University of South Carolina Libraries
This is what Hon. Jake Moore, State Warden of Georgia, says of Kodol For Dyspepsia: "E. C. DeWitt & Co.. Chic ago, Il.-Dear Sirs:----l have suffered more than twenty years from indiges tion. About eighteen months ago I had grown so much worse that Icould not retain anything on my stomach. I lya lost 25 ibs: in fact I made up my mma that I could not live but a short time when a friend of mine recommended Kodol. I consented to try it to please him and was better in one day. I now weigh more than I ever did in my life and am in better health than for many years. Kodol did it. I keep a bottle constantly, and write this hoping that humanity may be benefited. Yours very truly, Jake C Moore, Atlanta, Aug. 10, 1904. Sold by W. E. Brown & Co. IDOLS OF THE HINDOOS There Are Hundreds of Millions of Them In India. ~ THE FAME OF JUGGERNAUT. This Idol Has seen Worshiped About Two Thousand Years, and His Na tional Temple Is on the Sands of Puri-The Three Monster Cars. If I were asked to describe India the frst remark that would spring from =iy lips would be, "It Is a land of idols." It would be impossible to com pute the number of idols that there must 'ae at the present time hi India. The Hindoos pretend to have 333,000, 000 gods, and these are represented by innumerable Idols, so that we are quite bewildered with the thought of taking the census of the idols of India. The population of the whole Indian empire Is now about 300,000,000, and possibly the country contains ten times as many idols as people. Benares is the great center of the idol making business, though in all parts of India the trade flourishes. Potters the day through may be seen In the sacred city molding images of clay for temporary use. Sculptors also may be found producing representa tives of the gods sul stone or marble. Carpenters, moreover, make great wooden idols for the temples, and workers in metal-goldsmiths, copper smiths and brass workers-turn out more or less highly finished specimens In their respective metals. When speaking of idols it should be borne in mind that the in 'ges turned out by the potter, sculptor, carver or manufacturer are not considered sa cred or fit to be worshiped until cer tain mystic words have been uttered over them by a priest. The ceremony of "the giving of life," as it is called, to the image is a very solemn affair, and when It is done the idol is regard ed as holy and must ever afterward be approached and treated with the ut most reverence. Out of the many millions of so called gc.,.s is India, all of whom are counted worthy of worship, three are regarded as spec..ally sacred and form the Hin de,) triad or trinity. They are re spectively Brahma, Vishnu and Siva. Of those It is stated the second per son of the trinity only has been rep resented on this earth by human In carnations. Through one or all of these gods the Hindoos believe~ they may ob tain salvation- Brahma represents the way of salvation by w-.dom, Vishuu by faith and Siva by works. It is immaterial which method Is adopted, as they all lead to the same goal. Juggernaut is perhaps the most fa mious name among all the Hindoo Idols, inasmuch as his fame has gone forth Into every land. His temple is situat ed on the sandy shores of Orissa, wash ed by the wild waves of the bay of Bengal. The worship of Juggernaut dates back nearly 2,000 years, and Orissa has been the holy land of the Hindoos from that time till the present day. Sir William Hunter, who was one of the greatest authorities on things East Indian, says in a wonderfully graphic description of the temple of Jugger naut: "On the Inhospitable sands of Purl, a place of swamps and inunda tions, the Hindoo religion and Hindoo superstitution have stood at bay for eighteen centuries against the world. Here is the -national temple whither the people flock to worship from every province of India. There is the gate of heaven whither thousands of pil grims come to die, lulled to this last sleep by the roar of the eternal ocean." Well, I saw on one occasion that marvelous sight, the dragging of Jug gernaut's car and the cars of his brother and sister. The three Idols are inseparable, and ugly things they are, being nothing but huge logs of wood coarsely fashioned into human shape, but without arms er legs. Juggernaut's car stands forty-one feet high and has fourteen enormous wheels. The other two cars are .just a little smaller. The great cars have to be dragged a certain distance-half a mile or more from the temple-and the god will not allow horses or ele phants to undertake the work, but calls upon his faithful worshipers to do It themselves. Immense ropes, or, rather, cables, are attached to the ears, and at the word of command from the priests thousands of men and even women and children rush forward and seize the ropes and range themselves In order and the next moment are straining and pulling at the cumber some conveyances, which at length move with a heavy, creaking noise. Never shall I forget the sight The road was-nilled with tens of thousands of lookers.-on, all wild with excitement, and the fanatics who held the ropes stere dragging the cars along with frenzied zeal. Every now and then there would be a stop that the men might rest, I supposed, but Instead of resting they took to jumping In the air and to whirling themselves around like dancing dervishes and shouttng1 at the top of their breath: "Victoryl Tietory t'o Juggernaut!" Once on a time infatuated worship ers would throw themselves under the wheels of the mighty car that they might be crushed to death, counting it a privilege and a joy thus to perish. Some might demit today If the paternal British gove-Lment did not provide ggainst such catastrophes by taking all due precaution.-John J. Pool, B. D., F. R. G. S., in Los Angeles Times. Yellow Fever. The first appearance of yellowv fever Is said to have been among the eoi diers of Columbus in 1493. A Boon to Elderly People. Moss elderly people have some kid ney or bladder disorder that is both painful and dangerous. Foley's Kidney Remedy has proven a boon to many elderly people as it stimulates the urinat : organs, corrects irregularities and tcnes up thie whole system. Comn menc taking Foley's Kidney Remedy at once and be vigorous. W. E. Brown & Co. Suspicious. The Warden-I think the members >f the choir are going to ask for MI nore money. The Sidesman-Why? wi the Warden-For the last two Sun- lY lays they have been listening to the 11 ;ermon.-Illustrated Bits. In CO a A Striking Misapprehension. V Officer - Excuse me, madam; there hi ;oes eight bells. It's >iy watch on N leck. Mrs. Lansman-Ae1l, I don't at lame you for keeping your watch on cO leck if it strikes as loudly as that. Elarper's Weekly. HE SOUGHT DEATH. The Unfortunate Napoleon Ill. at the Battle of Sedan. Sarah Bernhardt mentions in hgr me- 6 noirs that Napoleon III. had two iorses shot under him at Sedan. Some inaing thrown doubt on her statement CO mnd denied that the emperor was ever of n personal danger at the time, Baron w Cerly, son of the late colonel of the 'ent Gardes, gives what he affirms to hli )e the authentic account of the unhap- P1 >y sovereign'7s persistent attempts to di ourt death when he saw that defeat was unavoidable. On Sept. 1, 1S70, b. it o'clock in the morning, Marshal tr IacMahon, returning wounded to Se- bi Ian, met the emperor riding out to P1 Bazeilles. Napoleon III. realized that ca :he situation was desperate. He rode slowly out, depressed and thoughtful, fa nder a hail of shot. During an hour a 2e inspected the positions. Bullets ained on his escort. Captain d'Hende- st :ourt was killed a few feet away from uj :he emperor. The latter, deliberately di ;eeking death, alighted, ordered his es- hi :ort to remain behind an embankment cl d walked up to a cemetery on a re eight, where he stayed for another to hour, exposed to fire. He mounted P5 again and rode to another part of the geld. General de Courson and Captain ti le Trecesson were dangerously wound- tb ?d by his side. but not a bullet hit him. Tl he emperor at last seemed to despair a: )f meeting his death as he sought it th and rode back to Sedan at noon. In the town itself shells fell thick, and in while the emperor was riding with his th escort up the Grand Rue one burst ti ust in front of him, wounded one .. the Cent Gardes and killed the horses w >f two aids-de-camp. Napoleon III. m looked on stolidly, understanding, per haps, that It was not his fate to die in s3 action. The story that he had two sc horses killed under him is, therefore, not correct. But there is no doubt that the unfortunate emperor, beaten and i, a pathetic and tragic figure, did de liberately seek death on the field to w escape the disgrace of Sedan which he ! Foresaw.-Paris Letter. fe A SERPENT STORY. n Terrifying Experience With a Deadly Lancehead. q The Paris Eclair tells a blood cur- u dling serpett story, the scene of which so was the island of Martinique and the dramatis personae Sergeant Legrand and Private Durand and the snake a deadly lancehead. The soldier had been punished With a night in the cells for some trivial of fense, but as the night was very hot the sergeant had left the door open. In i the morning at 5 o'clock Legrand went t~ to wake his prisoner and, to his horror, b beheld a lancehead snake coiled up and ~ fast asleep on the man's breast The sergeant did not lose his presence s of mind. He stole noiselessly away, a ran to the guard room and, t'ollowed by b all the men on duty, returned to the ~ cell with a bowl of milk and a tin vwhis- t tle. Placing the bowl of milk at the entrance to the cell, the sergeant beganh to play the "Blue Danube." It Is need- C less to remark that the weakness of e the lancehead'Is milk and mnusic. The0 serpent, which was a six foot specd men, awoke, glided from the soldier's 0 body toward the bowl, but it had no 0 sooner buried its head In its beloved drink than ten cudgels descended on it with terridec force, killing it outright. r The soldier Durand, who was in a ~-oon, was taken to hospital, where he lay for many days on the verge ofe madness. He finally recovered and re lated his horrible experience-how he had awoke in the middle of the nightt as the serpent was coiling itself on his bare breast and how he had lain there in an agony for hoursg not daring to move a muscle. Durand was sent back to France as soon as lie had sufficiently recovered. The only trace of his terrible expert-r ence, adds the Eclair, is that his hairr Is now snow white. Love's Young Dream. Another case of the bad boy rudely interrupting love's young dream. A alate giri~ and her Romeo sat in close proximity on the couch in the draw ng room lost to the world. They were b brought back from Eden by her little brother, who, like many of his kind, makes it a practice to butt in at the wrong time. He walked into the room, d planted himself in front of the young man and asked: "Was you ever tied to a fish line?" a "I certainly was not," was the reply. t, "Well," responded the boy, "I heard b pa tell ma last night that you'd make a good sinker."-Manila Gossip. As to Quotations. How many persons can unhesitating-a ly name the source *of the familiara quotations? Many a man goes througha lfe without reading a single play ofs Shakespeare, but probably no English speaking man goes through life with ut quoting him. If be sneers at "a woman's reason," he quotes Shake peare; If he refers to "a trick worth two of that," he quotes Shakespeare again. . Goldsmith's "She Stoops to Conquer" is not a popular work, but one line of t-"Ask me no questions, and I will ell you no lies"-Is known and used by eerybody.________ Made Him a Songster.s Mr. Stubb (in astonlshnment)-Gra- ~ ious, Maria! That tramp has been singing In the ba -yard for the last hour. Mrs. Stubb-Yes, John, it Is all r my fault Mr. Stubb-Your fault? Mrs. I Subb-Inded it is. I thought I was giving him a dish of boiled oatmeal, and instead of that I boiled up the a bird seed by mistake.-Chicago News. Wisdom is knowledge, sound judg- ~ meat and good cond'uct running togeth- ti er in harness and keeping step. Excellent Health Avice. Mrs. M. M. Davison. of No. 319 Gif ford Ave.. San Jose Cal., says: "The ~ wo-th of Electric Bitters as a general family remedy, fox- headache, bifliou. ness and torpor of the liver and bowels i so pronounced timt I axm prompted to say a work in its favor. for the bene fit of those seeking relief from such aflictions. There is more health Lot the digestive organs in a bottle of E-lee C tric Bitters than in any other remedy C I k-now of." Sold under guarantee at's Why James Lee Got Well. Everybody in Zanesville, 0., knows rs. Mary Lee, of rural route 8. She 'ites: "MIy husband, James Lee, firm believes he owes his life to the use e of Dr. King's New Discovery. His ngs were so se'erely alTected that nsumption seemed inevitable, when friend recommended New Discovery. e tried it, and its use has restored t) in to perfect health." Dr. King's _ ew Discovery is the king of throat - id lung remedies. For coughs and his it has no equal. The first dose Yes relief. Try it: Sold under guaran- - e at Arant's Drug Store. 50c. and Trial bottle free. A COMET'S TAIL. he Way This Filmy Dust Train is Toswed About by the Sun. No bridal veil was ever so fliwy as a met's tail. Huudreds of cubic miles that wonderful :!edndt;;e are out eighed by a jarfu! of alt. By means of the spectroscope we ire magicafly tr:a:sported this fairy ume to our laboratrie and have scovered that it is akin to the blue tme of our gas :Pves; for the gas which we cook and the delicate esses of a coa:et t-oth conasht of com nations of hydrogen and carbon, ap -opriately called by chemists "bydro .rbons." When It first appears in the heavens, r removed from the sun, a comet is tailless blotch of light. As a comet swims on toward the in the hydrocarbons of the tail split > under the increasing heat into hy ogen gas and hydrocarbons of a gher boiling point. With a still oser approach to the sun. these more sistant hydrocarbons eventually yield the Increasing heat and are decom sed in the form of soot. Interplanetary space is airless; hence .e soot cannot burn. It must pursue e comet in the form of a dust train e particles constituting that train -e small enough to be toyed with by :e pressure of sunlight. No matter where the comet may be its orbit, whether it has just entered .e solar system or is speeding away, iat plume is Inevitably tossed away om the sun, just as if a mighty wind ere blowing it from the central lu inary. The appendage of shining dust is the 'bol of the triumph of light over ar gravitation.-Harper's Magazine. Cured Hay Fever and Summer Cold. A. S. Nusbaum, Batesville, Indiana, rites: "Last year I suffered for three onths with a summer cold so distress g that it interfered with my business. bad many of the symptoms of hay ver, and a doctor's prescription did )t reach my case, and I took several edicines which seemed only to aggra te it. Fortunately I insisted upon a t.ving F oley's Honey and Tar. It b :ickly cured me. My wife has since ;ed Foley's Honey and Tar with the .me success." W. E. Brown & Co. THE PLARET iUPtIER. (hat the Man of Science Has to Say About Its Wonders. The jolly Jovians are said to be real les and not myths. Not only- are iere said to be inhabitants on Jupiter, at also on some ifhis moons, in the idst of which t~ vast planet, 1,300 mes the size of the earth, spins at .ih tremendous speed that it causeS round the equator a furious wind that lows perpetually at the rate of 250 iles an hour. Those who believe in ie Jovian say that his height runs -omn lfty to fifty-five feet and that e exists for about 800 to 1,000 of irth years. The Jupiter year, how er, consists of 144 months. The 2eans of Jupiter, torn into fury by the arricanes, would pay.no attention to ae z~'on such as moves the tides of ar earth, and it takes no fewer than ye of these satellites to perform this -ork for Jupiter. They travel at va os rates of speed, some flying close >Jupiter's surface, others far off. hey have atmospheres like ours on trth, and a moonlight on Jupiter Is ideed a glorious sight, for these oons have a variety of color; two are me, one is yellow, and one red. Jupi ir needs all her moons at night for lumination, for without them her five ours of darkness would be black in eed. So distant is the sun that broad aylight is hardly brighter than twi ght on earth, and one lone moon ould not reflect enough of the sun's iys to guide the Jovian footsteps. The Human Touch. "Jaie had a doll that would say ~apa' and 'Mamma.' " "Whalt became of it?" "Jane's miother' is an advanced per m.4! :she said the doll was an inex L51 :.~ childish reminder of a grossly e::1.;ed period." "Ad~ what did she do?" "She threw it in a dark closet where anie didn't dare to go. And then a. ay or two later she happened to step o it In the dark and it shrieked 'Mamn- 4 ta!' so naturally that she fell over In faint and bumped her head and had 'o buckets of water poured over her efore she recovered consciouisness." leveland Plain Dealer. Kennedy's Laxative Cough Syrup its gently upon the bowels and there. v drives the cold out of the system and ithe same time it allays intlammnation1 d stops irritation. Children like it. od by W. E. Brown & Co. An Anticlimax. Sir Henry Irving was frequently a ictim to the interjections of gallery . ods. When playing "Macbeth" one I Ight he had reached that dramatic oment In the banquet scene when in reaful fear be bids the ghost of anquo to vanish: "Hence, horrible shadow. Unreal mockery, hence!" e esclaimed and, shuddering convul vely, dropped to his knees, covering is face with his robe. As the ghost anished a shrifti voice in the gallery I roe the momemtary silence.: "'It's all Ight now, 'Enery; he's gonel"-Londonl l tellman. Chills. Fe.ver and Malaria suflerers can now >tain. wood's Liver Medicine in li d form. eu~ates the liver. kidneys and b dder, re ees biliousness, sick hcadache. coi tipation, .ti::ue and weakness. It's tonic effect on the itire system is felt with the first dose. Pleas' it to take. Clears up the comnplexion qulihly. j .00 bottle coutuins I'1- times the quantity of te 50e. size. Soldby the Man!ning Pharmacy. Not Very Consoling. Humorist-The editor makes fun of 1y jokes. Spacer-Well, I don't seet aat you have any kick coming. That's iore than you are able to dc.-Chicago Irn One Lesson. He-Your sister said she couldn't She-Well, can she? "Yes; I made her. We hadn't been1 n the floor a minute when I stepped n her foot. You just ought to have Supervisor's Qu The following Report of C1, uarter of the fiscal year 190S. s! >r what purpose, and amount, is ie requirements of the law: 0. NAM AND F 91 The Bank of Manning, borrowed i 92 Dr J Griffith, suits convicts......... 93 E B Brown, clerks salary........... 94 McIntosh Bros, supplies to poor... 95 A B Windham, bridge work ...... 96 J E Richbourg, part salary. ...... 97 S J Bowman, part salary, Supt Ed 98 D Ed Tarbeville, Constable........ 9S J P Turbeville, Magistrates Conste [00 R S Elliott & Son, supplies to poor 101 Marion Brock. road work.......... 02 G T McLeod, bridge work. ........ 103 J C Jenkinson, supplies to poor... 104 B T Sports, bridge work .......... 05 P D Hodge, hauling and bridge w< 01E J Buddin, lumber....... ........ 07 Charley Butler, ditching... .... LOS J P Gibbons, Jr, hauling and brid 09 Peter Murray, road work....... .. 10 R F DuBose, etal, guards chain.. [11 William Tilly, road work......... [12 William Watson, road work ..... 113 Hampton Watson, road work..... [14 W E Haley road work............. 15 H T Holge, care pauper... ...... [16 January Stukes, ditching......... [17 Charley Butler, ditching......... [1s W W Johnson, r,>ad work......... [19 J E Kelley, road work............ 120'Strauss, Rogan Compr.ny, supplies 1211S W Thigpen, road work......... [22 Linius Pastelle, care pauper.... .. 123 B W DesChamps, 2 mos, salary.... [24 J Henry Lowder, Magistrate's Con [25 R P J Lackey Magistrate's Consta [26 Willie Lowder, road work.......... 127 W M Davis, road work............. 128 John L Richbourg, bridge work... 129 D L Green Company, supplies top 130 C J Gibson, road work.. ...... 131 A P Burgess, witness ticket, etc... [32 S C Turbeville, supplies to poor... 133 S M Haynsworth, Co Bd Equilizati [34 A K Durham, supplies to poor.... [45 R L Bell, work chain gang....... [36 Legg & Hutchinson, supplies chair [37 W H Davis, road work........... 138 Dr A S Todd, professional services 39 J Y Jackson, chain gang.......... 140 J S Evans, road work............. 141 B P Broadway, part salary........ [42 J W Holladay, road work......... 143 W C Sims, lumber and bridge wor [44 Edgar P Mitchum, bridge work.. [45 L S Barwick, Magistrate.... ..... L46 W T Tobias, Coroner .... ..... L47S C Lee, committee work grand ju L48 B A Johnson. supplies to poor .. L49 E J Buddin, lumber and bridge w L50 Charley McCray, ditching...... [51 B P Broadway, unloading car tern [52 J H Lesesne Ex printing case supr [53 January Stukes, ditching ........ L54 T T Stack, lumber.......... [55 S A Shorter, road work.. ........ [56 E R Aid, ditching........ ......, L57 S M Readon, ditching........ !58 D M Bradham, 1 mule ... ....... 158 J McD McFaddin, lumber......... 159 Burt Hatfield, ditching.... ...... 100 A B Windham, bridge work . ... 161 B F Sports, road work............ 162 George Barwick, supplies chain g 163 L L Wells, part salary..... ...... 164 A P Burgess. pact salary. ....... 165 R F DuBoise, etal, guards chain g 166 A J Plowden, road overseer....... 167 R P J Lackey, Magistrate's Consti 168 L P Flemming, road work........ 169 Pinewood Mercantile Co, lumber. 170 C H Broadway, road work. .. 171 WV 0 King, road work.......... 1720C E Jones, lumber............. 173'F J Graham, road work......... 174 Burt Hatfield, ditching......... 175 J H Lesesne, Ex bonds......... 17 S M Readon, ditching.......... 177 W E Hobey, road work.......... 178 W H Boswell, coffin for pauper... 179 F C Thomas, lumber ..... ..... 180j Geo A Ridgill, supplies chain gang 181 S J Bowman, part salary.... 182 WV M Davis, road work ......... 183j Rob Childers, dinner convicts.... 184lGeo M Hicks, lumber.......... 185 E B Felder, jury ticket......... 186 H M Thames, lumber.......... 187 5 J Bowman, office expenses.. 18 B Turbeville, Magistrate's Coni 189 J P Turbeville, Magistrate... 190 E P Geddings, road work... 191 D Edd Turbeville, road wor.... 192 E M Kennedy, lumber......... 193 J J Epps, road work........... 194 R E McFaddin, Ex tice-t pauper 1 195 Lonney Bastelle, care pauper.. 19t6 E J Buddin, lumber........... 197 J H DuBose, ditching........ 198 Willie Rich, ditching.......... 199 January Stukes, ditching... 200 Carolina Portland Cement Co, 3 c 201 M J Davis, road work... ....... 202 M L Shirer, Coroners Constable.. 203 Hugh McFaddin, bridge work.. 204 R E McFaddin, months salary.... 205 T C Owens, bridge work........ 20 J McD McFaddin, lumber... 207 E R Aid, ditching.............. 208 Margaret Coleman, damages.. 209 January Stukes, ditching... 210............. . ............... 211 January Stukes, ditching.... 212 Sam Lindsay, ditching........ 213 S D DuBose, road work......... 214 Sam Lindsay, road work ....... 215 January Stuikes, ditching... 21 Albuirtus Hatfield, ditching.. 2170 C Broadway, road work... 218 Alburtus Hatfield, ditching... 219 Charley Butler, ditching........ [To be conclu tttst: E B. BRowIN, Clerk Board. His Discharge. A touchin2g instance of the humor vhich never deserts a true Irishman ven in his worst troubles is recorded. A soldier was seen In the trenches oldng his hands above the earth vorks. His captain asked: "What are you doing that for, PatI" He replied, with a grin, as he worked is fingers: "I'm feeling for a furlough, sir." Just then a rifle ball struck his arm ust below the wrist. Then a queer ex >ression of pain and humor passed ver his face as he exclaimed: "And faith It's a discharge."-Lon Ion Answers. So There Is. "1 didn't know you intended to nove." "We don't" "But your wife tol m she was out oolng at houses all day yester~day." "Well, that's true enough, but don't ru know there is a vast difference be ween looking 'at' houses and looking for' houses ?" The Wrong Bird. One of the well known magicians Lot along ago had a queer experience, et the people in the theater had more un out ofit than he did. One of his ricks was to shake a sack to show. at it was empty and then to drawi ut of It an egg, after which he would Iways reach in again and bring out he hen that laid the egg. Of course. a had to have help in this, and one, ght he had a new man who did veryting just as he had been told ntil it camne to this net Reaching nto the bag, he drew forth the fowl t the usual time, but Instead of the Len an old rooster hopped down on to he stage, ruffled its feathers and trutted around, crowing with all its night, while the audience laughed nd the magician went out to hunt his, arterly Report. urns approved for the Second iowing number, in whose favor, published in accordance with URPOSE. AM'T. noney......... .......... 3 80 ..................... 10900 ..l...... .............. ... 16 0 g....... .... . 12 00 ....................... 1375 25 00 uc. tion..... ............... 112 50 8 25 ble.......................33 50 r......................... 800 ......................... 4 50 ... ... .. . . ... .. ... .. 4 50 .... ...... . 600 . . . - . .. ."- .. ... .. 9 00 )rk .. ..................... 300 ... ... .. ... ... .. ... .. 42 34 4410 ;e wvork .... .... ....... ....950 .... ... ... ... .. ... ... 103 80 12 00 1 75 ............ ...... *1 3 ... ... .. ... ... .. .. .. 21 73 110 50 chain gang............116 83 .... .... .. . .... .... ... 8 00 4 50 8 00 S166 stable ..................... 1250 ble.................625 ..... ..3 00 S1040 oor ......................2050 4 00 1800 on ....................... 600 8 00 365 I gang ..................... 99 71 ... ... .. ... . . . ... .. 3 00 ...... .. 1125 ... . . .. ... ... .. ... .. 1 25 1 00 ............ ... 15 00 19 00 ... ... ... ... .. ... . .. 1625 .... .... .. .... .... ... 1 73 .... .... .... ... .... .. 6 50 116 83 16 60 ry1........................ 50 3845 irk................... ..... 17 10 30 00 a cotta..1......... 300 eme court.... .............. 19 20 16 41 3 2 S500 ........ 12 71 .. . . . .. . . .. . . . 20 65 25000 S6800 S2800 1900 I ................ ........ 52 0C ..1............... 155 ..... ... ....44 44 ing............. .........95 00 6 66 .ble........................6 2 rk......... .......... ...... 13 0( ....... ................ .... 1 81 171 ... ... .. .. .. . . ... .. 5 00 ................. 2 9 ... .. ... ... ... ... ... . 600 630C 1734 510( 0 ion,20.0( 2019 4671 ................. 47 0( .... terra....................11 21 ........................ 65( .. . . . .. . . . .. .0... 8 4 .. . . .80... . . . . . '11 3 .... ... .... ... .... ..... 4 11 ... ... .. ... ... .. .. .. 314: .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18601 .0....7. ...... 35 2oWsigoD ... . 802 .... ... ... ... ... .... ... 270 .... ... .... ... ... . .. ... 416 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 1 ... .. ... . ... .. ... .. .. 256 ... .... .. . .... .... .... 4395 32stracot. ...... 11 2 ded next e............ 65 R. .. .. ... .. ... .. ... .N 0 ..... ..... .... C......... 8 0. ... ... .. ... .. ... ... .. .E 7G 0 ....-..... .................. 21t 7! L ........... Prsn.. ... -200 Nine...e.....en.....i....i.n. 9G5m ....... ...... ....... ...... D 21ecto Athlet.........t........... 27 8 p.................... addres . . .... ............ 4ec 7y deet onfortek. aynJht ViiiSveris inviredonCo Wofford CoLEtig HR ESONrSNYDR. S. C.Lt.D LLgGrD., Presideatr. col Wie Deqpedtment.w irraGm dorsitoreande cpetin bDicto Atharesi Graonads. Netsession begin5 Septem 16. For catalogue address . . DufreW edas, Spy, burgtnburg.S.. Co.surO . C. i Wpivt omesn chare Wofrld.hrs Setsron fcurth Borday nightsn a aWlFord50 ColeeritefrCtloge Hg BENAMN Prepaator Schoor. doMitoiesand Pie rtaioebidny alrEcLImEd chool. OsmalS FALs: An improvement ovc system of a cold by a satisfaction or money Sold b' Cures Biliousness, Sick Headache, Sour Stom ach, Torpid Liver and Chronic Constipation. j Pleasant to tai~e Bank oftSummerton, Summerton, S. C. CAPITAL STOCK - $25,000 00 4 SURPLUS ------ 8,000 00 STOCKHOLDERS' LIABILITIES - - - - 25,000 00 4 $58,000 00 IN OUR SAVINGS DEPARTMENT We pay interest at the rate of 4 Per Cent. per annum, compounding same quarterly. RICHARD B. SMYTH, President JOHN W. LESESNE, Cashier. Eat and Grow Fat FRESH MEATS AT ALL TIMES. EVERYTHING GOOD TO EAT. Give us a Trial. Clark & Huggins. Kennedy's Laxative Cough Syrup CONTAINS HONEY AND TAR Relieves Colds by working them~ out of t)$stemf through a copious and healthy ,to of the bowels. ~eyesCogsb cleansing the muou embranes of the throat, chest as"As pleasant to the taste as Maple Sugar" Children Like It. Eor BAOKACHE-WEAK KIONEYS Try bemtis Kidney and Bladder Pls-Sua and Sale -W. E. BROWN & Co. GooSo Hacker &Son oldn an Bilin Mateial CHARLSTONS. C Sash eight and ords Windo and aner lass Speiy DorsMAIN, Blinds MHANNISN, S. C. CSvl egs and dSreors, DT H.LESESNLE, MANNING, S. C. oe ATNEY AT7LA MANMInng, C.C LEED & MOBRYAN, CAttornnes and ounsyrsa, MANNING, . . W. . LEvsESN EINEG ATTORNEYS AT LAW,. MANNING, S. C. CATN DURAN, C.ATTORNEY AT LAW, M ANNING, S. C. KATIVE CI1 CONFORMS TO NATION r many Cough, Lung and Bronchi eting as a cathartic on the bowels refunded. Prepared by PINEULE I - THE MANNING PHARMI ORINO mxative fruit Syru W. E. BROWN & CO. THE MANNING TOILEI Our stock of toilet goo all goods are of the most w( does not mean high priced prices in all lines-but from each article affords utmost v When you need Soaps Brushes, Bath Supplies or a parations, you will find it i them. W. M. O'BRYI BANK OF CLAREN We solicit your banking bu patronize this safe and stror tinued growth and operation as a dollar, speaks for itself, We want to be your ban customer, come and see us a you are, come and see us an: do a good thing for yourself. Interest Paid on BANK OF CLAREN IE'l NEED A PAIR SEE We must for our Fall is now beginm In. Pay less an Shoes. Sati your money ITHE HOME OF THE BANK OF MANb Capital Stock..............-.-..--. Surplus,........ ..... ...... .. Stockholders' Liability.............. Total................... .... ITIS EASY' a check in payment of a bill. Much easi And the check is a receipt for your mot THlE BANK 0 invites you to open an account with it t conduct business as all successful mend doesn't mean the same thing as if you 1o Prescribes Dr. Blosser's Catarrh Remedy. Dear Sirs-I first used your Catarrh Care in the case of my son, who had chronic naso-phar yngeal catarrh, with great benefit to him. I Ithin it is quite the finest remedy for catar that has ever been placed on the market. Thanking you ror past favos I am, M. J. D. DANTZLR E.D. this ounr.I has effected som emarkable cures. I do not k-now that it has failed in one instance where it hais been fairy tried. REV. T. -.ALLx Dr. Blosser's Catarrh Remedy is for sale by H. R. oger. Manning. S. C. A month's treat ment rc rd00 Alfree saml fo the asking. W HE N YOU COME TO TOWN CALL AT WELLS' SHAVING SALOON Which is litted up with an eye to the comfort or his customners. .. ... HAIR CUTTING( IN ALL STYLES, SHAVING AND S H AM MP00ING Done wil neatness and dispatch.. .. .. ... A cordial invitation is extended... J. L.. W ELLS. ~Iannig Times B'ioek.. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure1 Dugests what you eat.' IGH SYRUP ML PURE FOOD AND DRUGS LAW. al Remedies, because it rids the No opiates. Guaranteed to give IEDICINE CO.. CHICAGO. U. S. A. LCY. Cleanses the system thoroughly and clears sallow complexions of P pimples and blotches. It is guaranteed PHARMACY: AIDS ds is very complete and >rthy character. Worthy we afford a wide range of the cheapest to the best flue for the cost. , Combs, Tooth or Hair ay toilet articles or pre vorth while to come for N, Jr. Mgr. [)ON, Manning, S C. iness. It is to your interest to g bank, Four years of con 'without the loss ofas much does it not? kers, if you are not already a bout it and tell us why. If rhow. It is never too late to Savings Deposits. DON, Manning, S. C. OF OXFORDS 'Us! $ rake roonm Stock that ing to come d get better sfaction or back. N GOOD SHOES. ING, MANNING, S. C. ... ... .. ... .. .. ... ... .40,000 ... . . ...... ... ... ... . $40000 ... ... . . . .. .. ... ... - 40,000 .... .................$120000 r WRITE er than counting out the actual cash. Ley as well. F MANNING oday. Then you can write checks and >. Remember also hat the loss of your st your cash. University of South Carolina. Wide range of choice in Scien tific, Literary, Graduate and Professional Courses leading to degrees of Bachelor of Arts, Bachelor of Science, Licentiate Instruction, Bachelor of' Laws, Master of Arts, Civil Engineer' and Electrical Engineer. Well equpped Laboratories, Library of over 40,000 volumes. Expenses morderate, many students make their own ex penses. Next Session (104th) begins September 23, 1908. For Announcement write to the President, Columbia, S. C. J. S. BELL, MACHIINEST. Repairer of AUTMOBIEES. and all kinds of Ma chinery. PLUMBING, and Steam Fitting. Cut and Thread Pipe from 1-8 to a3 inches. HEAVY BLACKSMiTH Work Done to Order. J. S. BELL. Kennedy's Laxative Honey and Tar . Pinesalve ACTS LIE O0LTICE Carbolized reasorsmass Kodol Dyspepsia Gure nigents what von eat.