University of South Carolina Libraries
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 ~" v Celebrated HAWKES Spectacles and Glasses, 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. Now is Ike Tiuec i The Manning Times EK " Il. 1 ad|Both for $1.50. D We have arranged to give our readers additional reading mat ter in the shape of a first class Agriultural Journal, a paper with a world renowned reputation as a farm helper and a family corn pamon. Prominent among the many departments may be men tioned the Farm and Garden, Market Reports, Fruit Culture, Plans and Inventions, Live Stock and Dairy, Talks with a Lawyer, Fashions and Fancy Work, The Poul try Yard, Plants and Flowers, Household Features, The Treatment of Horses and Cattle, and Subjects of a Literary and Religious character. The Farm and Home is'published semi-monthly, thus giving you 24 numbers a year, making a volume of over 500 pages. No bet ter proof of its popularity can be offered than its immense circula tion. By special arrangement we are enabled to send THE FARM AND HOME to all of our subscribers who pay up their arrearage, and to all new subscribers who pay one year. in advance, without any additional charge. Every new yearly subscriber will be entitled- to THE FARM AND HOME and THE MANNING TIMES for $1.50; also every old subscriber who pays up his arrears. This is a grand offer and we hope the people will appreciate it. The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has beem in use for over S4) years, has borne the signatnre of c~~7 and has been made under his per sonal supervision since its infancy. Allowno one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and "Just-as-good" are but Experiments that trifle wvith and endanger the health of Infmat and Children-Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA * Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worws and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stoacnh and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. Thxe Children's PanaeaThe Mother's Friend. CENUINE CASTORIA A'WAYS Bears the Signature of. Tho6 Khid Yo11 HaYm Alwas Boilgilt In Use For Over 30 Years. Watches and Jewelry. I wantmy friends and the public generally to know that when in need of a Wedding, Birthday or Christmas Present, That in the future, as weil as the past, I am prepared to supply them. My line of LWatches Clocks Sterling Silyer Diamonds Jewelry Cut Glass Fine China Wedgewood Spectacles and Eye Glasses Is complete, and it will afford me pleasure to show them. Special and prompt attention given to all Repairing in my line at prices to suit the times. AWatch Inspector . WV.3 FOLSOM,~ "SCR, 'THE CAROINA GROCERY COMPANY, THOMAS WILSON, President. COMMISSION MERCHANTS. 1no oE+s Bay . - Charlestn, S. C. A Dude of 1770. From a newspaper printed in the year 1770 is the following description of a dandy: "A few days ago a mac aroni made his appearance in the as zembly rooms at Whitehaven, dressed In a mixed silk coat, pink satin waist coat and breeches, covered with an elegant silk net, white silk stnekings with pink clocks, pink satin shoes and large pearl buttons; a mushroom col ored stock, covered with fine point lace; hair dressed remarkably high and stuck full of pearl pins." The Height of Clouda. To determine the height of clouds an observer at each of two stations a mile or more apart measures the angle and altitude of some point of a cloud, the identity of which is ascertained from conversation by telephone, while synchronism in the observation is se cured by the beating of electric pendu lums. This is the method used at the celebrated observatories at Upsala, in Sweden. Why He Growled. Hoax-I saw you at the theater last night. You were in the dog seat. Joax-Sir, what do you mean? Hoax-Weren't you sitting in K-9? -Philadelphia Record. Better Than Making a Note. "Just before Badmun was sent to prison he bought a set of books to be aid for in installments." "What did he do that for?' "He said it would make the time ;eem shorter."-Chicago Tribune. uggies, Wagons, Road Carts and Carriages REPAIRED With Neatness and Despatch -AT R. A. WHITE'S WHEELWRIGHT and BLACKSMITH SHOP. I repair Stoves, Pumps and run water ipes, or I will put down a new Pump heap. If you need any soldering done, give ae a call. LAME. My horse is lame. Why? Because I id not have it shod by R. A. White, he man that puts on such neat shoes ,nd makes horses travel with so much ase. We Make Them Look New. We are making a specialty of re ainting old Buggies, Carriages, Road arts and Wagons cheap. Come and see me. My prices will >lease you, and I guarantee all of my york. Shop on corner below R. M. Dean's. R. A. WHITE, MANNING. S. C. WHEN YOU COME TO TOWN CALL AT WELLS' SHAVING SALOON Whieb is fitted up with an eye to the comfort of his customers..... .. - HAIR CUTTI e IN ALL STYL.ES, S HAV IN G AM) SH AMPOOING Done wAth neatnxey ant dispatch..... . .... A cordial invitation~ s extended... J. L. WELLS. Manning Times Block. eo. S. HacKer&Son E= Doors, Sash, Blinds, Moulding and Building Material, CH ARLESTON, S. C. Sash Weights and Cords and Builders' Hardware. Nindow and Fancy Glass a Specialty. DESIGN PATNT.e ADIEAST.ATAILIT Noic i "nvntveAg Boo "Hw t obainPatnts moeae o e m tnIsscrd E.G.SI8E L0 FIGHTING A WUJUDCAM AN ADVENTURE THAT MADE ONE MAN SHY OF THAT KIND OF BEAST. He Is Willing to Go a Long Way Around to Avoid Ferocious Ani mals, Even Though Science Sayi They Will Flee at Man's Approach. "I have read in the papers certain scientific assertions that no wild ani mal will voluntarily attack or pursue a.human being, but that, on the con trary, the fiercest of them, as tradition and the tales of woodsmen classify them, will make haste to escape the possible sight of man, unless, in des perate cases, hunger may urge it to ap proach him, its most dreaded foe, suchI cases being extremely :-e," said a matter of fact and veracious New York business man. "If that Is so, I had a little experi ace once with a wild animal that must have been the most desperately hungry beast that ever longed for food. The occurrence was in northwestern Penn sylvania, where one winter I had some business that called me ten miles from the county town to one of the back woods districts. It was late in the aft ernoon when I started on my return to the village. The way was over a lone ly, narrow, crooked mountain road, bor dered by deep woods rauch of the dis tance. Toward dusk. as I was round ing a short turn in the road, my horse, which had a good deal of spirit, shied suddenly and sprang forward on a furious run. "At the same instant an animal with glaring eyes plumped down from some where and landed in the sleigh at my feet. It had evidently leaped from a tree at the horse, the quick movements of which nervous animal had defeated that purpose, and the attacking animal had alighted with its 'ore feet on the robe that lay across my lap. It glared furiously at me, with its face not more than two feet away, an it clung to the robe with its shaxp claws, growling fiercely. I had never seen a wildcat, but I knew instantly and instinctively that I had one to deal with here, and it seemed to be a very large and sav age one at that. I had no weapon, but fortunately the whip that stood in its socket on the dashboard was loaded at the butt. "Clinging to the reins with my left hand-the horse was running away-I quickly drew the whip from the socket and struck the wildcst on the head with the heavy butt That caused the animal to loosen :Its hold on the robe and drop into the snow at the side of the sleigh, but tte agile and furious beast was up in the fraction of a sec and and with one bound sprang on the back of the sleigh, which had a low body. "Although the horse was running madly away along the narrow and rooked road, throwing the sleigh from side to side and threatening It con stantly with destruction against some rock or stump, I was obliged to drop the reins and leave the result of the runaway to chance, for the wildcat was struggling desperately to gain a foothold in the sleigh and fight me at close quarters. I knew that if the sleigh should happen to come into col lision with any obstacle heavy enough to wreck it I would be no match for the catamount, now w:.'ought to the ut most ferocity, fighting it on the slip ping snow, even if I were unharmed by the collision, so I strained every nerve to conquer the determxned beast whilt. still possessed the advantage of foot hold in the sleigh. "Once I thoughi: it was all up with me, for as the sleigh was carried abruptly round a short turn in the road by the speeding ho:'se one runner struck a stone or a root, and the sleigh careened and ran at least 50 feet on the other runner alo:2e. I mechanically threw the weight of my body toward the upper side of~ the~ sleigh, all the time raining rapid blows on the head of the wildcat with the butt of the whip, and forced the s~eigh down to its balance on both runners again. A few more blows after that, and I wasre joIced to see the determined and tena ious beast first loosent one claw, hang for a second or so by the other, while It tried to seize the top of the back of the sleigh again with Its teeth, and then tumble to the road and lie motionless in the snow. "I dropped back on the seat limp and weak and too much unnerved to make the least effort to obtain control of the runaway, whic'h was still rush ing wildly along the uncertain road, made still more uncerain by the gath ering darkness. The horse ran at least three miles farther and then began to slow up and at last stopped half way up a long and steep hill from sheer exhaustion. I had by this time recov ered sufficiently to take charge of the horse again and drive the rest of the way to the town, which wasn't far, and where I arrived with the horse covered with foam, a sleigh splintered and covered deep with scars and scratches made by the desperate wild cat and myself so bi~dly used up by nervous shock that it was three days before I was able to get -bout again in anything like good codition. 1 never heard whether the wildcat was killed by my blows or not, but I have an idea he was. I I ope so. Science may be all right In declaring that wild animals will hasten to flee at the very suspicion of ma-n's approach, but If ever I am going anywhere and hear there are wildcats In -hat direction I'll go around some other way."-New York Press. A Good Memory. A bad memory in most cases mright be more properly described as one L-ust ig from sheer want of use. The fact is our brain cells are always "ready to oblige," but we do not give them suffi cient encouragement in their well meant efforts. Natu:-ally the individ ual may cultivate a memory for cer tain details more readily than for oth ers, but the general basis of all recol lective acts is the same, and there Is no department of h-iman mental activity in which the motto that "practice makes perfect" holds more truly than in the science of mnemonics. The view may be expressed, indeed, that we never forget anything presented to our brain cells. When we say we have forgotten, we really mean that we can not find the mental photographic nega tive whence we can print off a positive reproduction.-Lonldon Chronicle. From an Author's Notelbook. The following as an extract from the diary of an impecunious author: "Rose at 5 and had a sonnet and a glass of cold water for breakfast. I retired ear ly in the evening without supper, as 1 feared the neighbors would be ann~oyed by the rattling of the knives and forks."-Atlanta Constitution. Slkworms and their eggs were firs;t brought to Europe in the sixth century of our era. A couple of monks who had traveled in China as missionarics brought away a quantity of the co coons coneaed in their walking sticks. THE OLD 1 DR. THACHER At y PAINTING BIG SIGNS. ARTISTS WHO DEVOTE THEIR TAL ENT TO ADVERTISING PURPOSES. Some of Them Have Had Years of Training In Drawing and Color Work, and Some Have Studied In Famous Old World Ateliers. Although the vivid advertisements of the excellences of foods, ointments, clothing, all mechanical appliances known to man and a thousand other things never dreamed of in the philoso phy of a hundred years ago are contin ually catching the eye and possibly shocking the artistic sensibilities of the beholder, few of the ordinary observers give a moment's question to the mak ers of advertisements. The advertis ing craze has grown of late to such huge and unlovely proportions that any brief account fails to explain its work ings. The office of a large advertising concern is one of the busiest places in town. Artists are constantly appear ing with designs for the firm, a small army of men with paint pots and brush es are hovering about waiting to be sent out, and everywhere are gay evi dences of the results of all this labor. "Who are the men that paint these 'heroic' pictures one sees on unused walls and lofty fences?" asked a re porter of one of the men who keeps these subordinates busy. "They are not the people you think them, I fancy," was the answer. "In stead of being daubers, with about the ability necessary to wield a whitewash brush, our best men are real artists. By this I mean that many of them have had years of training in drawing and color work. Several of them have studied abroad in the ateliers of well known men. A man whom I saw paint ing a head on a wall yesterday is a night instructor in a Brooklyn art school. Recently one of our men paint ed on a large wall the biggest portrait ever attempted. He had studied five years In the Paris art schools." "Why do they take up this work?" "The other doesn't pay. It's a case of 'commercialism in art.' They find that they can't make the real thing pay, so they come to this common calling. There's money in it. Why, our star painters get $50 a week. The daubers, who put in backgrounds, don't earn more than $10 or $15 a week." The men who paint the designs in various inaccessible and conspicuous places have with them small copies of the designs to be reproduced. Long experience makes them expert in ac curately tracing the design upon the chosen surface. Although the familiar advertisements scattered over the city seem exactly alike and one face seems the exact counterpart of another, yet closer inspection will show various points of difference. In the case of a very familiar picture which is display ed from one end of the United States to the other, when it was first brought out one man was hired for .the sole purpose of painting that one design, and to do this he traveled from Maine to California. "Not the least of our difficulties," said the advertising man, "Is finding places to put our signs. We hire men who do nothing else but go about and obtain permission from owners to put up billboards on their premises, use a vacant wall or decorate a fence or a roof. It needs great tact to do this. When there are objections, they must be overcome, and after this Is done the owner often gets the ! 4ea that his available space is worth thousands of dollars to us and to him. The expe riences of advertising men among farmers and tramps would make a mighty interesting book." "Why do you say tramps?" "Oh, the tramps are our worst ene mies. They build fires behind our billboards and burn them or else tear them down out of sheer wantonness." When asked about the price a blank brick wall in a conspicuous part of New York would bring to its owner if he let It for advertising purposes, the advertising man laughed and said he could not tell'that, but he did not mind saying that he was now paying $6,000 a year rent for a wall In the middle of the shopping district. "This is not an unusual sum to pay," he added, "for such prominent positions." Advertising firms are liberal sub scribers to all art magazines, particu larly to those French art periodicals which display the newest drawings of the still popular poster. The ideas of the foreign artists are taken freely and converted into gandy designs for ad vertising the latest song or a new cigar without the least compensation, since, as the advertisers assert, American ideas are assimilated abroad just as unceremoniously. Not all the large reproductions of fig ures and faces on our streets an~d along the roof tops are handwork. Many of them are machine made. By a process akin to that of making lithographs ma chines have been Invented to lay the colors automatically. The finished product, quite devoid of personality, presents accurately a copy of the work ing design.-New York Post. Measuring Your Man. Put this In your pipe and smoke It: There is always some chap smarter than the chap you think Is the smartest on earth-meaning yourself. You are a wonderful .judge of human nature, but don't measure your man too confi dently, for 99 times in 100 you'll find the suit doesn't fit. Never play favor ites. The lightweight today, in your measurement, will be the heavyweight tomorrow. Old friends, like old wine, will in the end prove best. Never go back on an old friend unless you have plenty of money well isnvested. Pos sessed of a big bank account and flushed with success-the mischief take friends, old and new!-New York Press. Lucky. Blinks-Lucky man, that fellow yones. Winks-I don't see how you make it. Blinks-Why, he took out a life In surance policy for ?1,000 and died six days before the company failed.-Ex change. __ _ _ _ _ _ _ -Letting 'Em Down Easy. Roberts-Have you heard anything about Thompson's affairs since the fail ure? When does he expect to 'resume? Peters-Just as soon as the creditors become reconciled to the fact that they won't get a cent.-Harlem Life. The ancient Mexicans had a year of 18 months of 20 days each. Some Polynesian languages have on a sevn consonants. RELIABLE REMEDY S 'S LIVER AND E our Druggist, 25 and 50 c LIBEL IN ENGLAND. Not Hard There to Give Cause For Actions at Law. England's libel law is a terror to the defendants. A short time ago a young playwright sold a piece to a London manager and drew a small royalty each week, which was paid by check. One week when the playwright pre sented the check to the bank for cash ing It was returned to him marked "No funds." The playwright had the check framed and hung conspicuously in his study. He took pleasure in pointing it out to visitors and making biting comments until one day the manager's lawyer called and told the young man that he was committing a serious libel on the manager, where upon the check was taken down at once. Over in England the railway com panies, or at least one of them, put up in the station placards bearing the names of passengers who had violated rules of the road, with addresses, the nature of the offense and fines impos ed. The offenders took the matter into court, and now the placards show only the words opposite the offense, "A passenger." It frequently happens that names given to villains and ridiculous charac ters in fiction will duplicate in real life. A certain English novel had its scene laid on the west coast of Africa, and the villain of the book was a major in the army, supposed to be stationed there. To the novelist's dismay there appeared one day out of the unknown a real major, bearing the name of the villain of the novel, who also had been stationed on the west coast of Africa. In vain the unhappy author protested in the consequent action that he had never seen or heard of the plaintiff. A verdict for the latter was given, with substantial damages. A Birmingham lawyer held that one could libel a man effectually enough by leaving out his name. He brought an action against a local paper for persistently omitting his name from its reports of cases in which he pro fessionally was engaged. Presumably he imagined that the loss of the ad vertisement he would have obtained by his name repeatedly appearing was damage enough. He was nonsulted, however. THE INDIANS PAID. What the White Men Charged Them For Killing One Donkey. In "Ieminiscences of Old Times In Tennessee" a story is told of the good faith and honor of a party of Chicka saw Indians. While'hunting one fall they shot a donkey, mistaking the creature for a wild animal. They sold the hide. gnd it finally- egme to the This Offer is Go( 4Full Quarts of OUR iSAMPLE PAC] ONE QT. W. H. McBRAYER, Guaranteed Stric Sour Mash. ONE QT1. GIBSON YYYRYE. Palatable in th ONE QT. GUCKENHEIMER, Justly Celebrate Value. ONE QT. OLD CROW WHISKEY, the oldfelit GLENDALE SPRINGS DISTIl 34 W. Mitchell Street, -- BRING JOB TO THE TLF STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of Clarendon, By James M. Windham, Esq., Pro-. bate Judge. WHEREAS, J. H. TIMMONS, C. ' C.P.,made suit to me to grant him letters of adminis tration of the estate of and effects of Charles Walker. These are therefore to cite and admonish all and singular the kin dred and creditors ~of the said Charles Walker, deceased, that they be and appear before me, in the Court of Probate, to be held at Man ning, on the 29th day of April, next, after publication thereof, at 11 o'clock in the forenoon, to show cause, if any they have, why the said administration should not be granted. Given under my hand this 19th day of March, A. D. 1901. JAMES M. WINDHAM, [SEAL.] 1-6t] Judge of Probate. INSURANCE FI~RE, LIFE, ACCIDENT a BURGLARY INSURANCE. Tailor-Made Clothing. A FUL LIN OFD SAMPLES. Carpets, Art Squares, RUGS, DRAPERIES & BED SETS. Carpts sewe rese a wadd lining fur nished FREE. J. L. WILSON. DR. J. FRANK GEIGER, DENTIST, MANNING, S. C. 'Phone No. 25. SURVEYOR'S CARD. Parties desiring surveys and plats made will receive my most careful and accurate attention.. I am supplied with improved instru ments. Address,S.OCATY Summerton. S. C. INCE 1852 ILOOD SYRUP ants. hands of John Barnes3n Lipton. When the Chickasaws returned to the region of Lipton for" their annual hunt the next fall, Barnes Invited them to a shooting match, the prize to be the skin of a very rare animal. Thirty braves appeared at the con test, and one of them won the prize. When he saw the skin, he turned It over and said: "Ha, ha, me kill him! Me shoot him! See!" And he pointed to the fatal bullet hole. Then Barnes told them that they had killed a donkey, a very useful animal, but he was sure that they had done it by mistake, ttelleving it to be a wild animal. The Indians listened attentively to the white man's words and then con sulted together a few minutes. Finally they separated, each brave going to his pony, unhitching him and leading him to the spot where a gang of white men stood, Barnes in the midst of them. Then one of the Indians spoke: "We sorry we kill donkey. We think he belong to the woods. We find him in cane. We think him wild. We sorry; now we pay. We take no white man's boss, pony, nothing of white man. We honest. We have ponies, that's all. Take pay." And he mo tioned to the long line of ponies, held by their owners. "How many?" asked Barnes. "White man say," returned the In dian, "take plenty." The honor of the red men was not equaled by the white men, for, be it recorded to their shame, they took from the Chickasaws 35 ponies to pay for the accidental killing of one don key. . The Happy Medium. A clerg.. ..,an relates that a worthy Irishman with an impediment in his speech brought him a child to be bap tized. While making a record of It he was in some doubt as to the correct spelling of the family name given to him and asked the man how he wrote it "Indeed and I don't write at all," was the reply. "I just want to know," said Father Boyle, "whether the name Is 'McGrath' or 'Magrath'-whether the second part of it is spelled with a big 'G' or a lit tle 'g.' After scratching his head hopelessly the puzzled parent saw his way out of the difficulty. "Well, father, just spell it wid a middlin sized 'g.' "-Exchange. Trimming Her Sails a Bit. Nannie-Ob, dear; my face is so frec kled! It's just awfull Aunt Hannah-I wouldnit fret, Nan nie. Of course the freckles are not very becoming, but, then, you know, they -serve to cover up your features. Boston Transcript. )d for 30 Days Only. Pure Rye Whiskey - - ,From Seven to Nine Years Old ...FOR... $2.65 Shipped to any ad dress Exnress Pre paid. We ship this as srmnor assort ~fed any way you like a , them, in a plain IISKN package for $2.65, 2dexpi'ess prepaid on ly to the' limits of - the Southern Ex smmnen"-press Co. Write for ?AGE. our new illustrated tly Pure Hand-made catalogue, just out. e Eighest Dere Give us a trial on d for its Medicinal our $1.50 and $2 hble Favorite.- Pure Corn and Rye. Send in your or LIC GOlNdr ~lReference: Third ATLANTA, (A. National Bank. YOUR VORK ES OFFICE. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure Digests what you eat. Nature in strengthening and recon structing the exhausted digestive or gans, It Is the latest discovered dget ant and tonic. No other preparation can aproach it in efficiency. It In stantl rlievesand permanently cures DysppiIndigestion, Heartburn, Flatuence, Sour Stomach, Nausea, Sick-Headache, Gastralgia,Crampsanld all other results of imperfect digestion. ariceta. oodan tsg ~ollS~~ Prpared by E. C. DeWITT 8 CO., Cbicago. The R. B. Loryea Drug Store, IsAAC M. LoRYEA. PROP. Life Insurance. I have been appointed a regular agent for The Equitable Life Assurance Society and will be pleased to talk or corres pond with any one wishing Life Insur ance in the strongest company finan mialy in the world. The Equitable works to maintain what its name implies, and is writing all the latest and most, popular policies for protection, savings or investment. We offer some policies especially ad vantageous to young men. J. HI. LESESNE, Manning, S. C. MONEY TO LOAN. I am prepared to negotiate loans on good real estate security, on rea sonable terms. R.0. PURDY, ATLANTIC COAST LINE, CARLTEsToN, S. C., March 4, 1901. On and after thi, date the following passenger schedule will be in effect: NORTHEASTERN RAILROADU. 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, %,AQ18 6.45 Lv Kingstree, .1 ' Ar Florence, 9.28 7.55 *Daily. t Daily except Sunday. No.52 runs through to Columbia via Central R. E. 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. B. B. leave Florence daily except Sunday 9.55 a m, arrive -Dar lington 10.28 a m, Cheraw, 1140 a in, Wadesloro 12.35 p in. Leave Florence daily except Sunday, 8.00 p m, arrive Dar lington, 8.25 p in, Hartsville 9.2r p in, Bennetsville 9.21 p in, Gibson 9.45 p in. Leave Florence Sunday only 9.55 a m, ar rive Darlington 10.27. Hartsville 11.10 Leave Gibson daily except Sunday 6.35 a in, Bennettsville 6.59 a m, arrive Darling. ton 7.50 a in. Leave Hartsville daily ex cept Sunday 7.00 a in, arrive Darlington 7.45 a in, leave Darlington 8.55 a in, arrive Florence 9.20 a in. Leave Wadesboro daily except Sunday 425 p in, Cheraw 5.15 p in, Darlington 6.29 p in, arrive Florence 7 p. M. Leave Hartsville Sunjay only 8.15 a in 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, Trafic Manager. H. M. EMERSON, Gen'l Pass. Agent. W.C.&A. South-Bound. 55. 35. 52. Lv Wilmington,'3.45 P. Lv Liarion, 6.40 Ar Florence, 7.25 Lv Florence, '8.00 *2.50 A. Ar Sumnter, 9.12 3.58. Lv Sumter, 9.12 - 923 A. Ar Columbia, 10.35 11.55 No. 52 runs through from Charleston via Central B. B., leaving Charleston 6 25 a m, Lanes 8.02 a in, Manning 8.50 a m. - North-Bound. 54. 53. 32. Lv Columbia, *6.40 A. *4.15 P. Ar Sumter, 8.05 5.35 - Lv Sum ter, 8.05 ~6.24 P. Ar Florence, 9.20 7.35 Lv Florence, 10.00 Lv Marion, 10.35 Ar Wiimnington, 1.25 'Daily. No. .53 runs through to Charleston, S. O. 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 11.50 a m, arrive Conway 1.30 p m, - returning leave Conway 3.40 p m, arrve Chadbourn 5.20 p in, leave Uhadbourn, 5.35 p in, arrive at Elrod 8.10 p in, aeurning leave Elrod 8.40 a m, arrive Chadbonup 11.25 a in. Daily except Sun day. J. R. KENLY, Gen'l Manager. T. M. EMERSON, Tracie Manager. H. M. EMERSON, Gen'l Pass. Agent. CESTRAL R. B. OF 80. CAROLINA. No. 52 Lv Charleston, 7.00 A. M. Lv Lanes, .8.34 " Lv Greeleyville, 8.46 Lv Foreston, 8.55 .Lv Wilson's Mill, 90 Lv Manning, 86 Lv Alcolu, 9.6 * . Lv Brogdon, 92 Lv W. & S. Junet., 93 No. 53 - LvSumer, 8.3 Lv For'~to 855 " Lv reeeyill, 9.05 Ar ane, 9.17 Ar Cholmbia, 11.00 Lv Sumter, 40A Ar Creston, 45 Ar Auust, 75 Lv Wilan'erg 5.10, Lv Freston, 53 Ar Suae, 62 I. Tz Tm~zNo.3 In effectWednesday Oc. hM. 545 50 L..Snnte.5r 0 5 550 52 .W. 5nc 7 90- 1 615 015 ...alzll6.05 4 63A13 Chalesorn, . 8.004 6 L5 1Sumtleree.0. 73 0 73A134 Orgeburg, .16 70" 3 Ar DenmarE, Depot) No. 3. Dilyexcet Snay No.72 PM Crestoi n .3 " 200 LeSum r. Ar4 30 paac0b3 e sleepncarsn beteenN7 220rk.and..aTondaia.Aug.sta. 320.....a...si mmer.~ a In30 ec Millrday, ..Oct .17t,1000 430 tween.Sumtneran 955en 510xed-.Dais.excep..unday Southbound. Northbound. No. 69. No. 75. - No. 72. No.768. PM AM Sttin AM PM 33 4500 0 Le. Millar .Ar 10 45 345 0 5l r~.alelO 25 3540 THOS1030 . WISOrdN President. Job Printing Betw e iS' MAl TRAS tr