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i~heumatism Is Not a Skin Disease. Most people have an idea that rheumatism is contracted like a cold, that the damp, chilly air penetrates the muscles and joints and causes the terrible aches and pains, or that it is something like a skin disease to be rubbed away with lini ment or drawn out with plasters; but Rhuematism originates in the blood and is caused by Urea, or Uric Acid, an irritating, corroding poison that settles in mus cles, joints and nerves, producing inflammation and soreness and the sharp, cutting pains peculiar to this distressing diseas-e. Bowling Green, Kr. Eposr to ba we ee or sudden BwigGen y Explngosur to bd welate or sude About a year avo I was attacked b7 act chilin oftheboy wll astn a a- rheumatism in my shoulders, arms and tack of Rheumatism after the blood and legs below the knee. I could not raise my system are in the right condition for it arm to comb my hair. Doctors prescrib3d to develop, but have nothing to do with ior me for over two months without iv ing meanyrelief. IsawS. S. S.advertfsed the real true causes of Rheumatism, and decided to try it. Immediately Icom which are internal and not external. menced its use I felt better andremarked Liniments, plasters and rubbing tomotherthatlwas Irladlad at last found L some relief. I continued its use and am will sometimes reduce the inflamma- entiroiy well. I will always feel doeply tiou and swelling and ease the pain for interested in the success of S. S. S. since a time, but fail to relieve permanently 1 12 h st mCE good. because they do not reach the seat of 311312thSt. Xl8. ALIOB HORTON. the trouble. S. S. S. cures Rheumatism because it attacks it in the blood, and the Uric Acid poison is neutralized, the sluggish cir culation stimulated and quickened, and soon the sys tem is purified and cleansed, the aching muscles and joints are relieved of all irritating matter and a lasting cure of this most painful disease effected. : S. S. S. is a harmless vegetable remedy, unequalled as a blood purifier and an invigorating, pleasant tonic. Book on Rheumatism will be mailed free. TE SWiFT SPECIFI CO, ATL4NTA, G& Look to Your Interest, liere we are. still in the lead, and why stiffer with your eyes when Vol e. 1 tiited with a pair of Spectacles with so little tronble? We carry th Celebrated HAWKES Spectacles and Glasses, Which we are offering very cheap. from 25c to $2.50 and Gold Frames at $ to $6. Call and he suited. . M. BROCKINTON. S. R. VENNING, Jeweler. DEAL-ER IN WATCHES, CLOCKS, JEWELRY, SPECTACLES, EYE CLASSES AND ALL KINDS OF FANCY NOVELTIES. I make a specialty of WEDDING and HOLIDAY PRES ENTS and always carry a handsome line of Silverware, Hand-Painted China, Glassware and numerous other articles suitable for Gifts of all kind. COME ANO SEE, THEM. All Watch. Cloct and Jewelry rIepairing done promptly an, uawranteed. Lxvi BLOCK. - MANNING. S. C. Improve Your Homes I am making a specialty this seamson of puttling within reaich the material t< make the HONlES ATTRACTIVE, and thereby inease the value of property The New~ Era Ready Mhixed Paini weighs 18 pounds to the gallon and is noted for its durability and for the v'as aont of space it 'Til cov er THLE IJAMMAR BRAND is another line Pain:., 1 gallon of Oil added, makes 2 gallons of v'eiy hear; P'aint. I want my customers to use these Paints andl I am in positton to gmv them good prices. Get my prices on Floor and Lubricating OILS, VARNISHES, etc. For pastures and yards the best on the market. I huy by e-..r load and will sel at reasonable prices. Always on hand the best Rubber and Canvass Bolting and Machinery Sup pneiCS. soeiheadquarters for STOVES, RIARDWARE, CUTLERY, LIAR NESS' and SADDLERY. C'ARRIAGE and WAGON MATERIAL, an< SP'ORTSM ESN SUPPLIES. When you want anything in my line come to see or write to. L.. E3. DLJFRANT, Sumter, S. C. mannmummmmmumamamunmuE Wholesale Grocers, Summerton _ _ _ I BRING YOUR TO THE TINES OFFICE LOVE t By F.r"Cis Livine!tcn IE sumner had gone. It wa in the early days of auiumn, and already the teuderex leaves. !ouched by the iirsi frost. were beginning to fall softly upon the grass. Witlin a eeztery. besid a freshly g-een grive. sat a wom:an (1ressed ir black. She was young and fair. Up on the grave lay a little bunch of fresh flowers. Every day for twc months past she had brought lower, to the grave and had sat for an houl on the bench underneath the willow tree which shaded it. As she sat thus, absorbed in her ten der memories, she never consciously raised her eyes to note who passed by. But one day she saw, quite, as it were, by accident, a young man standing a little distance from her, gazing at a grave she did not remember to have noticed before. He also was dressed in mourning, and his face was pale and sad. Her heart was suddenly very tender toward him, for she knew hini e for a brother. After this the young man came ev cry day at about the same hour as the young woman. Sometimes they would meet at the gate, or he would pass her on the graveled walk whici led to the two graves, and in time it fit, oc-1 Ec advanced and spokc to hcr. came that on these occasions he would salute her respectfully. She would bow to him timidly. One day, in Place of the few :flowers and green thinshiehrawy had bestowed hes upo te grae.h slted her respelarly. wshie. wold ered ith plhem ofThe fewn iwman eyed greem hingrih, bute wher, helwoyk edogttor ther ceeryhe ame tue awhiey.eadvnc and koe Ater he hadmeswdthesetiony.he turae hed vise srprsegularl see ws handsefiloed erwithss thm. he yedoug womard heerhmhnrl,.u hnh ok edItowrdhe herAdelad bwtha, ture sawagety. Headaned wand sokeod to her, seruwht heatngly. She tuld bed plasrsed to ee ise hansm fe thses wyour e hl uoardoe. Sh coul not Adeadk atbirtday, he tears. Jut ashe was sovgod soway, emrouse, nonehe ha shoeny Youb pleasedrtogood. Ietgive you inome of thersfryu daearon IAfter this, although he always salut ed her kindly, lie did not address her again for perhaps a fortnight. Then one afternoon she looked up and was surprised to find him standing beside her. He began to speak to her quite naturally and without apology. "The strangest thing to me is that the world goes on just as before. It seem ed to me that everything must stop when Adelaide died. Often I can hard ly endure the noise and hurry of the world outside. Indeed, my world is here" "It is so with me," she said simply. "I really live only for this hour that I spend beside him." "My friends-her f'riends, too-seek to dstract me. They tell me I dwell too much upon her meinory and that it is my duty to forget my sorrow." "They only can understand who have known such a loss themselves," she "That is why I can speak to you of her." he replied. "because you know." lie told her much about his Adelaide. They had been married two years only when she died. She had taken a chill through being out in a rain storm one day when she was visiting a poor fain ily. She was all goodness and charita bene.ss and had at the last given her life for others. She in turn talked to him of her Arthur. who had been her husband for a brief six months. He was never robust and had succumbed to a fever whic~h aIttacked him in the summer. He was~ so gentle and noble. Every one wh o knew him loved him. Thus a. companionship was estab lished between them. There were days when they sat near each other with out speaking. Sometimes they -would exchtnge a few words, but each felt the near ness and sympathy of the other. The datys were growing shorter aidy, and it soon became too coid to sit long out of doors. Then camne a1 sudden~i storm. and for days the two graves were white with snow. Whein they met again it was as two fied wnc aho had been long 1eparatecd. Ech ha d much to sa to the othier. muc~h of the old story-almost as old as lov e-of grief and of longir~g for the blesed dead. SWhen at Christmas time he came she was not there, but a beautiful wreath of holly lay on Adelaide's grave, mark ed "Fromi Arthur." Ihis eyes filled with tears, and of the flowers he had brought lhe laid the half on the other grave in Adelaide's name. In January there wer~e some mild days. almost springlike, whein they met and talked agrain. Now she told him somethin.g of herself. She lived with her huasband's parents. They were old people and sometimes were very sad, She felt it her duty to be as cheerful as she could for their sakes. Ie mnade his home with his sister and her hiusb'aid. They were very kind to him. but their house 'aas often full of life an-i gniyety, and he longed for the Sf ibhb s-ows came. an. agai: there were ofin d:ys when they did not meet, but when they did it was al ways to both a source of tender joy tinged with tlieious melancholy. With Mareh came a season of mild and lovely days. Th:-e was as yet no hint of green among the branches of the trees, but one felt that the new shoots were swelling. :nd the ;cent of the young, swift advn. - in spring Pre ceded her. The two fri'nd r.:i together under neath the willow, which was now voice ful with feathered lifei. is color was de'eper and his hear":1:: more spirited than in the autumn. The sadness of her youthful face was so1ftened by a ;mile. They had talked of Adelnide and Arthur at first, and afterward of aach other. Then they sat side by side In silence, as only those can remain be tween whom there exists the under standing born of long and sympathetic association. The warmth of the sun was very pleasant. The breeze swayed the branches of the willow gently. Beneath their feet the ground was stirring with the premonition of the coming change, the recurring phenomenon of the new life. With the unconscious movement of the sleeper the earth was- slowly turning her great brown cheek from the relaxed embrace of winter to meet the vivifying kisses of the sun. Far away a turtledove was calling to her mate. From the willow branches two little birds, quarreling noilsy. fell to the grass at their feet, then flew away to a neighboring tree to kiss and make up again. The young woman on the bench raised her eyes to the eyes of the young man beside her. With a vague consciousness of alarm she moved away a little, and a slight shiver passed over her. "You are cold." he said to her gently. "We have sat too long beneath the shade of the window. Corne; let us walk a little in the sunshine." And he laid his hand on hers. But she drew away her hand, her eyes lowered, her cheek scarlet. "I must go," she said and walked rapid ly away. He followed more slowly, a new light in his eyes as he looked after her. The path they walked In reflected the warm rays of the sun. The two graves lay in the deepening shadow of the willow. As the Briton Told the Joke. This is a true story of how an Eng lishman reported an American joke. Brown told the story at a euchre party. He said: - "My wife's name is Ruth. The other morning I woke up in a happy frame of mind and just to jolly her said, 'Hel lo, Norah!' My wife retorted, 'I'm not Norah,' and I replied. 'Nor am I. " Every one laughed at Drown's joke. and the Englishuian seemed to enjoy it as heartily as any one else. A few nights later he repeated it at another party. This is how he told It: "I say, don't you know, that fellow Brown made a remarkably good joke the other day. It seems Brown woke up, and be said to Mrs. Brown, 'Good morning, Norah.' Mrs. Brown replied, 'I say you know, my name is not No rah.' And Brown said, 'Neither is mine!' " The laugh not arriving on time, the Englishman added, "Bah Jove, I forgot to mention the fact that Mrs. Brown's name isn't Norah, don't you know." THE HOME IN FRANCE. It Ise Mainly an Adjanne: to Life On the Outside. The father and mother in Paris eat at home when they do not eat out, but absolutely no informal social inter course Invades the apartment. whIch Is more than anything else a sort of fac tory In which Is produced whatever the family needs for life outside. A vast amount of sewing Is done here. French girls of even wealthy parents, after they finish school, attend courses of dressmaking and millinery and to a great extent the industry which turns out the French woman as a model of good dressing, to be followed by the world, Is carried on by the women of the family In what would be the home If the French knew the meaning of the word. A reception day is rigorously kept, and much entertaining at dinner and dejeuner may be done. but always of a formal character. A person having the penetratirng qualities of a bopt agent might venture to try "droppIng in" on a French woman on a day when she is not regularly receiving, but in the nat ural course of ordinary social experi ence in Paris thIs would never happen. says Flora MceDonald Thompson In Harper's Bazar. Such order of living readily permits great economy. One has not to waste time, good clothes or house room in daily preparation for the unexpected guest. Six days of the week a French woman may run her sewing machine In the middle of her~ salon If she likes., secure from the interruption of chance callers. It is said that the chief func tion of the petit salon of a Paris apart ment is to provide storage room for ball gowns which on reception days are taken down from the chandelier and locked up in a bedroom till the guests have departed. The Absent Jock. The wife of a Washington street merchant is very fond of roses, espe caly of the brilliant varieties. By way of reminder she said to the hus band the other morning before he started for business: "I see, my dear, that Jacks are be coming cheaper." "That may be true," said the hus band absently, "but I have known men who would have been willing to pay $100 for one to put with the two already In their hand."--Indianlapolis Sentinel. Various Sources of Silk. Silkworms are not the sole source of the production of silk. It is also ob tained from several vegetable sub stances, but of an Inferior and less durable description. Excellent colored silk is obtained from the prepared and finer fibers of the bamboo, which is much in demand for clothing in trop ical countries from its lightness and porosity. Another form of silk Is ob tained from the pods of the silk cotton tree, of which there are several varie ties in existence, the material obtained from them being known as vegetable silk. Went Her One Better. "I never saw you in such a becomning hat, my dear. Did you get It ready made?" "I was just thInking how unusually pretty yours looks. Did you make it yourself ?"--Brooklyn Life. Hlow It Was Done. "I thought Miss Pumpleigh figured on marrying Jack." "So she did, but another girl with ~NCEXT~ii CURES viEDCiNAL VMTUES THAT USED TO DECK THE FINNY TRIBE. ?ereh Wax ValueLd in C'ruany For Its Curaf.tre --)!r-tirn, and Carp Wax Ne!. i !.i;g.i E;steem In Old England-T: Phyisician of Fishes, Fishing literature prior to the days and wr!tingzs of Izaak Walton opens up points of interest which are unique. Not the least imeresting are the con stant refervnees of the early writers to the medicinal virtues of fish. Of course many of tie salt and fresh water fish es mentioned by the old writers are not recognized in the waters 2f today, but the fresh water perch, crp, tench and cel are Yet recognized, and it is in connection with these fish that some of the quaiutest ideas as to their me :icinal virtues have prevailed. The Germans have a comparative proverb which says, "More wholesome than a perch of the Rhine," and it is certain that from the earliest times this familiar fish has been esteemed as one of the best gastronomic produc tions of fresh water. It has also been ascribed medicinal virtues. Gesner says that physicians value the perch so much that they recomnend it to be freely eaten by wounded men, women In childbed and those suffering from dangerous fevers. Aldrovandus praises It and mentions that the two otooliths ("round bones") found in the head of the perch are marvelously good for stone in the bladder. That the carp was esteemed In olden times in England Is certain. Dame Berners, writing in her quaint "Trea ysee of Eysshynge Wyth an Angle," published in 1400, says, "The carpe be E deyntous fish, but there ben few in Englonge." Being "deyntous"-i. e., dainty"-it must have been a good fish t that time to eat. It has certainly cst its character since then. In the-art of healing the carp plays a respectable part. One old writer speaks Df the fat of the carp as being of mi raculous power for the alleviation of "hot rheumatism." The manner of its aplication was by frequent rubbing mi the painful part, and the effect was said to be eminently mollifying and glutary. The triangular bones in the troat of the carp on being ground to :-owder and applied to a wound or b:eeding nose were said to act as styp tic. The gall was also said to have bn used for sore eyes, and "above the eyes," says an old -Esculapius, 'two little bones exist, semicircular in. ihape, which are diligently preserved by noble females against the lunatical lisase." In the "Haven of Health" carp are also comprised1 in "the 'ten sortes of asche which are reckoned as principal in the preservation of health," and, adds the qualut old writer, "this fish s of great wholesomeness and great value, and its tongue is very pleasant to carping ladies." A kind of first cousin of the carp is hat is known as the barbel. Such tncients as Juvenal, Albertus and oth rs of that Ilk evidence that it was Inown and esteemed by the Roman ourmnet. Plutarch mentions a curious act in its natural history. Dr. Bad arn In his "Prose Haleutics" trans bats this passage as follows: "The roe f the barbel is very poisonous. Auto lo Gazius took two boluses and thus lesribes his sensations: 'At first I felt o inconvenience, but some hours hay g elapsed I began to be disagreeably ffected, and as my stomach swelled and could not be brought down by anise and carminatives I was soon in a ;tate of great depression and distress.'" t appears that his countenance was 3allid, like a man In a swoon. Deadly ~oldness ensued, and violent cholera lnd vomiting came on. The barbel Barbus vulgaris) of today has survived ;uch poisonous qualities. Its flesh has :he taste of stewed white blotting pa >er, and .its roe is as innocuous as .,read pills. All the same, good Juiyana Berners hared the bad opinion of the earlier ~vriters. She says: "The barbyll is a wete fish, but it is quashiy mete d perylous for mannys bodye.- For ~omynly he ynyth an introduction to e febris (fever), and if ye be eten ae he may cause of mannys dethe rhych bath often beene seene." The touch which' has been introduced :nto some parts of this country is an live greenish carp which has been for ong tIme termed in England the "phy iclan of fishes." According to a score r more of authorities, ancient and iodern, the thick slime with which It s covered exerts healing effect on all rvouds or diseases in which it can oe in contact on or in other fishes. hence this belief originated Is not nown. but one instance of exact ob ;ervation is wvell worthy of credence. SIr. Wright in his book on "Fishes and 'shig" tells how a minnow acciden :ally hooked in the water of an aqua 'um In which it was swimming, on raking loose, immediately descended hrec parts of the way down the Wa :er and swiftly approached its nose to he side of the teach which was its ~ompnion in the aquarium. It rub ed Its nose for a few seconds against he tench and then again swvam about is lively as before. To this testirno y Mr. Wright adds: "We (my friend d I who were watching the perform .ce) were both of the opinion that it s really no fable as to the tench being e Esculapius of fishes, for here was n exanple before our eyes of a fish )eing wounded and immediately In tint directing It to seek a remedy." One piscatorial truth is known to all ho fish for pike or pickerel. The pike 'esoxluius) will ravenously seize as s prey the fry of almost every fish, ncluding his own speOcies. and all the ait minnows are also caviare to him, it he will not touch the teach. - 3rooklyn Eagle. The saliva. The poisons of some of the common and also some of the most loathsome lseases are frequently contained In he mouth. In such case anything that is moistened by the saliva of the In ected person may, if it touches the ips of another, convey disease. The ore direct the contact the greater the anger. It is believed that much can be done to prevent contagion by teach ing habits of cleanlimess. But if such instruction is to be effectual it must be continuous. The teacher in the pub ie school should notice and correct vio lations of these rules as habitually as riolations of the more formal school rules are corrected. Enoni.h Said. wo Boston ladies strolling along a road just outside of the borough came apon the first milestone. On It was written, "1 m. from Boston." Havingj aever ventured so far from their native1 lace before, they mistook the stone for a sepulchral monument. "Ho0w touch Ing!" they exclaimed. "How simple! low human!. TIm from Boston.' What ore needed to be said?- So the dead OUR FIRST HUNT CLUB. it Was Organized In Pennsylvania Away Back In 1706. The year 176G is far back, but- It Is interesting to think that the mutter ings of the coming war storm were not yet so engrossing even then but that the sportsmen of Pennsylvania could turn their attention to a more system atic organization of their fox hunting forces and then establisbid the first hunt club In the country. the Glouces ter Hounds. Not that this was the be ginning of the sport in Pennsylvania, that eminently horse loving country, for fox hunting bad held a high place in the pastimes of the people many a year before. It was rather the evi dence that the sport had become so im portant that It needed sysgematzlng, so that districts might ba"boroughly hunted In turn and contentions, rivalry and clashing dates be avoided. All the early fox hunting clubs had their origin In the pre-existing owner ship of a greater or less number of hounds by private owners. Every con siderable landowner in the south kept them. and good dogs they were, not always orthodox, according to the standard of the Belvoir and the Quorn of today. but nevertheless hounds de rived from the best English and Eu ropean stock and continued by Judi cious selection of those who showed the instincts by conformation suitable to the country in which they were called upon to work. Washington may be quoted as one of the southerners who kept bounds and hunted them too. Lafayette. moreover, sent him from France a splendid pack of French fox-: hounds, with qualities which still fur ther helped to complete the most per fect animal for American fox hunting, the American hound. From the formation of the Glouces ter Fox Hound club In 1760 until to-. day clubs have played the most Im portant phrt in preserving the sport and regulating its practice. Not all clubs of equal importance, it is true, but all of the same spirit.-Ulustrated Sporting News. NEW YORK TIME. It Is the Standard Used In All Our Weather Bureau Stations. When we read a report from any of the 100 regular weather bureau sta tions throughout our land bringing the information that a rainstorm, a tor nado or some other meteorological phe nomenon began at a certain hour we need not suppose that the hour men tioned refers to the time at the place where the observation was made. The hour given is the exact New York time, for every clock at the regular weather bureau stations all over the land is set to the seventy-fifth meridian, or east ern standard time, which Is exactly five hours behind Greenwich time. Only this standard of time Is used. in the text of the Monthly Weather I Review, and all weather bureau ob servers are required to record observa tions by it. The reason for this is that the best scientific deductions from the weather reports must be based upon the conditions of the atmosphere exist ing simultaneously in different parts 1 f the country. It would be very ludicrous if all the undreds of reports sent daily had to e changed at the central office in Washington from local to eastern time, nd so all the regular observers are re uired to use the New York, or eastern time, In making their reports. There are many volunteer observers and newspaper correspondents who in reporting weather phenomena use oth er standards of time. If the weather bureau has occasion to use their re ports the time Is often corrected to gree with the eastern standard or the ocal standard is mentioned.--Detroit Free Press. WEDDING PRESENTS. Some Hints About How and ,What and When to Send. it is a golden rule to send your wed ing gift In good time, the first to at' ive being much more appreciated than tat which is one of the many pouring n from all quarters during the last week.1 By adhering to this rule you are also aved the annoyance of hearing that he salteellars are charming, the third et already received. A month before the wedding day Is ot too early to send the present, which should be accompanied by a visiting ard, to be placed on the gift when dis layed am ug the others. The package should be addressed to e bride If you are intimate with both e happy couple, and to the bride's ouse, addressed to the bridegroom, If t is he with whom you are best ac uainted. Most people wish to give somethinlg C ovel, useful and pretty. The futurej ircumstances of the happy couple should influence the choice. If they are going abroad. do not give aything unsuitable to the require ments of the climate or so cumber ome that packing and conveying it to Its destination will amount to half the alue of the present. If the recipients will not be particu larly well off, it Is only kind to select some useful pr-esent. In these days, when artistic taste is shown in all the necessaries of life, this should not be difficult If the happy couple are likely to re eive many presents, it is safe to give something which will not be amiss if received in duplicate, such as silver sweetmeat baskets for the dinner table r a set of afternoon teaspoons or a bronze or china ornament. Women Who Dress Like Men. Tourists in the Austrian Tyrol and the remoter regions of the Swiss Alp's of ten come across strange peculiarities of dress, especially among the females ind those out of the way places. In the ittle village of Champery, which nes ties almost under the frowning Dent dn Midi, the women dress like men and may often be seen In the fields. Nat urally they are objects of much inter est to tourists, but the women do not seem to be at all uncomfortably con scious of the peculiarity of their garb. C The peasants of Champery are a sim1 ple, kindly folk, and doubtless find this novel dress more accommodating to the hard work they have to do. Killing Sharks by Electricity. In the British navy the engineers ave a curious way of kIlling sharks. They seal up a dynamite cartridge in S n empty can and put the can Inside lump of pork. The pork is thrown overboard on a wire which has been onnected with an electric battery. hen the shark takes the bait, the engineer presses a button, wb1eh-ex plodes the cartridge and kills the flsI.J Willing to Waive That, "Miss Angeline," began the poor but proud young man, "If I were in a posi tion to ask you to be my wife" "Good gracious, Mr. Throgsonh"' she xclaimed. 'In a position? The Ideal Do you think I would want you to get DlsoI Hardware Company Would have you bear in mind that their- stock of Guns andA mmunition is still compkoe. Joats, -Vests, Leggins and Boots. Everything to meet your wants for the holidays. Ton should see our line of Vandyke Ware, Porcelain Lined, Milk, Cake and-Pudding Pans. Coffee Pots and Saucepans. A. beautiful assortment of Ciirving Knives and Forks, Pocket Knives, Razors and Scissors. When you need- that Stove come to see us. DICKSON HARD!AIIcuni Leiii Block. First Opportunity for1904 - We have-still on hand a good assortment of Fall and Winter Goods, in act receiving some right along, namely: Some very fine Ladies' Jackets jst-received of the latest style. Also a new lot of Ladies' Sweaters in all colors and sizes. Don't fail to et one as they are the rage. We are selling them -cheaper than in any ity store. I. FULL LINE OF Dress Goods and Trimming TO' Also some more Ready-Made Walking and Dress Skirts. We promise to save you -money by getting your Suit-of Clothes he lso for your boy. Come and inspect them. ig ... _:i ..:N .E CF As to this line we are still maintaining our old reputation as-we dort ire of giving full satisfaction in workmanship and prices. We are also opening a full line of Xmas goods which -we wisb-A *ome and see. We have again a beautiful line of Ladies' and Gent's fine.Pnre-Liuend ld Fancy Handkerebiefs to be cheaper than elsewhere. Ju-st the thing - or your Christmas gifts. A full line of Fascinators. 0 wantyourOURSHOES - mly want your examination. You will sure find them to your wish. Thanking you for past favors, and anticipating your future wants, we >eg to remain Yours very truly, D. H IRSCH MANN, Next to Postoffice.-- - We Areit. Come t&Pieweid. We are here to do-.business on a- live and let-livespoliey, and a -isit to, our store will convince you that we -propose toibuild up -- ur section of the county making it an inducement to. buy at home. Come to see us and examine our stock of - WE ARE SELLING AT ACTUAL_ 008T DR Y GOODS, lotions, Fancy Goods, Gent's Furnishings, Shoes, FIA T S, CLO TH ING, Farm~f8' Supplie8s& Groe5ie8. We keep everything you need at prices to. meet competition. We want you to take a look at our Furniture and the best line f Buggies in the county. We keep the famous Rock lHill Buggies. We also carry a full line of Harness and Laprobes. Come and let us show you some nice Horses and show you ow to save money. We mean business. t. L FE3LDER, Pinewood,