University of South Carolina Libraries
T1HE CAROLINA GROCERY COMPANY, TEOXAS WILSON, President. WVQ* $A= *19caW*cft COMMISSION MERCHANTS. 159 East Bay - - Charleston, S. C sa- We Wotl Be kI to Nave Tou Write Us for Mies -1M Watches and Jewelry. I want.my friends and the public generally to know that wz in need of a Wedding, Birthday or Christmas Present, That in the future, as well as the past, I am prepared to supply them. My line of Watches Clocks Sterling Silver 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. Atlantic Coast Line LW. FOLSOM, SUMTER, Watch Inspector. s. V JI.'~3 U S. Wm. E. Holmes & Co., 209 East Bay, - CHARLESTON, S. C. -Dealers in PAINTS, OILS, VARNISH AND BRUSHES, LANTERNS, TAR PAPER AND BUILDING PAPER. Headquarters for the Celebrated Palmetto Brand of Cylinder, Planing, En. gine Oils and Greases. NoW Is Il Tiul o Suoscflb The Manning Times RW Both for $1.50.D8 We have arranged to give our, readers additional reading mat ter in the shape of a first class Agricultural Journal, a paper with a world renowned reputation as a farm helper and a family comn panion. 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 tiome isipublished semi-monthly, thus giving you 24 nubr eamkn a volume of over 500 pages. - No bet ter proof of its popularity can be offered than its immense circula By special arrangement we are enabled to send THE FARM AND HOME to all of our subscribers who pay up their arrearage, a.nd 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. BRING YOUR JOB WORK TO THE TIMES OFFICE. A' I I have opened up a Sewing Machini store next door to Mr. S. A. Rigby' general merchandise store August st 1900. I will carry the Be081in IN 01ng10 MOO~nS M010 The new ball-bearing "New Home, the best machine made: also "Nev Ideal" and "Climax," from $18 to $40 I sell on Instalment, Easy Paymen Plan. I clean and repair any kind o machines for least money possible. Call and see me. A. I. BARRON, Ag't. NOW OPEN TO TRAVELERS The Tisdale Hotel Summerton, S. 0. Livery Stable Near at Hand. New Building. New Furniture Extract of Lemon MADE FROM Messino Lemons. The Delight of Housekeepers. PREPARED BY D. 0. Rhame, Summerton, S. C. INSURANCE FIRE, LIFE, ACCIDENT & BURGLARY INSURANCE. Tailor-Made Clothing. FIT GUARANTEED. A FULL LINE OF SAMPLES. Carpets, Art Squares, RUGS, DRAPERIES & BED SETS. Colored degns and pes ofoos . Carpets sewe free adwdeliig fur, nished FREE. J. L. WILSON. TO CONSUMERS OF Lager Beer. We are now in position to ship our Beer all over the State at the following prices: EXPORT. Imperial Brew-Pints, at $1.10 per doz. Kuffheiser-Pints, at......90c per doz. Germania P. M.-Pints, at 90c per doz. GERMAN MALT EX TRACT. A liquid Tonic and Food for Nursing Mothers and Invalids. Brewed from the highest grade of Barley Malt and Imported Hops, at....1.10 per doz. For sale by all Dispensaries, or send in your orders direct. All orders shall have our prompt and careful attention. Cash must accompany all orders. CERMANIA BREWING 00., Charleston, S. C. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of Clarendon, By James M. Windhiam, Esq,, Pro bate Judge. WHEREAS, J. H. TIMMONS, C. .?P., made suit to me t( grant him letters of adminis tration of the estate of and effects of Sam Taylor. These ar6 therefore to cite and admonish all and singular the kin dred and creditors of the said Sam Taylor, deceased, that they be and appear before me, in the Court of Probate, to be held at Man ning, on the 22d day of June, next, after publication thereof, at 11 o'clock in the forenoon, to show cause, if any they have, why the said administration should not be granlted. Given under my hand this 13th day of May, A. D. 1901. JAMES M. WINDHAM, 9-6t] Judge of Probate. ,Geo,$.HcKer &Son Sas AWigtTcEs ordau Builers'Hardare Wiow n ac ls pca @ nf3d,|' Cntt 'i DorsMain, Blindgst ,0 oeulos dmin sators Guardina Matte o w ea l, te a CHAnin. Vr ESpeTONf .C San Weigmhmts eAd C tors anL ters ilGerds'p Hardwsardte. Windo nd Fanc Glas p bpeongnts te in e on th cgonllees. Maningese S.. thegestate-l(und tAupr oulles gv theidayof marchr897. Rren. unr-19) Execurktors Ad Tmefinio Land Crabs. One of the commonest and the lar gest of the Christmas island land crabs is the well known robber crab, which is found in most of the tropical islands of the Indian and Pacific oceans. It sometimes reacies a length of two feet and may measure seven inches across the back. Its colors are of a very gaudy description, the ground color be ing a bright red, upon which there are stripes of yellow, but in some cases a purplish blue is the prevailing tint. The eyes are fixed on stalks which can be moved Independently of one an other, and there are two pairs of feel ers, one long, the other short. The lat - ter pair are continually jerked up and down. There is a pair of powerful claws, then several walking legs. In general appearance these animals are much more like rather stout lobsters than crabs, and one's first encounter with one of these creatures in the mid dle of a forest far from the sea Is pro ductive of much astonishment on both sides. Another species of land crab com mon in Christmas island is a little bright red animal which in general shape is much like the common shore crab. This variety makes burrows in the ground, and in some places- the soil is honeycombed with hundreds of holes. The crabs spend most of their time collecting dead leaves, which they car l ry in their claws, holding them up over their heads, and drag down into their burrows, into which they scuttle at the least alarm.-Pearson's Magazine. Crabs In Dtsgulse. Human beings are not the only crea tures that have discovered the ap petizing, though indigestible, qualities of crabs, and some of these animals have been compelled to resort to vari ous defensive measures. Disguise is one of these and is practiced with great effect by spider crabs. These deliberately bite up seaweeds and plant them on their backs, very soon establishing a growth which har monizes perfectly with the surround ings and deceives many an enemy. Should the weeds grow too vigorously, the crab todustriously prunes them with his clawp and every now and then scrapes the whole lot off and starts a fresh garden on his roof, so to speak. The sponge crab behaves in a similar manner, nipping off little bits of living sponge and sticking them on his back, where they grow vigorously. The same end is served as in the other case. It Is very amusing to keep crabs of one or other of these kinds in an aqua rium and deprive them of the usual means of concealment. They get very nervous and agitated and try to cover themselves .with bits of paper or anything else that may be provided. One such captive is said to have had a little greatcoat made for him, which he put on in a hurry as on as it was handed to him. The Earl and the Highwayman. One night when the Earl of Stanhope was walking alone in the Kentish lanes a man Jumped out of the hedge, leveled a pistol and demanded his purse. "My good man. I have no money with me," said Lord Stanhope in his remark ably slow tones. The robber laid hands on lMs watch. "No," Lord Stanhope went on, "that watch you must not have. It was giv en to meby onelIlove. It is worth ?100. If you will trust me, I will go back to Chevening and bring a ?100 note and place It in the hollow of that tree. I cannot lose my watch." The man did trust him. The earl did bring the note. Years after Lord Stan hope was at a city dinner, and next to him sat a London alderman of great wealth, a man widely respected. He and the earl talked of many things and found each other mutuafly entertain ing. Next day Lord Stanhope received a letter, out of which dropped a ?100 note. "It was your lordship's kind loan of this sum," said the note, "that start ed me in life and enabled me to have the honor of sitting next to your lord p at dinner." A strange story; but the Stanhopes are a strange race, and things happen to them that never did or could occur to other people. To Be CheerfuL The sovereign, voluntary path to cheerfulness, If our spontaneous cheer fulness be lost, Is to sit up cheerfully, to look around cheerfully and to act and speak as If cheerfulness were al ready there. If such conduct doesn't make you soon feel cheerful, nothing else will on that occasion. So, to feel brave, act as if we were brave, use all ourwlllto that end, and acourage fit will very likely replace the fit of fear. Again, in order to feel kindly toward a person to whom we have been inimical, the only way is more or less deliberate ly to smile, to make sympathetic in quiries and to force ourselves to say genial things. One hearty laugh to gether will bring enen'.es into closer communion of heart than hours speht on both sides in inwad wrestling with the mental demon of uncharitable feel ing. No Pegs. Beerbohm Tree had a comical erpe rience on his first appearance as the corpulent Falstaff. In the last act he had arranged that Falstaff, disconcert ed by gibes and buffets of the fairies in Windsor forest, should make one herculean effort to climb the oak tree. the pegs that were to serve as sup ports for that tree were always con spicuous by their absence. On the morning before the performance Mr. Tee was told they should positively be ixed on the tree. The morning came, but with it no pegs. Eloquence was stifled; even invective~ faltered. He pointed to the tree and with the calm of despair blurted out to the defaulter, "No pegs!" Such an ejaculation, spoken more in sorrow than in anger, would, he hoped. appeal to that last remnant of con sience which even the papier mache bosom of a property man might be sup posed to retain. In the evening there . was a dress rehearsal, but still no pegs could be seen. Mr. Tree's form quiv ered-beneath the padding-with pent ,up emotions, and in a torrent of pas son and a voice shaken by righteous wrath he exclaimed: "Wihere are those pegs?" "Pegs--pegel" exclaimed the property master, with exasperating affability. "Why, guv'nor, what was your words a to me this morning? 'No pegs.' And r there ain't noner"-Londoni Tit-Btts. Howells' Aavioe to Writers. 6 One day at Lakewood while sitting a t a little table in the big rotunda hall 2 drinking afternoon tea I met Mr. W. D). Howells and had a delightful conversa tion with him. After knowing the per - sonality of thisifamous author one en Sjoys his writing ten times more--he Is o magnetic and his conversation so Ii Iteresting and breezy. "Yes," he said, S"I always advise any one who has an r inclination for it to try to write. One shouldn't expect to have th4 first things one does published, but one ~must keep on trying. It is an excellent t, ninn to set down something one has seen in everyday life and fry to get a story out of it. Indeed, it's the best way to practice. "Writing Is mostly drudgery," he continued. "I have to force myself to go into my library to work, and I find myself putting off the hour as long as possible." "But when you once sit down?" I ;erktured. "Even then it's hard work for awhile until I get Into the swing. Let no one Imagine the muse comes without a summons and without a good deal of urging! At least she never does to me!"-Anna Wentworth in Woman's Home Companion. Set For the Wrong Time. He works In a down town office for a gruff old ch'ap who has no love for laggards. He is due at 8 sharp, but as he likes to be out o' nights he never wakes up a moment too soon. He has an alarm clock, which he sets at 7, and this gives him barely time to dress, breakfast and rdach the office. One day last week, the man having forgotten to wind his clock the night before, It didn't go off. So there were explanations to be made about 8:30 a. m. This was the excuse: "Well, you see, Mr. Gruff, I know how punctual you like all of your men to be, so I -have an alarm clock, which I set for 7 in the morning. But, by mistake, I set It for 7 in the evening last night, and of course It didn't go off at 7 in the morning today, as usual. And I overslept myself." "Ah, you did? Well, I'll excuse you this time. But set It properly after this." And now the chap Is wondering whether or not "the old man" was real ly fooled or merely wanted to let him down easy. Perhaps he thinks the boss believes he has a 24 hour clock. Kansas City Journal. Bull Baiting. Although bull baiting was a cruel pastime, it was also a fulfilling of the lg.w, for formerly no butcher was al lowed to offer for sale the flesh of any bull ihat had not been baited. , The goading of the animal in a fury was supposed to have some influence on the flesh. In a similar belief the flesh of a hunted hare was thought to be superior in flavor to that of one that had been shot, and a present of "a hunted bare" was considered to be a special compli ment. In the records of the corpora tion of Leicester, England, the follow ing order appears: "At a common hall, held on Thursday before St. Simon and St. Jude, 1467, 'no butcher to kill a bull till balted.'" At Winchester It was or dered (thirtieth Henry VIII) "that from hensforth ther shal be no bulstake set before any mayor's dore to bayte any. bull, but onlie at the bull-ringe within the salde cytie." Why We Winkr. No satisfactory determination has been made of the reason we wink. Some suppose that the descent and re turn of the lid over the eye serve to sweep or wash It off; others that cover Ing of the eye gives it a rest from the Labor of vision, if only for an inap preciable Instant. This view borrows some force from the fact that the rec Drd of winking Is considerably used by experimental physiologists to help measure the fatigue which the eye suf Cers.-Popular Science. Read in another page tne combina ion Offer we are making. Through a misunderstanding several who took ad vantage of this offer last year did not get their papers promptly, but our rrangemen.ts are such now, that every person who pays up, and one year in dvance, and all new subscribers, will ret this valuable farm iournal promptly. Eemember yon get THE TIMES and Farm and Home for $1.50. OA S TI O 2. A.. g~~ TeKind You Huv MAlm Bout Signaus Prize Offered for Souvenir Design. The Women's Department of the South Carolina Inter-State and West Indian Exposition will give a prize of $0 for the best original design for sou venirs to be sold in the Women's Build ing during the Exposition. This competition is open only to women of South Carolina. Each de sign must be sent to the undersigned by uly 1st, 1901, and must be accompa nied by specifications for its construc tion, and the real name of competitor, in a sealed envelope, and not appearing elsewhere, so that the name of comnpet itor will not be known until the award is made. Rejected designs will be returned upon application (with postage enclos ed) made within thirty days after the lose of competition. The Executive Committee of the Wo men's Department will be the judges of the competition. MRS. R. W. MEMMINGER, JR., Chr'n Coin. on Souvenir, 44 Pitt St., Charlestori, S. C. Another combination offier we are making which we hope will prove an inducement to make the people take an increased interest in keeping up with the trend of events. Listen! We will send you THE MANNING TIMES, The 'hrice-a-Week Edition of The New York World and The Farm and Home or $2.25 a year. Remember that for 2.25 we will send you all three of these papers. THE TIMES management means to let the rest of the State see that Clarendon county supports a fear less and up-to-date county paper, a pa per that voices the views of its editor. that has no boss and that has ever stood by the people. The New York World three times each week is one of the finest newspapers published in Amer ica. The F arm and Home is devoted to agricultural, mechanical and house hold interests and no farmer's family should be without it. We want subscribers to take advan tage of this magnificent offer we are making. CASTOR IA For Infants and~ Childrn. The Kind Youi Have Arwajs Deughi Bears the Signature of This is a day of expansion of thought as well as trade, and in order to put our self in position to be of service to oui patrons who desire to keep pace witi: the progress of the day, we have effect ed an arrangement by which we cat supply our patrons with McClures Mag azine and THE MANNING TIMES corn bined for $2.25 per year in advance McClures Magazine is one of the fines literary journals published, its standarc is high,and its corps of contributors are among the most able in the world. A reader of this Magazine is a searche: after knowledge, and we know of n< better or more profitable reading that can be found in the pages of this cele brated Magazine. No library is com plete without it. We offer McClure! Maazine and THE MANNING TIMES A Good "Liver"iaI Sometimes has a ui Bad Liver. * DR. THACHER'S Li1 the old reliable remedy. It r tonic to brace up the syst< Many have proved this Ihdlvrcnrnaad but received no et an medicine fron which I ee in recommending your m then I e ont 0 cents for a bot Write our Consult symptoms and receive THACHISR MDICINB Roses and Turks. "It would give a genuine and rell- t gious Turk a fit If he saw how little appreciation Americans show for the rose and what little reverence they. have for'it," spoke a florist as he wrap- 7 ped the foil about the stems of a bou tonniere. "The rose is beyond question the pret- E iest flower that blooms, and it was so 3 considered by the Turks many years ' before the conquest of Granada. There is a religious legend generally believed b in throughout Turkey that thr. red rose sprang from a drop of the great proph- D et Mohammed's blood. Everything beautiful in nature is ascribed to him. h The Turks, therefore, have great rev- 1 erence for the flower and allow it to bloom and die untouched, except on state occasions and for the purpose of making rosewater. "After the conquest by the Turks they would not worship in any church until the walls were cleansed and wash ed with rosewater and thus purified by the blood of the prophet. It is used on the body for-the same purpose. A Turk whose conscience is stung by some act or deed he has committed will caress and pay reverence to the rose to ap pease the wrath of the prophet and Allah. 0 "With these ideas inculcated in him 0 from youth It would shock him severe ly to see the pretty flower strewn In the path of a bridal couple, thrown on the public stage or banked up in hun dreds at a swell reception or party to b be crushed and spoiled in an evening.U b -Exchange. Sensible Conclusion. Two doctors once had a disagree- I ment-as the best of doctors sometimes will have--and lost their tempers. "I hesitate to say just what I think of you," angrily exclaimed one of the two, "for you have not many years to live! Consumption has marked you for a victim." "Oh, it has, has it? How do you know?" "By the 'clubbing' of your fingers," referring to the wasting away of the fipgers near where they join the. hands. A Good Clothing | Store ' Is where you get the right I sort of Clothes without dan ger of mistake. Our Clothes are or the right sort, and you c will appreciate their excel- s 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. L.DAVID & BRO S, W, Cur, king and Wentworth Sts., CHARLESTON. S. C. DELL & MATHIS, Engine Repairing, Wheelwrighting And All Manner of Iron Work. - II Special Attention Given to Hlorseshloig, We warrant satisfaction. Below Baptist Church, Manning, S. C. Bu.ggie, Wagonz, Road Crsand CazrriagesI With Neatness and Despatch -AT R. A. W HITE'S WHEELWRIGHT and BLACKSMITH SHOP. I repair Stoves, Pumps and run water pipes, or I will put down a new Pump cheap. If you need any soldering done, give t me a call. L AME. My horse is lame. Why? Because I did not have it shod by R. A. White, the man that puts on such neat shoes and makes horses travel with so much ease. We Make Them Look New. We are making a specialty of re painting old Buggies, Carriages, Road Carts and Wagons cheap. Come and see me. My prices will please you, and I guarantee all of my work. Shop on corner below R. M. Dean's. R.- A. W HIT E, MA NNING, S. C. J. s. WILSON. W- C. DURANT. \ILSON & DURANT, Altorneys and Counselors at Law, M ANNING, S. C. A Busy Liver iver that is attending to its work ing bile. ,A lazy liver doesn't do then comes that oppressed, #red, " feeling. Have you a headache, tche? Ae you constipated, bieus? Then your liver 2g up, try !ER AND BLOOD SYRUP ever fails. You can't get a better unand keep it in perfet condition. Have you? kidney trouble fortenyea. Itried I pubsed two package or tet "IV baeet. To can :bys33 .dC~a J0u.= Lousvffle A&s "r. Thas tver red Slood S tethr ar Xedda (Drj). or becaa send us 25 dents vaacgO 0-But ty your nw yo beath ation Department explaining yr -free confidentil advice. COMPANY, Chattanooga. TOM. Do I need to call your attentiin -to at?" "Perhaps not," retorted the other. But -do you know you bear the uninis ikable indication of an early death ourself ?" "Where, sir?' "In those hollows at the back of your eck near the head, where you can't e them. They denote a fatal lack of taty." "In that case," rejoined the one who ad spoken first, extending hi hand, we are foolish to quarreL Let us rescribe for ch other." They are still alive and apparently i excellent health.-Youth's Compan Awnings. In Big Lots. "To supply some of the big modem uildings with awnings," said an awn ig maker, "costs as much as It would ) build a moderate sized house. "Nt all of the great buildings require wnigs. Some of the very largest ave their principal exposure In such a rection that they are not needed, the n not shining on these windows dur g the hours the offices are occupied. md then, of course, there are great uIldings that do not require awnings a sonie sides, but need them on others r In courts, and so on. "Here, for Instance, Is a building with bout 1,000 windows, of which 600 or ereabout are supplied with awnings. "Another building I have in mind has bout 1,600 windows. I don't know ow many awnings they have there, ut If It Is supplied in the same propor on as the other that would give it bout 1,000 awfIngs. I dare say that, i fact, you would find in the city sin le buildings with more than a thou and awnings. "You see, just the awnings for some these great modern buildings amount ) quite an Item."-New York Sun. Pardonable Curiosity. "I have met," remarked the old man, but two sensible women in my life." The innocent maid gazed Into his ace and asked, "Who was the other voman?"-Chcago News. Kodol lyspepsia Cure Digests what you cat. It ficiallydgehefodandads ature in strengthening and rcon trctng the exhausted digestive or an. It is the latest discovereddigest-. at andtonic. N~o other preparation an approach It In effciency. It In tantly relieves and permanently cures )yspepsa, Indigestion, Beartburn, latulence, Sour StoacNausea, Ick Headache, Gastralgia,Cr and~l lotherresults of Imperfect dgsin Preared by E. C. DWITT *00.. Cb10U0. The R. B. Loryea Drug Store, ISAAc M. LoETEA. PROP. laranteed $900 Salr'y YEARLY. Men and women of good address to represent s, ome to travel appointin agents, other o roman tosecur plesat pemanet position; eral income and future. New, brilliant lines. V'rite at once. S'TAFFORD 5"REG8. 8 Chuxrch St., New Haven, Conan. J. S. BELL, pp. Central Hiotel, Mannh'ng, S. C. -DEALER IN: Bicycles and Bicycle Supplies. also repair wheels and guarantee my work. MACHINERY REPAIRING A SPECIAL.TY. All work entrusted to me will receive rompt attention either day or night. J. S. BELL. 'THE lank of Manning, MANNING, 8. C. Trasacts a general banking busi Prompt anud special attention given o depositors residing out of town. Deposits solicited. All collections have prompt atten Business hours from 9 a. mn. to 2 JOSEPH SPROTT, L LEVI, Cashier. President. BOARD OF DIRECTORS. r. W. MCLEOD, W. E. BBows~, s. M. NEISEN, JOSEPH SPBoTr A. LEvI. ADVICE AS TO PATENTABIIlTY FE Notc in "Inventb Age" c ,asnmoderte-N ofeting ~tfti5sscured. coa P n awer.as .C.e ATLANTIC COAST UlE, CHAME-oN, S. C., June 9, 1901. On and after this date the following passenger schedule will be m effect: NORTHEASTERN RAILROAD. South-Bouid. *35. *23. *58. Lv Florence, 3.00 A. 7.55 P. Lv Kingstree, 3.56 9.07 Lv Lanes, 4.11 9.27 5.55P. Ar Charleston, 5.40 11.15 7.40 North-Bound. '78. *32. *52. Lv Charleston, 6.45 A. 5.00 P. 7.00 A. Lv Lanes, 8.16 6.10 8.35 Lv Kingstree, 8.32 6.25 Ar Florence, 9.30 7.20 *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 Fayettefille--Short Line-and make close connection for all poiJts North. Trains on C. & D. R. I. leave Florence daily except Sunday 9.55 a m, arrive Dar. lington 10.28 a m, Cheraw, 11.40 a m, Wadeaboro 12.35 p m. Leave Florence daily except Sunday. 8.00 p m, arrive Da. lington, 8.25 p m, Hartsville 9.2' p m, Bennetsville 9.21 p m, Gibson 9.4 pm. Leave Florence Sunday only 9.55 a m, ar. rive Darlington 10.27, Hartsville 12.10. Leave Gibn daily except Sunday 6.35 a m, Bennettsville 6.59 a m, arrive Darling. ton 7.50 a m. Leave Hartsville daily ox cept Sunday 7.00 a m, arrive Darlington 7.45 a m, leave Darlington 8.55 a m, arrive Florence 9.20 a m. Leave Wadesboro daily except Sunday 4.25 p m, Cheraw 5.15 p m, Darlington 6.29 p m, arrive Florence 7 p m. Leave Hartsville Sunday only &15 a m Darlington 9.00 a m, arrive Florence 9.20 a m. J. 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. South-Bound. 55. 35. 52. Lv Wilmington,*3.45 P. Lv Marion, 6.40 Ar Florence, - 7.25 Lv Florence, *8.00 *3.00 A. Ar Sumter, 9.15 4.02 Lv Sumter, 9.15 *9.23 A. Ar Columbia, 10.40 10.55 No. 52 runs through from Charleston via Central R. B., leaving Charleston 700 am,, Lanes &35 a m, Mannng 9.17 a m. North-Bound. 54. 63. 32. Lv Columbia, *6.40 A. *4.15 P. Ar Sumter, 8.05 5.35 LT Sumter, 8.05 .*6.24 P. Ar Florence, 9.20 7.36 Lv Florence, 10.00 Lv Marion, 10.35 Ar Wilmington, 1.25 *Daily. No. 53 runs through to Charleston, S. . via Cential H. R., arriving 6.28 p m, Lanes, 7.11 p mi Charleston 8. Trains on Conway Branch leave - bourn 11.50 am, arrive Conway 1.30 p.m. returning leave Conway 340 p m, arrive Chadbou;n 5.20 p m, leave Chadbourn, 5.35 p m, arrive at. Elrod 8.0p , rteurning leave Elrod 8.40 a m, aruIve Chadbourn 11.25 a m. Daily except San-r day. J. H. KENLY, Gen'l Manager. T. M. EMERSON, Traffie Mabager. H. M. EMERSON, Gen'l PassAgent. CENTRAL I. H. OF SO. CAROLINA. No. 52 Lv Charleston, 7.00 A. . Lv Lanes, 8.37 " Lv Greeleyville, 8.50 Lv Foreston, 8.59 Lv Wilson's Mill, 9.07 Lv Manning, 8.17 Lv Alcoin, 9.23 " Lv Brogdon, 9.34 " -Lv W. 4S.Junet., 9.48 : " Lv Sumter, 9.51 Ar Columbia, 11.1,3" No.53 Lv Columbia, 3.10 P. K. Lv Sumter, 5.33 Lv W. &S. Junct. 4.36 " Lv Brogdon, 4.60 Lv Alcolu, 6.00 Lv Manning, 5.08 Lv Wilson's Mill, 5.20 " Lv Foreston. 5.28 - Lv Greeleyvile, 5.38 Ar Lanes, 6.53" Ar Charleston, 7.40" MANCHESTER & AUGUSTA H. H. No. 35. Lv Sumter, 4.02 A. K., Ar Creston, 4.51 " Ar Orangeburg, 6.14" Ar Denmark, 5.48 " Ar Augusta, 7.67 " No. 32 Lv Augusta, 2.20 P. K. Lv Denmark, 4.20 " Lv Orangeburg, 4.55 "0 Lv Creston, 5.19 " Ar Sumter, 6.09 " Trains 32 and 35 carry through Pullmnan palace buffet sleeping ears between New York an d Macon via Augusta.. USR Sl Smmo-ton B.'B. In effect Sunday, Juneth,1901. Between Sumter and Camden. .Mixed-Daily except Sunday. Southbound. Northbound. No. 69. No. 71. No. 70. No. 68. PM AM AM PM 4 50 10 00 Le.. Sumter ..Ar 9 00 420 4 52 10 02 N. W. Janctn 8 58 418 517 1022 ...Dalzell... 825 350 5 33 10 32 ...Borden... 8 00 325 6 00 10 50 ..lBemberts.. 7 40. 3 05 615 10 55 .. Ellerbee .. 730 255 635 1120 So~y Junctn 710 240 6 45 1130 Ar..Uamden..Le 700 239 (S 0 & G Er Depot) PM PM. AM PM Between Wilson's 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 ...N WJunction... 1227 217 .........Tindal........ 1155 2 30........Packsville~.. 11 30 300 .........Silver......... 1106 3 . ...Millard........ 5 350........Summerton......1010 4 30 .......... Davis......... 940 445 ........Jordan.... .... 927 5 15 Ar.Wilson's Mills.....Le 9 10 PM AE Between Millard and St. PauL. Southbound. Northbound. No. 73. No. 75. No. 72. No. 74. P M A M Stations A M Pit 3 10 10 15 La Millard Ar 10 45 3 30 3 15 10 25Ar St. Paul Le10 35 3 20 PM AM AM PM THOS. WILSON, President. W HE N YOU COE TO TOWN CALL AT WELLS' SHAVING SALOON Which is fited up within eye to the comfort of his customers. .... HAIR CUTTIN(* IN A LL STYLES, 8H AVIN(& A~ S Hi AM POOI NG Done with neatness an dispatch.. .. .. , A cordial invitation. is extended... J. L. WELLS. Manning Times Block.