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If 9,896 Farmers and planters told you that their yields per acre of cotton, corn, tobacco, wheat, fruits, peanuts, rice, sugar cane and truck crops were greatly increased and even doubled By Using Virginia-Carolina Fertilizers and which they thought the best and biggest crop pro ducers on earth-wouldn't you feel that you should, in justice to your.;lf, try these fertilizers and get the same increased yields on your own farm? We have many thousands of un-asked-for letters from farmers blessing the day they bought Virginia-Carolina Fertilizers. Many of these letters are in our 1910 Farmers'Year Book, which can be had free of your dealer,or by mailing us the coupon SALES OFFICES: Richmnd. Vi. Atlata. CA. MLa si t~ his Coupn %eutolk. V2. 5swMULA6 G1. Vsacx:ACAXLMA XZNCAL Cobia.&S C. Vascasua Cataou.t CUZnc.At- Du m C - COMPAKY. A Ia m4 e a c opo rs 70t 2qo winstoo-Sacm. X. C. Fatr Y ow ro co. TChmIcolo. S. C. as leau . It' W.uolrgmeT. A1r. Wesphis. Tenn. ..... ............... I Sbacwpon, La. KYANIZE FLOOR FINISH Is made in seven beautiful colors besides oHl natural or clear. These colors are all durable and will stand water, hard usage and heavy shoes; same as the clear. hs all the same quality, works easy and lasts. Is made to walk on, but is suitable for all inside work 3-- well +s floors. Ecokiet Aa Cntic Cad Free. PLOWDEN HARDWARE CO. LO(W ~AT S to New Orleans. La.. Mobile. Ala. and Pensacola. Fla.. f or MARDI 6RAS. February 3 to 8. 1910. lickets on _sale February 1, -, oi, 4, 5. 6. 7, 1910. with tinal limit to reach original starting point not later than midnight of: Februaryv 19, with pr*,vilege of extension to Mlarch 7. 1910. Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Company. For further information, address nearest ticket agent, or T. C. WHITE. W. J. CRAIG, Gen. Passenger Agent. Passenger Traffic Manager. Wilmimgton, N. C. SOLD! S 9! FOR SALE! We wish to thank our customers for the liberal patronage during the fall. ~ We beg to say oiur Stock is complete in every Line, and we can save you money on any article in our Lines. We have just unloaded two cars of Buggies into our Repository, and we give the best guarantee with our goods of any dealer in the county. When it'comes to Wagons and Hand-made Harness our competitors are at a loss. Our buyer is now in the West and this week we will unload a car of Mules and Horses and can fill any order. Full Line of Oliver Chiiled Plows and Plow Re pairs always on hand. We only ask for your inspection of our Stock be fore you buy. To look and price, means we trade. Wishing you all a merry Christmas. I am yours for a square deal, small protits and quiec- sales. D. M.BR ADHAM & SON A CAR LOAD OF THiE NiCEST ilorses and Mules ever shipped to Manning, to arrive Thursday morning.,December 23rd. Come and see them. If you need a Horse or Mfule look them over before you buy. An article well bought is half sold. My Stock is bought right. Come and get yours before they are picked over. I carry a large stock of Tyson,& Jone's, Hackney and Wrenu Buggies. A car load of Piedmont \\agon~s just arrived. The best on the market for the money. Call and get my prnees before you buy. F. C. THOMAS, MANNIN6. S. C. Physaxa i ciatneeteboes Andeve foofromgingn your system. Th aetprodnet oi science is vLvo L.axative uker syrup purely vgtb-gne re~bleandofa pesant, arumatc taste. Veivo acts on the liver, as well as on the stomch nd owel, ad iof he geatst ossie ecac inconstipation. indigestion, bnnonss sick heaahe, feverkshness coic,flatulence, etc. Try VF 1 VELTO LAXATIVE LIVER SYRUP BRING YOUR MJ OB W OR K TO 1THF TiMES OFFICE. POPULAR FALLACIES, Some Old Fashioned Notions That Still Obtain Credence. THE CYCLE OF THREE IDEA. A Drowning Man May Sink Not Only Thrice, but a Dozen Times, and Still Be Rescued-Congestive Chills and the Merging of Diseases-Law Points. Three physicians were standing In a downtown drug store the other day when one, who had been looking at an evening paper. exclaimed: "Great Caesar. here it is again' I :iee it in the papers at least twice a month." "Whats thatY' asked one of the oth 1Ls zs.. 1opul:tr fallacy about a drowning man sinking for the third time. Here it says. *Just as he was sinking for the third time he was saved by the timely arrival.' etc. The next time I see this third time bus'ess it probably vill read. 'l1e sank for the third time before aid could be had and was drowced. -Why ill people ge: tht f'.ool idea that sinking for the third time must needs be fatal to a drowning man? Why, bless you. I saw a man sink a half dozen times before he was res cued alive. An ancie of mine, wit nesses said, nzever -saink but once. and he was drowned. The number of times a man sinks has nothing to do with his drowning. Ile way sink but once. I and he may go beneath the water any number of times. It all depends upon the person who is drowning. his iphys ical condition and how quickly the lungs till with water. "That cycle of three." suggested an other of the doctors. is carried along by those who insist that a person dies in his third sug9tesTive chi!!. tut this is not true. The same rule holds good in congestive chills. as in the case of the drowning man. A person znay die in the tirst or he many have a dozen and still live. The rule of three does; not obtain there either." The first physician, with great dis daIn, then told how many ignorant persons would swear that "if ye git th' malary an' it runs Into typhoid fever an' It rmns into newmony It's shore death." "There's that same old rule of three again." he continued Ilmost angrily. "First and foremost, one disease does not run Into another. There's no such thing as a collision between diseases, as many believe. If one has malaria he has that and that alone. The same thing is true of typhoid fever and pneumonia. Each one is a separate and distinct trouble, and a doctor with any sense should be able to diagnose his malady from symptoms which are always present in each and entirely different." From popular fallacies in regard to medicine the conversation drifted to fallacies regarding the law. A lawyer present was called upon to explain first one thing and another, when one of the bystanders said: "I made a bet the other day that a person had no right to touch a deadl body until the coroner arrived, and 1 won." -I "Who decided the question for you?" asked the lawyer smilingly. "Well." said the man sheepishly. "it was a bartender, but he's an educated fellow and is a good judge of the law." "You speak of the law as if It were something to be judged like cattle at a fat stock show." replied the attorney. "There is no law on any statute book Iu any state In the United States which says one may not touch a body b~efore the arrival of the coroner. "In case of murder the old English common law used to require that the body of the murdered one be left just as it lay until viewed by one in author ity. "That was done, It can plainly be seen, for the purpose of preserving the surroundings intact so that whatever. evidence might be there would not beI disturbed. In case of a murder today. especially If any mystery were con nected with It, common sense would teach a person to leave everything In-, tact, not alone for the coroner, but for the pollee officials as well. But should' the body of a murdered man be moved there is no law covering It unless It could be proved that the pe--^n .-.ho moved the body did It with the inten tion to destroy evidence. in cases of suicide or death by accident there could be no objection to moving the body anywhere in the city if done with humane or some other proper motive." -'"11 tell you what Is the law." said a stoop shouldered, long armed man who had beca listening long enough to get the gist of the discussion. "if a fellow sees a murder through a pane of gla' s he can't be a witness in the case." "Oh, plffle:" exclaimed the attorney. "I'm going to lunch. That's the limit. I was waiting for some yap to spring that. If that was the case and a mur der should be committed in this room half a dozen of us could not be comn petent witnesses, If your statement Is true, because we are wearing glasses. Glass is glass whether in a window ot on the nose. There is no such law as that. That's foolish." "I heard my grandfather say that." insisted the long armed man. "and4 he kow'd law too." "Yes," retorted the exasperated at torney, "and he no doubt gave It out as law that a man could stand with his bact against his own house and kill any one who came within a certain distance of him. But he would hang for It unless he had mighty good de fense. All of those things aro what we call 'chimneyv corner law.' but they won't hold In court."-Kansas3a City Journal. Took All ils Money. Often al! a man e'arns goes to doctors or for medicines, to cure a. Stomach, Liver or Kidney trouble that Dr. Kin"'s New Life Pills would quickly cure a slight cost. Best for Dyspepsia, lndi-j gestion. Bi!:iousness, (Coneti pat ion, .aundice. 31aiaria and D~ebility. :1.' at all druggists. Poetic Justice. -I -a, did you ever hear of a real case ofr poetic justiceY' --Yes. A man who once swindled me out of $6('O in an Irrigation schemee died of water on the brain."-Chicago Record-Herald. Not a Bit Conceited. Husband-Hocw conceited ysu are, EfPe: Youre always looking at your self In the glass. Wife-I'm sure I am not. I don't think I'm half as pretty as I really am.-Illustrated Bite. The kingdom of Prussia gets out of its cultivated foresta over $24,000,000 a year. LUCKY IMITATION. An Experience With the Russian Au tocrat Marshal Gourko. Marshal Gourko. the famous Itussian general. was a terrible autocrat On one occasion an impersonator of cele brated men was perfortning at a thea ter in Odessa. One evening he receiv ed a mysterious message. which read. "Study General Gourko." io Russia it is better not to inquire into matters that one does n.t understand. and so the artist spent an hour in privately impersonating the autocratic itussian. Just as the evening performiance was about to commence an order of arrest signed by Gourko was presented to the impersonator. and %ithout expl:anation he was led through the streets to the marshal's palace and Into an apart ment where the terrible man was seat ed. "They tell me that you imper soimte celebrated nen." lie roared. *'lnersvilate tre:* Giving a hassty look at Gourko. the performer turned to the mirror to "make up." It was an anxious ti:ue. for if the marshal should take excep tion t the representation he ba-1 un limited power to Inlict punishment. The imperso'iator dragged himself to gether atnd turned to the marshil a copy of his own face and overbeamring manner. Gourko burst into a roar of laughter. and the dangerous moment was over. EELS IN JAPAN. The Restaurant Cook Catches Alive the Fish the Patron Selects. Entering a Japanese restauraut. a guest who wishes broiled eels and rice Is led to a tank of squirming t.esh water eels and bidden to point ont tie object of his preference. n:: a writer In the Delineator. The cook. who stands by. selects the wrig:iin;; victim of his choice, strikes its head smartly upon a wooden block and. squattitng by it. grasps the creature's neck. in serts a knife in the left side of the vertebrae and dexterously runs it down to the tail. then. rapidly applying his instrument to the other side of the backbone. repeats the process. enilng the eel split open. Then. chopping the tlattened eel Into three inch lengths. the pieces are: plunged Into boiling water to make the skin tender. long bamboo splints used as skewers are thrust through I ben. and they are then placed on rods over glowing charcoal and broiled brown. being plunged from time to time into a vessel that contains old soy of Tbe color and consistency of molasses. These preparations concluded. the steaming eels again are drained and placed in red lacquer boxes with rice and set before the customer. The Phonograpii. One need not be afraid of operating a machine too constantly. as there is little danger of wearing it out, and the motor will give better service when used frequently that, when al lowed to stand unused. In all cases avoid winding the spring too tightly. Stop when it offers strong resistance. Irk many cases it is specifically statect that the needles should not be used more than once. and these directions should be observed. Not to follow them means almost certain damage to the records. The machine should be kept well oiled: otherwIse its mo tion will become sluggish. Sewing machine oil may be used for that pur pose. The records should be kept free from dust, as dirt clogs the sourd ware grooves and tends to give a scratchy sound to the reproduction. A good record cleaner may be made byj gling a small piece of velvet carpetj to a wooden block. Such a cleaner a ways should be used on dusty record before they are placed on the machlue. -Suburban Life. A Dismal World. "Why are you sad. iny dear? You ought to be supremely happy. Hlere i've just Inherited a fortune, and ev erything looks rosy. I can't under stand why at such a time as this youI should look so dIsmaL. What is It?! Have you beard tad news from hoe?' . "No. no; it isn't that. 1il try to throw it off. I suppose Im foolish not to be thoroughly happy. Let us not mention the matter again.' "But I Insist on knowing what it is that so depresses you. if It's anything that I can help I shali" "Well. If you must know, I've just heard thatt the Snobleighs next door are going to move away, so she'll not be here to feel jealous of me when we begin to put on style after you get your money."-Chicago. Itecord-Herald. His Rent Flag. On d)an. 1S every year, the anmniver sar- of the battle of Waterloo. the Duke of Wellington is bound to present to the sovereign a small flag, which is the annual rent in "petit sargenty" by which the estate of Strathfldsaye is held of the crown. The fla;: must be a miniature tricolor or eagle of the Napoleonic army, fringed wIth gold. with a gilded eagle on the head of the staff and the number of the year em broidered at the top corner of the flag near the eagle. An Old Idea. "In those old times when they cut off people's heads the train of events proceeded on one modern idea." What was that." The block system." - Raltimore American Making Sure. ighand Ferrymian (during momen tary lull In the stormm-E'm thenkin', sir I'l1 just tack yer fare. There's no sayin' what micht happen tae us. London Punch. He that plants thorns mutst never expect to gather roses.-Pilpay. Hoarse Conghs, stdffy Colds, nain in chest and sore lungs, are symp tous that quickly develoy into a dan gerous illness if the cold is not cured. Foley's Hion ey and Tar stops the cough, heals and eases the congested parts, and rngs quick relief. W. E. Brown & ne beat or e-unctuataon. At the time Colonel itoosevelt was carrying on his simuplitied spelling movement in Washington there was a. meeting of educators at Battle Creek. \Mich. and they visited the great san itariums there. Thea were shown throuh, and partieular stress was laid by the guide on the success that at tended operations there on enlarged and diseased colons, It being claimed that here was the seat of most dis ease. There was a banquet that night. and one of the visitors opened his speech like this: Washington. :.s we all know. is the seat of spelling reform; but, 1 take it. Battle Creek is bound to be the seat of punctuationi reform, for, as we were told today, you come here with a colon and you depart with a semicolon." aturda vening Post. BUYING RUGS INCAIRO It's a Risky Business For the Man Who Doesn't Know. LURING ON AN "EASY MARK." The Story of How a Rich American Was Worked by a Crafty Oriental Salesman-Under the Mystic Spell of the Dim, Religious Light. Writing of "The Passing of the An tique Rug" in the Century. John Kim berly Mumford tells this story: It Is beyond question cheaper to buy in America your ru-t and the ingenious tale that goes with it than to wait un til you visit Constantinople or Smyrna or Cairo or Tidis. They are much more skillful and insinuating over there. They have the advantage of local color and environment. and your common sense is under the spell of the east to begin with. Here Is an incident to Illustrate. A party of rich Americans arrived In Cairo one day se*.-al win. -i igo on a yacYlang trip and passed a week or more in sightseeing. One of them bad just Gnished a palatial house not far from New York a-nd throughout Eu rope bad bought marbles and bronzee. woodwork and velvets for It with a lavish hand. The journey to Cairo was made in order to secure rugs. What happened is Iest told n the words of a dealer In !he bazaar. from whom I had it. "There was a fellow In our con cern." he said. -who was always buy ing nightmares. and I had to work myself black in the face to get rid of them. The week before the Ameri cans came this chap had taken in a shockingly bad pair of Kirmans, enor mously big,. new and, to my mind. ut terly unsalable. When the head of the hause saw them he held up his hands and shouted. 'Get rid of those things for a hundred pounds to the drst person who'll buy them.' "So I rolled them up and put them one side. intending to send them to a commission man in the bazaar to un load. Next morning in came Money 'bags from New York with his whole company. le said he wanted to see the best carpets I had, and be saw them. I turned the place inside out. othing pleased him. for the reason that I made the common mistake of showing him too much. He thought I had something hidden away. so he winked me over into one corner and told me who be was. 'Now.' said he. 'I want you to limber up. I want the best. and I don't mind price if I get what suits me.' "I was in despair, for I had actually shown the man every carpet I had. All of a sudden I thought of these two freatzs baled away the day before. I almost laughed in his face. but finally I pulled my mouth down and began salaaming and asked bim why in the world he hadn't told me who he was in the beginnin,. then I shouldn't have wasted his time and abused his pa tience so. "He grinned triumphantly. 'I thought you had them.' he said. ' But.' said I, 'it will take a little time to get at them, and I must ask you and your friends t. wait pa tiently.' "They waited. and I tell you for the next half hour the men around that shop earned their pay. We went up stairs and unrolled those two rugs. We had a great big curtain of green puh. which we hung aaint the wall. Then we pressed the carpets out and put them up against the cur tain. That. you know. is worth 50O per cent to the looks. Then we adjasted the lights and stationed men all around to look as solemn as worship ers. Nobody was to speak above a whisper, and every man was to mur mur 'nhallah"' at appropriate Inter vals. "When everything was ready I ush ered the customers up and on tiptoe led them in. There is no doubt about it, the effect was fine. At first every body was still. It was like a church. "'Ah,' said the great man. 'that is what I cama for. I knew you bad them. You needn't tell me the price. Just send them to the yacht at Ales andria.' "That night I went up to the hotel where they were stopping and got his check for G0,000 francs for the pair. And tatwasn't the best of it. I had got into my stride then, and while he was busy annexing the Kirmans I had the porters bring up seven of the car pets he had refused downstairs and showed them in that dim religious light, unrolling them as if they had been sacred and sighing soulfully every now and then. lie bought the whole seven and to the day of his death fully believed that I was the original wizard of the east." Etiquette of Letters. Eighty years ago the etiquette of letters was far more rigal than now. Even the twopen~ny post w~as not con sidered good enough for correspond ene addressed to persons of any standing. in her "Reminiscences of an Octogenarian" Miss Louisa Packe tels us that when her father had oc casion to write to Londoners in his own class of life the letter was al ways conveyed by a servant not for any reasons of urgency. but because the post was considered a vulgar me dium of communication for persons residing in the same city and only to be used for the conveyance of letters to the country.-London Chronicle. A hopeless man is deserted by him self. and ne~ who deserts himself Is soon deserted by his friends. A Safegard To Children. "Our two children of six andl eizlht "ears have been since infancy subject to colds and croun. A bout three years ago [ started to use Folev's Honey and Tar. and it has never failed to prevent and cure these troubles. I. is the only med icine I can get the children to take with out a row." The above from W. C. rn stein. Green Bay. Wis., duplicates the experiences of thousan.ds of other users of Foley's Honey and Tar. It cures couh-. colds atnd crouo. and prevents bronchitis and pneumonia. WV. F. Brown No Argument. Patronizr of the Cheap Restaurant Look here. walter. this coffee is cold. Polite and laiteliigcent Walter-Quite right, sir. This Is a quk lunch cafe. and if the coffee was hot you couldn't drink it in a hurry.--London Scraps. The Preference. My dear," said the farseelng par ent "that young man may be a tridle tedious, but he is a coming inan." "Perhaps he is.' sighed the weary maiden, "but i'd rather he had more go In im."-Bitimlore American. SCARED THE OLD SAVAGE. Ruse Thzt Saved Dr. Felkin From King Mtesa of Uganda. When the well known Africnn tray eler Dr. Itobert Felkin was staying with the bloodthirsty King Ntesa of Uginda many years ago th- king. out of gratitude for his vIsitor's medical treatment. wished to cut ef his bend. On Dr. Felkin represenin:t that the treatment was noct finished and that if interrupt.'d it would cause Nlteai's death the latte;- granted him a re prieve until he w:is quite recovered. Then. however. nothing availed, and the execution was determined upon. Emin Pasha. who was a friend of Dr. Felkin. had instructed him most accurately about the state of affairs in Uganda nnd the court of King 31tesa and had revealed to him an Important state secret-namely. where Mtesa's powder store was hidden. Dr. I-'elkia remembered this at the right moment and as a Inst resort threatened that if Mtesa killed him he would bring down a flash of lightning up-.n his powder store. itesa replied incredu!ously. -Tell me where it Is." whereupon Dr. Fe..in whispered In his ear. "It is cotnice-led under your harem." 31tesi turned pale and allowed Fes kin and his companions to live. The "lithtning maker's' authority increas ed when nest day a flash of lightnin.t lippented to strike near the harem. Fooled the Town. University students have long enjoy ed a repm.latiun as practical jokers. but there has beca nothing quite so suc cessful as the famous sultan of Zan zibar hoax of some years ago at Cam bridge. One day the mayor of the town received the following -vire from one Henry Lucns. Hotel Cecil. London: "The sultan of Zanzibar will arrive at Cambridge at 4-27 for a short visit. Could you arrange to show him build ings of interest nnd .end carriage?" The mayor rose to the occasion. and in due course four darh complexioned gentlemen with tutbans and volumi nous trousers arrived at Cambridge. The mayor and corporation entertain ed them right royally, but to their chagrin they discovered a few hours later that the Interesting orientals were simply a quartet of undergrad nates who had played an immense practical joke upon the town.-LondoD Spectator. Not the Same. The new minister was making a duty call at the home of one of his flock and. taking a little six-year-old miss upon his knee, he said. 'ow. my dear, you want to be a Christian. like mam ma. don't you?" "No. sir," was the unexpected reply. "I would rather sing In the choir." Chicago News. State of South Carolina, Conty of Clareado. COURT OF COM.MON PLEAS. Mary B. Keels and Henry F. McClary. an jifaIt by his (iuardian, ad Litem., D. E. Gordan. Plainitiffs, against W. D McClary. Daisy Carrigan. Lex McCkarv. Wor man McClary. James McClary. Dargan McClary and Vera McCiar-,. Defendants. Deeree. UNDJER AND BY VIRTUE OF A Jdgment Order of the Court of Comi mon Pleas for Clarendon County, dated February 2. 1910. 1 w-ill sell to the highest bidder for cash. on Mon day, the 7th day of M\arch. A. D. 1910. the same being salesday, in front of the Court House at Manning. in said County. within the legal hours for judicialisales, the following real estate: All that piece, parcel or tract of land situate. lyin:: and be-ingr in the County of Ciarendon and State afore said, containing one hundred and fifty eight (1%) acres, more or less. and bounded as follows,. to wit: On the North by lands of Joseph Sprott; South by lands of Isaae JTohznson: on the East by lands of Mrs. M. A Henry. formerly a part of the same tract, and on the West by lands of Joseph Sprott and S. A. Rigby. The same being wore fully representcd upon a plat of the same made by P. G. Benbow. Snmrreyor, dated March 24th. A. D. 1886. Purchaser to pay for papers. E. B3. GAM BLE, Sheriff Charendon County. STATE OF SOUTH CABOUNA, Clarendon Couty. John WV. Weeks, Plaintitl against C. E. Br-oughton, Defendant. Sale LUnder I-xecution. UNDER AND iY VIRTUE OF AN execution directed to mue and il..ued by A. I. Barron. Clerk of the Couart of Com mon Pleas for Cliarendonm county. aignea December 'thx 190)5, in the above .tated case. I have levited upon and will sell ir. front of the Court Hou.,e. in M1anmn: within the legal hours of sale on .\o0 la the 7th day of Miarch,.1910), for cash. all the undivided interest of C. E. Brougton. decea.-ed, in aznd to all that pece. parcel or tract of lan~d lying, be ingr and situate in Santer Swamp. con taning (1,000) acres, more oir less, ad join ing lands of Santee Cr., press Lum her Cotmpany, and lands 'f Trezvant. bring a portion of the- Estatt6 of John J. B' ough ton. dec-a:- cd. l'urchaser to pay for papers. E. B. G A.\ R LF, Sheriti Clarendon County. KU LLTHE COUGH AND CURETNLUNGS wmDR.KING'S NEI DISCOVER ANALLIHROATAND LUNIG TROUBLE Gf/AQANEED $AT/SPACTORY OR M1ONvEY Rg/NMD.[ Notice of Discharge. I w~i. i apnh~ to : he .1u:: ot.(f I 'ru'bate for Clarendmn -ounty. on the '.th day.. of arch. 1910. for letters of di-char~ge as Admnistratr of the iFst.atc of Rufus trunsar., deceased. lnn. S. I '.. Feb'ruary 4. l1d1' AT (RNEYs AT LAw. D. J. A. COLE. I DENTIST. Upstairs over Bank of M~anning. .\hoe ANNING. S. C. iere ismore Sa Fe than Analyses The mere mixing of materials to obtain analy sis requires no special knowledge. The value of a fertilizer lies in the source from which the plant food is obtained. Each ingredient in Royster goods is selected. with a view of supplying the plant from sprouting until harvest. The plant is not overfed at one time and starved at an I' other. Twenty-five years experience goes with every bag. TRADE'MARK REGISTERED Sold by renable dealers throughout the South. F. S. Royster Guano Co. NORFOLK, VA. THE MANNING H ARDWARE CO. 1-3 ESTABLISHED IN .897. M Hardware, Tinware, Glassware. Crockery ware. 4 Enamelware. Woodenware, 2 Potware, Stores, Ranges, Oils. . .Paints, M: Heaters. W ire Fencing, Ban 1 Sporting Goods,Ban SPocket Knives, Brushes, ~ Razors, Shears ' glpS Shells. Nails, Sheet Iron SEtc. .11 Farm Imnplements, MilSupplies, Buggy and Wa~gonl Material. Tobacco Barn Flunes, ' WeDo Not Want The Earth, But we do want to sell you a portion of your Groceries. T he quality of our goods is always u to) the standard and we give sat isfation to every customer. Prices Are RIgh3 he.i YOUR MUE When you buy from US you canI many a worry and rest assured that you get goods as MN OLR 'cheap as you can buy thetu any- MN OLR where when quality is conisidereud. In this age of the world when :he pro tee:.ion of a good Fire !osuranmce P'olicy Prompt Delivery. coss:it~k.dtie. r~o -ei This is a feature in the grocery ret it is simfi' noor business to gro business which is very important, uir ed anuis is what you get when you u s tilm :your next order. . P. B. Mouzon..EM NMn Hacker Mfg. Co. slces-4oas -ro Geo. S. Hacker & Sor, Country Property for Sale. an. ti..-* Manufacture~ .I~dular,. .nh and i.odr: Columns an'~ -. d i~a.niter s: ie and Gab Real Estate Agents. Manning.. 4 C Ornuvmen:.i : Sreen D~oors and WE DEAL IN Gla-'.. Sa-ih tord and Weights. DR '.)HN H. MORSE. \' :-r~nsa I!AN. Dr. King's NIew1.ifePiIIs se natr. s.'.