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STATE OF SOUTH CAROLNA, county of Clarendon. COURT OF COMMON PLEAS. i. A. Norwood. Jr., Plaintiff against (eorge P. Plowden and Jfohu Ried. Defendants. Judgment for Foreelosure and Sale. UNDER AND 131Y VIRTUE OF A Jnudgment Order of the Court of Con mon Pleas. in the above stated ae-. tiou, to me directed, bearing date of February 19, 1909, 1 will sell at public auctionI.to the highst bidder for eash, at Clarendon Court House, at. Manniug, in said county, within the legal hours forjudicial sales, on Mon-. day, the 5th day of April, 1909. being salesday. the following de seribed real estate: "All that parcel or tract of land containing twenty-tive acres, being in the State and County afore uentioned. bounded North by lands: of Mrs. Mary Ann McFaddin; East by lands Martha Tavlor: South by; lands of R. C. Plowden, and WV est by lands of Ben Plowden. Purchaser to pay for papers. E B. GAMBLE, Sheriff of Clarendon Countv. STATE OF 80UTH CAROLINA, County of Clarendon. COURT OF CO.M MON PLEAS . Charlotte Bruzison. Mary Watson andl Lin'retia Washingcou, Plain tiffs against J. A. Weinberg in his own right and as Administrator of the estate of Rufus Brunson deceased, Alice Harvin, G'amble Bruusou, other wise called Minyard Bruuson, Lot tie Brunson, Isabella Brunson, Samuel Gilliard, Sparks Gilliard, Lizzie Gilliard, Parnezie Gilliard, - Fannie Brunson, Joseph Brunson, Willie H. Brunson. Mary Eliza Brunson and Bettie Brunson, De fendants. Copy Summons. For Relief. (Complaint Served.) TO THE DEFENDANTS above named: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and reQuired to answer the com plaint in this' action, of which a copy is herewith served upon you. and to.serve a copy of your answer to the said complaint on the sub-1 scribers at their office in the town of Manning, S. C.. within twenty days after the service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service: and, if you fail to answer the complaint within the time aforesaid, the plaintiff in this action will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the com plaint. To defendant, Gamble Brunson, otherwise called Minyard Brunson: You will take notice that a copy of the Summons and Complaint in this action has been filed in the office of the Clerk of Court for Clar endon County, State of S. C. W. C. DAVIS, Plaintiff's Attorney. Dated Janaary 19, 1909. State of South Carolina, County of Clarendon. COURT OF COMMON PLEAS. David Levi and Abe Levi as Execu tors of and Trustees Under the Last Will and Testament of Moses Lev-i, deceased. Plaintiffs against Rachael Serverance, Henrietta Blake and Guy Severance, Defendants. Judgment for Foreelosure and Sale. UNDER AND BY VIRTUE OF A. Judgmnent Orderof the Court of Com mon Pleas, in the above stated ac tion, to me directed, bearing date of February 19, 1909. I will sell at public auction. to the highest bidder for cash, at Clareudou Court Hlouse, at Manning, in said conty, within the legal hours f'or judicial sales, on Mon day, the 5th day of April, 1909, being salesday, the following de scribed real estate: "'That piece, parcel or tract of land being a part of the tract- known as the 'Ingram' tract, containing thi rty nine atcres. bounded on the North by lands of Joseph F. Rlhame; on the East by lands of S. A. Rigby and J. WV. MicLeod: on the South by lands of J. W. McLeod, anidon the West by lands of Moses Levi." .Purehaser to pay for papers. E. B. GA MBLE, Sheriff Clarendon Countv. STATE OF8S0UTH OAROLINA, Clarendon Couniy. COUJRT OF COMMON PLEAS. WV. E. Jena inson Company, Plaintiff agaimst Diana Burrows, Defendant. Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale. UNDER AND BYX VIRTUE OF A Deeral Order of the Court of Com mon Pleas for Clarendon County, dated the 19th day of February, 1909, I will sell to the highest bidder for cash, on Monday the 5th day of April. A. 1). 1909, the same being salesday, in front of' the Court House at Manning, in said County, within legal hours of sale. thie followv lng real estate: "All that piece, parcel or tract of land lying, being situtate in the County of Ciarendon, in the State afor-esaid, containing twenty acres, more or less, and bounding and but ring as follows: North by lands formerly of Dorcas Spann, now lands of Levi Bros.; East by lands of WV. S. Manning; South by lands of Diana Burrows anxd below described, and West by lands'of Stephen F. White, the saidll tract of land being the same devised to Sarah Preston by Will of James Wilder, deceased. Said Sarah Pres ton having departed this life, leaving as her heirs and distributees myself and W.ade Preston, and the -interest of the said Wade Preston having been conveyed to mec February 2, A. D. 1904." A LSO. "All that piece, parcel or tract of land lying, being and situate in Claren don Count y. in the State aforesaid. containing 20 acres as per plat of . D. Rutledge, surveyor, dated, Feb ruaryv 12, 1902. and b)ounded and but ting as follows, to wit: Nortn by tract of Iland above described: East by lands of W. S. Manning; South by lands of Stephen White. aul WVest by lands of Alice Green. The saidl tract of land being the same awarded to) me under' the Will of my father, James Wilder." Purcase topay for papers. Purcase to E. B3. GAMBLE,. Sheriff Ciarenmdon County. Bell & Harvin, iACH INISTS. Rteparires of~ A UJTOMOBILES, and all kinds of Ma ebhi cerv. PLUMB!NG., adSteam Fittingz. Cut, anid Thr'ead P ip-e from' 1-S to 6 HEAVY BLACKSMITH- WorkDone to Order. RBELL & , i'ARm/IN.u AN AFRICAN TITBIT. Hippopotamus Meat Has a Strong Odor and Flavor of Musk. To the African traveler the hippo potamus is a species of game partieu larly desirable, for its ivory and its hide are bota valuable, while the not inconsiderable danger involved in its pursuit provides the delicious cmotion without which every kind of hunt-ng is tame and insipid. Moreover, the ob ligation under which the leader of r:he expedition lies to feed his servants and carriers adequately makes one of these enormous beasts. twelve feet long or so and disproportionately wide, a per feet godsend. Not only does the hippo potamus furnish a formidable amount of meat, but that meat has the ines timable merit of keeping fresh much longer than any other. principally ow ing to the fact that flies seem to have an insurmountable horror of it. I must admit that for a long time I thoroughly sympathized with the flies. Alive, the hippopotamus has a peculiar odor. somewhat resembling musk. which discloses the presence of the animal from afar when he happen, to be to windward of one. In the flesh of the dead animal this odor-or the taste of it. rather-persists and is much appreciated by the natives, though for eigners take a long time to get accus tomed to it; some are never able to support it.-Wide World Magazine. FIVE SENSES NOT ENOUGH. Our Limited Scale of Consciousness Shuts Out Many Vibrations. Between the vibrations that we call electricity and the vibrations that we call heat we imagine there must be other vibrations filling up the gap. but we do not know, simply because we have no senses that can comprehend them. The spectrum is just such a litfe scale. Below the darkest red at the lower end we cannot see; at the other end as the vibrations get faster and faster through the orange, the blue and the violet is another unknown gap-that is. we cannot see it. But surely the vibrations are there. Some of them, for instance, that we have never seen and never can see mark their presence on .a photographic plate. And this same spectrum may be used as an analogy to describe spiritualistic phenomena. Just as there are limits at either end of the scale of vibrations beyond which our own senses can tell us nothing so may there be psychic forces at work beyond the limits of our consciousness. These are seemingly supernatural to us when we witness their effect, but they really are no more supernatural than the X ray that pierces the solid body or the invisible ultra violet ray that marks the photo graphic plate.-From "Are the Dead Alive?" by Fremont Rider in Deline ator. When the Waiter Wins. Two men were wrangling as to who should settle with the waiter for the luncheon. When the question had been finally decided and the contestants had gone the waiter said to one of his reg ular customers who was a witness of the scene: "That's what we like, for ev ery time it happens we come in for an extra tip. The man who couldn't get the check has only one way to get even, and that is by giving the waiter something, and nine times out of ten he does it and makes the amount more than he would have given if he had paid the check. 'This one ordered ex tra cigars and left the change for me. We like the 'give me the check' quar rels."-New York Tribune. Quick Wit. In the days when Rowley Hill was bishop of the Isle of Man one of his clergiuen, bearing the name of Tears, came to say adieu to his bishop on getting preferment. The parson said: "Goodby, my lord! I hope we may meet again, but if not here in some better place." The bishop replied, "I fear the latter is nlikely, as there are no Tears in heaven." "No doubt," wittily answered the parson, "you are right that our chance of meeting Is small, as one reads of the plains of paradise, , but never of any Hilts there." Over-feeding. "Men drunk from liquor and men drunk from overeating are most sus ceptible to pneumonia an,) die of it,' said a Chicago health commissioner it an address. "The majority of cases of pneumonia are of patients who con tracted the disease after a drunken de bauch or who were drunk from over feeding," the commissioner continued. "People- drunk fromr overfeeding, I think,, are almost as immoral as those who stupefy themselves with liquors. The eft'ects of pneumonia in such pa. tients are much the same." Champagne Corks. The manufacture of the best kind of corks, those made for chmpagne bottles, are never intrusted to ma, chines. The ordinary common cot: is made by machinery., but the best worki Invariably is done by human hands, and the champagne cork cannot be trusted to a machine. All the blem ishes in the cork have to be takenrgintc consideration, so this work ds donesby hand labor. Unexpected. Bessie-Yes; he held me on lhis knee, and I rested my head on his shoulder, and just as his mustache brushed my cheek he said- Jessie (ecxpectantly) Yes; ha said- Bessie-"ysn't it beast ly weather for this time of ypear?" Philadelphia Ledger. No man can produce great things who is not thoroughly sincera with himself.-Lowell. Kills Would-Be Slayer. A merciless murderer is Appen dicits vith many victims. But Dr. King-'s Nev' Life Pilis kill it by prevention. The' ently stimulate stomachi, liv 3r anc owes, preventing that cloggin~g thai nvites appendicitis, curing C< mnstipa. ion, Biliousness, Chills. Mlaruia.. H-fead che and Indigestion. 25c at Dr.. W. E Brown & Co., and J. E. Ar-ant. Sickroom Minrors. ' "Only a hand mirror sald-fn place in a sickroom," said a dottlor "and it should be one flattering to- thE patient-the kind, for instan ce, wli icL if the face is too broad will; length~er it a little. And the patient s hould only be allowed to look In the mirror ai propitious times. Many a latient hac been frightened literally to, deatht b3 is haggard reflection-bas looked sighed and renounced hope. But me nother patient 'in a really bad way eally desperate, too-being given .a ook at himself just after be has taken stimulant has bucked v~p wonderful ly. In fact, a sickroom mirror -wisely >andled is a curative age at, whike reek DEATH OF THE WORLD. When Water Disappears and Air Gets Too Thin to Breathe. The age of the earth is placed by some at 500,000,000 years, by others 100,000.000 years. and still others o: later time place it at 10,000,000 years None place it lower than 10.000,00 knowing what processes have beer gone through. Other planets go through the sam process. The reason that other planetc differ so much from the earth is tha they are in so much earlier or latez stages of existence. The earth inus become old. Newton surmised, although he couk give no reason for it, that the earth would lose all its water and become perfectly dry. Since then it has beer found that Newton was correct. As the earth keeps cooling it will be come porous, and great cavities wil be formed in the interior, which wil take in the water. It is estimated that this process is now in progress so far that the water diminishes at the rate of the thickness of a sheet o: paper each year. At this rate in G,000.000 years the water will have sunk a mile. and ii 15,000.000 the water will have disap peared from the face of the globe. The nitrogen and oxygen in the at mosphere are also diminishing all the time. It is in an inappreciable degree but the time will come when the al: will be so thin that no creature we know could breathe it and live. Th4 time will come when the world canno support life. That will be the period of old age, and then will come death. Richard A. Proctor. "CREASING" A WILD HORSE For One Captured by That Metho< Fifty Were Killed. Will C. Barnes. writing in McClure' of the various methods of captiurino wild horses in the old days on the plains. says: "'Creasing' was one of their devices This consisted in shooting a bullet s( that it struck the animal on the tel of the neck just in front of the with ers and about an inch or so deep clos( to the spinal column. The stock tem porarily stunned the horse, and tb hunter ran up and tied the animal'. feet together before he recovered. . rope halter was slipped on his head A gentle horse or sometimes a wor ox was led up alongside the prostrat1 beast, and he was securely necked ul to the gentle animal and thus could b( handled easily. Old mustangers say however, that for one horse caugh this way fifty were killed and that a: a matter of fact the method was no used very much except in an emer gency, when a hunter, after days o attempts to capture, finally took th risk of successfully ercasing an un usually fine animal rather than se him escape altogether. "One of the best cow ponies I eve owned I bought from a mustange who had creased him on the plain east of the Pecos river In New Mex ico. There was a hole in his neel fully two inches deep and wide, wher the ball from the heavy buffalo gu had plowed Its way through the fAesi just high enough above the spine no to kill and low enough to stun effectu ally." ________ India Ink. In both India and China there ar thousands of people who manufactur india ink as a side line to their regu lan business, working at it in the win ter at night and on days when the: are not otherwise employed. It i made by burning some kind of, oil il a lamp with a very long chimney. usu ally made in joints which can be tal; en apart for greater convenience il cleaning out the soot which make the ink. Almost any kind of vegeta ble oil will answer, and in district where petroleum is found even coal o1 is used in making the cheaper grades The best kind is made from sesam oil.-Argonlaut. His Hand. Tom Reed was playing whist on on occasion in his club in Portland. On of the party whom the "czar" did no like extravagantly had a habit of car rying a good deal of black realty ur der his finger nails, and the rest of hi hands never looked clean. But tlle fe' low had good luck, which nettled Ton Finally, almost unable to conceal hi impatience, the giant speaker of th house of representatives remarked i his metallic nasal tone of voice, "Blani if dirt was trumps, what a hand you" have!" A Terrible Threat. "You say your titled son-in-laa holds threats over you?" "Yes," answered Mr. Cumrox. "H has us where we can't give him an argument at all. )Mother and the girl say we must yield for the sake of th family honor." "Is there-er-a skeleton in th closet?" "Not at all. He simply announce that unless he has his own way he'. get naturalized and be a plain Amer can citizen."-Washington Star. Highly Esteemted. "Do you think that most peopl nowadays worship money?" "No; I won't go as far as that, answered the home grown philosophel "but I will say that the love of mone is seldom platonic."-Washington Hel Limited Love. "When your parents first refused mi T'our hand. I was so wretched that wanted to throw myself out of tlb window." "And why didn't you?" "It was so high!"-Lustige Blatter. A Religious Author's Statement. Rev. Joseph HI.Fespermau. Salisbur; N. C.. who is the author of sever: boks. writes: "For several years I wr amited withn kidney trouble and la: winter I was suddenly stricken with sevee painr is myt kiduoyvs and was co! fined to bed eight days unable to get u without assistance. .My urine containre a r.hic:k 'wvhite sediment and I passe .ame freouently day and night. I con m n-ed takini Foley's Kidney fRemed; aid the prain aboated and linally ceaa' I td my urine bce:' me normn:1. I chee fully recommend Foley's Kidney Ren cd. W. E. Brown & (Co. The' n~ew wa':itress sidled up' to dipper y'oung :m:m at tihe breakfa: table. who. after glancing at the- bi] opened his mouth, and a noise Issue forth that sounded like the ripping a of all of the cogs on one of the whee: in the power house. The new waitrer made her escape to the kitchen. "Fe low out there insulted me," she sail The head waiter looked at him. "I' get it," he said. "That's just the tral .nalle orderin his breakfast"-Arg ART AND WEATHER. A Storm That Suited the Painter, but Not the Committee. In a gallery there hangs a large canvas *.n an imposing frame. The painting shows a waterfall in one of the states famous for startling nat ural scenery. The picture has occupied. its present place for several years. "Does it belong here?" asked a vis itor of the man In charge. "No more than the others you see." "Seems to me it should be in the capitol of the state where this scenery is." said the visitor. "It was painted for the state," re plied the man in charge, "but when it was submitted to the art committee It refused to accept it." "What was the objection?" "You see the sky is overcast. The artist put in a gathering storm like ar. impending calamity. The art commit tee said it was a reflection on the rep utation of the sta 't a storm such as is represente 'nown in that: latitude." "Couldn't the ar . in another sky, one that ac. .gith the state's reputation for sc --ae?" "I suppose he could, but he refused He said that the rumpus kicked up by the art oommittee warranted the storm effect on the canvas, and he refused to budge. He sent it here, and here it: remains."-Boston Herald. WILD MACEDONIA. Strenuous Life Amid Savage Animals In the Balkans. Besides some warlike men Mace donia contains an abundance of wild animals. A traveler writes: "By the side of oaks and walnuts you find great tortoises and snakes eight feel; long, and bears and wolves abound. They are a serious drag upon indus try, and even in civilized Bulgaria ii; has lately been found necessary to in crease the government rewards for killing them. I believe it to be a true story that a party of peasants with horses was not long ago wholly de stroyed by wolves in the Mori Hovo mountains, r.othing but the bits and stirrup irons being found to record them. "In the same hills the peasants mi grate for the summer to.lofty shoul ders where the land is flat enough to grow little patches of maize, and here, night after night, they will sit up with a fire to drive off bears. There are tragic stories of women with bable; in their arms beating off bears with burning brands from the fire. "The prevalence of eagles is a de lightful feature for the traveler, and on the cliffs of Montenegro I once counted at the same moment thirty nine ravens." The Missing Link. A lawyer having offices in a Phila delphia building wherein there are some hundreds of tenants recently lost a cuff link, one of -a pair that he great ly prized. Being absolutely certain that he had dropped the link some where in the building, he caused a no tice to be posted in the following terms: "Lost-A gold cuff link. The owner, William Ward. will deeply appreciate Its immediate return." That afternoon on passing the door whereon this notice was posted what were the feelings of the lawyer to ob serve that appended thereto were these lines: "The finder of the missing cuff link would deem It a great favor If the owner would kindly lose the other link."-Harper's Weekly. .Not Included. After the dry goods sales'man had complete~d his business with Cyrus Craig, Centervmle's one storekeeper, he asked what was going on in the town. "Had sany entertainments this sea son?" he Inquired. "No," said Mr. Craig. "Not one. Sa lome Howe's pupils have given two concerts, piano and organ, and the principal of the 'cademy has lectured twice, once on 'Our National Forests' and once on 'Stones as I Know Them,' but as far as entertainments are -eon cerned Centerville hasn't got round to -'em yet this season."-Youth's Coin panon. _______ - Care of Snowshoes. Snowshoes need very little care. You don't have to wipe them dry with a chamois, for instance, the prescribed Streatment for skates. When taking :,them off merely tap them against the wall or a tree to shake free the cling ing snow and stand them up on their heels outside. Never attempt to dry them before a fire. When they are put away for the summer select a dry place where there will be no danger of mce.-Country Life In America. s-Thc Age of the Microbe. People just now are living in a state of almost morbid apprehension con Scerning what they should eat and drink. There have been the paleo slithic age and the red sandstone age. SThe present age would come to be known as the bacillus, microbe and tubecle age. - Lord Rabblesdale in House of Lords. What It Does. "Speaking of poetry, does the mod ern school make us think?" "Well, it makes us hustle for the Sdictionary-that is. those of us who have any curiosity at all."-Louisville Courier-Journal. The Long and Short of It. "He may win the race." "Yes: be's short legged, but long winded."-Detroit Free Press. Reason is not measured by size or height, but by principle.-Epictetus. Simple Remedy For La Grippe. La grippe coughs are dangerous .as LIthey frevuently develop into pneumonls. SFole's Honey and Tar not only stops te cough hut'heals and strengthens the alungs so that no serious results need be feared. The genuine Foley's Honey and1 pTar contains no harmful drugs and is in da yellow package. Refuse substitutes. dW. E. Brown & Co. 3 Overjoyed. "How did papa act when you asked Shim for my hand?" "I could see that he was trying to control himself, but he presented all the symptoms of a man who has adrawn a straight flush." - Houston Short Dogs Bite Low. Passerby-Here, boy, your dog has sbitten me on the ankle. Dog Owner sWell, that's as high as he could reach. SYou wouldn't expect a little pup like j.him to bite yer neck, would yer? London Tit-Bits. Who hangs himself in the chimney should not complain of smoke.--Ger man Proenrb. g~p OEI FE AN CHIDRE WIL dw-) H.. AN T Al % I/, N.,Q I pg7 II L NJVEi Cw iv THE WIFE AND CHILDREN WILL THAN6i TH A POLICY IN THE - Hartford Life Ins Will afford them Maximum Protection All Modern Policy Forms, Combini Liberal Premium Rates. MARIO] S. E. INGRAM, Local Agent, Manning. S. C. Are You Regular ? If you are noi, it is a sign of disease; a sign of some hidden female trouble, that may be under mining and weakening your con st'tution, and laying up for you mzah future suffering. Many thousands of weak, ir regular, suffering women have, in the past 50 years, been greatly benefited or cared by the use of that well-knowni, successful, purely vegetable, female tonic and cura tive remedy n WOMAN'S RELIEFe. Apple GI. Barnes, of Alto, Te. writes: "I caught cold, which ' made me irregular and gave me~ pains in my shoulders and sides. For almost 2 weeks I could not lift a chair, Cardui brought me all right again; I have no more Ir pains and am in very good health." At All Druggists WRI-TE FOR FREE ADYicE, sing age and descrlir~ ..P The Chattanooga Medicine Co., .Chattanooga, Tenn. E M4 Notice of Discharge. I will apply to the Judge of Pro bate for Clarendon County on the 16th day of A pril. 1909. for letters of discharge as Administrator of the Estate of Rausome Hampton, de eased.S. LE E HAMPTON. Pinewood, S. C., March 16, 1909. W u' Jab Work to iba Times afilea. Cures Coughs, Colds, and Lung Troubles. Pr ne* Pert Untouched For CO Peruvi FE ENDS nae Ceases. g THEN NEED HELP MUCH MORE I BY DO NOW. - OLD RELIABLE arance Company ii at a Minimum Cost. wt athe Best Featares with the Most. i RICH, Gen. Agt., Columbia, S. C. J. M. WINDHAM, Local Agent, Manning, S. 0.C FOLEY'S HONEY mTAR The original LAXATIVE coagh remedy. 1 For coughs, colds, throat and lung troubles. No opiates. Non-alcoholic. j Good for everybody. Sold everywhere. The genuine 'OLEY'S HONEY and TAR is in. a.Yelowpackage. Refuse substitutes. Prepared only by Foley & Company, Chicago. - .W. E. BROWN & CO. South Carolina. 3ERKEL.EY COUNTY. .CL.ARENDON COUNTY. Notice is hereby given, in accodance' ~specially of Section 34 Volume 1 of the Divil Code of South Carolina, that the* mtion i d to th ooaethe General ~ssembly of the State of South Caro on an authoritv to ec and an- - an a proper bridge across the Santee n the North or East side asmay be of aid river in Clarendon County, to some fil1ant~ and connecting the sid Mill. Plant with its property on the othier e \.NEE IVLUMBER CMPANY. December 5, 1908. -2E LFY5REY-~TAR a Gores Colds; Prevents Pneumonia Gs r. King's New Life Pills j The best in the world. .e Croup. La Grippe, Asthma, '] events Pneumonia and Consur W. E. BROWN & 00. xvian Guano...I.' by the Chemist or the cManufacturer TOBACCO TTON, TRUCK % an Guano Corporation i CHARLESTON, S. C. Lower Prices, than we quote mean but one thing-, the goods are of inferior quality Remember, "The best is none too good.' And the best is4he cheapest, be it Dry Goods or Groceries. STRIUSS-ROGAN COMTI SUMMERTON9 So C. BANK OF CLARENDON, Manning, S C. K We solicit your tUnking business. It is to yourinterest to Spatronize 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 already a - customer, come and see us about it and tell us why. If ou are, come and see us anyhow. It is never too late to oa good thing for yourself." Iterest Para.onsavings Deposits. BANK OF CLARENDON, Manning, S. C. rn Your Job Priin to The Ties ~EATY &BEATY, [ WRHE N OU COME . TO TOWN CALL AT ~GINEERS AND CONTRACTORS. Civil Engineering, Land Surveying, -AEL S ainage. Prompt attention to out-of- SH AVIN~ SA LOON wn patrons. lluchat Building, - \ANNING, S. C. Which is litted up with an D . . eye to the comfort'of haiR ope the cough an.d hels lungs customers...... __________________ A IR CUTTJ~lI CONTAINS NO IN ALL STYLES, HARMFUL SBA MPOOI N DRUGS Done witb neatness~ and hroat The Genuine is in the dispatch.. .. ... apinYEL LOW PA CKAGE L A cordial invitation is extended. . . -- Manning Times Block. Geo.S. Hacker &Son Doors, Sash, Blinds, SMoulding and Building -Material, CH ARLESTON, S. C. Sash Weights and Cords. Window and Fancy Glass a.Sgecialty. 8Meets on iourth Monday nights at A Visiting Sovereigns invited.