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The Best Fertilizers for Corn That the yield of corn from the average farm can be greatly in creased by intelligent and liberal fertilization has been repeatedly demonstrated. Large crops of good corn result from preparing the land well, using the right kind and quantity of fertilizer, good seed and proper cultivation. it Virginia- Ca rolina i Fertilizers will greatly "increase your vield per acre " of corn or any other crop. u In some cases remarkable results have been obtained. Mr. C. W. Caruthers of Sumpter County, Fla., writes:," Words r cannot express the value of your fertilizer. It is really so far ahead b of other companies' goods, that it would not pay anyone to use other brands, were they given free and put in the field. I can prove what I say to be a fact. I made a test on five acres. I used on one half the fand your fertilizer and on the other half another company s fertil izer, same grade: the land received the same cultivation every time. t I kept a correct account of the amount of money I got off each half s andlgot $300 more from the land on uhich I used Virginia-Carolina n Fertilizer than I did off the other half. I got four times as much a corn from the land on which I used your fertilier. Write today to nearest office of the Virginia-Carolina Chemical Company for a free copy of the new 1909 Farmers' Year-Book or Almanac, full of the most valuable and unprejudiced information for b planters and farmers; or ask your fertilizer dealer for a copy. Virginia-Carolina Chemical Co. r Saks OZFe$ Saeks Ojices Richmor.d. Va. Durham. N.C. - Norf olk, Va. Charleston. S. C. j Columbia, S. C. Baltimore, Md. i Atlanta. Ga. Columbus. Ga. i Savannah, Ga. Montgomery, Ala. Memphis, Tenn. Shreveport, La. ti QUALITY. We want to direct your attention 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 b one chance at our fifty dollar prize. Somebody gets the money. Get in line and win. o WAGONS. C 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. n Our,=a load of Horses was unloaded this morning.1-1 ri Come in and-I select what you want from a car that has S not been pickf.c overr. We will give you the benetit of b our twenty-five years experience in helping you get just a what you want. n b LAP ROBES and HARNESS. . We now handle the celebrated 5-A Robes, and. b have the best Line ever shown in the county. Five hun dred satisfied customers using our hand-made Harness. t In -fact we carry everything in our line you want. Guar- a antee the quality and satisfy you with the price when n you buy. We want your trade and are in shape to get it if you\ will inspect our line before you make your purchases. Yours wide awake and ready to serve you. s D..BRADHAM&SON~ ii The place to buy your Hardware of all kinds. Head- b * quarters forg * SPORTING GOODS v The best makes of Double and Single Barrel S Shotguns at lowest prices. A full line of Loaded a Shells, Powder and Shot, Rifles and .Cartridges.'1 Air Rifles for the Boys. The best t t COOK!NG R ANGESr on the market for the money. Stoves of all sizes. Heatei-s for the winter. We especially ask the Ladies to inspect ourt dEock Enamel Ware Crockery, Glassware, Toilet Sets, Lamps, Carving Sets, Etc. Beautiful Line Pocket Cutlery. FARMERS! Fence Your Land. Control the price of your produce in the only way 2 you can by .diversfying the use of your land. More - pastures will mean more pork and more profit. A hog pasture is not expensive. Bermuda Grass planted this, fall will be in fine condition for pasturing next year, and I once planted will aff'ord grazing for hogs and cattle sev era] seasons. It will enable you to keep cows at smallh expense and these housed from convenienb pasture wihl . help to cut down fertilizer bill. There is no limit to the possibilities with well fenced land, and farm cut into convenient fields for pasturage and cultivation. WE HAVE JUST RECEIVED. the largest shipment of Wire Fencing (Barbed and Woven) ever brought into the county .t This Fencing was bought at the lowest price named ( by the makers more than three years. We are going to I sell'this fence to our patrons at the lowest possible mar gin of profit. We want to sell the entire lot before the 1st of September, do not fail to see this lot and to purchase what you will want. It will be the best invest ment you have m'ade in many days. We are still 'selling the Ideal Deering Mower. This mower is without comparison. No other Mower has stood I the same test that the Ideal Deering has. We have a full line of repairs for them. In addition'to the Mowers and Rakes, we are selling a lot of Smoothing Harrows, One and Two-Horse Steel Beam Plows, (Syracuse and Oliver -Chilled. We also sell the Red Ripper Hay Press.1 Cane Mills and Evaporators. A full line of all sizes. Remember we want your business, and we will make it to your interest as well as ours, to deal with us. Very truly yours, MANING IARDWARE CQMPN A REAL CLOUDBURST. ne That Descended Upon a Mountain In Scotland. What d real cloudburst is like is de ribed by a Scotland correspondent of ountry Life:' "A cloudburst of ex eptional size descended on the Cairn orm mountains. and an old watcher, -ho has his but almost exactly where ie cloud burst. gives the following de ills: On July 10. 1901. the morning pened brilliantly fine and warm, with cloudless sky and brilliant sunshine. ut toward noon heavy clouds formed a the hills, and it rapidly became so ark that it was almost impossible to ad. He was standing in the door of. is hut, when suddeniy he heard from e hill across the glen a report like a 2underclap, followed by a noise like je tearing of linen, only a thousand mes louder and more majestic in und. Then he noticed that a solid iass of water had struck the hilltop. nd part of it, bounding up again with ae force of the impact, had descended a the hilltop immediately behind his ut. Immediately afterward a tre iendous volume of water came pour ig down both hillsides. forming great fts in the hills as it swirled. irresisti le in its course, down rocks and tones. The channel the flood scooped t was in places quite twelve feet ep. and large rocks were tossed down s course as if they had been pebbles. 'he sand and stones brought down by ie water so dammed up the river Dee, 1at quite an extensive loch was >rmed. During the time of the cloud rst the weather a mile or two up the len remained fine, but to the south ie clouds were black as night." SEEING THE ALPS. ourists Who Do Their Mountain Climbing by Telescope. The tourist of today who .visits the Ips and who lacks the physical- en arance or whose .ime is too limited > make the ascent of some of the fa ious peaks nevertheless is able clopely > survey the panorama of mountain yenery through the medium of power i telescopes located at the terminals C the mountain railroads. By this Leans the rocks and glaciers and pe liar formations of these historic iountins may be carefully studied, iough the spectator need not ap roach them within many miles. Each of these mountain telescopes is ounted on a forked cradle and is so icely balanced that its position may dily be fixed by the tightening of nall thumbscrews after the focus as been adjusted with a band wheel. he magnifying power of the instru ents varies from 35 to 116 diameters, at is adapted for landscape obser-a on only. When weather conditions are suita le, climbers on the Titlis may be seen rough the telescope at Uetliberg, ear Zurich, a distance of forty miles, ad the hotel on the Faulhorn, sixty iles away, may be recognized. Every :ep of the toilers on the slopes -of the atterhorn can be followed by means E the instrument on the RiffelalD ore Zermatt. Several lives have been ived by the means of these glasses, >r signals of distress on the inoun ins are seen by the watchers at the hlescopes.Harpers. A Birdseyo View. The following incident occurred dur ig a terrific thunderstorm at the home e a contractor who lives in the vieini rof ,Tampa, Fla. The contractor and is family were sitting on the veranda atching the storm when a bolt of ghtnong st'-ck a tree not fifteen feet *om wher'e they wvere sitting. The . ck was terrific, but no one -. 4fured, although they were all adly frightened. The young son, with rent excitement, was telling that he imped two feet high. "How do you know you jumped so igh?" said his father.. Why," said Johnnie, "I looked down tile I was up."-Youth's Companion. Wagner's Swan. What interests . me about Wagner, ays a writer in London Opinion, Is his tection for live beasts and animals. a "Siegfried" we have a dragon, and 1"Lohengrin," as you are all aware, dere is a very beautiful swan. When ae late Sir Augustus Harris produced ais latter opera something went irong with the bird. Just before the ise of the curtain, therefore, the au ience was considerably surprised and artled to hear the indignant voice of ne of the stage hands resounding com the realms behind inquiring with haracteristic vigor, "What's the mat r with'that infernal duck?" A Blissful Supposition. Miss Black-Mr. Brown, does you now whut a bird of paradise Is? Mr. Irown-Well, of co'se I doesn't know oh sure, but when I gits ter de nex', rorl' I wouldn't be a bit surprise ter iskuvah dat it was a spring chicken. -Illustrated Bits. A Hunmmer. "Morning, morning!" said paterfa ailias genially as he entered the break ast room. "I've had a splendid night. lept like a topi" His wife agreed with him. "You d," she responded grimly--"like a umming top!"-Philippines Gossip. A Man of Letters. "Did your friend make a hit at the Lterary club?" "I guess he did. He pronounced 'Les fserables' in a brand new way and hen alluded to It as Victor Herbert's aasterpiece."-Washngton He'ald. True bravery is shown by perform ag without witness what one might~ e capable of doing before .all the orld.-La Rochefoucauld. The Order of Fools. April 1 Is not the only fools' day in he year. On November 12, 1381, the )rder of Fools was instituted by Adol hhus, count of Cleves. Members were not by any means diots, however, for the word had a Lferent meaning then. They were he prototype of our modern Order of 'oresters or Odd Fellows, doing a imilarly benevolent work. Their in Ignia consisted of a mantle, upon the eft shoulder of which was embroidered tjester, or 'fool, in cap and bells, yel ow hose and silver vest. So these :heery, useful jokers had a bright, sppy outlook upon life and met to ;ether to dispense the earnest of their iealthful existence at stated intervals, he chief day of which was Nov. 12 oondon Chronicle. Washington Once Gave Up o three doctors; was kept in bed for five reeks. Blood poison from a spider's >ite caused large, deep sores to cover iis leg. The doctors failed, then "Buck en's Arnica Salve completely cured ne," writes John Washington, of Bos 1ueville, Tex. For eczema, boils, burns mnd piles it's supreme. 25c at Dr. W. E. Bro-n & Co. and 3. E Arant. A PARISIAN HAIR CUT. It Is Expensive at Times,-but Always a Sociable Affair. The Paris hairdresser cannot be per suaded to do anything more than pre tend to remove a little hair. It almost breaks his heart if you insist on a serviceable cut. The price charged is sometimes a painful surprise to the unsuspecting visitor. He has been warned to avoid those 'establishments where the tariff is not disrNlayed and so does not hesi tate when lie sees the announcement, "Hair Cutting. 1 Franc." When the operation is over. how ever, he is a little hurt at being asked for 3 francs. If he knows enough French to un derstand. he gathers that 1 franc is for the hair cutting. 1 franc for a "fric tion" and 1 franc for "perfume." Frenchmen pay these charges with out complaining and seem to enjoy a visit to the barber's. As they gener ally go to the same shop-and French men have their hair "cut" once a week -the assistant becomes their confiden tial friend. His customers discuss with him their love affairs. their ailments and lastly their business. He is also supposed to be a great au thority on horse racing, but be is too prudent to act on his own tips and generally manages to save enough money to start in business for himself. -London Mail. ANATOMY. A More or Less Helpful Lesson For Beginners. Proceeding In a southerly direction from the torso, we have the hips, use ful for padding, and the legs. The legs hold up the boay and are some times used in walking, but when rid ing in automobiles they take up valu able space which otherwise might be employed to better advantage. Attached to the legs are the feet. Some varieties of feet are cold. Some people are born with cold feet, others acquire cold feet, and still others have cold feet thrust upon them. The surface of the body is covered with cuticle, which either hangs in graceful loops or is stretched tightly from bone to ,one. On the face it is known as complex ion and is used extensively for com mercial purposes by dermatologists. painters and decorators. Between the cuticle and the bones are the muscles, which hold the bones together and prevent them from fall Ing out and littering up the sidewalk as we walk along. Packed neatly and yet compactly in side the body tre the heart, the liver and the lungs; also the gall, which in Americans Is abnormally large. These organs are used occasionally by the people who own them, but their real purpoe is to furnish sur geons a living.-Thomas L Masson In Lippincott's. A Free Handed Prince. The following Is told of the famous Prince of Conde. He left his son, aged nine years, 50 louIs d'or to spend ihile he himself was absent In Paris. On his return the boy came to him triumphantly, saying: "Papa, here is all the money safe. I have never touched it once." The prince, without making any re ply,. took his son to the window and quietly emptied all the money out of the purse into the street Then he said: "If you have neither virtue enough to give away your money nor spIrit enough to spend it, always do this for the future, that the poor may have a chance of It." The Bab. The East Indian teacher who founded the cult known as "Babism" was "the Bab"-Mrza Ali Mohammed. He was born in Shiraz, Persia, in the year 120. He was trained at first to com mercial life, but a pilgrimage to Mecca awakened in his heart the religious zeal which made him devote his life henceforth to developing the faith which he held. tUpon his return to his native city in 1844 he assumed the title of Bab, or "Gate" leading to the truth. In the eyes of the orthodox Mohammedans .the tenets of the Bab were rank heresy, and he was taken to Tabrlz and shot-New York Aner ican. The Anchor. "Captain," remarked the nuisance on shipboard who always asks foolish questions, "what Is the object in throwing the anchor overboard?" "Young man," replied the old salt, "do you understand the theory of seis mic disturbances? Well, we throw the anchor overboard to keep the ocean from slipping away in the fog. See?" Overdoing It a Little. "Spealping of economy," says a char acter in one of Life's stories, "Gillett says that he is saving up for a rainy day." "H'm!" came the response. ~"His wife thinks he must be saving up for another flood." Leading Up to It. A young man married against the wishes of his parents and in telling a friend how to break iihe news .0 them "Tell them first that I am dead, and gently work up to the climax."-Lon don Tit-Bits. Telepathy. "So you believe In telepathy?" "Yes." answered Mr. Meekton. "My wife knows what I am going to think about some time before I have made my mind up on the subject myself." Washington Star. As the Twig is Bent. "I hope you were a good little boy while at you aunt's and didn't tell any stories," said his mother. "Only the one you put me up to, ma," replied her young hopeful. "Why, what do you mean, childI" "When she asked me if I'd like to have a second piece of cake I said, 'No, thank you; I've had enough.' "-Har per's Weekly. Not What She Meant. Tardy Arrival at a Dinner Party I'm afraid I am too late, dear Mrs. Smith. Mrs. Smith (effusively)-Oh. my dear, you could never come too late!-London Illustrated Bits. Hexamethylenetetraminle. IThe above is the name of a Germat chemical, which is one of the man3 Ivaluable ingredients of Foley's Kidney Remedy. Hexamethylenetetramine ih recognized by medical text books anc authorities as a uric acid solvent anc antisepic for the urin. Take Foley': Kidney Remedy as soon as you noti'a any irregularities, and avoid a seriou! -talay W E. rown & Co. HANGING THE BABIES. Whistler's Arrangement of the Pic-, tures a Joke on the Artists. Late in life, when people had begun to rcalize the genius of the man. Whis tler was asked to arrange the annual Liverpool exhibition, and here, in his own words, is how le did it, according to Heinemann's "Life of Whistler." "You know, the academy baby by "the dozen had been sent in, and I got them all in my gallery, afid in the cen ter at one end I placed the birth of the baby-splendid-and opposite the baby with the mustard pot and oppo sits that the baby with the puppy and in the center, on one side, the baby ill, doctor holding its pulse, mother weeping; on the other, by the door, the baby dead-the baby's funeral-baby frori the cradle to the grave-baby in heaven, babies of all kinds and shapes all along the line; not crowded, you know, hung with proper respect for the baby. "And on the varnishing day in came the artists, each making for his own baby-amazing! His'baby on the line -nothing could be better! And they all shook my hand and thanked me and went to look-at the other men's babies-and they saw babies in front of them, babies behind them, babies to the right of them, bdbles to left of them. And then-you know-their faces fell-they didn't seem to like it -and-well-ha, ha, they never asked me to hang the pictures again at Liv erpool!" THE VENTRILOQUIST. Only an Amateur, but His Exhibition Was a Success. "I was one of a house party up the Thames," said an amateur ventrilo quist. "Tea had been served in the garden, an# after tea I consented to essay a little ventriloquism, and the fifty or sixty guests grew very still. "Behind me rose a superb tree. Looking up into the thick foliage, I shouted in a loud and angry voice: "'Hello! What are you doing up there?' "To my amazement a thin young voice replied: "'I ain't doin' no harm, mister. I'm just a-watchin' the big bugs.' "The guests glanced at one another, smiling appreciatively. Pulling my self together, I went on: "'Did any one .. - -u permission to climb up into tl- se?' "'Yes, sir. The s.ond groom. sir. He's my cousin.' ""Well,' said I, 'so far there's no harm done, but be careful not to fall, and don't let any one see you.' "'All right, mister,' said the humble voice. "I turned to my audience and smiled and bowed triumphantly. They broke into thunderous applause. They said that they had never listened to ven triloquism so superb. And they were quite right too."-London Answers. Rats' Cold Weather Retreat. Many animals snuggle together for warmth in bitter weather, as the squir rels and the rats. Those who go rat ting in hedges and dells in the winter know they may try a dozen freshly used burrows witholit finding a rat, when suddenly from a single hole the rats will come pouring out In a stream of frenzjed fur. Twenty or more rats will lie together In one hole. They are clever enough to block up a hole on the windward side to keep out the dtaft so that when a rat hole Is noted newly stopped with soll,:tur nip leaves or grass here is almost cer tain indication that 'rats are within. Like the squirrels, they store food for winter, and the keeper may find' it more difficult to secure his potatoes from frost than from the attack of the most numerous of his furred foes. London Standard. A Rattled Bridegroom.' Some few years ago a man of ma ture age found himself playing first fiddle to marriage bells. Then they hied themselves away, as others have done, to Niagara Falls. He chuckled to himself as he took a pen to enter on a hotel register for the first time "John Doe And wife." He thought he write with the easy air of one who had so written it there many years ar~d turned carelessly away. On leaving the proprietor inquired, "I hope you have enjoyed your honey moon with us." "Sir-r?" But he merely turned the register back and pointed to this en try, "John Doe and bride." .. He had been as "rattled" as any boy. -Philadelphia Ledger. The Safest Employment. The person who is least affected by trade depression and "slumps" in pro duction Is the peasant proprietor. So. long as his acres produce corn, pota toes, peas, beans, fruit, milk and vege tables he Is safe enough from hunger. His sheep will give wool, and home spun is excellent wear. His is the safe, primitive and elemental profes sion where a man lives close to the earth, the great mother.-Dublin Irish Homestead. Hard Names. "Caling names doesn't make any real difference." said the conservative campaigner. "No," answered the scientist. "If it did those Latin titles we have bestow ed on .germs would- have discouraged them long ago."-Washingtoni Star. Art For Art's Sake. "I like to see a man take an. interest In his work." "So do L. I once knew a policeman who was so enthusiastic that It posi tively pained him to~ see anybody out of jail."-Louisville jCourier-Journal. The Perfect Woman. There is a quaint old tavern sign in ent, "'The Perfect Woman"-a wo man's head without a mouth. This sgnboard was once quite common, and as late as 1818 a "silent woman" stood In St. Giles', In what Is now New Ox ford street, bearing beneath the picture of a headless female the following stanza: A silent woman-how can it be? Patient traveler, do not scoff. Drawn from the very life is she And mute because her head is off. -London Chronicle. The Secret of Long'Life. A French scientist has discovered one secret of long life. His method deals with the blood. But long ago millions of Americans had proved Electric Bit er prolongs life and makes it worth living. It purifies, enriches and vital izes the blood, rebuilds wasted nerve cells, imparts life and tone to the entire system. Its a godsend to weak. sick and debilitated people. "Kidney trouble had blighted my life for months," writes W. M. Sherman, of Gushing, Me.. "but Eleetric Bitters cured me entirely.' Only 50c. at Dr. W. E. Brown & Co., nd J. . Arant RAILROAD STORIES. The Man Who Paid the Conductor and the Name on the Ticket. An vld time traveling man was 't Ing of experiences of former days on the road. "Frequently," said this trav eler, "I journeyed to Cincinnati. The fare from my city to that place was then about-$3.25. I saved something by handing the conductor $2 in cash. One day there was an excursion, and I bought a round trip ticket for $1.25 or $1.50-I'vve forgotten the exact amount, but that circumstance need not cripple this story. When I handed this ticket to the conductor as he tore off the return coupon he looked at me and in a voice betraying how deeply he was hurt he remarked, 'My young friend, don't you know that I can af ford to haul you much cheaper thaf this company can?' "On another occasion, when in Chi cago, a colored man met me at the en trance of the station, asked me where I was going and offered to sell me a ticket for $1. The ticket was to Louis ville, but I was only going to Indian apolis. Cheap enough. "When the conductor casie along to take up my ticket he asked me my name. It was usual t6 write one's name on the ticket in the presence of the conductor. I told him my name was on the ticket He grinned as he handed it back and asked me to look at it and say if that was my name. I looked. The name on the ticket was 'Mary Flaherty.' He grinned again, somewhat sarcastically, but he took the ticket."-Pittsburg Press. SNORING. One of the Evils We Acquire With Our Civilization. It is a truism that no one ever heard of a snoring savage. In fact, if the wild man of the woods and plains does not sleep quietly he runs the risk of being discovered by his enemy, and the scalp of the snorer would soon adorn the belt of his crafty and more quietly sleeping adversary. With civ ilization, however, we have changed all this. 'he impure air of our sleep ing rooms induces all manner of ca tarrhal affections.- The nasal passages are the first to become affected. In stead of -warming the inspired air on its way to the lungs and removing from it the dangerous impurities with which it is loaded the nose becomes obstructed. A part of the air enters and escapes by the mouth. The veil of the palate vibrates between the two currents-that through the mouth and the one still passing through the par tially closed nostrils-like a torn sail in tIe wind. The snore, then, means that the sleeper's mouth is partially open, that his nose is partially closed and that his lungs are in danger from the air not being properly warmed and purified. From the continued op eration of these causes-the Increase of Inipure air in sleeping rooms and permitting habitual snorers to escape killhig and scalpig-some . scientist has predicted that in the future all men (and all womeif, too) will snore. It goes along with decay of the teeth and baldness.-Health. Natural Kindness. At an out of the way railroad Junc tion a tra-eler found himself hunggy, but with only two minutes to spare before his train left. "I'll take a cup of coffee," he said to the young wo man'In charge of the restaurant. "I've no time for anything else." "You can take all the time you want, sir," said the young woman cordially. "You look at this bill of fare, and I'll telephone to the superintendent to de lay the train a little while." "Why, can that be done?" asked the traveler In amazement. "Certainly," said the young woman. "Of course It can. It's a branch road and no other train coming or going over It today, and the superintendent would want you to have a good meal. He owns this restaurant." -Youth's Companion. The Influence of Bath. Is there .any town In the world that has so Imposed itself as much as Bath upon' the life and language of the na tion? For some there are 3ath buns, for others Bath Olivers, and the mili tant ladies who find the buns too soft may throw Bath bricks at office or other windows if they disapprove of the Bath chaps. When we become in firm it is the Bath chair we seek. And that "thousand years" of the middle ages "without a bath" seems now hor rble.-London Chronicle. .Separated. "Some men are fond of work, and others are not," said Wilber. "Take Dawson, for instance. He is 'wedded to his work." "Not now," said Hickenlooper. "He's been divorced." "Divorced? What do you mean?" asked Wilber. "He was bounced last Saturday," said Hickenlooper.-Lippincott's. Just Suited Him. "Miss Pansy, yo' suhtingly has got well developed ahms, ef yo'll pahdon ma sayin' so." "Alh developed dem ahms workin' ovah de washtub. Mistahi Rufus." "U'm-um--er-Miss Panisy, will yo' be ma wife?"-Denver Post. The Entomologist's Boor.. Professor (to his aged cook)-You have now been twenty-five years In my service, Regina. As a reward for your fidelity I have determined to name the bug I recently discovered after you.-Fliegende Blatter. Speak with contempt of no man. Every one hath a tender sense of rep utation.--Burton. The Way He Felt About it. While several young ladies were dis cussing novel plans for a church ba zaar a new member of the committee proposed to have the pastor's photo graph reproduced on pillow tops and "cac"tem off. All the girls voIced ther aproalat once, but when the plan was suggested to the parson he objected. "I really cannot consent," said he. "I've been sat on enough as It Is." Ladies' Home .Tournal. Secondhand. "Can't I go out into the back yard and play in the garden, mamma?" -"Certainly not, child. You must stay In and study your nature books." Life. Integrity wgithout knowledge is .weak and useless.-Paley. .Pneumonia Follows La Grippe. Pneumonia.often follows Ia grippe bu never follows the use of Foley's Hone3 and Tar, for la grippe cougbs and deei seated colds. Refuse any but the gen uine in the yellowv package. W. E Brown & Co. LIVE STOCK T never has been in this market a cleaner lot of L rses and Mules than can now be found at our st..be. Every Horse or Mule we sell goes with our guarantee. Farm Mules, Draft Mules, Carriage Horses, Bugg v Horses, Saddle and Driving Horses. Also Dr. White's famous Horse Remedies. Ii you want a good, strong, handsome Buggy, Surrey ot 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 persona- inspection of our Stables, and we feel assured that we can suit you to a Horse, Mule or Buggy, Surrey or Wagon. COFFEY&RIGBY $15.25 TO WASHINGTON D. C. and RETURN ATLANTIC COAST LINE Account Inaugural Ceremonies of President Elect Taft. Tickets on Sale February 28th, March 1st, 2nd. 3rd, final limit to reach original starting point not later than midniht March 19th. Great.MilitaryParade. For further information, reservations, etc., call on nearesi - [icket Agent or write W. J. CRAIG, T. C. WHITE, Passenger Traffic Mgr. General Passenger Agt. WILMINGTON. N. C. Easy R Confinement 7 If you have cause to fear the pains of childbirth, remember that 9they are due to weakness, or dis esse, of the womanly organs, and that healthy women do not suffer, like weak ones. table ingredients, of. which that famous, female medicine an 11WAOUo-RPLM1O manly tonliC.Haeyuepieed.ydfrly WOMAN'S RELIEF okit b ati o' o h~c Is composed, wIll build up the etrltsdoheokian t b womanly organs to a healthy state and thus prevent needless sufferneesryrparngt ut'hig lng. "Before my confinement," writes stagtndwe. Mrs. Rose Schubarth, of Mona ment, Coo., "I had such hearing-R i lSES down pains I didn't know what to do. Cardul quickly relieved me. Some months later I had a fine 1719Kn tet hretn~ 12-lb. baby, was sIck only thirty' minutes, and did not even have ___ ______________ a doctor."KLL ECO H i At AUDOW AB UETE RPUBIN Haoesyouexperiened anyvdfficult in T obaDnhttr. whn onar salutdtwitooffesiveemells dica the______ neesryrpisgovpuethng C R.L.DnSTRWS~ - -e AtAl rggssAND CURE THRE AN UNCLS WRITE FR FOREADVICE Cnatt0noogaYTenn. E 35 HONEYANDTA 'E~ The original ptisoe BnfMnig AXATIVE cog ___emedy.______ or coughs, colds, throat and lug R .FAKGI R troubles. No opiates. Non-alcoholic. j Good for everybody. Sold everywhere. DNIT The genuline FOLEY'S HONEY and TAR is inMNNN, .C aYllow package. Refuse substitutes. 1~.LSSE Prepared only by ci Foley & Company, ChIcago. ATRE TLW W. E. BROWN & Co. EATY & BEATY,JMSAN OD, ENGINEERS AND CONTRACTORS. ATRE TLW Civil Engineering, Land Surveying,MnigSC Drainage. Prompt attention to out-of- OfievrLv'sSr. town patrons. Gaiucat Buildinig. MIANNING. S. C~ . RD..OLVR BY W. C. DAVIS. .1. A. WEINBERG. PRY&OBYN AVIS & WEINBERG, AtresadCuslr tLw ATTORNEYS AT LAW , MANNING, S. C.CRLO DRAT Promptattention given to collections. ATRE TLW Pinesalve~a A a~OLTC MANna.C CarbolizedreorS~~Ammaa Dr.King'sNew Lie PiISLEE&MLELs The best in the world. Cii gieranLndSvyos Brngyor obWok-oDr.TKeinfig'SUTESC