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4 liffleDoefor SAYS Nine personsin everyten have Liver Troubles. If you're one of the nine don't delay, try Ramon's Liver Pills & Tonic Pel lets. Better than phyics --don't gripe--act quick ly and absolutely sure. Full treatment 25 cents. All Druggists. Open An Account With Us. You can then pay your bills with checks which we return to you the first of each month and --hich are thus made a receipt in full for every dollar you pay out. You can always make change with a check. Bank of SumMerton, Summerton, S. C. EOJLY3llOT-ATAR :aw cwuLsrear cafe, sure. o opgafte The Bank of Mallnig MANNING, S. C. Capital Stock, - $40,000 Surplus, - - 35,000 Stockholders' Lia, nility, .- 40,000 Total- Protection to Depositors, $115,000 OUR REPUTATION, our high financial standing, our resour ces. all' make it apparent to the dis criminating man or woman that TiS BANK, is the safest place for their money. En --'rust your account to us and you will be the recipient of every attention and courtesy. KILL HE COUCH AND CURE THE L UNCS -Dr. King's New Discovery (ONSUMPTION Price FOR iOUGsS asd s0c&as1.OO ~OLDS Free Trial. Surest and Quinckest Cure for aD. THEOAT and LUNG TROUB LES, or XONEY BACK. The R. B. Loryea Drug Store, Kodol Dyspepsia Cure Digests what you eat. Chamberlain's *Cough Remedy The Children's Favorite Coughs, Colds, Croup and Whooping Cough. ehsremodyla famos fr It uese gie as comedently to a baby as to an adult Price 25 ets: Large Size, S0 cts. DR. J. A. COLE, DENTIST, Nettles Building, upstairs, MANNING, S. C. Phone NO U7. DR. J. FRANK GEIGER. DENTIST, MANNING, S. C. 'Phone No.6. Wintbrop College Scholarship and Enfrance Examination, The examination for the award of va eant scholarships in Winthrop College and for the admission of new students will be held at the County Court House on Friday, July 6th, at 9 a. m. Appli cants must not be less than fifteen years of age. When scholarships are vacat ed after July 6th, at 9 a. m. Appli cants for scholarship should write to President Johnson before the examina tion for scholarship application blanks. Scholarships are worth $100 and free tuition. The next session will open September 19th. 190.(; For further in formation and catalogue,address PRES. D. 1. Johnson, lock Hill, S. C. Under a Fly's Wing. Oie of the Nuremberg toymakers in closed in a cherry stone which was ex hibited at the French Crystal palace a plan of Sevastopol. a railway station and the "Messiah" of Ilopstock. In more remote times an account is giTen of an ivory chariot, constructed by Mermecides, which was so small that a fiy could cover it with his wing; also a ship of the same material which could be hidden under the wing of a bee. Pliny, too, tells us tha Homer's "Iliad," with its 15,000 *rses, was written in so small a space as to be contained in a nutshell, while Elian mentions an artist who wrote a dis tich in letters of gold which he inclosed in the rind of a kernel of corn. But the Harlein manuscript mentions a greater curiosity than any of the above, it be Ing nothing more or less than the Bible written by one Peter Bales, a chancery clerk, in so small a book that it could be inclosed in the shell of an English walnut Handle Work With Gloves. "I hope," said the woman who was ordering a pair of slippers made of flowered satin, "that you will tell your workman to wash his hands before he begins to make these up2" "Wash his hands!"-repeated the clerk. "Why, madam, he- never will touch these with his bare hands!" Then the clerk explained that all workmen employed in making slippers of light colors worked wlth white gloves on. "Try to keep them clean!" he con tinued. "I should say they did. They try so hard that they change their white gloves three times a day." Which is not so fantastic as it may seem, for If a shoemaker soils material of this kind the expense to him of replacing the material, to say nothing of the loss of his time, makes it worth his while to work in gloves and keep them clean at that.-New York Press. The Smelt. It is the opinion of the true gourmet that of all marine pan fish there is none to compare with the smelt (Osmerus mordax). This primary rank is its own by reason of its delicacy and delicious flavor, and when fried a light brown in very fne breaderumba and served with melted butter there Is none that dis putes its pre-eaminence. Its delightful flavor, however, as well as its peculiar odor, Is evanescent Like the mackerel, it cannot be too fresh. It is from its odor that the smelt derives not only Its familiar but Latin name, an odor so ag gressive of sliced cucumbers that if its presence be manifested only to the sense of smell people are often deluded into such supposition. This odor is not marked except in the freshly caught fish and disappears in the cooking, giv ing place, however, to a fitting .resur rection of the smelt to an olfactory sense still more savory and delightful. Over the Transom. Two well known Portland (Me.) men, L. 3. Carney and Thomas L. Kingr, roomed together at the Preble House, in that cIty. One evening Mr. Carney retired before Mr. King, and the lat ter, on arriving rather late at the room, found the door locked, the key on the inside and his friend snoring loudly. Aft er repeatedly pounding on the door and .,akening the other guests he suc ceeL d in arousing his roommate. Mr. Carney jumped out of bed and after climbing on to a chair managed after considerable trouble to force open the transom. Then he passed the key out to King, but sleepily said he was aw fully sorry for locking him out. But King felt more than satisfned, as he roared at the ridiculous performance of his half awake roommate.-Chicago In ter Ocean. A Curious Fact. A man who had determined to kill himself went down to the river to com mit suicide, and when he began to write a final message to his wife he could think of nothing to say except that some butter which he had ordered would be found at a certain grocery. His message bears out a certain fact discovered by realists-that in the su preme and soul terrifying moments of life the most ridiculous and trivial things often come uppermost in the mind. Two Guide. to Happiness. Here are a couple of guides to happi ness which some wise person has dis covered: "For a fit cf passion take a walk in the open air. You may then speak to the wind without hurting any person or proclaiming yourself to be a simpleton. For a fit of idleness count the tickings of a clock. Do this for one hour, and you will be glad to pull off your coat and go to work like a man." Greek's Worship of Lightning. The Greeks were so much afraid of lightning that they worshiped it They endeavored to avert its malignant in ~tence by hissing and whistling at it. In places which had suffered by it al tars were erected and oblations made to avert the anger of the gods, after which no one dared to touch or ap proach them. Acting Under Order. "I should like to go to your party above all things," Mrs. Lapsling was saying, "but the doctor says I must remain exclusive for a week more. I am troubled with a slight prevarica tIon of the left lung."-Ohicago Trib une. Posterity. The contemporary mind may in rare cases be taken by storm, but posterity never. The tribunal of the present is accessible to influence; that of the fu ture is incorrupt-Gladstone. Laws can discover sin, but not re move it.-Milton. Pirating Foley's Honey and Tar. Foley & Co., Chicago, .ariginated Honey and Tar as a throat and:f 1uns remedy, and on account of the .greal merit and popularity of Foley's Hond3 and Tar many imitations are otfered for the genuine. These worthless imi, tations have similar sounding names Beware of them. The genuine Foley's Honer and Tar is in a yellow package Ask for it and refuse any substitute. I is the best remedy for ecoughs andl colds The Arant.Co. Drug Store, successo: to The R B. Tnrea Drug Store. A Good Complerion. A good complexiouis impossible with the stomach out of order. If pasty sal low people would pay more attention to their stomachs and less to the skin. on their faces they would have better complexions. Kodol for Dyspepsia will digest what you eat and put your stom ach back in right shape to do its Own 'work. Kodol relieves palpitation of the heart, flatulence, sour stomach, heart burn. etc., Sold by The Arant Co.Drug Store, successor to The R. B. Loryea Drug Store. The Great Air Whale. The native inhabitants of the Fiji islands believe thunder to be the bel lowing of the great air whale, a myth ical creature which, accordin'g to their folklore stories, inhabits the opposite side of all thunder clouds. If the regu lation thunder cloud appears unaccom panied by the ominous rumblings pe culiar to such phenomena, They take it as a token that the Great Spirit is pleased with their past doing. If, how ever, on the other hand, the detonations be frequent and violent they are sure that the god of the elements is dis pleased and immediately engage them selves in all sorts of ludicrous incanta tions for the purpose of righting mat ters. Lightning is to them the result of the air whale gnashing his teeth to gether and thus striking fire. Another peculiarity of this primitive people lies in the fact that they will not partake of food while a thunder cloud is in sight, fearing that the air whale will pounce upon and devour them for such irreverence. Speech and Intellect. A inan who has, by disease or injury, lost the raculty of talking is generally also unable to write, and it is only in exceptional cases that one of these functions persists while the other is In abeyance. Cases of this latter kind show, however, that there are really two separate centers for the two fac ulties which are lying very close to gether and therefore generally suffer at the same time. If the disease af fecting them be still mpre extensive the faculty of intelligent pantomime or gesticu~lation is likewise abolished. Per soils who have entirely lost their lad guage may still be .able to play chess, backgammon and whist, and they have been observed to cheat at cards with some ingenuity. They may also be sharp in business matters, facts tend ing to show that speech and intellect do not run in identical grooves. The Struggles of a Sculptor. Augustin Rodin, the French sculptor, had a great struggle with poverty and adverse criticism in his youth. Of an episode of this early period a writer says: "With that inflexible will and. singleness of purpose that never failed him throughout his career the young sculptor set himself to express in clay, marble or bronze his conception of life and art. He used his leisure In work ing at nighttime, in a deserted stable he had transformed into a studio, at his wonderful mask of 'The Man With the Broken Nose.' . After eighteen months of hard and patient labor he finished this mask and sent it to the salon. It took the hanging committee fourteen years to discover any merit in the work, for it was rejected in 1864 and finally accepted only in 1878." Odd Epitaphs. A correspondent of the Chicago Rec ord-Herald contributes a few odd epi taphs from cemeteries in various parts of this country. The following is found on a tombstone in a cemetery at Trenton, N. J. Although the fact is not stated In the inscription, It would appear that the subject was a scale maker or had something to do with weighing machines: His ways were ways of pleasantness In all life's fitful dream; He struck a balance with the world, And then he kicked the beam. In the cemetery at Copp's Hill, Mass., is found the following epitaph: Sacred to the Memory of Hannat, Beloved wife of R'd Garliek. She slipped her wind After doing a week's baking. The Three Heaviest Men. The three heaviest men of whom any mention is made in history were Miles Darden of T6nnessee, Lewis Cornelius of Pennsylvania and Daniel Lambert of England. Darden died' in -1857. When in health he was seven feet six inches in height and weighed over 1,000 pounds. There is no record of the date of the death of Cornelius, which oc curred in Pike county, Pa., but the ac count says that he was born in 1794. When In his prime he measured eight feet two inches around the waist, was six feet tall and weighed 645% pounds. Daniel Lambert was an English freak of the early part of the century and died in June, 1809. He was of average height, but weighed 789 pounds. "This Indenture." The phrase "this indenture." which appears so often in legal papers, is of curious origin. In the early days parch ment was used for legal documents be cause it was cheaper than paper. The leaves were not cut evenly, but scal loped with a knife, becoming "Indent ed." Papers are now cut on straight lines, but "this indenture" still re mains. Beauty From Within. There are faces so fluid with expres sion, so flushed and rippled by the play of thought that we can hardly find what the mere features really are, says Home Notes. When the delicious beau ty of linements loses its power it is be cause a more delicious beauty has ap peared-that an interior and durable form has been disclosed. Love's Interpretation. "Did you ever tell George that I was a dove?" "Did he say I did ?" "Yes." "Then he loves you, all right. I told him you were a pouter." - Houston Post. __________________ 'The Wasp. Don't fool with a wasp because you think he looks weak and tired. You' will find out he's all right in the end. No Contest. Teddie-Wat are woman's rights, pa?: -Pa-Eve'ting they want, my boy. Always remember that. Made-Happy For Life. Great happiness came into the home of S. C.'Bllair, school superintendent,at St.: ans, W. Va., when his little . au'iter was restored from the dread ul complaint he names. He says: "My lttle daughter had St. Vitus' Dance, which- yielded to uio treatment but rew steadily worse until as a last re sort we tried Electric Bitters; and I re joice to say, three bottles effected a complete cure." Quick, sure cure fort ervous complaints, general debility, female weaknesses. impoverished blood and and malaria. Guaranteed by The Arant Co. Drug Store, successors to A conrt of rine Mannera. ,t the court of Marie Antoinette ill emotions and passions were veiled by a mask of politeness. Even the children were taught to speak with wit and tact and courtesy aid to b.ear pain in SI lence. The little Duc d'Angouleme, eight years old; when thp old Sanbrun entered his presence unexpectedly, said, touching the book in his hand: "Ah, monsieur, I am in the company of Plutarch's men. You could not come at a moment more apropos." The Count de Pallance, beheaded in his tenth year, stood erect and calm in the cart until he reached the guillotine. The headsman lifted his long curls. "Monsieur," said the boy, with a bow and a smile. The next moment his head rolled in dust. The man or wo man who showed any signs of preten tion or self conceit was not received at court. Profound deference was shown to women-and to the aged. Well bred men heard of their own ruin with a bonmot and went out to fight each other to the death with such grace and courtesy that the duel seemed a sacra ment of friendship. A Bad Burn. For a painful burn there is nothing like DeWitt'sWitch HazelSalve. There are a host of imitations of DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve on the market-see hat you get the genuine. Ask for De Witt's. Good, too, for sunburn, cuts, bruises, and especially recommended for piles. The name E. C. DeWitt & Co., Chicago, is on every box. Sold by The Arant Co. Drux Store, successor The R. B. Loryea Drug atore. A Generous Actor. Sir Henry Irving one day met a bro ken down actor In the Strand. "I nev er see you at the theater now," said Pir Henry. The other murmured some thing about his ill luck and shabbiness. "Oh, nonsense; you come tomorrow and give your name at the box office!" He went, to find two tickets awaiting him, with a fifty dollar note. A Domestic Discussion Wife-William, I do think our boys. are the worst I -ever saw. I'm sure they don't get it from me. Husband (snappishly)--Well, they don't get it from me. Wife (reflectively)-No, Wil liam; you seem to have all yours yet. The Very Least. "Ah!" he sighed. "If you only gave me the least possible hope I" "Good gracioui!" retorted the~ hard hearted belle. "I've been giving you the least I ever gave to any man!" No Doubt. Jack-What seemed to be the hard est thing to you In learning to ride the bicycle? Tom-The ground. Famous Strike Breakers. The most famous strike' breakers in the land are Dr. King's New Life Pills. When liver and bowels go on strike, hey quickly settle the trouble, ano fhe purifying work goes right on. Best :,ure for constipation, headache ana izziness. 25c at The Arant Co. Drug Store, successor to The R. B. Loryea Drug Store. Humming Birds. Scientifically humming birds are "tro childae," and those who make a spe. cial study of them are "trochilidists," although the birds are not identical with the old Greek "'trochilus,'4or "rn ner," bird, which, according to Herod otus, entered the jaws of the sleep ing crocodile and obliged its big friend by picking leeches from his throat. The Spanish name for the humming bird Is "tominejo," meaning a third of a dram and referring, of course, to the bird's minuteness. But the prettiest names are those, such as the French "frou frou," which refer to the humming noise sometimes produced by the al most incredibly rapid vibration of the wings. "Purring with her wings" is the expression of Thomas Morton (1632), the first English writer to men tion the humming bird. C A.. TOR~~.IA. Bars asThe Kind You Have Always Bought Sinature of The Jeweler's Carat. The carat is a standard used by the jewelers to express both weight and fineness. When It Is used as a weight it is equal to four grains, or the one hundred and twentieth part of an ounce roy.' In determining the fineness of precious metals twenty-four carats Is considered the highest standard of pu rity. Accordng to this standard, an eighteen carat gold ring contains three parts of gold and one of some base metal. Original Me=ann- of "Snob." "Snob" meant originally in the land of Its origin a person of plebeian sta tion, considered from the height of *birt."P It was a word used with the downward eye and upward nose of su perior station or assigned to the haughty by ppular convention. Then Thackeray took it and rebuked with it the social ambitions of the vulgar. Bears aoThe Kind You Have Always Bought Bignti of Coins of Enormous size. When the area and square inches of surface are taken into consideration, the largest coins ever Issued by any government on the globe were those put into circulation by Sweden during the sixteenth century. These mammoth pieces are neither round, square, oval nor octagon In shape, but are great ir regular slabs of copper described as "resembling pieces of a boiler after an explosion." The smallest piece issued under the law which authorized this gi gantic coinage was an irregular rectan gular slab of about twelve square inch es of surface and about half an inch thick. It was worth 30 cents. The lar gest of the same series was about a foot square and had a face value of $4. Each of these copper slabs is stamped in several places on the face, the vari os inscriptions giving the date, denom ination, etc. The four dollar piece men tioned .last above is nearly an inch in thickness and weighs four pounds. lack ing a fraction. It pours the oil of life into your sys em. It warms you up and starts the life blood circulating. That's what ollister's Rocky Mountain Tea does. 3 cents, Tea.or Tablets. Dr. WV. E. Brown & Co. Talk and sleep. Doctor-Do you talk in your sleep? Patient-No; I talk in other people's. I'm a clergyman. The ritualistic use of candles in The Truce of... Goa. One of the most curious of the many queer mediaeval customs was that known as "the truce of God." From what we have been able to learn of it the custom appears to have originated as an outgrowth of a desire to protect the common people to some extent at least against the lawless tyranny of the feudal lords of the middle ages. It was first decreed at a church synod which convened at Roussillon in the year 1027. By this decree It was pro vided that no man should attack his enemy between Saturday evening at nones and Monday morning at the hour of prime. About the year 1032 a similar compact was entered Into' be tween the church and the barons of England. The church forbade barons to make any attack upon each other between sunset on Wednesday night and sunrise on the following Monday or upon any feast or fast day. The same truce made provision that no man should be disturbed while labor ing at his trade or while going to or from a place of worship. Lost a Railroad. "A champagne dinner once cost St Joseph, Mo., the Union Pacific rail road," said an old railroad official. "The Union Pacific aid bill was up for consideration in congress in the early sixties. It fixed St. Joseph as the eastern terminus of the road. While the bill was under consideration a ban. quet was held at St. Joseph. It was attended by many of the leading men of the town. After they had filled up on champagne a question arose as to which flag should float from the city hall. The Confederate flag was finally decided on, and in the morning the stars and stripes were hauled down and the stars and bars hoisted. The news reached Washington that very day, while the Union -Pacific bill was still under consideration. Senator Pomeroy moved that the name St. Jo seph, Mo.. be stricken from the bill and Omaha, Neb., be substitute! The amendment carried and St. Joseph thereby lost the Union Paclfic."-Kan sas City Journal. 40 A ig T5: O - .A . Beri h Kind You Have Always Bought ignature of The Japanese Language. The Japanese language has some fea tures which puzzle beginners in its use. In English when one has learned the name for rice that ends it. Not so in Japan. Begin with cooked rice, meshi. When eaten by a child it is called mama. In speaking to another person of eating rice you call it gozen. As a merchant sells it, uncooked, it is kome, and as it grows In the field It Is ine. S a carpenter's foot, or shaku, is about twelve inches, but a tailor's Is fifteen. A kin or pound of beef Is fourteen ounces, of flour twenty-one, of suga over thirty. The ri, or mile, varies in different provinces, and on the Fusi yama ascent half a ri is marked a ri because It's so much harder work going uphill. Stomach Troubles. Mrs Sue Martin, an old and highly respected resident of Faisonia, Miss. was sick with stomach trouble for more than six months. Chamberlain's Stom ach and Liver Tablets cured her. She says: "I can now eat anything "I want and am the proudest woman in the world to find such a good medicine.' For sale by The Arant Co. Drug Store, successor to The R. B. Loryea Drug Store. A Perieet Lear. The teacher of a large class In one of the New York schools once said to the pupils who were leaving for the sum mer: "I want each of you to search for a perfect leaf and bring It to me when school reopens. Remember, it must be perfect-every tooth right, not to speaki of mold or blight or dIscoloration, not a vein broken." They searched faith fully, but none found a perfect leaf, though they learned a great deal about leaves while they examined them thus carelly.-New York Times. Kennedy's Laxative lioney and Tar Cures ali Conghs, s expels Colds from the systemt by gently moving thie bowels. The First Inquest. The nearest approach to the holding of a judicial Inquiry into the cause of death In England occurred as long age as the year 1200, when, according to ax old writer on the subject, "six and twenty venerable persons were sum moned together to hear and consider the testimony of any who could speali with authority regarding the death of a digger in the fields named Marti Bolsover." Kodol Dyspepsia Cure Digests what you eat. NO BLADES. NOANNUAL . TAX. If you wish to test on of these Razoig without RISK or OBLIGATION on your part, spply to us foe detaila!, 25 sable Concave $0 for Heavy Bad - rho seo&It -stata to shavers," For sale by D). 0. REHAMt;. Summerto'n. C W. 0. W. Woodmen of the World. Meets on fourth Monday nights at ViiigSovereigns invited. Notice to Creditors. All persons having claims against the estate of Ruben R. Hudgens de ceased,will present them duly attesterd, and those owing said estate will make payment to MIAR'Y M. HUDGFNS, Administrator. Foreston, S. C. April 23rd, 1906. HAIR BALSAM ccae. esnS besetiac, the bair 30c~and $100 at Drugst Rin our Job Work to The Tumes office. DYSPEPSIArCAE DIGESTS WHAT YOU EAT The $1.00 bottl. cortain 2% times the trial sze, which ses for So centL PRZEPARED ONLY AZ T z LAORAT.y 0F E. C. DeWITT & CO3PANY. CHIcAGO. ILL The. Arant Co. Drug Store. Successor to The it. B. Loryea Drug Store. Cures Biliousness, Sick Cleanses the system Headache, Sour Stom *L thoroughly and clears ach, To-pid LiVer and sallow complexions of Chroni-c Constipation. pimples and blotches. Pleasant to take Uve Symp It is guaranteed The Arant Co. Drug Store, Successor to The R. . Loryea Drug Store. Do You WantH0Th11 Do -Yo W ant Openfor. 2Meatre Parties -and Special Dinnersa. PERFECT EOENA 1LA.N. OPJO 12. ." THE RESTAURANT, up .A xipm -CHARGES REASONABLE. CLOTHES? ROOMS EN SUITE, W AND WIT1OT PRIVATE BATHS. NEW ENTRANCE ON HASELL STREET. THEN COME OR SEND TO U Charleston's First and Only Modern Euroean Plan Hotel We have the best equipped Tailor ing Establishment in the State. THE ARGYLE HOTEL CO., Proprietors. WVe handle High Art ClothingA Hats and Gent's Furnishings-in theOpenfoTheat P city. RIA Ask yo ur most p rom inen t men who we are, and they will commend youP o For IefnetFts and Cildres. i. L, DAVID& BRO The Kind You Have Cor. King & Wentworth Sts.. ,CHARLESTON,9 - S. C. - s. c. AAlways. -Bought AVegetable~reparatioxnforAs Buggios, Wagons, Rtoad sjiaingieFood.negula Carts and Carriages ' R.EPAIRED imtr R.EP IR1.~D Prornotes'DigesfoCeerfuI With Neatness and. Despatch nessandResttotainsfeither Opium,Morp~line norligat o -AT-XOTARCOTic. R. A. WHITE'S WHEELWRIGHT and # BLACKSMITH SHOP. I rbair Stoves, Pumps and run water pipes, or I will put down a new Pump U cheap. If you need any soldering done, give Ape&Sc1 Remedy forCos' me a call.Rn orStuahD me a cal. LAME. WoronflsYeversh-F My horse is-lame. Why? Because I F0 did not have it. shod by Rt. A. White, a ifleSg tueo the man that puts on such neat shoes and makes horses travel with 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 ~(TCP PWAPR please you, and I guarantee all of my IKCNARCMAY E OS ~Y Sop cre.eo .M Da'. _________________________________ R.egtabe.reWraionTrEs MANNING.g S. C.danRIgYOUR Southboond.NArthbTund 647 939 DaizeS.T6 51 70r T1010tsordenChi0dren 73 121 Renbrts.. 4 43 ______________The________i____d___ You____________ 730rfe031Remeyeror.730t4pa 7 50 II 10.nSo.oRv SuocachnDia10h4ea SonessbanddLOSorOFbouEEP. 00 Le're. umte . Arrve. 12 3 3 20 Tindal............to the cUie Sgt ues evroociafefr fisrac n a Sh n Dornerbelow..Dean's. P M ANNstItprNdeG. csSoas.2.Cshvlus d.IcntsiC.ate n BET WEEN SMTELR .AND STCAULE.yer4t.aiupvle;5hThrydy'gaeferheistrmums MieDaily except Sunday.ai;6 Southbound. . Northbound.p b.Etne vaus7t.Tepiup ale paicaeindied; PM AM AM PMToaanPe ann isbltCau, 4 05 10 20........Borde A....0 4 58 4 253 103 A1......Rembert'...0 40 thonDayecptSna.Nrh n d beei.eann h aea fte rmushdbe eual adb of1.av D... sum h rg.rie.. teisrd t.I lopoie hti h oiyhie hudmk e 3 No.....umero paJunconthtion....pana..ea..ayngprmim1te oman wl I3 il app.....Sl ver...... Jug..........sette$,0 freey8100aple o sol h isrddet cu 0Arh ive......isn 's Mie.ease yer8h opn il d r 4iu tefc fsh oiyta a SotbonIARGAly A.ep udNort b en i uigti eidadpyi i ahpu h aeo h ~i 4Ad102 Le minard rAtr.10x 51h hi30iy a nyeotindfo 4.,Ne0 Zion, S. pl 1e.106Reineo Noic C.D of. J DicAg. IBR.Lf itbr IwlapytoteJdeoPrbtecopnhaigteLRETOTIASULs oplc-ldr foofrndnCuty nte 1h'anyCOPNINTEWRDASPtTOtTHRERE oMaTTORNEYS for Letter ofDsharRgeAD OL~ assB AdmiDinisrstratrpixdof econiedtineciaEailiy ad bsi AciT.BdidceaseT~DU. JA E H R ED Prsd n Attorneys An d n is rsatrix., ANew NIoNG C, pri 11. P1906.gPnn . C. DWAIOS. J. A.VR WEIBRG. AVI0 OS & WEIBR, .~?AAAA~A~ ATTORNEYS AT LAW , MANNING, S. C. J H. LEESNETOF PHETIEPHOFFIC. tor propUnietayitest abssu isuryncediv eomind s urne.n a MANINnumb e ortion feiu that ae ser be edes is anymiteron Sin poices whnl Cmpatat Issuaant es myprtheto fmous - fund and lielf-Sudens taoicyn Pol . SE H FyeaAr; 4Theai fuf valent of h polity tats'i guranaterb the frsereimi aid 6rth.e b E ten e div e suplusThe i cpvans ricordt of divie ds MANINt.h.. Ia a -OIYJXES [IAXN l~Tiota andtst Lirabiitent Diabliylase lvionytheLan insuredth ashoo oproides that i e oliuhir suce maeIe Wiaonymentst I Colthmb0-amn plan and aningim the Cman wil pay~lPTDPDW~I hi ette$,00fr verW100 plidfr hudth nurddat cu