University of South Carolina Libraries
Look to Your Interest. *He?e we are, still in the lead, and why suffer with your eyes when you can be saited with a pair of Spectacles with so little trouble? We carry the Celebrated HAWKES Spectacles and Glasses, Which we are offering very cheap, from 25c to $2.50 and Gold Frames at $3 to $6. "aIi aad be suited. W. M. BROCKINTON. No WIs Ik Timel Subscflbet The Manning Tines .AND... a! Both for $1.50.'B We have arranged to give our readers additional reading mat ttr in the shape of a first class Agricultural Journal, a paper with a world renowned reputation as a farm helper and a family com 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 Hiome isipublished 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 &n. 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 .e hope the people will appreciate it. Forinfants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature TJ ~AncoTIG. 1 or lFor Ove ness and LOSS OF' SIZEP. - acsile Signature or EXAC't COPY0 oWAEEER. RpansTabules Doctprs Find A GodPecito ATDanniSTUan TOT~[C~E. I have opened up a Sewing Machin store next door to Mr. S. A. Rigby general merchandise store August 1s 1900. I will carry the BeSt [IN 01 SONll MllllEN M0l~ The new ball-bearing "New Home, the best machine made: also "Ne, Ideal" and "Climax," from $18 to $M I sell on Instalment, Easy Paymer Plan. I clean and repair any kind machines for least money possible. Call and see me. A. 1. BARRON, Ag't. NOW OPEl TO TRAVELERS The Tisdale Hotel Summerton, S. C. Livery Stable Near at Hand. New Building. New Furnitur Extract of Lemon MADE FROM Messino Lemons. The Delight of Housekeepers. PREPARED BY SD. 0. Rhame,1 Summerton, S. C. o+o~o4o~4*oO+0oo+o+0oooo INSURANCE FIRE, LIFE, ACCIDENT & BURGLARY INSURANCE. Tailor-Made Clothing. FIT GUARANTEED. A FULL LINE OF SAMPLES. Carpets, Art Squares, RUGS, DRAPERIES & BED SETS. Colored designs and samples of goods. Carpets sewed free and wadded lining fua nished FREE. J. L. WILSON. TO CONSUMERS OF Lager Beer We are now in position to ship ou Beer all over the State at the followin prices: EXPORT. Imperial Brew-Pints, at $1.10 per do2 Kuffheiser-Pints, at.....90c per do2 Germania P. M.-Pints, at 90c per do; GERMAN MALT EX TRACT. A liquid Tonic and Food for Nursin Mothers and Invalids. Brewed frox the highest grade of Barley Malt an Imported Hops, at....1.10 per dos For sale by all Dispensaries, or sen in your orders direct. All orders shall have our prompt an careful attention. Cash must accompany all orders. GERMANIA BREWINGCO00 Charleston, S. C. of yoursnt bl.IS FR OE DUR.BL th soNOUS. HAMA PAIN Is mdofte BEST miaybycndo I. Il the COMMON SENSE HoUsE rAT No BETTER paint Can he made ANY cost, andis NoT TO CRACK. BLISTER, PEEL or CHmP. F.N.&XrarLAR PAINT CO., St. Louis, Xe. Sold and guaranteed by Main~iig Hardware Co. MANNING, S. C. GeoS. Hacker &Sol Doors, Sash, Blinds, Moulding and Buildini Material, CH ARLESTON, S. C. Sash Weights and Cords an Builders' Hardware. Window and Fancy Glass a Specialt ADIC in TO PTENTABILITY m Book "Hoarwtoohtainl Patst" Cars ,ndrt. Nofeet ptentis secured E.C. SIGGERS.,PatentLawy? W ashnn Dn R ringr ynur Joh Work in The TimeBS offic A TEST OF COURAGE. e s TORTURES WHICH INDIAN SCOUTS BORE WITH SMILING FACES. ft Was Up to Lieutenant Farrow Once to Emulate Their Example, but the West Pointer Used His Wits and Escaped the Ordeal. t The Indian scouts that joined forces f with the United States army in 1878 to make prisoners of the Sheep Eaters In western Idaho were skeptical at first of Lieutenant Farrow's abilities - to lead them into battle. They had aever seen his courage tested and plainly intimated by word and action that they had no intention of obeying his orders unless he should prove him self braver than any chief, subchief or buck in the command. First they gave themselves up to all kinds of physical torture as a lesson to him. They slashed their bodies with knives without showing pain. They slit the skin on their chests, ran skewers thereunder and jerked off cutaneous and :leshly strips while smil lng happily in his face. They split their ears, pierced their noses, lacer ated their cheeks, butchered their arms a and legs. ThEir stunts were so far - beyond anything Farrow could inflict a upon himself that the poor young lieu tenant thought he "saw his finish." Suddenly, while rivulets of cold per spiration trickled down his spine, the West Pointer. recollected that In his schoolboy days he was an adept at driving a pin into the thick of his "vastus externus" without feeling pain ald the joyful Inspiration to thus illu minate his courage seized him. The necessary pin was in the lapel of his fatigue jacket. Ruthlessly he slit the front of his breeches leg from pocket to knee, then his drawers till the front of the thigh was exposed to the wondering gaze of the Indians gathered close around. Then dramat ically exhibiting the pin, an affair of an inch and a sixteenth, he reached for a flat stone and drove the harmless bit of wire down to the head in the unresisting muscle. gIs handsome face was as unclouded as when he helped to base his first plebe. The red men nodded approvingly, g-unted, looked wise and sat down om tir haunches. They had seen some thing new, but wanted something mor convincing. Farrow realized this and was in the seventh heaven of despai as he smilingly pulled out the pin and held it aloft for inspection. To show the white feather meant ir - that hostile country insubordinatioE and treachery, involving Farrow's mysterious death. It was a moment tc try a soul-and to fry it. The lieuten ant whispered to his trusted sergeant: "I am going to take a desperate chance I am going to shoot myself througi r the head with my revolver, but yot stand beside your horse, and just am instant before I shoot you fire youw rifle, yell 'Si-wash!' mount and mak( off through the woods as fast as yot can ride. Don't forget to fire before I do, else I shall be a dead man." Sitting upon a jagged rock, he ex plained to the Indians what he war about to do, and with great delibera. tion and some fine theatricals he cock Sed the pistol and placed the muzzle Sagainst his temple. The Indians were Swrought up to a high pitch. They had -never seen a man shoot himself througi Sthe head and live. Surely here wai the bravest of all brave leaders. They would follow him through hell. The sergeant, unnoticed, fired his ri fie, his "SI-wash!" woke the echoes o: Shoshone and Bitter Root, and the clat. ter of his horse's hoofs rang down the Clear Water as far as Fort Lapwai "Si-wash?" The Indians knew wha1 that cry mean t. In less time than I1 takes to tell it Farrow was alone. Hli -forces had scattered to the four winds In the course of a few hours all were united again, but the courage test was not renewed. Twenty-two years after this exciting incident, on a certain evening in 1900 Farrow occupied a box in the Madilsor 1Square Garden when Buffalo BIll'i Wild West was in full blast. Chie. Josephi, the celebrated commander o. the Nes Perces, whom Farrow had cap tured 22 years previously and whoa he had not seen in the interim, led wild, whooping, yelling, screechini mob of painted Indians out into the arena for a dash around the circle. But the charge was interrupted-cui short When Joseph reached the curve near the Madison avenue end of the amphitheater, he pulled his horse sharp ly to the right, cutting across the firsi file of warriors in most dangerous fash ion. In a mad gallop he poked hli charger's head into an arena box straightened up in his stirrups, hel( out his hand and cried: "How! How Howl" The old fellow had caughi sight of Farrow, and nothing could prevent him from riding up' to salut4 his captor of 1.878. It was a dramatic Incident-New York Press. Budget. The origin of the word "budget,' meaning an estimate of governmeni revenues and expenses, is thus explain ed: Almostfrom time Immemorial It ws the custom in England to put the esti. mates of recelptsand expenditures pre sented to parliament In. a leather bag the word budget being thus borrowei from the old Norman word bougette which signifies a leather purse. Curi ously enough, the word has passed bacd again into France from England.-Nev York Tribune. "I love company," said a local Mrs - Partington. "It makes things brigh i and lively-It breaks the anatomy." New York Sun. ;From a cliff 1,000 feet high one wit] clear vision can see a ship at a dis tance of 42 miles. Kodol Dyspepsia CurE Digests what you eat. Iartificially digests the food and aid Nature in strengthening and recon structing the exhausted digestive 01 gans, it is the latest discovered digesl ant and tonic. No other preparatiol can approach It In efficiency. It In stantly relieves and permanently cure Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Hlearthurl Flatulence, Sour Stomach, Nausei Sick Hedce Gastralgia,Cram~psan all other results of imperfect digestiox slsiss.Bo all btdY5spes d ~Prepared by E. C. DeWITT 8CCO., CbICagS The R. B, Loryea Drug Store, I sAAc M. LoRTEA. PROP. C. DAVIS, ATTORNEY AT LAW, 8. M ANNTNG, S. C. JAPAN IN WINTER. Colder In Eouses of the Rich Ma: Than In Open Sunshine. "I suppose that the American peop] and the Russians are the only wester races that really keep warm in wintei Still those who dwell in other countrie admit that they have the same ideal b their Inefficient effort to attain to it, writes Anna N. Benjamin in Ainslee' "The Japanese winter Is most trying 0 account of its continual dampness, be the Japanese are content to remal cold. They make almost no effort t overcome It. The old 'bushido' (chiva rous) idea of the 'samural' (knight, was that it was effeminate to feel colk and such is their severe training the they do not really feel it as we do. Th wearing of some extra 'kimonos' an the use of a 'hibachi,' or brazier, I which are a few tiny sticks of lighte charcoal, are the only concessions t winter weather. With the 'hibach they never pretend to heat more tha their finger tips, which they hold ove the coals. It is used when the house I entirely open. "The houses, as every one knows, ar built of thin, light w'ood, and the sT Ing panels which serve for doors an windows have paper panes. They az as apt to be open as closed during th day. When I took my first firrikish ride through the streets of Nagasaki, forgot my own sufferings in my syn pathy for this unhappy nation, whic as surely as the cold came endured suc misery from it. The coolies wear thi blue cotton clothes and are always pa ding through the mud. The stcrekeel ers sit out in their open booths, and th women go bareheaded about the street In the houses of the rich the still col behind the closed panels is often mo intense than that outside 'in the sui shine, where the air is stirring. TI schools and public buildings are equa ly frigid. "It seemed to me that the only war things in Japan were the babies, wh looked like bundles of gayly colore crape, their round heads covered b knit caps. They slumber peacefull tucked down their mothers' backs. Th attempt to keep warm in winter is 2< entirely a'modernimprovoment,'thOgf it goes with western civilizatio-n. T; Koreans do it very thoroughly, the Oh nese to a certain qxtent. The Japanes as a race, continue to scorn it as the always have done, and this Is mere] one of a hundred examples which pros that the Japanese are still true to the traditions in their daily life and as 74 little affected in the ordering of the homes by the ideas adopted from tt west." NOVEL CURES. UnIque Methods Employed to Ove come Certain Diseases. Freezing, baking, Illuminating, to: turing, frightening and bruising al among the accepted ways of curing ce tain diseases, says.a writer in the Phi adelphia Times. For example, the bal Jug cure: When one hasa well deve oped rheumatism, he is placed in a sp cdes of stove and the crystals of ur, acid are literally melted out of his bod: Another odd cure once tried f( rheumatism was burial In dam) warm clay. The first rheumatic burb took place at Menominee, Mich. TI treatment was not a success, and th form of cure has been given up. The freezing cure: This was first I troduced by a Swiss doctor, Paul Bu deyront He placed his patients sheets immersed In ice water, packir the patient all about with crushed Ic This treatment Is today used In typhoi fever cases. Or the patient Is plunged into an it water bath. The treatment saves mar lives. Raging fever above 105 degree F. has been brought down by thee means to normal-98 2-5 degrees-1 less than ten minutes. Neither of these modes of treatmei actually freezes one. A physician < Paris, M. Figeau, introduced in 1890 s ammonia vapor method, which ral froze the patient. The body was place In a chamber into which certain cher icals were Introduced. Ammonia ga by sudden evaporation, then produce intense~eold, and the blood In the bod~ lost most of Its heat Mi. Flgeau's method did not met with success. Some of his patien1 succumbed to the drastic measure and the practice was abandoned. The Wheel Problem. Which, at any given moment, is mo ing forward faster-the top of a coac wheel or the bottom? The answer to this question seen simple enough, but probably nine ps sons out of ten, asked at raxadex would give the wrong reply. It woul appear at first sight that the top as bottom must be moving at the san rate-that is, the speed of the camriag But by a little thought It will be dil covered that the bottom of the whe Is in fact, by the direction of Its mi tion around its axis, moving backwari in an opposite direction to that whic the carriage is advancing and Is col sequently stationary in space, whil the point on top of the wheel Is mo ing forward with the double velocil of its own motion around the axis ax the speed at which the carriage move Flower Gardens of the Sea. The sea has its flower gardens, hi the blooms are not on plants as the are on the land. It Is the animals< the sea that make the gardens, ti corals of the tropical waters partici larly making a display of floral beaui that fairly rivals the gorgeous colo lng and delicate grace presented I land flowers. So closely do they reser ble plant blooms that it Is hard to b lieve that they are wholly animal organization. Dr. Blackford says thr among the coral gardens there al fishes of curious forms and fiashir colors darting about, just as the bir< and butterflies dart about plant ga dens on land.-Chicago Chronicle. J. S. BELL., Opp. Central Hotel, Manning, S. --: DEALER IN : SBicycles and Bicycle SupplieS. I also repair wheels and guarantee r work. BMACHINERY REPA!RINC A SPECIALTY. All work entrusted to rme will recei prompt attention either day or night. J. S. BELL. Guaranteed $901 Ssalary YEARUi Men n nd women of good addrcss to represt us, some to travel appointing agents, others local work looking after our interests. $9< -salary guarar.teed yearly; extra commissi( and errenses; rapid advancement; old est: lished Ihouse. Grand chance for earnest man woman to secure pleasant, permanent positic liberal income and future. New, brilliant lit Write at once. sTrAFFORO PRESS, ao C....c. St New Haven. Cox Your Chili -me a 0. blood. You needn's be as DR. THACHER LIVER =i5BLO SYRUP to the little folks either, t has bean the standardI remedy of the United Stat Ct nearly ffyeasIt builIds i'l1food for young aI h and is verypleatato take. mui i B a Bottle now and s g y~'rns and th0 men perfect blood oeoad spent all the money we cOuld fC , your Liver and Blood Syrup. When I met my 6 they ask what had done me so much good. T t getting well. I tell every body that Thacher's I e Your Druggist has Dr. Thacher' I ~or dry) orhecan got the= If 12 age or 50o for a bott2e-Bul Write our Consulation Dept., explaining your THACHiER MEDICINE COMPAN r THE NEW TENANT. Now, when he left my lfe-I drew Close shut the casements of my heart e And locked the door, and in each part - Strange darkness reigned, forlorn and new. p There pierced no happy sunshine through The barrier of fastened doors; e The dust lay thick upon the floors e Where rosemary was strewn and ru. E, But on a certain day came one Who knocked and would not be denied And threw the rusted casements wide And entered with the wind and sun. h The dingy webs that grief had spun, - The dust that sad neglect bad laid, The faded hangings, rent and frayed, Had vanished ere his work was done. e Oh, he hath swept my heart for me Clean of old sorrowing and doubt, Andhe hath set it all about d With peace and happy certaintyl e Oh, home be glad for such as he L. And very sweet nor let him find That ghost one tenant left behind, 6 That silent, sad eyed memory! -Theodosia Garrison in Harper's Ba-r. NO BREAKING OFF. d Just.a Little Disagsreement Between the Peppery Lovers. 7 "See here, Daniel," began the old e farmer when he had cornered his son it out by the cornerib, "what's this here h circalatin round 'mong the neighbors e 'bout you and Patience breakfi of yer - engagement?" 4 "Nuthin to It 'tall," with a sullen tone Y and look. Y "Blamed funny. I never see so much e smoke where there wasn't some fire. Did yoa and her have some words?" t "I said there wasn't no breakin off, r didn't I? What's the use of cross ques e tionin a feller like he was on the wit ness stan' ?" "Lots of use, my young man. Haln't I tole you more times 'n you've got Ingers and toes that my mind and ma's mind Is sot on this here marriage? Don't our farms jine, and Isn't she a only chile, and hain't you a only chile? Hain't you got no gumtIon nur com mon sense?" "She said not. She said I didn't %now enough to peel b'iled pertaters afore eatin 'em or to keep awake when I was a-courtin of her." "She hain't so fur wrong, either. And what did you say?" ir "I tole her she didn't have Interleck N enough to talk so's to keep nobody awake and that ef I was a-pIckin and a-choosin fur beauty she'd be at the foot of the class. That's what I tole her." "Well?" "She ordered me to git out and said gef she ever see me on that farm from hencefor'ard she'd set the dogs on me, d and I tole her the dogs would have a confounded easy time of It so fur as I was consarned. But there was no breakin off." SThen the old man Informed the boy Sthat if the engagement wasn't renewed n within 24 hours he'd leave every "durned dollar to a sannytorlum fur i fools."-Detroit Free Press. Too Profuse. y, Managing Editor-Quiller writes more d than twice as much as any other man yon the staff. He really deserves to * have his salary raised. d Business Manager-On the contrary, y he ought to have It reduced. Just think of the money he costs us in a year In it the matter of pens, ink and paper! a Boston Transcript. THE CAROLINA 91 THOMAS WII COMMISSION 159 East Bay - Watches a I- I want my friends and the public ge SWedding, Birthday 2- 1hat in the future, as wi-l as the past, I ani - Watches Clocks Sterling Silyi at Fine China Wedgewood SIs com~plete, and it will afford me pleosure gSpecial and prompt attenti< 1 at prices to suit the times. Atlantic Coast Line Watch Inspector. Wm.E.Ho 209 East Bay, - -Deal PAINTS, OILS, VAR LANTERNS, TJ ye BUILDIN~ Headquarters for the Celebrated I - gine Oils and Greases. ) BRING oOB i TO THE Tli drenIo=a Od. Growing issues, #5 U . red sil DD cm. is for Id old ad gvsS new lWe ad v o tins You must try Dr. Thachers remedy to MAn bOW 0 ' Its good for the Liverand dnesUM 00" ad good health can be seured by 0the"r r me for medicine before I ommeed tkng A friends on the street that saw me last sUmmer iey all tU me they bad lost an hopes of mY ever Aver *nd lood Syrup cared me.. ANN IO SON, Abbevifl, Tenn. aLiver and Blood Syrup, (liquid b won't send us Mefor sa k. Try Your Druais Fis symptons and receive free, confdental AdvieS. , Chattanooga, Tea. World's Longest Stairway. The Philadelphia city hall contains the highest continuous stairway In the world, and tourists who have boasted of their muscular ability in climbing the store steps of the Bunker Hill monument at Charlestown, the Wash ington monument or the monument to General Brock near Queenstown, On tario, will tell their friends of their feat of aseending the 598 steps which lead from the seventh floor of the city, hal to the landing about the feet of William Penn's statue. It extends from the seventh to the sixteenth door and contains 598 steps of Iron, arrang ed about a square central shaft, in which runs an electric elevator. To reach the tower stairway the climber may mount 245 granite stairs in the stairways at the nehm end of the building, thus making a total climb of 74 steps. ower climbing Is one of the fa42 touuists. Nitherto the Banker monument, rith Its our hundred odd stone steps, and the Washqton mpu ment, which has a few morm, have rp rsqated the acme of onportunity for tests of Vh7sical endtAnce In this lladelpla Prom. Romaatgable Power. I A dear old lady was taken one day to a musical serviee in a Boston ChrehU She had heard much about the fin voice of the soprano and was prepared for a treat. She sat in rapt enjoyment unti the service was over and then turned a ra diant face toward her escort2 who was a young grandson. "Dear .boy," sha said, "you'-ve given me a great treat. Her voice Is pestectJ ly beautiful. It made cQld china runi all up and down my spine." "It's too bad, grndmamma." seg the boy, "but she didn't sing toag though she was there. The genema next me says she's been sufering to a bad cold, and one of the chorus had to sing the solos for her." "What, dear?' said the old lady, leok tag momentarily distressed. Then he face cleared, and she patted his arm reassuringly. "Never you mind," she said. "We' can come again some time. But, afteri all, if she can make me feel that way without singing I don't know that it would be wise for me to hear her. Now,' would lt?"-Youth's Companion. Dosing an Elephant. I A difficult operation was performed the other day at the zoologilcal gardens at Hanover. An elephant was suffer ing great pain from a growth on the lowrer part of one of its hind feet, and It was deemed necessary to cut this malformation away. In order to ren der the animal InsensIble a dose of 600 grains of morphia in six bottles of rum was administered. This dose took about an hour before any visible effect was produced. The elephant then fell over in a kind of sleep, and the opera tion was successfully carried out with out any further ado. The operation lasted in all three days.-London Globe. Many men in China do not marry, the priests who serve in the temples and those who take up literary pur. suits abstaining by choice, while many remain single by reason of their pov erty. IbellY COMPANY, 'SON, President. MERCHANTS. - Charleston, S. C. !I You Wite Ue for 1ioiclla nd Jewelry. nerally to know that when in need of a or Christmas Present, prepared to supply them. My line of r Diamonds Jewelry Cut Glass Spectacles and Eye Glasses to show them. ,n given to all Repairing in my line FOL SOM, SMTER". ines & Co., CHARLESTON, S. C. lers in NISH AND BRUSHES, R PAPER AND G PAPER. 'aletto Brand of Cylinder, Planing, En SYOUR WORK MES OFFICE. ATLANTIC COAST UK.E CEmazroN, S. C., Macrch 4, 1901. On and- after this date the following passenger schedule will be in effect: NORTHEASTERN RAILROAV. South-Bound. *35. *23. e53. Lv Florence, 3.25 A. 7.55 P. Lv Kingstree, 8.57 Ar Lanes, 4.38 9.15 Lv Lanes, 438 9.15 7.40 P. Ar Charleston, 6.03 10.50 9.15 North-Bound. *78. *32. *52. Lv Charlestora, 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. t Daily 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 lose connection for all points North. Trains on C. & D. R. R. leave Florenco daily except Sunday 9.55 a m, arrive Dar lington 10.28 a m, Cheraw, 11.40 a m, Wadesboro 12.35 p in. Leave Florence laily except'Sunday, 8.00 p m, arrive Dar. lington, 8.25 p in, Hartsville 9.2 p m, Bennetsville 9.21 p in, 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 8.35 t m, Bennettsville 6.59 am, arrive Darling. ton 7.50 a in. Leave Hartsville daily ex. Dept Sunday 7.00 a m, arrive Darlington 7.45 a m, leave Darlington 8.55 a m, arrive Florence 9.20 a in. Leave Wadesaboro daily except Sunday 4.25 p in, Cheraw 5.15 p in, Darlington 6.29 p m, arrive Florence 7 p m. Leave Hartsville Sunday only 8.15 a m Darlington 9.00 a in, arrive Florence 9.20 i m; T4 I. KENLEY, JNO. F. DIVINE, Gen'l Manager. Gen'I Sup't. T. M. EMERSON, Traffic Manager. H. M. EMERSON, Gen'l Pass. Agent. W. C. a A. South-Bound. 55. * 35. 52. Lv Wilmington,*3.45 P. Lv Marion, 6.40 Ar Florence, 7.25 Lv Florence, *8.0( *2.50 A. &r Sumter, '.12 3.58 Lv Sumter, . 9.15 *9.23 A. Ar Columbia, 10.40 10.55 No. 52 runs through from Charleston via Central B. B., leaving Charleston 6 25 a w, LEanes 8.02 a in, Manning 8.50 a m. North-Bound. 54. 53. -3. Lv Columbia, *6.40 A. *4.16 P. Ar Sumter, 8.05 '5.35 v Sumter, - 8.05 *6.24 P. &r Florence, 9.20 7.35 Lv Florence, 10.00 Lv Marion, ' 10.35 Ar Wilmington, 1.25 *Dailv. No. 53 runs through to Charleston, & 0. via Centaal B. I., arriving Manning t.04 p in, Lanes, 6.43 p in, Charleston 8.30 p m'. Trains on Conway Branch leave Chad. bourn 11.50 am, arrive Conway 1.30 p m, returning leave Conway 340 p m, arrive Chadbourn 5.20 p m, leave ohadbourn, 5.35 p m, arrive at Elrod .10 p M, aeurning leave Elrod 8.40 a in, arrive Chadbourn 11.25 a in. Daily except Sun. day. 7. R. KENLY, Gen'l Manager. T. M. EMERSON, Trafc Manager. H. M. EMERSON, Gea'l Pas. Agent. CENTRAL R. R. OF 80. CAROLINA. No. 52 Lv Charleston, 7.00 A. M. Lv Lanes, 8.34 " Lv Greeleyville, 8.40 " Lv Foreston, 8.55 " Lv Wilson's Mill, 9.01" Lv Manning, 8.50 " Lv Alcolu, 9.16 " Lv Brodon, 9.25 " Lv W. &S. Junct., 9.38" Lv Sumter, .9.40 " Ar Columbia, 11.00 No. 53 ' Lv Columbia, 4.00 P. N. Lv Sumter, 5.13 " Lv W. A S. Junct, 5.15" Lv Brogdon, 5.27 " Lv Alcolu, 6.35 Lv Manning, 6.04" Lv Wilson's Mill, 5.50 Lv Foreston, 5.57 " -Lv Greeleyville, 6.05 "~ Ar Lanes, 6.17 " Ar Charleston, 8.00 " M1ANCHESTEB A AUGUSTA B. B. No. 35.. Lv Sumter, 4.00 A. N. Ar Creston, 4.52 " Ar Orangeburg, 5.16- " Ar Denmark, 5.55 'S Ar Augusta, 7.55 No. 32 Lv Augusta, 2.40 P. N. Lv Denmark, 4.35" Lv Orangeburg, 5.10 " Lv Creston, 5.34 "' Ar Sumter, 6.24 " Trains 32 and 35 carry through Pnliman palace buffet sleeping ears between N~ew York and Macon via Augusta. Tn TaraNmo '.B In effect Wednesday, Oct.1l7th, 1900. Between Sumter and Camden. Mixed--Daily except Sunday. Southbound. Northbound. No. 69. No. 71. No. 70. No. 68. PM AM AM PM 5 45 9 50 Le.. Sumter ..Ar 910 815 5 50 9 52 N. W. Junctn 9 05 810 615 1015 ...Dalzell... 835 440 6 30 10 30 ...Borden... 8 00 4 20 6 45 10 50 ..Etezuberts.. '740 4 06 6 55 10 55 .. Ellerbee .. 7 30 400 7 20 11 20 So Ry Junctn 7 10 3 40 7 30 1130Ar...Gamden..Le 700 3 30 (S i &AG En Depot) PM PM AM PM Between Wilson's Mill and Sumter. Southbound. Northbound. No. 73. Daily except Sunday No. 72. P M Stations. P N 2 00 Le....Sumter....Ar 12 30 2 03 ...NW Junction... 1227 220 .........Tindal........ 1156 250........Packsville....... 1130 3 20 .........Silver......... 11 06 3 30 10 35 40 ....Millard........1000 430........Summerton... 955 510..........Davis......... 920 530 ........Jordan.... 908 6 00 Ar.Wilson's Mills.....Le 8 43 PM ,. AM Between Millard and St. Paul. Southbound. Northbound. No. 73. No. 75. No. 72. No. 74. P M A M Stations A M P11 3 30 10O00Le Millard Arl1035 406 3 40 10 10Ar St. Paul Lel1025 3 56 PM AM AM PX THOS. WILSON, Proeident. W HE N YOU COMB TO TOWN CALL AT WELLS' SHAVING SALOON Which is fitted up withan eye to the comfort of his customers.... .. HAIR CUTTIN. IN A LL STYLES, SH AVINGi AND SH AMPOOINQ Done with neatness an dispatch... .. .., A cordial invitation is extended. . . J. L. WELLS. Manning Times Block.