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Mrs. McRaney's Experience. Mrs. M. McRaney, of Prentiss, Miss., writes: "I was confined to my bed for! three months with kidney and bladder trouble, and was treated by two physi cians but failed to get relief. No human tongue can tell how I suffered, and I 16 had given up hope of ever getting well until I began taking Foley's Kidney Remedy. After taking two bottles I felt like a new person, and feel it my duty to tell suffering women what Foley s A Kidney Remedy did for me.' W. E. Brown & Co. C A NOTORIOUS OUTLAW Fearless "Billy the Kid," Who h Reveled In Carnage. ONLY A BOY, YET A TERROR.' c( This Youthful Desperado of the South- 1o western Territories Was but Twen r ty-one - When He Met Death at the, Hands of Sheriff Pat Garrett. tb When General Lew Wallace was governor of New Mexico and the war d that raged for -several years between the rival cattle companies was at its height "Billy the Kid" had reached th the flood of his murderous career. He ir arrived in Lincoln county to take sides or in the cattle warfare,; known and hi feared in every range town and min- 73 Ing camp in the southwestern terr tories.' Pure wanton love of carnage was all that attracted him to Lincoln county. s With the band of desperadoes he led ! he raided ranches, "shot up" towns, t killed, burned houses and committed d outrage after outrage with the blind i recklessness of a maniac. Fear was w extinct within him. He cared no more for detachments of cavalry than he Pr did for cowering sheriffs. q Affairs in New Mexico finally came Z to such a pass that half the cattlemen El paid the youthful desperado tribute. a It was only after Pat F. Garrett was B made sheriff of Lincohi county and the th author of-"Ben-Hur" (General Wal lace) "- that fearless gun fighter t mbler to capture Billy the Kid J. at a determined effort was made to 3e end his reign of terror. m The obstacles that Garrett had to en- h counter called for all his headlong en- ai ergy and nerve. Billy had. the entire s countryside in a state of abject.terror; re friends were ready to give him timely warning of rursuit; ranchmen daredw not deny him lodgment or conceal t ment. Pat Garrett undertook the capture in it October. ISSO, and on Dec. 20 he sur- P rounded the Kid and his band in- a p1 deserted house near Stinking Springs. it After a siege lasting most of the day the outlaws' ammunition was exhaust- Pr ed. Billy the Kid- surrendered. He of and his four followers, surrounded by fr a great force of armed men, were taken H -to Las Vegas and thence to Santa Fe o for safe keeping. . la An array of indictments charging "i murder confronted him. He was tried on one Indictment and acquitted, then ti tried on another and convicted. He ci *carried himself throughout with sneer.. se Ing deliance. After he had been sen tenced to hang Gari-ett took him ~to ti Fort Stanton, near Lincoln. Two depu- .d: -- ties armed with Winchesters were as- tU signed to guard him in the temporary ti jail in the Murphy & Dolan store build ing. B In some mysterious fashion the E Kid possessed himself of a revolver, tr shot ,down his guards, seized their xr weapons. and appeared at the window. u) -When another guard appeared the 12 * prisoner riddled his body with buck- jE shot Then he called to anoldflmanlon f the plaza to- bring him a fie. Filing T off one of his shackles, he called for a horse.. One wasi brought, and he es- m For nearly three months after that a Billy .the Kid led ' a fugitive life. re Garrett dogged him patiently and final- ct * y got wind of his hiding place-the -ranch of Peter Maxwell, near Fort be -Sumner. It was nearly midnight when qi Garrett, and two deputies quietly ap- n< proached the Maxwell hacienda. Gar- ci rett crept into the room where Max well was sleeping. Softly awakening ti the sleeper, he questioned him concern- t ing the whereabouts of the Kid. of At that moment the hunted youth a sprang into the room. coiling out in p Spanish, "Quien va?" ("Who comes ii there?") It was Billy. He was un armed, and as he reached for his rifle tl Garrett shot him. The body of Wil- w * 1am Bonney (Billy the Kid) was bur- s< led in the military cemetery at Port di StantonJuly 15. 1881. His age at the ci time of his death was twenty-one years seven months. There his body is to- it day,'though in later years a corpse was It exhibited throughout the west as that ti of the famous young outlaw.-Harper's tl Weekly. . S None Left Alive.e "An orator," said one of' our states- k men, "was addressing an assemblage tl of the people. He recounted the peo- F ple's wrongs. Then he passionately se cried: f "'Where are America's great men? o: Why don't they take up the cudgel in y our defefise? In the face of our man- g ifold wrongs why do they remain cold, a, immovable, silent?' ti "'Because they're all cast in bronze!' si shouted a cynic in thie rear."n Iz Bucolic Humor-.3 "Hiram, why don't you speak to that city gal out there a-slttin' on the grass a with her back up agin your No Tres- ~ passing' sign?" i "Mandy, that young woman is be- el neath my notice."--Boston Transcript But Not the "One." e Mrs. Hoyle-My husband had $100, 000 when I married him. Mrs. Doyle How much has he now? Mrs. Hoyle Oh, he has most of the ciphers left! Bohemian.____.__ The Whale's Blow.B Porpoise-What is the whale blowing se about? Dogfish-Oh, he got so many e' notices for his feat in swallowing Jo.. a] nah 'hie's been blowing ever since.-Ex- ' . chage.A Progress Is the-real cure for an over smate of ourselves.-Macdonald. Marked For Death. "Three years ago I was marked for a eath. A grave-yard cough wa tearing fit v lungs to pieces. Doctors failed to 'lp me. and hope had tied, when my sband got Dr. Kiuig's New Discov y," says Mrs. A. C. Williams, of Bac, v. "T'he first dose helped me' and im- 0 ovement kept on until I had gained d nounds in weight and my health was lly restored."~ This medicine holds eworld's healing records for coughs dcolds and lung and throat diseases. m prevents pneumonia. Sold under a 'rantee at Dr. W. E. Brown & Co.. T J. .E. Arant's drug store. 50c and i Tri bottle free. fr NE SANCY DIAMOND egend of Louis de Berquem and the Celebrated Gem. NIGHT LAMP FOR A KING. heckered Career of the Brilliant Stone After the Death of Charles the Timid. Some Facts About the invention of Diamond Cutting. Louis de Berquem, says tradition, as a poor jeweler's workman, but fell in love with the daughter of a ealthy jeweler. This avaricious fa er would not give his daughter in arriage to any man not ossessed of >d. Louis, having neither "expecta ons" from relatives nor favor at >urt, sought to make his fortune. He Ad often heard the father of his be ved remark that the man who discov ed a method of cutting diamonds ould become very wealthy, for up to at time they knew nothing more an to scrape off the gravel, and the amond was left in its native state. eiher lime, fire nor the mill could af et the diamond. After many investigations and deep ,ought Louis bethought himself that on is fashioned with steel, which is tly hardened iron, and it occurred to m that perhaps the diamond would eld to the diamond. He made an :periment, which was at once crown : with success. A few days later he presented him if before the rich jeweler with two amonds cut into facets. He obtained :e hand he sought and amassed a eat fortune by his secret, which he, vulged only after he had become ealthy. ing Charles the Timid was the 'incipal customer of Louis de Ber iem. The fastidious enemy of Louis L then possessed a large diamond, ace become celebrated, accounted nong the finest of precious stones. at this diamond was ill shapen, and e fires which it held burned in vain. Louis de Berquem cut and polished is stone, and nothing could equal the y of Charles the Timid when the weler brought him the great dia ond, so glittering with light that It up the darkness, and this to such t extent that the prince said. "It will rve me as a night lamp." Berquem ceived 3,000 ducats for his work. ..s for the diamond, this is the one hich was found in January. 1477, on ,e body of Charles the Timid after ,e battle of Nancy. A soldier picked up, sold it for one gold piece to a lest, who In turn sold it for three ecesof gold to a merchant, who took to the Duke of Florence. From the hands of this prince it Lssed into the possession of the king Portugal He sold It for 70.000 ancs to- one of the companions of enri III.. Nicholas de Harlay, baron Sancy. -Since this time the first rge diamond to be cut is known as he Sancy." This legend leads to other considera ns of the cutting of diamonds as ibed to Louis de Berquem at Brus 1s in 1465. Hardly any one* will assert boldly at no diamonds were cut before that tte, but It Is reasonable to suppose at Louis de Berquem regulated cut g by arranging the facets. Long before the -brth of' Louis de arquem cutting was known-in India ren n Europe we. find among the easues of 'the churches thick dia onds ut into table and culet, the >per sides beaten into sections. In 60, according to the Inventory of the wels of Louis, duke of Anjou, is und an entire series of cut diamonds. tiere is mention of a fiat diamond th six sides, of a heart shaped dia ond; of a diamond with eight sides, a lozenge shaped diampnd, of a dia ond pointed on four sides and of a liquary In which was set a diamond Lt In the shape of a shield. History Informs us that -150 years fore the first work of Louis de Ber mem there were at Pari$, at the cor 'r of the Corroyerle, several diamond The Duke of Burgundy, after a fas lious repast given at the Louvre to .e king and the French court in 1403. lered to his .noble guests eleven dia onds estimated to be worth 786 eces of gold, the money of the pe It is hardly possible to suppose that ese were uncut diamonds; all of hich goes to prove, notwithstanding me opinions, that Louis de Berquem d not nvent the process of'diamond It is no less interesting to follow the rtunes of the Sancy a little further. remained in the Saucy family some mue, aid Henri III. took it from em. It was destined to serve as a edge for the raising of a body of griss soldiers, but the servant intrust [ with bringing this diamond to the ng was attacked, put to death, and .e diamond was thought to be lost. inally it was discovered that the rvant had been assassinated In the 'rest of Dole and through the care the priest had been buried In the llage cemetery. Then the Baron de mey resolved that the diamond must >t be lost. In fact, they found it In te stomach of the hapless. faithful rvant. wbo swallowed It at the mo ent that he fell. According to the entory of 1791 the Sancy weighed M carats. It disappeared in 1792 to reappear in assia. . Its value is estimated at a llion francs. Before the revolution was among the French crown jew s.-New York World. Silence is sometimes the severest -iicism.-Baxter. This Is Worth Reading. Leo F. Zelinski, of 68 Gibson St., affalo, N. Y., says: "I cured the most moing cold sore I evr had, with ack~len's Araica Salve. I appcied this le once a day for two days, when 'ery trace of the sore was gone."- Heals I sores. Sold under guarantee at Dr. . . Brown & Co., and Dr. J. E. rant's drug store. 25c. Off His Mind. "Have you forgotten that X that you yrrowed of me some time ago?" "Oh, no. I still have it in my mind." "Well, don't you think this would be good time to relieve your mind of The sorrow of yesterday is as noth gthat of today is bearable, but that tomorrow Is gigantic because in stinct.-Eurpides. loase coughs and stuffy colds that ay develop into pneumnonia over night ee quickly cured by Foley s Honey and r, as it soothes inflamed membranes, als th lungs. and expels the cold LAND OF THE CROSSBOW. The Deadly Poisoned Arrows of the Lissoo Sharpshooters. On the wild frontier between China and British Burma is a barbarous tribe which has no civilized supervision. George Forrest, an English traveler, thus describes the chief weapon of these people: "If I had to suggest a title for a book on the upper Saiwin I should call it 'The Land of the Cross bow,' which is the characteristic weap on of the country and the Lissoo tribe. Every Lissoo with any pretensions to chic possesses at least two of these weapons-one for everyday use in hunt ing, the other for war. The little chil dren play with miniature crossbows. The men never leave their huts for any purpose whatever without their cross bows. When they go to sleep the 'nu kung' Is hung over their heads, and when they die it is hung over their graves. The largest crossbows have a span of fully five feet and require r. pull of fnlly thirty-five pounds to string them. The bow is made of a species of wild mulberry of great toughness and flexibility. The stock, some four feet Ilong in the war bows, is usually of wild plum wood. The string is cf plaited hemp and the trigger of bone. The arrow, of sixteen to eighteen inches, is of split bamboo about four times the thickness of an ordinary knitting needle, hardened and pointed. The actual point is bare for a quarter to one-third of an inch, then for fully an inch the arrow is stripped to half its thickness, and on this portion poison is placed. "The poison is invariably a decoction expressed from the tubers of a species of aconitum which grows -on those ranges at an altitude of 5.000 to 10.000 feet. The poison is mixed with resin or some vegetable gumto the consist ency of putty and is then smeared on the notched point The 'feather' is sup plied by a strip of bamboo leaf folded into' a triangular form and tied in a notch at the end of the a'rrow, with the point of the angle outward. The re duction in thickness of the arrow where the poison is placed causes the point to break off in the body of any one whom it strikes, a.. i, as each car ries enough poison to kill a cart horse. a wound is invariably fatal. Free and immediate incision is the usual remedy when wounded on a limb or fleshy part of the body, but at Chengka the uncle of the Laowo chief showed us a prep aration which resembled opium dross and which he said was an e'ffective antidote. -"With few exceptions the Lissoo seemed to us to be arrant cowards. but the crossbow and poisoned arrow are certaiply most diabolical weapons. An arrow from a war bow will pierce a deal board an Inch thick at seventy or eighty yards. Some of the Tsekou natives were so expert that they could. hit a mark four inches in diameter re peatedly at sixty to eighty yards. As no one goes anywhere without his crossbow and his bearskin quiver full of poisoned arrows and as every vil lage is at feud with every other vil lage mutual suspicion is inevitable. In open fight the Lissoo are usually careful to keep at a respectful distance from each other and behind oxhide shields which protect the whole of the body. But if battle, is rare, murder and sudden death by ambush in the jungle are common." Drank and Remembered. A porter in a big New York ware house in Greenwich street was recent ly discharged for gettingdrunk and los ig a valuable parcel. The discharge sobered him instantly, coming as a sud den' hard shock.' He said he would take the oath never to touch liquor again, but his pleadings for reinstate ment were unheeded- He searched everywhere for the parcel, but could not recollect what disposition he had made of it. Of his honesty there had never been a question in twenty years. Overcome by the loss of his place, he got violently drunk and while in this <ondition recollected where'he had left the parcel and went and recovered it New York Times. Where Willie Was. The professor (at the dinher table) Oh,' by the way, Mrs. Chopsticks, have you seen your little boy Willie l.ately? Mrs. Chopsticks-No, professor. I have not seen him since 10 o'clock. and I can't imagine what has become of him. In fact, I am very much worged about him. Professor-Well, seeing Martha pour me out that glass of water just now reminded me of something that I Ihad on my mind to tell you some .time ago, but which unfortunately escaped my memory. It was just about 10 o'clock, Ithink, that I saw little Willie fall down the well-Atlanta Constitu ISympathy For the Orphans. An elephaznt while stamping th' ugh the jungle one day quite unintent. a ly stepped upon a mother bird, crush ing it to death. Hearing the cries of the little brood in the bushes near by, she sought out the nest and with a sym pathetic sigh said: 'Poor little things! I've been a' mother myself. I'll keep you warm." And she then proceeded to sit upon the nest-From George T. TaignsFpabe. "The Kind Hearted Modern Version. "Then you will be ever at my beck and call?" inquired Aladdin. "With the exception of Tuesday and Fridav afternoons, Monday and Satur day evenings and every other Sunday," firmly replied the genie.-Washington IHerald. The Knocking. "De successful man." said U~ncle Eben, "keeps quiet se's he kin hear op portunity knockin' at de do.' De fail ure tries to do all de knockin' hisse'f." -Washington Star. CATARRH OIURED AT HOME Trial Treatment of Dr. Blosser's Catarrh Remedy Free to Sufferers. If you have catarrh of the nose. throat,.or luns. If you are constantly spitting, blowing the nose, have stopped up feeling, head noises', deafness, asthma, bronchitis or weak lungs, Iyou can cure yourself at home by a remedy so simple that even a child can use it. It will cost you only a postal card to get a liberal free trial package of Dr. Blosser's won derful remedy. It is sen by mail to every intested sufferer. Certainly no offer could be more liberal. The full treatment is not expensive. A pack ae containing enourh to last one wthole month will be sent by mail for s1.00. IA postal card with your name and address sent to H. R. B3OGE R, Manning. S. C., will bring 'you by return mail the free trial treatment and an interesting booklet, so that you can at once begin to cure'yourself privatelv at home. Crazy to Expect It. Harduppe--Say, old fellow, lend me a hundred, will you? Riggs-A hundred what? Harduppe-A hundred dollars. I- Riggs-Oh, stop your joking. Hlarduppe (carnestly)-,Toking? I was never more serious in my life. I'm broke. Riggs-My dear man, you're not broke; you're cracked!--- Catholic QUICK WIT SAVED HIM. The Way a Criminal Fooled a Paris j Police Chief. ye In the "Memories" of M. Claude, H chief of police during the reign of Na- P: poleon III., there is much that is fas- ni cinating to lovers of detective stories. ne One of M. Claude's experiences was th that in which he was outwitted by a t clever criminal who saw in the police di chief's resemblance to Beranuger when at the poet was at the height of his pop- 'a ularity a means of escape from cap- to ture. The criminal had returned to of Paris and was living as a rich student de in the Latin quarter, then in the height1 N of its bohemian splendor. Claude thought to make an easy capture of his man by attending a cer tain famous ballroom at the hour when pr dancing was at its height. He tells bu the story: no "I had no difficulty in discovering 1 him seated among a swarm of pretty fr3 girls and bewitching danseuses. wl "Convinced there were but two ways ra of getting the better of a cunning ene- sh my-surprise and audacity-I walked' straight up to where my rascal was a seated. I walked slowly, with steady TI steps, my eyes on the eyes of my man. ro He was a dark skinned. handsome fel low, with a face as brazen as it was, so cynical. I saw by an impreceptible. sign that he recognized me. He turn-! ed pale-he was mine! de "I was almost near enough to cap ture him when I saw him bend to the : ear of one of his companiqns. Instant ly all the gigls surrounded me and stood in a feverish, excited. ardent phalanx before me. They formed an impenetrable barrier, behind which my rascal escaped, while the women press ed eagerly upon me, crying out: Al "'Beranger! It is Beranger!' "The magic name presented upon P1 the youthful spirits there the effect of an electric spark. All the dancers of the establishment stopped dancing HI and surrounded me with acclamations' The students and young girls rushed up to me, some bearing bouquets. oth ers glass in hand. I was literally cov ered with flowers, while the whole place rang with shouts, a hundred times repeated, of 'Vive Beranger! VFive Beranger!' "I was aghast, and yet I understood the trick. On the point of being col lared by me, the man I had marked down had recourse to this shrewd game, which must have succeeded even better than he expected. I certainly had some points of resemblance to the illustrious song maker or the whole world of students and grisettes In the Latin Quarter would not have fallen so readily into his trap. I was as bald ( as the poet at that time, and at all times I have had a certain good na- t tured, sympathetic benevolence in my appearance such as the portraits of Beranger show to this day. "Well, if the- youth of Paris counter signed the intentional error of my clev er scamp I owed it to my resemblance to the poet Though I was tricked. I p was well tricked. It was not for me to own to these giddypates that I was not Beranger, but 'Claude. the police- $ man, the agent of all the prosecutors. judges and lawyers who under the restoration had done so much harm to their idol. I escaped from the ova tion, which was becoming delirious G. under an avalanche of flowers." - G4 Woods Liver Medicine in liquid form regula tes the lhver relieves sicle headache. -constipm tion, stomach. kidney disorders and acts as a gentle laxative. For chills, fever and m-alarla. Its tonIc effects on the system felt with the first -ose Thet1l.00 bottle contales sM timeaiunUch as the 5oc size. The Manning Pharmacy. qu Setti-.d I:: Themselves ac In western Chi~iin ureain travelers se recently found :i sI:x,'ue :nethod .of of settling disputes. One of them writes: ni "While we called the middayi halt at tw Tachade. we aisked the villagers con- ex cerning some new~ jr-aves which- we an noticed in a field close by Th~ey an- W swered, 'Our- heod man and two oi hers in were killed three montrhs ago in at feudfo with a village hiigher up the hills:' 'Is p, it settled now? -'Yes.' 'Did you re- g port the matter to I.aowo? 'No. p1 What would have been the use': We th, just settled the matiter ourselves.' m< 'How? Oh, we killed eight of the Sc other party.' O The Apple of Discord. At the marrige~ of Thetis and Pe lens, where all the gods and g~tadsses met together, Discord threw on the ta ble a "golden apple" for "-the- mostF beauiful." Juno, Minerva and Tenus put in their separate claims aznd. not being able to settle the point, referred the matter to Paris. who gave :Judg. ment to Venus. This brought on him the vengeance of Juno and Minerva, to whose skill is attributed the fall of Troy. ______ Literary Taste. "I have written a book that every body ought to read," said the author. "9 am afraid it'won't do," answered the publisher. "What the public seems to want now is a- book that nobody ought to read."-Washngtonl Star. 'Mledicine That Is Medicine. L "I have suffered a good deal with ma laria and stomnach complaints, but I ( Ihave now found a remedy thbat keeps me well, and that remedy is Electric ~Bitters: a medicine that is medicine for I stomachi and liver troubles, and for run down conbitions," says W. C. Kiestler, of Halliday, Ark. Electric Bitters puri fy and enrich the blood, tone un the - nerves, and impart vigor aud energy to o the weak. Your money will be refund- 0 ed if it fails to help you. 50c at Dr. W. E. Brown & Co.. and Dr. J. E A:-ant's drug store. B How Needles Are Made. Needles are all made by machinery. The pIece of mechanism by which the ti needle is manufactured takes the J rough steel wire, cuts it Into proper lengths, files the point, flattens the mi hea, ieresthe eye, then sharpens an th iyistrumnent and gives it that Be polish familiar to the purchaser. There 'ap is also a machine by which needles are b counted and placed In the papers ~ ic whIch they are sold, these being after- n ward folded by the same contrivance. wI be it Was All Within. ( A practical joker carried an onion of in his pocket to the depot when bid ding farewell to a young lady and__ tok a bite now and then to induce tears. Before the train. departed he had eaten the entire onion. The young lady, perceiving the situation, re marked, "Ah, you have ' swallowed your grief!"-Harper's Weekly. Restless. Caller-So your cook has passed away to a better place? Hostess-Yes, but I don't know If she'll stay. Poor Bridget was very hardc to suit.-Boston Trav "The poet Is born, not made," sayeth ( the proverb. In other words, it Isn't bi own fault Beneath Him. "These chefs!" said uue New York ultiiilliouaire to auother. -Mine, ,u know, draws a thousand a month. e used to be at the Cafe Royal In iris. But his independence! One ght I gave. just to show off, a din r of 200 covers. The afternoon of e dinner. 1 found him motoring in e park in a taxicab with two French .neing girls. Of course I hailed him Ld took him to task. 'Oh.' said he, dinner of that sort I always leave my assistants. With such masses food it is impossible to introduce licate, subtle or original cooking. >w, little girls, shall we drive on?' " gonaut. Too Much For Him. smithson used to labor under the im ession that he was a born humorist, t he has given up trying to be funny w. e called one day on an old school end and was shown into a room -ere his chum's sister was busy ar aging a quantity of dried grass which e had collected. 'What a quantity of dried grass you ve collected, Miss Ritchie!" he said. ten his humor burst forth. "Nice om for a donkey to get Into" 'Make yourself at home, Mr. Smith n" said the girl pleasantly. When he arrived home all the humor is crushed out of him forever.-Lon n Scraps. J. S. BELL, MACHINEST. Repairer of TOOBILES, and all kinds of Ma chinery. .UMBING, and Steam Fitting. Cut and Thread Pipe from 1-8 to 6 inches. AVY BLACKSMITH Work Done to Order. J. S. BELL. ORINa axative Fruit Syrup Pleasant to take Che new laxative. Does tot gripe or nauseate. ,ures stomach and liver roubles and chronic con tipation by restoring the Latural action of the stom ich, liver and bowels. refuse substitutes. Price 500. W. E. BROWN & CO. ATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of Clarendon. COURT OF COMMON PLEAS . A. Norwood, Jr., Plaintiff 'against erge P. Plowden and John Reid,.De fendants. SUMtIONS FOR RELIEF. (Complaint Served.) the Defendants George Plowden td John Reid. Tou are hereby summoned and re ired to answer thae Complaint in this t~ion of which a. copy is herewith 'ved upon you, and Ito serve a copy your answer to said Complaint on subscriber~ at. his office in. Man 2. Clarendon Countj', S. C., within enty days after the service hereof, ciisive of the dray of such service; d if you fail to answer the Complaint thin the time aforesaid, the plaintiff tais action will apply to the Court -the relief demanded in the Coin rhe defendant, George Plowden, 11 also take notice that the Comn tint in this action was duly filed in e office of the Clerk of Conrt of Comn m Pleas for Clarendon County. uth Carolina. on the 22nd day of tober, 1908. CHARLTON DURANT. Plaintiffl Attorney. EPPAREL SHOP OR MEN ND LADIES Everything of the best for the personal wear and adorn ment of b;oth sexes. We fill mail orders carefully and promptly. >AVID )UT FITTING :OPANY, Charleston, S. C. [ATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, Cminty of Clarendon, rJames M. Windham, Esq., Probate Judge. HEREAS, Martba V. Beard and Samuel D Powell made suit to me, grrant them Letters of Administra in of the estate and effects of mnes E. Beard. rhese are therefore to cite and ad nish all and singular the kindred d creditors of the said James E. rard, deceased, that they be and pear before me, in the Court of Pro te, to be held at Manning on the iday of November next after publica n thereof, at 11 o'clock in the fore on, to show cause, if any they have, ty the said administration should not granted. liven under my hand, this 21st day October. A. D. 1908. JAMES M. WINDHAM, EAL. Judge of Probate.I KIL L THE COUU ND CURE THE LUNCS. -Dr. King's New. Discovery OR COUDS nROdn ND ALLt TROAT AND L.UNG TROUBLES. UABTEED SATISFACTORY IBE ONEY BEFUNDED. a n's neru Store. EES LA] An improvement ove system of a cold by a satisfaction or money: Sold b3 aa Cures Coughs, Colds, ( and Lung Troubles. Pre WHEN YOU COME TO TOWN CALL AT WELLS' SHAVING SALOON Which is fitted up with an oye to the comfort of hip customers. . . HAIR CUTTING IN ALL STYLES, SHAVINi AND SHAMPOOING Done with neatness and dispatch. . . . . . . C i cordial invitation S is extended. . S J. L. WELLS. T anuiung Times Block. Notice to Creditors. All persons having claims against the estate of Frank W. Thigpen, de ceased, will present them duly attested and those owing- said estate will make payment to the under signed qualified administrator of said estate. .. T. STUKES, - Administrator. Manning, S. C., October 12, 1908. / al b A PROPERLY EQUIPPED LAVATORY IN A HOTEL; is an attraction to guests, both trans lent and regular, that should not be i overlooked by an up-to-date landlord. e are prepared 'to equip any'thingj fom the smallest dwelling~to the larg est hotel, or public buildings, office or uildings with the best sanitary open lumbing, that insures comfort, clean- 1 ness and good health to its patrons. Or work is the acme of- scenti-fieer.j fction. L R. 11. rIASTERS, 19 ing St27-raree~t, Charleston, S C eMS aerl, n ash Weghsan o s. Mud ig and BulssaSialtn. R. J. A. COPE, DENTIST, Ustairs over Bank of Manning. .MANNING. S. C. Pone No 77. R. .J. IFRANK GEIGER. DENTIST. MANNING, S. C. H. LESESNE, ATTORNEY AT LAW, MANNING, S. C. McSW\AIN WOODS, J .ATTORNEY AT LAW, Manning, S. C Onfice Over Levi's Store. L . PURDY. S. O.1VER O'BRY URDY & O'BRYAN, Attorneys and Counselors at Law, MANNING, S. C. V. c. DA VIS. J. A.- WEINBERG. AViS & WEINBERG, ATTORNEYS AT [JAW., MANNING. S. C. P~opt attentionf given to collections. at and Grow Fat FRESH MEATS AT ALL TIMES. EVERYTHING GOOD TO EAT. Give us a Trial Clrk & Huggins. (ATIVE COUGH SYRUP CONFORMS TO NATIONAL PURE FOOD AND DRUGS LAW. r many Cough, Lung and Bronchial Remedies. because it rids the :ting as a cathartic on the bowels. No opiates. Guaranteed to give refunded. Prepared by PINEULE MEDICINE CO.. CHICAGO. U. S. A. - THE MANNING PHARMACY. CONTAINS NO -D . HARMFUL DRUGS troup, La Grippe, A:-.thma, Throat The Genuine is in the vents Pneumonia and Consump on T-. W ?ACz W. E. BROWN & CO. BANK OF CLARENDON, Manning, S We solicit your banking business. It is to voi- interest to patronize this safe and strong bank, Four years of con tinued growth and operation without the loss of as much ' . as a dollar, speaks for itself, does it not? We want to be your bankers, if you are not l ,read customer, come and see us about it and tell us why.; yu are, come and see us anyhow. It is never too lat.-.~ do a good thing for yourself. too " Interest Paid on Savings Deposits. - BANK OF CLARENDON, Mn THE BANK OF MANNING, MANNING, S. C. tpital Stuck...... . ..$............................... .. . . 40,000 rplus. ... ... ...... ........... .......... 40,000 ,ockholders' Liability...:.....................,. ... . $40,000 ntal. ...... . ............ 120 000 AVOID.THE STING OF REMORS< - T at follows avoidable mistakes Haveyou ever thou'hr how- many mistake t spending you might avoid if you banked your nione f START AN ACCOUNT AT THE BANK OF KANNIN id learn by pleasant experience. Money in the'b terms d urn lik easb f= your pocket. Once you put it in you-aue not naras ke t iy anything you see. You think twice and hinkir mi, r. c y or 0-V - 0V 0W Z Loe pricesf _ ;han we quote -mean bud oneS t M:i - the@od'r"o negr ~f~y Remember, The bssnnto hi ~good. And the bess th i eps~. SUMMERTON, S. -..n.m..,..a... . -.,,...,. 3.. sa .. .. .a.Jb..a....lan. Vn e .rtta -bet M . e14: u 1HE FANKLIt-aURN a Ziaarp,.boL .jv: . FARMERS! ecYu:ad Control-the price of your pr ce ni h ry.w~ you can by' diversfying the use obf yo~r r~..~oe pastures will mean moere pork an more pitA'og pasture is not expensive. Bermu i Grs'plte1his fall, will be in tine condition for a m ne~xt ,e? and, once planted will afford grazing f ' ogs andc te s eral. seasons. It will enable you. epcows atK af expense and these housed fromi nvenieng pasture wil help to cut down~ fertilizer bill.a There is no limit to the pos bilities with well fen ed land, and farm cut into conveni t-'felds for atae and cultivation. WE HAVE JUST ECEWVED the largest shipment of Wire Fe ing (Barbed and Woven) ever brought-into the county. This Fencing was bought. the lowest price gamed. - by the makers.more tha~n thre years. We .are-gombg t' sell this fence to our patrons a the *owest possible mar gin of profit. We want to se he entifre lotaeore the 1st of September, do note fai to see this lot -and to purchase what you will want. It will be the best mnvest ment you have made in many as We are still selling the-I Deei-ing Mower This mower is without comparison No other Mower has stood the same testathat the Ideal ering has. Wehave a itill line of repairs for them. In Ldition to: the Mowers sand Rakes, we are selling a lot Smoothing Harrows; One and Two-Horse Steel Beam lows, (Syracuse and. Oliver Chilled. - We also sell the Red R -per Hay Press. - Cane Mills a L Evaporators. A full line of all si Remember we want you' business, and we will ma it to your interest as well as ours, to deal with us. Ver truly yours, MNNING A WAE CMfNY BRI YOUR AJOB WORK TO THE IMES OFFICE.