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1%~ + + !CHRISTIllS! +++44++*++++++++++++++++++ WITH A COMPLETE STOCK OF ISeasonable and Valuable Gifts. A auseful present is more sensible than an ornamental __one, and in SOur Dry Goods Department Will be found many of these, a few of which we will 'amention: SRugs, Art Squares, Lap Robes, Table ==Cloths, Towels, Napkins, a hand- ~ some Coat or Fur, Kid Gloves, Neck Pieces, Handkerchiefs, Mufflers, Belts, or a Boxj of Shamrock Hosiery, In our Clothing Department yon will find a SCOMPETE LINE OF ORCOATS For old, young and middle age, Neckwear in endless va Sriety, Sweaters for Men and Boys, Suits for the little fel Slows from $1 to $5, suits for the medium size from $2 to $10, suits for the old folks from $5 to $1A with Hats and shoes to suit all sizes. Therare few if any places in which all your wants can be so nearly supplied as here. G REAT CLEAR ANCE SAI Christmas is at hand and New Year is coming. We have h a splendid fall trade and thank our many friends for their liber: patona e o e.,K Govs Woe have oo large a stock to carry over for next year, and i order to reduce our stock we will have a SPECIAL C2LEARANC SALE Commencing Monday, Dec. 2 AND Ending Saturday, Jan. 2, 1904 Everything in our store will be sold at reduced prices. V have too many things to enumerate and quote prices on n tl limited space of a newspaper; the best way is for you to come our store and examine the goods before you find out the low pric wes sullit asies W ising s ytou all a happy Christmas and a merry New Yen we are always at your services. S. L.KANF N ext to Mutual Dry Goods Company. Imnprove Your Homes I am making a specialty this season of puitting within reach the material make the HOll ES ATTRACTIVE, and thereby increase the value of proper1 The New Era Ready Mnixed Pair weighs 18 pounds to the gallon and is noted for its durability and for the v amount of space it will cover. TILE HLAMMAR BRAND is another fine Paint, 1 gallon of Oil added, makes 2 gallons of veryg;hea P aint. I want'my customers to use these Paints and I am in position to gl tmy prce on Floor and Lubricating OILS, VARNISHES, etc. ET_ \rOOD WIE FENCING For pastures and yards the best on the market. I huy by car ioaid and will s Ale on hace .the best Rubber and Canvass Belting and Machinery Si plMy~ store is headquarters for STOVES. HARDWARE. CUTLERY, HA NE'SS and SADDLERY. CARRL\GE and WAGON MATIAL. ai 51PORTSMEN SU7PPLIES. When y.ou wa'nt any thing in my line come to see or wvrite to. L. G. DURANT, Startling Evidence. Frehii testimony in great quantity is constintly coming in, declaring Dr. Wi Kink's New Discovery for Consumption Coughs and Colds to be unequaled. A - recent expression from T. J.McFarland Bentorville. Va., serves as example. He writes: "I had bronchitis for three a Years and doctored all the time without "N being benetited. Theu I began taking so, Dr. Kin's New Discovery, and a few shi E bottles wholly cured me." Equally ef- si fective in curing all lung and throat rig troubles, consumption, pneumonia and Ta Grip. Guaranteed by The R. BU.Loryea tio: = Drug Store. Trial bottles free, regular u = sizes 5Oc and $100. pr< ANIMALS WITH HANDS. The use of the Paws In Conveying Food to the Mouth. Kangaroos use their hands very readily to hold fcod in and to put it to their mouths. As their fore legs are so sa short that they have to browse In a re 'o stooping position, they seem pleased when able to secure a large bunch of let cabbage or other vegetable provender l and to hold it In their bands to eat. Sometimes the young kangaroo, look ing out of the pouch, catches one or two of the leaves which tlhe old one wi drops, and the pair may be seen each ha nibbling at the salad held in their do bands, one, so to speak, "one floor' Sul above the other. In "Alice In Wonder- ag land" the lizard' is always making Vis notes on a slate and then trying to rub e them out again with his fingers. Many the lizards' feet are so like hands that it fg is rather surprising that they are only used for running and climbing. But 011 that is the main purpose to which SO' lizards apply them. The slow, dellb- Sol erate clasping and unclasping of a me chameleon's feet look like the move- ye: ments which the hanas of a sleep- be = walker might make were he trying to of = creep down the banisters. The chame- th leon's are almost deformed hands, yet fo] they have a certain superficial resem- sy: blance to the feet of the parrots, which ho more than other birds use the foot for ex3 many of the purposes of a hand when it I feeding. rol To see many of the smaller rodents- is ground squirrels, prairie dogs and mar- Dc mots-hold their food, usually in both na1 paws, is to learn a lesson in the dex terous use of hands without thumbs. Rats and mice do not, - as a rule, "clinch" what they hold, but merely T support it in their paws, the move ments being much less human than ' they appear. Nothing more readily sug- ga1 gests the momentary impression that fal a pretty little monkey is remotely "a bei man and a brother" than when he the stretches out his neat little palm, fin- fai gers and thumb, and with all the move- th ments proper to the civilized mode of th( greeting insists on shaking hands. But ses no one feels in the least inclined to Qu grasp the clawed digits of any of the I rodents which use their paws to hold Ju: food. They are only "holders," not Le hands.-London Spectator. fir fel SECRETS OF SUCCESS. toc frc Push, cald the button. the Never be led, said the pencil. I Take pains, said the window. 5k Always keep cool, said the ice. ph Be up to date, 'said the calendar. - Do business on tick, said the clock. rei Never lose your head, said the barrel. wI Never do anything of'hand, said the grn Eglove. hir Doing a driving business, said the to hammer. kel Be sharp in all your dealings, said hil !the knife. tin -Trust to your stars for success, said the night ~Spend much time in refection, said pr tor gmirror. .u'ake much of small things, said the ha Stive to make a good impression. said the seal-.r Find a good thing and stick to it, said the glue. en: Turn all things to your advantage, so< said the lathe.et Make the most of your goed points, ed dsaid the compass.-Pittsburg lDispatch. oth ni He had benaway on a luiess tripTi E for quite a long time and had brought his wife a handsome fan upon his re-. turn. I "You're just perfectly lovely, Fred," m: 7 she said. "It's the daintiest and most beautiful fan I ever saw." "I'm glad you like it," he returned, er with evident gratification. en. ."How could I help liking anything so s *pretty?" she asked, and then she added r with a sigh. "I only wish I could carry tic it some time."ln le"Why can't you?" he demanded. t"No gown to go with it," she answer E ed promptly. "'There ought to be a gown to match or at least one that toi r, wouldna't lock shabby beside it if" She got the gown. Hie kicked him self for two days and ever thereafter bought fans to match what she already had.-New York Times. SRuneiman and Henley. It is related that shortly after Runcir man, the well known writer on seafar Sers and smugglers and poachers, had g bitterly fallen out with W. E. Henley he lay dying in London. To Henley in Edinburgh, lame and ill, came an in-s direct message that Runciman believed - that If Henley could come and look on a him he would get welL It was a dy-a1 ing man's whimsy, but Henley took the train from Edinburgh and arrived in London to find his friend dead. A Modern Instance. e0 "In some circles of ancient magnifi- J cence," said the pedantic person, "It : was customary to have a skeleton at t the feat."~ so ,."We follow that custom at our house," answered Mr. Meekton. "We have a turkey one meal and the skele tton for the next four."-Exchange. St Tipping the Seales. "Confound it!" growled Closeman. "I dropped a dime in that weighing ma~ chine instead of a penny." SI "Ha. hal" chuckled his buffoon a friend. "I guess that's when you tip- a ped the scales."-Philadelphia Record.m A Satistring Portrait.b eMr. Roxe--This portrait doesn't look rt like my wife at alL. Artist--I know It doesn't, but it looks as she thinks she looks.-Judge. So strong Is Bank of England note h elI paper that a single sheet will lift a weight of 100 oud.a R- The ILone Star State. c ntd Down in Texas at Yoakum is a~ bi~ dry ugoods firm of which Mr. S. M. Hal- e Ir is the head. Mr. Haller on one of P his trips East to buy goods said to a friend who was with him in the palace car, "Here. take one of these Little Early Risers unca retiring and you will p: be up early 'in the morning feeling ti good." For the "dark brown" taste, headache and that logy feelingDeWitt's e Little Early Risers are the best, pills to use. Sold by The R. 13. Lorycn Drug d< Sn . IEDIT DUE TO SUMEOUY lere Did We Get the Right te Borrow In Mathematiex? Where did we get the right to bor r in mathematies?" asked a nan o takes an interest in curious things. le always pay back-a thing we netimes fail to do in other relation ps in life-but where did we get the ht to borrow in the first instance? ke a simple llustration in aubtrac a: The teacher will tell the r.upil to >tract 4,322 from 0.421. We put the iblem down after this fashion: 6.421 4.22 2.099 re we have the problem and the re t. We know that we cannot say -o from one.' So we borrow one and r 'two from eleven.' and we get the ult 'nine.' We pay back prowptly. - instead of saying ;:o from two ves nothing,' we say 'three from Dive leaves nine.' I*ut by what au xrity do we say tl!.d When did we cover that this method would give correct mathematical results? That's at I would like to know. Here we re one of the problems which the :trine of evolution may deal with. I )pose some old fellow in the long found that it was necessary to de e a method of meeting this math atical emergency, so he hit upon Idea of borrowing from one row of res and paying back to the next, I so met and conquered a very seri ; difficulty. The Idea originated with ne one,'and to that some one we owe nething. Mathematics would be a aningless science without this con ilent plan, just as other things would useless but for the clever inventions men who have gone before. There Is thing, for instance. which stands nothing, the naught, that round nbol 0. It has a history. We know v they calculated before it came Into stence. But I will not tell you about iow. r was speaking about the bor ing habit in mathematics, and that enough to think about at one time. you know bow and when it origi led?--New Orleans Times-Democrat. KEYS OF THE BASTILLE. ese Historic Relies of Old Paris Owned by an American. he keys which locked the great -es of the Bastille at the time of its have been In America for a num of years. For nearly a century y remained in the possession of the nily of the Frenchman who took m from the famous prison, though y have recently come into the pos sion of an Englishman living In ebec. hen the mob stormed the prison on Ly 14, 1789, a Parisian, Carrier chastel, Is said to have been the ;t to rush over the drawbridge as it . It was he, at any rate, who over k a fleeing jailer and took the keys m him. The mob Immediately stuck keys on the end of a spike, and an mense throng paraded with them -ough the streets. They were con ered one of the most valuable tro es of the revolution. .echastel kept the keys, and they nained In his family until 1859, Le a descendant of the family emi ted to America, taking them with n. Eventually the keys were sold ,ohn Hamilton of - St Louis, who at them for twenty-five years, ex dtng them from time to time, when y were sold to a Canadian. )ne of the keys was obtained in ance by General Lafayette and was sented by him to George WashIng ia year or two before his death. It ngs In the mansion at Mount Ver a and has been seen by thousands of itors there. he keys at present are very old and ty. The largest of them is twelve hes long and is quite heavy. The allest is of fine workmanship, the ~ket being shaped like the ace of bs, and is supposed to have belong to the treasure rooms. This and an tr key measure sIx inches In length, die the other two are about ten hes and much heavler.-Washinlgtonl es. The Happiest Man, 'Marse Tom should be de happies' in in de roun' worl!,r 'Think so?" 'I sho' does. Hie spends three-fourths his time huntin' an' de yuther fo'th tin' what he hunts!"--Atlanta Con tution. t 4s said that it takes three genera ns to make a gentleman, but five to ure perfect and patrician hands.. 'he utopia of today is the reality of norrw.-Jassy. Getting Around it. Thomas, you have disobeyed your Lgrandmother.". No, I didn't, ma." 'Yes, you dId. Have you not been imming?" 'Yes, ma." 'Didn't I hear her say to you not to swimming ?" 'Oh she didn't tell us that She only me out and said, 'Boys, I wouldn't swimmin',' and I shouldn't think a would, an old rheumatic woman e her. But she didn't say anything out our goin' swiminigu." An Infamy. some years ago we remember mneet at the door of a secondhand book op an excited Irishman. He had st bought the "Irish Melodies" for a llng, when he turned round on the okseller and burst out, "But I could ye for selling these Immortal gems cheap l"-Athemum. Really Ant:lque. in texcellent plaster of paris cast y be seen in one of the Egyptian leries of the British museum of the mous sycamore statuette known as . "Sheikh-el-Beled," or "Village eikh." The original dates from 3900 C. and is still in perfect coidition, hough It is the oldest known speci m of wood carving. It represents an erseer of the workmen engaged in ilding the pyramids close to Sakka o, where it was discovered.-Londonl Killing Sharks by Eletrictty. [n the British navy the engineers ve a curious way of killing sharks. iy seal up a dynamite cartridge in tempty can and put the can inside lump of pork. The pork is thrown -erboard on a wire which has been nected with an electric battery. ben the shark takes the bait, the gineer presses a button. which ex odes the cartridge and kills the fish. Willing to Waive That. "Miss Angeline," began the poor but ~oud young man, "if I were In a posi yn to ask you to be my wife" "Good gracious, Mr. Throgsonl" she :elaimed. "In a position? The Ideal o you think I would want you to get w- on you kees?"-lxhangna CONSTANTINOPLE. It Has Perhaps the Finext Site For a City In the World. Constantinople looks much better from the w.ater than it does when view ed ashore. The tourist who touches at the port, renains on board and sees the city only from the sea retains an en tirely different impression from that of him who goes ashore. Seen from the water, Constantinople is very beauti ful. Seen from the shore, it is the apotheosis of everything that is filthy and foul. I do not say that It Is un worthy of a visit, but. I do say that he who stays on board will take away a much more picturesqtie Impression. The site of Constantinople is Ideal. There is probably no finer site for a city in the world. It is situate on the Bosporus, between the Mediterranean and the Black seas. It lies between Eu rope and Asia. for Scutari is part of Constantinople, and Scutari is on the Asiatic shore. It is cut off by natural boundaries into municipal divisions, for the Golden Horn divides Stamboul, the Mohammedan. from Galata, the Christian. city. So the Bosporus di ides Scutari. the Asiatic. from Con stantinople, the European, city; yet all of these places make one great city under the general name of Constanti nople. And this great city Is guarded also by nature. It has thie sea of Mar mor close at hand. with fortifications at either end of this great water high way, rendering the city unassailable by sea. It has a peninsular conforma tion which also renders it, properly for tified, impregnable by land as well as by sea. It is as if San Irrancisco were to have batteries of heavy artillery all around her water front, from India basin to the presidIo. from the presidio to Lake Merced and then across the neck of the peninsula from Lake Mer ced to India basin. With all these fac tors in its favor no wonder that Con stantinople has always been looked pon as an ideal site for a city. That so many races should have battled over Byzantium for so many hundreds of ears is not surprising.-Argonaut. WISDO-M OF NOVELISTS. Adam Invented all the different ways In which a young man can make a fool f himself.-G. I. Lorimer. The man who overestimates the fool shness of others Is himself the biggest fool concerned.-Seton Merriman. Tell the truth, live openly and stick to your friends-that's the whole of the best morality in the world.-Sarah Grand. Every wrong brings with it its own punishment It may be added that It frequently leaves it at the wrong house. -Barry Pain. With good luck one can accomplish anything, but good luck Is just one of the things that cannot be arranged for, even by the cleverest people.-Frank fort Moore. Really beautiful things can't go out They may disappear for a little while, but they must come back. It's only the ugly things that stay out after they've had their day.-W. D. Howells. Slow In forming, swift In acting; siow in making, swift in working; slow to the summit, swift down the other slope; It is the way of nditure and the way of the human mind. - Anthony ope. Why do people with immortal souls pend their lives In leaving tiny oh longs of pasteboard on other people with immortal souls whom they scarce ly know and don't care a straw about? --Robert Hlchens. Wml make You Sleep. An alcohol rub at bedtime will go far toward breaking up insomnia. Let the rubber begin with the forehead and temples of the sleepless one, paying particular attention to the spine and back of the neck. Rlub the alcohol gently but firmly Into the body, work ing gradually down to the feet. and probably the patient will fall asleep before the rubbing is completed. One night or even one week of rubbing would not be likely to bring back per manent habits of sound. healthy slum ber, but each night there Is a gain to ward the normal equilibrium of the nerves, and a month of alcohol rubs should put one In a position to do with out external helps of any kiad.-Bos ton Budget. Shook it Down. There is a strong man in a certain village in Hungary. Not long ago he was building a stable for a farmer. Just as he was about to put the cul minating brick in its place he happen ed to fall out with his employer and by way of working off his superfluous energy went up to one ef the pillars and shook it. The entire building came down with a run. This is thie most not able case of "It come apart in my 'ands," as servants say, since Samson. -London Globe. And Then Not Do It. "Many people are entirely too hasty. A man ought to think two or three minutes before he opens his mouth at "It altogether depends. He ought to think two or three years before he opens his mouth to sing."-Philadel phia Ledger. Schoolboy Definitions. These are two schoolboy definitions llustrated by sentences: "Frantic means wild; 1 picked some frantic flowers." "Atletic, strong; the vinegar was too athletic to use."-Little Chronicle. The Ambition Climber. The Guide-Well, here we are on the peak at last The Tourist-Oh, guide, do you mean to say we can get no higher? Don't say that I can ascend no further. The Guide-Well, you can climb up this alpenstock if you want to. It's sev en feet long.-Chicago Tribune. Her Preference In Gamed "Does your daughter play Mozart?" inquired the young man with gold glasses. "I think she does," answered Mrs. Cumrox affably. "But I think she pre fers whist."-Washington Star. An Most Cats Get Them. Elsie-I don't believe that story about "Puss In Boots." How could a cat have seven league boots? Robbie-Maybe a giant threw 'ema at him one night-Philadelphia Press. ~t is better to live rich than to die rich.-Johnson. Annoying. Layzee-My wife isn't exactly an an archist, bitt she annoyed me this morn ing with one of her incendiary speeches. Jenks-You don't say so? Layzee-Yes, she said, "Henry, get up this minute and make the fire."-Phila dlphin Ledger. The oldest library in the world is that of Nippur, from which cuneiform tablets antedating- Abraham have been takLn CURE FOR HICCOUGHS. Simple Scientific Remedy That Gives Immediate Relief. An attack of hiceoughs brings Its vic tim less sympathy perhaps than almost any other allment, the main reason be ing that, except in very rare cases, it, Is not attended with fatal results and that in most cases it attacks otherwise healthy persons. Still, it is one of the most annoying and most obetinate of diffeulties. While the effort to cure it is being made it generally disappears, yet it resists the most-vigorous effort of the will to control its vagaries. A hiccough is a quick, involuntary, inspiratory movement of the din phragm, brought suddenly to a stop by an involuntary closing of the glot tis. The muscles that control these two portions of the human anatomy are Incessant workers. They wait on every breath without being guided by the will and even work while we sleep. While they do their duty life passes, tranquil, calm and pacific, but If from any cause a disturbing element enters into their bailiwick they rebel, are be yond the control of the will and, hav Iig no guide, as it were, run away, and. like any runaway. have no care for the damage done. The effort to remove the disturber is the cause of the hic cough, and thp following method of treatment arrests these muscles In their wild escapade, brings them back to their duties, and. like the patient serv ants they are, they resume their work and life becomes as placid as before: First, expel all the air from your lungs very, very quickly. The portion of the body they attend to Is, as It were. collapsed, and now commences the next and concluding part of the cure. Second, commence to fill your lungs with air, but do so very slowly, but steadily. Pucker your mouth, and if possible leave an opening of your lips no larger than a pin, and through this inhale the air. Fill your lungs, raise your arms and tihiow out your chest, and when you are full these muscles resume their regular duties and the hiccoughs are gone.-Brooklyn Eagle. MAN AS SEEN BY NOVELISTS Success serves to sweeten the average man; unsuccess is the heroical test of heroes.-Eden Philpotts. He who does good on the spur of the moment usually sows a seed of dissen sion in the trench of time.-Seton Mer riian. A- woman without Illusions is the dreariest and most difficult thing to manage possible. - Author of "Eliza beth and Her German Garden. Have something to say; say It; stop talking; give fools the first and women the last word; the meat's always in the middle of the sandwich.-G. H. Lori mer. Happiness falls to our share In sep arate detached bits, and those of us ho are wise. content ourselves with these broken fragments.-Beatrice Har raden. Noisy fellows are always wedded to their 'own opinions, weak fellows to the opinions of others. The perfect man, conscious of his intellectual fini tude, is content with aspirations.-Har old Begbie. With men you must take your choice -liberty for your mind and a prison for your body, liberty for your body and a prison for your mind. Nearly all people choose the latter. We knowl what becomes of the few who do not -James Lane Allen. The Birds of Paradise. Probably no famous bird has a small er habitat than the bird of paradise, whose beautiful feathers are so highly prized In the millinery trade. No one knows why the varieties of- this beauti ful bird are confined to the Island of New Guinea and the neighboring coasts of Australia. There are many other Islands not far away where the condi tions would seem to be* equally favor able to their existence, but they are not found among them. Quite as satisfactory. "I want to ask you something, Gracie," said the beautiful heiress. "What is It. Duckie?" the duke in quired. "Would you object If I should request the minister to omit the word 'obey' from the service when we are mar red?" "Certainly not He can just make it 'love, honor and supply.'" - Chicago Recol-Herald. To Get Rid of Rats. After all other remedies fall, there still remains a way of getting rid of rats, and that is by depriving them of water. They can live for a very long time without food and when hard pressed will not hesitate to eat each other, but no rat can go twenty-four hours without drink. Therefore If ev ery possible means of obtaining water Is taken from the rats they will desert the vicinity. Very Pathetic. "What can be more pathetic," said the sentimental woman, "than a man who has loved and losty' "Well," replied the man of expe rience, "a fellow who has bet on a sure thing and lost cuts quite a figure In the pathetic line"-Chicago Record Herald. Lachrymal Amielioratio. "Poor thingi Did she take her hus band's death much to heart?' "Why, she's prostrated with grief!l She can't see a soul except the dress mker"-Town Topics. His Nbominattionl. Politician - Congratulations, Sarah. I've been nominated. Sarah (with del!ght)-Honestly? Politician-What difference does that make?-Detroit Free Press. Cures Blood Poison, Cancer, Ulcers, Eczema, Carbuncles, Etc. Medicine Free. Roert Ward, Maxey's. Ga.. says: "I suffered from blood poison, my hcad, fae and shoulders were one mass of c.rruption. aches in bones and joints, burning, ite -ing. scabby sin. was all run down and discouraged, but Botanic Blood Balm cured me perfecctly. healed all the sores and gave my skin the rich glow of health. Blood Balm put necw life into my blood and new ambition into my brain." Geo. A. Willhams. Roxbury, face covered with pImples, chronic sore on back of head. suppurating swelling~on neck, eating ulcer on leg, hone pamns, itchmng skin cured perfectly by Botanic Blood Balm ors all healed. Botanic Blood Balm cures all malignant blood troubles. such as eczema, scabs and scales. pimples. running sores. carbuincles, scrofula. etc. Especially advised for all ob stinate2 cases that have reached the second or third stage. Improves the digestion: strength ens weak kidnevs. Druggists, $1. To prove it cures, sample o'f Blood Balm sent free and pre paid by writing Blood Balm Co.. Atlanta, Ga. Describe trouble and free medical advice sent In scaled letter. For sale by The R. B. Loryca Drug Store. CASTORIA For Tnfants and Chuidren. The Kind You Have Alway Bought Bears the rnatnre of (* 7 i4 ' Avan Mercd Comf Last Opportu We have still on hand a good at -fact receiving some right along, nai Some very fine Ladies' Jackets j Also a new -ot of Ladies' Sweat get one as they are the rage. We city store. A FULL LI1NE' OF Dress Goods Also some more Ready-Made We- promise to save you money also for your boy. Come and inspe< SM s|L-+L..*\I As to this line we are still inaia tire of giving fall satisfaction in wc We are also opening a fall line come and see. We have again a beautiful line atd Faney Handkerchiefs to be ch for your hristmas gifts. A full line of Fascinators., OUR only want your examination. You Thanking you for past favors, a beg to remain Yours, D. H IRSE Next. to We I Come to We are here to do~ business visit to our store will convinct our section of the county makir1 Come to see us and examin< WE ARE AOTU~LA - DRY C Notions, Fanc) Furni Sh HIA TiS, C. Farmers' Suppl We keep everything you ne We want you to take a look of Buggies in the county. We Rock filL We also carry a full line of Come and let us show you how to save money. We mean R. L FELDI Ian , Wholesale Grocers, Summerton, S. C. nity for 1903f isortment of Fal and Winter Goodsrin. nely: just received of the latest style. ers in all colors and sizes. Don't failto are selling them cheaper than in auy. and Trimmin I TO ,king and Dresi Skirts. 'b.getting your Soft of Clothee.hq ,them, k taining our old reputation as we don rkmanship and prices. of Xmas goods which we wish you to of Ladies' and Gent's fine Pure Linen eper than elsewhere. Just the thin.', SHOES will sure find them to your wish. .nd anticipating your .future wants - very truly, HMANN Postofflee. on a live and. let live policy, anda you that we propose to build up g it an inducement to buy at home. our stock of SELLING AT ~OODS, SGoods, Gent's shings, L OTHIN G, lies & Groceries, :ed at prices to meet competition. at our Furniture and the best line keep the famous I Buggies. Harness and Laprobes. some nice Horses and show you business. Bn Pinewood,