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Positively we must Liquidate our Stock. so in order to do so, we will offer our Stock. consisting of all New. Sea sonable Goods. No cheap. shoddy stuff, but brand new factory lines of Shoes for Men. Women, and Children at manu facture cost prices. This is no fake sale to raise cash, but we mean just what we say; the goods must go in order to wind up our affairs. This is your opportunity. so take ad vantage of it. jW. M. TURNER SHOE GO. SEE THE Fireworks! And the Many Nice Things Santa Claus has left with us. Cannon Cracker Salutes, per pkg.... ...........c. Torpedoes, Loud Popping Fellows, per pkg., 3c. and 5c. Roman Candles, all sizes, each ...... .... ...1c. to 8c. Drums, Dolls, Tea Sets. Guns, Whistles, Driving Reins, Horns, Banks. Books, Book-straps, Wheelbarrows, Wagons, Carts, Tool Sets, Blocks. Marbles. Rubber Balls, Baseballs, Rattles. Rings. Etc. See our Line of Stationery, Jewelry ard Toilet Articles. Prices in keeping with Sc. cotton. Manning Grocery Co. THE SANTA CLAUS STORE. * L WE HARDWAR C0. The place to buy your Hardware of all kinds. Head quarters for SPORTING GOODS The best makes of Double and Single Barrel Shotguns at lowest prices. A full line of Leaded Shells, Powder and Shot, Rifles and Cartridges. Air Rifles for the Boys. The best COOJK!NG RANGES on the market for the money. Stoves of all sizes. -Heaters for the winter. We especially ask the Ladies to inspect our stock Enamel Ware Crockery, Glassware, Toilet Sets, Lamps, Carving Sets. Etc. Beautiful Line Pocket Cutlery. The Greatest REDUCTIGN SALE - Ever Offered ! 25 PER CENT. OFF On the Entire Stock of Clothing from Regular* Prices for 20 Days Only. Blunders of the Types. Ever since the introduction of type setting errors, weird or comical, have emanated from printers' offices. The mistakes are not always to be shoul dered on to - the compositor, for bad handwriting must be taken into ac count. Here are a few instances of actual blunders collected by a proof reader in the course of his daily work: "His blushing bride" was transform ed into "his blustering bride." A major was stated to have "served with destruction In the army." The writer thought he used the word "dis tinction." "The Galley I Love" was the descrip tion of a picture entitled "The Galley Slave." Speaking of theatrical folk, a critic wrote that "nearly all have husbands or wives." The paragraph printed read "hundreds of wives." "They sailed for three days around the cape and finally slaughtered a small Italian" should have been "sighted a small island." One more in conclusion. "He takes delight in talking on his family shame" was a shameful thing to say when "favorite theme" was meant. A Three Legged Bison. In 1S67 Small Eyes, a Blackfoot who had come down from the north and joined the Arapahoes and lived with them, told Black Kettle, a Cheyenne in George Bent's lodge, about having killed, between the. Cimarron and Beaver creek, a tributary of the north fork of the Canadian, a buffalo bull which had only one hind leg. Accord ing to Small Eyes' story, it did not ap pear that the bull had lost one of its hind legs, but rather that it never had had more than one. The hind leg was very large, seemed to be in the mid dle of the body instead of at one side, and there was no sign of any missing leg. It looked as if the two hind legs which the buffalo ordinarily has had in some way fused together. The war party with which Small Eyes was traveling was passing along near a hollow when the bull came up out of it, and some of the men ran ahead, got around it and shot it with a gun. It was not able to run fast. but rather hobbled along.-Forest and Stream. The Chine.e Hoe. The Chinese farmer stands second to rope in all the world. This is all the m ore remarkable since he has really so few implements with which to work the marvels he produces. His only im plements are the hoe, the plow and the harrow. Beyond these the Chinese farmer never dreams of desiring any other. The first of these tools seems never to be on-: of his hands, for it is the one upon ",'hich he relies the most and is his moot effective implement It really takes the place of the spade in England, though the latter is never put to such extensive and,.general uses as the hoe. The Chinaman can do any thing with it but make it speak. A farmer well on in years can easily be recognized amidst a number of work ingmen by the curve his hands have taken from holding the hoe in the many years of toil in his fields. With It, If he is a poor man and has no oxen to plow the ground, he turns up the soil where he is going to plant his rops, and with It he deftly and with a turn of his wrist levels out the sur face so that it is made r dy for the seed. With a broad bladed hoe he dips to the bottom of a stream or of a'pond, draws up the soft mud that has' gath ered there and, with a dexterous swing, flings the dripping hoeful on to his field nearby to increase Its richness by this new deposit-London King. Extract of Knowledge. An article on "Examination Humor" in a periodical called Normal Echoes contains some good "howlers." They are none the less interesting for* com ing from students in training for teach ers. A criticism of William Blake that "as a child he was precocious in po etry, but in later years it developed into dogmatism," is a lesson in the art of being Inarticulate, wtille the remark that "the works of the time were most ly satyrs" Is quaint, though obvious. Of course there is boggling over proper names. There is nothing, indeed, so good as the description of Cromwell as "a man with coarse features and having a large red nose, with deep re ligious convictions beneal:h," or the case of the "lapsed man" who, having *by way of exception attended church, admitted to the rector's wife that ho had benefited, for he had learned that Sodom and Gomorrah were two cities, whereas he had always thought they were man and wife. - Manchester Guardian._____ Fat and Disease. If the Medical Record is right, man is pursuing in tho matter of bodily weight what is bad for him, a cdmmon trick, and woman pines for a phy'sical Ideal that would mean long life if achieved, something rare indeed for women to do. Most men struggle to be fat. Most women diet to be lean. Dr. Brandreth Symonds draws from a study of life insurance weights that people past the age of thirty live long er if below normal weight than they do if at or above standard. Heart dis ease is as rare among the underfat as it is common with the heavy folk, and this is true also of Bright's disease, apoplexy, paralysis, cerebral conges tons and cirrhosis of the liver. Only in pneumonia and tuberculosis do the underweights carry a greater risk. In all the cases which he examined Dr. Symonds found not a single fat man who reached the age of eighty .years, while forty-four short weights passed this mark. The Best Pride. A titled Englishman while In New port talked most entertainingly to a group of ladies about ancestral pride. "Anestral pride Is an excellent thing," he said, "but there are better things. We have long felt In Great Britain that there are better things. I heard the sentiment rather neatly ex pressed Inst season by a duchess. Hers Is a great family, but she was talking to a young marquis whose famhily is Incomparably greater. He Is a rather worthes's, lazy, dissipated young mar quis, and he boasted to the duchess about his people. "'I am very proud of my ancestry, you know,' he ended. "'Yes,' said the duchess, 'and you have cause to be, but I wonder how your ancestry would feel about you?'" Half a League. The class had just' finished reciting "The Charge of the Light Brigade." "Now," said the teacher, "can any one present tell me the meaning of those words, 'Half a league?'" Up shot the hand of Thomas .Tones, aged eleven, football captain and In domitable fullback. "Please, sir, it means they couldn't get enough clubs to make up the full league." Some one had blundered.-Londonl Anears. The Polo St:ar. . Ursa Major and Ursa Minor are known also as the triones and as the Greater Wain and the Lesser Walu. It is curious to note that the larger con stellation was given the figure of the bear by the Arabs and by the Iroquois red men. The assumed! forms are or dinarily fanciful. and the identity of the names in this instance affords food for speculation. Homer uses both bear and wain (wagon) in his references to these stars. It is evident that the name bear was a translation from some original Aryan language, as the constellation is called in Sanskrit riksha, a word that in different Len ders means both a bear and a star. Of course the polar star in the tall of Ursa Minor Is the constellation's point of giory. In this case we may say fairly that the tail wags the dog, because the group of stars was once called the dog's tail, or cynosure. From that we have our word cynosure, that toward which all eyes turn, as to the dog's tail for sight of the pole star.-Mfune apolls Tribune. How Mora Coaxed the Tips. A group of women were standing In the corridor of a summer hotel when an aged scrubwoman started upstairs with a pall of water. Just then a bright faced, buxom Irish chamber maid came up. "This looks purty heavy for the likes of ye," she said cheerily to the old woman. "Better let me help." She took up the paid and whisked off upstairs with it. "How thoughtful of Nora!" "Isn't she kind?" and similar expressions rose to the lips of the women. The proprietor of the hotel and another man also witnessed the incident. "Clever girl, that Nora," said the hotel man to his companion. "She's always doing something like that when there are people looking on. She gets more tips than any two other girls in the house. She could afford to pay me for the privilege of working here. Every summer she makes enough to spend the winter In Idleness at her old home in Ireland."-New York Tribune. Oddities of Color Blindness. Color blindness, or the inability to distinguish certain colors, Is by no means rare. Incomplete color blindness is when a person cannot distinguish one of the fundamental colors, red, green or violet. If a person is told to select colors resembling violet, he will If red blind usually select blues as well as violets. If he is green blind, he will select green or gray, with possibly some blues and violets of the brightest shades. Violet blindness is rare. To a red blind person the American flag ap' pears to have green and white stripes, while the white stars appear on a vio let field. To a green blind person the stripes have the proper colors, but 'the field for the stars Is red violet. To a violet blind person the stripes are nor mal, but the stars appear to be set in a dark brownish gray field. To a person who is totally color blind the blue of the flag appears a light yellowish brown, while the red stripes seem to be a darker brown. An Idol Shattered. Some one has said that people that are fond of hero worship should never make a pilgrimage to see the hiero. Here Is an Instance: An enthusiastic young lady admirer called on her favorite author. In speaking of her visIt she said:. "I'm sorry I saw him. He didn't look at all like an author-no long, wavy hair; no dreamy expression; no eyes fixed on the stars as if to read the secrets of the heavens: no musical, low voice-nothing to suggest the genius. No. I found him leaning oni the garden gate, ln his shirt sleeves, swearing at a grocery boy! And his hair was close cropped, and he looked as If he hadn't shaved in a week.. He was the most terribly human spee~men I ever saw."-Atlanta Constitution The Wickedest Bit of Sea. Nine out of ten travelers would tell inquirers that the roughest piece of water is that cruel stretch in the Eng lish channe!, and ni.ne out of ten fray: eers would say what was not true. As a mattei' of fact. "the wickedest bit of sea" is not in the Dover strait or in yachting, for example, from St. Jean de Lulz up to Paullac or across the Mediterranean "race" from Cadlz to Tan;ier, nor is it in rounding Cape Horn, where there is what sailors call a "true" sea. The "wickedest sea" is encountered li rounding the Cape of Good Hope for tc -'m:stern ports' of Cape Colony. What a Scotsman Wears. A Scottish correspondent, siging himself "Raggis," writes to us as fol lows: Dear Sir--Please state in your column that a Scotsman wears a kilt, not kilts. Thus Harry Lauder went to amuse the king clad in a kilt, not in kilts. We regret to say that we find our selves unable to aeccede to our corre spondent's request. Respect for truth compels us to state that a Scotsman almost Invariably wears neither a kilt nor kilts. but trouaers.-London News, Fiddled Into Office. Losing relates ihat in 1848 he~ met at Oswego, N. Y., Major Cochran,,then nearly eighty yeairs old, a son-in-law of General Philip Schuyler, who told the story of his election to congress during the administration of the elder Adams. A vessel was to be launched on one of the lakes In InterIor New York, and people came from afar to see It. The young folks gathered there, determined to have a dance at night. There was a fiddle, but no fiddler. Young C:>chran was an ama teur performer, and his services were demanded. He grati-fied the joyous copany, and at the supper table one of the gentlemen remarked, in comn medation of his talents, that he was "fit for congress." The matter was talked up, and be was nominated and elected a representative in congress for the district thea comprising the whole of New York west of Schenec tad. He always claimed to" have "fiddled himself into congress." A Hindrance. Suburbanite-Yo)u are half an' hour late this morning. Letter Carrier-Yes, ma'amn. The sections of stovepipe 1 have to wear liside my trousers legs on account of the' dogs you keep along this street hamper my movemnents, ma'm."-Chlcago Tribune. Why She Held on to It Mrs. Willful-My husband told me If I didn't like the brooch you'd exchange It for me. Jeweler-Certainly, maam. I'll be only too glad, as four different lades of your set want It. Rare Indeed. How rarely d.o these three things meet-a man who wants something, is fitted for It and any great number' of persons who thik he ought to hay. fit! -Exhange. Price Never Changed. The Rev. Simon Turple was an elo quent speaker, but he seemed to have at a list of sermons which, when he onee began, he went right through to the la end and then started at the first ser- hi mon again, and so on. w A young man In the congregation tr was about to leave for South Afz's, el but the Sunday before he departed he si attended the church service. b< In the course of his lecture the min- li later used an illustration in which were do the words, "A man can easily purchase cc two sparrows for threepence." w The young man, after being absent be for about three years, returned and (o again on the first opportunity attended b divine service. Strange to say, he pi heard the same narrative by the same si minister, the phrase striking him most te being about the "two sparrows for m threepence." of At the close of the service the win- at Ister, in his courtesy, came and shook m hands with the youth and, welcoming him back to his home, asked him if he noticed any changes about the place. ed The young man, evidently quite un- R concerned, replied, "Aye, man, there's two or three changes, but there's yin in thing I can see-the price o' sparrows R, is aye at the same auld flgger."-Glas- w gow News. ci er New Use For Wheelbarrows. m Mrs. Zella Nuttall, the archaeologist. f] was making some excavations in Mex- w ico. The Indians were removing the A, earth some distance from the point of tl excavation in the customary manner- d< that is, on a piece of coarse cloth tied ci between two poles. stretcher fashion, sg carried by two Indians. This method w seemed rather laborious to Mrs. Nut- tb tall, so she ordered several iron wheel- p1 barrows from the city. When they tb arrived she turned them over to the sa foreman after explaining to him what fa they were for and how to use them. D Next day when she visited the work the Indians had discarded their primi tive parihuelas and were using the bright new wheelbarrows. As each barrow was filled with earth it was picked up by two Indians, one using H the handles and the other the wheel, and carried to the place where the c earth was to be deposited. All efforts ni to get the Indians to use the wheel- fc barrows properly failed, and they kept d on carrying them until the work was Pe finished. Alphabet of the Playhouse. at "We keep learning things all the * time," said an infrequent theater goer. "I stopped In front of a theater the i other day to buy a ticket of a specu lator, and I asked him if he had a good d sLagle near the front. d "'Here's one In 0,' he said, 'thir- Pa teenth row, third seat from the aisle.' hi "Now, you know, I don't carry the it relative positions of the letters of the g alphabet in my mind all the time. I a have to work for a living 'and have m other things to think of. But It struck he me that 0 must be farther down the p1 lie than thirteen, and so I just count- to ed up the letters on my finger tips, and w E made O come fifteenth, and I said so to the ticket man, but that didn't wor ey him any. "'There's no A in this theater,' he said, 'and there's no 1 in any orches Cra in town.' "And, having my finger tip figuring ~ thus handily knocked out, I bought the ki ticket"-Washington P~ost. The Surprise of $livnitsa. "I have never quite made out," sayss a writer in "Near East." "why the a] plain of Slivnitsa has come to be re-a arded as the scene of one of the great t decisive battles of the world's his tory. It did not even decide the Servo- ~ Bulgarian war In 1885. That was de- t iided by Austria intervention. The a" battle of Sllvnitsa is really only re-c markable for the comical fact that tC both sides thought they were, defeated, and while Milan of Servia was hurry ig home in confusion Alexander of Bulgaria galloped all the way back to his capital before he learned that the t tide had turned. Nowadays the vil- I lage looks sleepy enough, poor and dirty, like most Bulgarian villages, but almost gay when the sun shines upon ye its red roofs." Wanted the Other One. A handsome and neatly dressed young woman was walking down the street the other day. followed by her favor ie dachshund pup. It was market a day, and the pavement being some what crowded caused the dog to get some distance beh'nd its mistress.d Fearing It would lose sight of her, she called, "Come along, sir!" t A. would be wit who was near step- a pd up to her and with great politeness ic said, "Certainly, miss." "Ah," she exclaimed as her pet came s running up, "you have made a mis take! This is the puppy I called"- ~ London Tit-Bits Know Them at Once-.a The vicar appointed to a living in an s old English village was anxious to re- g, store his church. On either side of eg the porch were grotesque, not to sa7' as hideous, faces that had become almost al hidden. The vicar had these ancient v faces worked up until their features tl were made distinct Then be took a ha very old lady of the parish to see~ s them and jokingly asked if she could tell him who they were. "Why, bless T my heart, sir," said she, peering at the old ornaments, "lt's you and your good b: lady!" ' 03 Pear Shaped Balloons.F Pear shaped balloons are the fashion vs in Belgium. The point is upward; the S base of the balloon is spherical. It is gi claimed that balloons of this shape 11 pierce the air vertically with far great- b er speed than the ordinary spherical e balloon. Consequently they are stead- d Sut Not to Pay Back. s Dnks-I see Rouge has bought an a automobile. I didn't think he had suf- dJ ficient means to do that. Winks-Oh, v he has all sorts oir means. of borrowing b money and just as many means of t spending it.-Judge's Library. I Too inquisitive. Politician-Congratulate me, ngy dear I've won the nomination. His Wife (In I surrse)Honestly? Politician-Now, '< what in thunder did you want to bring , up that point for?-Exchange. I Soon Gets Over It. "What is the honeymoon, pa?" "Well, the honeymoon Is the onlya period in a man's life during which he considers it funny to come home and 2nd that his dear little wife hasn't' dinner ready In time." The Means to the End. Mrs. Benham-Why does a man hate I his mother-in-law? Benham--Oh, he doesn't hate her; he simply hates to think of the way she got Into his fam Saved by a Photograph. A very remarkable incident occurred Rio de Jani)ro. A passeniger on board one of the rge liners took a photograph of the trbor. It included a small yacht hickh had sailed in the morning with vo men in her, but returned in the ening with one only. The survivor id his companion had fallen ovN' >ard, but his statement was not be ved. He was tried and sentenced to ath. The matter had by this time me to the ears of the photographer, ho remembered that the picture had Feu taken on the day of the "crime" r accident) and that the scene em -aced a yacht. On examining the int more carefully he noticed a small peck on the sail and in order to de rmine what it was had an enlarge ent made. It proved to be the figure a man falling. It was shown to the ihorities at once, and the condemned an was released. Dropsical Oysters. With a sneer the oyster opener point [ to a brownish smear upon a Saddle ock shell. "Some fool," said he, "has been try g to fatten up a batch of Saddle ocks with cornmeal. You might as eln try to invigorate flowers with red beef hash. But it is a common ror to believe that cornmeal or oat eal will fatten oysters. I continually d oysters with their shells stained ith those grains. It makes me laugh. s a matter of fact, there is no such tg as fattening oysters. All you can is swell them up with water, pre sely the same as water swells a nge. You put them in fresh water, hich, being less dense than the soft Bey are accustomed to, by the princi e of osmosis penetrates and distends eir tissues-gives them, as you might .y, dropsy. For my part, I don't like ttened oysters."-New Orleans Times emocrat. Did the Bost He Knew. Geordie Horn was a character well town among the country folk of the tch highlands twenty-five years ago. e belonged to a class rather hard to Issify, for he was neither a tramp ir a farm hand, although frequently flowing the habits of both. Wan Hring from farm to farm, the greater at of the time he was kindly treated 4d hospitably entertained generally. hile be was a man of unusual rength, he' was mentally weak and :ceedingly lady. "He's a gie cute chiel, though slow the uptack" (understanding), - was e way a good many described him. One day he arrived at his friend the stor's and complained of a severe in in his breast The doctor handed m a plaster, with instructions to put on his chest without delay. Geordie Lye him one of his knowing looks id took his departure. The doctor et him a few days later and inquired >w he was feeling now. Geordie re led, "Nae better." "Did you do as I d you with the plaster?" the doctor ant on. "Weel, no, not exactly. I done the at I could. I didn't have a chest, sae stuck it Qn my bandbox" (hat box). An Expensive Dollar. . Not long ago in this town a kind end of the family gave one of the d a do r. Of course it was too uch to le hbe kid get out and spend r candy and gum, so it was rell ously put up on the sideboard or me other safe place to be kept-just r what the deponent saith not. In out a week the juvenile owner of e big round coin remarked at the eakfast table, "Papa, mamma spent y dollar yesterday." The head of Le house took the hint and fished up other dollar, which, like its prede sor, was placed in a good safe place keep. During the next month by a careful tabulated record which he kept on cuff he repaid this elusive dollar St thirteen times. So at the end of Le month you will not be surprised to arn that our friend sent the donor of e original dollar this curt note: Dear Sir-Inclosed you wiul find a chock r 31. It's the dollar you gave our tungster. I return it simply to avoid kruptcy. Already it has cost mie some ire between fifteen and twenty. -Lamah (Mo.) Democrat Dollar Fish. "Have you any dollar fish here?" a *oman asked of one of the attendants :the aquarium. While the question may seem curl is, it was really very simple, for the >llar ish is only a young moonfish. The moonfish is a curious but beau fl creature, almost round in shape id extremely thin and having the elest of pearly sides. It swims on Ige, so that It always presents its des of pearl to view. It takes its ime from its shape and because, irther, in color it suggests the silvery Young moonfish of the size of a indard silver dollar-and they are arcely any thicker-are called dollar ihes because of their resemblance to at coin in size and shape and color, d the woman making the inquiry bout dollar fishes was duly informed at there was none in the tanks at ie present time, but that they did zve them occasionally. - New York ree Sabbaths Each Week In Tangierr Morocco is a country of many Sab tths. The first three days I spent in angler wer~e- all Sabbaths. Arriving a Thursday night, the next day was* 'riday, the Mohammedan Sabbath, 'hich was followed by the Jewish abbath-the Hebrew element in Tan Ler is considerable and strict in re gious observance-and that In turn y the Christian Sunday. Subsequent mparison, however, revealed little fference between any days of the reek. On the Mohammedan Sabbath black flag is hoisted on the minarets t the prayer of dawn. instead of the -hite ag that announces the time of evotions on other days. It remains p until the middle of the forenoon, y which time everybody is supposed have found out what day it is. Few York Post The Word "Chariatan." "Charlatan," says a writer in the ,ondon Chronicle, "is companion to ijack' in our vocabulary, and of this lord the origin is certainly ltalian. t is 'clarlatano,' merely a chatterer, d describes the traveling doctor in Is cart who used to offer in an over rhelming torrent of talk his pills to Wagers In the market place. He was dentist as well as a physician and rrenched out the tooth In public. The nus Is not yet entirely extinct" A Word Breaker. "Fine looking old gentleman."' "Yes, but be was never known to -ive a man his word that he did not >reak it." "Dishonest, eh?" "Nope;a he snters"-Houston Post LIVE STOCK There never has been in this market a cleaner lot of Horses and Mules than can now be found at our stables. Every Horse or Mule we sell goes with our guarantee. Farm Mules, Draft Mules, Carriage Horses, Buggy Horses, Saddle and Driving Horses. Also Dr. White's famous Horse Remedies. It you want a good, strong, handsome Buggy, Surrey or Wagon, we can supply you at prices to meet competition. Come to us for Harness, Saddles, Robes and Whips, and anything pertaining to this line. We want your personal inspection of our Stables, and We feel assured that we can suit you to a Horse, Mule or Buggy, Surrey or Wagon. COFfEY & RTGBY QUALITY. We want to direct your attertion first to our Line of ~ Buggies. Our Rock Hill, Durham, Corbitt and Babcock Buggies embrace every feature to be desired in a service able' and perfect riding Buggy. if it is ease of motion, finish and durability in a Buggy you want, for the lowest dollar, we have it. FREE. You get a ticket with each Buggy that entities you to one chance at our fifty dollar prize. Somebody gets the money. Get in line and win. WAGONS. Our Line of Wagons is complete, and for lightness of draft and durability for the price we offer, is unappro ached in any rival. HORSES. Our car load of Horses was unloaded this morning. Come in and select what you want from a car that has not been picked overr. We will give you the benefit of our twenty-five years experience in helping .you get just what you want. LAP ROBES and HARNESS. We now handle the celebrated 5-A Robes,- and have the best Line ever-shown in the county. Five hun dred satisfied customers using our hand-made Harness. In fact we carry everything in our line you want. Guar antee the quality and. satisfy you with the price when you buy. We want your trade and are in -shapeto get it if you will inspect our line before you make your purchases. Yours wide awake and ready to serve you, - D. M. BR ADHAM. ActQucky.South Carolina. - BLARELDY COUNTY. Delay Has Been Dangerous in rian-CARNO CUTY - niNotice is hereby given, mn accordance ng- with the requirements of law, a~nd Do the right thing at the right time. especially of Section 34 Volume lot the-' Act quickly in times of danger. Civil Code of South Carolina, that the Backache is kidney danger. undersigned intends to imake an appli Don's Kidney Pills act quickly. c ation to the Honorable the General Cure all distressing. dangerous kidney Assembly of the State of South Caro ills. .- lica, at its coming session. for perrms Plenty of evidence to prove this. sion and authority to erect and mamn P. T. David, living at 30 E. Evans St., tain a p roper bridge across the Santee. Florence, S. C., says: "I havel used Rivert from some point on its property Doan's Kidney Piles and I feel I can on th North or East side as may be of safely recommend them to other suffer- baid river in Clarendon County, to some ers. Prior to using them my. kidneys point op its property on the South or - were so weak that I had to arise many West side as may be, of said river in times during the night. My back also Berkeley County; in the locaiity of its' pained me a great deal and I was so sore Mill Plant; andeonnnasting the said Mill 2 and lame that it hurt me severely to Plant with its property on .the ot'her; stoop. When I made a sudden moe side. ment, sharp shooting twinges would $ANTEE BIVER CVPRESS pass through my loins, and I wonld suf- LUMBES .MP Y fer more-intensely. A friend aavised me Decernber 5, 1908. to try Doan's Kidney Pills, I procured ~ a box and used them accordingto-d rections. The backaches and pains soon ular and normal and at present I am The boofts for thle .colleetq o able to sleep well at night. Doau's Kid- taxes will open on October M, MRS ney Pills have done me a great deal of and close on March 15, 1909. ThJi good, in fact proved to be the best rem- levies are as follows: edy I ever used for the kidneys.". State, 5* mills; ordinar-y constgy Fr 'sale by all dealers. Price 50 25 :,uills; special road, + mill; consta cents. Foster-Milbuirn Co.. Buffalo, tutional school tax, 3 mills. - New York, sole agents for the United1 Interest on court house hopas,4. -- States. mill; imterest on county bonds, r Remember the name-Doan's-and mnill; special tax for Scho.oJ ,Distrct 'take no other. No.'1, 2 mills; special ta; for .Sehool District No. 2, 3 mills; .special tag fo~r School -District No. , .3 mills; specefa STATE OF SOUTH CAROLNA, spe ioSaDerc *m 9, 8 mills:; :apeeial .ta; for .School pDs-. dC''' " ""r"ict'** .*10,'-3 miils; speia tax for 101 u n u e School District No. 11, 2 mills; spe COUR OF o~ro PLIAS. eial tax for School District No. 15. 3 COUR OF OMMO PLES. mills; special tax for Schocl District Samuel N. Welch, H. Olin Welch, No. 16, 2 mills; special tax for School Robert J1. Welch, Martha S. Creecy. District No. 13, 2 mills; special taix Eddie S. Barrow. Mary J. Smnith, Ifor School District No. 19, 4 mills; Salie J. Wallace. Laura V. Welch, special tax for School District No.20, Venetia 0. Welch. Emma 0. Welch. '4 mills; special tax for School District Maria F. Welcli., ?laintifra No. 21, 3 mills; special tax for.School against District No. 22, 9 mnills; special tax Joe . Johanson, Annie A. Thigpen for School District No. 24,- 1 mIl; and Susa~n Ethel Weleh, .the last special tax for School District No . naed an infant .eigtee.n years of 3 mills; special tax for School 1)is age, Defeud*antZ. trict No. 26, 4 mills; special tax for Deree for SaLe *.d rit,ign of .Seitoo Distrit No.. mil;pe UNDER AND B'y VYlTUE ,OF A: 9.mills. L. L. WELLS Decretal Order of thc Coni~r,t of.Com&- Cunty Treasurer. m Pleas for Clarendon County, dated the 9th day of December. 1908,$ will sell to the ~highest bidder fo Ntce of Discharge. : ay, A. D 1909 the same being I will, apply to the Judge of Probae ej aedy, .in front'of the Court House for Clarendon County on the 5th day of:2 ateanin. in said County. within January 1909 for letters of dischargre as egalhours of sale, the follow'ing real adminis'trator of the estate of JTuly Wat eate son deceased. DPA ~ I.~i lta hat parcel or tract of laud I y. Administrator. - ing, being and situate in Clarendoun St. Paul, -S. C. December 4th, 143. County, containing Four hundred - - and nine (409) acres, more or less, anid ITEE & McLELLAN, bounded as follows, to wit: Onth Robet b ith; o . tA.enEatyby Civil Engineers and Land Surveyors7 lado W. W, tiennedy; on the andth by lands of Bartow Smith. ~SUMTEE, s. c. and on the WVest by lands of M. G. Dand JoesDror papers. anZan Pile Reasedy Pucasrt pay fo AMB1LE, .EIE -. IN ". R Fl Sheriff Clarendoni County BEAY & BEATY,ase deyan adra t ENGINEERS AND CONTRACTORS.DrK gsNe Lie ls DriCg.P Lmtattnint ut-of- The best in the world. wpatrons.sios.c CHARLTON DURANT, s.eoecoeghandhees1Saan ATTORNEY AT LAW, jilf~ l~