlem rs taurant attracted the eye of a farmer, and he wvent in. He had a raw, at ry, a stew, a pan roast, a broil anda steam on toast. When he got throu:;h he laid a quarter on the cashier's desh, only to be told that he was shy a dol lar and a quarter. "No, by jing." said the farmer. '-A quarter's right. Doesn't your sign say. 'Oysters In Every Style For Twenty fir Cents?' "-Lippincott's. S ORIA For Infants and Children. hm Kind You Have Always Bought B~ears the -o lAl use hi.rty Years ASTRIA I'MCL -A .I .%r -K. NCw YORK CI-V - Fr--.:e' "G-c ' i.an of 3righton. In Octtber. :-. ani individual was to be observed :: ri):h!on. England, who wa-iaed out e:ery (lay dres:ed i1 reen from :v:al it foot-green sboes, ae :! .Te gren 1::ndkerchief aid otrai mtch This .ecen trie "ersn iivel alone. laew uobody, :,:( i- i'0 t-ue the -urtains. the wal paper. tie fiuriture. even the plates and' dis es- and the smnallest toilet ar. icle. .'e:- id :nuninterrupted se q::ence of ;reen laving started on bis career. -r- was obviously no rea son to stolp. t: with full consistenc3 Le carried this scruples so far as to eat nothirg b,nt fruit and vegetables of the sane reein color. The conse quences we:-e extremely disastrous One 6ne day the green man jumped from his window into tbe street. rush ed forward ::nd performned a secoud somersault from the top of the nearest eliiff. C'lharls Durhiatm. LovinztnJ. III , ba sed in li-Cing a positive cure for 4f wetting. yMV litle hoy wet th< eh v eery ight, clar Ii' on the licor J :ied set er-al kinds of kidnev mnedicin< m I wasi' in t.e (ru store l0ok1~ fo7i sometiog diLa'erenLt tO-o eli h ti hn: eard" (f Fole Kide i!. fter h< ba tae them two Ia we I could se A Difference of Opinion. On one occasion Bishop G. of At. lanta purposed leaving home on a Sat urday night train, arriving in Savan nah the nest morning in time to fill pulpit engagement. His brother. much his senior, old fashioned in his notions of Sabbath observance. bearing of the proposed Sunday trip, took him to tash about it. The bishop explained that he was staying home as long as pos sible to take care of his children, who had been ill all the week. so that his wife would be in better shape to nurse them during his absence. "You see. Allen." the explanation ended. "i' a case of the cx in the ditch." "Ox in the ditch nothing:" snorted his b'rother in dismust. "It's a case of a 'l-rker ia a slei-;iag ear!"--St. !.to.is Parson's Poem A Gem From Rev. H. Stubenvoll, Allison la.. in praise of Dr. King's .New LifE Pi!s. "The're such a health necessity. In every home these pills should be. If other kinds yo'&ve tried in vain. USE DR. KING'S And be weil again. Only 25e at all drug. Nature's Parachutes. Careful examination has been made of the heads of Canada thjistledowns in order to determine their effective ness as parachutes carryin:g the seeds of the plant to great distances through the air. The results of this exami nation are quite remarkable. Calcula tion shows that a thistledown starting from an elevation ot twenty feet In still air would require two-thirds of a minute to reach the ground. With a wind blowing twenty miles an hour it would be carried on the average about a tifth of a m;le. The total sur face exposed to the air in an average thistledown is. on account of the great number of hairlets, a little more than one-third of a square- foot. Another well known and very beautiful esam pie of nature's parachutes ts furnished by the light silken threads with the aid of which the little .:ossamer spider makes long aerial voya;;es-Scientific American. Foley's Honey and Tar Compound is a reliable family medicine. Give i to our children, and take it your-sei wh~n you feel a cold c:aming on. Il cecks and cures eaugihs and colds and riup and pt-events broach itis and pneu mon ia. Th'le D icksoa Drui Cr. A Quibbler. "These people oui-y the letter, per mps. but they don't olbey the spiri of the law." TFhe spaaetr was dis cussing certain troublesome and wily transressors. Hie continued: "A~n( they dont even inter-pret the lette: of the law correctly. They rind thei: attorneys quibble like the young maz in Pike county. A young man and his girnl wer' strolling in a Pike county mea dov when a bull dashed upon the~m. "' Stav here aind protect ny retreat, cried the girl. 'You know. Reggie yo've often said you'd fac-e death fo my sakte; --ut liteele. who bad alread; sprintdl fifty yar-';. called back ovel his sh'ucder: "'Do y'ou -: :!w: bull dead?'" *Saving Mioney.0 "My dear. we can't go on in this N way. You simply must find some way to cut down your household expenses. "Ive beei, cutting them down right along. Twice 1:,st week I refrained from ordering ce:ery. and on Thursd.y I teilephon:ed to my dressng!er. sav ing '0 cents car fare that Would have been wasted if I had gone to try on mY new' gown. which wasn't ready. So you see I'm doing my best. But you can't expect me to do all the econ omizing What are you doing to re duce your expenses?" "Me? Great heavens: How ca.n you ask such a thing? I saved $600 last . week. Six hundred dollars! Why. George you haven't got $G00 to save. "I know it. but I saved it all the same. A friend of mine who claimed to have inside information concerning stocks -,are me a pointer, and if -I had borrowed $G00 and done as he advised A I'd have lost every cent of it."-Chica go Record-Heraid. Classic Central New York. Here in central New York we have our own peculiar problem. Some one with a devout admiration for the clas sies got in his work when the business of christening was going on in these parts. Authorities are in dispute as to a who this person was. We shall not en- I ter into that ontroversy, but merely call attention to the fact that in a county containing Apulia. Borodino. Camillus. Cicero. Delphi. Fabius. Man lius. Mycenae. Marcellus. Navarino. Pompey. Tully and Syracuse. to say nothing of .oshua and Jordan, there devolves upon the resident citizenship an obligation to use such pronuncia tion as shall honor the classic heroes and localities so carefully rgmembered by the pioneers. We have neard Apu lia pronounced Apyoolye by the un thinking, and, on the other hand. that I honored Scriptural name Joshua is now infrequently s,:etched into Joshaway, wnich overdoes it in the other direc I tion.-Syracuse Post-Standard. French Matches. What is the explanation of the 4 French match? Well, on every box there is printed the legend. "Manufac tures of State: Contributions Indirect." While you are struggling with the French wntch you are paying taxes. I do not know the exact amount of the revenue raised by the French I match, but a French friend assures 1 me that the atrocious badness of French matches is due to the determi nation of the government to compel smokers to us. ten matches instead of one. There was once a contractor who secured the contract for making the state matches. He was a conscien tions contractor. He made good 4 matches. He made matches that struck on the box. In consequence the revenue fell off. The government was enraged. They warned the con tractor thar his contract would be can celed unless he forthi.vith lowered the quality of his maAehes. .ccording to my friend. the objer-: of the contractor now is to make- -u:tches .o vile that the whole popuilation of France is A forced to spend half its tine trying to V make them burn.-Lotnlon Opinion. - TeBcar Lakc's Black Eass. 6 "Teonly b~lark bass wvater ! know of where lhe b daek basi~ are really blaek." said a man whoi makes ishing Itackle aind tries it out on waters al most ev-erywher~e. "is Bear lake, in the westerna corner of New York. It lies I high among the hills of Chautauquat county. near the Pennsylvahia line. itJ has no inle~t and no visible outlet.A peculiarity of Dear lake is that it has no shallows. There is no graduatl slope from its shores into deep wvater. but they pitch ofi' at angles so acute as to be almost per-pendicular, giving the mm pression that the water of the lake fills an immnense pit of great depth. The lake is almost round and only a mile in diameter. Owing to its odd formation and unusual depth. Bear lake has the appearance of a vast pool of black ink. In those depths are black bass which are said to be natural to that water, plentiful. large and full of fight. Black bass elsewhere are not black at all. but ot' a dark olive green. Z but these Pear- laike black bass are back.--New Yourk Sun. Whsn Liszt Met Dirika. A Paris co-n rmpornor :eintes no0 in- ~ eresting story or !.iszt; l'hie :great pianist wva' tving in :: little Germlnim town whe'n Diriks. the Norwegian painte'r, went to re'sidet at the same place. lhinking Ihe wvond be able to work t.here wi'thout interruptions. HeC 2 tnd been insta!led in his uew quar - ter-s only one day when he made the ~ piais's aegaraintance. The painter X had been trying his art for about two 2 hours, and then he gave up In despair. He went outside. and at the same time~ Liszt camne out for a breath of fresh Z pir. The painter addressed the pianist. and ids dialogue ensued: "Are you the x pianist. mionsieu'r. whom I have heard 2 all day ?' "Yes, mnonsieur." '"It is very irri:ating."~ "Alas, monsieur, you do not lov-e music?" "I detest it." "It is re:-y rerttable. but I must practice."i 'ut you disturb me in my work. Moreover, you play atrociously." "Ah. you think so? It is the first time any one has ever told me so." "'Judging from your age, there have been manyI opportunities,"~ was the painter's an swer. Then there was silence fo r a moment. Liszt, going indoors, content ed himself with the observation. "My name is Liszt-" Ends Winter's Troubles To) m anv. winter is a season of troau bie The'frost-bitten toes and finaers. j capped hands and lips. chilblains, cod-sores. re-d and rouazh skins, nrove his. But such trouble fly before Back rlen' Arnica Salve. A trial convinces.I Geatest healer of Burns, Boils, Pi les; Cuts, Sores. Biruises, Eezemna andi Spais Only :25a at all dr-unists. Succeed when everything else fails. In nervous prostration and female veaknesses they are the supreme remedy, as thousands have testified. FOR KIDNEY LIVER AND STOMACH'ITROUBLE it is the best medicine ever sold over a druggist's counter. R. .. A COLK. DE-NTISTI. l'-tairs ver' Bank of .\anio.. \lA NNING. S. C. HIGH QUALIT CO bFFEY AT LOW PRICE. For the past year Coffees have steadily a - t i: vanced, until they are about out of reach. h We purchased heavily last sutmmer. and w hile a our stock lasts. we will sell at no advance in prices. b TRY HO-BO-LA A mixture of Hondurs. Bogota and Lgu1r. I PRICE. 22 1-2c. POUND. Blended Raw t This (otfee parched would cost you 35 rentS per pound.S ManningGrocery Co M n S"" x n 4:e-r% Pervevors to Particular Peopie. THE OL MANNING HARDWARE COMPANY Where Can be Found The Celebrated Prosperity Farm i 9 Implements. The Beautiful Sanitary Wall Coat- 0 3 ing--ALABASTINE. The High-grade -Paints and Varn ish Stains. The Incomparable 0. K. Stoves and 9 Ranges. The Matchless for Strength Ameri i can Wire Fence. The Everlasting Hiobsy Leather Collars. The Full Stock of Hardware. Enam- a I V elware and Crocker%. The Hearty WelCeme for all our D Many Friends, at The SMANNING HARDWARE COMPANY SC. R. Sprott, F. D. Hunter, President and Treas. Vice-President and sec. --MANUACTURRS OF oManning Sine. CO-MNUFATUERSN OF - - C ton Sdataeeduhtte P rdghts soa t ee hecmptAinofteD b igh Gales Fetlzr SrAsobE ArANfETO.AR Ion. Lams, ad\ loi fat athe i lbcrt yo unt a terice is alright.ii Stoyepeithu and gtl beu sol. at1 NATURE'S LAUNDRY. Is Liable to Play Pranks With the Wash In Yellowstone Park. Nature's gifts are widely. and va ously distributed. in one place the ements of things are given. to be ade available by labor: elsewhere ie provides things ready for man's 5e. To gain our bread the seed must > first sown and months afterward ie grin harvested. thrashed and round. But the native of the Pacific les plucks his bread from the bread 'uit tree. Perihps nature foresaw ie overworked and not overstrong ousewife to whom "washing day" is dread and burden when she estab shed here and there natural wash ibs and washing machines and in >me places even provided ready made >ap. In the Yellowstone National park ie family washing is easily disposed f. The soiled bedding and clothing re put into a stout bag, which Is ung in one of the boiling springs and ft there while the party wanders bout sightseeing. When - taken out le clothes are so clean and white iat no rinsing is necessary. On one occasion a party hung their ag of ciothes in the basin of the gey er called "Old Giant" and. wandering f?, were absent longer than they in ?nded to be. While they were away be "Giant" spouted. and the garments 'ere thrown high in the air, torn into breds and scattered.-Exchange CHINESE TREASURES. Rubbings" on Paper From Ancient Tablets and Monuments. Chinese men of letters are exceed ily fond of ancient records in the hape of long scrolls of paper -rub ings" from famous stone tablets and onuments. The Liu Li Chang sta loners of Peking are extensive traders a these. They send special agents on >ng trips to shrines or arrange with he - local people at the place of a oted monument to take paper rub ings from it. The usual rubbing Is a ield of black where the face has been ked. the lettering cut into the mar le remaining white on the paper rub ing. To the foreigner in China rubbings rom the tablets the one left by the Cestorian Christians at Sianfu. in hensi. about 00 A. D. and the Mo tammedan tablet are especially inter sting. Those from the tablets at the-tem le of Confucius.at his burial place. hefoo, in Shantung, are among -the ollections of the Chinese man of edu ation. So many rubbings have been aken from several of the tablets rhich bear line portraits o' Confucius hat the lines and the-'letters on the tone have become so faint that the povernment has prohibited further bbings being taken.-New-York Sun. Man More Liquid Than Solid. Every fiber and every cell that enters nto the formation of a living body is athed in moisture. by which means lone these ultimate elements are kept ilive and are enabled to carry out their luties. Even the bones, which appear to be the most solid of all, owe more than half their weight to the presence af fluid. That our bodies contain a arge amount of fluid is proved in a trikng manner by the blisters which rise after the infliction of a burn. Water. in fact, plays a very important part In the human anatomy, for It is through its agency that the vital proe sses of digestion, absorption and the excretion of waste products are car ried out. To reduce the whole matter to igures and taking 154 pounds to be the total weight of an average full grown man, it is said that water alone ccounts for 1093 pounds of the whole. Hacker Mfg. Co. SU .C sSORS TO Gr .Hacker & Son, We Manufacture Doors, Sas~h an'd Bliods: Columns aud Balusters: Gilles and Gable Ornaments: Screr-ni Doors and WNindows. NE DEAL iN Glass. Sash Cord and Weigh ts. TATi!OF S'O VTH OAROLUNA County of Sumter. COURlT OF COMMON PLEAS. Copy Summons for Relief. -(Co mplaint Serverl.) ruce W. DesChamps, Pbtintiff. Against .D. DesChamps, R. S. DesChamps, J. M. DesChamps, Henry D. Greeni, Hennie D). BSrailsford, G1race L. Briggs, i.alla Bsriggs, Bessie Des Champs. Louis T1. DesChamps, Myrtle DesChamps. M. Cato Des Champs, Marshall DesChamps, Iva DsChamp's, C. Aiphonso Des Champs, Elizabeth DesChamps. R. S. Elliott, Duvall Elliott, John L, Elliott, Carltou E. i'lliott, Rod derik M. Elliott, Wayne V. Elliott. Dargan F Elliott, Johu M. Elliott. Cleo F. Elliott and Richard F. El liott.. Defendants. '0 the Defendants above named: You are hereby summoned and re ired to answer the comnplaiut in his action of which a copy is here* rithi served upon you, and to serve a opy of your answer to the said com. laint ou the subscribers at their of ce 2-2 North Main street, in the ity o Sumter, S. C., within twenty as after the service hereof. exclu ye of the day of such service; and if o fail to answer the complaint ithin the time aforesaid, the plain f in this action wvill apply to the >urt for the relief demanded in the >pllait. Dated December 7, A. D., 1911. LE E &MOISE, o the Defendant, J. M. DesChamps: Take notice that the Summons and omplainlt in the above styled action ere iled in the office of the Clerk of id Court on the 12th day of Decem er 191, and that the plaintiff makes. a personal demand against you in us action. LEE & MOISE, Plaintiffs' Attorney. LRANTS DRUG STORE Licensed Druggist. Sells Everything in bD RU6S andA MED::n IES= Chest Pains and Sprais Sloan's Liniment is a:1 ex cellent remedy for chest and throat affections. It quickly relieves congestion and in fiammation. A few drops in water used as a gargle is antiseptic ami healing. Here's Proof "I have urcd Evna Liniment for vears and can *.x..' - :- onderful cffrcicncv I hav i *%oat croup. la bac -:d reuaa.sm and 10 ever Ca.sei ga. s;ant rlitf. Rk. ECCA JANE ISAACS, Lucy. Kentucky. SLOAK1S41 LINIMENT is excellent for sprains and bruises. It stops the pain at once and reduces swell ing very quickly. Sold by all dealers. Price, 250s, 500., $1aG0 - Sloan's . Treatise on the Horse sent free. Addren Dr. - Earl&Sloan Baiton, 'BUM i.TAT OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of Clarendon. COURT OF COMMON PLEAS. Copy Summons for Relief. (Complaint Served.) The Bank of Manning, Plaintiff. Against Mrs. Richard E. Harvin, J. C. Harvin, Mrs. Elizabetb Thompson and John Doe and Richard Roe, unknown heirs of Richard E Earvin, Denfendants. To the above named Defendauts: You are hereby summoned and requir ed to answer the complaint in this ac ion, of which a copy is herewith serv ed upon you, and to serve a copy of your answer to the said complaint on the subscriber, Charlton DuRant, at his of fice, in Mannine. South Carolina, with in twenty days after the service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service; and if you faii to answer the complaint with in the time aforesaid, the plaintiff in this action will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the complaintb To the absent defendants, Mrs. Richard E. Harvin, Mrs. Elizabeth Tompson, and John Doe and Richard Roe, un known heirs of Richard E. Haryin, take ote: The original summons in this action. f which the foregoing is a copy, and, he complaint in said action were filed n the otlice of the Clerk of Court for C1arendon county, South Carolina, on he 19Lh (lay of December A. D., 1911. UHIARLTON DURANT, Plaintiff's Attorney. eFOR SALE! HERE IS A BARGAIN! 605 acres of Clarendon land wil be sold cheap, 800 acres cleared and stumped. Tphis land is well located for farming. Church and school near. For particulars address, C. F. RAWLINSON & C0., Davis Stations S. C. APPAREL SHOP FOR MEN AND LADIES Everything of the best fcr the personal wear atnd adorn ment of both sexes. We fill mail orders carefully -and promptly. DAVID OUTFITTING COMPANY, Charleston, S. C K.L TAVE., Civil Engineer AND Land Surveyor, Sumter, S. C. )iice Ov er B3ank of Sumter. . C. D AVI S. J. A. WEINBERG. AVIS & W EINBERG, MANNING, S. C. R. J. FRANK GEIGER. DENTIST, MANNING, S. C. R0. PURCDv- S. oLIVR O RYA N. URDY & O'BRYAN, Attorneys and Counselors at Law, MANNING. S. C. JH. LESESNE, ATTORNEY AT LAw, 3arer List.. Court convenes in Mannin4 Jan Lry 22nd. 1912. GRAND JURY. J. P. Buddin. New Zion. J. D. Burgess. Mouzons. L. B. Gibbon, New Zion. J, H. Geddinivs, Paxville. J. 0 Wells, Davis Station. E. M. Watt, tSummerton. E. ,. Fairey, Silyer. W. T. P. Sprott. Foreston. W. C. White.' Wilson. J. W. Weeks, Pinewood. George June, Manning. P. M. Gibbon, New Zion. E. L. IHniford, Lake City. John V. Sprott, Jordan. H. R. Boger, Manning. D. E. Geddings. Paxville. R. E. Burgess, New Zion. D. W. Barwick, Alcolu. PETIT JURY. J. M. Cantey, Summerton. B. B. Thompson. Jordon. R. J. Carrigan. Summerton. R. F. Felder, Pinewood. Rt. A. Lawrence, Pinewood. 1). Hirchnam,, Manning. J. Pickett Gibbon, New Zion. R. J. -tukes, Silver. D. J. Ross, Remuiii. M. C. Driggers. Lake City. B. S. Crawford, Alcolu. W E. Hodge. Alcolu. A. C. Morris. New Zion. Stackhouse Holladay, Manning. J. M. Player, New Zion. J. R. Dingle, Smminerton. Jasper Ridgeway, Wilson. W. W. Johnson, Alcolu. R. T. Touchberry, 'axville. A. F. Rtichardson, Pinewood. C. T. Dingle, Sammerron. LeRoy Frierson, Wilson. W. D. Dngle Suimerton. J. H. HortonDavis Station. W. Fraser I arrin-ton, Manning. R. B. Mellette. Sr.. Suminerton. S. M. Hayisworth, Foreston. J. W. Driggers. New Ziou. J. M. Richardson,.Summerton. A. M. Holladay, Manning. R. L. Geddings, Pinewood. Alvin J. Rigby, Manning. .L M. Coker. Turbeville. Joseph D. McFaddin, Alcolu. S. N. Barnes, Foreston. H. L. Brewr, Manning. Second Week Petit Jury Spring Term. D. C. Plowden, Manning, R. F. D. W. J. Millsap. Mayesville, R. F. D. I. T. Eadon, Summerton, R:F. D. Morgan P. Strange, Manning. J. J. Nettles, Alcolu. J. Bunyon Harvin, Summerton, R. F. D. T. R. Evans. New Zion. M. B. Corbett, Paxville. S. J. Smith, Manning. N. B. Davis, Silver It. F. D. 2. Jessie D. Geddings, P'axville. S. I. Till, Manning. P. E. Ridgeway, Jr., Foreston. J. A. Way, Silver R. F. D. F..W. Truluck, Summerton. J. Henry Lowder, Pinewood. Tom T. Flowers, Manning. J. V. Carrigan. Summnerton. J. L. Player. Tnrbeville. 11. H. Mathis, Summertcn. J. B. Cutter, Wilson R. F. D. L. B. Oriffin, Alcola R. F. D. J. C. Land, Foreston. S. W. Thigpen, Manning R. F. D. J. W. Coebran, Manning Rt. F. D. H. L. Johnston, Jr., Tufbeville. Lonnie Tobias, Manning J. M. Lee, Alcolu, R. F. 1). D. G. Shorter, Davis Station. H. F. Geddings, Paxville. J. S. Ridgeway, Manning. W. M. Lewis, Davis Station R. F. D. Olin B. Croskey, Summerton. Morgin J. Morris, Turbeyille. T. Mi. L. Coker, Lake City R. P. U. E. O Rtowe, Summerton, Rt. F. D. Notice to Credito'rs. All persons having claims against the estate of John H. Mahoney, de ceased, will present them duly at tested and those owing said estate will -make payment to the under signed executor of said estate. G EORGE W. MA HUtNEY, Executor. Sumter, S. C., R. F. D., No 1. Notice of Discharge. I will appiy to the Judge of Pro. bate for Clarendon County, on the 29th day of January, 1912. for letters of discharge as administrator of the estate of Nannaie Mi Felder, deceased. AUGUSTUS E. FELDER, A dministrator. Pinewood.8S C., December 28, 1911. Notice to Creditors. All persons having claims against the estate of Martha Ellen Pittman, deceased, will present them duly at tested, and those owing said estate - will make payment to the under signed qualified administrator of said estate. I. W.PITTMAN, -Administrator. Tfurbeville. S. C., January 2, 1912. LOANS NEGOTIATED On First-Class Real Estate Mortgages. Pud y &6 O'Bryan, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, ,Manning,S. 0. JOHN G. CAPERS, (of South Carolina). Ex-Commrissioner Internal Revneue JOUSEPHI D. WRIG HT. C APERS & WVRIGHT, AT ORNEYS AT LAW Evans Building, WASHINGTON. D). C. Telephone Main 6691 Woodmnen of the World. Meets on First Monday nighs- at 830. Visiting:Sovereigns invitedJ. 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