The Manning times. (Manning, Clarendon County, S.C.) 1884-current, September 14, 1904, SUPPLEMENT TO THE MANNING TIMES, Image 6

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Geo.S. Hacker &Son NIANUF~ACTUIU'.9 OF C=' I-2 C-'5' Doors, Sash, Blinds, Moulding and Building Material, CHARLESTON, S. C. Sash Weights and Cords. Window and Fancy Glass a Secialty. * Do You Wailt PERFECT FIT1NG CLOTHES? THEN COME OR SEND TO US. We have the best equipped Tailor in. Establishment in the State. We handle High Art Clothing solely and we carry the best line of Hats and Gent's Furnishings in the' city. Ask your most prominent men who we are, and they will commend you to us. i. L DAVID & BRO, Cor. King & Wentworth Sts., CHARLESTON, - S. C. Buggies, Wagons, Road 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 soldering done, give me a call. * LAME. 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 vdth 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 gularantee all of my! work. -Shop on corner below Rl. M. Dean's. R. A. W HIT E, MANNING. S. C. KILL THE COUCH AND CURE THE L.UNCS wriDr. King's New Discovery CYONSUIMPTION Price FOR 50'JGSase soca&s1.00 ~OLDS Free Trial. THROAT and LUNG TROUB LES, or EON~EY BACK. The R. B. Loryea Drug Store. W HE N YOU COME TO TOWN CALL AT W/ELLS' SHAVING SALOON Whbich isi titted up with ant .veC to the com fort of' hii HAIR CUTTIGI IN ALL STYLES, * ~ SHAVING AND SH AMPOOING lione with neatness~ an .lipatch.. .. .. ... A co"rdia. in vitation. J. L. W ELLS. Maninig Times Block. JH. LESESNE, ATTORNEY AT LAW. MANNING. S. C. C. DAVIS, ATTORNEY AT LAW, MANNING, S. C. J. s. WULSON. W. C. DURANT. wV. J. MULDROW2 .WILSON DURANT & MULDROW, Auresand Coucns.ers atLaw, MANNING, S. C. JOSEPH F. RHAME. ATTORNEY AT LAW. MANNING, S. C. DR. J. FRANK GEIGER. DENTIST. MANNING. S. C. 'Phone No. 6. DR. J. A COLE, DENTIST. Nettles Building. upstairs. CASTOR IA Forj Infants and Children. The Kind Ycu Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of T "E 30 Manning Oil Mill +...Ginnery... has been comuletely overhauled during the summer and is now doing betteir work than ever betore. We Guarantee Satisfaction, and will gin your cotton quicker and better and for about half the price vou would have to pay elsewhere. Prices for Gining: For bales weighing 550 pounds or less, 50 cents per bale. Over 550 and not over 650, 70 cents per bale. Over 650, 81 per bale. Bagging and ties furnished at 50 cents per bala. We pay the Hilhest Price tor cofton Seed, or we will store them on very liberal terms for our ginnery customers only. There's a Dollar at Each Each End of a Thous and, and the First One Is the Biggest. The First Dollar! Call on us and get one of our RED EIVPE LOPES, which will help you to save your small change. When you get One Dollar, de posit it with us. You will find it easy enough to keep it growing after you once begin. COMIE A~T ONVCE! Bank(of Sume~fon, Summerton, S. C.. DeWIs Early Risers The famous little pills. 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, 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. BANE OF CLAPRENDON, MANNING. S. C. T[HE Bank of ManninE, MANNING. 8. 0. Capital Stock, - $40,000 Surplus, - - $25,000 START YOUR BOY in the right way. Good habits instilled in the youth will bear good fruit in after years. Whether it be the small account of the boy or the business ac count of the man that is entrusted to us we can guarantee perfect satisfac Kodol Dyspepsia Caro Tragedy Averted. "Just in the nick of time our little boy was saved" writes Mrs. W. Wat kins of Pleasant City, Ohio. "Pneu monia had played sad havoc with him and a terrible cough set in besides. Doctors treated him, but he grew worse every day. At legth we tried Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption, and our darling was saved. He's now sound and well." Everybody ought to know, ft's the only sure cure for Coughs, Colds and all Lung diseases. Guaranteed by The R. B. Loryea Drug Store. Price: 50c and $100. Trial bottles free. KANGAROO HUNTING. A Dangerous Sport In Which Thick Breautplaten Are Worn. Tiger skins, elephant tusks. antlers and a dozen other trophies decorated the smoking room of the huntsman. "You can't guess what this is," he said, and he took down from the wall a piece of curiously woven matting. It was about two feet square, green in color and five inches thick. "This," he explained, "is the breast plate that is worn in kangaroo hunting. Without it the kangaroo with a fore leg blow would smash in your chest as though it were a pasteboard box. This breastplate is a souvenir of an exciting kangaroo hunt in Australia. "All big game enthusiasts are fa miliar with tiger shooting, elephant shooting, the chase of the grizzly, of the boar and of the hippo, but I know few men who have ever hunted kan garoos. "Yet this is an exciting and danger ous sport. The kangaroo when he is brought to bay will fight. He jumps straight at you, like a great cat, and with his small fore legs he aims at your chest two tremendous blows-first the right and then the left-and these blows, with a speed and an accuracy that no prizefight~r could equal, would kill you if they landed on an unpro tected surface. So you wfar, for a protection, this thick green gtard, wov en of native grasses by native women. "You hunt the kangaroo in 'sets.' Eight huntsmen compose a set, and each set employs half a dozen native runners to stalk the kangaroo. "The kangaroo, on being stalked, comes tearing over the plain straight at you. He travels with the speed of an express train, and he makes great bounding leaps. One minute he is crouched on the grass, the next he is ten feet up in the air, and all the while, remember, he is going forty miles an hour. "Hence he is a mighty difficult ob ject to shoot. If you fail to shoot him, and there is no tree handy, then you must put your trust in your mat ting breastplate. This breastplate of mine, you notice, has a dent In it" New York Telegram. PITH AND POINT. Lots of worthy people are not popu lar. There's your case, for example. Talk about a rut all you please, some men are never any good out of one. The second time a man calls on a clever girl she tells him she knows his step. Youth deals In fancy; age, in facts. All false teeth are made to look too young. Before saying that you think forty is old remember there may be some one present who Is at least forty-one. You are getting old when people be gin to say that you have money hidden around somewhere. They never accuse the young of hiding money. There is a saying "Get busy." It ap plies to idle, shiftless men. But there should also be a saying "Get lazy." It would apply with force to some men who work too much.-Atchison Globe. A Legal Puzzler. Curious comments by a judge, even in the presence of the prisoner, though extremely rare, are not unprecedented. Mr. Justice Maule once addressed a phenomenon of innocence in at smock frock in the following words: "Prisoner at the bar, your counsel thinks you in nocet; the counsel for the prosecution thinks you innocent; I think you inno cent But a jury of your -own country men, in the exercise of such common sense as they 'possess, which does not seem to be much, have found you guilty, and It remains that I shall pass upon you the sentence of the law. That sentence is that you be kept in imprisonment for one day, and 'as that day was yesterday you may now go about your business.". The unfortunate rustic, rather scared, went about his business, but thought law was an uncommonly puzzling busi ness.-London Tit-Bits. The Yankee as Europe Know5 Him. "I was greatly amused," said a mer chant who has lately made a visit abroad, "to notice how the term Yankee widens In application as one gets far ther away from the habitat of the real thing. "I met a very intelligent hotel keeper. at Berne, in Switzerland, and in the course of conversation he remarked that he had an extremely agreeable countryman of mine staying at his house the previous season. "'As you are both Yankees, you may by chance know him,' he said. "'Where does he live?' I asked. "'In Buenos Ayres,' replied the hotel keeper."-New York Press. Willing, but Hampered. Rich Caller (who is making the round of the tenement districts)-Well, I must go now. Is there anything I can do for you, my good woman? The Other (of the submerged)-No, thank you, mem. Ye mustn't mind it, mem, If I don't return the call. I haven't any time to go slummin' me self.-Chicago Tribune. Prompter. Mrs. Prunes-When do you actors at the theater draw your pay? Boarder-I am not an actor at the theater, marlam. I'm prompter there. Mrs. Prunes-Well, you'll have to be prompter here, too, or find another boarding house.-Kansas City JournaL. A Bungler. Alice-Herbert says he is a self made man. Kitty-How he must suffer from remorse.-Harper's Bazar. Always think before you speak. Be fore you write, think a long time. Somerville Journal. Sour Stomach. When the quantity of food taken is too large or the quality too rich, sour tomadh is likely to follow, and especi ally so if the digestia has been weak ened by constipation. Eat slowly and not too freely of basily digested food. Masticate tlie good thoroughly. Let ive hours elapse between meals, and when you feel a fullness and weight in the rgion of the stomach after eating. take Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets and the sourstomach may be avoided. For sale by The IR. B. Lor WHAT MEXICANS EAT. Grease Plays an Important Part In Their Rich Dishes. The farther south one goes the e more important part meat seems to J play in the diet. In old Mexico the people of the upper class have highly a seasoned roasts and steaks and game three times every day. The roasts 1 are stuffed with raisins, and a rich 1 brown gravy is poured over them. Grease seems more indispensable to e them than to the fur enveloped Es- b kimos. There are no broiled steaks, but in their place one is served with a half raw piece of tenderloin reek ing with grease and peculiarly flavored herbs. In that balmy clime, where the system would be so much 'better off without any meats, thousands of steaks are sold daily at 45 and 50 cents a pound. The poorer classes are forced to abstain from such and live on the coarse frijole beans and cold clammy tortillas, which are thin white corn cakes made from rye hominy crushed to a pulp. This forms their unvaried diet. On the aristocrats' tables are the most delicious fruits, chiramoyas, zipotes, mangoes and others which Americans have never tasted. The popular aguacate is a cross between a fruit and a nut. It is a dark green and the flesh is about the consistency of ointment. It grows on a tree of unparalleled dark green foliage and Is used often In the place of butter or is made into a toothsome salad. Rich soups, with bananas chopped in them, are served every day, and vege tables dressed with goat's cream are on their tables. At every meal during the year they eat the frijole beans, which have been dipped into a brown pottery bowl of boiling lard before they are brought to the table. The Mexicans eat enough lard to under mine the digestion of the stoutest be ing. Sirup is a great delicacy and very expensive. It is served as a sort of dessert in little china saucers and Is eaten from spoons. Little bits of native candies are also served in sepa rate plates.-Farm and Ranch. KERdSENE OIL. A'few drops added to your boiled I starch will make ironing easier. I Dip the fingers in the oil and rub the throat to give relief from sore throat Saturate a cloth in the oil and rub the rollers to clean a clothes wringer quickly. A few drops added to the water with which windows are to be washed will save time and labor. A few drops on a hinge or roller which has formed a bad habit of squeaking will insure a speedy cure. One tablespoonful added to each boil erful of water will lessen labor as well as whiten your clothes when washing. A few drops on your dusting cloth will brighten your furniture as well as prevent dust from flying from the cloth. Saturate a cloth with the oil to clean the sink, bathtub or basin which has become greasy and discolored from use-Woman's Home Companion. t Cameo Cutting. Before the discovery of onyx as the material specially adapted for cameo 1 cutting the ancients cut them on soft stones, eggshells and other materIals.1 The Greco-Roman, and especially the Augustan, period was rich in cameos, and almost every great Roman wished to have his portrait cut in onyx. One of these, an exquisite portrait of Emperor Augustus Caesar himself, is perhaps the finest existing cameo. Such por trait cameos,were practically indestruc- 1 tible, except by accident. Some large cameos-the "Triumph of Bacchus" at the Vatican, the "Agate de Tibere" at 1 Paris and the "Gemmna Augesten" at Vienna-are splendid works of art. 1 There was a change from the classi cal and mythological designs of Greco Roman times to Christian themes in the fourth century, when Constantine the Great became a Christian. : At the renaissance classical art re covered its lost-position. Renaissance cameo cutters were very skilled work men, but In spite of their general high 'level they did not succeed in making ay very important cameo, although the "Hymeneal Procession of Eros and1 Psyche" realized a high price. Fact and Poetry. An English fox hunter of celebrity had been asked by a publisher for aI book of reminiscences. "But I've never written a word for publication," he said deprecatingly. "-Of course, I've had adventures in the field in plenty, but" "Have you never had any connection with literature?" asked the publisher. The master of the hunt shook his head. "By Jove, yes; I have!" he exclaimed, his face lighting up. "3Nars ago Whyte-Melville came to me with a hunting poem he had written. For my criticism, he said. I read it through, and told him it was good, only there was one place where he was a little off. 'Hounds have broth, not soup,' said I." "Well?" said the publisher hopefully. The master of hounds looked grave again. "I don't think that counts," he said reluctantly. "The next line ended I in 'whoop,' and Whyte-Melville reject ed my suggestion." Had Tried Electricity. A New York senator relates that he was riding in a car next to a motherly old lady, who asked him a question. He answered, but found the old lady very deaf. Hie repeated his answer in a shout, and conversation was thus es tablished. "You are very deaf, aren't yo, madam?" bellowed the senator. "I am so," she replied. "and haven't been able to do a thing for it." "Have you ever tried electricity ?" asked the senator. "Yes," she said, nodding vigorously. "I was struck by lightning last sum mer." As His Wealth Grew. Ascum-Have you seen anything of Jiggins lately? Dr. Swellman-Yes, I just prescribed a trip to Europe for him this morning., Ascum - Indeed? He's getting wealthy, isn't he? Dr. Swellman-Well, I can remember when I used to prescribe for him sim ply a dose of sodium bromide for the same complaint.-Philadelphia Press. 1 Spoiled IHis Chance. "Yes, she rejected him because of a bad break he made when he was pro posing to her." "What was that?" "He told her she was 'one in a thou sand.' She thinks she's one of the Four Hlundred."-Philadelphia Ledger. c A Change of Dates. Mrs. Dearborn--Were you married in June? L Mrs. Wabash-Yes, once on the 5th. once on the 8th. once on the 10th and another time on the 10th; but I'v r switched off to October; that's my mn;' i Praise of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarraboea Remedy. "Allow me to give you a few words i praise of Chamberlain's Colic, Chol ra and Diarrhoea Remedy." says Mr. ohn Hamlett, of Eagle Pass, Texas. I suffered one week with bowel trouble nd took all kinds of medicine without etting any relief, when my friend, Mr. Johnson, a merchant here. advised ie to take this remedy. After taking nc dose I felt zreatly relieved and hen I had takenl the third dose was ntirely cured. I thank you from the ottom of my heart for putting this 'reat remedy in the hands of man ind." For sale by The 11. B. Loryea, )rug Store. Isaac M. Loryea, Prop. A LUCKY SHOT. Exciting Moment In a Bufalo Hunt In South Africa. A hunter in South Africa tells the ollowing story of an adventure with a yuffalo: "I was in the act of descend ng the bank when Prinsloo, a Dutch unter, who was lower down the slope, aw the dark outline of the buffalo tanding at bay behind the screen of eeds. Next instant, seeing it about to arge, he shouted, 'Daar kom hij!' 'There he comes!') and fired, rather at ndom, I am afraid. Then, rushing lown the path by which he had ad ,anced, he threw himself headlong in o the reeds on the left. This all ha'p >ened in a few moments, but I had ufmicient time to raise my rifle to my oulder and fire as the enraged bull ushed straight at me through the -eeds, with nose thrown forward and iorns back. As I fired I endeavored to ump aside to escape the charge, but ny feet got entangled in the matted rass, and I fell on my back, luckily, owever, retaining my hold on the tock of my rifle. My first shot seem d to check him for a moment, but the iext he was rushing up the slope at ne. I shall never forget the look in is fierce eyes. It was but a moment's vork to draw back the bolt of my Iauser and to close it again, thus >ushing another cartridge into the )reech. I had no time to raise the -ife to my shoulder. There was barely ime, just before he was within strik ng distance, to pull the trigger, with e stock under my armpit. while I ay on my back on the top of the slop ng ground. Without so much as a roan he fell in his tracks and rolled >ver into the muddy water two yards )elow with a great splash, shot through he brain." CHEER UP. Lhere Are Millons of People Much Worse Of Than You Are. Cheer up. The world is taking your hotograph. Look pleasant. Of course -ou have your troubles, troubles you :annot tell the policeman. A whole ot of things bother you, of course. 3usiness worries or domestic sorrows. t may be, or 'vghat not. You find life t rugged road whoSe stones hurt your eet. Nevertheless cheer up. It may be your real disease is sel ishness-ingrown selfishness. Your life s too self centered. You Imagine your ribulations are worse than others ear. You feel sorry for yourself-the neanest sort of pity. It is a pathetic lusion. Rid yourself of that and cheer What right have you to carry a pie 're of your woebegone face and fu ereal ways about among your felloWs, vho have troubles of their own? If rou must whine or sulk or scowl, take car and go to the woods or to the mfrequented lanes. Cheer up. Your ills are largely im gnary. If you were really on the rink of bankruptcy, or If there were 10 thoroughfare through your sorrows, rou would clear your brows, set your :eeth and make the best of it. Cheer up. You are making a hypo betical case out of your troubles and ;ffering from a self inflicted verdict.I Eu are borrowing trouble and paying high rate of interest. Cheer up. Why, man alive, in a ten ninute walk you may see a score of eople worse off than you. And here ou are digging your own grave and >laying pallbearer into the bargain. Aan alive. 'you must do your work. smile, even though it be through your ears, which speedily dry. And cheer p.-Milwaukee Journal. EconomnY. "Economy," said a Wyoming man, 'Is always admirable. A Cheyenne atter, though. was disgusted the other lay with the economical spirit of a risitor to his shop. "This visitor, a tall man with gray 1air, entered with a soft felt hat. rapped in paper, in his hand. "'How much will it cost,' he said, to dye this hat gray, to match my~ "'About a dollar,' the hatter answer "The tall man wrapped the hat up "'I wont pay it,' he said. 'I can get ny hair dyed to match the hat for a luarter.'"________ A Villain. Lady of the House (to her friend) iVhat do you suppose has happened? t the last ball my Elsa made the ac uaintance of a young man who was bviously interested. He was a good natch, so I sent him frequent invita ions to dinner, arid as I knew he was great gormnand I employed the best :ook that was to be had. Her Friend and your plan succeeded? ILady of he House-Well, not exactly. The vil ai found out and married my cook. Explainin'g It. "His great contention is that all men tre born equal." "That's all right." 'But he seems to think he's better :han most men." "Well, he means all men are born egual, but some are equal to a hundred >thers."-Philadelphiai Press. Definition of Genius. So far is genius from being "a tran cendent capacity for taking trouble, irst of all," as Carlyle has It. that it is rather the capacity for doing without trouble that which other people can aot do with any amount of trouble. P'all Mall Gazette. "Nine times out of ten," saysa pilosopher. "trouble is what wec blame :he world for when we did it all our slves."-Atlanta Constitution. Poverty wants somue things. luxul7: rnany, avarice all things.-Cowle-Y. What's in a Name? Everything is in the name when it omes to Witch Hazel Salve. E. C. De Vitt & Co. of Chicago. discovered some ears ago how to make a salve from Vitch Hazel that1Is a specific jot' Piles. 'or blind, bleeding, Itching and pro ruding Piles, eczema, cuts, burns, iruises and aif skin diseases, DeWitt's aalve has no equai. This -has giveh ie to numerous worthle.s counter eits. Ask for DeWitt's -the genuine. ol by The R. B. Lorye Drng Store. A Drop in Values. An odd story of Emerson was told the other day by a Cambridge man. "A New York woman," he said, "call ed on Emerson one morning. The phi losopher was reading in his study, and near him on a plate there lay a little heap of cherry stones. The visitor slipped one of the cherry stones into her glove. Some months later she met Emerson at a reception in Boston. She recalled her visit to him, and then she pointed to the brooch she wore-a brooch of gold and brilliants with the cherry stone set in the center. - 'I took this stdne from the plate at your elbow on the morning of my call,' she said. "'Ah!' said Emerson. 'I'll tell my amanuensis of that He will be pleas ed. The young man loves.cherries, but I never touch them myself."' A Pioneer Patentee. It is rather remarkable that the first patent taken out in America should have been secured by an Englishman. It was in the middle of the seventeenth century that an Englishman named Jenk secured a monopoly in America for the sale of a hand machine for ex tinguishing fires which he had invent ed In England some years previously, but did not test its practical working until he migrated to America. The mo nopoly only lasted for fourteen 2 :rs, but Jenk made a very ample fortune out of his sales of the apparatus.-Lon don Tatler. A Costly Ton of Coal. On Jan. 10, 1789, thirteen men brought a wagon with a ton of coal from Loughborough, in Leicestershire, to London as a present to the then Prince of Wales. When the coal was emptied into the cellar the clerk of the cellars gave them 4 guineas, and as soon as the prince was informed of It his highness sent them 20 guineas and ordered them a pot of beer each man. They performed their jour ney, which is 111 miles, in eleven days and drew the coal all the way without any relief.-London Tit-Bits. InA7antesimal Webs. Mexico, the land of Montezuma, prickly pears, sand, volcanoes, etc., has many subtropical wonders both In vegetable and animal life. Among these latter is a species of spider so minute that its legs cannot be seen without a glass. This little araneida weaves a web so wonderfully minute that it takes 400 of them to equal a common hair in magnitude. WHEN IN NEED OF GrocerieS CALL ON P. B.MOUZON. NEXT TO DR W. E. BROWN & CO.'S DRUG STORE. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, Couty of carendon COURT OF COMMON PLEAS. Annie Jenkins. Ada Hi. Wilson. Louis W. Jenkins, Alvah B. Jenkins. Eu nice T. JTenkins, Ethil A. Jenkins, Ellen N. Jenkins. Da.na Mcuiu JTen kins and Viola E. JIenkins, Defend ents. COPY SUPIMONS. FOR RELIEE. (COMPLAINT NOT SERVED.) o the Defendants A bove Named: You are herehy summoned and re quired to answer the complaint in this action which will be filed in the office of the Clerk of Courtof Common Pleas. for the said County, and to serve a copy f our answer to the said Complaint on the subscriber at his office at Man nin. in said County, within twenty days after the service hereof:; exclu sive of the day of such service: and if ou fail to answver the complaint within the time aforesaid, the plaintiff in this action will ap~ply to the Court for the relief demonded in the complaint. You are further notitied that the Complaint, in this netion was. on the 0th day of August. 1904, filed in the of iee of the Clerk of Court of Common Pleas for said county, at Manniug. in aid county. Dated August 2;th. A. D. 1904. WV. C. DAVIS. Plaintiff's Attorney. 49-;t] ________________ To All to Whom These' Presents May Come: This Diploma is testimony that S. L. Kranof, F. D.. by a full course of in tructions given by The Cincinnati Col lege of Embalming, has qualified him. self in the art of Sanitation, Disinfec tion Embalming and preserving dead )Odis. Given under the hand and seal of the taculty this the 20th day of July, A. D. 1904. :at Cincinnati. Ohio. J. Hi. CLARKE, M. D., Ph. D.. C. H. CLARKE. President. Secretary. Undertaking. I keep a large and complete stock of If you should be so unfortunate as to need either, the cheapest coflin or the finest Rosewood Casket you will find the principle of low prices ruling in this line. Our beautiful new hearse has arrived and all calls, night or day, will receive prompt attention. My Furniture Department is coin. lete in every detail, and as I buy f.or rash and in carload lots I defy competi SW. E. JENKINSON.L Bng your Job Work to The Thdes office DIGESTS Te 31.00 bottle contak:s 2 PREPARED I E. C. DeWITT & Northwestern R. R. of S. C. TmETABLE -NO. C. In effect Sunday, June 5, 1904 Between Samter and Camden. Mixed-Daily except Sunday. South bound. Northbonnd No. 69. No. 71. No 70. No. 68. PM AM AM PM 6 25 1 3G Le.. Suiter ..Ar 9 00 5 45 6 27 u 38 N. W. Jnuct 8 58 5 43 | 6,47. - 59 . ..Dalzell... 8 25 5 13 7 05 10 10 ... Borden.. . 8 00 4 58 723 10 21 ..Renberta . 7 40 4 43 730 10.31 ..Eilerbee.. 730 438 750 11 00 .o Rv Junuctn 7 10 4 25 8 00 11 10 Ar..Cawmden. .Le 700 415 (S U & G Ex Depot) PAi P M AM PM Between Wilson's MIll and Sumter. sontbhound. Northbound. No. 73. Daily except Sun;:d:ay No. 72. P M tations. P M 300 Le ........S uter........Ar 1230 3 33 ..Snimmerton Jnncti m.. 12 27 320 .........Tindal....... 1155 335 .......Packsville....... 1130 35.5 .........Silver......... 1100 4051 1045 530( ........Millard ........ 10 20 4 45 ......Summerton ...... 10 15 525 .... .... Davis......... 915 545 ........Jordan ... .... . 900 6 30 Ar .. :lson's Mills.....Le 840 P Ma AM Thtwi-en Mi!f.. and St. Paul. Sonthbou:nd. Northbound. No. 73. No. 75. No. 72. No. 74. P M A M Statious A M P M 4 05 10 20 Le Millard Ar 10 45 5 30 415 10 30 Ar St. Paul Le 1035 4201 PM AM AM- PM TlO.S. WILSON, President. All Pleased. WE ARE PLEASED to write your insurance, You will be pleased to receive it. The Best Is What You Want. See me about your insurance, either Life, Fire, Accident, Health, Burglary or Plate Glass. 3. t. WILSON. Cheap Trips VIA ATLANTIC ( BALTIMORE, MD.-Account Natior Eagles, September 12th to 17t] $1.25.. Tickets on sale Septena return September 19th, with I September 25th. BOSTON, MASS.-Account General Churcb, October 5th-28th. Ra the round trip. Tickets on return to October 31, 1904. St. Louis, Mo., Season Tickets, 60-day on sale es Coach. 'E~o1z on sale ever DON'T MISS THE OPPORTU'NI'l Rates, routes, schedules and all and the undersigned. H. M. EMMERSON, Traffic Manager, Wilmingt' Naturi . Liver . M Physicia - - P FOR SA A MED ICNL Sold on a 4 0 CURE CURLS AGU dGRIPPE2A ND Of All Dr 50c. BRING TO THE TI1F WHAT YOU EAT 34 timesthe trial size. sizich selsf fr50 cents. MY AT TXZ UAsORAoy 0. DMPANY, CHICAGO. IM THE KIND-O F r A MEs To be used is very muci matter of taste. It is important thouogh, that the frames set the nose and at the right from the eyes; that the lens perfectly centered. and how, you to know when one is ing? WE... NEVER GUESS. Glasses Right, Good Sight." E. A. Bulfmai JEWELER'AND OPTICIAN 17 S. Main St., SamterS 'PHONE 194 Do You W-0 TO BORROW MO If you want to borrow moneyw on real estate, no matter'h large the amount, come to me. I can make loans on proved real estate at a lowr of inte.est and on long i J. A. WEINBR Attorney at La MANNING. - - Money to mEasy Ter APPLY TO Wilson, DuRant,& d to the rHE al Convention Fraternal , 1904.' Rate, one first clas ber 10th, 11th and 12th, Iimi >rivilege of extending return Convention Protestant Epis be one first class fare plus 50 eeas ale October 2nd and 3rd, I World's Fair. tickets. ~ 15-day tickets ~ -ery day. y Tuesday. 'Y FOR AN~ EXCELLENT TRIP~ information given by TicketAei'. W. J.. CRAIG, Gen'1 Passe Agt GLENN SPR INGS MINERAL M WATER s's Greatest Rem 4 FOR DISEASES OF THE ,Kidneys, Stomah and Skin. mns Prescribe it, atients Depend on it, and Everybody Praiss u. LE BY OF MfENIT..< luarantee CGUIL LS. ET, DENGUE, BILIOUS NE SS. oggists. al.00 . YOUR [ES OFFICE.