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A MYSTERIOUS ISLAND San Nicolas Was Once Peopled by a Race of Indians. AN ENIGMA OF THE PACIFIC, On This Barren, Wave Swept Sand Dune Are Mounds of Shells and Bones and Stone Implements, Monuments of a Lost Race of Ancient People. About eighty miles due northwest of San Pedro, in California, lies a desert island that has all the combined romance of the ages in its history. It is rarely visited aud has but a single inhabitant, yet it has a peculiar fas cination for many people. The very ele ments seem to conspire to make the place forbidden, as it almost invariably blows a gale of wind in the vicinity, and when one reaches the inhospitable island there is no bay or harbor for a craft much larger than a rowboat. The island is about seven miles long by two or three in width and rises to a height of SOO to 1,000 feet in the center. Wind swept, forbidding, haunt ed by the spirits of storms, it does not invite inspection and appears to have been cursed by the elements, yet de spite this the island was at one time the home of a numerous people, a race that has been lost sight of. The writer made several attempts to reach the island in a sixty ton yacht and was literally blown off, finally making it one day about noon, coming to anchor near -a--long, specter-like tongue of land that extends out into the ocean. where the tide ran like a mill race and a heavy ground swell swept around the point from the windward side. The islana. of San Nicolas ap pears like a sand dune. The landing was a wave swept beach that received a high swell from three points, and it was evident that skill in landing alone would make it possible. The boat lay off, waiting for a low sea, and finally went sailing in upon one of less size, and the crew jumped overboard and held on to the boat that the undertow and back rush attempted to claim. In this manner the entire party landed, and an investigation of the island was begun. The one inhab itant, a-Basque, came down to the beach. He had not heard the news of the world for a year and did not dis play any disposition to learn it, but he was not happy-too many dead peo ple, too many bones that make wind spirits blow, he said, and when he heard that the party was after the re mains of these dead people he showed an inclination to leave. In all proba bility there is not in any land a more remarkable mound to be seen. About ten feet in height and nearly a mile in length, It was at this time a verita ble Golgotha, a collection of bones and implements of the lost people, ever changing, ever shifting, today expos ing numbers of skeletons, tomorrow covering them up in sheets of sand. The mound was a town site upon which hundreds of people had lived for untold ages. They had brought in their shells and, fish bones, piling them up at the doors of their huts, slowly building themselves up higher and higher, until in time they came to live on the top of a vast shell mound. Here they buried their dead, concealed their household goods, and when a man or woman diect his or her possessions were buried with them, and so ~the big mounds were made up of shells, stone implements, fish and human bones-a monument of this lost race. Where the original islanders came from, who they were or why they lived on such a- wind swept, nearly waterless Island is one of the mys teries, but it is known that the. mission fathers visited San Nicolas years ago and took off the few survivors found there and divided them up among the various mainland tribes. When this human loot was being carried into ex ecution, a storm came up, and in the hurry of departure it was found that a woman had left, her baby on the beach. It was impossible,. to land, so the captain sailed away, but not with the mother. She had plunged into'. the waves and swum a long distance to'the shore and with her child was deserted, the captain intending to return later for her. San Nicolas, however, was not visited for many years. The ves sel was wrecked, but the legend lived, and many years after a priest decided to visit the island and learn if the woman had survived. An expedition was got up in 1850, the party mang a safe landing.. They formed a line across the island .in order not to miss any signs of human habitation and be gan a slow search from the south point north. They soon found evi dence of anicient occupation and in a deep canyon discovered a hut and a * woman, the mother who had been de serted years before. She was living in the hut, which was made of whale ribs -and sea lion hair, her sole companions being several wild dogs that savagely charged the strangers. The woman could not make herself understood, and, singularly enough, no one in all the Indian tribes in southern California could be found who under stood her. She told her discoverers by signs that the wild dogs had killed her child long ago and that she killed sea lions and sea birds with stones and lived on them. At first she appeared to be afraid of the men; but, finding that they treated her kindly, she consented to go with them. She took all the rude articles she had used during the years of her solitude, her skin dresses, made mostly from the skins of the sea lions, and so interesting were the costumes that they were sent to Rome to the pope by the priest who instigated the res eue. The woman was taken to Santa Bar bara and named M.aris, after the little vessel which accomplished her rescue. She was placed in care of a family. who did everything possible for her. She was bright and vivacious in dispo sition, learned some Spanish, danced and sang for her friends and was vis ited by Inc .ns from various parts of California in an effort to find some one who could understand her. But civili zation proved too much for her, and she died in three months, one of the most remarkable Crusoes known, as her story is based on actual facts and in its details Is much stronger than fiction. The interesting mound which the writer examined on San Nicolas was formed during past centuries by the ancestors of this woman and possesses an intense interest on this account. The island near the landing was twen ty or thirty feet higher than the shore and reached through singular wind worn passes, wind being the sculptor here. Once on the heights a broad mesa was seen, as level as a floor and ancient plowing or something of the kind. The mesa was covered with fine flinty stones about the size of peas, which the herder says were picked up by the wind and blown through the air at times. They were arranged like chaff on a beach. The writer followed this mesa for several miles. and that the island had had a large and vigor ous population at some distant time was evident. Every short distance some object was found, now a pipe made from the vertebrae of a fish, a needle of fish bone, a dish made from a shell, the holes plugged with asphal tum. Here would be a stone club or mortar of stealite, a spearhead or a sinker and shell hooks that some fish erman centuries ago perhaps had drop ped and forgot. Everywhere piles of big pearly shells of a size unknown here were found, telling of the lives and work of these people. One mound was found cov ered by the ribs of whales and beneath them a flat rock bearing marks of va rious kinds, and then the owner, a skeleton in perfect preservation, and all about it in the sand vessels of stone, flutes of bird bones and the va rious objects which went to make up the home of this unknown. In one spot six layers of skeletons were found, the lowest apparently very old. The question of age is always very inter esting, but no one- in contemplating these great shell deposits can form an adequate idea of their age. The island evidently has been inhab ited since the earliest times. But the elements have conspired against it, and it is doomed to be swept and covered with sand. The island is now fre qu'ented by the professional collectors, who go over from the mainland and live here for weeks and months, camp ing out on the sand dunes, weighting their tents down with rocks to prevent being blown into the sea. Every morn ing they go out, with their hooks and poles, hunting for the spoils which have been uncovered by the wind in the night. In this way tons of mate rial have been collected here and sent all over the world.-Chicago Chronicle. The Now Puze F~od and Drug Law. We are pleased to announce thai Foley's Honey an I Ta- 0, cou s , colds and lung troables is not affecttd bv the National Pace Food and Diug law as it contains no opiates or ott et harmful drugs, and we recommend. i1 as a safe remedy for children and adults. The Arant Co. Drug Store. Shancwv Etiquette. "I ?l th Naiir chief respect fully and le:my." said the sailor. "Can you imagine my surprise when he give mea kick? "'Get o]: my shadder,' he says. "'Wot?' "'Get off my shadder.' "I was standing, by crinus, on his shadder, the shadder of his stomach. I skipped from there to the face. He groaned. When I got on to sunlit ground again he says to me: "'Didn't you never have no bringin' up? Look at you now, lengthenin' out your shadow louger'n mine. Crouch, consarn y , or I'll warm your hide with this re club."' The sailor gave a loud laugh and emptied his glass of milk. "Them Kaffirs," he said, "regards their shadders as part of themselves. A polite Kailir would no more walk on another's shadder than a polite Ameri can would hit a lady. They have a regular shadder etiquette. You mustn't on no account let your shadder be onger than a superior's. Tou must crouch to make it smaller, and that there crouch for the purpose of dimin Ishin' the shadder is thought by the Spencerian philosophers-I don't say I think so, mind-to be the origin of the bow."-New Orleans Timies-Democrat. Doing Business Again. "When my friends thought I wai about to take leave of this world. oz account of indigestion, nervousness'anc general debility," writes A. A. Chis hlm, Treadwell, N. Y., "and when it looked as if there was no hope left,] was persuaded to try Electric Bitters, and I rejoice to say that they are cur ing me. I am now doing business agair as of old, and am still gaining daily.' Best tonic medicine on earth. Guaran teed by The Arant Co..Drug Store. 50c. Patti's Burning Admirer. Once in Italy a card was brought tc Mine. Patti from a man whose name she did not know, but who was sc very anxious to see her that she allow ed him to be shown into her room. When the unknown came in he proved to be a little old man who was quite red and speechless with nervousness. Suddenly Patti noticed smoke coniing out of his coat, so without saying a word she seized a glass of water and threw it over him. It turned out thai the old man had put his lighted cigaz into his pocket when he entered the room and so had set fire to his coat "Sir," said Mmne. Patti, "I have had many admirers who professed them selves burning with admiration for me, but I have never before met one whC went so far as to set himself on fire to prove it." "Pneumonia's Deadly Work had, so seriously affected my right lung," .writes Mrs Fannie Connor, oj Rural Route 1. Georgeton, Tenn., "that I coughed continuously night and day and the neighbors' prediction-con sumption-seemed inevitable, until hus band brought home a bottle of Dr. King's New Discovery, which in my case proved to be the only real cough cure and restorer of weak, so.ie lungs." When all other i-emedies utterly fail, you may still win in the battle against ung and throot troubles with New Discovery, the real cure. Guaranteed by The Arant Co. Drug Store. 50c. and and $1.00. Trial bottle free. Jgood' in th -- - Sta Ho - for al -- - succe cusse - it~ ? I The Eye of the Needle. When Christ says in his sermon "that it is easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle than It is for a rich man to enter the kingdom of heaven" he does not mean a sewing needle, but a hole through which a camel had to pass through in getting into a fortress. It was the custom in I old times, and in parts of Agibia still is, for the people of a village to build a fortress against the robbers of the desert, into which they carried an un derground passage in a zigzag form barely large enough for a camel lying down on its side to work itself through into the courtyard of the fort, and the Saviour beautifully compares the strug gles of the animal to what the rich man must suffer in order to gain paradise. The hole was called "the eye of the needle." In the old stone cahirs, or walled cities, in Ireland specimens of these eyelles may be seen. Most of them have been partially destroyed, but there is one almost perfect at Grianan Elleach, in Donegal, and so like the eastern eyeholes that one would think they were made by the same workmen. The Irish annals relate that fileach was erected by a Tuach de Daanan chief 1,300 years before Christ.-Ex change. _______ The Magic Flat. "This is our library," said the New York woman, leading her visitor into the front room. "And that cozy little room back of it Is the music room. The 'den' is the big, bright room on your left. Come over and see it. Yes, .we have just five rooms in all. The small back hallroom we use as a pack ing and storage closet. Isn't it cozy?" "Y-e-s," agreed her visitor doubtful ly, "but where do you sleep and eat. and all that?" "Oh," said the New Yorker indiffer ently, "my husband and I sleep in the 'den' on the oriental couch, and mother sleeps in the music room on another couch that pulls out at night. We eat on that funny little table in the libra ry. You've no idea how big it can be made when the leaves are In. And we dress In the bathroom and keep our clothes in the packing room. So, you see, It's all very convenient." "What do you do in the kitchen?" in quired the other lac(nically. "Oh, we keep the dogs in there at night, and in the daytime we some times use it-to cook in."-New York Press. The Price of Health. "The price of health in a malarious district is just 25c: the cost of a box of Dr. Kings New Life Pills," writes Ella Slayton,'of Noland, Ark. New Life Pills cleanse gently and impart new life and vigor to the system. 25c. Sat isfaction guaraiteed at The Arant Co. Drug Store. An Imprerario's Advice. Some year :.: after the regular Italian opera s'::son bad ended at the Academy of Music. New York. that building beezrn . :z sort of trying on arena for wouLI b prima donnas and tenors. One day during the open and shut Interim between the seasons Max Maretzek w.et the tenor Adams and Mime. Pappenheim. When the treacr s-aid. -"Congratulate us, Max: wve have just leased the acad emy for classic operas--no candy rot for us," the impresar-io replied: "I wish you great surcess. But tell me your proposed rep)ertory." To this Adams re sponded, "'Antig one,' 'Orfeo.' 'lhigenia.' 'Sapho.' 'Al ceste.' etc." Mfaretzek suavely said: "That is mag nificent. But do mc a favor as an old and experienced friend. Give the "Trovatore" once each week in order to pay salaries." This advice was not followed, and very soon the academy was again for rent-New York Tribune. The New and the Old. A Chicago girl said the other day in an address before a girls' club: "I ad vise all of you to be new women. I urge you to pay no heed to the gibes about new women thait are continually being uttered by men. It Isn't a fine type of man that gibes at the new wo man. You know the story of the man in the county fall? 'What brought you here, my poor fellow?' a missionary asked. 'I married a new woman, sir,' the prisoner groaned. 'Ahar' said the missionary. 'And she was so domi neering and extravagant that It drove you to desperate courses. eh?' 'No,' said the prisoner. 'The old woman turned up.' "-San Francisco Argonaut An Odd Little Anagram. Here is an interesting little puzzle and anagram which was published in a newspaper several years ago:. A - old woman with --Intent Put on her - and to market went. "-"said she, "give me, I pray. The wherewithal to - this day." Each of the blanks is to be filled with a word of four letters, and the same letters occur in each of the five differ ent words. These words are consecu tively "vile," "evil." "veil," "Levi" and "live." Bitten by a Spider. Through blood poisoning caused by a spidr' bite, John Washington, of Bos queville, Tex., would have lost his leg, which became a mass of runno sores, had he not been persuaded to try Buck len's Arnica Salve. He writes: "The first application relieved, and four box es healed all the sores." Heals every sore. 25c. at The Arant C. Drug Store Man's Love For Woman. "If a man loves a womaa for her looks he will love he:: for five years. IIf he loves her mind he will love her for ten years. If he loves her ways he will love her forever." And every wo man believes when she marries that her lover loves her ways. re is more than one way to get ops to market. There is only one o be sure of a full crop of smooth, sized, mealy potatoes. Nine per cent, of Ptash fertilizer is necessary. be manure alone makes scaly, and irregular shaped potatoes with Potash, a larger yield of a quality is a sure result. w to apply Potash, the reasons pying it, and other vital points of ssful potato growing, all are dis din our booklet. Why not have osts you nothing but the asking. GERMAN KALI WORKS r-9 Nassau Street. or lna.. (l:.-1__ Cuenane Ruilding ni If The Results of liber.Uy using our fertili zes . opay ct a mortgage, nithe olfz-.1 Itead thefol k owing irom Messrs. Wherry Son. owneraof the Magnolia rit Farm. Durant, iiss. ,4 "We made $000 from one acre . 'ir.wbcrric3. on which your ferilizurs were used. Eight yearsagoweboughtthis place at :)0 per acie. it was then ~:co red1 to have been worn c twety years before. but vrgii-Coln Fetiizr =~de:reas a r.G Tct beans, wo - can( iI'ow grow almos t any thin-, and havo been offered R5-1 per co for the place. We .. imned with a great A rainy brands of Ifertilizers, but !ind theo higbest per-cent. ihaer"Kor dodt you think Vi tmn-Carolina Fertilizers e--wou ensie yoi to pay oft a 7.: i g if you had one? iWel, dont-use any other. 'Virginla-CnroikacheicalCo. E ifebaond. 'a. Norfoik, Va. D ram. N. C. Ciarleston, S. C. Jir~a-ir;re. ld. SAtintst Ga. T av-.:r:rh, Gn. The Pe4riod of a woman's life Is the name often given to "change of life." Your menses come at long Intervals, and grow scantier until they stop. The change lasts three or-tour years, and causes much pain and suffering, which can, however, be cured, by taking NE Woman's Refuge in Distress It quickly relieves the pain, nerv ousness, Erritability, miserableness, fainting, dizziness, hot and cold flashes, weakness, tired feeling, etc. Cardul will bring you safely through this "dodging period," and build up your strength for the rest of your life. Try It. You can get It at all druggists In $1.00 bottles. "EVERYTHING BUT DEATH I suffered." s-rites Vir::Inla Robson.of East Son.. Mdl.. "un:Il I took Cardul, which cured me so quictdv it surprised rny doctor, who idn't know I Wss tkakiglt. Notice. A meeting of the Stockholders of the Jones B'ros. & Hinson Company is called for April 6tn, 1907, at their office at Alcoln, S. C., for the purpose of amend iij the charter of the said corporation. L. M. JONES, For Board of Corporators. March 25, 1907. Chinese Laundry. Having decided to continue the Laun dry business in the Town of Manning I have placed in charge of my Laundry Charlie Willie, an expert Laundryman, whose work will please the people. Patronage is solicited. SSAM LBE. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of Clarendon. COURT OF COMMON PLEAS. Summons, For Relief. (Complaint Not Served.) Daniel M. Rtodgers, Plaintiff against Isaac Murray, Josiah Murray, Stephen Murray. Jelf Curtan, Earnest Curtan, Carrie Curtan, Hunter Curtain. Co ron Curtan, Leifers Curtan, Mary Sue Curtan and Alva Cur-tan, Defend ants. To the Defendants above named: You are hereby summoned and re quired to answer the complaint in this action which is filed in the office of the Clerk of Court of Common Pleas, for the said County, and to serve a copy of your answer to the said Complaint on the subscribers at their office in Man ning, South Carolina, within twenty days after the service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service; and if you fail to answer the complaint within the time aforesaid, the plaintiff in this ac tion will apply to the court for relief demanded in the complaint. WILSON & O'BRYAN, Plaintiff's Attorneys. To the Defendants Josiah Murray and Stephen Murray: Take not-ice that the Summons and Complaint in this action were filed in the afflee of the Clerk of Court of Com mon Pleas for said County and State on the 5th day of March, A. D. 1907. WiLSON & O'BRYAN, Plaintiff's Attorneys. March (6, 1907.6. [SEAL] A.I.BAR~oN, C. C. C. P C. C. rKIL LmTE COUCH AND CURE TE LUNCS WITH (ONSIMPTION Price "OR ~OUoiSaand 30c as1.OO OLDLS Free Trial. 5ureot and Quicifest Cure f'or all THOTand LUNG TEOUB The Arant Co. Drug Store, KodelDsppiair EDigestswhtyu a. Kennedy's Laxative Honey and Tar Cures all Coughts, 2ndi expels Colds from hesyteam by gently mnuIng the bnowels.L The Bank of MaimIng MANNING, S. C. Capital Stock, - 840,000 Surplus, - - 40,000 Stockholders' Lia bility, - - 40,000 Total Protection to Depositors, $120,O0 p..4 DON'T HOARD. Your money in unsafe place. A GOOD BANK, is the saftest place for your money. You will be surprised at the rapidity with which your bank account is in creased by a little systematic saving. From April 1 to September 1 the hour for closing will be 2 o'clock p. m Tinning& Plumbing Have your tinning done by an expe rienced workman. I cut and thread all sizes of pipe and am always ready to do the right thin& by those who bring me their work. I make a specialty of doing all kinds of soldering, such as coffee pots, ket ties, stew pans, sauce pans, dish pans, milk pans or anything that needs re pairing. -I will do it in a workmanlike way. . STOVES.-I repair, put up and buy your old stoves. I have had the best experience with hardware men and will give you satisfaction. If your lamp is out of order let me see it before you throw it away. JOHN P. BELL. Shop near Bradham's stable. 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 change with a check. Bank of Suminniron, Summerton, S. C. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of Clarendon, COURT OF-COMMON PLEAS. R. I. Manning, Plaintiff, against James Di. Dleas, Lynch H. Deas.Rich ard R. Deas, Eleanora N. Deas.J. Di. Dleas, Jr., Henry Dleas, Ellen Di. Dleas and Henry B. Dleas, Defend. ants. Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale. UNDER AND BY VIRTUE OF A Judgment Order of the Court of Com mon Pleas, in the above stated ac tion, to me directed, bearing date of February 7, 1907, I will sell at pub lie auction, to the hig-hest bidder for cash, at Clarendon Court House, at Manning, in said county, within the legal hours for judicial sales, on Mon day, the 1st day of April, 1907, being salesday, the following de scribed real estate: That parcel composed of twenty nine and one-third acres No. Ia. and nineteen and two-thirds acres. No. 1b, in all forty-nine acres, situate in the county of Clarendon, in said State. and bounded as follows: North, by lands of John C. Manning and Eleanora N. Richardson, known as lots No. 7 and 2; east, by lands of Eleanora N. Richardson and J. M. Richardson; south, by lands of J. M. Richardson and on the west by lands >f John C. Manning, known as lot No. 7, and by lands of J. M. Richard son. That parcel or tract of land in said ounty and State, known as the southern half of the second Bottom, ontaining seventy-four and d1-100 ares, bounded, north, by lands of John C. Manning, known as lot No. ; east, by St. Mark's church, Glebe ands; south, by lands of Mathis, and west by the Santee river swamp. Purchaser to pay for papers. E. B. GAMBLE, Sheriff Clarendon County. TATE OF SOUTH CAROLUNA, Clarendon County, IN THE PROBATE COURT. By James Mi. Windham, Esq., Pro bate Judge. IHEREAS, James McDowell made 'suit to me to grant him letters of administration of the estate f and effects of Belle M. L. McDowell. These are therefore to cite and dmonish all and singular the kin red and creditors of the said Belle f. L. McDowell, deceased, that they e and appear before me. in the ourt of Probate, to be held at Man ing, on the 11th day of April ext, after publication thereof, at 11 clock in the forenoon, to show ause, if any they have, why the aid administration should not be ranted. Given under my hand this 22nd ay of March. A. Di. 1907. JAMES Mf. WINDHAM, [S]~AL.]Judge of Probate. FOLETYIORtYTAR for caudrela afe, cure. .No opiate OLEY'SlO1RFYATAR Curos Colds; Prevents Pneumonia neing yonr Job Work to The Times affice. The new Laxative that does not gripe or nauseate. Tleasant to talke. L Do You Want PERFECT FITIING CLOTHES? THEN COME OR SEND TO US. We have the best equipped Tailor ing Establishment in the State. We handle High Art Clothina solely and we carry the best line of Hats and Gent's Furnishings in the city. Ask yourmost prominent men whc we are, and they will commend you to us. J L, DAVID & BRO, Cor. King & Wentworth Sts., CHARLESTON, - S. C. Geo.S. Hacker&Sop MAitUFACTURtFMR OF DoorsSas, Bin s C I-A CC4 ~L Doors, Sash, Blinds, Moulding and Building Material, CHARLESTON, S. C. Sash Weights and. Cords. Window and Fancy Glass a Specialty. Undertaking. A complee stock or Caskets, Coffins and Fu neral Suppies always on hand. Mv hearse will be sen to aypar of te countyndclsil director and undertaker, night or day. W. E. JENKINSON CO. NORTHWESTERN R. R. OF S. C. TIME TABLE No. 6, .In Effect Sunday, June 5, 1904. BETWEEN SUMTER AND CAMDEN. Mixed, Daily except Sunday. Southbound. Northbound. No. 69 No. 74 No. 70 No. 68 PM AM AM PM 6 25 9 36 L.ve..Sumter ..Ar.9 00 5 45 6 27 9 38 N. W. Junction....8 58 5 43 6 47 9 59...Daze11...822 5 13 7 05 10 10...Borden...8 00 4 58 7 21 10 21...Rembert's. ..7 40 4 43 7 30 10 31...E1er be..730 4 28 7 50 11 10..So. Rv. Junction..7 10 4 25 8 00 11 10 Ar.. .Camden. .L ve7 00 4 15 PM PM AM PM BET WEEN WILSON'S MILL AND SUMTER Southbo.nd, - Northbound. No. 73 Daily except Sunday. . No. 72 PM ' PM 3 00 Leave....Sumter...ArrIve. .12 30 3 03..ummerton Junction...12 27 3 20...........Tinda!............11 55 3 35.......... ..Packsville......... 41 30 3 5......... Silver...... .......11 00 4.0.........Millard......... 10 45 4 45...........Summerton.....10 1~, 5 25......... ...Davis............. 9 45 545..........Joran . ...... PM AM BETWEEN MILLARD AND ST. PAUL. Daily except Sunday. Southbound. Northbound. No. 73 No. 75 No. 72 No. 74 P M A M A.M P M 4 15 10 30 Ar St. Pul Lve.10 35 40 P'M AM AM PM - FOS. W LSON, President. W. C. DAVIS. J. A. WEINBERG. DAVlS & WEINBERG, MANNING, S. C. Prompt attention given to collections. jomN s. wn~soN. S. OLIVERt O'.BRYAN. WILJSON & O'IBRYAN, Attorneys and Counseldrs at Law, MANNING, S. 0. J H. LESESNE, ATTORNEY AT LAW, MANNING, S. C. JOSEPH F. RHAME, ATTORNEY AT LAW, MANNING, S. C. J McWAINWOODS, e A TO N YAT LAW , Manning, S. C. Office Over Levi's Store. DR. J. A. COLE. DENTIST, Upstairs over Bank of Manning. MANNING. S. C. Phone No 'i7. DR. J. FRANK GEIGER. DENTIST, MANNING, S. C. Phone No. 6. CHARLTON DU-RANT, ATTORNEY AT LAW, M~ANNING, S. C. SoPss the coeagh a..d heeslunage Kodol Dyspepsia Cure . Digests what you eat. Cures Stomach and Liver trouble and Uative Fruit Syrup Chronic Constipation The Arant Co. Drug Store. The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature - or - and has been made under his pe sonal supervision since its infancy. 7PA eW. Allowno one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and "Just-as-good" are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children-Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotie substance. Its age is its guarantee. It'destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrha and. Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea-The Mother's Friend. CENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the Signature of The Kiid You Have lways Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. THE CCMITAUR COMPANY. 7T MURRAY STRET=. NEW YORK CETY. Buy Land! The short crops in the vicinity of Manning have caused' prices this fall not to advance as they did\last year.Now is the inves tor's opportunity, as with reasonably good erops and prices next year's land will go much higher. Others think 'as we do. And here are two orders recently placed with us by two men from other counties, and the kind of men this county needs: First. A farm. within easy reach of a high school and good churches, properly improved and costing fr'om five to ten thousand dollars. Second. A farm of from one to two hundred acres,' within reach of a cominon school and good church, costing from three to five thousand dollars. If you can't pay cash we will help you to borrow the money Manniing Real Estate Agellcy E. D. Hodge, Manager. Office over Bank of Maiming. ALCOLURAILROD. DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAYS Effective May 1st, 1906. NORTHEAST.-READ DOWN. SoUTH1wEST-READ UP. 4200 9745...... 2.... ........... Audson*........... A 2 6 80......... .... - 4220 1015 ........I 75..............Beua................ 18 I 76 00.... .. 255 tain ecp Beu0ah4and.A.cou.are gsaions...or..a.. trains0. I wendays, No. 2 andriaNso.o.3. Thursdays, No. 2. R. P. ALDERMAN, - Trafliic Manager. ~ J~4QUGHFAR~&fi1LAVEL N OPTHAJNDSoUTH Florida-Cuba. A passenger service unexcelled for luxury and comf ort,equipped with thelatest Pullman Dining, Sleeping-and Thoroughfare Cars. For rates, schedule, maps or any informa. tion, write to WM. J. CRAIG, General Passenger Agent, Wilmington, N. C. BRING YOUR 4CJ OBWOR K TO THE TINES OFFICE.