University of South Carolina Libraries
GOOD POTATOES BRING FANCY PRICES To growa large crop of good potatoes. the .Soilr matcain plenty foah Tomatoem. melons. cabbage. rumps, lettuce '-in f, all vegetables remove large quanti tics of Potsh from the Soil. Spply Potash liberally b 'te use of fertilizers containing *at Z tkaan 10 per cent. actual Potash. Better and more piroitable yields arc sure to follow. Our pamphlets are not advertising circulars booming special fertilizers, but contam valu able infomation o farmers. Scnt tree tor the askng. Write now. GEZNUN KALI WORKS KNew York-93 Nassau Street, or Atlanta Ga.--: South Broa. St. .Th Bank of Malllillg. MANNING, S. C. Capital Stock, - 840,000 Surplus, - - 30,000 Stockholders' Lia Dility, - - 40,000 Total Protection to Depositors, $110,000 7" 11 N: /'7fS MONEY in.the bank is either safe or unsafe there is no middle ground. If you ap reciate absolute safety. deposit your oney with this BANK. All our custoiners receive prompt and areful attention. ndertaking. ,A complete stock of Caskets. Coffins and Fu aeril Supplies always on hand. Mv hearse will besent to any part of the county. and calls will e responded to by Mr. A. J. White. funeral itecor and undertaker. night or day. W. E. JENKINSON CO. PiIIRfOSPMTfiE CURES KIDNEY DISEASES URINARY BLADDER 4~ TROUBLES' POR SAI.P RT RI.I. DISPELNSfRIP. Open An Account ith Us. You can then pay your Kbills 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. .ucan always make change . with a check. sank of Summerton, Summerton, S. C. THE SUMMERTON HOTEL Having made special preparations, I Sam now better prepared to_entertain th~traveling public than ever before. I especially invite the transient pat c'nage. H. A. TISDALE, Proprietor. W. 0. W. eets on fourth Mlonday nights at Visiting Sovereigns invited. Directing Funerals. We have an up-to-date- Under taking Establishment, and carry a full line of Caskets, ?Ooffins, and Undertakers' Supplies, from the cheapest to the best State Casket Our beautiful Hearse is a great addition in this department, and puts us an a level with tihe larger undertakers in the State, and we have men graduates in this pro fession, sober and reliable. S. L. KRASNOFF, UNDERTAKER. J. W. HERIOT, FUNERAL DIRE CTOR. L-v m.:omk. anning,.. C.n Wheeling, W. Va., May 28, 1903. Some years ago while at work, I fell over a truck and severely injured both of my shins. My blood became poisoned a: a result, and the doctor told me I would have running sores for life, and that if they were healed up the result would be fatal. Under this discouraging renort I left off their treatment and re sorted to the use of S. S. S. Its effects were prompt and gratifying. It took only a'short while for the medicineto en tirely cure up the sores, and I am not dead as the doctors intimated, nor have the sores ever broke out again. Some 12 years have elapsed since what I have de scribed occurred. Having been so signally benefitted by its use I can heartily recom mend it as the one great blood purifier. JOHIN W. FU7NDIs. Care Schmulback Brewing Co. Chronic sores start often from apim ple, scratch, bruise or boil, and ile salves, washes and powders are beneficial, the unhealthy matter in the blood must be driven out or the sore will continue to eat and spread. S. S. S. reaches these old sores through the blood, re moves all impurities and poisons, builds up the entire system and strengthens the circulation. S. S. S. is a blood purifier and tonic combined. Contains I no mineral what ever butis guaran teed purely veget able. If you have an old sore write Us and our physi cians will advise without charge. Book on diseases of the Blood free. The Swift Specific Company, Atlanta, Ga. MOUZON, The Staple and Fancy Grocer, carries a full and coinplete line of Green and Parched Coffees. Sugars. Grits. Meal and all Heavy Groceries. You can tlnd on my shelves. right fresh Can ned Meats of all kinds, including such delica cies as Chicken. Tongue. Chipped Beef. Lob Stn :hri mps. et4-. I have the entire garden or freshly canned Vegetables of the staple variety. including far off BIoston Baked Bean-. of t'e easily digested cereal preparations I carry. among others. Force. Shredded Whea:. Cream or Wheat. etc.. an of which is- deliciotU-s healihful and nutri tions-he very foed for dys pepties and invalids. You want Condiments. None are better than HEINZ'S CELEBRATED PICKLES, MUSTARDS, and his varied line of appetizing relishes. I carry them. Now is the time to buy your Jellies :nd Pre serves. Come to MOUZON'S for them. I keep all the time a full line of Fresh Fruits and Vegetables. You can get your breakfast, dinner and sup per from my store. I can feed the toilina la borer or the fastidious epicure: the irritable dyspeptic and the pettish invalid. SQUARE DEALING. live and let live. with golden rule prices covers my motto. Before buying for your table call and see P. B. MOUZON, The G-roer. Have You Money Idle? If so, deposit it in a good bank until you have need for it. The Bank of Clarendon, MANNING, S. C.. Is the place to deposit your money. Every courtesy and accomnmo datiou consistent with safety is extended. In our Savings Department in terest at the rate of four per cent. per annum will be paid semi-annually. BANE OF OLAR~ENDON, MANNING, S. C. Easily .Made Money ! WRITE LIFE INSURA\NCE. Good reliable agents wvanted for the PENN.MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY. Ad dress, General Agent, Sumter, S. C. Notice to Creditor-s. All persons having claims against the estate of Mary S. R ichiardson, de eased, will present them dluly at tested, and those owing said estate will make payment to J. M. RICHARDSON, Executor. Silver, S. C., R. F. D). DR. .J. FRANK GEIGER. DENTIST, MANN[NG. S. C. TPhone No. 6i. DR. J. A COLE. DENTIST, Nettles Building. upstair-s. MANNING. S. C. KILL THE COUCH ANDCURE THE L UNCS W-THDr. King's Now Discovery ONSUM'PTION Price FOR oJC-Sand s0c&S1.OQ oS Free Trial. Surest and Quickest Cure for all THRtOAT and LUNG TEOUB LES, or MONEY BACK. The R. B. Loryea Drug Store, Kodol Dyspepsia Cure Digests what you eat. Rring- vnnr Job Wnrk to The Times affice A Chicago Alderman Owes His Election to Charberlaen's Cough Remedy. --I can lheartily and conscientiously recommend Chamberlain's Cough Rem edv for affections of the throat a.nd lungs." says Hon. John Shenick. 22'1 So. Peoria St. Chicaae. "Two years agzo during a political campaign. I caught cold after being overheated, which irritated my throat and I was finally compelled to stop, as I could not sneak aloud. In my extremity a friend adlvised me to use Chamberlains Cough lliedv. I took two doses that after noonfl and culd not believe my senses when I found the next morning the in Ilammation had largely subsided. I took several doses that day. kept riight on talking throu'2h the campaign. and thank this mediclue that I won my seat in the council." This remedy is ror' sale bV The 11. 1. oryen Drig Store. HALLER WAS POLITE. A Story of the Famous Swiss Scien tist and Iix Election. Ilalier, a famous Swiss scientist of the eighteenth century, was once well rewarded for his )oliteness to a fellow traveler. Some scientists find it hard to take an interest in anything except their own specialties. It was not so with Halier, His fellow traveler was a good woman from Berne. The con versation fell naturally upon the com modity for which Berne is noted cakes. The Berne dame said with pride that she could make fourteen kinds of cakes. What was her surprise and delight when Haller asked her how she made them! She eagerly began a recital, with copious explanations, of those fourteen recipes, and she had a good listener. Perhaps Haller regretted his rash question, but he did not show it. He listened patiently and smilingly to the end, and he and the Bernese woman parted very good friends, though he had hardly spoken a word. It is safe to say that in all his scientific re searches he had not learned so much about the combination of butter and sugar and eggs. Some time afterward he was elected to an important political office. From some quarters he received an unex pected number of votes. Then he found out that his Bernese cakemaking friend had been so impressed with the intelligence and ability of her fellow traveler that when she heard he was running for office she gave her rela tives, friends and acquaintances no peace of mind until she had secured their promise to vote for him. CABS IN RUSSIA. F ares Are Low if You Are Up to the Tricks of the Drivers. In no European country are cab fares so cheap as in Russia, for there is no tariff at all. On the rank are half a dozen drivers on the boxes of their droskies-tiny victorias, hung low and with just room for two if the two clasp waists after the Russian mode. If you know just about how far you want to drive you take the first driver and tell him where you want to go and what is the price offered. The eti quette is followed invariably. The driver throws up his eyes in horror. He calls upon the saints to witness that so ridiculous~ a price must be dou bled before he could le.>k at it You are not deceived. You .':et on. And before you have gone ten paces the cabman is after you, pointing po litely to the seat in the drosky and, with a grin, repeating frequently the Russian equivalent for "please." But if you are driving to a destina tion at an unknown distance it Is nec essary to ask the opinion of the first bellied, belted, bearded brigand on the box of a drosky. Then it Is your turn to throw your eyes to heaven and call on the saints. A quick problem in division works itself out in your head. Threes Into a ruble? And you put yourself up to a Dutch auction along the rank. "Hotel So-and-so, sorok kopeck!" you cry, with a lean ing toward generosity. There is a race for you. You drive a long way in Moescow for a dime. When Vigo Was Famous. Vigo, the Spanish seaport, is an old time scene of war. It was to Vigo that Drake and Norris sailed In 1588 to place Don Antonio on the throne of Portugal. They burned Vigo, but failed to capture Lisbon and went away cursing each other. So little plunder was there that the common sailors re ceived but 5 shillings a man in wages and took to robbery, for which many of them were hanged in and near Lon don. When the English under Booke put into Vigo harbor again there was treasure in sight A fleet of Spanish galleons, of which Benbow had been in pursuit, was in the bay, protected by a French fleet. Several galleons were captured by the English, but more went to the bottom and there remain to this day. Nowadays Vigo is a com monplace little town. Great MIen. It is a matter of common observ'ation that at the passing of the great men of each generation there is a pessimistic feeling prevalent that "there were gi ants in those days." But the feeling has never had any warrant in the ac tual deficiencies of the oncoming gen erations. Orators have come and gone and statesmen have come and gone, and sometimes their immediate suc cessors have not beea discernible. But in time the men have emerged who have taken their places and who have Improved upon the patterns they left -Des Moines Register. Never Touched Him. The old man paused at the parlor dr on his way upstairs. "Don't forget, young man," he said, "that the lights in this house are all out at 10 o'clock." "Thanks," rejoined the young man, who was helping the fair maid to hold the sofa down, "but-er-couldn't you make an exception tonight and put 'em out an hour earlier'?"-Chicago News. Lucky stars. "I've had a very successful season?' said the prosperous looking theatrical manager. "Well, you can thank your stars for that" replied the seedy loolting man ager.-Tonkers Statesman. Inciting to Perjury. Lawyer-Did the defendant to your Iknowledge ever incite another to per jury?~ Witness-Yes. Once I heard him ask a woman her age. A love of justice is simply -in a major !ty of men the fear of s:uffering In jtsti ce.-La Rtochefoucauld. Pleasant and Harmless. Don't drug the stomach to cure a cough. One Minute Cough Cure cuts the mucus, draws the inilammiation out of the throat. lungs and bronchial tubes, heals, sooths and cures. A quick cure for Croup and Whooping Cor gh. Sold by The it PR Tornem Doncr SAne. "Slab's" Ruminations. Editor Th' Mainnian Times: For sometime past I have been rLeminating, and seriously, over the condition of the farmer. And being one of the woolhat crowd myself am naturally aroused over the present condition of things. Isn't it amazing what greed for the all-mighty dollar will cause people to do. Now you take thosc fellows that sent ihe nrice of cotton tumbling, and wha't's the matter with them? Why they war.f moneyand more money, if they have to squeeze us to death to get it. We know that there was a big crop of cot ton made last year, entirely too big for the farmers' best interest for the reason mainly that there was cotton made to the exclusion of other and far more important crops. I figure it out that the speculator was mainly but not entirely to blame for low prices. The speculator saw that we had made a big crop, and he knew we couldn't eat it, it must go on the market sooner or later and there was his chance to squeeze. and of course he squeezed. The farm er was to blame for planting 25 acres of cotton and 5 acres of corn to the horse. And the re sult is we have got to sell cotton at just about what it takes to make it, and pay a dollar per bushel for western corn. And turn it and twist itas you please, western corn don't fatten hogs fast. And another most natural result of a short corn crop means western bacon instead of those good old sweet hams and home cured sides. Now just remem ber last fall as long as cotton sold for 10 cents the farmer did not have to sell his pigs, and pork went to 8 and 9 cents on foot, but just as soon as the cot ton fell, down went pork to 4 and 5 cents. You see the farmer thought he had to sell his shoats; to help out his cotton crop. And' now lie has got to buy that meat back on a lien at 10 and 12 1-2c a pound. All of this just shows a thinking man which way the wind blows. But-amid all this confusion don't forget to eat, and be thankful. The farmers of the South are passing through a period in history or rather have the opportunity of making a period in history, the like of which may never pass this way again, if this opportunity is neg lected. When in all the ages past have the bankers, merch ants and fertilizer companies ever shown such honest desire to help the farmer out of his trouble as they are doing by go ing down in their pockets for the hard cash to help keep the machinery greased? They say to the farmers of the South: Your iterests are our interests. When you fail it cripples us. Our for tunes are linked together, and we want to help you. We wll help you if you will show an honest desire to help yoursel es." That is what they have said and have already contributed of their means to our cause. Now if we turn our backs on this honest offer of help and also on what to us is of such vital mn terest, and say "I am my own man. I'll do as I please. I'll plant as much cotton as I want to. Take your help and go to Guinea with it." Won't such a man or set of men deserve the most ignominious failure? There is one class of farmers that I want to say just a word to. It's those fellows that say, "Oh! well, all my neighbors are cut ting down their cotton crops, now is my chance to make my Jack. I'll -plant more." Now under the existing circumstances and in the light of all reason, what aught to become of a man like that. Friend, don't do it. It's against your interest; it's against the interest of the South. It's to your individual interest to make your own bread and meat and plant cotton as a surplus crop. Try it and see if it don't pay in the end. The opportunity of a life time is before us. Will we grasp it. Yours truly, JOHN SLAB. The following suggestion, credited two a noted. Paris physi cian, is well worth trying'vhere smallpox has made its appear ance. He says: "I herewith apppend a recipe which has been used to my knowledge in hundreds of cases. It will pr-event or cure the small pox, though the pittings are illing. When Jenner discover-ed cowpox the world of science hurled an avalanche of fame upon his head, but when the most scientific schoolof medicine in the world, that of Paris, pub lished this receipe as a solid panacea for smallpox it passed unneed. It is as unfailing as fate and conquers in eve-y in stance. It is harmless when taken by a well person. It will also cure scarlet fever. Here is the r-eceipe as I have used it to cure smallpox. When learned physicians said the patient must die, it cure; Sulphate zinc, one grain, fox glove. (digitalis) one grain, half a teaspoon of sugar, mix with two tablespoons of water. When thoroughly mixed add four ounces of water-. Take a spoonful every hour-. Either disease will disappear in twelve hours. For a child, smaller doses according to age. If Icounties would compel their physicians to use this there would be no need of pest houses. If you value advice and exper iencc use this for that terr-ible discse."-Ex. For Sale. Old Presbyterian church building. For particulars apply to W. S. H-arvin. aran. h'klg corn. Got Off Cheap. He mar weil think he has got o!Y cheop. %vho after having contracted constipation or indigestion is able to perfectly restore his health. Nothing will do this but Dr. Kin_'. New Life Pills. A quick. pleasant and certain cure for headache, constipation. etc. 25c at The R. 13. Loryea Drug Store. TESTS BY TORTURE. The World Is Not Yet Free From This Barbaric Practice. England, as all the world knows, was the last of civilized countries to abolish the test by torture as a regu lar legal institution. A historian who has made a special investigation of modern methods of torture has discov ered that the barbaric practice is still common in many out of the way cor ners of the globe. The early English system, too, has been widely imitated. Even in the time of Henry III. the tor ture trial was in vogue. First came three days of preparation by fasting and prayer. On the solemn day a cal dron was made to boil in church, and a stone was placed apparently in the boiling water. Two juries of twelve men apiece were present in the interest of accuser and accused. Both sides tested the water, and if they agreed that it was boiling the accused thrust in his bare arm and took out the stone. His arm was then wrapped in cloth and sealed. On the third day the priest inspected the arm, and if it was per fectly healed the accused got off. It seems as if the testing representatives may have been tampered with or the examining priest may have been cor rupted. The same preparation was carried out when the other method was tried. which was the carrying of a redhot bar of iron for three steps. The hand was then sealed and examined as be fore. It has been suggested, as many people escaped scatheless, that the priests had a secret cure for burns or for preventing burns. But such a se cret must have been known to the chemists, and the chemists of today are.ignorant of any such remedy. As late as 1174 a man was condemned to the boiling water. In all cases the ac cused had been declared guilty by a jury. and even if he succeeded in the ordeal he was often banished. In southern India there is a curious case of domestic ordeal. The natives would plunge the arm in boiling oil and come out scatheless. It is well known that the hand, protected by Its natural moisture, can be placed in mol ten metal and not be burned. A. mis sionary tells of a native who was very jealous of his wife. At last the poor woman, wearied by his reproaches, of fered to undergo the ordeal. The husband boiled the oil himself, that there might be no error, and bade her insert her hand, keeping it there till he gave her the word to extract it. He let her hand remain in the oil for some time, and when she took it out there -was no sign of burning. Know Ing the furious jealousy of the man, the missionary had no doubt as to the tem perature of the oil. In Arabia there is a more stringent though less danger ous test. A woman carried hot embers in her veil for twenty yards. If, her veil did not burn, her Innocence was established. It is well in considering these things to remember that the "fire tests" were the great conjurers' tricks from the time of the Greeks to that of the red Indians. In the rituals of all old re ligions treading on hot coals, embers, burning stones, etc., was a common rite. It exists in Bulgaria today. In Borneo a Chinese meat firm intended to establish a business not long ago. The European Inhabitants of the place were cstonished to see the street cov ered for some distance with redhot embers and a respectable Chinese mer chant walking thereon with naked feet. His object was to ascertain by this means whether or not this would be a favorable place to establish his busi ness. A traveler in Fiji recently photo graphed natives walking barefooted over redhot stones. The bands of dry ferns about their ankles were not scorched. For an Impaired Appetite. Loss of appetite always results from faulty digestion. All that is needed is a few doses of Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets. They will invigor ate the stomach, strengthen the diges tion and give. you an appetite like a wolf. These Tablets also act as a gentle laxative. For sale by The R . B. Lo'ye. Drug Store, Isaac M. Loryea, Prop. BiTS FROM THE WRITERS. A brave man doesn't think; he acts. H. Rider Haggard. Hurry, excitement, bustle-these are not good for people. ILet us go slow and live long.-Frank T. Bullen. There is only one way in which a man or woman can develop real strength, and that is to fight unceas ngly and to stand absolutel:- alone. Gertrude Atherton. To borrow one's merntal fare from free libraries is like picking up eata bles dr;pped by some one else on the road and making one's dinner off an other's leavings.-Marie Corelli. To go a-fishing in the pond of the past is a pastime not devoid of charm. What old, forgotten, faroff things can be dragged up by the assiduous an gler!-Ella Hepworth Dixon. By leading people to suppose that you are as wise as themselves you lose opportuities of obtaining useful in formation. They wont tell you things they think you know already.-Sarah Grand. Trace Your Family Tree. A pleasant pastime -- literally - for those who have no more pressing du ties and wish to get .utside their en vironment at least in thought will open up before her who begins to mount a family tree. Tracing one's genealogy may become-probably will become a matter of absorbing amusement and attention, for it entails a thread gath ered up here, dropped there, a letter to write, a book to read, a register to consult. To the' self absorbed, the de spondent, the listless, one may recom mend this diversion as certain to suit even rather morbid conditions of tem perament and yet as certain to gently force the mind away from itself to oth er persons and things in opening up a wider and wider field of reflection. A Safe Co ugh Medicine for Children. In bnying a cough medicine for chili dren never be afraid to buy Chamber lain's Cough Remnedy. There is nc danier from it and relief is always sure to follow. It is especially valuable i colds, croup and whooping cough. For sale by The R. 13. Loryea Drag Store, I ac M. LoryeaC . Prop. Kodol Dyspepsia-GCure Digests what you eat. MEXICAN DRAWN WORK. The Ve -. :.e 11 According to Veo; ; ntrawt. The woin:: wi. akes dr:aawn work on a Mexicn .o:..:- i ant independ eut 'workewr t : I. 1ines the money for all the wo:-R .': doft h'itls accom plish. She is ::':oat whose father or brother or tun-i Ir moiwr ii in debt to the -;rrent ion." She cau do the drawn wo-I, the d:'s - :gent sup plies her with !:non: l ;n. a frame and the re. u O:teh 1i(uInts and in dicates the dLis:;:: thatsh is to fol low, for. thou.h you :ay n1ot know it, there are fashions in drawn work quite as exclusive :ind quite as popular as there are in women's hats. for instance. When her wor!: is done that poor wo man cannot fare forth to market and offer it for sale. It is by the term of her peon contract perhaps already sold to the "great dou," whose tenant she is. Miguel, his agent. takes the work, by now as grimy as the overalls of an engineer. leI has kept account of the time the woman has been engaged up on it, and for each of the 'many days she may have worked he gives her 7, 8, 0, at most 12 cents, but. never the last amount unless she be a thorough mistress of her craft. Once a year the Mexicans for whom the women do this work, somewhat as the sweatshop toilers of Chicago and New York drive their needles for a master, meet in solemn conference and determine what the prices shall be. So great is the popularity of drawn work generally that the supply never equals the demand, and the profits made by the Mexican masters of the drawn work trust, for it is really that, are enormous. The dealer pays these "op erators" what they demand, and they demand much. Therefore the buyer pays $40 for a "cloth" that costs the "manufacturer" 12 cents a day, labor hire, for, say, ninety days, to produce. Pik'rim. ~ Gulf Weed. In China and other parts of the east gulf weed is often pickled and used In salads. It is found floating in vast quantities in some parts of the Atlan tic, Pacific and Indian oceans. Al though a tropical plant, it is occasion ally carried by winds and carrents to the British coasts. The fronds are long, with distinct stalked leaves and air vessels which resemble berries. The presence of this weed on the Atlantie is regarded as a sure indication of the gulf stream, from which it takes its name.-Pearson's. "De easiness wif which some peo ple is fooled," sid Uncle Eben, "is what te mpts many a man dat might be honest to go astray."-Washingtol Star. LAND FOR SALE. Two hundred acres of land with nine room dwelling-house and other im provements for sale: 150 acres cleared land, 50 acres of woodland, 1+ miles from Workman. Clarendon county, S. C. WILLIAM J. MTULDROW. For Sale. 40 foot Lombard Saw Mill with Cut Off Saw, complete. Apply to W. R. DAVIS, Silver, S. C., R. F. D. Notice to Creditors. All persons -having claims against the estate of Wesley E. Richbourg will present them duly attested, and those owing maid estate will make payment to A. T. RICHBOURG, Executor. Sandersville, Ga. A Home Esterprise SEEKING HOME PATRONAGE. The Manning LauDdry and Press ing Club is now doing good work anid doing it promptly. Bring or send all your collars,euffs, shirts, ladies' waists, etc., to be laun dried. All your gent's suits or over coats and ladies& wool skirts, waists, etc., to be cleaned and pressed. All your work earnestly solicited. ~J. S. PLO WDEN, Proprietor. A .Newv Firm. -:o: The undersigned having formed a cop artnership under the name of L. L. WELLS & CO., desire to extend .1 cordi'al welcome to their store in the Levi block, where they will always nave on hand a full and complete stock of FANCY Or and $$$ STAPLE IU U FRUITS, CONFECTIONS, CRACKERS and everything pertaining to a first class grocery. We will continue keeping a full stock of SCHOOL BOOKS and STA TIONERY and chioice books for the home. Come to see us. IL. L. WELLS, J. ELBERT DAVIS. TATE OFSOUTH BARDOUNA, Gounty of Clarendan. COURT OF COMMON PLEAS. Archie I. Barron, as Clerk of tihe Court of Common Pleas for Char endon County, as Administrator of the estate of W. H. Dyson, dhe eensedl, Plaintiff, against Enma S. Nelson, Dorcas Pleasant, Nellie Richardson, Mloses Dyson, Eliza Dvson. Elijah Dyson, Jack Dyson, 'James Richardson and Samuel Pleasant, Defendants. Decree for Sale of Lands. UNDER AND BY VIRTUE OF A decretal order of the Court of Comn mon Pleas, tc me directedl, wvhich order beairs date February 21, 190)5, 1 Iwill sell to the highest bidder, for Icash, at Clarendon) County court house, in Manning, within legal Ihours of sale, on Monday. the third Iday of April. being salesday, the fol. lowing described real estate: All ~that piece, parcel or tract of land lying, being and situate in Clar. endon~ County, State aforesaid, con taining ninety-three acres, more or less. and bounded, west, by lands of 0. D. Harvin; east, by lands of Man ning: south, by lands of W. S. and P. 1-. Broughton, and north by lands of Weinberg, the same being exclu sive of a tract of twelve and three fourths acres owned by the defend ant, Dorcas Pleasant. Purchaser to pay for papers. I E. B. GAMBLE, ISheriff of Clarendon County. Maning S. C., March 8, 1905. JUST IN. Three bundred pair Men's. Ladies' and Chil dren's Shoes and Slippers. The cheapest in the lot worth $2.50 and up to $4, all sizes. at only . 99c. Fifty dozen Men's and Boys' Straw Hats, the cheapest in the lot yvorti 25c and up to $1, for only 10 and 15c. Come and get one.. Ladies' Hats equally as cheap.. Thousands and thousands of yards of Embroid erv in Match Sets, any width, at just one-half price. Come in and see. them. We have thousanids of other groods coming i every day. I J. W. McLEOD.. S. I. TII..I- MgEr Levi Bloc1E. The public to come and inspect our stock of g Fancy & Staple' Groceries SWe carry this line and will cheerfully give you prices, as it is to your interest to keep in touch with them. F LOUR. 8 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. o COFFEE. SWe carry both parched and green, a'nd if you want.. first class article, something nicely fiavored and contain Sing good strength try some of our Coffee. We beg that you do not confuse these goods with pos sibly others you have been using. Can we quote you prices in bulk? Certainly, with easure. Cll ndsee e s e ss s Can supply your wants to the letter. In the way of Farm Imple ments prices are guar anteed. Call to see us. DICKSON hARDWVARI COMPANY,