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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 I T ti 113 at se Celebrated HAWKES Spectacles and 6lasses, CI Whieh we are offering very cheap, from 25c to $2.50 and Gold Frames at $3 m to $6. Call and be suited. a W. M. BROCKINTON. se The Manning Times in t th * - A fo e a Both for $1.50.E : gi We have arranged to give our readers additional reading mat ter in the shape of a first class Agricultural Journal, a paper with th a world renowned reputation as a farm helper and a family corn- er *pamion. Prominent among the many departments may be men- bi tioned the O fio Farm and Garden, Market Reports, Fruit Culture, g Plans and Inventions, Live Stock and Dairy, Talks of with a Lawyer, Fashions and Fancy Work, The Poul- P try Yard, Plants and Flowers, Household Features, ma Is The Treatment of Horses and Cattle, and Subjects of - b a Literary and Religious character. s The Farm and Home ispublished semi-monthly, thus giving you t 24 numbers a year, making a volume of over 500 pages. No bet- b ter proof of its popularity can be offered than its immense circula tion. g By specal arrangement we are enabled to send THE FARM st AND) HOM to all of our subscribers who pay up their arrearage, gi and to all new subscribers who pay one year in advance, without ut Pny additional charge. of Every new yearly subscriber will be entitled to THE FARM fo AND) HOME and THE MANNING TIMES for $1.50; also every b old subscriber who pays up his arrears. This is a grand offer and f we hope the people will appreciate it. ed tu a____CASTOIA P The Kind You Have ~ Always. Bought Ay egeialerr nemn -eaeealdt edTEFR A gHOEto a ofoBers th e sny .--ii-naligargt1Ro 'E orhine noryr~iber wilb nildhoTEFR Q~iwmi1 Ymf to SSO WN OMEnulinseeih -H aANN IE o 15;as v r aesPriisfrnatusre o r T to do mer cowForanOve. h -ca Watches and Jewelry.. I want my friends and the public generally to know that when in need of a hai *Wedding, Birthday or Christmas Present, it 'Ihat in the future, as well as the past, I am prepared to supply them. My line of h3e Watches Clocks Sterling Silver Diamonds Jewelry Cut Glass ne FinesChina Wedgewood Spectacles and Eye Glasses V Is complete, and it will afford me pleasure to show them. rc Special and prompt attention given to all Repairing in my line at prices to suit the times. A ttc Cost L.* L. W.1 FOLSOML "SMTER. ' CAROLINA GROCERY COMPANY, THOMAS WILSON~, President. . = waQ.s0A2*s anocas COMMISSION MERCHANTS. 169 Eost Bay - . Charlestan, S. C. : MOVING PICTURES. OW THE SKETCHES ARE REPRO DUCED UPON THE FILMS. he Amount of Movement That May,' Be Crowded Into Fifty Seconds.. The Greatest Successes Are Often Brought About by Accident. "A queer thing about moving pic res," said an expert operator in that le to a New Orleans Times-Democrat qrter, "is the illusion they generally oduce as to the time they occupy hile on the screen. What is known ithe 'standard exhibition film' is 50 et long. It is used almost entirely r comic scenes, trick pictures and her effects. that are got up in the udios of the experts who make them specialty. Every theater goer has .en them, and I wil. venture the as rtion that the avtrage man will de are they take at least three or four inutes in passin; before the eye. As matter of fact the picture is on the reen less than one minute. You can sily figure it )ut for yourself. The dinary 50 foo: film of the kind to hich I refer is put through the repro icing machine at the rate of 16 plc res to the second. Each picture is ree-fourths of an inch broad, which ikes the 16 measure exactly one t, edge to edge; in other words, the m travels a foot a second-50 feet, 50 conds. What gives it the effect of king up so much more time is the mense lot of action that is usually owded into the brief period it is in ew. Until the moving picture was ented I don't think anybody had e least idea how much could be done 50 seconds. It seemed hardly time ough to turn around in, yet when e expertsbegan to study its possi lties they found it was ample for mdreds of little pictorial comedies at have since delighted audiences all er the world. "It is entirely a matter of rehearsal. subject is selected, generally calling r from three to four people, and ev y detail of the 'business' or action is refully worked out in advance. Sup se, for illustration, that a comic bur ary is the topic. The business, in eleton, might run something like s: Old gentleman dozing in parlor; ter burglar; old gentleman awakes; rglar hides; enter policeman, search the room, collars old gent; they ,ht and roll on the floor while bur ar suddenly emerges and leaps out the window. That doesn't sound ,rticularly side splitting, but in the ds of intelligent comedians it can made really very-funy. The all es atial thing is to crowd it into 50 sec *ds, and to that end each bit of ac m is carefully timed and made to into each other bit like so many all geared cogwheels. The old gen uman's startled yawn, the burglar's nce aroand the room and every p, movement and gesture from be Mning to end is calculated with the most nicety, and at last after dozens rehearsals the act is attempted be re the recording machine. If every dy is lucy, it goes through on sched a time, but the slightest hitch is fa L, and if one occurs the film Is spoil ,and they must try all over again. Swonder it seems Impossible to fu re spectators that so much could nspire In SO seconds. 'But some of the most telling effects composition pictures," continued the erator, "have been the result of acci nt and were entirely unpremeditat ,That was the case with a film that had a hand in preparing and that erward made a tremendous hit and oved to be one of the best sellers er put on the market In getting >the picture our princIpal purpose w to introduce a large and very in ligent bulldog I owned at the time, d we sketched out a simple little me in which a tramp steals a pie >ma kitchen window, is pursued by a dog and is last seen trying to scale a back fence with the animal hang r to his coattails. 'The training of the dog was the in trouble, but I finally taught him lay hold of anything red, and we wed a big piece of fiannel as a mark the baci of our tramp's coat Red otographs black, so it couldn't be min the pictures, and after a good my rehenrsals the dog learned to sh out at exactly the right moment d nail thE marauder, whose cue was n to rush for the fence and consume a remaidIig time in making an ap rently desperate effort to scramble er the top. At last we got every Ing all ready, gave the word and rted the record machine to take the sture. 'Immediately the little comedy be n. The tra'mp appeared, looked and steelthily, saw the pie, booked and was having a feast when out ~ang the bulldog and seized him by coattai's. He thereupon sprinted the fence and was about to carry out a rest o: the programme when, to our sternation, the boards gave way, d he came down bang on top of the g. The fim had about ten seconds to ,. and it was occupied in recording e of the liveliest scraps that ever ppened. There was no hippodrome out it. Both 'parties were out for aod. When the fence fell, the bull g had p::omptly transferred himself m the tramp's coattail to the tramp's lf whIle~ that unfortunate person atched up a broomstick and tried to y him loose. They rolled over and it about 50 times as much action and imation in the last ten seconds as .d been crowded into the preceding .We fhally pulled them apart, and was not until the negative was devel ed that we realized what a prize we . accidentally secured. That ear t and impromptu wind up has con ised a'uiences all over Christendom 4 made fully as much of a hit in Eu pe as it did at home." Doors, Sash, Blinds, [oulding and Building Material, CHARLESTON, S.C. ash Weights and Cords and Builders' Hardware. indow and Fany Glass a Saecialty. A CULINARY GENIUS. Cooked Dinner In His Home While at Business In His Ofnce. The ordinary man is nowhere more out of place than in the kitchen. All rules have their exceptions. however, and a correspondent sends a story of a man who might have led armies per paps, but was certainly equal to culi nary emergencies. In the absence of his wife and family it became necessary, as he thought, for him to cook his own dinner, and in view of the fact that be was a man of business his presence was also geeded down town at his office. Now, the same body cannof be in two places at once, and this well known consideration would have settled the question for an average man. He would have either spent hiirgorenoon in the kitchen or gone to -his ofLice and lunched out. This, however, was a man to whom physical laws do not courtesy even as cistom to great kings. The case stood thus: He was to have a boiled dinner and would have it done to a turn, piping hot and ready to serve at his home coming. The meat, turnips and beets, therefore, which require a longer time, he put on before leaving the house. The potatoes and cabbage, needing less time for cooking, were put on the cov er of the pot. Then he dropped a string through a hole in the edge of the cover, ran It through a loop suspended from the ceiling and thence down to the sink. In the sink hole he firmly stuck a can dle, to which, two inches below the top, he tied the string. Last of all he lighted the candle and went to his business. In two hours, or about half an hour before he was to return, when it was time for the vege tables on the cover to go to their ap pointed place, the slowl-y descending flame burned the string, which releas ed the otherwise unsupported edge of the cover, which dropped its burden Into the pot and fell back where it be longed. When the genius reached home, his dinner was ready.-Youth's Compan ion. VISITORS NOT WANTED. People Who Want to See Greenland Must Get a Royal Permit. Greenland is governed in a grand motherly way by Denmark; but, as it consists of a group of colonies which would not under any circumstances at tract many tourists or traders, no out sider complains of the exclus' ,iess of the Danish authorities. Trade always has been and still is monopolized by the state, and only government vessels are allowed to sail in Greenland wa ters. For foreign travelers also Green and is a closed country unless the trav eler in question has beforehand ob tained the rare distinction of gaining the permission of the Danish govern ment. The monopoly of the trade is said to protect the Greenlander from being de Delved by unscrupulous merchants. The dministration settles a fixed price both Eor the goods the Greenlanders pur chase and for the products they sell. En this way all are treated in the same manner, and the business being car ied on by the state is a guarantee hat the natives are not imposed upon. Furthermore, the members of the ad ninistration are enjoined to take care hat the natives do not leave them selves short of produce by selling more han they can dispense with, so that hey are destitute of needful food and lothing when the slack time arrives. he native Greenlander never has been, either is he now, able to purchase a ingle drop of spirits from the admin [stration. The exchange of goods between ireenland and Denmark is, as a rule, arried on exclusively by means of the nine vessels belonging to the Green land company - viz, five brigs, three arks and a small steamer having a otal register of about 2,000 tons net several of these vessels, which are itable for sailing through the drift Ice, make two voyages a year and the steamer, as a rule, three voyages. iontreal Herald. Womanly "Tenderness." "Don't talk to me of the tenderness f woman's heart," said the man who hates women, though he has never been married. "She hasn't any. I was traveling recently on a through train to New York from the west, and n the morning, just after most of us had dressed and were sitting in the nd of the car, the conductor came and called two men away. One of them belonged to an intelligent and well dressed woman sitting opposite me, md when he came back she asked him what the conductor wanted. "'Why,' said the man seriously, 'the an in lower S; has been found dead.' "The woman's eyes widened, and I tought she was going to say some hing sweet an~d sympathetic, but she didn't What she said was: "'Why, how thoughtless of him, in car with all these women too!' "Don't talk to me about women." Washington Pott. Cooked IUder Water. An Englishman made a wager that he could cook a plum pudding ten feet beneath the surface of the Thames and on the bet by placing the pudding in a tin case and putting the whole in a sack of lime. The heat of the lIme, slaking when it came in contact with the water, was sufficient to cook the udding in two hours. Until 1027 the Chinese wore their hair long and coiled on the top of the head, where it was fastened with an rnamental pin. The Mantchoo edict making the pigtail a sign of loyalty changed this style. There are no big words in the ser mon on the mount. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure Digests what you eat. Iartificially digests the food and aids Nature in strengthening and recon structng the exhausted digestive or gan. It is the latest discovered digest-' nt and tonic. N~o other preparation, can approach it in eficiency. It in stantly relieves and permanently cures Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Heartburn,. Flatulence, Sour Stomach, N~ausea, Sick Headache, Gastralgia,Crampsanid ll1other results of imperfect digestion. Pricetoe. and$1. argesizecontins2%tie naie.Boolaboutdyspepsiamallbdfree Preared by E. C. DeWITT a CO., ChiCUSO. The R.8B. Loryea Drug Store, IsAAc M. LonYRA, PROP. C. DAYIS, ATTdRNEY AT LAW, M'ANNING, S. C. DR. THACHER All Why We Eat Oysters Raw. Dr. William Roberts in his Interest ing lectures on the digestive ferments writes: "Our practice in regard to the oyster is quite exceptional and furnish es a striking example of the general correctness of the popular judgment on dietetic questions. The oyster is al most the only animal substance which we eat habitually and by preference in the raw or uncooked state, and it Is In teresting to know that there is a sound physiological reason at the bottom of this preference. "The fawn colored mass which con stitutes the dainty of the oyster is its liver, and this is little less than a heap of glycogen. Associated with the gly cogen, but withheld from actual con tact with it during life, is its appropri ate digestive ferment, the hepatic dins tase. The mere crushing of the dain;y between the teeth brings these tvwo bodies together, and the glycogen is :t once digested without other help by its own diastase. "The oyster in the uncooked state or merely warmed Is, in fact. self digest ive. But the advantage of this provi sion is wholly lost by cooking, for tie heat immediately destroys the associ ated ferment, and a cooked oyster has to be digested, like any other food, by the eater's own digestive powers." Lincoln as a Life Saver. William A. Newell, who had the rare 1 distinction of being governor of two i states-New Jersey and Washington told in Success of his romantic experi ences as a congressman in 1849, when he originated th" life saving service by offering a resolution in the house of I representatives to app'ropriate money 1 to save lives imperiled by the sea. Fel- ! low members of congress at that ses- i sion were John Quincy Adams and 4 Abraham Lincoln. Mr. Newell said: 1 "Various objections were made to my motion, the strongest of which was that the scheme was impracticable. I laid the matter before a great many senators and members, speaking to them In person. Ex-President John -1 Quincy Adams occupied a seat just be hind mine and after the reading of the resolution clerk leaned forward and said to me, 'I would like to see that res olution.' I sent for it and handed it to him. He read It over carefully and, handing it to me, said, with a smile: 'It Is good. I hope It will prevail.' Abra ham Lincoln also read it and said: 'Newell, that is a good measure. I will I help you. I am something of a life saver myself, for I invented a scow 4 that righted Itself on the Mississippi sand bars.' Caling the Doctor. A good story is told of Dr. X., who Is the physician In charge of the female wards of one of our best known chari table Institutions. One evening about 9 o'clock Mary, a new Irish servant girl, knocked at the door, saying: "Doctor, the head nurse wants you to come down to supper." The doctor, swelling in his pride of - superiority above the nurses, sent the Irish girl away with a curt message. Half an hour later the head nurse came to his room looking very serious. "Doctor," she said, "No. 8 is very bad Indeed. I think you ought to see her at once." "Why did you not let me know be fore?" was the reply. "Why, doctor," said the nurse, "I sent you word by Mary half an hour ago."~ "The fool!" said the doctor. "She I told me to come down to supper!" C "Why," said the nurse, "I sent you word to come down to eight!" An inquiry made the whole thing lear. Mary thought it more polite to say "Come down to supper" than to i say "Come down to ate."-Pearson's t Weekly. A Sensitive Scot. A sensitive Scot rebukes the London Daily Chronicle for saying that his countrymen pronounce man "mon." "The absurd form 'mon,' he writes, "Is the hall mark of Scots' vernacular as written by a southern pen, and its In trusion has often le'at additional sad ess to comic journalism, even, alas, to the pages of our chief humorous periodical. In the north of England 'mon' certainly occurs; in Scottish speech never. In Scott and Stevenson ne may look for It In vain. The broad, soft vocalization of the word in - othian dialect lies somewhere be tween 'maun' and 'maan,' but as It cannot be literally symbolized the word should be spelt in dialect pas sages simply as In English." Accordingly. "She's well educated, Isn't she?" "Well, she's one of those women who can pass as being that way. When she meets any one who can speak French and not German, she can speak Ger :an, and when she meets any one who can speak German and not French she an speak French."-Indianlapolis Sun. His Mistake. "How lovers are given to freaks of fancy!" "What's the case in point?" "Here's a story where a fellow calls is girl's hair golden, and the accompa yiig picture shows It's only plaited." -Washington Star. Her Hint. Stout Man (whose appetite has been he envy of his fellow boarders)-I de lare I have three buttons off my vest. Mistress of the House (who has been aching to give him a hint)-Tou will probably find them in the dining room,I sir.-Exchange. NGti l10dillI fS, I1L1WiliI88.[ OFFICE OF- Jt'DGE 0F PROBATE.' Maning, S. C., Augus.t 1. 1900. ) o Executors, Administrators. Guardians and Committees:( Irespectfully cafl your attention to annexed statute. You will please give this matter early( V.tnio. \ery respectfulINHAM Judge of Probate. Sc. 20&6--(;942). Executors, Administrators. urdians and Committees, shall annually while any estate remains in their care or cus tod y, at any time before the first day of July of ac ti year, render to the Judge of Probate of the . ounty from whom they obtain Letters Testa mentry or Letters of Administrators or Let ters or Guardianship, etc., a just and true ac ount, upon oath, of the receipts and expendi tures of such estate the preceding Calendar year, which. when examined and approved, sh:.11 be deposited with the Inventory and ap p-aisement or other papers belonging to sueh estate, in the office of said Judge of Probate. the re to be kept for the inspection of such per sons as may be Interested in the estate-(under [proved te ~dday of March, 1897. OSEPH F. RHAME, ATTORNEY AT LAW, MANNTNG, S. C. OREVENTS SICKNE 'S LIVER AND Druggists, 25 and 50 ce THE BLACK VENUS. An Ugly Stone Figure Worshiped b3 Peasants of Brittany. Even false religions die hard, an there are reminders of all extinc faiths still existing in the world. On of the most curious relics of paganiss which are still worshiped in a Chris tian country is the gigantic blac] stone figure of a woman which is to b found in a forest of the district o orbihan, in Brittany. It is known as the "Black Venus, but probably dates far back of th time when the Greeks and Roman worshiped that goddess. Antiquarian assert that this ugly idol belongs t the age of the serpent worshipers, on of whose subterranean temples is iE the neighborhood. This would mak the figure far older than the Christial era. The statue is that of a huge, un -outh woman, with a sullen, angry sountenance, her form enveloped in a loose mantle. The superstitious Bretons have al ways worshiped the figure, asserting hat it has power over the weather an< :he crops. If the Idol is neglected, they leclare that the grain dies on the ear ind if the anger of the black woman is urther roused a tidhl wave sweeps >ver Morbihan. Twice the stone was cast into the sea )y pious folk who hoped thereby to pui in end to this idolatry, and twice th< )easants dragged it back and set up an iltar before it. About two centuries ago Count Pierri le Lannion, on whose estate the figure tood, in order to save the statue fron >oth friends and enemies, dragged i )y 40 yoke of oxen to his own chateau nd set it up in the courtyard. He cu m inscription on the base of the pedes :al, declaring the figure to be a Venus arved by Cmsar's soldiers. The count and his chateau are both ,one, but the huge black woman, over rown with moss, still stands in the orest, and the peasants still beseech ier to bless their crops. How Flags Wear Out. It costs money to fly even two snall lags every day in the year. The two ;mall ones on the east and west fronts )f the capitol, each about three yartd ong, which is small for such an im. nense structure as the capitol, fray on1 ;o fast that it costs $100 a year to re lace them. They are darned every lay and on windy days probably two r three times. Even with all these conomies $100 worth of fine wool oats off Into the air in such fine parti es that never a trace of it can be ound even at the foot of the two flag taffs.-Pittsburg DisDatch. 3'uggies, Wagons, Road Carts and Carriages R1EPA IRFEW With Neatness and Despatch -AT R. A. WH iTE'S WHEELWRIGHT and BLACKSMITH SHOP. I repair Stoves, Pumps and run watei lipes, or I will put down a new Pumi heap. If you need any soldering done, givE ae a cal]. LAME. My horse is lame. Why? Because] id not have it shod by R. A. White hie man that puts on such neat shoes nd makes horses travel with so mucd ase. We Make Them Look New We are making a specialty of re ainting old TBuggies, Carriages, Roai ans and Wagons cheap. Come and see me. My prices wil lease you, and I guarantee all of m3 ~ork. Shop on corner below R. M1. Dean's. R..A. WHITE, MANNING, S. C. Wm.E.Ho 209 East Bay, - -Deal PAINTS, OILS, VAR: LANTERNS, T2 BUILDIN Headquarters for the Celebrated F ie Oils and Greases. This Offer is G< 4 Full Quarts of OUR SAM~PLE PAC NE QT. W. H. McBRAYER. Guaranteed St: E QT C GISNH RYE. Paatable i NE QT. OL?D CROW WHISKEY. the old Re LENDALE SPRINGS DISi 4 W. Mitchell Street, -- BRING JOB TO THE~ TI] S1 BLOOD SYRUP nts. Barbers of Spain. The barber's business in Spain is p cullar in that he is called upon to pl his shears on donkeys as well as-mer for it is an Important Item in the car of Spanish donkeys that they should b sheared as to the back in order t make a smoother resting place for ma or pannier. So, while the master hel his animal, one of the barbers plie some enormous clacking shears and 11' tered the ground with mouse colore hair, leaving the beast's belly far cov ered below a fixed line and for a smal additional price executing a raised pal tern of star points around the neck. The tonsorial profession is an indi pensable one In a country where shai Ing the whole face is generally prac ticed among all the humbler orderi not to mention toreros and eccleslas tics. But the discomfort to which th barber's customers submit is astonist Ing. Instead of being pampered, sooti ed, labored at with confidential rc spectfulness and lulled into luxuriou harmony with himself, as happens I: America. a man who courts the razc in Spain has to sit upright in a stil chair and meekly hold under his chin brass basin full of suds and fitting hi throat by means of a curved nick a one side. Cause of Taleyrand's Lameness. The cause of Talleyrand's lamenes has long been a matter of dipputc Some stories have it that the defec was congenital; others that it was oc casioned by an accident which befel him in his infancy. The most curiou explanation of all is that offered by i wrtier in The Quarterly Review. "Ti quote the very words of our Informani an eminently distinguished diplomat, says the writer, "Talleyrand's Vienn colleague, Baron Wessenberg, told mi years ago that his lameness was owin, to carelessness of his nurse, who lait him down in a field while she flirte with her sweetheart and on comini back to her charge found some pig. dining on -the Infant's legs. I am suri that Wessenberg told me this as a -established fact, and I am all but sur that his authority was Talleyrand him self." A Wily Answer. The shah of Persia once asked 4 group of his courtiers whom the; thought the greater man, himself 0 his father. At first he could get no re ply to so dangerous a question, the an swer to which might cost the courtier, their heads. At last a wily old courtier said "Your father, sire, for although yo1 are equal to your father in all other re spects in this he is superior to you that he had a greater son than any 01 have." STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA County of Clarendon. By James M. Windham, Esq., Probati Judge. WHERASJULIA A. PEARSOI WHRae suit to me, to grant her Let ters of Administration of the estate c and effects of Toney McDonald. These are therefore to cite and ad monish all and singular the kindred and creditors of the said Toney Mc Donald, deceased, that they be and ap p ear before me, in the Court of Prc bate, to be held at Manning on the 2nd day of May next after publicatial thereof, at 11 o'clock in the forenoon to show cause, if any they .have, wh: the said administration should not b< granted. Given under my hand, this 15th da; of April, A. D. 1901. JAMES M. WINDHAM, [SEAL.) Judge of Probate. [5-3t INSURANCE F'ERE, LIFE, ACCIDENT & BURGLARY INSURANCE. Tailor-Made Clothing. AFULL LIEOF SAMPLES. Carpets, Art Squares, RUGS, DRAPERIES & BED SETS. Cares swdfare ad wadded liing fur nished FREE. J. L. WILSON. ines & Co., CHARLESTON, S. C. ers mn HTSH AND BRUSHES, LR PAPER AND G PAPER. almetto Brand of Cylinder, Planing, En Od for 30 Days Only. Pure Rye Whiske3 - From Seven to Nine Years Ok .FOR... '$2.65 Shipped to any ad dress Express Pre paid. We ship this as "j sortment, or assort ed any way you likt themin a plait !* express prepaid on lv to the limits o t'he Southern Ex press Co. Write foi 'AGE. our new illustratei ietly Pure Hand-made catalogue, just out t~he Highest Degree. Gv satilo .ted for its Medicinal our $1.50 and $. Liabe Fvorte. Pure Corn and Rye libeFvrt.Send in your or ILLIN CO. dReference: Thirn ATL ANTA, GA. National Bank. YOUR WORK ~1OFFICE. ATLANTIC COAST INE Camn mooN, S. C., March 4, 1901. On and after thiz 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 Lsnes, 438 9.15 7.40P. Y Ar Charleston, 6.03 10.50 9.15 North-Bound. e *78. '32. *52. e Lv Charleston, 6.33 A. 5.17 P. 7.00 A. 0 Ar Lanes, 8.18 6.45 8.32 a 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. R. -leave Florence daily except Sunday 9.55 a m, arrive Dar lington 10.28 -a in, Cheraw, 11.40 a m, Wadesboro 12.35 p m. Leave Florence daily except Sunday, 8.00 p in, arrive Dar lington, 8.25 p m, Hartsville 9.2c p M, Bennetsville 9.21 p in, Gibson 9.45 p m. e Leave Florence Sunday only 9.55 a m, ar rive Darlington 10.27. Hartsville 11.10 . Leave Gibson daily except Sunday 8.35 a m, Bennettsville 6.59 a in, arrive Darling. ton 7.50 a m. Leave Hartsville daily ex cept Sunday 7.00 a m, arrive Darlington a 7.45 a m, leave Darlington 8.55 am, arrive r Florence 9.20 a m. Leave Wadesboro daily r except Sunday 4 25 p in, Cheraw 5.15 p m, D Darlington 6.29 p m, arrive Florence 7 p in. Leave Hartsville Sunday only 8.15 a m Darlington 9.00 a in, arrive Florence 9.20 a m. J. . KENLEY, JNO. F. DIVINE, Gen'l Manager. Gen1 Sup't. T. M. EME 'ON, Traffilc Manager. H. M. EMERSON, Gen'l Pas. Agent. t W.C.&A. South-Bound. 55. 35. 52. 5 Lv Wilmington,*3.45 P. L Lv Marion, 6.40 ) Ar Florence, 7.25 Lv Florence, *8.00 *2.50 A. Ar Sumter, 9.12 .158 Lv Sumter, 9.15 *9,23 A. Ar Columbia, 10.40 10.55 No. 52 runs through from Charleston via Central R. R., leaving Charleston 6 25 a m, Lanes 8.02 a m, Manning 8.50 a m. - North-Bound. 54. 53. 32. Lv Columbia. *6.40 A. *4.15 P. Ar Sumter, 8.5 5.35 Lv Samter, 8.05 *6.24 P. Ar Florence, 9 20 7.35 Lv Florence, 10.00 Lv Marion, 10.35 Ar Wilmington, 1.25 *Daily. L No. 53 rens through to Charleston,'8. 0. F via Central R. R, arriving Mann' 6.04 e pm, Lanes, 6.43 p m, Charleston ? p . Trains on Conway Branch leave Chad bourn 11.50 am, arrive Conway L.34) p m. returning leave Conway 3.40 p m, arrive * Chadbourn 5.20 p ;m, leave Vhadbourn, 5.35 p M, arrive at Elrod- 8.10 p mn, aeurning leave Elrod 8.40 a m, arrive 1 Chadbourn 11.25 a m. Daily except Sun day. J. B. KENLY, Gen'l Manager. T. M. EMERSON, Traffic Manager. H. M. EMERSON, Gen'l Pass. Agent. CENTRAL R. R. OF 80. CAROWIA. No. 52 Lv Charleston, 7.00 A. X. Lv Lanes, 8.34 Lv Greeleyville, 8.46 Lv Foreston, 8.66 L.v Wilson's Mill, 9.01 Lv Manning, 8.50' Lv Alcoln, 9.186 Lv Brogdon, 9.25 fLvW. &S. Junet., 9.38 Lv Saniter, 9.40 Ar Columbia, 11.00" No.653 Lv Columbia, 4.00 P. M. Lv Sumter, 5.13 . - Lv.W. k S. Junct. 5.15 " Lv Brogdon, 5.27 " Lv Alcolu, 5.35 '" Lv Manning, 6,04 " Lv Wilson's Mill, 5.50" Lv Foreston, 5.57 " Lv Greeleyville, 6.05 . Ar-Lanes,.. 6.17 - SAr Charleston, 8.00 " MANCHESTER & AUGUSTA B. & No. 35. .. Lv Sumter, 4.00 A. M, Ar Creston, 4.52 *a Ar Orangebutg, 8.10 Ar Denmark, 6.55 " Ar Augusta, 7.55 " No.32 Lv Augusta, . 2.40 P. IL Lv Denmark, - 4.35" Lv Orangeburg, 5.10 ". Lv Creston, 5.34 " Ar Sumter, 6.24 " Trains 32 and 35 carry through Pullman palace buffet sleeping cars between New York and Macon via Augusta. W~,,ilson and Summerton B. E Tom TAnra No. 3, In effect Wednesday, Oct. 17th, 1900. Between Sumter and Camden. Mixed-Daily except Sunday. South bound. Northbountd. No. 69. No. 71. No. 70. No. 68. PM AM AM PM 545 950 Le..Suinter..Ar 9 10 51'5 550 952 N.W.Junctn 906 610 6 15 10 15 . ..Dalzell... 8 35 4 40 630 1030 ...Borden... 800 420 6 45 10 50 ..Rtemberts.. 7 40 4 05 6 55 10 55 .. Ellerbee .. 7 30 400 7 20 11 20 So By Juncta 7 10 3 40 730 1130 Ar..Camden..Le 700 330 (S C .'- G Ex Depot) PM PM AM PM Between Wilsc~is Mill and Sumter. Southbound. Northbound. No. 73. Daily except Sunday No. 72. P M Stations. P M 2 00 Le....Sumter....Ar 12 30 2 03 ...NW Junction... 1227 220 .........Tindal........ 1155 2 50........Packsville....... 1130 320 .........Silver......... 1105 40 ....Millard.... 10 . 4 30........Summenrton ....9655 510..... .... Davis......... 920. 530 ........Jordan ... .. ...903 6 00 Ar....ilson's Mills.Le 843 P M A M Between Millard and St. Paul. Sonthibound. Northbound. No 73. No. 75. No. 72. No. 74. P M A M Stations A M P M 3 30 10O00Le Millard Ar 10 35 4 05 3 40 10.0 Ar t. Paul Le 1025 3 55 iPM AM AM PM THOS. WILXON, President. The Times DOES NEAT Job Printing. GIVEtUS A TRIAL.