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Cotton Must Have Potsh 9 Potash is an essential plant food Swhich must be added as a fertilizer or the soil will become cx bausted, as true of I many cotton fields. z. We; aebooks -Mer-. W~e wi11 send : -o *-v "-r.-'r who ask. us for them. RNku AN KALI WORKS, Atianta, Ga.- - g% o. Broad St. GeoS.Hacker&Son MU\VFACTUREMFS OF' Material, C== Co =C= Doors, Sash, Blinds, M~oulding and Bulldinz Mateial, - CHARLESTON, S. C. Sash Weights and Cords. Window and Fancy Glass a Specialty, DO -YOI Walt PERFECT FITTING . COME OR SEND TO US. We have the best equipped Tailor ing Establishment in the State. We handle 1higb Art 1lothino -solely and we carry the best line of Hats and Gent's Furnishings in the eitv. Ask your miost prominent men who we -are, and they will commend you -to us. i, L DAVID & BRO,, Cor. King & Wentworth Sts., OHA RLESTON, - S, C. Nothing has ever equalled it Nothing can ever surpass it. Dr. King's New Discovery For jAgn*OXsc.o - A Perfect For All Throat and Cure: Lung Troubles. Money back if it fails. Trial Bottles free. The- R. B..Loryea Drug Store, Indigestion Causes Catarrh of the Stomach. For many years it has been supposed that Catar'rh of the Stomach caused indigestion and dyspepsia, but .the truth Is exactly the opposite. Indigestion causes catarrh. R, peated attacks of Indigestion inf lames the mucous membranes lining the stomach and exposes the nerves of the stomach, thus caus ing the glands to secrete mnucin Instead of the juices of natural digestion. This is called Catarrh of the Stomach. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure -relieves all inflammation of the mucous membranes lining the stomach, protects the nerves, and dures bad breath, sour risings, a sense of fullness after eating, indigestion, .dyspepsia and all stomach troubles. Kodo! Digests What You Eat Make the Sto pch Sweet. the'ria sie, whih ells for 50 cets. Prepared by E. 0. DeWITT & CO., ChIcago,1NI. The R. B. Loryea Drug Store. Money to Loan. APPLY TO WILSON & DuRANT. Bank of Summerton, Paid in Capital, 1.000. Authorizo'd Capital, $25,000. The Bank of Summerton having moved into its new building, solicits your business and County collectin a specialty, and prompt re turns always uiven.IHA .SYH President and Cashier. hi;NRY P. WILLIAMS, Vice-President. DIR ECTORlS: C S. GA.susN J. .\DGER SMYTIH. IEtt P. W1 u.AMs. C. 1 DAVIS. RtICTaatD 1B. SMYT;I. W.C. DAVIS. ATTORNEY AT LAW, MANNING, S. C. J. S. WILSONt. W. C. DURANT WILSON & DURANT, Attor neys and Counselors at Law, MANNING. S. C. DR. J. FRANK GEIGER. DENTIST, MANNING, S. C. 'Phone No. (1.___ Bring yanr Job Work to The Times nffie., DIVERS AFT ER PEARLS. Their 'Work Is Deadly, and They Do Not Live Long. Pearl fishers do not live long. They often dive to a depth of 100 feet or s more, and the strain wears them out before their lives are half over. From these depths a diver usually brings C two oyster shells each "trip." It is on h the mother of pearl in these that the f European depends for his sure profit sl Pearls are "plums,' which only occa- s1 sionally fall to his lot. Divers work t( for a wage, and all the shells brought ' up are the property of the employer. 15 In "Studies In Brown Humanity" t Hugh Clifford describes Malay pearl n fishers. They anchor on the oyster rC beds or as near them as possible, he k says, and the diving takes place twice aday. a "All the boats are manned at morn- a Ing and evening, and the Sulu boys row t them out to the point selected for the tI day's operations. The white man in a charge always goes with them in order t( to keep an eye upon the shells, to resus- Q citate exhausted divers and generally SI to look after his own interests. 01 "Presently a man lowers himself f] slowly over the side, takes a long, deep f( breath, and then, turning head down- t( ward, swims into the depths, his limbs e0 showing dimly in froglike motions un- s! til, If the water be very deep, he Is cJ completely lost to sight o1 "In a few minutes he comes into ri view again, his face straining upward, tl yearning with extended neck for the r1 air that he now needs so sorely. His IX hands cleave the water In strong down- Ic ward strokes; his form grows momen- d tarily more distinct, until the fixed, II tense expression of his staring face is Si plainly visible. Then the quiet surface 1 f the sea splashes in a thousand drops SI f sun steeped light as his head tears A: through it, and his bursting lungs, ex- s pelling the Imprisoned air, draw in the a breath which they crave in long, hard f gasps. If the dive has been a deep one iI a little blood may be seen to trickle '3 from nose and month and ears. At times even the eye sockets ooze blood, the result of fearful pressure to which the diver has been subjected." T CHILDREN ARE SANE. cl But Grownup People, Most of Them, A Are More or Less Insane. U There Is one disadvantage which is n involved in the very nature of educa- tc tion-that is, that we have to assume 6 that grownup people are representa- = tive. We have even'to go the length t of assuming that grownup people are hI sane. When we talk about encouraging health in children and discouraging morbidity, when we talk of such and t such a child being abnormal or inter- ai esting or neurotic or a genius, we are f ll the time taking for granted that we bi ourselves have attained to what is rc :rofitable and eternal in human nature. tO But there is at least something that may reasonably be said upon the other sl side. It may at least very plausibly t be maintained that it is children who 0I are, age after age, sane and reliable nd grownup people who are, age'aft- AJ er age, more or less fantastic and dis :ncerting. The great majority ofa grownup people in any age will be in all probability slightly Insane; for since g ao human p;hilosophy Is perfect, and since every human philosophy natural ly treats itself as if it were perfect, the' o chances are in every generation that the majority of educated people will be ecstatically certain of something thatb is quite untrue. Children, on the other hand, it might be maintained, repre sent the nctual primary and untouched O auman nature. Whatever agrees with1 that Is sane; whatever disagrees with st it is eccentric. Children are alwayss children, or, to limit the matter with more precision, babies, at any rate, are always babies. But few will be so paradoxical as to maintain that men are always mien or women always wo men.-Black and White. MAAl Germ Infected Malaria is not confined exclusivel nd marshy regions of the country, but bad air this insidious foe to health is : vapors and gases from sewers, and the cellars are laden with the germs of this which are breathed into the lungs and blood and-transmitted to every part of you begin to feel out of sorts without e cause. No energy or appetite, dull hea< tired and completely fagged out from 1 tion, are some of the deplorable effects malady. As the disease progresses and more deeply poisoned, boils and absc< yellow spots appear upon the skin. V left to ferment and the microbes and ge: the blood, Liver and Kidney troubles at arise. As Malaria begins and develops . ,effective must the germs and blood, and und constitution ra: S.o.S.i a guaranteed purely veg hames.Wrt s oouclero want medi tinaotyour cae hswill cost yo The Sign of th -The big cigar hangs over the sid Stle building where mea CAPERS maeaspecialty of compounding pre S They keep a full line of 5 Medicines and '1 S They carry a line of high grade Swell a the biggest Cigars. Look for the sign o' SThe+~ Prescription CAPERS & CO., Loans Made ! I can lend .M on Real | Real Estat e E s ta ie. onable inter on long im on or wri e iF. A... 37V7EINBEFJJ M A N N T N 03 BAKED APPLES. ke Way to Make a Convenient and G Delicious Dessert. The difference between apple sauce ewed quickly over the fire and that Pc tked slowly for several hours in a oderate oven is so * great that one 01 uld easily believe that different fruits In id been used. Each method, if care- w ily followed, produces a delicious re- It tut, and, while some persons have a b rong preference for one or the other, f my mind it is difficult to decide o hich Is the better way. Therefore it PI vdell to use both methods, cooking ei to first apples that come in midsum oer by stewing, and later, when the cc ol days of early autumn make a fire to ss objectionable, trying the baking. ti The dish for baking is as Important that for beans baked properly and c so for Indian puddings, and should be a to same in style and material. Cut T te fruit (and you may use in this way a: y kind of apples or pears which are g 0 green or hard to use uncooked) into b. iarters; then remove the cores and a dns. Allow one cup of sugar and n, e-half cup of water to two quarts of w uit The amount will vary with dif- c rent apples, and it Is Important not P use too much sugar, for the long p oking seems to develop the natural ti reetness of the fruit Cover them osely and cook in a slow oven four k five hours or until they have a deep OC ch red color. If they cook too fast, a Le steam will cause them to burst and P m over the edge and res,.:t in a ushy sauce, but a moderate heat, e ng continued, will leave each quarter ti stinct in the clear sirup. Let it cool d the pan and turn it out without any rring of the fruit This may be yured at onc.e into sterilized jars and a aled the same as canned fruit, if you C" -e not likely to use it all soon. As a r Luce for a breakfast or dinner it is b !ceptable; with cream and hot biscuit n r supper it is delicious, and as a fill-, g for pastry shells it is convenient ome Science Magazine. THE CAVE OF GHOSTS. g Us Is One of the Wonder Places of si New South Wales. One of the curiosities of Oakley eek, N. S. W., is a cave which very n w people care to enter. It is of the -ual order of stalactite and stalag ito shapes and figures, but In order a get inside it the visitor must crouch A >wn and squeeze himself through a a] trrow opening and grope l4s way In e inky darkness for a few 'yards till can stand erect and light a torch. As soon as he has done this he sees h Intly the weird shapes assumed by a e water dripping from the limestone td he hears a whirring noise. He A els inclined to make his exit at once, Lt he hears something moving all e und him, and presently something h d'ches him. ti Ere concludes that there are uncanny al Irits about, and this sensation Is mul yied many times in intensity when turning to retrace his steps he finds msei-confronted by a tall, ghostly f the visitor has a strong nerve oro ts been forewarned, which is not al- a ays the ease, he recognizes that the ~ ostly tigure is a senseless block form .by the dripping from the limestone, d that the moving creatures are ' 1here Is one part of the cave which it Sman has dared to explore. It is to led the blowhole. One adventurous m sitor was about to squeeze himself to rough this narrow aperture when it ~ curred to him to throw a stone rough. He did so, listening for the ~ ane to touch bottom, and the dull und that finally reached him con- al need him that there was a sheer r'1 op of 200 feet on the other side of e blowhole.A Many men have been capable of do ug a wise thing, but very few a gen r~ons thing.-Pope. fil HA Air. v 7 to the swamps wherever there is I 'ound. Poisonous nusty air of damp miserable disease, it taken up by the the body. Then ver suspecting the - laches, sleepy and he slightest exer f this enfeebling the blood becomes _ n sses and dark or _- -,, ;- g rhen the poison is b -ms to multiply in d other serious complications often a in the blood, the treatment to be ~ begin there too. S. S. S. destroys c poisons and purifies the polluted er its tonic effect the debilitated yidly recuperates and the system is 1 signs of this depressing disease. y etable remedy, mild, pleasant and cal advice or any special informa- a, u nothing. 'ECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GA. e Big Oi1ar walk in front of the moedest lit -ar scriptions. oiet Articles. as igars, including thc smallest as the Big Cigar- __s -a et UIU~,Store Proprietors, a e - - 5. C. 3 on p1 >nev on Loans MXade inl at eas- on Recal tr st and [ E4s tate. SCall to me. RGr, Attorney at Law, g S. C. AS TO NICKNAMES. Lven Often For Absurd Reasons, and Gener=Uy They Stick. "Wonderful how names stick to a rson," said the observant man. 'here were two nice little women in ir village who came on us one even g, and we offered them popcorn hich the children had just brought from the kitchen. They defused, it not so emphatically as to keep us om giving them two heaping plates the corn. We kept refilling the ates and they kept crunching all the -ening. There was something so funny )out it that I called them 'The Pop rn Ladies,' and the name has stuck them so that the whole village knows em by It. "I once knew a man who talked in ssantly in a high pitched Zpice, and bright girl dubbed him 'Th' Chirper.' he name was quickly passrd around nong the young people, and now the eater part of his friends know him that name. A dignified young wom 1 of my acquaintance goes by the ime of 'Whont' to this day because hen she was a little girl she used to LtI herself 'Mrs. Whont' when she ayed grownup ladies, and the family eked it up. She sinply can't shake te absurd name. "More than one red haired man is iown by the name of 'Pink' and phil ;ophically accepts the title. I have an :quaintance who holds a responsible >sition who is !nown by the name of )otty.' It seems that one day a mis dievous girl discovered that he had Lree prominent dimples. She promptly ibbed him 'Dotty Dimple,' and now Is known to all his associates as )otty.' Another man of my acquaint c Is always called 'Bluebeard' be Luse he has such a white and thin tin-that if he does not shave daily his ,ard shows blue through it. That ime, too, came through a woman's alck wit. "In a certain household a very fem ine little woman is still called 'The oy' because when she was a young rI she went through a'serious illness hich made it necessary to cut her hair iort. Her younger sister said she was be boy' of the family, and the dainty .dy is still called by that absurd ime. "An effeminate n'an was once called 'Iola' by one.of the boys in the office, id now we know him by nothing else. nother one of the boys in the office Is ways called 'Chesty.' and, though he >t angry at first. he has cheerfully ac pted the new name now. "Our bookkeeper Is always putting in s oar when it is not at all necessary, id I think now he will be known un I the end of time as 'General Butts.' friend of mine who is always called heerful' does not know whether he Is led that b5ecause his friends believe has a cheerful disposition or because Ley consider him a cheerful idiot. But ; any rate, he can't shake the name." Milwaukee Sentinel. Beaconsdleld's4 "Don'ts." An Inquiring and aspiring person once ;ked Beacousfield to tell him the secret social success. "Never discuss the ithorship of the 'Letters of Junius' " as the reply. Beaconsfield's biographer, Mr. Wilf rid eynell, adds something positive to this Itty negative rule for getting on in the orld. A distinguished member of par iment begged the Victorian statesman tell his young son something to re ember. something that would help make him an agreeable and popular ember of society. Beaconsfield hedged. "Model yourself ter your father." he said to the lad: This was not altogether satisfactory, id the M. P. insisted upon a definite ile of conduct. "Well, amy boy." said Beaconsfield, ye amusing. Never tell unkind stories. oe all, never tell long ones." A Large Fish. An Englishman visiting Lake Tahoe ;ked a native if there was any good ;hing In the lake. "Oh, yes, stranger." "What kind of fish do you catch "Oh, all kinds, stranger." "What Is the weight of the largest ;h you ever caught?' "Waal, stranger, we don't take ighng machines when we goes fish g and I am an honest man and ouldn't like to say how much that st trout I caught would weigh. But tell you, stranger, that when I pulled at fish out of the water the lake et down a toot." - Birmingham -Pessimistie View. Sentimental Wife (reading from a vel)-"And, clasping the beautiful r to his heart, the hero pressed his irning lips to her snowy brow." Practical Husband--Yes, and I'll bet dollar to a doughnut he'll be down ith pneumonia in the next chapter. icinnati E nqu irer. Severely Practical. "Don't you sometimes wish you could rite your name on the scroll of fame?" "'m not worrying about that," an rered Senator Sorghum. "The scroll fame isn't the book that the bank shier turns to wvhen you want a Lck certified."-Washingtonl Star. Hold Out Your Chest. Nowadays we are told "Hold out ur chest" and not "Throw back >ur shoulders." The shoulders will ke care of themselves if the chest held well up.-Maxwell's Talisman. The Flue. "DId Slickun's house catch fire from a afective flue?" "No an effective one. Hie ad It in tred for twice its real value."-Cincin itl Times-Star. Dont contest a will It it is a womn gs.-Lowell Citizen. are the TeKYO ve Always Bought The Saracens and the Moon. The Saracens called the moon Ca .r the Great, and the crescent still rmounts the Turkish mosques and is ablazoned on the green standard of e prophet. Schlegal mentions a story at Mohammed "wished to pass with s disciples as a person transfigured a supernatural light and that the Ddulity of his followers saw the ion, or the moon's light, descend up him, pierce his garments and re 3nish him. 'That veneration for the moon which .11 forms a national, or, rather, reli >us, characteristic of the Mohammed s may perhaps have its foundation the elder superstition or pagan idola i of the Arabs." . B xh ,Tiha Kind You Have Always Bought MEETING AN AUTHOR. Aobert Barr's Visit to His Friend Captain Mayne Reid. Robert Barr, the author, told with glee how Captain Mayne Reid, who was a friend of his, came to London and sent his address to Barr. The latter started to call on Reid. He did not know the street and, asking a bus man if his vehicle passed such and such a street, was assured that it did. In due course be came upon the street. In his letter Mayne Reid said he had taken a corner house in this street and added that he had a delightful garden and a high wall. "When I got down from the bus," says Mr. Bar, "I found that the corner house had a high wall and doubtless behind it a delightful garden, which answered perfectly the descrip tion which Captain Mayne Reid had given me. "I said to a policemen, because I wanted to be sure, 'Could you tell me where Mr. Reid lives?' And be an swered, 'Do you mean Mr. Reid, the au thcr?' An:1 I replied, 'Yes.' So the po liceman pointed to the promises I had already selected as the resience of my friend. Therefore I went through the gate without fear and rang the bell at the residence, which stood some dis tance back in the garden. I was ad mitted and asked If Mr. Reid was at home. I was told that he was and was shown Into a room on the left band side of the passage. Waiting there some time, an old, slippered man came in, whom I did not recognize. "'Do you wish to see me?' he asked. . rose from my chair and replied, 'I have called to see Captain Mayne Reid.' 'I beg your pardon,' he said very frigid ly. 'I am Charles Reade,' with which he turned his back upon me and left me there alone. That was the only time I had the pleasure of meeting one of England's greatest authors. Captain Mayne Reid had taken a corner house in a street of the same name in Maida Vale, some miles from where Mr. Charles Reade resided during his last days." THE M,0DEL GUEST. He Knows Just Witen, What and How to Do or Not to Do. A really fine specimen of the guest who does his best has a spirit which cannot be broken by weather or weari ness. He can mlanage to talk to any one, even if he should discover with a shock that he is sitting next to his worst enemy. IUe knows how to come into any discussion and how to keep out of it. Ile does not seek his own amusement. yet be never fails to show that he is amused. leis tolerant of every opinion, and though he may have many convictions of his own and may state them so as to do them justice he never tries to proselytize. His visit Is not a mission, and he never for a moment fancies himself on the hustings, in a debating society, a pulpit or a court of justice. Above all, he has a good opinion of himself. Good wine needs no bush. He has no desire to boast, but he is cer.tain that be will not be slighted. If his hostess assigns to him a dull job he is sure it is because she thought he could do it well, and if he feels it to be really below his powers he takes her mistake into account not while he is under her roof, but when he next receives her kind Invitation. He is not plagued by that craving of the oversensitive to be like their com pany nor does he belong to that race of born dissenters who would always rath er be different. But, alas, conscience and talent do not always go together. There are some high principled guests who are terrible bores. In their solicitude to be agree able they never stop talking, but pursue their garrulous ideal like a dog follow ing a carriage. To every interruption they give immediate but momentary attention and run breathless on.-Lonl don Outlook. Condensed For Pour Days. "There was a good old lawyer of the good old southern type," said a judge, "who had a most eloquent way of pleading. -His brief for three days had been a marvel of classical allusion and legal erudition. "The judge, however, became a trinle impatient and, as gently as he could, intimated that the docket was some what crowded, and It might be to the client's interest if the lawyer could contrive to end his plea. And, do you know, the old barrister declared that the last fonr days of his argument were a marvel of condensation." The Hecdgehog. The hedgehog runs the roads in Eng land freely, Ie is a quaint little fel low, our hedgehog, having far more intelligence than people give him credit for. It is curious, as you stand per. fectly still in the middle of the road, to see him come running along, then stop ping to sniff and whine and examine the high, strange object that hardly breathes lest he startle the little crea ture. Then, with a gentle grunt, he will pass you by. A very low yet de cided grunt he gives, and he whines as well.-Blakwood's Magazine. shaking Hand', at Freneh Funerals. A most painful custom at French funerals is the posting at the exit door of the church wherein the ceremonies take place of the male head of the de ceased person's family, the widower or the eldest son or brother, whose duty it is to shake hands with every person who has been present at the ob sequies when once they are over and pople are going away. It is not eti quette for the. gentleman to speak to anybody, but if he is moved to tears his weeping is considered a most ap propriate action. nsoc His Fault. A doctor was summoned to attend the miller's little boy. He wrote out a prescription, which was promptly made up and administered in due form. The next day he called again to see his pa tient and found the whole family in tears. "Alas!" said the mother, "I shouldn't have thought that my poor child would have died of the measles." "What!" exclaimed the doctor. "He had the measles, and you never told me?"-Paris Journal. His Occupation. Calvert, Jr.-What is your uncle do ing now? Balty Moore-Sitting on juries. Calvert, Jr.--What? I thought he was judge in one of the higher courts. Balty Moore - He Is. - Baltimore American. The Joke on Her. "I suppose being the wife of a hu morist Is a continuous joke," said her former schoolmate. "Yes," she sadly sighed, looking at her faded jacket, "and it's on me." Chicago Record-Herald. Bears te T~heKind Ycu Have Always Bought A Bank Account MEANS FOOD, SHELTEE, EDUCATION and CAPITAL For Your Family and Yourself. The time to start an account is NOW And the place is at the Bank of Iarendon, MANNING, S. C. Four per cent interest paid on time deposits. Bank of Manning, MANNING, S. 0. Q1 N ARE YOU IN LINE as one of the many depositors in the Bank of Manning?- No matter what your position in life may be, A BANK ACCOUNT is a handy thing to have-the best in surance against adversity. Why not be one of the five hundred men and women who have deposits here? Buggies, Wagons, Road -Car'ts and Car'riages REPAIRE~D With Neatness and Despatch -AT R. A. WHITE'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 me a call. L AME. My horse is lame. Why? Because I did not have it shod by 1R. A. White, the man that puts on such neat shoes and makes horses travel with so much ease. We Make Thiemu 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 )lease you, and I guarantee all of my work. Shop on corner below R. M. Dean's. R. A. WITE, MANNING. S. C. GO TO RM, Dean's Shop For the best Recpair Work ou Wagons, Buggies, Carts, etc. Horseshoeing a Specialty. You can get an afllround job of first class work on Horseshoeing for 80 ets. See me and get your work done first class and cheap. C. JACHSON, .Manning, S. C. N orthwestern R. R. of S. C. Utween ~ Siimie-r anid Cannu.'a Sothbou.Nort bund No. 69). No. 71. No 70. No. 68. P M AM A M P ll (1 25 9 36 Lc-.. Siiumter . .Ar 9 00 5 45 6 27 9 38 N. W. Jnnein 8 58 5 43 6 47 9 50 . ..Dailzeil... 8 25 5 13 7 05 10 10 . .. 13rdeni... 8 00 4 58 7 23 11) 21 . . lhemlerbs 7 40 4 43 7 30 10 3i .. Ellerbee .. 7 30 4 38 7 50 11 00 So Rty .Junctu' 7 10 4 25 800 1110 Ar. .(,amden. .Le 700 4 15 (S C & G Ex Depot) P M PM.\ AM3 P M Between Wilson-s~ Mill arnd Sumter. Southn d. NortL boun d. No. 73. 1aily except Sne day No. 72. P M Stations. ' M 3 30 L4e.......S mtr...Ar 12 30 3 33 . .Samnmerton Junction 12 27 347........Tmndal........ 1155 4 00 '....... Packsville....... 11 30 425..........ilver......... 1100 ... .. ..Millard .........02 5 5 ...Sumnmerton .... 10 15 5 5.5..... .... Davis......... 9 15 6 15.........Jordan ....... 9001 7 00 Ar... ilso's Milks... Le 8 40 PM AM Between Millard and St. Paul. Daily except Sundlay. onthboun d. Northbound. No 73. No. 75. No. 72. No. 74. P M A M St anons A M P M 4 35 10 20 Le Millard A r 10 45 5 00 4 40 10 30 Ar St. Paul Le 10 35 4 50 PM AM AM PM THOS. WILSON. President. ~odol Dyspepsia Cure Digests what you eat. BA nlQQUGHFA EoffTflVEL e1ween the NORTH AND SOUTH F Jorfida-Couba. A passenger.service:unexcelled for luxury and comfort equipped'witlithelatest 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, CAROLNA PORLAND CEMENT CO., CHARLESTON, S. C. Sole Selling A.genzts IKIL _UAN Fire Brick, Fire Tile, Arch, Brick, Bull-Head and All Special Tiles. ALSO FINEST PREPARED FIRE CLAY. Carload Lots. Less Than Carload Lo GLENN SPRING$-,._ MINERAL WATER. Nature's Greatest Hamedy * FOR DISEASES OF TIE * Liver, Kidneys, Stomaohd and Skin. Physicians Prescribe it, I. 6 Patients Depend on it, and Everybody Praises It FOR SALE BY AVegetablePrepaainoAs- Y Buh simnilating the ooandileula ting the Stomnachsan of~ Ber h Promotes Digesion.Cheerful- Sg ness andRest.Contains neither Opium,Morphiine norineral. o NOT~NAnc OTIC. AWrfemdonvusonsveish ness and LOSS OF SLEEP.Fo Ovr Fac Simile Signature of TBears ther Signatur 'of EXACT COPY OF V/RAPPER. THC CNTAtCOMP.1NY. NEWY'.0tKCOTY. vTTTvinTvTvwvinYVtWHTRTTTTTYWTV' ENYU O Ti1E KIND OF - F r mE s!~SAIGSLO Tobcse svry muha matter Whc tedpnh Sof taste. It is important, though, Sthat the frmsset properly on a y otecmoto i the nose and at the right distance csoe~..... Sfrom the eyes; that the lenses be a APCTI Sperfectly centered. and how are Syou to know when one is guess- a NAL TLS ~ing? EWE .. on.ihnetesa "Glasses Right, -Good Sight." Acrilivtto SE. A. Bultman, i .L WLS JBWELER AND OPTICIAN. 2 ann ie lc 17 S. Main St, - Sumter, S. C. i oo ypesaO 'PHONE 194.Dietwatyuet EMAIMJAAAAAAAMAWAAAAAAAA~TH H fEA DUG TOE.