University of South Carolina Libraries
We, have just received a lot (1 1,~v : a:aia~clo'd which we kniow will interest you. Among other things are: TWO-GALLON WATER COOLERS.................. 0i WIRE DISH COVERS.......... ........... and l0e each THREE PRONG ICE CHISELS....................... .hc WIEE FLY TRAPS............................1.5e each f-E CREAM FREEZERS- 1-qt.. 1.3~>: 2-(1-, $1.-,5: 3-qt.. k2.25: 4-qt. 82.7. STONE CHURNS.......................1-gal.. 2.: 2-gal., :c POTATO MASHERS.................e............. HA.MOCKS................................. .. I._5) TOOTHPICKS- large package.................................. ) We have lately received a large consignment of STOVES, and can safel say that we have the best assortment of them to - oose from that has ever beer sh'own in Clarendon County. Our prices., too. are so reasonable that they excite comment from every one. We can assure you that you can do as well with us ii making purchaes a-s you can anywhere. M FARME3RS M We still have a few of those cheap Orangeburg Sweeps and ('ot ton HIoc. on hand. We have lately received a lot of Paris Green Distributors or Sprayers5 and will eudeavor to ha'e them on hand when wanted. Our One-Horse Harrows have been in great demand. We stil have a few. HOUSEBUILDERSS Will find our stock of Builders' Hardware in good shape. We have Valley Tin. Locks, Hinges. Nails in endless variety. Also White Lead. Oil and Colors for Painters. Remember our COLUMBIA BICYCLES Have been tried and proven the best on earth. We have Bicycle Repairs at lowest prices. Very truly yours. Manning Hardware Co. CROSSWELL & CO, 0sUMTERL E3. C On account of big advances on everything in the Grocery line We Can Save You Money if You Will See Us Before You Buy, As we bought largely before the advance. Below we give you a list of articles that we can save you money on: 200 Sacks Rice, 2 3-4c to 4c per lb.; 22 Barrels Good Carolina Rice, 4c per lb. CAKES AND CRACKERS (f. o. b. factory in 5 box lots) as follows: Soda Crackers, 4c. Ginger Snaps. 4c: Round or Square Lemon Cakes. 4ic: Nicnacs, 4ic: Sugar Cakes, 5c: Molasses Cakes, 5e: Cream Lunch, Sie. Prices subject to change. These are low prices and you should take advantage of them. Parrott and Monkey Baking Powders, $1.60 for case of 50 10-oz. cans. Rex Baking Powders, 100 5c cans to case, 50 10c cans to Zase, $3.60 per case. Delivered in 5 case lots. Ship direct. Best large Lump Starch. 40-lb. boxes, at 3ic per lb. Star Lye, $3 per case, delivered in 5 case lots. Ship from Sumter, S. C. 3-lb. can Tomatoes, 2 doz. in case, 90c a doz.: 2-lb. can Tomatoes, 2 doz. in ease, 70c. Big bargains in Tobacco, Cigars and Cheroots, Cigarettes, etc. Get Our Prices on Sugar, Coffee, Molasses, Bacon, Lard, Meal and Soap Before You Buy. FLOUR we can always give you at mill prices. The "Roller King" Fancy Patent is the finest on earth. "Alpine Snow" Half Patent is fine. --Red Star" Family, $3.50 barrel. Ask for price shipped direct from mill in 5 barrel lots or more. CROSSWELL & CO, Bt7wE.M 8. 0. Look to Your interest. Here we are, still in the lead, and why suffer with your eyes when you can be suited with a pair of Spectacles with so little trouble? We carry the Celebrated IBAWES Spectacles and 61asses, Which we are offering very cheap, from 25c to $2.50 and Gold Frames at $3 to $6. Call and be suited. W. M. BROCKINTON. 'T1I CAROINA GROCRY COMPANY, THQXAS WILSON, President. e*gt.*A2* CRQC*3* COMMISSION MERCHANTS. 19 East Bay - - Charleston, S. C. * We Woal4 De Sla4 to aEm Yon Write Us for Pricei. - The Percival Manufacturing Comnpany1 INCORPORATED. MEETING ST., near Line, - CHARLESTON, S. C. WE MANUFACTURiE ALL KINDS OF Sash, Doors, Blinds, Frames, Mantels, Turning, Moulding, Scroll Work, Stair Work And every description of house-finishing wood work. We are prepat'ed to comp~lete2 with any establishment in the United States it prices and quality of work. Get an estimate from us before purchasing else where. ,Iro W7ill SavJe Monuey By It THE TIMES JOB WORK Neatly and a Office Does Lo etPrices DR. MOFFETS Allays Irritation, Aids Digestlon Sregltes the Bohls, Makes Teethir-5 Easy. r g(Teething Powders) TETlINA Relieves the Bowe Troubles of Children of Costs only cents at Druggists, ANY AGE. No Wild and Woolly West. Easterners have an erroneous Impres. si-n about the vast plains country thai stretches eastward from the, flanks of the Rockies to the wheatfields of the Dakotas. It is a region where crimes are far less numerous iii proportion to pop ulation than they are ir the densely settled regions of the eastern and mid dle states. If the sombreroed ruffians with pis tols and knives in their boots and car tridge belts around their waists are not in the cattle country, where, then, are they to be found? Where are those Alkali Ikes, Lariat Bills, et al., who fire at the decanters in barrooms and at the silk hats of tenderfoot stran gers-the villainous desperadoes whose lynching bees and other harrowing an ecdotes make up considerable of the stock in trade of our eastern comic illustrators? I do not know. For many years I have wandered through the great northwest on horse back, stagecoach and in canoes, as well as In the palatial Pullman sleeper of the great transcontinental lines, and I have never discovered any of the fierce, bewhiskered dime novel heroes. Dur ing all my travels in the Dakotas, Mon tana, Idaho, Washington, Oregon and British Columbia I have never seen a man hurt or witnessed any sort of row, and I would feel much safer to strike across the mountains or plains alone on a broncho and unarmed than I would to walk up Clark street at night in Chicago-St. Paul Globe. Infant Baptisms In Russia. "I was fortunate enough," writes Trumbull White, "to visit the Church of St. David. in Tiflis, Russia, just in time to attend a baptismal ceremony. According to the rites of the Greek church, as practiced in this ancient Georgian temple, the youngster in question, a fine boy 4 or 5 weeks old, had to be Immersed three times in a baptismal font filled with water, each time to be completely covered, in ad dition to various blessings and anoint ings with holy oil and several long prayers. "The benevolent looking old priest proved himself a man of kindly thoughtfulness. While the familygroup around the baby was getting him prop erly unclad, for the ceremony requires that the child shall be naked, the priest surreptitiously dipped his finger Into the font, and I saw by his face that it was too cold. Then he stepped behind a screen, where his samovar was steaming, emptied the hot water into a pitcher, and while the family still kept busy over the baby he poured enough to temper the pool that had been provided for the shorn lamb. The result was that the little fellow took his plunges without a murmur and thereby distinguished himself."-Chl cago Record. "Paradise B'iled Down." A tourist tells how he traveled with a young couple evidently on their hon eymoon, and the passengers in that particular carriage were on the grin most of the time over their antics. The bride had got the man she loved, and she didn't care who saw her put her head on his shoulder. The bride groom had got a farm with his wife, and if he wanted to feed her on sweets or squeeze her hand whose business was it? Alittle old man sat directly opposite the couple, and he looked at them so often that the young husband finally explained: "We've just got married." "I knowed it all the time," chuckled the other. "And we can't help it, you know." "No, you can't. I'll be blowed If you can!" "I presume It all seems very sills to an old man like you," continued the husband. "Does It? Does it?" cackled the old fellow. "Well, I can tell you it does not, then. I've been there three times over, and now I'm on my way to marry a fourth. Silly! Why, children, it's paradise b'iled down!"-London Fun. Old London Sundays. We have got it into our heads that Sunday was better observed in the puritanical acceptance of the word three or four generations back than it is now. It was quite otherwise. All the great ladies when Queen Victoria came to the throne-the Duchess of Wellington, the Duchess of Rutland, the Marchioness of Salisbury, the La dy Hyde Parker, the Misses Walpole had regular card parties on a Sunday, and there were concerts and receptions all over the town announced with be. coming regularity in The Morning Post-Saturday Review. How to Get a Genial Dog. A vagrant dog, particularly a cur with seven or eight different strains of common dog in him, is the best kind of a dog to own. He Is always smi~ling and wagging his tail at you, and his appreciation of little favors Is only equaled by his appetite. A fancy dog with a blue ribbon around his neck is always looking for an opportunity to snap at children. If we kept a dog, we would keep a yellow one, purchased as a pup from a negro boy.-Atchison Globe. Ancient Cattle and Butcherin'g. The earliest records of Egypt depict a. butcher cutting up an ox, exactly as it is done today outside of the great slaughtering establishments, with a knife that he sharpened upon a steel that hung at his side and providing cuts of meat precisely like ours. They used leather, and they did better tanning than we do; the blood, instead of being processed into fertilizing, was used for cooking purposes, and our Spanish friends never see a better bull fght than was daily purveyed for the delectation of those ancient "sports." A little later in the world's history we fipd records of tricks being played in the cattle trade, for do not some historians aver that Jacob exercised undue Influence upon the cows of L&y ban's herds as well as upon the ewes of his flocks? And others tell us thai Zaph-uto-otherwise known as "3ao seph the Wise," stockbroker in chiel for the Pharaoh Apophies, who, of course, was not known in the deal cornered the cattle as well as the grait of all the country about-Self Culture A Sure Teat. "Are you sure she Is as gentle anc patient and amiable as she seems?' asked the friend. "Not quite sure," answered the youns man who Is in love, "but I'm going t( find out." "Howv?" "I'm going to get her to call some body up over a long distance telephon1~ and then watch her." -IndianapoliE .Turnal. Crafty men contemn studies, simplb men admire them and wise men usi them, for they teach not their own use but that is a wisdom without them an( above them, won by observation.-Lord Bacon. There are a great many caves an< preistri monrs in Ioa.m Hlot Wickli It is handier than a coa Flame Oil Stove is abs< and causes neither smo Made in various a pocketbooks-wher MANNING HA The Lady and the Teeth. "I was called one day to a certAjW hotel to give chloroform to a youbg woman who was about to undergo a slight surgical operation to remove a morbid growth in the ear," said a phy sician. "The patient, as it developed on my arrival, bad been married only a few days before and was in the city with her husband on their bridal tour. 'Although quite handsome, she was no longer ,exactly in her first youth, and she was very much averse to having her husband present at the operation. However, he insisted, and she finally agreed that he should stay, but I no tieed that she seemed very nervous and preoccupied. "The operation, as I said before, was trifling. She took the chloroform easily and all went well until she was just regaining consciousness, when she opened her mouth, and out fell a set of false teeth. She had said nothing about that detail, and the truth was that she had hoped, poor woman, to pass through the ordeal without the fact of her wearing such things being known to her husband. "But the effect on that individual was entirely unexpected. He gave one horrified glance and then rushed at the old surgeon and seized him by the throat 'You infamous scoundrel' he yelled. 'You have broken my poor dar ling's jaw!' "At that stage of affairs I beat a re treat. I never did learn exactly what the husband thought had happened or what sort of explanation was offered." -New Orleans Times-Democrat. He Drank Alone. In the early days of Ventura, Cal., Dr. Bard established such a reputation for willingness to fight that few pre sumed to provoke his anger. He was once informed that the lawyer he had engaged to represent him in a certain case had sold out to the opposing side. "PIl cut his heart out," said Bard when the news came to him. Shortly after that, walking with one of his friends, Dr. Bard met the law yer en the street. "Come in and have a drink," said that worthy, and the three men, entering the barroom, or dered three glasses of whisky, which were put before them. "Drink," said Dr. Bard to the law yer. "Not until you are ready," the law yer politely replied. "No, not with me," said Bard; "you drink now." "Not until you drink," insisted the legal light. Dr. Bard's pistol was out In a mo ment and pointed between the eyes of the man who had betrayed him. "Drink!" said he in a voice of thun der; "drink, I tell you!" The lawyer drank with ayidity, and when he was through Bard and his friend threw their full glasses on the floor. "We don't drink with curs," said they and, turning their backs, walked out of the room.-San Francisco Argonaut It Waan't the Bell. The Lewiston (Me.) Journal tells a story of a minister in a prayer meeting who cut short "Uncle" Ira, a prosy old deacon, by ringing a bell at the end of five minutes. But after doIng so he felt sorry, because he had apparently hurt the feelings of an old father in Israel. So he arose and went down to "Uncle" Ira and put his hand on the old man's shoulder. "'Uncle' Ira," said he, "i'm sorry for that. I ask your pardon and" "Uncle" Ira looked up, the anger still in his eyes. "Why, ye don't think I set down on account of that pesky little bell of your'n, do ye?" he demanded. "Why, I-I-well, I thought"- stam mered the minister. "Waal," said "Uncle" Ira, "ye needn't think no more about that belL. I want to tell ye right now that no bells ain't ever goin to set me down in this vestry where I've talked goin on 29 years. I want to tell ye right now, young man, if I hadn't jest swallered my chaw Ed 'a' kept on talkin till I'd 'a' 'lucidated that p'int if it had 'a' took me all night." _______ They Spilled Over. Marjorie never cries when any little mishap befalls her and has been known to sustain without shedding a tear se vere bumps that have rapidly acquired a black and blue aspect. But the other day Araminta, her dearly loved and tenderly cherished- doll, fell into the open grate and received a contusion of the nose which was most unpleasant to contemplate. Marjorie winked very hard for a few minutes, and then, run ning with her injured Araminta to her mother, she buried her head in her lap, sobbing, "Oh, mamma, I don't want to cry, but my tears have all come un fastened!" Where the Paint Went. "I thought you were working oni Jay Krank's new house," said the house painter's friend. "I was going to," replied the- house painter, "but I had a quarrel with him1 and he said he'd put the paint on bin self." "And did he do itd" "Yes, that is where he put most of it."-Philadelphia Press. Not Enough Pin Money to Go Round. Ostend-Pa, I want a dollar to buy a set of tenpins. Pa-Well, you just don't get It! It's all I can do to keep your mother in pin monar -Chicagn News. meals cool C You'll not need to r by the thermomete Wickless Blue Flam hottest days you can choose, in whatever out suffering any a while cooking, The is only one of the ac eSs Bl oil Flame Ji 1 stove and cleaner and cheaper lutely safe; it burns ordinary 1 ce, smell nor soot. zea for various-sized families; sold at prices ver etoves are sold. If the dealer doeanot have STANDARD OIL COMPANY. ARDWARE CO Both Had Been Out. "The revenue cutters of the United States, as you may know," said an offi cer of one of them who likea his little joke, "confine their services, which are really Invaluable to the government, to the coast, and it is a rare thing indeed for any one of them except those of the Bering sea patrol to venture any dis tance out to sea. Nor Is this rule an upsatisfactory one, for, say what you please about it, sea service is not as pleasant as the novelists and other ro mancers would have you believe. "But I am getting off of my story, which applies to the cutter Grant when she was doing duty in New York bay and vicinity. Something had happened to call her down the shore somewhere, and she left the bay one afternoon, and early the next morning, while she was bowling along at about seven knots an hour, she hailed a big foWr master. "'What ship is that?' came the cry from the Grant. "'The Royal Bengal Tiger, 243 days out from Calcutta,' came the reply. 'What ship Is that?' "'Revenue cutter Grant,' was the plaintive answer, 'and we've been out all night.' "-Washington Star. A Bold Lkttle Bird. The boneybird is a well known deni zen of many parts of the Transvaal. It has the unique peculiarity that It does not fear men and women, but actually flies up to them, uttering a plaintive low note and, flying about their heads, tries to lead them on to the nearest clump of rocks or kopje. The bird knows full well that under a certain rock lies a store of honey, con cealed by the cunning bees, and, rock honey being as much esteemed by birds as by human beings, the clever little fellow tries to induce a friendly being with two strong hands to push aside the rock, so that it may get to the honey. If it succeeds in its object and the traveler on the veldt, attracted by the bird's fiutterings to and fro between himself and the rocks, finds the honey, the bird changes its plaintive tone to one of joy and pleasure, as much as to say; "Thank you very much." A little social life is good for one. As time goes on and the old friends have gone to their promotion it is vell to keep up one's interest in the world of today by cultivating friendly relations with those about us.-Ladies' Home JournaL. His Ability. Old Crusty-You ask for my daugh ter? Why, young man, at your present salary you could not even dress her. Suitor-Oh, yes, sir; I could keep her in gloves! Old Crusty-Gloves! Do you mean to insinuate that my daughter would only wear gloves? Suitor-Pardon me, sir; I asked only for her hand. Well Equipped. She-You used to call me an angeL He-Yes, I remember I called you "my angel without wings." She.-But you never do any more. He-No, I've begun to believe that you have wings, after all. It's so easy for you to fly into a passlon.-Catholic Standard and Times. The bacilli are found in the sputa, and It Is settled by repeated researches that tuberculosis is spread nearly ex elusively by dried sputum. A Diplomatic Poet. An eastern~ poet has penned soime hge that show he is a born diplo mat. Here is a sample verse: d the goldenrod droops down its head senesof despair, For itt splendor that Blamed is outahone and shie By the gold of Evadne's bair! If .that Isn't a neat and unobjection able way of calling a girl redheaded, 'eot know what is. - Cleveland PanDealer. Pooled Thema, Mrs. Walldoff-Which of thesq an cestors are yours and which are 'our husband's? Mrs. Justinn-Oh, it's a funny thing about them ancestors! The decorators got 'em mixed while fixing the gallery, and we couldn't tell t'other from which, so we bunched the whole lot and called 'em our ancestors.-Judge. A Healthf=l Swelling. Pihysician (with ear to patient's chest)-There Is a curious swelling ver the region of the Jgeart, sir, which must be reduced at once. Patient (anxiously)-That, swellipg .1s ~ypocketbook, doctor. Ples lon't ruce it too much.-Harlem LIfe. A Coffee Hint. A French housekeeper says that In her country it is an invariable rule to add a little butter and powdered sugar to coffee beans while they are roast ing. A very small piece of butter is needed to the pound, a bit perhaps as large as a hazelnut, and not more than a teaspoonful of powdered sugar. This treatment Is the secret of the'pleasant burned sugar flavor in French coffee. Like Unto Like. "And love restored his reason," said the sweet young thing in concluding her story. "It is the first time," returned the old bachelor, "that I ever heard of insan ity curing insanity."-A-Chica&O Post. and ooks egulate your cooking r when you get a e Oil Stove. On the cook whatever you way you wish, with dditional discomfort comfort you'll gain vantages of using a Stove The Wickless Blue erosene, without wicks to sut any sized them, writeoto the ., Sole Agents. Curious Facts About CoaL Australian soft or bituminous coal produces twice as much gas as Euro pean or American coal. For this rea son the Australian coal is imported Into Europe, although it is very costly. This is a case of the best coal going to Newcastle to oust an inferior kind. Pennsylvania anthracite weighs twice as much as European anthracite and takes but half the space. This fact enables it to cmpete on favorable terms with the European product be cause of the advantage in railroad freights.-St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Clever Suggestion. "How shall I prove the sincerity bf my devotion?" asked the young man who had been so long coming to the point that doubt had begun to accu mulate against him. "Call the parson in as a witness," suggested. the young lady.-Detroit Free Press. NOTICE! Board of Control Clarendon Co. Manning, S. C., June 27, 1900. On the.14th day of July, 1900, at 12 o'clock M. in the office of the Coun ty Supervisor, applications for the position of County Dispenser will be opened and considered. Said appli cations must comply with Section 7 Acts General Assembly 1894, which reads as follows: "Section 7. Applications for posi tions of County Dispenser shall be by petition, signed and sworn to by the applicant and filed with the County Board of Control at least ten days before the meeting at which the application is to be considered, which petition shall state the appli cant's name, place of residence, in what business engaged, and in what business he nas been engaged two years previous to filing petition; that he is a citizen of the United States and of South Carolina; that he has never been adjudged guilty of violating the law relating to in toxicating liquors, and is not a keep er of a restaurant or place of public amusement, and that he is not ad dicted to the use of intoxicating liquors as a beverage. This permit or renewal thereof shall issue only on condition that the applicant shall execute to the County Treasurer a bond in the penal sum of three thou sand dollars, with good and sufficient sureties, conditioned that he will well and truly obey the laws of thle State of South Carolina. now or hereafter in force, in relation to the sale of intoxicating liquors, that he will pay all fines, penalties, damages and costs that he may be assessed, or recorded against him, for viola tions of such laws during the term for which said permit or renewal is granted, and will not sell intoxicat ing liquors under his permit at a p rice other than that fixed by State Board of Control." R. H. DAVIS, 14-St] Chairman Board. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of Clarendon. By James Mf. Windham, Esq., Pro bate Judge. WH IEREAS, F. H. CHEWNING made suit to me to grant him letters of administration of the estate of and effects of Mrs. Josephine Holladay, deceased. These are therefore to cite and admonish all and singular the kin dred and creditors of the said Mrs. Josephine Holladay, deceased, that they be and appear before me, in the Court of Probate, to be held at Man ning, on the 21st day of July next, after publication hereof, at 11 o'clock in the forenoon, to shew cause,. if any they have, why the said admin istration should not be granted. Given under my hand this 21st day of June, A. D. 1900. JAMES Mf. WINDHAM, [SEAL.] 14-4t] Judge of Probate. R. L. BELL MANNING, S. C.. MANUFACTURER OF Wagons and Log Carts. All work entrusted to me will be done with neatness, despatch and durability and guaranteed. HORSESHOEING A SPECIALTY. Bring on your work. R. L. BELL. 1%Totice. All parties holding claims against the school fund of the county will please present them for payment on or before the 30th inst., as on that day the scho lastic year will close. My annual re port to the State Superintendent of Ed ucation will be due on the 10th day of July and I am anxious to pay up all claims by the :30th inst.. so that I can make a full report. L. L. WELLS. Co. Supt. of Education. Manning, S. C., June 16i, 1900. For Sale. Two Second-Hand Gins, Feeders and Condensers, complete, will be sold cheap. They are in good condition. A. L. LESESNE, Manning. S. C. A Good Clothing Store Is where you get the right sort of Clothes without dan ger of mistake. Our Clothes are of the right sort, and you will appreciate their excel lence and smallness of cost. We Make Clothes to Order for those who prefer them. Lasting Materials, proper fit and make and moderate pri ces. Your orders will have our best attention. J. Ln DAVID & BRO S. W. Cor. King and Wentworth Sts., CHARLESTON. S. C. To Consumers O F Lager Beer, We are now in position to ship Beer all over this State at the following prices: Pints, "Export bottles," five and ten dozen in package, at 90c. Per Dozen. We will allow you 18c per dozen f.o.b. your depot for all Export pint bottles and can use all other bottles and will give standard prices for same. Cash Must Accompany All Orders, All orders shall have our prompt and careful attention. T H E GERMANIA BREWINO 00., Charleston, S. C. Geo. S. Hacker&Son MAUACTUOERS OF LaiU CM. Doors, Sash, Blinds, Moulding and Building Material, c Builders' Hardware. Window and Fancy Glass a Specialty. W HE N YOU COME TO TOWN CALL AT WIELLS' SHAVING SALOON Which is fitted up with an eye to the comfort of his customers. .. .. HAIR CUTT~lNI IN ALL STYLES, SH AVIN(. AND SH AMPOOI NG Done with neatness and dispatch.. .. .. .. A cordial invitation. is extended. . J. L. WELLS. Manning Times Block. 180O1-1900. South Carolina College, COLUMBIA, S. C. A. B.. B. S.. A. M.. LL.B., L. I. Courses. Prfessors rses0 reolumnes in library exel riay. thletic grounds. Tuton 54,oher fees 518, a session: tuition remitted to needy tiidPupils fro forty-five Accreed School eter its Freshman Class without examination. Entrance and Normal Scholarship Examina ions held at every county-seat. Friday. July 20. ext ssson open September 26, 1900. For atalogue, address. F. C. WOODWARD, Pres. INSURANCE FIRE. LIFE. ACCIDENT & BURGLARY INSURANCE. Tailor-Made Clothing. FIT GUARANTEED. A FULL LINE OF SAMPLES. Carpets, Art Squares, RUGS, DRAPERIES & BED SETS. Carpets seereand wapeadded liring fur nished FR EE. .J. L. WiLSON. The Times DOES NEAT Job Printing. GIVE US A TRIAL. Land Surveying and Leveling. I will do Surveying, ete.. in Clareen don and adjoining Counties. Call at office or addr-ess at Suter.tl S. C. P. 0. Box 101. JOHN R HAYNES\VOnTHl. S.L. KR~ASNOFF. *GENERAL CONTRACTOR. Wil furnish estimates and make con trcsfor all kinds of building and is plaredto conltract for first class paint ing AdresS. L.- KRASNOFF, Manning, S. C. ATLANTIC COAST LINE. CHARLESToN, S. C., Jan. 14, 1900. On and after this date the following passenger schedule will be in effect: NORTHEASTERN RAILROAD. South-Bound. *35. *23. *53. Lv Florence, 3.25 A. 7.55 P. Lv Kingstree, 8.57 Ar Lanes, 4.38 9.15 Lv Lanes, 438 9.15 7.40P. Ar Charleston, 6.03 10.50 9.15 North-Bound. *78. *32. *52. Lv Charleston, 6.33 A. 5.17 P. 7.00 A. Ar Lanes, 8.18 6.45 8.32 Lv Lanes, 8 18 6.45 Lv Kingstree. 8.34 Ar Florence, 9.28 7.55 *Daily. tDaily except Sunday. No. 52 runs through to Columbia via Central R. R. of S. C. Trains Nos. 78 and 32 run via Wilson and Fayetteville-Short Line-and make close connection for all points North. Trains on C. & D. R. It. leave Florence daily except Sunday 9.55 a sn, aa rive Dar lington 10.28 a m, Cheraw, 11.40 a m, Wadesboro 12.35 p in. Leave Florence daily except Sunday, 8.00 p in, arrive Dar lington, 8.25 p in, Hartsville 9.20 p in, Benuetsville 9.21 p m, Gibson 9.45 p m. Leave Florence Sunday only 9.55 a in, ar rive Darlington 10.27. Hartsville 11.10. Leave Gibson daily except Sunday 6.35 a m, Bennettsville 6.59 a m, arrive Darling ton 7.50 a m. Leave Hartsville daily ex cept Sunday 7.00 a in, arrive Darlington 7.45 a in. leave Darlington 8 55 a in, arrivo Florence 9.20 a in. Leave Wadeboro daily except Sunday 4 25 p in, Cheraw 5.15 p in, Darlington 6.29 p in, arrive Florence 7 p m. Leave Hartsville Sunday only 8.15 a m Darlington 9.00 a in, arrive Florence 9.20 a M. J. R. KENLEY, JNO. F. DIVINE, Gen'l Manager. Gen'l Sup't. T. M. EMERSON, Traffic Manager. H. M. EMERSON, Gen'l Pass. Agent. W.C.&A. South-Bound. 55. 35. 52. Lv Wilnington,*3.45 P. Lv Marion, 6.34 Ar Florence, 7.15 Lv Florence, *7.45 *2.34 A. Ar Sumter, 8.57 3.56 Lv Sumter, 8.57 *9.40 A. Ar Columbia, 10.20 11.00 No. 52 runs through from Charleston via Central R. R., leaving Charleston 7 a in, Lanes 8.34 a in, Manning 9.09 a m. North-Bound. 54. 53. 32. Lv Columbia, *6.40 A. *4.15 P. Ar Sumter, 8.05 5.35 Lv Snm ter, 8.05 *6.06 P. Ar Florence, 9.20 7.20 Lv Florence, 9.50 Lv Marion, 10.34 Ar Wilmington, 1.15 *Daily. No. 53 runs through to Charleston, S. C., via Central R. R., arriving Manning 6.04 p in, Lanes, 6.43 p m, Charleston 8.30 p m. Trains on Conway Branch leave Chad bourn 5.35 p in, arrive Conway 7.40 p p, returning leave Conway 8.30 a in, arrive Chadbourn 11.50 a in, leave Chadbourn 11.50 a in,arrive at Hub 12.25 pm,returning leave Hub 3.00 p m, arrive at Chadbourn 3.35 p m. Daily except Sunday. J. R. KENLY, Gen'l Manager. T. M. EMERSON, Traffic Manager. H. M. EMERSON, Gen'l Pass. Agent. CENTRAL R. R. OF SO. CAROLINA. No. 52 Lv Charleston, 7.00 A. M. Lv Lanes, 8.34 " Lv Greeleyville, 8.46 " Lv Foreston, 8.55" Lv Wilson'sMill, 9.01 Lv Manning, 9.09 Lv Alcolu, 9.16 " Lv Brogdon, 9.25 " Lv W. & S. Junet., 9.38" Lv-Sumter, 9.40 Ar Columbia, 11.00 No. 53 Lv Columbia, 4.00 P. M. Lv Sumter, 5.13 " Lv W. & S. Junct. 5.15" Lv Brogdon, 5.27 " Lv Alcolu, 5.35 " Lv Maning, 6.04 " Lv Wilson's Mill, 5.50" Lv Foreston, 5.57 " ' Lv Greeleyville, 6.05 " Ar Lanes, 6.17 " Ar Charleston, 8.00" MANCHESTER & AUGUSTA B. R. No. 35. Lv Sumter, 3.47 A. M, Ar Creston, 4.43 "4 Ar Orangeburg, 5.10" Ar Denmark, 5.48 -No. 32 Lv Denmark, 4.28 P. Md. Lv Orangeburg, 5.02" Lv Creston, 5.27 " Ar Sumter, 6.18 " Trains 32 and 35 carry through Pullman palace buffet sleeping cars between New York and Macon via Augusta. W iison and SummertonR . R. Thin TABLEz No. 1, In effect Monday, June 13th, 1898. Between Wilson's Mill and Dalzell. Southbou.orthbound. No. 73. Daily except Sunday No. 72. P Md Stations. P' M 1 45 Le...Dalzell...Ar 1 30 2 08 ...N WV Junction... 1 02 30 .....umter...... 13 303 ...NW Junction... 1227 315 .........Tindal........- 1155 3 33........ Packsville........'11 30 350..........Silver......... 1110 40 ....Mllard ....... ..14 4 45........ummerton .... 10 10 5 15...... ...Davis.........9 40 5 40........Jordan ........925 6 00 Ar..Wilson's Mills..Le 9 05 PM AM Between Millard and St. Paul. Southbound. Northbound. No. 73. No. 75. No. 72. No. 74. P M A M Stations A M P M 4 05 10 15 Le Millard Ar 10 45 4 35 415 1025 ArSt.PaulLe1035 425 P'M AM AMl PM THOS. WILSON, President. THE Dank of Manning, MANNING, 8. 0. Transacts a general banking busi ness. Prompt and special attention given to depositors residing out of town. Deposits solicited. All collections have prompt atten tion. Business hours from 9 a. mn. to 3 JOSEPH SPROTT, A. LEVI, Cashier. President. BOARD OF DiRECTO~is. J. W. McLEOD, W. E. BROWN, S. M. NEISEN, JOSEPH SPROTT, A. LEVI. Bring jour Job Work to The Times office.