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- At Garden Truck T can be raised profitably only in soil containing plenty of Potash. All vegetables require a fertilizer con taining at least io per cent. actiil Potash Without Potash no fertilizer is com plete, and failure will follow its use. Ewerr farmerqhorld bAveonraluflble book% on f nuization-thev are not advertising matte)r boo-ming anv s'ecial fertilizer, but boots of anthoritatire if rmatiOn that means lar prontato thofarners. Seatfreeforthe GERIAIN KALI WORKS New YorL-93 Nasau Street. or Atlanta. G.-22% South Broad Street. The Bank of Maiimiiig MANNING, S. C. Capital Stock, - ,40,000 Surplus. - - 30,000 Stockholders' Lia bility, - - 40,000 Total Protection to Depositors, S110,000 TELLER' ANY BUSINESS rlAN will appreciate the way we do business. Every modern facility for the safe handling and storing of funds, the high est grade of clerical assistance. AN UNIMPEACHIED RECORD of past. trausactions. etc. You will find thi:s an entirely reliable i3auk. Undertaking. A complete stock of Caskets. Coffins and Fu neral Supplies always on hand. Mv hearse vill be sent to any part of the county, and calls will be responded to by Mr. A. J. White. funeral director and undertaker. night or day. W. E. JENKINSON Co. 6?NIPOSPIIITE I CURES K!DNEY _____ DISEASES URINARY BLADDER STROUBLES FORSM~L~BTELL DlSPERtSfRIS. Open An Account With Us. You can then pay your bills with checks which we return to you the first of each month and which are thus made a receipt in full for every dollar you pay out. You can always make chang~e with a check. Summerton, S. C. THE SUMMERTON HOTEL Having made special preparations, I am now better prepared to entertain the traveling public than ever before. I especli!y invite the transient pat ronage. H. A. TISDALE, Proprietor. Woodmeu of the Worli. .\leets on fourth 31onday nights at 8:3'). Visiting Sovereigns invited. Directing Funerals. We have an uj)-to-date- Under taking Establishment, and carry a full line of Caskets, Coffins, and Undertakers' Su pplies, from the cheapest to tihe best State Casket Our beautiful Hearse is a great addition in tis department, and puts us an a level with tile larger undertakers in tile State, and we have men graduates in this pr-o fession. sober and reliable. S. L. KIRASNOFF, UN DERTAK ERt. J. W. H ERI.T FUNERAL DIRE CTOR. i Bloc:vk, Manning, S. C. We are INo 11 MOllr New Quarlers21 We are in our new quarters at the same old stand, next to Jenkinson's, where we are prepared to fill all orders for Girocer-ies. We will be glad to see you and "figger on any bill of Groceries you may need- and feel assured we can satisfy you both in qual ity and -price. The Manningfirocery Co. 0 8 SUMMERTON HARDWARE CO., S C ASUMMERTON, S. C. President. Vice-President. Sec.-Treas. OUR MOTTO: 3 L'S. Live and Let Live. For dry goods, go to a d y goods store. For shoes, go to a shoe store. For groceries. go to a grocery store. For medicines, go to a medicine store. For HARDWARE and its kindred articles, go to a HARDWARE STORE. Paints, Agricultural mpl ments, Pumps, Pipe, Stoves and Stoveware, Harness and Saddlery, Crockery and Glassware. -We have them all. Our long residence in the county is our guarantee of fair and 8 honest treatmlent of our customers-. hWe have recently associated with us Mr. J. M. Plowden form erly with the Dillon~ Hardware Company, who thoroughly uuder stands the hardware business aud will take pleasure iu giving the public the benefit, of his experience. 80 With all its attractiveness is upon us and with its ad Svent the problem of restocking the farin with tools and imple ~-ments comes. - EA RA DO e have never been in better shape to supply ~FAMRSR, youduring our eight years of business life among you, and we can confidently say that we have the best assort ment of goods ever brought to Manning. DIIA nnlODIDIT D The K. P. Distributors. This uU GU UISTRIDUTO Ru. splendid distributor we sold Shere for the first time last season, and owing to its strong con Sstruction and accurate work became a favorite at once. All the ~ Sagricnltural papers unite in praising its fine qualities. S The Cole Distributor is better adapted to distributing around Sshe growing crop; for this purpose it is. without a rival. It can~ ~-be used for all purposes. C The Spangler Distributor is a new distributor Onl our market; we have many testimonials of its effciency. D~o not fail to see it,. as it possesses features that no other distributor has. .. C We have in Cotton Planters as follows, all of which are too a Swell known to require a description: DOWV LAWV and FARQU SHAR. nnD DI A E Our Corn Planter has attracted quite :a C UUR I L R SI a.U lot of attention. We sell the "ST1A R." Iiswithout a doubt-a splendid suecess as a planter. S We are agents for some new Plows that are great labor-saving C implements, among which are the SY RACUSE Steel Beam two C horse Plows. We have them in three sizes in stock. We are also Sagents for the "WVatt" one and two horse Plows. E We also have a nine lot of Harrows and Cultivators and the Scelebrated RUJBIN JONES FENDERS. S We have everything usually kept in better class hardware - Sstores and are always pleased to serve you. _ Very truly yours. M ANNINC HARDWARE COMPANY, i Go to WV. P. HAWKINS & CO lfor the best. They' hae just got in a lot of fine ones. Prices right anid terms liberal. You ca~n depend on what you buy of W. P. [IAWKINS & CO., for they are straight and their new Horses anid Mules are unsurpassed in any market. Honest dealings and the best stock is our motto for suc cess, if it is worth anything to you see W. P. HA WK[NS & CO. Buggies, Wagons and Harness. Our salesrooms have been refilled with the view of en ticng patronage and this can only be secured by havingo what the people want, and their money's worth when they get it. It will not cost yon a cent to look through our stables and salesroom~s. Our prices will suit. and everything yon buy fromn us gos with our guarantee. W. P. H AWKINS & CO~ The Political Situation A prominent North Carolinian has this to say: I have been a sufferer from Rheumatism for fifteen years, a por tion of the time bedfast, and for the last six months it has been seated in my left side near my heart: could scarce ly rest any at night. I finally decided try Dr. King's Nerve and Bone Liui teut. Two or three a:)plications en ti.eV relieved nc of the pain. [ have u-.Cdi it. in v familv Willit good results. ). (. Howe l. Sold by Dr. W. 1. "COME OUT OF YOUR SHELL" Hnsbands and Wive. Who Ho3d Aloof From Neighbors. I am acquainted with too many hus bands and wives who, though all the world to each other, are nothing to the world. Their whole life is within their home. They gather comforts about them, they bear daintles to each other's lips, they live and move and have their whole being in each other's love, and, shutting out all the world, live only for themselves. I say I know too many such pairs as these. They are far too plenty. They cannot bear to be torn from their homes for an afternoon. They take no interest in others. They never call friends and neigh bors around their board, and they cou sider it a hardship to fulfill the com mon offices of social politeness-to saj nothing of hospitality. It is not un just to say that this is one of the most dangerous and most repulsive forms of married life. It is selfish ness doubled, associated, instituted, and it deserves serious treatment. Homes, like individuals, have their relations to each other, and, as no man liveth to himself alone, no home should live to itself alone. It is through the medium -of homes that the social life blood of America is kept in circula don-through this medium almost ex clusively. Every home should be as a city set upon a hill that cannot be hid. Into it should flock fuiends and friendships, bringing the life of the world, the stimulus and the modifying power of contact with various natures, the fresh flowers of feeling gathered from wide fields. Out of it should flow benign charities, pleasant amenities and all those influences which are the natural offspring of a high and harmonious home life. Intercommunication of minds and homes is the condition of individual and social development, and failing of this no married pair can be what they should be to each other. Exclusive de votion to business by day and exclu sive devotion to selfish home enjoy ments at night will dry up, harden and depreciate the richest natures in the coirse of a few years, and as soon as the man withdraws from the business of the world the world has seen the last of him and his family for life. They have no outside associations. It is as if they did not live at all. When they die, nobody misses them, for they have been nothing to society. As many doors are open as before, and social life feels no ripple upon its surface when the sand is thrown upon their coffins. There should glow in every house throughout the land the light of a pleasant welcome for friends. On ev ery hearth should leap the flame that frradiates the forms and faces of as sociates. Neighborhood should mean something more than a collection of dark and selfishly closed hearts and houses. A community should be some thing better than an aggregation of in dividuals and homes governed by the same laws and sustaining equal civil burdens. Neighborhood should be the name of a vital relationship. A community should be a communi ty in fact-informed with a genial, so cial life, in which the influence of each nature, the power of each intellect, the wealth of every individual acquisition, the force of every well directed will and the inspiration of every high and pure character should be felt by all. A neighborhood of homes like this would be a neighborhood indeed, and none other deserves the name.-"Timothly Titcomb's Letters" In Bostcn Globe. The Economy of the Bee. At one time the bees were male and female in equal numbers. The irre sponsible male buzzed about, simply getting his own living, marrying and dying. The responsible female not on ly got her own living, but that of her children. Somehow, by and by, they came to see the advantage of communal effort, and, just as women say to one another now, "If you'll washx the dishes I'll wipe 'em," one feminine bee said to the other, "I'll be mother if you'll get the living." It was a bargain, and the accommodating females took drones in to board. The queen of a beehive does not rule; she lays eggs. Sie ,loes not mind the babies. She does not even do her own digesting, let alone getting the food. The attendants that surround her feed her with bee milk, secreted by glands in their heads. She has to be fed con tinually, for at certain periods she has the power of producing from 2,000 to 3,000 eggs a day, twice her own weight -four times, indeed, for more than half her weight is eggs. In her lifetime a prolific queen will lay 1,500,000 eggs. Carlyle Is a Death Gasp. Carlyle-all unwittingly, I grant rings out the old world of misrule which was inaugurated by the first Adam-that world in which man's fool sh wit and wisdom have borne sover eign sway, and human nature accord ingly shows itself at best a mere bat tleground of heaven and hell. Emer son, on the contrary-but in like utter unconsciousness of his mission, I ad mit-rings in that better world inaugu rated by the second Adam, in which at last the divine spirit is supreme, and our nature, consequently touched by that inspiration, brings forth Immac ulate fruit-that is, all those spontane us graces of heart and mind and man ners which alone have power to re deem us to eternal innocence, peace ad self oblivion. In short, Carlyle is the last gasp of a w orld in dissolution, the death rattle of an ancient but al ways merely provisional and now ut terly exhausted life of God in man, and there is consequently no outlook of hope, but only of despair, in his filmy eyes for man's earthly future.--Henry James, Sr.. in Atlantic. Champion Liniment for Rheumatism. Chas. Dr-ake, a mail carrier- at Chap nville, Conn.. says: " Chamberlain's Pain Balm is the champion of all lini ments. The past yeaal I was troubled great deal with rheumatism in my houlder. After trying several cures he storekeeper here recommended his remedy and it completely cured re." There is no use of anyone suffer ing from that painful ailment when this liniment can be abtained for a small sum. One application gives rompt relief and its continued use for short time will produce a permanent ure. For sale by The R. B. Loryea Drum Stor, Tsaae. TLoya. Prop. A Dinner zvitation. After a hearty meal a dose of Kodol Dyspepsia Cure will prevcnt an attack of Indigestion. Kodol is a thorough digestant and a guaranteed cure for Indigestion, Dyspepsia. Gas on the Stomach, Sour Risings. Bad Breath and all stomach troubles. N. Watikins, Lesbus. Ky.. says: --I can testify to the eiicaev of Kodol in the cure o' Stonach Trouble. I was aillicted witi Stomach Trouble for fifteen years anl hhve taken six bottles of your Kodol Ds liepsia Cure, which has entirelv cured ein. The six bottles were worth -O1.000 to me." Sold by The ih B. roryen Drug Store. WON THE SOUTHERNERS. 11Henry Ward Beecher's Dinxray of Tact and Nerve In Richmond. One of the "nerviest" illustrations of tact is to the credit of Henry Ward Beecher. After the war he made a lec ture tour of the south and appeared at Mozart hall, Richmond, with an ad dress entitled "The North and the South." II was rather doubtful as to the reception he should have, but he knew what he wanted and was deter mined to get it. No applause welcomed him as he appeared on the platform, but a few hisses were heard in the gal lery. In the better rows of seats were some grim ex-Confederates -General Fitz-Hugh Lee, General Rosser, ex Governor Smith, Governor Cameron and others. Beecher fixed his eye di rectly on Lee and said (I quote a news paper report of the incident): "I have seen pictures of General Fitz Hugh Lee, sir, and I assume you are the man. Am I right?" The general, slightly taken back by this direct address, nodded stiffly, while the audience bent forward, breathless with curiosity as to what was going to follow. 1 "Then," said Beecher, his face light ing up, "I want to offer you this right hand, which in its own way fought against you and yours years ago, but which I would now willingly sacrifice to make the sunny south prosperous and happy. Will you take it, gen eral?" There was a moment's hesitation, a mouent of deathlike stillness in the hall, and then Fitz-Hugh Lee was on his feet, his hand was extended across the footlights and was quickly met by the warm grasp of the preacher's. At first there was a murmur, half of surprise and half of doubtfulness, from the audience, then there was a hesitat ing clapping of hands, and before Beecher had unloosed the hand of Robert E. Lee's nephew there were cheers such as were never before heard in old Mozart, though it had been the scene of many a war and political meeting. But this was only the beginning of the enthusiasm. When the noise had suffiefently subsided, Beecher contin ued: I "When I go back home I shall proud ly tell that I have grasped the hand of the nephew of the great southern chief tain, I shall tell my people that I went to the Confederate capital with a heart full of love for the people whom my principles once obliged me to oppose, and I was met halfway by the brave southerners, who can forgive as well as they can fight" - Five minutes of applause followed, and then Beecher, having gained the hearts of his audience, began his lec ture and was applauded to the echo. That night his carriage was driven to his hotel amid shouts such as have never greeted a northern man in Rich mond since the war.-Marshall P. Wilder in St. Louis Republic. Guided by Parrota. Before the eagle'was selected as our national emblem Benjamin Franklin urged the claims of the turkey. It was purely American, he said, which the eagle was not. It was a proud and generous bird, and it was good eating. If Franklin had known more about our early history he might have spoken for the parrot. When Columbus sailed westward over the unknown Atlantic he expected to reach Zipangu (Japan). After several days' sail from Gomera, one of the Canary Islands, he became uneasy at not discovering Zipangu, which according to his reckoning should have been 216 nautical miles more to the east. After a long discussion he yielded to the opinion of Martin Alonzo Pin zon, the commander of the Pinta, and steered to the southwest. Pinzon was influenced in his opinion solely by a flight of parrots which took wing In that direction. It was good luck to follow in the wake of a flock of birds when engaged upon a voyage of dis covery, a widespread superstition among Spanish seamen of that day, and the great navigator was thus guid Ied to the new world. Interest In the Flamingo. There are larger birds than the fla mingo and birds with more brilliant plumage, but no other large bird is so brightly colored, and no other brightly colored bird Is so large. In brief, size and beauty of plume united reach their maximum of development in this re markable bird, while the open nature of its haunts and its gregariousness seem specially designed to display its marked characteristics of form and color to the most striking advantage. When to these, more superficial attrac tions is added the fact that little or nothing is known of the nesting habits of this singular bird, one may in a measure at least realize the intense longing of the naturalist not only to behold a flamingo city, without ques tion the most striking sight in the bird world, but at the same time to lft the veil through which the flamingo's home life has been but dimly seen.-Century. Lee's surrender. After General Robert E. Lee's last attempt was made with Gordon and Fitz Lee to break through the lines of the enemy Colonel Venable Informed General Lee that it was not possible. He said, "Then there is nothing left me but to go and see General Grant," when some one near him, hearing this, said: "Oh, general! What will history say of the surrender of the army In the field?" He replied: "Yes, I know they will say hard things of us. They will not understand how we were overwhelmed by num bers. But that Is not the question, colonel. The question is, Is it right to surrender this army? If it is right, then I take all the responsibility." And he did-"ecollections and Letters of General Lee." Night Prowling Thieves. Coup and Whooping Cough come like a thief in the night, stealing in to fasten the fang of mortal disease upon the children as they peacefully sleep in their little beds. Kennedy's Laxative Honey and Tar, the new discovery for Coughs and Colds, will drive out these death-dealingr demons before the doctor can arrive. It protects the lives and health of the little ones. Contains no opi .tes. Keep it handy. Sold by The I)0 You Want PERFECT FITIINO CLO TiES ? THEN COME OR SEND TO US. We have the best equipped Tailor ing Establishment in the State. We handle High Art Clothing solely and ve carry'the best liue of H:>.ts and( Gent's Furnishings in the city. Ask your most prominent men wh( we are, and they will commend you to us. JL DAVID& BRO,, Cor. King & Wentworth Sts., CHARLESTON, - S. C. All Pleased. WE A RE PL EA SE D to write your insurance. You-ill 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. J. L. WILSON. lBuggies, Wagons, Road Carts and. Carriages RE-PAIRED 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 ueed 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 with so much ease. We Make Themi Look New. We are making a specialty of re painting old Buggies, Carriages, Road Carts and Wagons cheap. ICome and see me. My prices will please you, and I guarantee all of my work. Shop on corner below R. M. Dean's. MANNING. S. C. W HEN YOU COME TO TOWN CALL ATI W E LLS' SH A VING S ALOON Whbieb: is titted up with anu eye to the ..:ufort of. bl. enistomrs. .. ... HAIR CUTT1 m IN A LL STYLES, SH AVING AND SH AAMPOOINGi I one w:tk- :wratnw', i~ndl J. L. WVELLS. Manning Times Block. Northwestern R. R.*ofS- C. I;a effect Sundany, June 5,1904. xiktweeni Sumter anid Camiden. Mixed--Daily '.xcept Sundaty. South b'onnd. Nortb houn id No. 60 . N.. 71 No 70. No. 68 PMl A M A M P M O 2. ti 36 1.e-. ..umti-r...r 900 5 45 6 27 1) 38 N. WA. Junctni S 58 5 43 G647 9 59 . ..Daulzil... 8 25 5 13 7 05 101)0I ...BHorden... 8 00 458 723 3021 ..iRembIerts . 740 443 730 1031 .. Ellerbh-e.. 730 4138 7 50 11 00) 5o Jy .Jnt 7 10 4 25 80(0 11 10 A~ r.Camuden..Lo 7.00J 4 15 (Ni C & G Ex Depot), Betwveen Wilson's Mlill and Sumter. Sonitbi~unnd. Northbioun. Ni 73. Daily cee,-pt Suindiay No. 72. P :n- Staition. P' Mi 3 00 1..... Sumter.....Ar 12 30 33 .. Summeirtonm Junction 12 27 I320l .....Tmnl..........1155 3 35 .. ...Packsv.ille........11 30 35 . ......iver..........1100 4 45 . ...Snimerton... 10 15 55 ..... Davis...........9 15 51 ....Jordan........ 9 900 6t 30Ar...Wilsou's Mills..L~e 8 40 Retweenl alillard and St. Pani. Dalyexep Sunday. Southbouni.1. Northibouud. No 7;. No. 75. No. 72. No. 74. 1' M A M Stations A M P~ M 4 (05 10 21) Le illirdi A r 10 45 5 30 4 13 1031) Ar St. P'iml Le 10 35 41 20 I'l A .1 AM PM TilOS. WILSON. President. Money to Loan. maar Term APPLY TO IWilson, .DuRanit &c Muldrowv Wanted to Sell. One Hundred tons Prime Cotton Seed Meal at S23.50 per ton, 1. o. b. St. Paul. Clarendon, S. C. WELLS & EDENS, Inrf Sumter. S. C. DYS SEA ?<l DIGESTS WHAT YOU EAT The $1.00 bottle contains 2% times the trial size. which sells for 50 cet PREPARED ONtY AT THE LABORATORY 0P E. C. DeWITT & COMPANY, CHICAGO. III b.e JE. B. Loryea 3"r-ug Store. IIKSON HARDWAE COu Can supply your wants to the letter. In the way of Farm Imple ments prices are guar anteeL.. Call to see us. DICKSON HARDWRin Co..,. Levi Block. GLENNi SPRINGS S --WA TER, Nature's Greatest Ramead FOR DISEASES OF THE Liver, Kidneys, Stom and Skin. Physicians Prescribe it, t~b Patients Depend ont it, and Everyhaody Praises it FOR SALE BY SE. BROWIN cfa C Iw!sey OLD NICK FIOUSEi 1-20-I -86 *YEARS* WILIA S ARS6 Ol.WHISKEY om.J Four Quarts Free. Read Our Offer. Our great-grandfather, Colonel Joseph Williams, the revoldtionary hero, established this business, right on this spot; in 1768- more than 100 years before dealers advertising temselves as "old houses" dreamed o going into the whiskey business. Ours is the originlal mail order whiskey business, after which many small dealers pattern inan attempttoduplicate our success. They cannot compete with us in quality because thyare not -- distillers, and in attempting to meet our prices they put on temarket terribly injurious and dangerous concoctions. many which contain the * deadly wood alcohol. vwistoalcopttoadcriimfr - Our business, our name and our wikyhvwthto Rcmetonadrtcsmfralmost a can - tuary and a half-a record unparalleled in the business world. For four generations our whiskey bas been recognized as the purest and best possible to produce and during that time we have served and satisfed - hundreds of thousands of ctmers. In order to increase our list of customers to one million and to eclipse all past efforts during the ext few months, we offer the foilowing exceptionally low prices on our high grade whiskies for a short time only. If not satisfactory when received, you can return at our expense and w will refund every cent paid. What fairer proposition could you ask? Our Word-as the People's Nationai Bank of Winston, N. C. will tell yo-s 8od as gold. sFackced in 47-8 gals i6 keg ' ' EXPR ESS PAID TO YCUR~ SATION . li o. ntbxd 3 gallons special Offer (in Sug, haxed)............. 4.90 $ 7.15 CORN, 3 gallons Favorite (in jug, boxed).................. 6.75~ 10.05 - RTE OR I 12 full quarts Favorite (in bottles, boxed)-.---.-...... 6.95 10.054 OU ON 12 full quarts Finest Qualiy (in bottles, boxed)........ 9.73 13.8s8 12 full quarts White Man's Choice (inbottles, boxed)... 12.45 13.259 12 full quarts Private Stock, 20 years old......................... 15.3! 13 S gallons Mountain Apple Brandy (in jug, boxed) .....4.. .... ....... 6.95... or one gallon~in jug)of each of thesixdiferentkinds for$I8-35. Terms, cash with order. rP With each order coming from this advertisment accompaniedby the names and addresses cfte whiskey drinkers we propose to give freesa Handsome Pocket Flask, Cork screw Knife andCl gar Clipper, together with four beautiful colored pictures re .ee figour anti-revolutionary scenes. By purchasing thsree[3Jgallons or twelve quarts, you get about two [z gallons without express charges .' added, fo epewho ship four[4]quarts rmay about as much express on It as we pay on the above pack ages. E-S-in addition to the above, If you or your friends will send us an order at once for four of -- the above packlages we will send to the one mnaking up the crderlnur full quarts of the same goods abso- . lutely free. so act at Once. P. S. The above prices apply to Ala., Fla., D. C., Ga., Ky., Md., Miss., N. ., -, . Tenn.. va., W. vs. To orders from all other states add $1.60 per ppacage for additional express. References:.-Ev ery bank in North Carolina, all our state officials, Senators and Congressmen. TH E OLD NICK WILLIAMS CO., Lock Box 24 Williams, N.C The above prices refer to South Carolina also. Loas Mde IF YOU WISH TO BORROWj Money on long or short time, - onsMd On on improved real estate, I am Ofl Improved in agQosition to serve you. IImprOVed I Current rates of interest RelEsae Real Estate. and reasonable charges.Ra stt. : Call on or write to Attorney at Law, Maiming, S. C. Geo~,Hac8rDnODR. J. FRANK GEIGER. E e DENTIST, MNUFACTUltlt or Phn MANNING, S. C. PhoneNo. 6. R.D' J. A.. COLE, DENTIST, MANNING, S. C. _ -r C. DAVIS, ATTORNEY AT LAW Doors, Sash, Blinds, MNIG .0 Moulingand uilin WILSON & DURANT, Material, CHARLE TON, S C. Atorneys~ and Counselors at Law, CH A LES ON, . C.MANNING, S. C. Sash Weights and Cords.F.RA E JOSEPHF.RAE Window and Fancy Blass a Specialty' ATTORNEY AT LAW, MANNING, S. 0. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure Digests what you eat. Brin yor Job Work to The Times offlct