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Cabbage Plants and Sea Island Cotton Seed. CABBAGE PLANTS 11or sale z-nd now ready for delivery. -'EARLY JERSEY WANE FILD" and 1CHARLESTON LA TYPE WAKEFITD.' two early sharphead varieties and bead in rotation as named. "SUCCESSION, .AUGUSTA TRUCkER - and -SHORT STEM FLAT DUTCH." the three best flat-head varieties and head in rotativi as namd.1 -Prices: Single thousand. -3.: .O( and over. 41.'-; per I.000: 1I.illh, and over. per Terms: Cash with order: or. plants sent C. 0. D.. purch::ser paviig returni harg rtony. Our plant beds occupy :n acres on South Carolina sea 'oast. and we undterstnd growin them in open air: tough and hardy: they will -tand severe cold without injury. l1:aiits crated for shipment weigh lbs. per we have special low rati for prompt transportation by Southern Express Company. I know of other plants you can buy cheaper than mine. I s Ill god plants. No cheap -cut rate" plants shipped from my farm. I guarantee those that I ship to be true to pand name. and grown from high grade seeds purchased from two of the most relianblz -ed houses in the United States. I win refund purchase price to any dis satisfied eistoLerat nd of s oton. OUR COTTON SEED. Lint of our Lon, Staple variety o; S!iuA ISLAND COTTON sold this e year in Charleston on Dec.:'.. at 32c. per pound. SeedI. $.4per bu.: lot (if Ili b. and over. .51 per bushel. Mv specialty: Prompt Shipment. True Varieties a'id Satistied Custoier-. I have been in the plani business for thirty-five years. Wm. . Geraty, "Theabge aT Youngs Island, .S. M. l e YIPost and legrapli Ofll la (1.) Four hundred and fifty acre plantation on the Manning Summerton road, four miles from Suminerton, two hundred acres under cultivation, balance in woods, some timber and practically all can be brought under cultivation. Buildings: One five-room dwell ing with necessary outbuildings and the four tenant houses. Soil of first-class quality. The place is cheap at the price offered. viz: $15 per acre. - (2.) Tract one thousand acres, three hundred acres under culti vation, four hundred acres of balance in second growth pine, one hundred acres original growth pine, two hundred acres cypress and other swamp timber, in the western part of Clarendon county and formerly known as the Robertson Taylor place. situated about two miles southeast of the old C. S. & N. R. R. crossing. Price $G,500. (3.) Five hundred acres near Foreston. Want other Clarendoii couwnty lands' for sale. R. B. BELSER, Real Estate Broker, Sumter, S. C. 'Phone 12. Court Square. S. R. VENNING, Jeteer: Deier in WATCHES, CLOCKS, JEWELRY, SPECTACLES, EYE CLASSES AND' ALL KINDS OF FANCY NOVELTIES. I make a specialty of WEDDING and HOLIDAY PRES ENTS and always carry a handsome line of Silverware, Hand-Painted China, Glassware and nurnerous other articles suitable for Gifts of all kind. CoME ANC> SEE THEM. ll Watch. Clock and Jeweiry Repairing done promptly and guaranteed. Levi Block. ib h 5 23Iuope n1nfS o MANNING, S. 4 The DuRant Hardware Co., SUMTER, S. C. Being in close touch with the very best markets, w~e are better pr epar ed thandl the trade thaneereore an weherefore invite an snpectton of you want Hardware, Stoves, House Furnishing Goods, Karness, Saddles, Leather, Belting, Etc. *'Our S >e is headquarters for Gun;, Powder, Shot, Shells and the very latest in Sporting Goods. Devoe'sF Paints. We also handle large quantities of other Paints, Oils and Window Glass. For Engine and Mill Supplies there is no better place to buy. Come and examine our Iarge line of Cooking and Heatimg Stoves. Ever-y Stove bought from us is warranted. The DuRant Hardware Co., s4MTERf, s. C. During These Cold Winter' Months a Trip to Florida-Cuba VTA. TII~2 ATLANTIC COAST LINE Would be just the thing to make life worth the -living. Superb trains, excellent schedules and. tickets which offer every advantage possible for a 'pleasant and attractive trip. For full information or pamphlets call on your" nearest ticket agent or write. H. M. EMMERSON, . W. J. CRAIG, Traffic Manager, Gen'1 Pass. Ag't, Wilmington, N. C. Directing Funerals. J . WiNEG We have an up-to-date- Under- L AWYER. taking Establishment, and carry: a fnll line of Caskets, Coffins, and MANNING, S. C. Undertakers' Supplies, from thelPop n aeu teto ie cheapest to the best State Casket Ptomll busn-e ttnio ie Our beautiful Hearse is a great toalbuies addition in this department. and -__________ ___ puts us an a level with the larger M . J. MULDROW, undertakers in the State, and weW have men graduates in this pro- A TTORNEYA L w fession, sober and reliable. - TLW S. L. KRASNOFF, MANNING. S. C. UjNDERTAK~ER. J. W. HERIOT, _________ FUNERAL DIRE CTOR. *~L Levi Block, Manning, S. C. - K HE ANDCUE HELUNCS -H. LESESNE,Nv in ' ATTORNEY AT LAW, ~*K I~ MANNING, S. .Ne Dic v r W. O.K ad W.$.O Woodmen of the THOAoadLUld.OB Meets on fourth Monday nights at, Eo OE AK VisitinewgDisoveininie.TeRB.oyaD ryoe The famous Goodyear Apple Farm, 2ear Waynsville, N. C., is now owned >v John Farrior. Esb., who said:King's Nild Cherry and Tar is the best Cough \Iedicine. It is pleasant and effective, ind I would not be without it. Even a :light cold is not a thing of no momnent. t may end in catarrh or pneumouma. eep the breathing apparatus open ind clean. All diseases of the throat mnd bronchial tubes are cured quickly tnd pleasantly by Dr, King's Wild 'herry and Tar. 25c., no cure no pay. sold b'y The R. B. Loryea Drug Store. A GOOD WIDE YAWN. [t Is a Splendid Reviver For the Whole Body. A good, wide, open mouthed yawn Is i splendid thing for the whole body. A rawn is nature's demand for rest ome people think they only yawn be :ause they are sleepy, but this is not o. You yawn because you are tired. Eou may be sleepy also, but that is not :e real cause of your yawning. You ire sleepy because you are tired, and rou yawn because you are tired. Whenever you feel like yawning just rawn. Don't try to suppress it be ause you think it is impolite to yawn. Put your hand over your mouth if you want to, but let the yawn come. And f you are whore you can stretch at the same time that you yawn just stretch nd yawn. This is nature's way of tretching and relaxing the muscles. Don't be afraid to open your mouth wide and yawn and stretch whenever you feel like it. Indeed. if you are rery tired, but do not feel like ya--n ng, there is nothing that will rest you so quickly as to sit on a straight back hair, and, lifting your feet from the loor, push them out in front of you is far as possible, stretch the arms, ut the head back, open the mouth ide and make yourself yawn. Those tense nerves will relax, the montracted muscles will stretch and the whole body will be rested. Do this two )r three times when you are tired and see what it will do for you. DURER AND LEONARDO. Explanation of the Differences Be tween Their Work as Painters. Durer was born a German, Leonardo an Italian. This sums up much of the ifference between their work as paint ers. .The Italian race, under its sunny skies, has an inborn love of beauty. The German, in a sterner climate "How I shall freeze after this sun!" wrote Durer, during his stay in Italy, to a friend in Nuremberg-retains to this day the energy that carved its way through the vast forests of his mountry and some of the gloomy ro mance that haunted their dark shad )ws. The German spirit is character zed by a "combination of the wild and rugged with the homely and tender, by meditative depth, enigmatic gloom, sincerity and energy, by iron diligence and discipline." Very remarkable qual ities these, and to be found in Durer's work, which is the reason that we de scribe him as being so representative )f the Teutonic race. But it was not only the difference of race that helped to mold the genius of these two men differently. Each was a. manifestation of the "new birth" of art and learning that was spreading ver Europe-Leonardo of the form of it which appeared in Italy and Durer af that which prevailed in Germany. St. Nicholas. SHAVING IS ANCIENT. 'he Custom Was Probably Followed In Prehistorie Times. It Is not improbable that prehistoric man shaved, for curiously shaped shells and flint fiakes have been dis yovered which have been supposed to be very ancient razors. In remote parts af China men have their chins scraped, without water or soap, by instruments very similar to these, and the men of the stone age would most likely find out at a very early stage that to leave hair upon their face was to give a use Eil handle to their enemies. That, indeed, was the reason why Alexander the Great compelled his sol iers to shave, and his order is among the earliest 1iefinite :instances of shav ng upon redord, although there can be ao question that the practice existed Long before his day. The oldest Egyptian. sculptures show ome men clean shaven, and others partially so, with curled beards. It is rec~rded in Genesis that Joseph, when he went from prison to the presence of Pharaoh, about 1300 B. C., "shaved himself and changed ]its raiment." Alexander's Palace. The palace of Alexander the Great was an imposing~ structure in its time, and the wonder is that any vestige of it stands today. It was built in a man ner much more substantial than thai of today, though advocates of steel construction claim that the modern structure will defy time as long as any of those built by the ancients. Time alone will determine how much truth there is in this contention. Or the Asiatic plain are the massive rem nants of an ancient gateway fringed with weeds, and, vaguely knowing who he was, the natives tell that this is all that is left of the palace of Alexander. The Patient's Idea. Dr. Price-Price (diplomatically)-l don't know whether I sent you a state ment of what-er-you owe me. Mr. Knox-Neither do I. Dr. Price-Price Al, you didn't get It then? I guess I didn't send you a statement. Mr. Knoi -Oh, yes, but it looked more like statement of what you think I pos sess.-Catholic Standard and Times. A Burning Mistake. Bilkins-I never knew Cockshure t< acknowledge that he had made a mis take. Pilkins-I did once. Bilkins How did It happen? Pilkins-He pui the lighted end of his cigar in his mouth.-Louisville Courier-Journal. Old Ocean's Joke. "There's another bunclh of rniidl cou pies on that ship," remarked Fathel Neptune. "Yes," replied the Atlantic ocean "I'm being crossed in love pretty regu Rarly these days."-Phliladelphia Press. Of the best society it used to be sa1t its conversation affords instructior while Its silence imparts culture. Cothe. Public is Aroused. 'The public is aroused to a knowledg of the curative merits of that grea medicinal tonic, Electric Bitters. fo sick stomach, liver and kidneys. Mar; H. Walters, of 546 St. Clair Ave.. Col umbus, O., writes: "For months, I wa given up to die. I had fever and ague my nerves were wrecked: 1 could nc sleep and my stomach was so weak fror useless doctor's drugs, that I could nc eat. Soon after beginning to tak Electric Bitters. I obtained relief, an in a short time I was entirely cured. Guaranteed at The R. B. Loryea Dru Store; lnice 50r Catarrh. Which usually commences with cold in head, hay fever, rapidly infects the. mucous membrane of the throat, and leads to graver :omplications, unless pronptly attended to. We recommend King's Sarsaparilla internally to purify the blood, and direct treatment with Dr. King's Catarrh Remedy (a douche comes with each bottle). It gains a foot hold from which it hard to dislodge. With treatment of these two medicines any ordinari- case will yield quickly the very worst cases will be greatly reliever. The prike, -$.00: three for $2.50, and guaranteed. Sold by The -'L. B. Loryea Dru- Store. After Lee's surrender. In "Rtecollections and Letters of Gen eral Robert E. Lee" (aptain R. E. Lee describes his father's return to private life after the surrender of Appomat tox. He says: "A day or two after the surrender General Lee started for Richmond, rid ing Traveler, who had carried him so well all through the war. He was ac companied by some of his staff. On the way he stopped at the house of his eldest brother, Charles Carter Lee, who lived on the upper James, in Pow hatan county. le spent the evening in talking with his brother, but when bedtime came, though begged by his host to take the room and bed pre pared for him, he insisted on going to his old tent, pitched by the roadside. and passed the night in the quarters that he was accustomed to. On April 15 he arrived ih Richmond. The peo ple there soon recognized him. Men, women and children crowded around him, cheering and waving hats and handkerchiefs. It was more like the welcome to a conqueror than to a de feated prisoner on parole. He raised his hat in response to their greeting and rode quietly to his home on Frank lin street, where my mother and sis ters were anxiously awaiting him. Thus he returned to that private fami ly life for which he had always longed and became what he always desired to be-a peaceful citizen in a peaceful land." Oil on the Coffee. The cup of black coffee had on its surface a little oil. This oil shimmer ed. It gave forth delicate, changing colors, like oil on water. The man who was about to drink the coffee gazed at it with delight. "The oil," he said, "tells me all I want to know about the coffee. Now, without tasting it, I am sure it is su perb. "The whole secret of making coffee," he went on, "lies in extracting and re taining this oil. This oil it is which gives coffee its aromatic and delicious taste. This oil it is also which stimu lates you, which makes you feel after you have drunk strong and gay. "Good coffee-the kind with oil afloat on it-can only be made by excellent cooks. In millionaires' houses or in hotels where they employ French chefs you are likely to get it. But the aver age American housewife does not know how to make this oily kind of coffee at all."-Philadelphia Bulletin. Soot as a Disinfectant. Of the many cheap and simple disin fectants proposed for the use of the people one of the most effective is common soot. Soot is composed of pure carbon and is formed by the hot vapor of the hydrocarbon coming from burning fuel striking the -cold walls of the chimney or stovepipe and con densing thereon. It is a very light, porous and Impalpable powder and, like charcoal, which is the same ele ment in a different form, possesses the property of absorbing and retain ing a wonderful amount of gas. The great danger of disease about sewers, drains and other places is almost en tirely due to gas given off by decom posing matter. If soot be sprinkled about these places It will absorb the foul gas.-London Mail. Too Munch Imagination. Pity the man or woman devoid of im agination, but he or she who allows the imagination too great liberty be comes its subject rather than its mas ter. The man who wears a rubber on the pedal attachment to his cork leg because the cork foot aches with out the rubber is as unfortunate a vic tim as the Scotchman who fainted on account of the beat int church the first Sunday after stoves were set up, al though a fire had not been lighted In any of them. Dutch Cur'e For Lazy People. The Hollanders are not fond of lazy people, and they have a very good way of curig persons who can but won't work. If a pauper who is able to work refuses to do so they put him In a cis tern, to which a pump Is attached, and turn on a stream of water. The stream flows into the cistern just slow enough to enable the lazy person by lively pumping to keep the water from get ting up over his head. Real Riches. "Who Is the richest man in the world?" asks an exchange and begins. measuring millions against millions. All wrong. The richest man in the world is the one that gets the greatest amount of happiness out of what he has, whatever it is. It is an old truth, but it was never truer than It Is to day.-Pueblo (Colo.) Chieftain. A Reminder Elder Sister-Really, dear, you mustn't put "I remain ever your loving Nellie Tomkins." You may put "I re main your loving Nellie Tomkins" If you like, but underline the "renlain" and the "Tomkins." Father's been throwing out hints about the 'long courtship, darling! Before and After. Mr. Busybody--Pardon me fore men tioning it, but Isn't your wife a little rude to you at times? Mr. Henpecked -Well, it does seem so to me.. Before we were married she used to -sit on my knee. -Now she sits all over~me,--Som erville Journal. Not Using It. Mr. Green-Miss Passay says sh'e has a prescription for perpetual youth. Miss Sarcastic-It's a wonder she wouldn't take it to a drug store and have it put up.-Detroit Free Press. Ducal Persiflage. Duke of Bilherry--Where were you when the king fell off his horse? Duke of Hohokus-Oh, I was near the thrown !--Pittsburg Post. Sick Headache. This distressing ailment r'esults from a disordered condition of the stomach. All that is needed to effect a cure is a dose or two of Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets. In fact the attack may be wvarded offt or greatly lessened in severity, by taking a dose of these Tablets as soon as the first symptom of an attack appears. Sold by The R. B. Lorya Drug Store. Isa Md. Loryea, Startlirg But True. People the wvorll over were hor-ilictl on learning of the burning of a Chica-o theater in which nearly six huntired people lost their lives. yet more than five timies this number or over :"00 people died from pnetuuonia in Chlka go during the same year. with scarcely a passing notice. E very one of these cases of pnurmonia resulted from a cold and could have been pretented by the timelv use of Chamberlain's Cough Reimedy. A great many who had every reason to fear pnuemonia have warded it off by the p.iornpt use of this remedy. The following is an instance of this sort: "Too much cannot be said in favor of Chamberlain's Cough I Reiedy. and especially for colds and influenza. I know that it cured my daug' eir. Laura. of a severe cold. and I believe saved her life when she was threatened with pneunonia." W. D. VILCox. Logan, New york. Sold by The R. B. Loryea Drug Store, Isaac M. Lot-yea. Prop. FORMIDABLE GUNS. The Bombards Used by the rurks In the Fifteenth Century. In 147S Mohammed II., in forming the siege of Scutari, in Albania, em ployed fourteen heavy bombards, the lightest of which threw a stone shot of 370 pounds weight, two sent shots of 500 pounds, one of 750 pounds, two of 850 pounds, one of 1,200 poinds, five of 1,500 and one of the enormous weight of 1,640 pounds, enormous even in these days, for our S0 ton guns throw only a 1,700 pound projectile, our 100 ton throws one of 2,000 pounds, and the 110 ton throws an 1,800 pound shot with a high velocity. The stone shot of Mohammed's guns varied between twenty and thir ty-two inches in diameter, about the height of a dining table, 2,534 of them fired on this occasion weighing, ac cording to a calculation of General Lefroy's, about 1,000 tons, and were cut out of ,the solid rock on the spot. Assuming twenty-four inches as the average diameter of the shot fired at the siege, the total area of the surface dressed was nearly 32,000 square feet At this siege the weight of the powder fired' is estimated by General Lefroy to have been 250 tons. At the siege of Rhodes in 14S0 Mohammed caused six teen basilisks or double cannon to be cast on the spot, throwing balls two to three feet in diameter.-Chambers' Journal. WHEN A MAN STARVES. Eow It Feels to Go Without Food For Seven DayM. For the first two days through which a strong and healthy man is doomed to exist upon nothing his sufferings are perhaps more acute than in the remain ing stages; he feels an inordinate, un speakable craving at the stomach night and day. The mind runs upon beef, bread and other substances, but still in a great measure the body retains its strength. On the third and fourth days, but especially on the fourth, this inces sant craving gives place to a sinking and weakness of the stomach, accom panied by nausea. On the fifth day his cheeks appear hollow and sunken, his body attenu ated; his color is ashy pale and his eyes wild, glassy and cannibalistic. The sixth day brings with it increas ed suffering, although the pangs of hunger are lost in an overpowering languor and sickness. The head be comes dizzy ; the ghosts of well remem bered dinners pass in hideous proces sion through the mind. The seventh day comes, bringing in creasing lassitude and further prostra tion of strength. The mind wanders. Chicago Chronicle.. SEEING NOISE. The Method by Which sound Waves Are Photographied. Sound can be photographed by tak ing advantage of the motion produced in a tuning fork. Sound travels in waves, each corresponding with an os cillation in the fork, which remains in a state of continuous vibration while the note is sounded. To photograph these sound waves a small mirror is attached to the end of one of the prongs. On this a powerful -beam of light is projected by a lens, so as to strike it at an angle of forty-five degrees. The light is again reflected from its surface, but in a new direc tion, and a very slight alteration in the position of the mirror makes a large one in the reflected beam. To take the photograph the light is turned upon the mirror in a darkened room, and the tuning foi'k is set in vi bration, while a sensitive plate is rap idly passed in the path of the reflected pencil of light On development the plate shows sound waves recorded as a wavy line, and each note has its characteristic curves. - The Mad Ambassador. There was a tragic little scene imme diately preceding the marriage of King Edward TII. when he was the Prince of Wales. With several of his royal relatives he was staying at the Prus sian embassy in Rome, where his host was the German ambassador, Baron von Kuanitz. The responsibility of entertaining so many august personages under his roof was too much for the ambassador. He appeared at dinner one night in his dressing gown and slippers and to half the royalties of Europe exclaimed: "Is thiis to go on much longer? I am -heartily sick of it, and it must come to an end at once." They carried him to his room and the next day removed him to a1. asylum, a raving lunatic. Rtocking~ and Sleep. Dr. Manacoine, the famous Russian authority on sleep phenomena, says that rocking is an artificial method of inducing slumber. The process fa tigues consciousness by -a series of monotonous sensations and incidental ly deprives the brain of its blood sup ply.' Absence of blood from the brain makes sleep. The influence of the lul laby is objectionable, but not equally so. A baby will go to sleep unaided -when it needs sleep. Hecr Recommendation. Cholly-So Miss Tartun loosened up and said a good word about me, did she? Archie-Tes; she said that whet Sone got better acquainted with vou one found you were not half as big fool as you appeared to be.--Exchange. Has a Distinct Advantage. Addipus-Dont you hate to be as lean as you are? Skinnicus-No; some times I find it's a decided help. I car Scross my legs in a crowded car withou1 t- aking up any more room that I dlit r-before-Chicago Tribune. The noblest question in the world is SWhat good may I do in it?-F-ranklinl A Knock-out. Dr. King's Ne w Me dicine for colds aCold Breaker is now getting in som< ifine work. It is speedy; safe and sure The price is only 23ca, Convenien Spackage. Find it at The R. B. Lnrye: Drug Sore. CLA -When a child I had a very severe at tack of Diphtheria, which came near prov ing fatal. Upon recovery the glands of the neck were very much enlarged, and after the free use of iodine, the right one was reduced to its normal size, but the left one continued to grow-very slowly at -irst, until it was about the sizeof a goose egg, which began. to press on the wmind pipe, causing difficult breathing, and be came very painful. An incision was made and a large quantity of' pus discharged. The gland was removed, or as much as could with safety be taken out. For ten years I wore alittle piece of cloth about an inch long in my neck to keep the place open. During this time I to have it cut open by the doctor every time I took cold or the openingclogged. IntheSpring or early Summer of 1884 I was persuaded by my wife to use S. S. S., which I did, strictly in accordance with directions. I to6k twenty-six large bottles, and was en tirely cured, for I dre not suffered since that time. B. S.RAGLAND. Royal Bag Mfg. Co., Charleston, S. C. Only a constitutional remedy can reach an hereditary disease like Scrofula. When the blood is restored to a normal condition and the scrofulous deposits are carried off there is a gradual returntohealth. S.S.S. is well known as a blood purifier and tonic. It is the o nlIy guaranteed, strictly vegetable remedysold. Ifyou have any signs of Scrofula, write us and our physicians will adviseyoufree The Swift Specific Company, Atlanta, Ga. ITHOMAS Z MiMMER F . I desire to direct at tention to the fact that I have moved into the store next door to the : Manning Hardware Co., which was especially prepared for my line of I business, and I am now in a position to handle imy increasing trade bet r_ ter than ever. My stock of Family and Fancy [ GToceries Scannot be excelled any Swhere, because I am in Sconstant touch with the l best of markets, anid i handle first grades inii i everything. I am sole agent for the celebrated SYou wvill, always get Sfrom me the freshest Sand choicests of Fruits. S I b~uy my Fruits in car Eload lots, and am in S position to sell at whole isale prices. SThere is no store in the county with a better stock of iMeats.Preserves, .Jellies, Setc. We have the best Sof Pickles, Olives, Sal Sads, and in fact every thing to entice.and m ake it easy for the house keeper to prepare a good dinner-come to see me. Have You I Moniey Idle~ If so. deposit it in a good ban1 until you have need for it. Th Bank of Clarendlon, IMANNING. S. C., 'Is the place to deposit you money. Every courtesy and accomme dation "consistent with safety extended. In our Savings Department in terest at the rate of four pe cent. per annum will be pai semi-anually. BANK OF CLAREE019 MANNIN, S. C aLastCl rT his Win er.I -mim E have about one hun dred pairs Cotton and IWool Blankets and Comforts that we will sell at ACTUAL COST. We cannot afford to carry these goods over until -next winter. - It would be a -good investment for you to buy them if you do not use them until next winter. ECome and A See Them. We have about one hundred Ladies Hats we will sell at act ual cost also. New Spring Goods are com ing in every day and we must make room for them. These goods will be offered you at ACTUAL COST. Yours for business, i J.W.MLO 1S.7I. TILL, Ma ager. LEVI BLOCK. @ @@@@@@@@@@I@ . 0The public to come and inspect our stock I 8 Fancy & Staple Groceries0 8We carry this line and will cheerfully give you paces, as it is to your interest to keep in touch with them. - 0 b~ F LOUR. Yes, we have 'the best Full Patent and if you are Ssomewhat dissatisfied with your flour, try our 100 per cent. ~and we feel reasonably sure you will be pleased, that is if you are looking for a high class article. We COFFEE.-* Wers carry both parched and green, and if you want' - firdass article, something nicely flavored and contain ~ing good strength try some of our Coffee. We beg that you do not confuse these goods with pos sbyothers you have been using. Can we quote you prices in bulk? Certainly, with pesure. Call and see. People of Maning, Listen! We want your business, and if close prices and good goods mean anything to you, we'll get it. At any time we'll be more than pleased to furnish you with any information im our power. LELAND MOORE PAINT & OILt CO, Paint Manufacturers and Lead Orinders, 211 East Bay Street, Charleston, S. C. Genuine Peruvian Sells itself-none better. Ten thousand tons now offered for sale. .Nitrate of Soda, Mutriate of Potash, Gerrnan Kainit H ARBY & CQ., sumer ARE HEADQUARTERS. Get Onz'r P'eices, Please.