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THE BRITISH FOURTH1 England's Equivalent of Our inde pendence Day. THE LEGACY OF GUY FAWKES. Foiled In His Attempt to Blow Up the Houses of Parliament, the Gunpowder Plot Conspirator Gave to the English Boy a Joyous Holiday. The day in England most nearly cor responding with the American Fourth of July in its manner of celebration is Guy Fawkes day. Nov. 5, the anni versary of the attempt to blow up the British houses of parliament, king, lords and commons by Guy Fawkes in 1605. The celebration, although grad ually losing-its national and historical significance, is still observed as a holi day by children in many parts of the country. For several weeks before "the Fifth" the lads scour the countryside for tree trunks and branches, boxes. barrels, anything that will burn, in fact, and they trail their finds to some old barn miles away, where they are stored in anticipation .of the great day and guarded with a zeal that often leads to pretty stiff fights. Marauders from other localities will, if not carefully watched, secretly re move inviting "chumps," as the logs are called, and add them to their own collections. Between this intermittent warfare and dodging the police and owners of woodland property the younger ele ment of Great Britain has quite a live 1y time during the few weeks prior to Guy Fawkes day. The day itself is occupied until dusk In building tonfires, "cadging" coal, coke and oil and eating "parkin," k cake inseparably associated with the celebrations. This cake Is made of molasses, ginger and oatmeal or any other coarse meal. As soon as the first night shadow falls the fires are lighted, firecrackers begin to snap, and pyrotechnic displays of every description are in evidence in all directions. The fun is kept up with a vim similar to our Fourth of July spirit until far into the night, when potatoes, roasted In the fires, are indulged in. The name given to the day is some what misleading perhaps, and the whole credit or onus of the plot has been popularly laid upon the shoulders of Guy Eawkes, whereas he was far from being the most Important of the plotters and seems to'have been chosen bythe chief conspirators entirely because of his superb courage and coolness. The plan was originated by Robert Catesby, a man whose natural atmos phere was one of plots, but a man of extraordinary personal charm. The Roman Catholics had expected great 1ings from the accession of James I. to the throne. The laws of Elizabeth were cruel and unjust toward them, and they were led by James to expect amelioration and tolerance. Instead of this, the laws against them were enforced with renewed vig or, and the great dIscontent resulted In the gunpowder plot The conspir acy was elaborately and carefully con ceived, and great hardships were un dergone to carry it out. It was not until the conspirators, all gentlemen unused to physical labor, had excavated through nIie feet thick ness of stone wall in orde.r to get be neath the house of commo: s that they found that a vault underneath the ed ifice was to let. The vault was taken in the name of Guy Fawkes, and the severe physical work was ended. Un der cover of night thirty-six barrels of gunpowder were conveyed to the vault, and all was in readiness for the meet ing of parliament on Nov. 5. Then came the first weakening which was to end in the failure of the scheme. The conspirators could not agree upon a plan to warn the Cath olic lords and members who would oth erwise be blown up with the rest. The plotters were all prominent gen tlemen and had personal friends among the apparently doomed legislators. An anonymous letter was received by Lord Monteagle, one of the Catholic peers, warning him not to be present The anthor of the letter Is not really known, but it is commonly believed to have been Gresham, in spite of his vigorous denial when accused by Cates by. At all events, this is supposed to have been the key to the discovery. Monteagle showed the letter to Salis bury, who in turn took it to the king, and all sorts of ingenuity were exer cised to discover its meaning. A close watch was kept, and in order to take the plotters redhanded the arrest was palpably postponed until the dramatic moment in order to allow Catesby to escape, though he was shot a few days later while attempting to raise an in surrection at Worcester. Guy Fawkes, whose work It was to fire the train, was taken as he was leaving the house through which ac cess was gained to the vault, and the rest of the plotters were either killed er captured at Dunchurch, to where they fled. Fawkes was put to the torture, but nothing could shake his magnifieent forti~tude, though he was so weak from agony' and sickness that he could scarcely mount the scaffold. The day (Nov. 5) was proclaimed a day of thnksgiving forever by an act of par liament, which was only repealed after 200 years. For nearly 300 years the celebrations 'were carried to-rlotous excess. Effigies of Guy Fawkes were paraded in towns and villages all day amid shouting and singing and burned at night in huge conflagrations to the accompaniment of thousands of fireworks.-Scrap Book. Nutriment of Bacon. Professor Snyder of the Minnesota food station gave in a report some rea sons why bacon should become popu lar. In reference to a test-he says that bacon was cut in thin slices and baked or broiled in the oven until crisp and brown. All the fat which was cooked out was saved and eaten with the bread and other foods which made up the daily fare. On an average about 90 per cent of the protein and 96 per cent of the fat of the ration containing bacon were digested and about 88 per cent of the energy was available. Calculated val ues for bacon alone showed over 90 per cent protein and 96 per cent digest ible fat. figures which compare favor ably with those which have been ob tained for other animal foods. "Lean bacon contains as much pro tein and about twice as much digesti ble fat as other meats," says Professor Snyder, "making it at the same time and even at a higher price a pound a cheaper food than other meats. D3a con fat is easly digested, andl when combined with other foods it appears to exert a favorable mechanical action THE OCEAN LINER. Safety Devicc That Are Operated From the Briage. It is in its safety devices and the provision made to meet every possible accident that the ocean liner is perhaps most remarkable. All the machinery whch may be set in motion In case of danger is centered on the bridge, and so perfectly has it been arranged that $he entire vessel coild be controlled f the necessity should arise by means of a series of levers and push buttons. About the walls of the wheelhouse are arranged curious looking indicators, much the same as one sees behind the desk of a great hotel. About them are hung a surprising variety of barome ters, thermometers, thermostats, wind and rain gauges and other less familiar looking instruments. There are rows upon rows of buttons and levers on every hand, all highly polished and in the most perfect working order. The danger of fire at sea. for instance, is anticipated by a thermostat connected with the frame filled with little squares like the hotel indicator. There are. thermometers in every part of the ship electrically connected with this box which are constantly on guard. If a fre should start in any part of the great ship the temperature would of course rise, and the fact would instant y be announced in the wheelhouse by the ringing of a bell, while a red light would flash at the same time in one of the squares of the indicator. The man at the wheel could tell at a glance the exact point of danger.-Francis Arnold Collins in St Nicholas. POTATOES IN FRANCE. Parmentler's Wily Plan to Kill the Prejudice Against Them. The way in which Parmentier cre ated a demand for potatoes In France would have done credit to the wiliest of wily tradesmen. Nothing would at first induce the simple minded peas ants to cultivate the popular tuber. They would not listen to lectures on Its virtues nor accept seed potatoes free of cost for planting. Parmentier therefore decided to get the better of their prejudice by artifice and with this object leased as much land as he could round Paris and plant ed It with potatoes. Just before the ripening of the crop he posted watch ers round the fields and issued notices that all persons stealing potatoes would be severely punished, the crop being intended for the tables of the king and nobles. Such delicacies, continued the notice, were too good for ignorant peasants, who would touch them at their peril. Of course watch was only kept during the day, .and at night the fields were robbed right and left by the peasants, who were curious to taste the strange vege.table and jealous that it should be reserved for their betters. As soon as they had tasted the suc culent tubers the pilferers were only too anxious to plant as many as they could possibly purchase, the wily Par mentier's scheme thus succeeding be yond the most extravagant anticipa tions. Notice to our Customers. We are pleased to announce that Foley's Honey and Tar for coughs, colds and lung troubles is not affected by the National Pure Food and Drug law as it eontains no opiates or other harmful drugs, and we recommend it as a safe remedy for children and adults. The A cant Co. Drug Store. THE FlIRST ZOO. China, It seems, Counts That Among -Her Many Record's. The Chinese had the first zoo. Men ageries are thought to owe their ori gin partly to the cult of sacred ani mais, and pairtly to the ambition of rulers to posses specimens of rare and valuable creatures from foreign lands or savage beasts from their own. In the simplest forms zoological gardens were one of the earliest developments of culture and were familiar to the Chiniese, Indians, Greeks, Romans and .pre-Spanisih Mexicans in ancient times. The oldest recorded menagerie is Chi nese. dating from 1150 B. C. The den of lions kept by Darius, as described in the book of Daniel, is an example of one of those primitive menageries, while the cult of sacred white horses by the ancient Greeks and R~mans and that of so called white elephants in Burma and Siam are instances of a second type. A live giraffe was re ceived at the menagerie of Schonbrunn as early as IS2S. The Paris establishment is regarded as the earlIest entitled to the designa tion "zoological gardens" in the mod ern sense of that term, which owes its origin, however, to the formation of the menagerie In the Regents' part. Of German establishments of this sort the one at Berlin is the earliest. American zoos, notable among which is New York and Chicago, are among the completest in the world.--Ex change. Roman House Heaters. The methods used by the Romans for warming their houses were clever. In Rome itself artificial warmth may have been brought rarely into use, though the Italian winter requires fires at times, but when the Roman took up his abode abroad as the conqueror he certainly lived in chilly climates. In the country houses he built in England he had carefully devised heating ar rangements, which are called hypo causts. These are fines running un der the tessellated floors. Fires were lIt outside of the house, and the hot air passed under the floors. To do this much required a knowledge of the builder's art, with the necessary precautions against fire. Remnants of these hyocausts are found today in England, suilt during the Roman oc cupation. Tho Popular Song. The definition of popularity as given by a salesman in a Ilar.e :uusic store is one that may be apjiled to other things besides sonigs. "Is this a popu'lar s->ng?" asked a young womnan, holding up a sheet of music briLliautly decorated In red and green. "Well, no. miss," said the salesman, assuming a .judicial air, "I can't say it is as yet. Of course lots of people are singing it, and everybody likes it, but nobody's got tired enough of It yet for it to be what you'd call a popular song, miss." The Contrast. A small negro boy was putting his head against the marble steps of the capitol. HIe would step back a few feet and then run toward the steps, strking them full force with his head. "What on earth are you doing that for, boy?" asked a senator who came by. "Are you going to fight a goat?" "Naw, sah, l's doin' it cause it feels so good when I don't." - R ochester WHALES THAT FENCE The Male Narwhai Uses Its tight Foot Tooth as a Sword. Who ever heard of whales fencing with one another-just for amusement apparently? This may seem very strange. but it is nevertheless true. There are whales that not only fence with one another, but use their teeth for swords. Some whales have no teeth, but instead of teeth have great sheets of whalebone hanging from the roof of the mouth, others have their great jaws filled with terrible teeth, while one kind, the narwhal. has but two teeth. One of the teeth of the male narwhal grows through the upper lip and looks like a spear projecting in front of the animal. Sometimes both teeth grow out in this way, b)ut that is not often the case. This tooth is frequently eight feet in length, and it is with this powerful tootri or spear that the nar whal does his fencing. No one seems to know of what uso such a big tooth is to the narwhal Some say it is used for digging the mud in the bottom of the ocean to scare outthe fish that may be lurking there. Others think it is used in spear ing the fish or for breaking holes through the ice in the northern seas in winter, for whales have to come to the surface occasionally to breathe. But. for whatever use it is intended, It is certain the whale derives amusement from his tooth, for when he wants to play he ends ano' er narwhal In the same playfta! moos, and away they go clashing swords-or teeth-together. Besides being very frolicsome, they are very active for such big animals, and sailors have watched them cross ing swords, thrusting and parrying, rolling, turning and darting with much agility. In traversing the ocean they form in ranks like soldiers. and with similar I undulations of the body and sweeps of the tail they swim by the thousand to gether. The narwhal is light gray in color and covered with black spots. The Greenlanders value it highly for many reasons. Its oil is of a very fine (qual ity, its flesh is used for food, and the skif is made into a jelly called mattak, considered too much of a dainty for or dinary occasions.-St. Louis Post Dis nateh. Orino Laxative Fruit Syrub is best for women and 'zhildren. Its mild ac tion and pleasant taste makes its pre ferable to violent purgatives, such as pills, tablets, etc. Get the booklet and a sample of Orino at The Arant Co. Drug Store. DRUGGISTS' GLOBES. How the Colors In the Window Em blems Are Produced. "The big glass globes filled with col ored water which were once in the front windows of every drug store are not seen now as frequently as of old," said a drug clerk to a reporter. "Of course many are still in use, but in the readjustment of the windo* displays in drug stores by reason of the installation of the electric light they "have been displaced. With the old gas jet arrangement there were but two or three separate illumina tions, mostly placed behind the globes in question. "The colored contents of these globes and their chemical constituents are a mystery to most persons, and I have had ladies ask me if they contained colored perfumes. The globes are made in all sorts of fancy and elabo rate shapes and designs. Some are costly. Their history is buried in an tiquity, but as they contain chemical compositions they were primarily, as they are now, the emblem of the chem st "The water is filtered and beautiful ly colored by chemical admixtures and are composed of such chemicals that they will withstand the rays of the sun and not fade. The exquisite pale green, which is one of the popular se lections of coloring, is a solution of nitrate of nickel, and most persons will be surprised to learn that it is derived from dissolving the common five cent nickel piece in nitric acid. A few five cent nickel pieces dissolved in this acid will produce enough coloring body to tinge several gallons of water and give a coloring which is most pleasing to the eyes. "The red, which is also a very bright, beautiful and permanent color and which shows very effectively both by day and when illuminated at night, is made from resublimated or metallic iodine. The blue is made from sul phate of .copper and ammonia, and the yellow is produced by an admixture of bichromate of .potash and sulphuric acid. Any person can make these beautiful colorings, especially the green, but as the acids used are very power 'ful it is best to have them prepared by a chemist, as a drop of nitric acid on the hand will eat a hole in the flesh. "In fact, even druggists make mis takes. I remember one who tried to get a fine new color that other drug gists didn't have, so he mixed tincture of chloride of iron with antipyrin. It did, in fact, make a fine color in the globes, but when the sun's rays rested on it for .a few hours explosive gases were generated, which sent the globes fying in a thousand pieces and wrecs ed the contents of the window." Washington Star. Bears th heKn You Have Always Bought Signature Ways of the Flying Fish. Flying, fish swim in shoals varying in number from a dozen to a hundred or more. They often leave the water at once, darting through the air in the same direction for 200 yards or more, and then descend to the water quickly, rising again and then renewing their flight. Sometimes the dolphin may be seen in rapid pursuit, taking great leaps out of the water and gaining up on his prey, which take shorter and shorter fiights, vainly trying to escape, until they sink exhausted. Sometines the larger sea birtds catch flying fish in the air. The question whether the flying fish use their fins at all as wings is not fully decided. The power of flight is limited to the time the fins remain moist. How Sirds' Nests Are Made Round. The little abandoned nest had fallen from the tree. The nature student lift ed it from the ground. "o0w round it is," he said. "No cup rim could be rounder. Don't you won der how the bird, with neither rule nor compass, can make her nest so round? Well, she does it easily. She builds the nest about her breast, turning round and round in it, and its circular char acter comes spon.sneously and inevita bly The circle is founad everywhere in Ithe buildings of the kbw~er aniimals. The straight line, on the other hand, thej FRAUDS iN OLD BOOKS. i Ancient and Rare Volumes Doctored, 4 Restored and Imitated. A well known collector acquired what he took to be a book published by Aldus in the year 14S9. He paid i,ooo for it and believed that it was an original Aldus, because the publish er's press mark, a dolphin coiled round an anchor, appeared upon it. When the book was shown to an expert it proved to be beyond a shadow of doubt a modern antique-that is to say, it was simply a copy of the orig inal work printed by an ingenious book fakir. So clever was the Imitation. that only an expert could tell it from! the original and rare book. Scores of persons during recent years have bought facsimiles of rare works under the impression that they were getting the originals. Dickens' "Sunday Un der Three Heads" has been faked many times and sold as original to collectors who no doubt treasure them as rarities. Genuine copies of this little book are worth a good sum, and some unscrupulous dealers, taking ad vantage of the circumstances, have had it reprinted and palm off the copies on unsuspecting bibliomaniacs for the genuine first edition. Many men make a living by "doc toring" old and rare books for un scrupulous dealers. These men are adepts in the art of book restoring and are quite able to make good any part of an imperfect copy. For instance, If a rare book has a leaf missing It is . handed over to a restorer, who re prints the page with battered itype, the paper upon which it is printed be ing afterward discolored with chem Icals or tobacco water in order to give It the true antique hue. The first folio Shakespeare is, of course, of great value, and it Is safe to say that every possible deception has been practiced in fitting up copies of this work for sale. At one time the manufacture of first folio Shakespeares was quite a trade. A first folio having several leaves missing had leaves in serted from the second folio, while In one case the entire play of "Cymbe line" was reprinted and inserted in a first folio. The "faked" pages were so cleverly done that several experts were at first unable to detect them when turning over the pages of the work in question. Book restorers, as a rule, are most Ingenious artists, and they can produce an imitation of a page of a rare book which will deceive hundreds of collectors. One particu lar restorer has "doctored" more than a thousand old boois during the last two years, producing pages In facsim ile and supplying colophons or deco rated capitals. There is not a thing wanting to make a book complete that this man cannot skillfully "fake." Brooklyn Eagle. POINTED PARAGRAPHS. Don't bet on your popularity. About the hardest thing in this world to handle is a jealous disposition. When some people get into trouble they enlist a lot of people to help them out. If you have to keep demanding your rights all the time you are asking for something not coming to you. What a comfortable world this would be if people didn't take such delight In making trouble for each other! A doctor has two classes of people to contend with-those who swear by him and those who swear at him. How you resent it when any one in terferes in that which you consider "your business!" And how often you interfere with the business of others! Atchison Globe. The Poet and the Beauty. One of the finest houses in southern England. is Penhurst Place, the birth place of Sir Philip Sidney. U~nder the trees of its park Edmund Wailer paid his addresses to the haughty Lady Dorothea, whom he celebrated as Sach arissa. But the heart of Lady Dorothea Sidney-who was the most beautiful woman of her time-ws untouched by Waler's amatory verses, and she re jected the poet in favor of the Earl of Sunderland. Many years afterward the countess met Waller -and, reminding him sentimentally of the old days at Penurst, asked him when he would again write verses about her. "When, madam," said the poet rudely, "you are as young and as handsome as you were then." Properties of Chlorine. Chlorine is a greenish yellow gas with a disagreeable smell It is solu- I ble In cold water, only slightly solublej in hot water. It destroys color in wet' fabrics and is also a strong disinfect ant. Both of these properties are said2 to be due to its power of decomposing. hydrogen compounds, such as water, - combining with the hydrogen and liber-, ating oxygen, which in a nascent state oxidizes coloring matter, rendering It colorless. As a disinfectant it oxidizes the germs of disease and-is in conse quence largely used for this purpose. Strange Mistak~e.8 Old Mrs. Jones entered the drawing 1 room unexpectedly and spoIled a very pretty tableau. "I was just whispering a secret in Cousin Jennie's ear," explained Char "I'm sorry," said the old lady grave ly, "that your eyesight has become so ad that you mistake Jennie's mouth for her ear."-London Tit-Bits. Her Line. "Now our cook has- gone away 1 don't know what we shall do." "I thought you told me your wife was such a good cook?'" "Not a bit of It. I told you my wife was an expert in broils, roasts and stews."-Baltimore American. IKiLL THE COUC AND CURE THE LUNCS New Discovery O0NSUJMPTION Price FOR ~OUGSs and 30c asI.0O Suest and Quickest Cure for a17. TROAT and LUNG TROUB LE, r ONEY BACK. The Arant Co. Drug Store, Mates Midncis andi Sladder Rlght Kodol Dyspep3sia Oure Digests what you eat. Kennedy's Laxative Honey and Tar Cres all coughs. nnd expels Colds from the...stm bY nnty moving the bowels. 00 Crops That Convince resseYocYXield3. 'Per Arre We wlU convince you that you j eau -incroaso your yields per acere" eamd you wor't bav to keep it a so Cret, either. P.C.1 WItot Messr5 wherry thcSon, of tha Magnolia ]-1nuit 17:i-, Durant, Yj-, write: -'From two :rcres of at wberrlew on which 1,000 pounds of Virgina-M Carolnsa Fertilizers per acre were u!c, we clcared a Sprollt of $75.00 per acre more tan the other are of strawberries % hicb had on!-, 603 pounds of this fertilize." Thius double the quan tity of these fertilzers nn eacli &cre of ny crop. nud more thau doubly "increace your yi'0ds per acre." Be sure yonbuly only Virginia-Care lins Fortilizers. VirgeiniCaroflna Chemical Co. Richmond. Va. Atlanta, Ga. Norfolk, Va. - Savannah. Ga. Durnam. N. C. Montgomery. A6 Chn'riestofl, S.C. Memaph is. Tenn. Baltimore, Md. Shreveport, La. Draggin Down Pains are a symptom of Me most serious trouble which can attack a woman, viz: falling of the womb. With this, generally, comes irregular and painful periods, weakening drains, backache, headache, nervousness, dizziness, ir ritability, tired feeling, etc. The cure is WINE ICdi OF ari The Female Regulator that wonderful, curative, vegetable ex tract, which exerts such a marvelous, strengthening Influence, on all female organs. Cardui relieves pain and regulates the menses. It is a sure and permanent cure for all female complaints. At all druggists and dealers In $1.00 bottles. "I SUFFERED AWFUL PAIN in my womb and ovaries,"writes Mrs. Naomi Bake, of Webster Grove, Mo., "also in my right and left sides, and my menses were very painful and irreg ular. Since taking Cardul I feel like a new woman and do not suffer as I did. iIt Is the best medicine I ever took." MANNING, S. C. lapi(tl Stock, - $40,000 surplus, - - 40,000 stockhoders' Lia Dility, - - .40,000 to Depositors, $120,000 DON'T HOARD. Your money in unsafe place. A GOOD BANK, the saftest place for your money. tou will be surprised at the rapidity cith which your bank account is in. reased by a little systematic saving. From April 1 to September 1 the tour for closing will be 2 o'clock p. m. Have your tinning done by an expe ienced workman. I cut and thread all sizes of pipe and n always ready to do the right thing >y those who bring me their work. I make a specialty of doing all kinds if so!dering. such as coffee pots, ket les, stew pans, sauce pans, dish pans, cilk pans or anything that needs re airing. I will do it in a workmanlike $TOVES.-I repair, put up and buy 'our old stoves. I have had the best :perience with hardware men andi nil give you satisfaction. If your lamp is out of order let me c it before you throw it away. JOHN P. BELL. Shop near Bradham's stable. RydaleI LIVER TABLETS CURE ALL LJVER TROUBljES WE GUARANTEE THESE TAB 'LETS TO CURE CHRONIC CON STIPATION, BILIOUSNESS, TOR PID LIVER, JAUNDICE, AND AL L AFFECTIONS OF THE LIVER. IN TESTINES AND BOWVELS. 50 CHOCOLATE COATED TAB LETS IN A CONVENIENT BOX. PRICE. 25 CENTS. Prepared and Guaranteed by THE RYDALE REMEDY CO., Newport News, Virginia. Dr. W. E. Brown & Co. for chL~renl: cafc., care. .izo opiates ues Coldsj Prevents Pneumoia Bring yur Jch Work to The Time office. Cleanses the system thoroughly and clears sallow complexions of * * pimples and blotches. ab e ntIt is guarated The Arant Co. Drug Store. ___________ For Infants andChde. The Kind You' Have. SAegetablePreparationforAs similating tefooandReg tngthetmachsadwso Bears the 9 I.ta PromotdeDgsionCheerifu nessandRest.Contains neither opiun,Morphine norMineral. o NTNARCOTIC. WXjurWM man Aperfect Remedy for Constipa !ion, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea Worms,Convusions,Feverish- orO ness and LossOF SIEP. Facsimile Signature of NEW YORK. 0~A TO.R, ,LN N EXACT COPYOF WRAPPER. C A T I . - - laI~TC CEAU COWATIE @I 3 BuyTnasand_!il~ The short crops in the vicinity of Manning ave caws prices this fall not to advance as they. did -last year'.ow is the inves tor's opportunity, as with reasonably good cropsaZnd pe.- nes year's land will go muchBhigher. Others think as. we do.-And drr.t a he housan dolrosi h iiiyo ann aed e rif this ant pay adacas he i lasto earNow istheiney yea'sandwil Do muhoige Mangers.hn s o n othe contisnte oveind of M nniongyed fiveecthouMaydidollars. IfRHEAyouEA Dcan' . a ah ewllhl y OHtESTrroEt D mone Mixd.MiediED . SHTOe, Managered Mxe. No.. M .. .M5.PN.2.N..N. 2'00 7 45 ..... OLv........... Acoi...........Ar 25 8-00. ..a. - 2 05 ,750 .... 2 .......McLeod*............ 23 7 5. ..... 2415 8 00 .... 5 .... ....Harby*.............. . 20 7 40....... .... 220 805 .... 7 ........DuRant*............. 18 735............. 2 45 8 30 .....1 ......Sardinia.............. 13 7 0 . ... 255 8 40 ...-.1 ......New Zion'............ 11 70 :. .... - 3 00 8 45 .....1 .......Beard*............... 10 6 55 .... ...... - 3 15 9 00 .... 17 ........Se1oc.*............. . 8 -6 40..-. ....... 4 00 9 45 ....21 '..............Hudson*............. 4 6153.... ...... 4 30 10 15 .....2 Ar...........Beulah.............Lv '0 6 00..... -. ---. P. M. P. M. -P. M. 'ueday. ,No. 1. Stardys,.o. 2. and No..3. Wednesdays. No. 2 and No. 3. Thursdays, No.. R. P. ALDERMAN, Trafilic Manager. - iIQKUGHFA4OfEi0IVU./ % -<>Ieeen the NOR TH JINDSoUThl Florida-Cuba. A passenger service unexcelled for luxury and comfort, 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 TO THE TIMES OFFICE. Cures Biliousness, Sick Headache, Sour Stom ach, Torpid Liver and Chronic Constipation. 4 Pleasant to ta1he 4 Do You Want PERFECT FITIING CLOTHES ? THEN COME OR SEND TO US. We have the best equipped Tailor inz Establishment in the- State. We handle High Art Clothing solely and we carry the best line of Hats and Gent's Furniehings in the city. Ask your most prominent ien who we are, and they will commend you to us. J.L DAVID& BRO, Cor. King & Wentworth Sts., CHARLESTON, - S. C. Geo.. Hacker &Son 31ANUFACTU1IR OF C) Moulding and Buildinz Material, CHARLESTON, S. Sash Weights and Cords. Window and Fancy Glass a Suecialty.. Undertaking. A complete stock of Caskets, Cofins and Fu neral Supplies always on hand. Mv hearse will 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. NORTHWESTERN R. R. 0OF S. 0. 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 Lve..Sumter ..Ar.9 00 5 45 6 27 9 38 N. W. Junction....8 58 5 43 6 47 9 59... Daze1.... 822 5 13 7 05 10 10...Borden... 8 00 4 58 7 23. 10 21...Rembert's. ..7 40 4 43 7 30 10 31...Eerbe..730 4 28 7 50 11 10..So. Rv. Jun-ction. .7 10 4 25 - 8 00 11 10 Ar.. .Oamden. .Lve7 00 4 15 PM PM AM PM BET WEEN WILSON'S MILL AND SUMTER Southbound, Northbound. No. 73 Daily exccpt Sunday. No. 73 PM PM 3 00 Leave.... Sumter ..Arrive. .12 30 3 03..ummerton Junction....2 27 3 20........... Tindal.....-.. -.... 11 55 3 35........... Packsville......... 41 30 3 55........... Silver............-11 00 . ...... ...... Milard. ...... . 4 45......... . .. Summerton..... 10 15 5 25........... Davs............. 9 45 s45...........oran .......... 4. PM AM BETWEEN MILLARD AND ST. PAUL. Daily except Stinday. Southbound. Nor thbound. No. 73 No. 75 No. 72 No. 74 PM AM AM PM 4 05 10 20 Lve Millard Ar.10 45 5 30 4 15 10 30 Ar St. Paul Lve.10 35 4 20. PM AM AM PM PHOS. W 1LSON. President. W. C. DAVIS. J. A. WEINBERG. DAVlS & WEINBERG,I ATTORNEYS AT LAW , MANNING, S. 0. Prompt atten ion iiveu to collections. JOHN s. wIr.soN- S. oL1ERa O'BRYAN. WILSON & O'BRYAN, Attorneys and Counselors at Law, MANNING, S. C. jH. LESESNE, ATTORNEY AT LAW, MANNING, S. 0. OSEAPH F. RHAME, ATTORNEY AT LAw, MANNING, S. 0. J-MCSWAIN WOODS, e TTORNEY AT LAW, Manning, S. C. Office Over Levi's Store. - R. J. A. COLE. DENTIST,' Upstairs over Bank of Manning. MANNING, S. Ci Phone No T7. DR. J. FRANK GEIGER. DENTIST, *MANNING, S. C. Phone No. 6. * CHARLTON DURANT. ATTORNEY AT LAW, MANNING, S. C'. Stos tho coegh and hnsl1ng Kodol Dyspepsia Cure Digsts what you eat.