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GeoS. Hacker &Son Co co LU Doors, Sash, Blinds, F Moulding and Building Material, D CHARLESTON, S. C. Sash Weights and Cords. Window and Fancy Biass a Specialty, l0 Y011 WantI PERFECT FIT1tNM CLOTHES? THIEN COME OR SEND TO US. We hamve the t . equipped TaLilor i Establishien t he St ate. We haujd - high Art '1inlI solely and w'e carry the best line of Hp.ts and Gent's Furnishings in the city. Ask you r most prominent men who we are, and they will commend you to us. J. L DAVID & BRO,; Cor. King & Wentworth Sts., CHARLESTON, - S. C. C Buggies, Wagons, Road Carts and Carriages 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 R. A. White, the man that puts on such neat shoes and makes horses travel n ith so much ease. We Make Themi Look Newv. 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. W HIT E, MANNING. S. C. KILLYTHE COUCH AND CURE THE LUNCS -T "Dr. King's New Discovery FR ONSUMPTION Price LOLDS Free Trial. THBOAT and LUNG TROUB LES, or NONEY BACK. --The R. B. Loryea Drug Store. W HEN YOU COME TO TOWN CALL AT, WELLS' SHAVING SALOON .Whieb is titted up with an eye to the comfort of his .*-nsto-ners.. .. .. HAIR CUTTIN(*t IN ALL STYLES,e 8H AVINGi AND SH AMPOOING 0 D~one with neatness an .li.patch.................. . .L .A crdiea ii uvitation is oxtended. . . ic J. L. WEBLLS. Manning Times Block. 'i ATTORNEY AT LAW, MANNING, S. C. W . DAIS. ATTORNEY AT LAW, MANNING, S. C. J. 5. WLLSQS. W. C. D)CUANT. W. J. MULDROWi WILSON DrRANT & MUJLDROW.* Allorney~s (ad Counsa.elor at Law, MANNING. S.C. JOSEPH F. RHAME, ATTORNEY AT LAW, MANNING. S. C. DR. J1. FRANK GEIGER. DENTIST, MANNING. S. C. i'hone No. f(. DR. .1. A. COLE. DENTIST. - Nettles Building. upstairs, I WHEN IN NEED OF I] CALL ON .B. MOUZON.1 NEXT TO R. W. E. BROWN & CO.-S DRUG STORE. ANX OF CLARENDON, Manning, S. C. Equipped with a burglar-proof screw-door safe with time lock, as shown above. ONSERVATIVELY AND CAREFULLY CONDUCTED. tering 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. ANE OF CLARENDON, MANNING. S. C. WintrOsmith a (CL\\ @ I CUARANTEED CUR E CHILLS DENGUE, AGUE, LAGRIPPE, BILIOUS FEVER AND AU. MAL ARIAL ILLS. At you Drug Store. Moneuy ae teuded t It does yos ao good after .a leir mi?. lank of Manning, MANNINO. 8. 0. apital Stock, - $40,000 urplus, -- - $25,000 TAKE IT a good bank. Our long list of cus mers, with yeats of business experi ace is a GUARANTEE the satisfactory way in which our asiness is conducted. The utmost con deration is shown to all our patrons. adies who wish to open check accounts ill meet with much courtesy. Beginning April 1st this bank will ose at 2p m. horhonis & Berkshires. We have booked orders for many of ar Pigs for spring delivery, but still ave a fine selection now ready for ship Lent. Our Berk-shires are the finest. Do you n~nt a fine young Shorthorn ull or some Heifers? Perhaps it is a red cow that you want. We shall be eased to supply your watnts. Ldrman Stock Far'm, ALCOLU, S. C. hsEiute Cough Cure For Coughs, Colds and Croup. D)o You Want TO BORROW MONEY? If you want to borrow money on rea! estate, no matter how large the amount, come to see me. I caf make loans on im proved teal estate at a low rate of inte.-est and on long time.I J. A. WEINBERG, A ttornzoy at Law. MANNING. - - S. C. lodeN Dyspepsia CuPs A Sweet Breath s a never failing sign of a healthy tomach. When the breath is bad the I tomach is out of order. There is no I emedv in the world equal to Kodol r )yspepsia Cure for curing indigestion, c yspep 'a and all stomach disorders. I rs.l rv S. Crick of White Plains, r (v., writes: "I have been a dyspeptic or years: tried all kinds of remedies c ut continued to grow worse. By the I tse of Kodol I began to improve at c ince, and after taking a few bottles am I ully restored in weight, health and I trength and can eat whatever I like." - odoi digests what you eat and makes he stomach sweet. So d by The R. B. oryea Dru.' Store. k GREAT NEWSPAPER rHE LONDON TIMES AND SOME OF: THE THINGS IT HAS DONE. Why "The Thunderer" Is such a Power In Europe-The History of the Times In the History of the World since the Paper Started. The London Times is the most com )lete and thorough news record pub ished in -ny language. Its law re )orts, written by barristers of stand ng, are essential to all English law ers. Its accounts of parliament form t convenient reference for public and )rivate libraries throughout the world. :n every department it gives a full re yort of what has happened. The paper was started in 1785 under he name of the Daily Universal Reg ster. which was changed to the Lon Ion Times in 17S8. In 1S03 it began its reat development under John Wal 'er It is no vain compliment to say that he Times is part of British civiliza ion. For over a hundred years it has >elonged, with the Established church d the British constitution, to the his oric greatness of the race. "You cannot buy the Times," its ed ttor proudly said when a powerful man sought to silence i; thunde.r, and the words might well be written in let ters -of gold across the portal of Print ing House square. You cannot buy the rimes. Lord Randolph Churchill in that dra matic moment when, locking up the wonderful budget which nobody has ever seen, he stepped for the last time Dut of the treasury in Whitehall, hailed a hansom and drove to the office of the rimes. In ten minutes he was in the editor's room telling the editor the news which was next morning to star te the political world. "Of course you will support me," Lord Randolph said in his own way. "No," said the editor, while Lord Randolph stood aghast. "But there is not another paper in England which would not be grateful for such a piece of information," ex laimed the wondering statesman, and the editor agreed. But would Lord Randolph take the news to any other paper? He might do so, and not a word should appear in the Times the. next day. Lord Randolph left his se eret with the Times and left the office, we may be sure, reflecting on the won lerful character of the one thing in the world which no man could buy. The Times the next morning reproved him severely for deserting his colleagues. It has been so from the beginning. The Times was a child of four when ts founder, the first John Walter, was put into jail for censuring the Duke of York. But they could not imprison the Times, and even while John Walter was in Newgate lie was sentenced again for severely criticising the Prince of Wales and accusing the Duke of Clarence of leaving his ship without Leave. The government withdrew its adver tisements and its printing contracts, but the Times went on its incorruptible way. It made cabinets and broke them, exposed plots and averted them. At least once, at a cost of ?5,000, the Times nipped in the bud an interna tional conspiracy which might have ruined half the banks in Europe, and there are two scholarships in London schools endowed by a thanksgiving und then raised to the Times. When the railway mania was at its tighest the Times sacrificed a fortune L advertisements by denouncing the, spirit of recklessness which was abroad, and' neither the penalties of the law, the enmities of statesmen nor the loss f revenue has availed against the earless determination of the Times to ay the thing It thinks. There were dramatic spectacles at times, when the great newspaper ought not only its own but foreign governments. Napoleon himself, who eared an editor more than an army, is said to have wanted to bring an action or libel against the Times, and Gui rot, the French minister of a later day, id more. To punish the Times for its unfriendliness he detained its courier i .Paris, delaying its dispatches. But the ingenuity of John Walter II. was too much for him. The situation in India was grave, and the Times established an overland oute to England without touching rance. The Indian mail was handed to a messenger at Suez, the messenger rode on a dromedary 200 miles to Alex ndria and there handed his packet to a, passenger on an Austrian steamer bound for Triest. Thence the pre :ious packet was dispatched via Os tend to Dover, where a special train waited to bring it up to London. The French minister was angry and nade another move. Special trains and steamers were placed at the dis posal of the English rivals of the hated paper, and for once the genius of the Times failed. But a storm stopped the French vessel in the Mediterranean, while the Times steamer sailed quietly p the Adriatic, and the triumph of the paper coincided with the advent of ts famous editor, Mr. Delane, who became editor of the Times when he was twenty-three. The history of the Times Is the his tory of the world since the paper began publication. No historian, writing of any period from the French revolution antil now, can do without its files. It was the Duke of Wellington who. sid that the editor of the Times was the most powerful man in the country. There was nothing the editor did not now, few things he could not do. It was through the Times that Lord John Russell learned of the indiscretion of Palmerston, which led to an apology to the king of Naples. It was the Times which accused Lord Melville, the friend of Piti;, of A Summer Cold. A summer cold is not only annoying, I >ut if not relieved pneumonia will bejS he probable result by fall. One MIin-!i ce Cough Cure clears the phlegm. traws out the inflammation, heals, oothes and strengthens the lungs and ronchial tubes. One Minute Cough jure is an ideal remedy for the chil- ( tren. It is pleasant to' the taste and cerfectly harmless. A certain cure for :: roup, cough and cold. Sold by The RI.' Escapad an Awful Fate. Mr. I luggins of Melbourne. Fla., vrites. "My doctor told mne I had con umption and nothing conid be doneifor ne. I was given up to die. The offer d a free trial bottle of Dr. King's New )iscovery for Consumption, induced ne to try it. Results were startling. T m now on the road to recovery and iwe all to Dr. King's New Discovery. t surely saved my life." This great :e is guaranteed for all throat and ung diseases by The R. B. Loryea )rug- Store. Price .50c. and *1. Trial )otties free. TESTS OF TILE INCAS STRICT MILITARY TRAINING OF THE ANCIENT PERUVIANS. Feats of Strength and Endurance That the Cadets Were Called Upon to Perform During Graduation Exercises Which Lasted a Month. Long before Columbus discovered the western continent many interesting peoples lived here, having their pecul iar customs and training their children carefully in the way they considered best calculated to make them brave and wise men. Not only the red Indians of the north, but the people of Mexico and Peru, who had a certain sort of civilization of their own, trained their children carefully and made them pass through a series of trials which the American boy of today may be thankful he does not have to undergo. Men of today in digging in the ruins of the splendid cities of the Peruvians have found almost a complete record of some of their educational systems. In Peru the kin. of the cu:ntry was called the inea. :md his eldest son, who was always brought up to succeed him, received a training especially elaborate and trying. The prince was sent to one of the big boarding schools where young noblemen were educated almost as soon as he could talk. There he was treated in all respects 'as if he were not the heir to the throne, but just a common, ordinary boy, who would some day have to work for a living. The school at which the prince was educated was a military school, which, according to records, was the Peru ian West Point. There, although many other things were taught. the chief stress was laid upon the art of war. All the prince's relatives, boys of about his own age and called the Inca nobles, were at the school with him and had their final examinations at the same time. The literary part of their education was inquired into in private by the "wise men," which corresponded to the "academic board" of West Point, but these examinations were followed by public exercises. The public exercises were conducted by a board consisting of the most prominent of the old Inca nobles, and It corresponded to the board of. vis itors appointed by the president each year to preside over the graduations at West Point. The graduating exer cises at the royal Peruvian military academy lasted for a month. The graduates were required to il lustrate by drills what they knew of military tactics. Then they had to give exhibitions of boxing and wres tling. Running was also regarded as a necessary accomplishment, for the Peruvians had no horses, and the men who were destined to lead their armies had to prove that they could move swiftly on foot over long distances and not tire. Therefore long courses were laid out for the boys to run over, which taxed their endurance and strength to the utmost. Then for several days together the bys were compelled to fast, being arefully examined during the time to see how they bore going without food, for the Inca said that a soldier and a gentleman should always be willing and able to go without food and not grumble when such abstinence was necessary. The cadets were also matched against each o'ther in mimic battles, in which, though the weapons were blunted, mnany were wounded and some killed. When this sort of thing had gone on or a month those boys who had won the best marks in their examinati~ons and had best stood the test of the pub lic exercises were selected for gradua tion, while the others were dropped or turned back Into the next class. The king was always present at these graduating exercises and delivered an address to the graduates. Garlasso, a descendant of the Incas, has left us an account of these ad resses from which we know that they were almost exact counterparts of the addresses delivered today by promi nent men at high school graduations and college commencements. Other things change, but the graduation ad dress seems to have been the same thing in all ages. After the address something took place which does not happen at modern American graduating exercises. The kig pierced the ears of each graduate with a golden bodkin, or large pin, which was allowed to remain there un til the wounds healed, leaving a hole Into which a round ornament was in serted. The size of this ornament was grad ually increased until in the case of the prince it was as large as an orange. Sandals were now bound on the feet gf the boys, and they went barefoot no longer; also a sash was tied about their waists and crowns of flowers placed on their heads. - The prince was now allowed to put on his royal robes, and, though only sixteen, he was usually sent to com mand an army corps somewhere on the border, where the king almost always, had a little war going on with thej neighboring savages.-New York Press.I Preferred ,Jail. A. convict in a New England prison' who had been sentenced to a life term for murder in the second degree, hav ing served a considerable number of years, was told that he would be re leased were he to pledge himself to go back to Italy, his native country, and never, never return to America. He declined the offer of freedom on the ground that he could earn so little money in the land of the ancient Ro mans that he would be hungry all the time at home, while in a Yankee prison he would get enough to eat at worst. Sick Headache. " For several years my wife was trou >led with what physicians called sick eadache of a very severe character. she doctored with several eminent phy icians and at a great expense, only to trow worse until she was unable to do ty kind of work. About a year ago he began taking Chamberlain's Stom ch and Liver Tablets and today weighs nore than she ever did before and is -al well," says Mr. Geo. E. Wright of Ce w London, New York. For sale by rho R. B. Loryea Drug Store, Tsaac M. QUAIL IN ITALY. The Way They Are Caught by Whole sale In Shore Nets. Vast numbers of quail are caught in Italy and particularly in the island of Capri. The nets are stationary engines and are set upon the shore. a little above sea level, upon the southern and eastern ends of the island. The nets are fine, dyed a gray cot(r and all but Invisible. They are stretched between poles all along the coast so as to inter cept the migrants. Along the bottom part of the net is a pouch or bag. The quails strike the net and flutter down ward into the network bag in helpless exhaustion. Mauy drop dead or dying into the sea. Others fly ashore with such force that they dash themselves to pieces on the rocks, where hawks await them. The birds fly by night, and the catch ers are at their nets at dawn. The day's work is over by S a. m. Many which escape the first nets are sought out upon the inner parts of the island and captured with small hand nets, which the quail catcher very cleverly uses when the birds have been marked down by a dog. Some fabulous figures have been given of the numbers of quails taken in the island of Capri alone. It is said that nowadays from fifty to sixty thousand are annually caught, and the island, as every one who has been to Naples knows, is a small spot. At other places along the Italian coasts a different system of netting is favored. The nets are but a yard high, though of great length. The bottom is securely pegged down to the sand close along the edge of the sea. The top is supported by notched sticks so lightly that a blow to the net knocks it down and entangles within its meshes what ever strikes it. The quails arrive flying swiftly and close above the surface of the water. Each bird lands in the net with a jerk and is covered by the part which it dislodges from the supporting sticks. These nets are sometimes half a mile long, and the owner walks slowly from end to end. collecting the birds and set ting up the sticks again. It is said that the captives are so ravenous for meat and drink. and so bold in disposi tion that they feed and quench their thirst ten minutes after they are cov ered up in the baskets. That quails migrate in enormous masses has long been notorious. In autumn the birds travel southward less hurriedly, and decoy birds are used to call their fellows into the nets. They are male birds which are blinded with redhot irons. Whistler's Sharp Wit. Mortimer Menpes in his book, "Whis tler as I Knew Him," gives this illus tration of the painter's sharp wit: As he grew older Whistler's love of practical jokes did not diminish. When quite a lad he was placed in a govern ment office, but his originality wrought his destruction, and he was dismissed. Just as he was leaving the office he passed through the chief's room, and his eye was caught by a huge magni fying glass which lay on a desk. Now, this glass was no ordinary one, but was used on the most solemn occasions by the "old man'' only and was held in much awe by the staff. Whistier, full of bitter thoughts, stooped over the desk for a moment and painted a little demon right in the middle of the sa cred magnifying glass and passed on his way with a smile. Next day, when the great man solemnly lifted his glass to inspect something, he saw nothing but a horrid little grinning demon and dropped it on the table with a howl, thinking that he had gone out of his mind. For a Cold In the Head. The following is said to cure a cold in the head: In the morning- after ris ing and at night before retiring wash the feet and legs as high up as the knees in cold water, then rub them with a rough towel and massage them till the skin is red and glowing. In ad dition to this cautiously snuft' tepid wa ter up the nose frequently during the day and sip with a teaspoon a glassful as hot as can be borne an hour before ech meal and at bedtime. A few days is often quite sufficient for simple cases and obstinate ones yield if the treat ment is prolonged. No medicines are required. If taken in the first stages of the disease a cold is broken up which might otherwise become a severe case of bronchitis lasting many days or weeks. Boiling 'Point of Water. Water boils at different temperatures, according to' the elevation above sea level. In London water boils practical ly at 21.2 degrees F.: in Munich, in Germany, at 200% degrees; in the City of Mexico at 200 degrees, and in the Himalayas, at an elevati;>n of 18,000 feet above the level of the sea, at 1S0 degrees. These differences are caused by the varying pressure of the atmos phere at these points. In London the whole weight of the air has to be over come. In Mexico, 7,000 feet above the sea, there is 7,000 feet less of atmos phere to be resisted; consequently less heat Is required and boiling takes place at a lower temperature.-London Chronicle. An Emerald Vase. In the ancient cathedral of Genoa a vase of immense value has been pre served for 6100 years. It is cut from a single emerald. Its principal diameter Is twelve and a half inches~- and its height five and three-quarter inches. It is kept under several locks, the keys of which are in different hands, and it is rarely exhibited in public, then only by an order of the senate. When sown to the public It is suspended round the neck of a priest by a cord, and no one else is allowed to touch It. A decree passed in 1476 forbids any one goiug too near the precious relic. Narrow Escape. Wiggins (the coachman) - What a shocking accident almost happened as I was driving mistress in the park this morning! Bobbins (the butler)-Wig gins: Wiggins-Oh, yes; a fat man slipped and fell, sprawling on the ground most comic, and I came near smiling.-Browning's Magazine. No Better Than Father Used to Make. Young Husband - Still sitting up: dear? You shouldn't have waited for me. I was detained downtown by In: portant business, and- Young Wife Try some other excuse, George. Thats the kind father used to make.-Chicago Tribune. Too Independent. "What! Fell downstairs? How did It happen?" "Why, you see, I started to go down and my wife said, 'Be careful, .Tohn,' and I'm not the man to be dictated to by any woman-and so down I went." Hope. deceitful as it is, carries us agreeably through life.-La Rochefou ANTIQUiTY OF THE ROSE. The Flower Goem Back Beyond the Most Ancient Recordx. The royal rose lias a pedigree to shame any other queen. it is so long, so full of enchanting turns and twists and so delightfully cumbered with myth, fable and history. She is in a way a paradox. since, although by ap pearance and perfume the most trop ical of blossoms, she is yet by nativity a flower of north temperate latitudes. Her habitat is bounded north and south, roughly speaking. by the twen tieth and the seventieth parallels. She grows wild all over Europe, in Africa as low as Abyssinia. in Asia to and through India and in North America to the edge of 'Mexico. Most wild roscs are single, yet Pliny mentions double ones. among them the hundred leaf. and Ilerodotus says, "Macedonia has gardens of Midas, with roses of sixty petals breathing out a delightful perfume." Whoever has read Roman history must recall the roses of Paestum. which bloomed twice a year. Notwithstanding this Rome's favorite rose was the Hundred Leaf. It followed the eagles and the legions wherever they went and grows today over three parts of the Roman world, a vital record of that old time occupation. Etymologically "rose" is from the Celtic rhodd or rhudd, "red." also the root of *ruddy." The Greek name, rhodon, has the same meaning. So have most rose names in any language. Botanically the flower gives name to the great natural order rosaceae. Arti ficially it is classed under polygoniae, the many angled. The wild forms have always fleshy, urn or pitcher shaped ca yxes, twenty or more sta mens, five petals and five sepals. The sepals show a bit of nature's most cunning work. Two of them are beard ed at both edges, two without beards I and the fifth bearded at one edge and straight along the other. Thus they Inclose the bud with a bearded over lap along every seam, good to repel moisture and to put to rout every in trusive creeping thing. Rose culture's beginning goes back beyond records. The flower is men tioned in the earliest Coptic manu- I scripts. India's traditions take the rose to the times of the gods on earth. Egypt had roses, wild and tame, before the Roman occupation made it in a way Rome's commercial rose garden. Yet, curiously enough, there is no ref erence to the flower in pqinting, sculp ture or hieroglyphics. Japan in our time parallels Egypt. Roses flourish there, but do not serve as a motif for artists. There is this further likeness -neither Egypt nor Japan has a rose song or a love song proper, so it may well be that madam the rose is aveng ed for the slight. The Jews, returning from the Baby lonish captivity, took with them <! recompense of roses. Semiramis, with the world at her feet, fotind her chief oy in a bower of roses. Mohammed turned back from Damascus after viewing it encircled wiith rose gardens. "It is too delightful. A man can have but one paradise," said the prophet. Damascus lies in the heart of Syria, whose name some geographers derivev from seri, meaning a wild rose, and1 wild roses are abundant there. The amask. roses of our gardens go back to Damascus. They were brought from it at the time of the crusades, although exactly when or by whom nobody can certainly say.-Martha Mc Culloch-Williams in Success. Hawaii's Dusky Kcing. William N. Armstrong. who was at torney general under Kcing Kalakaua of Hawaii, In an amusing volume about that monarch says: "It is a sin gular trait of the Hawaiians to avoid the use of English when sober, .but when drunk to use it with much volu bility. The king's immediate predeces sor on the throne, Lunalilo, when in liquor would often refuse to conve:-se with his native relatives in the native language, but addressed them in Eng ish and directed an interpreter to translate his speech and, on the other hand, required a translation in English of their conversation in Hawaiian. The king's remarkable memory furnished! him with a considerable vocabulary of uncommon words. Alcohol seemed to open that part of his brain where they were stored, especially when, like the moon, he was at the third quarter and coming to the 'full.' On one occasion the use of the words -hippodramatic performance' secured to him the pres tige of a learned manl." Turning the Tables. Many years ago, ivefore the produc tion of grain was equal to the demand, wages of farmn hands were high, but as production increased the prices low ered faster than the rate of wages. A farmer employed an industrious Irishman for five years at the rate of' 5 a month "and found"-board, lodg lg, washing and mending. At the end of the term he said to his man: "I can't afford to pay you the wages I have been paying. You have saved money, and I have saved nothing. At this rate you will soon own my farm." "Then I'll hire you to work for me," said the other, "and you can get your farm back again'!"-Success. The JoyM of Poverty. It's all nonsense for rich folks to ( harangue about the stimulating force of poverty in character building. It4 hasn't any, and they know it. Poor races are always weak. Too much in -ome gives fatty degeneration. Too little p~roduces emaciation. i?. the forced overhustle for bread there's lit te opportunity for intellectual better Inenlt. Shakespeare c-ouldn't haive dug -lams for a living atpresent prices and have written never to be forgotten Ias. The overwork of povertys lcc'ssity doesn't give the brain a pro gressive chianc~e.-IIayfield MIower. I tiad nothing better for- liver de augement and constipation than Chiam ~elain's Stomach and Liver Tablets. B. F. And rews, Des Moines. Towa. For ;ale by The R. B. Loryea Drug Stor'e. ~aa .\. Lor-yea, Pr-op. CASTORIA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the signature of ( J 7 4 z~ no sEarly Risers The fnaosa litle nills. BYSP PSIA CURE DIGESTS WHAT YOU EAT The S 1.00 bottle contains 2% times the trial size. which sells for 50 cents. PREPAXED ONLY AT THE LABORATORY OF E. C. DeWITT & COMPANY, CHICAGO. ML, THlE KIND OF IFrAmEsI Tobe used is vera much a matter ,o of taste. It is ipotant, thogho y r that the frames set properly on o the nose and at the right distance i deom the eyesB that the lenses beE s perfectly centered, and how ae syou to know whe one is ouess-y NEVER GUESS. RedteNw Glasses Right, Rea cost..: GodSigh. Tbout Mollbnere, udhici iv to e S h ofes taste Itl is imoranrhogh. We are selling all fine, freshn E. theenose andwatlthesright.distaec citrined up latest midsummer Ac Bn f oew York Ladies, Misses' andN i ~hidrti' Hts ELW CST ~ 17 S. Main St., - Sumter, S. C. W . .PHNE 94. " Nastern R. R. of S. C E.m Bultman, In effect Sundiay, .Jute 5, 1904 Between S :: "]- n1 ml.1 Sonthbound. No. 69. No. 71. No 70. No 68 P M AM A M P A 625 9 30 Le.. Sumer ... Ar 9 01 545 627 9 38 N. W. Jnin 858 .543 647 959 ...Dalzell... 82i 513 705 101) ...Boren.. 800 458 723 1021 ..Remberts. 740 443 7 30 1031 ..Ellerbee.. 730 438 750 -1100 So 1y Junctu 710 425 800 1130 Ar..Canden..Le 700 '4 15 A.,, Mrs. Hirsl-uann has already (S ( & G Ex Depot) eft for N York and other PM PM AM FM Torthern markets it is to our advan- Between Wilson's Mill and Sumter. :age to sell our Millinery regardless oboi.Nrtond Southbun .Northbound. A cost. Vs-ii will Oir~ xitl 11A if von'are Nt-. 7.3. D~aily exce~pt S11ita No.e72 ;till in need of a Summer Hat. r m sbtio I' 3 300 lie........Snmter........Ar 1230 Looking For. 33 ..Snmmerton Jnnetiou.. 1227 320 - ......... Tindal ....... 1155 Be sure to look for, look over, and 335 .......Packsville....... 11 30 ook through ourSler ,ook t rotici our3 55 ....... . Silver ......... 1100o 53 ........ Millard ........ .1045 445 ......Summerton...... 1015 525 .... .... Davis......... 95 545 ........Jordan .... ... 900 6 3X Ar.....Wilon's Mills.....Le 8440 P M ' - AM Jietwoen Millard and St Pautnl. Da.ily except snn-lay. Northbound. No 73. No. 75. 72. No. 74, P M A M Statfious A M P.X 405 10 !0 Le Millard Ar 10 45 5 3i, 4 15 10 30 Ar St. Pail Le 10 35 4 2) V M AM . M THOS. WILSON, President. All Pleased. W E A RE P.L EASED Shoe Department. to write your insurance, You will be pleased to receive it. WE ARE AGENTS FOR THE )ELEBRATED HELMERS BET ANN & CO.-S SHOES. - See me' about your insurance, either Life, Fire, Accident, Health, D. Hirschmann, Burglary or Plate Glass. Next to Postoffice, WIL. V SONS Bring your Job Work to The Times office i GLENN SPRINGS d/ MINERAL WATER. Nature's Greatest Remedy FOR DISEASES OF THE Liver, Kidneys, Stomach { . and Skin. Physicians Prescribe it, Patients Depend on it, and Everybody Praises It FOR SALE BY w. E. B.R.OW N cf4 CO. AUGUST 17th... Excursion Rates. MANNING, S. C., TO )LD POINTT, VA. $ IRGINIA BEACH, VA. '-'' '''' 7 50 )CEAN VIEW, VA. f JAROLINA BEACH, N. C. RIGHTSVILLE BEACH, N. c..-'.''-''''.'5.50 IYRTLE .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, ATLANTIC COAST LINE i'or reservationls or* any- information write H. D. CLARK, W. J. CRAIG, Agent, Gen'1 Pass. Ag't, Manning, S. C. Wilmington, N. C. JBRING YOUR joib YWork TO THE TIMES OFFICE