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GeoS. HacKer &Son COO) -0 Doors, Sash, Blinds, Moulding and Building Material, CHARLESTON, S. C. Sash Weights and Cords. Window and Fancy Glass a SUecialty. )o You Want PERFECT FITIING CLOTHES? TH EN COME OR SEND TO US. We have the best equipped Tai!or in Establishimenft in I hp State. H1ig1 Ar 6lothing soiely and we carry the best line of la~ts and Gent's Fnruishings in the eitv. Ask your most prominent men who we are, and they will commend you to us. J.L DAVID & BRO,, Cor. King & Wentworth Sts., CHARLESTON, - S. C. Buggies, Wagons, Btoad Carts and Carriages REPAIRED 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 solderingdniv me a call. -gdngv L AME. . My horse is lame. Why? Because I did ~not have it shod by Rt. A. White, the man that puts on such neat shoes and makes hors'es travel v. ith so much ease. We Make Them Look New. We are making a specialty of re painting old Buggies, Carriages, Road Carts and Wagons cheap. Come and see me. My prices will please you. and I guarantee all of my work. - - Shop on corner below R. M. Dean's. R. A. WHITE,, MANNING. S. 0. LNUP F 9-ta. Price 90i.$ \ ree Trial. Surest and Qui.:-cs ,jqu* for all TEROAT and ..UN TRUB The R. B. Loryea Drug Store, WHEN YOU COME TO TOWN CALL AT -WMELLS' sHAVING SALOON Whbich is titted up with an '-ve to the comfort of his --nsto-ners.. .. ... HAIR CUTTING IN ALL STYLES, S HAVIN(. .&Az S HA M POl ONG D~one with neatness an dispatch. .. .. .,. .\ eordial invitation isi extended... J. L. WELLS. Maanning Times Block. JH. LESESNE, ATTORNEY AT LAW. MANNING, S. C. C. DAVIS, ATTORNEY AT LAW, MANNING, S. C. J. S. Wif.SON. w. C. DURNT. w. J. MULDROwE WILSON DURANT & MULDROW. Attorneys~ and Couns.elors t Law, MANNING, S. C. JOSEPH F. RHAME, ATTORNEY AT LAW, MANNING, S. C. DR. J. FRANK GEIGER. DENTIST, MANNING, S. C. 'Phone No. (3. DR. J. A. COLE, DENTIST. .Nettles Building qpstairs. WVH EN IN _N EED O F GrocerieS CALL ON P. B. MOUZON. NEXT TO DR. W. E. BROWN & CO.'S DIG STOR. BANK OF CLARENDON, Manning, S. C. Equipped with a burglar-proof screw-door safe with time lock, as shown above. CONSERVATIVELY AND CAREFULLY CONDUCTED. Offering you these safeguards, you are invited to deposit your mon ey with us. May we not have the pleasure of serving you'? Four Per Cent. Interest Paid on Time Deposits. BANK OF CLARENDON, MANNING. S. C. THE Bank of Manning, MANNING. S. 0. Capital Stock, - $40,000 Surplus, - - $25,000 -LLT-US-PAT~ -YOUF- NTr~EEST YOU CAN hAKE MONEY with money. You can have money if you save it. It's our mission to receive your money, to conserve it, to pay you a fair interest on it. No matter what your position in life may be, you can START A BANK ACCOUNT. You'll find it a good thing to have when old age comes. Beginning April 1st this bank will close at 2 p. m. Shorthornis & Berkshires. We have booked orders for many of our Pigs for spring delivery, but still have a fine selection now ready for ship ment. Our Berkshires are the finest. Do you want a fine young Shorthorn Bull or some Heifers? Perhaps it is a bred cow that you want. We shall be pleased to supply your wants. Alder'man Stock F'arm, ALCOLUJ, S. C. Indigestion Causes Catarrh of the Stomach. For many years it has been supposed that Catarrh of the Stomach caused Indigestion ind dyspepsia, but the truth is exactly the opposite. Indigestion causes catarrh. Re 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 mucin instead of the juices of natural digestion. This is called Catarrh of the Stomach. Kodol Dyspepsia Gure relieves all inflammation of the mucous membranes lining the stomach, protects the nerves, and cures bad breath, sour risings, a sense of fullness after eating, indigestion, dyspepsia and all stomach troubles. Kodol iet What You Eat Maete Stomach Sweet. Bottes only Reur sie $1.00 holding 2M times Prepared by E.. o.WITT &0OOChlcago. ill, The R. B. Loryea Drug Store. Money to Loan. Ess "rerms. APPLY TO Wilson, DuRant & Muldrow Do You Want TO BORROW MONEY? If you wa'nt to borrow money on real estate, no matter how large the amount, come to see me. I can make loans on im proved real estate at a low rate of interest and on long time. J. A. WEINBERG, Attorney at Law. MANNING. - - S. C Kodol Dyspepsia Cure Digests what you oat. A Sweet Breath is a never failing sign of a healLhy stomach. When the breath is bad the stomach is out of order. There is no remedy in the world equal to Kodol Dyspepsia Cure for curing indigestion. dyspepsia and all stomach disorders. Mrs. Mary S. Crick of White Plains, Ky., writes: "I have been a dyspeptic for 'years; tried all kinds of remedies but continued to grow worse. By the use of Kodol I began to improve at once, and after taking a few bottles am fully restored in weight. health and. strength and can eat whatever T like." Kodol digests what you eat and makes the stomach sweet. Sold by The R. B. Lorvea Drug Store. Lord Palmerston. Herbert Paul in his "History of Mod ern England" thus describes Lord Pal merston: This "gay, eupeptic son of Belial" was now in his sixty-second year. No English statesman except Walpole and Pitt has passed so large a proportion of his public life in office. The ratio was forty-nine years of office to fifty nine of public. life. While the Tories , were in power he was a Tory. For more than twenty years, from 1807 to 1828, he was secretary of war, or, as we should now say, financial secretary to the war office. Ducing that long period he seldom spoke, and Channing, who spoke for pleasure, complained that "he could not bring that three decker Palmerston into action." Lord Palmerston was a man of fashion and a man of pleasure. His house was a social center of much importance. But he was also pre-eminently a man of af fairs who never neglected his business and was always master of his subject. i When he returned to office under Lord John no mai In Europe could be com pared with him for knowledge of for eign policy except Metternich and Gui I zot. He took difficulties as a bold rider takes* a still fence, relying on his horse and his luck. Hitherto his luck had been very good, and his horse was a splendid animal. In 1846 England was undoubtedly the first power of the world, as France was the second. The Queer Sunfash. The sunfish or headfish is fairly com mon in the vicinity of Santa Catalina Island. Its general appearance is ob long and deep, very thin or compress ed, cut off (truncate) behind, so there appears to be no tail, a mere rim of movable flesh taking its place, which has a very limited use in the slow loco-. motion of this extraordinary fish. The skin is hard and coarse, rough, scale less and covered with fiat spines, the entire skin covered with a thick coat ing of slime, which appears to be a world In itself for numerous parasites which prey upon the fish. This extraordinary fish is one of the few fishes of little or no use to man. "I am of the opinion," says a natu ralist, "that the hard skin might be utilized. I once learned that the boys of a certain village in Maine were anxious to secure the muscular en velope of a specimen caught by me to use it as rubber. They cut the hard, elastic substance into round shapes and used them for the interior of home made baseballs." Crude, Garish Athens. An American traveler writes: "Ath ens Itself, as a city, Is insufferable. It Is raw, garish, new, staring, crude. It smells of paint. It reeks of varnish. it is redolent of last week. It is the newest city one sees in southern Eu rope. It is dusty, it Is noisy, it is vul gar. Everything in it is imitation. The palaces are imitation. The hotels are pmtation. The army is imitation. The cIty is a sham. It is a joy to leave the commonplace streets, to quit the insufferable city and to climb the Acropolis. There everything is calm and peaceful, and the magnificent ruins are restful. There only in Athens do you find a spot which is not oppressive ly new and raw. The royal palace is one of the newest and the rawest of all the raw, new buildings." -France Sets the Pace. "Wife beating Is unknown among the French, excitable though they are," says a writer on British manners in the National Review, "and, as every one knows at home, that pastime is commonly indulged in by our lower classes at the expense of a 2s. 6d. fine. In England many little things testify to the accepted 'superiority' of the male sei. A woman bows first, as to her lord and master; in France a man salutes his Idol whether noticed or un noticed and stands with his head un covered if she stops to speak to him, while the younger men never omit to kiss a lady's hand, to shake which would seem an impertinence!" Tendencies of the Tim. Personal luxury-vulgar, ostentatious, unsthetic-Is rampant. Our men xitear diamonds, sapphires, rubles in their ties, in their sleeve links, in the~tr gold cigarette .cases, in their mnatchboxes. Brutal ostentation is near to being the good form of today. Our women clothe themselves with reckless profusion. Life is murdered in every quarter of the globe to provide them with furs, with feathers, with the hundred and one gewgaws that have come to be con sidered essential.-Today. Debt and Eappiness. Blodgett-1 should think it would be awful to be in debt the way you are. Tildng-Oh, I don't know. I've known lts of people who owed money, and Pve known sorte who had money owed to them, and the latter always seemed to be the more unhappy.-Boston Tran script. A Paradox. "Will you please insert this obituary notice?" writes a correspondent to- the editor of a leading daily paper. "I make bold to ask it because I know the deceased had many friends wlio'd be glad to hear of his death."-London Tit-Bits. Born tp It, "Some scientist has made the discov ery that every one is born lefthandd." "Well. I can go even further than that I maintain that every one 'is born with a predisposition to. say 'I done It.' "-Chicago Record-Herald. Always Fly Away. Riches have wings all right, but they are, it would seem, trained only fot an outward flght.-Judge. Philosophy is that which enables a rih man to. say there is no disgrace In b~eing poor. A Summer Cold. A summer cold is not only annoying, but if not relieved pneumonia will be the probable result by fall. One Min ute Cough Cure clears the phlegm, draws out the inflammation, heals, soothes and strengthens the lungs and bronchial tubes. One Minute Cough Cure is an ideal remedy for the chil - dren. It is pleasant to' the taste and perfectly harmless. A certain cure for croup, cough and cold. Sold by The R GARDENS OF THE ALCAZAR. One of Their Greatent Charmis In the I Apparent Lack of Cultivation. The garden of the Alcazar is one garden composed of several, each open. ing into the other by steps descending j from a terrace or through arches in marble or living green. All the gardens are surrounded withI wonderful hedges of myrtle, juniper or box. If the gardens of the Alcazar should be stripped of all but their hedges, palm trees and magnolias, they would still be most wonderful. In some places walls about eight feet in. height separate the gardens, and against these walls are trained orange and peach trees, with a tangle of jas mine and roses climbing among them as they will. In fact, the flowers grow in such careless and natural profusion I and there is seemingly so little cultiva- I tion that one might almost think the i hoe of a gardener had not visited the 1 place for a hundred years. This very carelessness was one of the greatest charms.of the place and added to the effect of age that clung to everything. Modern gardeners would stand aghast at such apparent neglect. I recognized that the very lack of i modern care was artistic and suitable 1 and yet wondered, if the place were 1 mine, whether I could forbear the use I of shears, trowel and hoe. The hedges < were trimmed. These, with some or- I ange trees growing in a solid mass of i green along some fifty feet of palace wall and reaching to the very roof, alone bore signs of the gardener's shears. The flower beds were of Intricate shapes. filled with a tangled mass of flowers and always surrounded with box. And such box! Mly heart sank within me when I thought of the box in my garden at home, where not even a hundred mild winters and a hundred rainy summers could give growth like the smallest of that at the Alcazar. The bouquet that is considered in Se ville as a model of beauty and elegance was to our eyes a most hideous thing. In shape like a pyramid, about four teen inches high, it was formed by fas tening a magnolia bud to the top of a smooth, round stick and then winding flowers tightly around the stick, each succeeding row becoming larger, so that at the bottom the bouquet was probably two feet around. It was a frequent sight to see two men carrying a pole between them with from six to a dozen of these bouquets swinging, heads down, from the pole.-Seribner's. Puzzled His Tutors. Lord Avebury, better known as Sir John Lubbock, was a naturalist even as a schoolboy at Eton. In his day there, however, the instructors cared for nothing except the classics and were ignorant of natural science. In his autobiography Lord Avebury says: "At that time Eton boys, especially If they were quick at writing verses and learning by heart, had much more lei sure than they have now. I devoted a good deal of mine to natural history and geology in spite of the remon strances of my tutor, who thought that it might have been better occupied on the classics. On one occasion we were given 'The Bee' as a subject for a theme. I took some pains with it, and my tutor sent for me and asked me confidentially whether It was all true. From what he said I inferred that they rather suspected I was quizzing them and doubted whether to com mend or to flog me." Cats Fond of Olives. "I have often wondered if all cats like olives." remarked a woman who Is very fond of the feline tribe. "All mine do, and I have six. Olives are usually an acquired taste with the hu man race, but cats seem to take to them naturally-at least mine do. A~n olive will set any one of them into par oxysms of joy. They will leave milk or fish or any other article of food for it, purring and rolling over It much as though It might have the intoxicat ing effect of catnip before they finally eat it. I have often tried olives on other cats in the houses of friends and have found them equally appreciative, only they prefer their olives cut up in to pieces."--Philadelphia Record. LOVE OF FIGHTING. It Seems to Be Inborn In the Aver. age Human Being. We are all fond of fighting-that is, we all love to look at a fight, and some of us like to be in a fight. But we all love to see one. There are some super msthetic and hyper refined humans ,of both sexes who think they do not like1 to see a fight. Some of them actually believe they are sincere. But deep down in the average man and woman the love of fight exists. It is ingrained; It is congenital; it is in the human ba-I by. When he screams. squalls and kicks If his will Is thwarted, he is fight-1 ing. So with the same bany when, grown up into a boy, he pulls his little sister's hair. It is partly, perhaps, the love of fighting and partly, perhaps, the love of giving pain, for cruelty also seems to[ be part of the makeup of the human aimal. After little brother has fin-I Ished pulling little sister's hair and she has dried her eyes she soothes her wounded feelings by pulling off flies' wings or legs or pinching the cat's tal under a rocking chair. Of the higher fights of juvenile cruelty to which her brother rises when he ties two cats to gether by their tails over a clothesline, where they fight till nothing is left but their tail tips-of these familiar facts we will not speak. When brother goes to school and then to college, whether It be to the English "public" school or to the American "public" school, resembling each other only in name; to the academy, to the preparatory school, to the university, 1 he speedily becomes past master in cr0 elty. In most of these institutions he must fight. Hazing exists in every col lege in the country. Even the United States government cannot stamp it out' at West Point and Annapolis. In both these institutions fist fights under prize ring rules are of almost daily occur rence. They are masterful battles, and they have not a little to do with mak lg stout hearted, stalwart fighters of ur army and navy officers. To those who object to these battles the unan swerable reply Is that the boys are there to learn to fight and that the way to learn to fight is to fight.-San Fran dsco Argonaut. Soft. "Yes," he declared, "I think one grows to be like the things he eats." "You must have been brought up on 1 marshmallows," she suggested.-Chica go Record-Herald. Part of Her. Doctor-Your wife must keep out of excitement. Mr. Brisque-She. can't'. doctor. She carries it around with her.-Indanapolis Journal. Contentment comes from making the 1 very best of whatever you have, be it POTASH MINES. rhey Are All In Prussia and Supp the Entire World. The potash which is dug from t oyal Prussian mines, located at Stra; !urt, ninety miles from' Berlin, is t iole source of the world's supply. I "ore the mines were discovered t ,est substitute which could be fou or the product was wood ash, such be southern plantations used in t >d days for making lye soap. T Prussian mines are twenty-seven umber and were devoted to the p: iuction of salt before rock salt w liscovered. When the new variety of salt u given to the world the Prussian mir ere temporarily abandoned, and in lew years a search for rock salt w instituted. The salt was found, t Jn a badly adulterated condition, a in analysis of the adulterant reveal the fact that it was the most valual art of the mineral. The potash w it once turned to use as commere 'ertilizer. The mines are controlled by a syn eate. They employ 21,000 men a Field 1,200 car loads a day of potai Of the entire output 75 per cent ased for agricultural purposes, wh the remainder is used for chemi< urposes. It is largely utilized in t yanide process of extracting g< rom the ore.-Louisville Courier-Jol al. MILITARY STORIES. a Soldier Who Was Punished and Bugler Who Was Excused. From one of the French naval po .omes an interesting story of an it lent which recently occurred there. eneral holding a high command mt ls appearance suddenly at the b racks of an infantry regiment, whi [n obedience to his orders, was prom Cy drawn up in the yard. Then he, pIined the reason in a brief addrE Fe said that as he was walking the town attired in mufti on the p rious day a man belonging to 1 .orps, who was the worse for liqu ccosted him rudely and asked him stand him a drink. "Let him step < )f the ranks," he concluded. Imme tely a bugler emerged and, saluti: said, "It Is I, mon general." The incident is characteristic, a propos of it we are reminded of si in adventure which befell a cdrt French marshal. A grenadier who v masperated at some injustice tl ad been done him pointed his pis it the marshal and pulled the trigg but it did not go off. Without mov a muscle the veteran cried, "Four di in the cells for keeping your arms a bad -state!" The bugler's honesty can scare ave failed to be an extenuation of )ffense in the eyes of the general. THE WORD "HUSSAR." it Is Hungarian and Origins Meant a Freebooter. Hussar is a Hungarian word me Lng originally a freebooter or free lan These men, strong, active, hardy, eustomed to capture and tame herds wild horses, were brought into m tary service by Corvinus, the boy kil In 1442 and became the finest body light cavalry in the world. The si gested derivation from the Magya huzt, twenty, and ar, pay (one hor man raised by twenty fnames) only a fanciful one. The name spin Into all armies, and hussars of all tions are distinguished by uniforms brilliant colors and elaborate orj ment Two characteristics are thed man and the busby, with its scar cloth attachment, a survival ofi narrow Magyar bag, which fell o' the left shoulder as a protection agail sword cuts. The word dragoon was first used a regiment of mounted infantry, so ci ed from the dragons or short musk, with which they were armed. 'l ead of a dragon, wrought on the m sle of the muskets, seemed to spit and at one time was depicted on th standard. WAYSIDE WISDOM. Opportunity is the cream of time. Self conquest is the greatest of3 tories. The more you say the less people member. A mother's tears are the same in anguages. Good breeding is a letter of credit over the world. It is more profitable to read one xx than ten books. A man cannot go where temptati ran~not find him. People ruled by the mood of glo< ttract to them gloomy things. A fault which humbles a man is more use to him than a good acti which puffs him up with pride. In the conduct of life habit cour or more than maxim because habit . living maxim and becomes flesh a istinct-Detrolit News-Tribune. The "Czar" Went to Bed. A foreign nobleman who, If reps speaks true, is somewhat henpecked rited some men a night or two ago >lay cards in his house. The meeti was a convivial one, and all wi 'merry as a marriage bell." It gre ate, and fears were expressed byi arty that they were trespassing up te kindness of the mistress of i ouse, who, by the way, was not pr "Not at all, gentlemen; not at Play as long as you please. I am c2 ere," said the master of the mansic "Yes, gentlemen, play as long as y lease," said a silvery voice, and ose Immediately as the baroness ste efore them. "But as it is after i'clock the czar Is going to bed." ent Wanted a sure Thing. An English professor of mineralo ;ells a good story about a certain I nglish commercial magnate. He sa :at the great merchant in questi rame to him to consult about the truction of the hopeful son and he rho was some day to run the vu usiness interests from which "t ater" had made his wealth. "But mind you," said he, "I dol rant him to learn about strata or di >r faults or upheavals or denudatio1 mud I don't want him to fill his ml vith fossils or stuff about crysta What I want him to learn is how id gold and silver and copper In pa ng quantities, sir-in paying quan Fitted the Event. "See here!" said the city editor. vsh you would get away from trl ad expressions as musch as possib Iere you have written that at a ci an point in this big meeting 'the ence was oppressive.' Now, that is aying" "That is especially apropos," repli he dignified press person. "It was neeting composed entirely of womel Cncinnati Times-Star. An Arab Spy Outwitted. Once at least in Egypt the loss of his eye in an earlier campaign proved a great service to Lord Wolseley and his he army. He could get no information of he the enemy's strength or position. An h Arab was captured prowlln'g around he our outposts and was brought before he him.. It was ten to one the sullen fel ad low knew everything. Lord Wolseley s questioned him. The fellow answered he never a word, standing stolid between i the two soldiers. At last a happy idea struck the general. He said in Arabic: 1as "It is no use your refusing to answer me, for I am a wizard and at a wish can destroy you and your masters. To as prove this to you I will take out my a eye, throw it up. catch it and put it 'as back in my head." And, to the horror ut and amazement of the fellow, Lord ad Wolseley took out his glass eye, threw ed it up, caught and replaced it. That le was enough. The Arab capitulated, 'as and the information he gave the staff [a led to Arabi's defeat-London Globe. A Hidden Warning. nd It is recorded in history that when ;h. Darius. king of Persia, invaded Scythia Is the ruler of the latter country, Idan ile thuras, sent him a message consisting al of a mouse, a frog, a bird, an arrow he and a plow. The wisest men in the >ld army puzzled over the meaning of it, .. which was conjectured to be that the empire was -surrendered. It was sup posed that the mouse signified the dwellings, the frog the waters, the bird the air, the arrow the arms and a the plow the land. But it turned out eventually that ts the interpretation intended was that ci- unless Darius and his soldiers could fly A like birds, burrow like mice or betake de themselves like frogs to the water they ar- would never escape the weapons of the ch, Scythians and make their way out of pt- the country. r CASTORIA he For infants and Children. *t The Kind You lVe Always Beoght di- Bears the ag, Signature of d --- ng i AND FEVIER TO STAY CURED BY ur Wintersmiths on ( jll (irJe of a gurnte redy for Chills. oAgue, Oengue, LaCrlppe, and all - Maara Toubles. Standard for t- eas No'~Quinine 6?r ather Me- harmful Drugs. No bed esults -is frow usiag i. Tooes you up all ed e and puts new life and .Jgor - lat I our systew. of 5OCsue let -_______________ 2st THlE KIND OF 2 F rAmEsi ' To be used is very much a matter z of taste. It is important, though, ire E that the frames set properly on ~ er the nose and at the right distance ei from the eyes; that the lenses be Sperfectly centered. and how are you to know when one is guess ~ing? ~WE... GUESS. -Glasses Rtight, an GoodSight." all E. A. Buitmian, S JEWELER AND aPTICIAN. on 17 S. Main St., - Sumter, S. C. 'PHONE 194. oN*rhws ""~ . ". of0 C. its I LmE T1AuL. No. C. is In ftl .Mnmiay, June 5, 1904 nd Bet1wceen 8initer an d Cain den. Mixed-Daily except Sunday. Soutihboundlt. North boiund No. GO. No. 71 Noi 70. No. 68 ad P AM AM P M I 6 25 9:3 SGL... S'umter .. Ar 9 00 5 45 to 0627 'J38 N. W .loneitn 8 58 5 43 ng 6 47 1)59 ...Dlen. 8 25 5 13 mt 7 05 10 10 ... t,'rden... 8 00 4i58 w7 23 10 21 ..- 'emblerts . 7 40 4 43 h7 30 10 31 .. EI:erbee .. 7 30 4 38 7 50 110Oi Sou1v.Jonetr 7 10 4 25 on 8 0 11 10 Ar..Camde'n..Le 7 00 4 15 he (8 G e y Dspot) es- P.M P' .i AM P.M Bl. Jetween Wilsoni's Mill and Samter. 'a So4ithhon'd Northbound. n.. No. 73. 1Miy et*' Suna No. 72 ou 1' M Staitions. 3' M eu 3 00 1e.... Sutr.. Ar 12 30 od 3 0 . .Sammerton Jinnetion.. 12 27 132.).........inal........ 1155 1 3 35.........Pa~ckvle .... 1 30 E355..........ilver .........1100 405 )1045 5 30.........End..........10 20 4 45 .....nomierton ... 10 15 5 25...... ...Davis...........9 5 5y A ....Jordan ....... 9 00 d6 30 A r..Wilo's Mills...Le 8 40 7 y p 1; A M Unr3tyWieen Millard and St. Panl. tSt 8onthibound'. Northbond. he No 7:3. Ni. 75. No. 72. No. 74. P M A .\ Stations A M P M t4 03 10 20 L~e M illard Ar 10 45 5 30 S4 13 10 30 .Ar St. Paul Le 10 35 4 20 ps 'M.1 A M A M P M SAll Pleased. WE ARE PLEASED to w~rite y our insurance. You will be pleased to receiv e it. The Best Is What You Want. n.See me about y our insurance, ether Life, Fire, Accident, Health, aBurglary or Plate Glass. a 3. L. WILSON. Bnga ur Job Work to The Times office A GOD OPORTNITY Fine~~~ Reudin 0 Mlle hu~ The Manning Times IS CLUBBING WITH THE Weekly News and Oourie1 AND . Life and Letters, A Southern Magazine. We will send THE TIEms and the Twice-a-Week News and Courier for $2 per year; Or we will send THE TIMES and Life and Letters for-$ Or both The News and Courier and Life and Letters with THE TIEs for $2.50 per year. - This is an excellent opportunity- for the reading publie rhe News and Courier is one of the best State newspa pers in the country; it gives State, national and the news of the world. Life and Letters i's a monthly magazine published at Knoxville, Tenn., and has among its contributors some of the : finest literary taleht of the Sonth. We regard THE TIMES fortunate in being able to club with it. Subscribe Now and secure this magnificent Southern magazine with Taw TIMES for -$2 per year; or The Weekly News and Courier with TaE TIES for $2 per year; or all three, THE TIMES, - Weekly News and Courier and Life and Letters for $2.50 per year. SGLENN SPRINGS MINERAL9 WATER. * ~ Nature's Greatest Remedy FOR DISEASES OF THE *Liver, Kidneys,St ah * and Skin. - Physicians Prescribe it, Patients Depend on it, and Everybody Praises It FOR SALE ~BY W. E. B1~WINT de Co AUGUST 17t . . Excursion__Rates. MANNING, S. C., TO OLD POINTT, VA. VIRGINIA BEACH, VA. --''------'75 OCEAN VIEW, VA. CAROLINA BEACH, N. C. WRIGHTSVILLE BEACH, N. C..--'-'-'''---.50 MYRTLE BEACH, N. C.f Through Pullman Sleeping Cars on Train No. 32 direct to Norfolk, arriving Norfolk 6 A. M. August 18th. Tickets limited to return on any train until September 1st, 1904. ATLANTIC COAST LINE~ For reservations or any information write ' H. D. CLARK, W. J. CRAIG, Agent, Gen'l Pass. Ag't, Manning, S. C. Wilmington, N. C. BRING YOUR TO THE TINES OFFICE.