University of South Carolina Libraries
Geo.S. Hacker &Son ustVAC-rM9 OF h a CH RETO ,S C ~' ~. THEN COEO EN OU. - CO Doors, Sash, Blinds, Moulding and Builin o Material, CHARLESTON, S. C. Sash Weights and Cords. Widow and Fancy lass a eciaty Do You Want PERFECT FITRIN. CLOTHES ?I THEN COME OR SEND TO UTS. We have the best equipped Tailor in. Establishment wn the State. We handle Cgh Art Cothin CF solely an we carry the best line Of D Emts and Uent's Furnishings in the city. Ask your most prominent men who we are, and they will commend you to us. EiLDAVID &BRO -Cor. King a Wetoth Sts., CHARLESTON, - S. C. 3uggies, Wag=n, '.'adI Carts and Can'iages RE-PA IRED With NeatnesS and Despatch -AT R. A. WHITE'S WHEELWRIGHT and BLACKSMITH SHOP. SIrepair Stoves, Pumps and run water pieor I will put down a new Pump P If you Deed any soldering done, give me a call,. L AiME. My horse is lame. Why'? Because I did not have it shod by Rt. A. White, the man that puts on such neat shoesr and makes horses travel vwith 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. W HIT E, MANNING. S. C. KILL THE COUCH AND CURE THE LUNCS D r. King~s ew Discovery o M OSUMPTiON Price -~Of.DS Free Trial. THROAT and LUNG, TROUB LRS, or EONEY BACK. The- R. B. Loryea Drug Store. W HE N YOU COME - TO TOWN CALL AT * WELLS 0 ,SHAVING SALOON Which is titted n p wijth an '.ve to the cornfort of his .nstoners.. .. ... - HAIR CUTTING IN ALL STYLES, SHAVINiAND - S HA MPO OING Done with neatness an A cordial i nvitation i<~ 'otended... *J. L. WELLS. C Manning Tiues Block. JH. LESESNE, ATTORNEY AT LAW. MANNING. S. C. 0. DAVIS, ATTORNEY AT LAW, MANNING, S. C. J7. S. wUfSON. W. C. DU1uANT. W. J. 31CLDROWr, WILSON DURANT & MULDROW,I Attorneys and Counselors at Law, MANNING, S. C. JOSEPH F. RHAME, o to ATTORNEY AT LAW, e MANNING, S. C. UR. J. FRANK GEIGER. h DENTIST, MANNING, S. C. 'Phone No. 6. DR. J. A. COLE.,c DENTIST., Nettles Building. upstairs. Notice. The County Board of Control will old a meeting September 6th to elect Cohnty Dispenser. Applications to e considered must be filed with the oard twenty days before said date. EDWARD S. ERVIN. W. H. MIULDROW, B. F. RIDGILL, County Board Control. o All to Whom These Presents May Come: This Diploma is testimony that S. L. rasnoff. F. D., by a full course of in ructions given by The Cincinnati Col ge of Embalming. has qualified him lf in the art of Sanitation. Disinfec on, Embalming and preserving dead dies. Given under the hand and seal of the ;culty this the 20th day of July, A. D. 04. at Cincinnati, Ohio. J. H. CLARKE, 31. D.. Ph. D.. C. H-. CLARKE, President. Secretary. WHEN IN NEED OF 0rocerieS CALL ON .B MOUZON. NEXT TO R. W. E. BROWN & CO.'S DRUG STORE. 'here's a Dollar at Each Each End of a Thous and, and the First One Is the Biggest. he First Dollar Call on us and get one of our ED EANFELOPES, which ill help you to save your small aange. When you get One Dollar, de osit it with us. You will find it isy enough to keep it growing Eter you once begin. COMlE A~T ONYCE! lank of Sumeton Summerton, S. C. ANK OF CLARENI)0N, Manning, S. C. Equipped with a burglar-poof screw-door safe with time lock. as shown above. NSERYATIVELY AND CAREFULLY CONDUCTED. Eering you these safeguards, y ou 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. ANK OF CLAR~ENDQN, MANNING, S. C. THE ankR of Manning, MANNING. 8. 0. apital Stock, - $40,000 Larplus, - - $25,000 TAKE ITK a good baa k. Our long list, of cus mers, with yeats of business experi-i ce is a GUAlRANTEE the satisfactory way in which our siness is conducted. The utmost con leration is shown to all our patrons. 1.dies who wish to open cheek accounts 11 meet with much courtesy. Beginning April 1st this bank will d se at 2 m. is neff inte~oughCePO ror Coughs, Colds and Croup. p Bring yur Job Work to The Time office E A Sweet Breath s a never failing sign of a health: toniach. When the breath is bad th tomach is out of order. There is n emedy in the world equal to Kodc )yspepsia Cure for curing indigestiot lyspepsia and all stomach disordern drs. Mary S. Crick of White Plains Cy., writes: "I have been a dyspepti or years; tried all kinds of remedie )ut continued to grow worse. By th ise of Kodol I began to improve a mee, and after taking a few bottles ai ully restored in weight. health an trength and can eat whatever I like. Kodol digests what you eat and make he stomach sweet. Sold by The I E Zoryea Drug Store. THE WATWA OF AFRICA. A Curious Tribe, Low Down In thi scale of Humanity. A hunter of big game in Africa give a description of a tribe of native whom he found there, the Watwa "These natives," he says, "live in th, wamps, their staple article of diet be ing fish and flour made from the seei )f the water lily, although during th, rains they grow patches of gassav: root and sweet potatoes at tte edg, f the swamp. They smear thel )odes with .mud to protect them fron mnosquitoes and are extremely dirt; md evil smelling in consequence. The: ire very low down in the scale of hu manity and have a bad reputatioi imong tribes living on the high ground mbich reputation they upheld durin )ur-visit. We engaged several -Watwi 2atives as carriers, but they only cam, to-see what they could steal. One da: [ shot a reed buck in sight of th< mimp and left two Watwa to carry i a while I went after a hartbeest, bu [never saw either men or buck agaix [t was, no- use following them into th, wamps, as they knew every incl )I the ground and water. They ha4 smal canoes hidden everywhere, an, immediately they crossed a stream teyi.sunk the canoe again where the: lone knew where to -find it. Our boy iere afraid to follow them, as the: isedspoisoned arrows and sometime ;et poisoned stakes in the tracks lead bgto:their haunts." DAME JULIANA BERNER. ;he Was. a ifteenth -Century Author ity on Fly Fishing. The first printed English book 01 ngling was Dame Juliana Berner' 'Book of St. Albans," which appearei bout 1450, and contained a chapte: uitled "A Treatyse on Fyshynng4 With an Angle.' Fly fishing must have been practice uch earlier- than this, as nothing bu gradual evolution could account fo: he complete list of flies for the-fish ng-mnonths of the-year which it gives To Dame Berner belongs the hono: >f first. telling that the salmon coul e-rughtwith -the fly. She -says: "AL ;o- ye-may take hym, but it Is seldon een-ith a -dubbe at such times a rhen- he lepith in lyke foure an( naoereas ye do a trought or a -gray lng." Her - knowledge seems morn romplete than could have been tha >' the -original inventor, so that th< -ime when- fly fishing originated iI ritish waters must remain uncertain Dame -Berner's flies will kill tron oday, and- her twelve were the foun tation of those of which Izaak Wa] :orr said quaintly in 1653: "Thus havy 'on a jury of fles, likely to betra: Lnd condemn all the trouts in thi 'ier" LOGGERHEADS. I'his Wame Is Given to Some Turtles and Other Animna. The giant turtles which are founi ong the Atlantic coast and frequentl3 n southern waters in great numbers trotnOwn as loggerheads. They comn nonly attain a weight of 1,000 pounds re-rapd-swimmers and are often seer 'arfrom land, floating asleep upon th< vaves. Carnivorous by nature these hug< ortoises-feed- on crabs and fish, espe ally ona-large-speciesof conch, whicl he break :open with their .massiv< aws. The -flesh of this terrapin i: eathery and oily, with a strong sine! >f musk. Young specimens are mort miatble and are oftea on sale in thi narkets. Aduck, as large :s our goose, whici s native of the shores of Tierra de nego and the Falkland isles is als< nled -loggerhead, from its seeminj rtupidity and helplessness. In the West Indies this name is alst ~ivn to two or three sorts of fi: ,atchers. Protected the Judge. After- the jury in a Texa~s case hat istened to the charge of the court and id. gone to their room to deliberate pon - the verdict, one of the twelvi rent right to the point by saying 'That thar Pike Muldrow orter b< envicted- an gen'ral principle. He' a as-they- make 'em." As-the-hum of approval went arouni Swezened little juror said, "I heeri hat Pike -gun It out-that he'd go gun kn' fur us, If we sent him up, jes on's he got out, an' fur the jedgi "We must perfect the sedge," the3 greed, and the verdict was "Not guil y."-Detroit Free Press. A Peenliur Ornament. Belin has probably one of- the mnosi ieuliar ornaments for a reading roont hat has ever been seen in a similai )esition in a civilized country. This is tgravestone which stands, large and nassive, in one corner of a small room :t Is not only a gravestone, but Is It ts legitimate position at the head o: grave. The history of its location i he house is interesting. It- was noi lut up In the house, but the house was milt around the stone. Its originas osition was in the burial grounds it he churchyard at St. Hedwig's. - How Could He Help Itr He-Do you think marriages ari nade n heaven? She--I don't know ~erhaps they are, but I'd be satisfie( rith one made in-or, that Is, of course wasn't thinking what-oh, Charlie o you really mean lt?-Chicago Rec rd-Herald. Nothing Definite. Her Mother-Mr. Sloman has beex oming to see you for quite a long rhile Maude. What are his inten ions? Do you know? She-Well,] hink he intends to keep on coming. Thiladelphia Press. A Summer Cold. A summer cold is not only annoying ut if not relieved pneumonia will b< e probable result by fall One Min te Cough Cure clears the phlegm raws out the intiammatio'n, heals )othes and strengthens the lungs and ronchial tubes. One Minute Cougl ure is an ideal remedy for the chil. ren. It is pleasant to' the taste and rfectly harmless. A certain cure foi :-oup, cough and cold. Sold by The R Escapad an Awful Fate. ' Mr. H. Huggins of Melbourne. Fla., D writes, ".y doctor told me I had con 0 sumption and nothing could be donelfor 1 me. I was given up to die... The offer of a free trial bottle of Dr. Ring's New Discovery for Consumption, induced , me to try it. results were startling. I c am now on the road to recovery and s owe all to Dr. King's New Discovery. - It surely saved my life." This great t cure is guaranteed for all throat and a lung diseases by The R. B. Loryea I Drug Store. Price 50c. and $1. Trial bttles free. 5 BOY OF THE REGIMENT. With His Dying Breath lie Asked Garibaldi For a Cofn. When Enzo Ferretti entered actively s into the Italian war of independence he was just seventeen. He left Parma s secretly, deserting, as it were, his fa ther, mother and family to fight for his hero, Garibaldi. He walked over the Apennines without a penny in his pock et and, arriving half dead at Genoa, concealed himself on one of the ships bound for Sicily. When at his destina tion he emerged and gained the nick name of the "boy of the regiment." From that time for some months he fought until the day for rest came. He was shot in the head and carried to the hospital in a dangerous condition. Everything possible was done for him, but it was evident that he was trou bled, and at last it came out that he could not die happy because he had never seen his hero. "I have fought everywhere and sought always," he ex claimed, "but I have never succeeded in seeing him. How can I die never having caught a glimpse of him?" Another preoccupation was that he - feared he might be buried without a coffin. Morning, noon and night his cry was, "Let me have a coffin!" The very day he died, by a fortunate chance, Garibaldi arrived at the hos pital. 'Having heard Ferretti's story, be stooped and spoke to him. The sick boy's expressive face lighted up and he exclaimed: "Now I can die happy. 9 Oh, general, let me have a coffin!" TRAGIC IN ITS BREVITY. The Story of the Duel Between Ham ilton and Burr. - The story of the Hamilton-Burr duel is tragic in its brevity. The little party I of five-the principals, their seconds 3 and the surgeon-was on the ground I not long after sunrise. The prelimi E naries were soon arranged. As Pen dleton, Hamilton's second, gave him his pistol, he asked, "Will you have i the hairspring set?" t "Not this time," was the significant r reply, and then the men faced each - other. According to the best authorities up E on a. disputed subject, Burr fired atthe I word. At the report, Hamilton started - forward with a convulsive movement, i- reeled, involuntarily discharging his ;- pistol into the foliage above him, and I fell headlong. Burr, with an expres -- sion of pain upon his face, sprang to Sward him, but Van Ness, his second, t seized him by the arm and hurried him i down the b~ank and into their boat. i Hamilton. being lifted up, revived .for a mome'it and gasped. "This is a t mortal wound, doctor!" Relapsing - again into unconsciousness he was - again revived by the fresh air of the Sriver. "Pendleton knows," he said, Strying to turn toward his friends, "that 1 did not intend to -fire at him." At 2 the afternoon following he had breathed his last. Monster Bowl of P~unch. ,In 1694 Admiral Edward Russel.1, commander of the English Mediterra L nean fleet, entertained 6,000 people in Sa large garden in Alicante, where he Sserved the largest bowl of punch ever brewed. It contained-twenty gallons of lime juice, four hogsheads of brandy, one pipe of Malaga wine, twenty-five hundred lemons, thirteen hundred weight of fine white sugar, three pack ages of toasted biscuits, fifty-one pounds of grated nutmegs and eight hogsheads of water. The whole was prevented from dilu tion in case of rain by a large canopy, which spread over a marble fountain bowl which hel'd the punch. The punch was served by a boy, who rowed about the basin of the fountain in a boat built for the purpose and refilled the empty cups. - . Two Scoteh Stories. A Scotch schoolmaster in Banffshire years ago had strong views en the sub ject of dress. In the day when crino line was the rage a girl came to school with a very extensive one, 17hich much exceeded tl:e space between the desk and the form on which she had to sit The teacher, seeing this, said to her, "Gang awa' home and tak' off thae girds (hoops) and come back to the school as God made ye." Another rough and ready dominie was examining his boys in a catechism and asked if God had a beginning. "No," said the boy. "Will he have an end?" "Yes," he replied. This was followed instantly by a buffet on the side of the head. "Will be have an end noo?" "No," said the boy, and the master was satisfied. Tennyson's "Married Brows." "I have a question to ask," an nounced the literary man. "You know Tennyson's line: "The charm of married brows. "Well, did he mean by that the crowning charm of married women, or did he refer to the charm of eyebrows that meet in the middle? In the 'Arabian Nights' there are many pas sages in which such eyebrows are spoken of as a great charm, iadeed, but In the west our beauty~ doctors give explicIt directions to prevent such growths. What did Tennyson mean, anyhow?"-Philadelphia Press. lie Got It. Teacher--Willie, give me a sentence In which the term hook and eye is used. Willie-Me an' pa went fishin'. Pa told me t' bait me hook an' I did. Baltimore American. A Revelation. Wife-I haven't a gowa fit to wear. Husband-Jove! That's the reason none of the servants will stay here.--New York Times. It costs more to live than formerly, but then people live longer, so it is about even.-Montgomery Advertiser. Sick Headache. "For sever-al years my wife was trou bled with what physicians called sick headacho of a very severe character. -She doctored with several eminent phy sicians and at a great expense, only to grow worse until she was unable to do ,any kind of work. About a year ago tshe began taking Chamberlain's Stom Sach and Liver Tablets and today weighs -more than she ever dlid before and is real well," says Mr. Geo. E. Wright of iNew London, New York. For sale by The R. B. Loryca Drug Store. Isaac M, A GREAT NEWSPAPER THE LONDON TIMES AND SOME OF THE THINGS IT HAS DONE. Why '"The Thunderer" In Such I Power In Europe-The Ihistory of the Thiex Is the listory of the World Since the Paper Started. The London Times is the most com plete and thorough news record pub lished in any language. Its law re ports, written by barristers of stand ing, are essential to all English law yers. Its accounts of parliament form a convenient reference for public and private libraries throughout the world. In every department it gives a full re port of what has happened. The paper was started in 1785 under the name of the Daily Universal Reg ister, which was changed to the Lon don Times In 17SS. In 1803 it began its great development under John Wal ter. It is no vain compliment to say that the Times is part of British civiliza tion. For over a hundred years It has belonged, with the Established church and the British constitution, to the his toric greatness of the race. "You cannot buy the Times," its ed itor proudly said when a powerful man sought to silence in thunder, and the words might well be written in let ters of gold across the portal of Print ing House square. You cannot buy the Times. 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 & hansom and drove to the office of the Times. In ten minutes he was in the Editor's room telling the editor the news which was next morning to star tle 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 claimed 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 cret with the Times and left the office, we may be sure, reflecting on the won derful 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 Its 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 he 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 nippeCd 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 fund then raised to the Times. When the railway mania was at Its highest the Times sacrificed a fortune in advertisements by denouncing the spirit of recklessness which was abroad, and neither the penalties of the law, the enmities of statesmen nor the loss of revenue has availed against the fearless determination of the Times to say the thing it thinks. There were dramatic -spectacles at times, when the great newspaper fought not only' its own but foreign governments. Napoleon himself, who feared an editor more than an army, is said to have wanted to bring an aetiqn for libel against the Times, and Gui zot, the French minister of a later day, did more. To punish the Times for its unfriendliness he detained its courier in Paris. dlelaying 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 route to England without touching France. The Indian mail was handed to a messenger at Suez, the messenger rode on a dromedary 200 miles to Alex andria and there handed his packet to a passenger on an Austrian steamer bound for Triest. Thence the pre cious packet was dispatched via Os tend to Dover, where a special train waited to bring it up to London. IThe French minister was angry and made 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 up the Adriatic, and the triumph of the paper coincided with the advent of its 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 until n1ow, cain do without its files. It was the Duke of Wellington who Isaid that the editor cf the Times was the most powverful man~ in the country. There was nothing the editor did not know, few things he cculd 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 Lr-d Melville, the friend of Pitt, of the practices for which 1he was, im peached, a tragic destiny which broke Pitts heart. It was the Times whichl startled the world one 'norning by an louncing that Peel would repeal the ~orn laws. It was the Times wvhich published the Berlin treaty in London two hours before it was signed in Ber lin. it was the Times correspondent in Paris to whom Alfonso XII., leaning against the mantelpiece in his study, told the story of the coup d'etat in Madrid which had made hiim king of, Spain. It was in the Times that Charles, Dickens wrote the burning letters which brought an end to public execu tions. It was in the Times that Lord Brougham, Macaulay, Disraeli, Dean Stanley, Cardinal Newman and a host of famous men were proud to write. It was the Times that saved the world from one of the greatest~ catas trophies that could have occurred in 1 modern Europe. All the world knows the story now, but the thought of the French scare sends a thrill through the 1 chancelleries even today. It was Bis mar-k who this time was behind the Times-Bismiarck, the founder of the German empire, who saved that em pire from itelf ndi revealed, to thb cdi-res PoI i ;e.i .L i tehe tefnibTe plot which would have crippled France a second time. Jealous of Moltke and perhaps hon estly detesting his fiendish conspiracy against a conquered foe rapidly regain ing her strength, Prince Bismarck let Blowitz know, and Blowitz, the Paris echo of the "Voice of Europe," told It to the world. Those who remember the middle seventies remember yet the effect of the thunderbolt which the Times hurled against Count von Moltke. The Times has missed its chance sometimes. In 1892 its editor received a long letter forecasting the alliance of Russia and France, but as nobody but the writer seemed to believe it the edi tor kept it back until 1897, when it announced. with the rest of the papers, that the Franco-Russian alliance was an established fact. If it has lost prestige in error It has sacrificed itself not once or twice, but many times, for peace and the welfare of the world. One of the most graphic, stories in journalism is of the foreign minister who sent for the Times cor respondent and shouted a challenge to England in his ears, who flourished a bundle of telegrams in the journalist's face and declared that "-- - should pay for it." The correspondent went not to the telegraph office, but to bed, and the world was no wiser the next morning for the angry scene of the night before, which, had it been known, almost certainly must have caused war. It is something surely to have record ed for so many years the affairs of the whole world. It is something more to have been through all these genera tions a fearless critic of princes and kings and the enemy of wrong. "We thundered forth the other day," wrote Captain Sterling in a "leader" which give the Times its niekname, "an article on the subject of social and political reform." and the Times Is "thundering forth" still. The world has changed, and the Times moves with the times, but its ancient glory has not passed, and there is not a liv Ing Englishman who would gladly let die the wonderful paper which gives us today and builds up for posterity the history of the world while it is be ing made.-London Mail. M3P Early Risers The famous Eittle pills. Read the News bout Millinery, which is to your nterest as wvell as ours. We are selling all fine, freshly rimmed up latest muidsomimer styles f Newv York Ladies', Misses' and hildren' Hats BELOW COST. As Mrs. Hlirschmavnn has already left for New York and other orthern markets it is to onr advanm tye to sell onr Millinery regardless >f cost. You will share with us if vou are still in need of a Summer Hat. Lookinig For. Ue sure to look for, look over, and Cook througrh one Shoe Departmnent. WE AREl AG3ENTS FOR)1 THE 3ELBATIED i!LlME'RS BET LANN & CO.'S SHOES. D. Hirschmann, Next to Postoffice, Undertaking. o I icep a lar'ge and comleIte stock o If you should he so unfortunate as to edeither. the cheapest collin or the nest Rosewood Casket you will fiud he principle of low prices ruling inC his line. Our beautiful new iiearse has arrived Lnd all calls, night or day. will receive )ropIt attention. Mv Furniture Department is comn )let in every detail. and as I buy for ash and in earload lots I defy competi ion. *W. E. JENKINSON. I Kodol Dyspepsia Cre) Digrsts what yous eat. DYS SIA CWE DIGESTS-WHAT YOU EAT The S1.00 battle contains 2% timesthe trial-size, which sells for5O cents. PREPARED ONLY AT THE LASORATORY .oF E. C. DeWITT & COMPANY, CHICAGOMLL. ~orthwesten1 R. R. of S. C. ITYWVYIrnVVIVVV1IVIJ1I Tii:TBENo. " ..r- C * T No. 6, . In effect Sunday, June 5, 1904. Between Samter and Camden. I Mixed-Daily except Sunday. Northbound qo. 69. No. 71. No 70. No. 08. Tobe used is very much a mtter P M A .1 A M p A : of taste. It is important, though, 025 9 3G Le.. Sumt-r ..Ar 00 545 that the frames set proerly-on 6 27 9 38 N. W. a nnetu 8 58- 5 43 C the nose and at the right distance 6 47 0 59 . ..Dalzell... 8 25 5 13 E from the eyes; that thelenses be - 7 05 10 10 ... Borden... 8 00 4 58 - perfectly centered. and how axe 7 23 10 21 ..Remberts;.. 7 40 4 43 C You to know when one is gue 730 1031 .. Ellerbee .. 730 438 ing? 750 11 00 So lty .Jnetn 710 425 8 00 11 30 Ar.-.Ctmden..Le 700 4 15 ( 0C & G Ex Depot) NEVER C: GUESS,. Between Wilson's Mill and Snniter. iouthbonnul. Northbound. Glasses I o. 73. D)aily except Sr;day No. 72. ? M1 Stations. 1' M 300 Le ........Sum1ter ........Ar 1230 3 33 ..Srmnerton Junction.. 2 27 7 320 .........Tindal....... 1155 C 335 .......Packsvilie....... 1130 JEWELER AND OPTIIAN. 355 ......... Silver........ . 1100 405 ' g;.1045r,1S.MiSt, Sme,.C 530 ---.' -- 1020 'PHON 194. 4 45 .. Somerton...... .. 1015 5 25 .... .... Davis......... 9 L5 5 45..... ...Jordin.....9 00 M111&AAAAAA11L*AIAAAAAA~AUI 6 3G .f Ar .1on's Miilffnn.Le 8W40 PM To be se iasvr Do You Want nd O BORROW i MON though, .o. 73. No. 7.5. No. 72. No. 74. T ORWM NY P M A M Slt.-o A 11 P X1 If you want to borrow money 405 10 20 L,- Millatrd Air 1045 5301 on-real estate, no matter how 4 15 10 '30 Ar t. 1aul Le 1035 4 20' targe the amount, come to see V M A IT A 11 P M me. I can make loans on im TGS. WILSON. President. proved real estate at a low rate of inte.est and on long time. All Pleased.. WE ARE PLEASEDAtozyatLw to write your insurance, MANNINGe R You wGill be pleased to receige ith [he Best Is What You: Want, M oney to Loan...' See me about your insurance, E a y ' 'r is e ither Life, Fire, Accident, Health, Burg~lary or Plate Glass. APPLY TO - J. L. WILSON E Wilson, DuRant& MuldroW, NOW IS THE TIME TO TAKE A CHEAP TRIP VIAu THE PNTIC CO A LN PAO M ATEP T 4 ~ ~ O 05TE 102TOMlr 1 5 53 RICHMOND, VA., and return, September Oth-.3t, accou Grand United Order True Reformers. AUSTIN, TEXAS, and return, September 14th to 19th, ac count International Baptist Convention (colored). CHATTANOOGA, TENN., and return, September 13th-16th, account International Association Fire Engineers. SAN FRANCISCO AND LOS ANGELES, CAL., and re turn, September 5th-9th, and 19th-20th, account Triennial Con dave Knights of Templar and Sovereign Grand Lodge I. 0. 0 F Season tickets, 10-day tickets, 15-day tickets to the "W<r1d.c's "Fair, St. Tc'U.lis on sale every day. Coach. 'Eiecm so TicdEets on sale every Tuesday in August. Rates and other information given cheerfnily by Ticket Agents and the undersigned. H. M. EMMERSON, W. J. CRA1G,0. Traffic Manager, G4 Wilmington, NI C. MINERAL WATER. Nature's -Greatest R FOR DISEASES OF THE Liver, Kidneys, Stomaoh Physicians Prescribe it Patients Depend on it, and Everybody Praisest FOR SALE BY W. EI. 1-LOW 1 cf CC. Woziu Have Chills or Other iiis litAny Way Malarlous, Doin9Drad Yourself with Quinine Pills, Or-Other Drugs NefarIous TRY OMETHING SAFE AND SURE Wintersm 50c Am .