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COME TO THE Mouzon Grocery. EARLY JUNE PEAS, FANCY SWEET CORN, BARTLETTE PEARS, CALIFORNIA PEACHES,: PINEAPPLES, TOMATOES. BEANS, Etc. All kinds of Flavorings. Candies, Crackers of all kinds, and fresh. BUCKWH AT, PANCAKE FLOUR, Catsups, Pickiles;, alinee- meat, very choice Apples in quart cans, Tapioca, Vermicelli, Postum Cereal, Cigars and Tobacco. The best of Groceries, and Vegeta bles of every varietv. The finest grades of Tea and Coffee, Housekeepers. give me a trial and I will please you. P. B. MOUZON. Geo1S.HacKer &Son MM*NUFACUIRR or .1 Doors, Sash, Blinds, _1oulding and Building Material, CHARLESTON, S. C. Sash Weights and Cords, Hardware and Faints. Window anld Fansi Sims a Saecialty. Do You Wat PMOET FITRING CLOTffHES? THEN COME OR SEND TO US. We have the best equipped Tailor ingx Establishment in the State. We handle Sa e rn Dik or, mos indsn h weuare, and iedyou CHARLESTON,- S. C. SoshsWigos SAVED CBYs Heard: and opain tsg. EDo o g Waante.Nt WeT heB Loret equpe STaor iWe Esabismnt tin th S.aFoe.g Asoppost prS.mPaent Ofnfico iWL AITD. C.0 Cr. Kig. FRANtGIRtSs, CH A NNINGO, -S. C. P hionei o. 6. iie oi zeATTORY ATe;Pluiy La, M AsNING, So. C.uat Atorey and Counselors aouLaw Th~yboe gTimneedsN JUL o P Pricetin.& sonable e. Te R. LO.ye PUD Y, Sor We ro~ty btinU.Su er S.d For . RnA-anInWrrinTeTmefin THE KIND OF FrAm~ To be used is very much a matter of taste. It is important, though, Cthat the frames set properly on the nose and at the right distance C from the eves: that the lenses be C perfectlY centered, and how are you to know when one is guess WE . . - NEVER GUESS. - Glasses Right, Good Sight." E. Ae Bultman, JEWELER AND OPTIMIAN. 17 S. Main St. - Sumter, S. C. 'PHONE 194. 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 SL.16 per doz. uffheiser-Pints, at .....90- per doz. Germania P. M.-Piats, 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. T I E CERMANIA BREWING GO., Charleston, S. C. Buggis, Wagons, Road Carta an! Carriags RE-PAIRED With Neatness and Despatsh -AT R. A. WHITE'S WHEELWRIGHT and BLACKSMITH SHOP. I repair Stoves, Pumps and run water pipes, or I will put dowa a new Pump cheap. If you need any soldering done, give me a call. L AME. My horse is lame. Why? Because I did ~not have is shod by R~. A. White, the man that puts on such neat shoes and makes horses travel with so much ease. We Make Themx 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 Rt. M. Dean's. R. A. WHE THE B8a of VENRIi. Transacts -a general bankieg busi ness. Prompt and special attention given 'to depositors residingout of4 town. Deposits solicited. All collections have prompt at ten tion. Business hours from 9 a. in. to 2 p. m. JOSEPH SPROTT, A. LEV1, Cashier. President. BoABD OF DIRECTO~s. . W. MCLEOD, 'W. E. Baewx, . M. NEISEN, Jos2PE SPEor A. LETI Things We Like Best Often Disagree With Us Because we overeat of them. hId gestionr follows. But Ihere's a way to eseape such consequences. A dose of a good digestant like Koddl will relive you at once. Your stomach Is simply too weak to digest what you eat. That's all indigestion is. Kodol digests the food without the stomac 's aid. Thus thbe stomach rests while h od s strength-. ened by wholesoje food. listing Is un necessary. Kodol digests any kind of good food. Strengthens and invigorates. Kodl Eakes Rich. Red Blood. The R. B. Loryea Drug Store. Jos. r. aEAIuE. J. B. LRsssNX. RHAME & LESESNE, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, MANNING, S. C. PARKER'S' ALnsAM -- e.M *mudbtde*te2 1j0D GOA TH.1E GOLUEN ITS SITE 18 NOW ONLY A VAST AND GRASSY TOMB. The Olee Splendid Portuguese city In India a Magnifloent Wildeiness. Its Mfaterpiece .a(Art the Tomb of St. FraAcia Xawier. It as said that during the prosper ous times of- the Portuguese In India you could not have seen a piece of iron in any merchant's .house, but all gold and silver. They coined linmense quan tities of the precious mnetals and used to make piecesrof workmanship in them for efportation. The very sol diers enriched themselves by com merce. But then at last came the inquiSitiOn, which celebrat.ed its terrible and deadly rites with more fervor and vehemence at Goa than in any-other place. Reli gious persecution, pestilence and wars with the Dutch, disturbances arising. from an unsettled government, and, above all, the slow but. sure wor-kings of the shortsighted policy of the Portu guese in intermarrying and Identifying themnselves with the Hindoos of the lowest caste, made her fall as rapid as her rise was sudden and prodigious. In less than a century and a half aft er BaGama had lagded on the Indian shore the splendor ofGoa -had departed forever. The inhabitants fled .before the deadly fever which soon fastened upon the devoted precincts of the city, and In 1758 the viceroy transferred his headquarters from the ancient capital to Parjina, about eight miles distant Soon afterward the religious orders were expelled, leaving their -magnif cent convents and churches all but ut ferly deserted, and the inquisIton wS suppressed upon -the recommendation of the British government The place is now a grass grown wil derness. But still the firm and well built causeways of this olden city and its moldering splendors are reminiscent of echoing pageants and the tramp of armies which once sounded there. As we tread the ancient wharf, a long, broad road, ined with a double row of trees and faced with-stone, a more sug gestive scene of desolation can haudly be eoneei-ved. Everything around teems with melancholy associations, the very rustlings of the trees and murmur of the waves sound like a dirge for the de parted grandeur of a city. Towering above a mass of ruins a solitary gateway flanks the entrance to the Strada Diretta, tie Straight street, so called because almost all the streets in old Goa are laid out In cur vinear form. ft was through this portal surmounted by the figures of St Catherine and Vasco da Gama that the newly appointed viceroys of Goa passed in triumphal procession to the alace. Beyond the gate a level road, en ta populous thoroughfare, leads to the Terra di Sabalo. a large square front ing the Primacial, or Cathedral -of St. Catherine, who became the patron saint of Goa when the place was cap tured by Albuquerque on the dgy of her festivaL Groves of cocoanut-ipalns and mango topes now incumber the ground once covered by troops of -o. The wealth, the busy life and the lux ury of the old place are dead. Kites and cobras infest the crumbling halls which once resounded with the ban quet and the dance, aund naught but a few old monks and nuns keeps vigil amid its desolation today. But Gon possesses one treasure of great interest This is the tomb of Francis Xavier, the great Jesuit mis sionary to the east It is to be found in the Church ofBon Jesus. It is amas terpiece of art which Is lost to all but the casual visitors to old Goa. Som,e hae ventured to suggest that no other mausoleum in India or even in Asia ex cept the Taj Mahal can equal It It is built of rich marble of variegated col -ors. The lowest stage Is of red and purple jasper and Carrara alabaster adorned with statuettes and cherubs. 'he middle stage Is of green and yellow jasper decorated with beautiful bronze plates representing Incidents in the life of the saint. The highest of the three stages Is surrounded by a lovely rail ng of red jasper rarked with white pots, the adornments being figures of angela, while its middle portion Is graced with columns elegantly carved, whose intervening spaces are surmount d by arches showing further incidents in thelifeof thesaint The frieses of the four lateral columns are of black tone and the plinths of yellow jasper. urmounting this las~t stage lies the coffn overlaid with silver, a gorgeous receptacle embellished with many ex quisite specimens of relief work. Lumps of silver depene1ng around com plete the adornment of the shrine. It Is a worthy relic of Goa's departed glo The bell of the Augustinian convent still rings forth its vesper peal above this old city of ghosts, and it is impos sible to forget the effect of the deep, mournful notes as they strike dpen the ear. Kever was heard a more beautiful or more, sadly musical summons than that which calls in vain from the tower of the Augustinians to the forsaken and solitary city. It Is all sunimed up in the eloquent apostrophe of Sherer: "Goa the golden exists no more; Goa, where the aged Da Gamas closed his glorious life; Go, where Ile immortal Camoens-sang and sufered. It is now but a vast and grassy tomb, and* it seems as If Its thin and gloomy population ef priests and friars were only spared to chant re quiems for its departed souls."-t. mes Gazette. A Rigid Duteh Latw. More than 200 years ago the Dutch rulers of Ceylon. anxious to retain their monopoly of~ the precions splee for which that island is famous, enacted a law which made It a capital offense to buy or sell the wild jungle cinnamon. then the only sort known. The plants, wherever found. were held to be the property of the state. If a shrub chanced to spring up in a man's door yard, he could neither destroy nor use it under severe penalties. Things are Ihappily different now a A Fatal Mix. Cholly-I would have bought a box of candy this evening, Gladys, only you're training for a basketball game, you know, and Indignant Maiden--'m not doing any thing of the sort! Cliolly (turning pale)-Then I've got my girls mixedl-Chicago Tribune. The-first Iee cream ever sold as a reg ular article of commerce was shIpped by a Boston merchant named Tudor in 1805. He sent a load to Martinique. ase tae expuiS1o3. Ev-l'm so sorry! wsafospr adise-Smart Set. It Is a great deal easier to teach an old dog new tricks than it is -to ma-ke TEA ROOT CARVNGS. Fantastie Wooden Objects That Are Fashioned In the Orient. The fantastic wooden objects which come from the far cast and are known as tea root carvings hire long been the basis of a prosperous industry In the populous city of Fuchau. Strictly speaking, the name is a misnomer. Some of the carvings ard made from old tea roots and tea trunks, but the vast majority, nine-tenths at least, are made from the roots and trunks of h'ardwood trees. The carvings are almost invariably made in two parts,.a pedestal and one or more human figures fitted to -the -lat ter by pegs and holes. The former is made from a root and the latter from a trunk. 'She roots are selected with con siderable care. They must be compara tively free from dry rot, decay and worm holes and must possess a rude symmetry. They are cleaned, scrub bed and scraped and sawed to about the desired size; then the artist with chisel, gouge, knife and pinchers re moves rootlets and roots until the fig ure is completed. The simplest design is a three legged pedestal, of which 1he base is a rough cylinder of wens and knobs. Any num ber of legs may be used. A curious specimen seen by the writer in the Grand hotel, Yokohama, has ity legs, while the body has been so treated as to suggest a horny centiped. A second type of pedestal is the mushroom. A third type Is an animal form, such as fhe buffalo, tiger, unicorn, elephant or dragon. Nearly always the chisel Is guided by humor or satire. If it be a saint who is depicted, the look of piety or suffer ing is replaced by a leer or drunken grimace; if it be a warrIc, every limb and muscle Is molded so as to suggest decrepitude or a desire to run away. Quang Ti, the Invincible soldier prince, is frequently portrayed stand ing on one leg, with the other extended like a professional rope balancer.-New York Post. WATERFALLS IN JAPAN. They Are Almost Countless and Are Used as shrines. The waterfalls of Japan are almost countless. There is one at every turn, and where there was not one In the beginning the Japs hare made one, for it is their passion. Every little garden has a fall or two, and It would not be considered a garden at all without It There are many very beautiful ones In various parts of the country, and they are all of them shrines visited. by thUaDds of pfflgelms.eve7.yea.- They do not pray to them as to a statue of Buddha, but they first pass up a little paper prayer on a convenient rock and then sit down In rapt attention and gaze at-the falling water for hotgr tak ing an occasional cup of tea at a litte teahouse which always stands close ai band. The Japs -are great at making pil grimages .anyway. When a man has reached the age of forty-five, he is sup posed to have raised a family which will In the future take care of him. About the first thing he does on retr ig Is to start on a series of pilgrimages Sometmes he joins a band of fellow pilgrims, or, if comparatively wealthy e sometimes takes his wife and a mi nor child and makes the plgrimaages by himse'lf. These pilgrim bands can al ways be seen mpving about the coun try. They carry little banners with the name of their city and district marked on them, and when they have received good entertainment at a teahouse oz hotel they hang one of their banners up In a conspicuous plate as a testimonial Often a baind of pilgrims will travel from one end of the country to the oth er, visiting every temple and waterfall In the land. STREET CRiES- IN CAIRO. Sonds an2d Voices That Traveler" Hear In the Egyptian City. Take a chair outside a busy cafe near the market place and tram center and watch street life. There are ne hungry men, no starving, pinched child faces, no finger worn mofhers, for this is a land of plenty, and the people's wants are ,few and simple. Thus sun shine and laughter spray a welcome fragrance over the novelty and ro mance of the gay city's streets. Here is a street melodist twanging a monster one stringed "something" and accom paniedl by a nose ringed girl who taps deftly on a species- of tambourine, whie bystanders ejaculate "Allah, al Iah!"-the Arabfe word for applause. If not quite in accord with your preju dices concerneg music, well, maalaish (never mind), it is not nearly so dis tracting as a street corner at home, and they will go away If you tell them to. The baboon, the donkey and boy are in evidence, with a score of perforing tricks that are very original and cer tainly funny, and you console yourself with the hope of a minimum~ of cruelty in the training. A fruit seller, basket on head, with luscious grapes andl figs, saunters by, singing in a quaint minor: "O grapes, swet grapes, that are larger tharn doves'' eggs and sweeter than new cream! 0 angels' food, delicious figs, bursting with honey, restorers of health!" There is a drink seller, bent under the weight of the odd shaped jar slung over his shoulder, a lump of ice projecting from its mouth, conjuring~ custom i a similar strain as he struts up and down, making the air resound with the rhythmical clap clap of twc brarn saucers: "0 refreshment of the weary! 0 quencher of parched lips! O) blessing of heaven!" Aother street cry which may be heard in the main street of Abbassleh, a suburb, contains the following entie ig announcement: "Tomorrow, 0 peo ple, Iam gong tokill a caiel! The doctor 'says, It 18 young and healthy. Oh, Its flesh will be tender as the quail and juicy as lamb. Its price is but 14A plasters (7 cents) a pound. Do you love the sweet flesh of the camel? Then come early and be satisfied." Not the least picturesque figures in the streets arp the city police, in their neat white drill and red tarbouches in summer and blue serge in winter. 'The Gravedigger. A gravedigger, walking in the.streets the other day, chanced to turn and no iced two doctors walking behind him. He stopped till they passed and then followed on behind them. "And why this?" said they. "I know my place in the procession," returned he. A Beautiful BuDl. An Irish editor being, unable to obtain a sufficiency of -news for his daily pa per, made the following, extraordinary announcement: "Owing to an unusual res re of matter we are today oblig ed tleave several columns blank." English as she Is Spoke. Tourist-Say, my good fellow. am ] n the right road to the'town? Native (after a pause)-Ya-as, stran ger, but I reckon you're goin' in thE I wron diertshnn.---TPnincett'S. I 16HiDBEIlND T HE R ULE. One of Horace .reele .Qrders-The Helped Htp New.Eitor. As .n editor Rouace-Geeley had b come weary of the censtant repetitio of the word "the"- in pening sentence One issue of hiapaper in particular 0 asperated him. Almost every item ba its opening paragraph begin wit "the." This lack of judgment on ti part of his wrtters in the choice < wordszecelved attention. Greeley wroW a note This notice be requested to - posted:1nthe editorial room and cause copies of it to be sent to correspon< ents. The order read: "Under no circumstances must tl word 'the' be used in the opening ( subsequent paragraphs of a news a; ticle. In sentences within a paragrap it will be tolerated If used with mO( eration. If you cannot write a panrT graph without 'the' to open it, omit." One day shortly after the issuance < his new rule Greeley entered the et itorial room in a fury. "How is it that we have nothing I today's paper regarding Holland's a titude toward the policy of the northl he asked of his editor who had chari of the foreign news. This editor was aware that be he omitted an Important news Item whic at the time he considered as unimpo: tant. But he was resourceful. "Your rules and orders are positiv Mr. Greeley, are they not?" asked t: editor. "Ceiny!" sheted the famot scribbler. . "Then tell me iow I could have usE 'The Hague' for the date line In tl joiland dispatch without violatir your positive -der." Mqr. Greeley was beaten,. hut he mu teed, '-"J yl -dlbows ceuld ause jud4 ment, these would be no need -' rules.." PONME6 AND COBS. How; the_ ma-tiaekWnPs Detween tb Tor Are - Deftzed. A correspondent writes, says - t1 Badminton Magazine, to ask me whi a "pony" -esat--the pony of the-be ting ;ggg e~etersto the animaL T dictioaes-whiclhbe has consulted te him .=o -.mere tham-that "a pony" Is' little bosse," ankd he wants to kno where the pony ends and the hor begins. The term is. of course, vez loosely used. At Newmarket, whei one might expect accurate definition the trainers seem to call all sorts I animals ponies. "I will send rout your-pony at 8 o'clock," is a familia phrase to me, and In two cases It hA always portended the arrival of an ar mal.of quite 14.2. I have searched f, authorities for some time past al only accidentally came upon one t! other. day. A pony, I And It stated, strictly appUcable to an animal und< 13 hands. Above 13 and up to 18.8 t1 creature should be known as a gall way, and over 13.8 it becomes a hors This, however, is not the modern inte pretation, though when the phraseolog Was altered I do not know. Accorih to the Hurlingham rules of polo, "t] height of ponies shall not exceed bands 2 Inches," and such an anime~ aecording to my old time authorit would be quite a full sized horse. Oi cannot, of course, go against the Hu lngham nomaenclatuire, but I shou be inclIned to say that in general pe lance anything 'under 14 hands is pony. I am glad my correspondent-C not ask for an exact dedinition of "cob," for I could do no better ths suggest that a thickset pony fro: about 13.3 to 14.2 would Comne undi the head. The term "cobby," at a rate, has a significance of its own. MAN'S LITTLE TOE. Scientists Declare That It is Doome to an Early End.. Eminent scientists assert that ti small toe of the human foot will I crowded out of existence by the end< the present century. Such is the vie of chiropodists generally and of phys clans who have given the matter mo3 than passing consideration, says ti Philadelphia Press. Just as, according to Darwin, the ta was crowded out of the human bon skeleton many ages back because It ha no useful functions to perform, just the vermiform appendix, the only a: parent function of which Is to necess tate dangerous and expensive open tins, will eventually find no place human anatomy, so, according to pre ent indications, the littlejoe must ult mately disappear aIgogether. Whether or not the-big 40e Is all the is needed in waiagand reming is question whieh has net yet been sati factorily answered, but the fact ri mains that athletic instrueters an coaches have txniverseaily-striVen-to di velop the big toe at the expense of tU others in the training of fast runnel and football players, and~to that en the shoes have- been made so narro that any possibiity of using the lit toe has been precludedL Between the modern method of wall ing and the -wead~ng of tight fittin shoes the little toe is -doomed- to an ea ly end. Her Blessing. There is always a possibility that ti person whom, we regard as a. propi object . for sympathy may look upc himself In another light This interes Ing and Instructive surprise ofte awaits the well meaning bearer of col dolence. When Mrs. Hastings learned that h< old friend, Mrs. Warren, had becon "stun deef," she went with a long fa< to see her. "It must be an awful cross, Laviny, she wrote on the slate which Mrs. Wal ren presented to her as soon as she we seated. "'Tain't either!" snapped the afflic d one, who, though deaf, was by n means dumb. "Folks that have gC anything to say can write it on thi slate, and Henry Warren, that's ha to pt. a curb on his tongue for uj ward o' thirty years on account of t high temper he took from his mother folks, is now able to say anything b likes and no feelings hurt. I count m deafness a real blessing. How's yot rheumatism?7" scarce Eggs. The eggs of some common birdsc the present day have never been founi There is the robin snipe; its eggs hav never been seen. An English zoologlh kept a man going up and down tU coast of Labrador for weeks purpose] to get a robin snipe's egg, but It was I vain. The bird Is known by thousand of people, but it breeds so far nort and so remote from any civilizatic that no scientifie observer can ever g< to Its nest ere the young are hatche and have taken to wing. The frigal bird that is so commonly seen at SE on the Pacific and off the West Indie is such a solitary bird and Is so seldo seen In its nest during the hours of da: ight that its egg is rare. It seem strange, but the eggs of so~ well know a bird as the sandpiper have nevE en fmunad are ahnost priceless. MISSISSIPPI RUoSTi ABOUUTS. They Are Tra.veleza, omads, Auto erat, Men of Leisure. The black steamboat roustabout of the Mississippi is as much part and parcel of the river as is the water and quite as necessary. There is an tIn d pression that the roustaboit is a much h abused individual, an inclination to e class him along with the slavelike cir ieus hand. This is wholly wrong. The roustabout is traveler, nomad, auto e crat, man of leisure. He Is little seen d on the upper river, but in St. Louis, - Memphis and Orleans there are enough of him to man five times as many ,e boats as touch at those ports. Yet r lower river packets have trouble in shipping full crews of the blacks. They h are compelled to ship for each trip sep arately, because it does not please the rouster to take more than one trip in a month. The balance of the time he plays gentleman of affluence. On the. Memphis levee I listened to a group of the brawny-fellows as they lolled with n in the shade of a freight pile. Not one t- was there who had not visited at some time every point in the Mississippi val e ley at which the steanoat calls. They d were equally at home in Pittsburg or d Orleans, Little'Rock or Chattanooga. In summer the rousters are fairly willing to work, though they exercise fine discrimination in the matter of boats, but in the fall, when steamers are plentiful and labor scarce, they become exceeding coy. They do not s gather around the hiring mate then. He has to -come to them. They regard d coldly the average monthly wase. e They ask for$60 and even for.G,Aad 9 they get it. If they hold a gg against the mate of a boat they 4e! mand his discharge and get that-too. But the moment, summer or winter, r that the roustabout steps upon a steam er's forecastle his hots- of ease are done. He works day and- gt..:adrt of work no white man c- sta lor even twelve hours. He oleeps:M-odd e minutes between landings . wled on deck or cotton bale. He weam-AMtm e usually-trousers and shoes and- inds t them burdensome. He lays aside bs t- powers of :sight and reasoiteg, 8e09W te only ears and muscles -and becoVnes a powerful machine, answering to the a slightest Inclination of a mate's will. Willis Gibson in -Scribner's. SOUTHERN SUPERSTITIONS. f If you kill frogs, youreows will "go 1 d dry." r Tickling a baby win cause the child is to stutter. J- To throw hair combings out of the >r window is bad luck. - tld To thankl a person for combing your te hair will bring bad luck. is No person. who. touchea.a dead body r' will be haunted by its-spirit e Cut a dog's "dew elaws" and it will D not die from poisonous snake bite. e. To kill a ghost it must be hot 1ith r- a bullet made of a silver quarter dollar. To dream of a live snake means ene -mies at large; of a dead snake enemies e4 M or poerles To dream of unbroken egs signines -trouble to come; If the eggs are broken, the trouble Is past. r- If you boast of your good health, 1ppunid wood immediately with your dst Sor yonw wil become sick. a To eat a baby's finger nails will de d form It. If the child is a month old, It a milcae it to have fits, eu Tolalow a child to l'ook into a mirror n :beforeit-ls~amonth old will cause it to ar hbavetroubleIn teething. LO A child wll have a nature and dispo s?ioasimilar tethose of the person who flrst'takes It-out of doors. To hear a screech owl is bad luck. To prevent hearing its cry turn the ? poekets. inside. out and set the shoe soles upward.. 0 A struggle Wity. English. af American tourists abroad often comn v ment upon the literal translation- into I English of notices In foreign languages. - The well meant efforts of landlords and t others to convey in thelanlguageof the visitor the meaning of the native often il produce laughable results. 7 A Washington citizen found this no d tice posted in his room in an Alpine *s hotel: >"Misters, the venerable voyagers are - earnestly requested not to take .clothes of the bed to see the sun rise for the n color changes."-Washingtion. Star. i- Our Paper Money. The man who is ever reayto-:et on tt anything said suddenly to~ grasp of a menmbers of the club, "I'lltbetiacaaeWof catc'hup to a bottle of curry-pw t thdt there Isn't a maada thepsztythz d can name the denominst*ens of Untd States paper, money." All lostgAnd:3U e were abashed when- he zet aM s $2, $5, $10, $20, $50, $100, $500, $1,000, d $5,000 and $10,000. Most men ere:un accustomed to handing notes~ save .e $100, andl few ever saw one of.i000. -New York Press. g Food Alters .&nanmau - It Is surprising howrerumtncs-l ter animals. The savages of the Ama zon region feed the common green .par rot for generations with the fatof cer e tan fishes, thus causinlgit tobecomo r beautifully variegated witth red and. n yellow feathers. In like manner the t natives of the Malay archipelago, by a process of fejeding, change the talka t ive lory into the gorgeous king lory. rThe Mannarer Reaizes It. e "There is something elevating in mu e sic," said the artist. "Yes,", answered the manager. "Mu sic certainly has the effect of stimu-~ l ating lofty ideals as to salary."--Wash 'e ington Star. 0 IReduced Rates Via Atlantic Coast Line. t Savannah, Ga. - Southern Baptist t Convention and Auxiliary Societies. d Tickets on sale from all points at one Sfare for round trip, plus 25 cents, May e 4th to 7th. inclusive. Final limit May s 20th, 1903. 'An extension of the final e limit until June 1st may be obtained by deposit of tickets with joint agent at Savannah on payment of a fee of 50 ets. rNew Orleans,' La.--United Confeder ate Veterans' Reunion. Tickets on sale May 16 to 21, inclusive. Final limit May 24, 1903. An extension of f final limit to June 15 may be obtained L by deposit of tickets with joint agent, eat New Orleanson pa-yment of a fea of '50 cents. Rate,.one cent per mile. " Call on ticket agents for exact rates .i e and any other information aud see that our tickets read via the Atlantic Coast 'Line. W. J1. CRAIG, . a A pproved: Gen'l Pass. Agt. - i H. M. EMIERSON, Traffic Manager. SCASTOR IA sFor Infants and Children. The Kind You Hare Alwaps Bought Bears the - Sionatnre of Will sour the sweetest disposition and transform the most even tempered, lov able nature into a cross-grained and irritable individual. If impatience or fault-finding are ever ecusable it is when the body is It is truly discouraging to find after nonths of diligent and faithful use of external remedies that the place remains as defiant, angry and offensive as ever. Every chronic sore, no atter on what part of the body it comes, is an evidence of some previous ionstitutional or organic trouble, and that the dregs of these diseases remain in the system; or, itmay be that some long hidden poison-perhaps ancer-has come to the surface and begun its destructive work. The blood must bepurified before the sore will fill up with healthyflesh md the skin regains its natural color. It is through the circulation that the acrid, corroding auids are carried to the sore or ulcer and keep it [rritated and inlnmed. S. S. S. will purify and Invigorate the stagnant blood when all sediment-or Ather hurtful materials are washed out, fresh rich blood is carried to the Useased parts, new tissues form, and the decaying flesh begins to have a healthy and natural look; the discharge ceases and the sore heals. Several years ago, =7 wif had a se- S. S. S. is the onlyblood purifier ree sore We and was te ted by the that is guaranteed entirely vege bet physigians but received no benefit. table. It builds up the blood and Dr.raggixt advised her to try S. S. S., tones up the general system as no which she did. Fourteen bottles cured other medicine does. If you have her and she has been w91l ever since. T. 3. n RAOL 22 Canal st' a sore of any kind, writeus and get Cohoes, N'. Y. the advice of experienced and filledphysicians for which no charge is made. Book on Blood and Skin Diseases free. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ga. WE ARE IN THE RACE: W. P. HAWKINS & CO. have now on hand and in stock the best lot of HORSES & MULES 'hat has ever been brought to this market and will continue to receive others the market demands. Also a. very choice lot of BUGGIES (OPEN AND TOP) !om the best manufacturers in the South and West. Large and varied line of )ouble and Single, to suit the same. We also carry in stock the Celebrated Piedmont Wagons, 'rom 1* to lt Axle," with gear to suit the same. We have a number of GR AIN DRILLS on hand. The "Farmer's Favorite,"y WIhich is the best made, and would-be glad to supply our.farmers. Now is the ime, to plant and be sure of a good stand that will withstand the severest win ,or. Come and see us right now and get what you want. W. P. HAWKINS &. 0. AROMKIA PORTLAND CEMET 10 CHARLESTON. S. C. sol1e sen1ing A.gen2ts KIT1 LTLI AN Fire Brick, Fire Tile, Arch Brick, Bull-Head and All Special Tiles. ALSO FINEST PREPARED FIRE CLAY. arload Lots. Less Than Carload lots. Watches and Jewelry. I waatmy friends and the public generally to know that when in need of a Wedding, Birthday or Christmas Present, Chat in the.future, as well as the past, I am prepared to supply them. My lineof Natches- Clocks Sterling Silver Diamonds Jewelry Cut Glass Fine China Wedgewood Spectacles and Eye Glasses a complete, and it will afford me pleasure to show them. Special and prompt attention given to all Repairing in my line t prices to foit the tunes. ktantic Coast Line Di l~ ~~~ U SUMTER. Watch Inspector. L W . FOLSOM, "US.C. N QUGHFAPEofIKtVEL efoween the N0RTH AND S OU Florida-Cuba. A passenger servicelunexcelled foi luxury and comfort,equipped with the. latest Pullman Dining, Sleeping and.Thoroughfare.Cars. For rates, schedule, maps or any informa tion, write to WM. J. CRAIG, General Passenger Agent, Wilmington, N. C. n.OF~ETrT's Cares Clielera- infa~Ii, Children of Any Ae. vT. __ gpg jpAdS Digestion, egatr P ___ A~ (5TdiEEWOthe Bowels, Sfrnte 0 CStS Oliyf 75 00a1 2DiggISaS, TEETING EASY. O r iuai 2 cents to C. J3. MOFFETT. M. D.. ST. LOUWS, Mf PLRY~ BR Zo.2.20.IN Y ltdio 7our miyhacflICareontueTET Jtho-baywe oarbarz on nat sapeetv W of ol or wee hso iT O I a ou1I cllgToHE ndTIofetMe ,nSob vcyOu ttFdFCFrb rm