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THE WAY TO GET FAT! Exchange that puny spring appetite for a wholesome zest. Eat Plenty of Fruit ! Fresh Fruit in sufficient quantity being out of the question. both as to price and variety. we call attention to the excellent line of new arrivals in Evaporated Goods. Apricots, beautiful Cidifornia's, per lb ... ...... c. Prunes, selected Santa Clara's, per lb.. . 15c. Peaches. selected California's. per lb.. . 121c. Apples, extra fancy New York's per lb.. . 15c. Nectarines, fancy California's .. c Manning Grocery Co. "Big Store on The Busy Block." You cn make a water-tight box out of hardwood flooring, coat the inside with KYANIZE FLOOR FINISH Fil it with water and let it stand all day. Twenty-four hours of water soaking won't feae the KYANIZE a bit. When it's dry inan hour or two it will be as bright as eve.C KYANIZE is waterpoof- it's made so on purpose. Cm in ca and %em Beae"iful Colors od Sw a W.eft as was an- es PLOWDEN HARDWARE CO. SOLD! ~lAN ! 1OR SIE We wish to thank our customers jor the liberal patronige during the fall. We beg tosy our 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 gosof any dealer in the county. When itcomes to Waosand 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 profits and quick sales, D. M. BR ADH AM &:SON In theFight. The decks are cleared for action. I am now in the race for cash trade, and I have i splendid stock of everything needed on the farm or in the household. I cordially invite an inspection of my stock of Dry Goods, Fancy Goods, Notions, Shoes, Hats, Clothing, Crockery, Tin, Wooden and Hardware. GROCERIES of all kinds and in large quantities. ,Come to my store, price my goods, examine the quality. and if not as cheap as the cheapest, then don't buy from mec. _I have made special arrangements to do a large cash trade this season, and I fully realize that I must, to do business, meet sharp competition. This I have prepared for. I want your trade. Yours. etc., B. A. J OH NSO N . BRING YOUR 12J OB W OR KJE TO THE TIMES OFFICE. The coaegerate Xou~em. The movement so long neglected has at last. begun to erect a monument to the memory of the heroes who wore the gray,-soldiers whose record was the marvel of the civilized world. Clarendon now proposes to place upon the court house square a suitable mark of its pa triotism by having erected a shaft in hznor of those who responded and laid down their lives upon their country's altar. All contributions sent t. ThE .IANNINGi T1MESi will be acknowl-I-d through its columns. J. 11. Lesesne ....... ... .....$10 00 Louis Levi.. ................... 10 00 Fred Lesesne ... ........ .... 10 00 Mrs. E. Appelt.............. 10 00 David H. Jones.......... ....... 10 00 D. L. Green............ ........ 5 00 C. M. Mason............ ....... 5 00 R. F. Ridgeway...... .... ..... 1 00 R. M. Strange.................. 5 00 W. T. Wilder...... ..... ..... 5 00 The Call of The Blood fcr purificaTin, finds voice in pimples, boils, sallow complexion, a jaun.aded look, moth patches and blotches on the skin.-all signs of liver trouble. But Dr. King's New Life Pills make rich red blood: give clear skin. rosy cheeks. fine complexion, health. Try them. 25c at all druggists. A -POOR JUMP. It Came Near Being the Death of lea bey, the Painter. Napoleon Bonaparte. as Is well known, was in the habit of walking with his arms crossed upon his chest and his head slightly bent forward. Isabey. the painter. was at Maimal son, and he and some of the first con sul's alds-de-camp were having a game of leapfrog on the lawn. Isabey had already jumped over the heads of most of them when at the turning of a path he espied the last player, who, In the requisite position, seemed to be waiting for the ordeal. Isabey pur sued his course without looking, but took his dight so badly as only to reach the other's shoulders, and both rolled over and over in the sand. To Isabey's consternation. his sup posed fellow player turned out to be Bonaparte. who got up. foaming at the mouth with anger, and, drawing his sword, pounced upon the unfortunate artist. Isabey. luckily for himself, bet ter at rnning than at leaping. took to his heels and. jumping the ditches di viding the property from the highroad. got over the wall and never stopped until, breathless, he reached the gates of the Tuleries. Isabey. It was added, went Immedi ately to Mme. Bonaparte's apartments. and she, after having laughed at the mishap, advised him to lie low for a little while. THE ADAM'S APPLE. An Important Organ That Helps to Protect the Brain. One of the most remarkable pieces of mechanism in the human system, a device which anticipated several of our modern patents, is the Adam's ap ple, which for ages physicians consid ered a sort of freak of nature with out any material use In the human economy. But how differently this ltttle device is considered today! If we had no Adam's apple there would have been more deaths from apoplexy and brain disorder than ever chronicled In history. Instead of be lng a useless organ this article serves as an Important storage system to protect the brain. For Instance, when we are excited or too naimated the heart pumps the blood up to the brain a little too fast. and If It could not be stopped by some automatic device death 'or brain dis ease would follow. The Adam's ap pe is the blood storage cistern which intercepts the rapid flow and holds the surplus blood. Again, If the supply from the. heart runs short and the brain Is likely to suffer from an insuffcient supply the storage cistern gives up Its surpias of blood. 'Thus this organ acts au tomatically to check and increase the flow of the blood to the brain, protect ing that organ from damage through our temporary excesses. - Pearson's Weekly.________ Sedan and Bath Chairs. The sedan chair, so called from hav ing been made at Sedan, In France. was Introduced into England in the tIme- of King Charles L. Often this chair was most ornate without and luxurious within, for an ancient poet speaks of one e e Covered with velvet red. And cloth o5f Ene gold about your head. With amask white and azure blue Well diapered with Iles new. Seated in their sedan chairs in all the glory of paint, powder and _patches. the belles and ladies of fashion of the eighteenth century were carried from rut to rout by two stout lackeys In livery. As all people who love their Dickens are aware, these chairs were still in use in the days of the Pickwick club. The origin of the bath chair is "wropt In mystery." We are told that It was "much used by the inhab itants of Bath," probably for the pur pose of getting to and from the pump room. Nowadays the use of the bath chili is confined chiefly to invalis. Lndon Mall. An English Election. emarks the London Chronicle: "The worst of election expenses is that the candidate can never be sure what sort of pig in a poke he is buying. The parliament may run its full term or It may come to an end after a few months. Even if It lasts the game may be decidedly not worth the can-' die. Sir Mountstuart Grant Duff gives a poignant little incident of the weari some struggle ov. r the coercion bill in iSSI. 'When things were at their dullest and deadliest Stuart Rendei heard a man as he rolled off his seat in the extremity of weariness say. "And to think that I should have paid ?7,000 for this""" Her Proof. "Just think of It! One person in' evry thirty-seven in England is a pauper." "Why, John," she returned. "it isn't so. I met more than thirty-seven peo ple in London last summer myself. and there wasn't a pauper In the lot." -London Tit-Bits. He Was Right. "My doctor told me I would have to uit eating so much meat." "Did you laugh him to scorn?" "I did at first. But when he sent inm his bill I found he was right."-Wash-I ington Star. His Style. Tom (who takes his meals at a ho tel)-Do you like your meals served table d'hote? Dick (who patronizes a street waflie wuagon)-No. I generally take mine a la cart.--Baltimore Ameri can.I Ambition is but avarice on stilts and The:Dmor. of The Ai: ii tLe germ of LaGrippe. :hat, breathed in. brings suffering to ihousands. Ilsi after effects are weakness, nervousness, lack of appetite. energy and ambition, with disordered liver and kidneys. The greatest need then is Electric Bitters, the splendid tonic. blood purifier and re u!ator of Stomach, Liver and Kidneys. Thousands have proved that they won derfully strengthen the nerves, build up the system and restore health and good spirits after an attack of Grip. If suffer ing. try them. Only 50c. Perfect satis faction guaranteed by all druggists. A STRANGE PLANT. The Drinking Orchid and Its Fruitless Search For Water. -The strangest orchids I ever saw," said a naturalist. -live on the edge of a lagoon on the Rio de la Plata Il.' I say, for sure!y no animal Is more alive than they, and among them I first realized the pathes of a plant's immobility, the cruelty of its roots that bind it fore--er to one spot. "Lese orchids had each at the cen ter or axis a long stem a half inch wide and a quarter inch thick. They grew on dead limbs overhanging the lagoon. and now and then when fn need of water they uncoiled their axial stems. lowered them three or four feet to the stream and when enough water had been drunk coiled the stens up again as a tape measure coils up on its spool. "A strange sight that still and trop ical afternoon-a silent, sun drenched lagoon, a scarlet blaze of orchids and here and there those slim, supple tubes descending to drink, satisfying them iselves then coilir.g up again. "But what impressed me most was a mass of faded orchids that continually and restlessly let down their tubes in vain, for the stream had fallen, and hence the tubes descended upon dry ground. It was pitiful. The orchids were dying, but with what strength was left to them they lowered and drew up their tubes. They felt fever ishly and weakly for the water that wasn't there. "A sad sight-a sight that brought bome the pathos of the Immobility of plants!"-Exchange. BLAKE'S VISIONS. I The Curious Hallucinations of the Post-Painter. William Blake. the contemporary of Charles Lamb. was a man of visions Blake dined with prophets and held converse with archangels. A friend of Blake called on the poet-painter "and found him sitting, pencil in hand, drawing a portrait with all the seeming anxiety of a man who Is conscious of having a fastidious sitter. He looked and drew and drew and looked, yet no living soul was risible. 'Disturb me not,' said Blake In a whisper. 'I have some one sitting to me.' 'Sitting to you!' exclaimed- the astonished visitor. 'Where Is he? I see no one.' 'But I see him.' answered Blake haughtily. 'Ihere he is. Hix nme is Lot. You may read of him in the Scriptures. He is sitting for his portrait.'" Blake's hallucinations, however, rare ly took a malignant form. One of his most beautiful visitors was of a fairy funeraL. "I was walking alone in my garden," he said. "There was a great stillness among the branches and flow ers and more than common sweetness in the air. I hezd a low and pleasant sound and knew not whence It came. "At last I saw the broad leaf of a fowc' move, and underneath I saw a procession of creatures of the size and color of green and gray grasshoppers, bearing a body laid out on a rose leaf, which they burled with songs and then disappeared. It was a fairy's funeraL" -Chicago News. The Manchus. The name "Manchuria." to desig nate the country of the aaanchus, is not known to the Chinese, but was in ented by French geographers. The Manchus are a tribe of Tartars who gained the ascendency in China in the seventeenth century. Manchu is Chi nese for "-pure" and was applied by an ancestor of Shun Che, the first Manchu emperor of China, to his dy nsty and his people. The Manchus resemble the Chinese only to the eye of a stranger, just as we think that all Chinese laundrymen look alike. To themselves the Man chus'- are distinct- from Chinnamen in appearance. as n race, and one who knows eastern races easily distin guishes them. Most of them are short and good looking, with brown and rud dy skins.-New York Tribane. Conscious During a FaIL. Every time a workman falls from a forty story. building there are people to say. "Well, he probably didn't feel it when he struck." There Is little or no basis for this belief that a person is dead or unconscious at the end of a long falL. Our surviving jumpers from Brooklyn bridge prove this, and that a person retains consciousness Is shown by the case of the English boy who fell down a pit some 2l50 feet deep and shouted "Below!" three times on the way down. One theory is that a person falling would not be able to breathe, but a train at sixty miles an hour is moving faster than one would move in falling a hundred or so feet. and no one pretends that one would die of suffocation if he put his head out the train window.-Exchange. A Way of Explaining It. Wife-Why, John, fust see what a stupid blunder the newspaper has made In Its account of our silver wed ding! Don't you remember I wrote it Out for the reporter that we had spent together twenty-five years of married happiness, and the stupid typesetter has gone and made It twenty-five years of marred happiness. Isn't It awful? Husband-Oh, well, dear, don't be too hard on the poor fellow. Perhaps he's been married twenty-fire years him self.-London Tit-Bits. First and Last Words. "Why do we pay so much attention to the last words of great men?" "Possibly because their first words are all allke."-Washington Herald. One makes one's own happiness only by taking care of the happiness of others.-Saint-Pierre. Saved From The Grave. "I had about given up hope, after nearly four years of suffering from a severe lung trouble." writes Mrs. M. L. Dix of Clarksville, Teno. 'Often the pain in my chest would he almost. un bearable and I could not do any work. but Dr. King's New Discovery has made me feel like a new person. It's the best medicine made fc:-ehe throat and lungs." Obstinate coughs, stubborn colds. hay fever, la grippie, asthma, croup, bron chitis and hemorrha"es, hoarseness and whooping cough, yield quickly to this wonderful medicine. Try it. 50c and $1.00. Trial bottles free. Guaranteed - The HRgh Cost of Lving increases the price of many necessl.iei without improving the quality. Foley's Honey and Tar maintains its high stan dard of excellence and it; great curative qualities without any increase in cost. It is the best remedy for coughs, colds, croup, whooping cough and all ailments of the throat. chest and lungs. The genuine is in a yellow package. lefuse substitutes. W. E. Brown & Co. HIS TAPESTRIES. The Gems the Collector Bought and Showed to the Expert. That the collector falls into a :rap occasionally is shown by an episode which we recall. Au enthusiastic pur chaser of old tapestries was once of fered In Paris a masterpiece executed on a large scale and held at a large figure. Consulting an expert. be was urged to buy. but the sum demanded seemed to him at the moment a good deal to Invest in a tapestry. and be let the opportunity pass. A year or so later he met his friend. the expert aforesaid, and asked him to come to his house to look at two tape tries he had just secured. "They are smaller." he said. "than the one you advised me to buy and which. to tell the truth. I have always regretted. ati I paid twice as much for them as I was asked to pay for that glorious piece, but while it seemed a fearful lot of money to spend I simply couldn't resist the chance." The specialist in tapestries walked into the gallery of the.proud collector and gazed upon his prizes. He gazed for a time in silence and then had to be very guarded in his speech of con gratulation. He was looking at the original tapestry, which his friend could have had for half the money. now neatly cut In two and supplied with borders. He never revealed to the victim of this ingenious little game what precisely had hiappened.-New York Tribune A TRYING ORDEAL The Fattening Process of a Marriage able Girl In Tunis. The marriageable girl In Tunis has a trying ordeal to go through after her betrothal to the man not of her choice. but whose choice she is. She has to be fattened to the required size before the ceremony can take place. As soon as the betrothal takes place she is taken to a room and there coop ed up till the fattening process is con eluded. Silver shackles are fastened round her wrists and ankles, and the task of her parents and future hus band Is to increase her bulk till her wrists and ankles fill up the shackles. If the husband is a widower or has "discharged" his first wife the girl has the shackles of the first spouse placed on her, and she must :11 them out. It takes a long time to do this as a rule, and sometimes it cannot be ac compUshed in spite of all efforts. It is then open to the future husband to cry off the bargain or waive the condition. In the case of a bachelor he takes care to see that the bracelets and anklets are not too large-that is, if he is fond of the girl-but if he is being forced into the marriage by his parents he is a great stickler for ci'tom. Stout girls are the more quickly snapped up In Tunis.-st. James' Gazette. Wrong Diagnosis. Mrs. Slingchin put her head over the fence and thus addressed her neigh bor, who was hanging out her wash ing: "A family has moved Into the empty house across the way, Mrs. Mangle." "Yes, I know." "Did you notice the furniture?" "Not particularly." "Two loads, and I wouldn't give a sovereign a load for It. Carpets? I wouldn't put 'em down In my kitchen. And the children! I won't allow mine to associate with 'era. And the moth er! She looks as if she had never known a day's happiness. The father drinks, I expect. Too bad that such people should come into this neighbor hood. I wonder who they are." "I know 'em." "Do you? Well. 1 declare! Who are "The mother is my sister, and .the father is the superintendent of the Sunday schooL" "Oh-sh-umn! Do you think It's going to rain" The First Tooth Festival. Among the Syrians there is no such thing as giving a party In celebration of the first anniversary of the birth of a child. The celebration is held when the baby cuts Its first tooth. On such an occasion friends of the parents are not Invited to the house to eat cakes and listen to a phonograph. but what ever sweets may be prepared for the ocason are sent by the parents to the homes of the friends whom they wish to Inform of the news. The friends later visit the parents and tender their cogratulations. The dishies In which the sanninleh is carried to neighbors and friends are not returned Immedi ately. Sometimes It is a week or even two before they are back in their cus tomary places In the family cupboard. When they are returned they are not empty. _____ Particular. "Walter, bring me a finger bowly' "There's your finger bowl, sir." "But that's only one." "And do you want two. iIr?' "Certainly I want two. You don't suppose I'm going to wash my left hand In the -bowl I just washed my right hand In, do you?" - Yonkers Statesman. As Ever. "When Cholly Van Rox proposed to me he was too rattled to say a word-" "Then how did you know he was proposing"Y "Oh, r..y dear, his mcney did all the talkng!"-Cleveland Leader. Fooled. "Dle man dat t'lnks nobody can't fool him," said Uncle Eben, "stahts In by foolin' hi'se'f right there."--Wash ngton Star. They that stand high have many blasts to shake them.-Shakespeare. CATARRH CURED AT HOME Trial Treament of Dr. Blosser's Catarrh Remedy Free to Sufferers u y'ou have camarrh of the nose. tl' .oat, or luns, if yau arec constantly spitting, blowing th nose,. have stopped up feelin:g. head notsm. deaness, asthma. bronchitls or weak lUu4ng. you can cure yourself at homne by a remedy se simple that even a child '-an use i. t will cost you only a postal card to eget ,a liberal free trial packca&e of Dr. ii1o,,,er a wonderful remedy. It Is sent by mall t" eve-ry interested sufferer. Certainly no offer couldi be more liberal. The ful -.reatment Is:.ot expensive'. A pack age contaning cncugh to iast one w hole month will be sent by mail for 81.00. A postal card with your name and address set to H. Rt. B5OGER. Mannini Times omoe. Manning. S. C.. winl bring you by return mail the free trial treatment and an interesu~tng bonklt. so that you can at once begrin to cure SQUARING THE CIRCLE. An Ancient Problem That Has Turned Many Brains Dizzy. The oldest of problems Is that of squaring the circle-!. e., of telling the precise length of the side of a square whose area will equal the area of a given circle. The tirst attempt we know of was made 500 years before the exodus of the Jews. Since at least 1300 B. C. Chinese brains Lave turned dizzy over it. The oldest mathematical book in the world-written about 2000 B. C.. by Ahmes, scribe to an Egyptian kin, and now resting In the British mu seun-pretends to solve It. but It doesn't. Our old friend Euclid pru dently avoids the subject. Books have been written to prove that it is impossible. others to prove the Impossibility of proving Its im possibIlity, others again to prove the impossibility of proving its possibility. One scientist, a professor of Zurich. adopted some fifty years ago a rather original method of tackling the prob lem. He divided the door of a great loft Into thousands of small squares and spent his days in solemnly throw Ing needles about and noting the num ber of times they fell clear of the chalk lines. but It did -not help him much. The important ratio which would set tle the question has been carried to 500 places of decimals. And still It is not exact. If you have a taste for sums you can start and carry it to G00 and see what happens At any rate, you will soon find your hair getting grayer.-London Answers. A HUMIUATED MONKEY. The Crippled Old Despot Was Made to Feel His Mighty Fall. The following amusing story is told by J. L. Kipling in his "Man and Beast I In India" of the humiliation of a mon key whom physical disablement pre vented from mnintninIng his despotic position as leading male of the troop: "One morning there came a monkey chieftain, weak and .lmping. having evidently been worsted in a severe fight with another of his own kind. One hand hung powerless, his face and eyes bore terrible traces of bat tle, and he hirpled slowly along with a pathetic air of suffering, supporting himself on the shoulder of a female a wife, the only member of his clan that had remained faIthfnl to him aft er his defeat. "We threw them bread and raisins. and the wounded warrior carefully stowed the greater part away In his cheek pouch. The faithful wife, see ing her opportunity, holding fast his one sound hand and opening his mouth, deftly scooped out the store of raisins. Then she sat and ate them very calmly at a safe distance, while he mowed and chattered in Impotent rage. '-He knew that without her help he could not reach home and was fain to wait with what patience he might till the raisins were finished. This was probably her first chance of disobedi ence or of self assertion in her whole life, and I am afraid she thoroughly enjoyed it." Watch For The Comet The Red Dragon of the sky. Watch the children for spring cougths and colds.: Careful mothers keep Foley's Honey and Tar in the house. It is the best and safest pret-ention and cure for croup where t~he need is urgent and imrned ate relief a vital necessity. Its prompt use has saved many little lives. Contains no opiates or harmful drugs. Refuse sub-1 siitutes. W. E. Brown & Co. The Lion and the Unicorn. The unicorn came into the royal arms with James I. It belongs to the royal arms of Scotland. The signet ring of M1ary, mother of James, Is in existence, having a unicorn on It. I the royal arms, therefore, one support er represents England. the other Scot land. The lion and the unicorn occur also In ancient Buddhist scriptures, placed together as supporters. Both of theseI animals also are seen playing draughts together in the well known Egyptn painting. But the oldest connection of the two is in the blessing of Jacob and of Moses. - London Notes and QuerIes.__ ____ Second Thought. very sorry that what you ask I can not grant. I cannot become your wife. Yours sincerely. Ethel Barrows." Then she added: -P. S.-On second thoughts. dear George, I think I will marry you. Do come up tonight and see your own true Ethel." A Subtle Dufferenca "And so." began the browbeating at torney to the shabby witness. "you live by your wits, do you?" "No, sir: by other folk's'- lack of them." corrected the witness modestly. He Knaew. Wife-I wonder why there~ are no marriages In heaven? Husband-Be cause It is heaven, of course.-Illus trated Bits. - Notice of Discharge. I will apply to Lhe .Judge of Probate for ('larendon county, on the 28th day of April 1910. for letters of discharge as~ guardian for John Edwin Welch and William McBrid Welch formerly min ors. JEHt S'.nTH. I Guardian. Turbeville, S. C,.March 20th 1910. Notice of Discharge. I will apply to the Judge of Probate for Clarendon county, on the 1.th day of April.- 1910. for letters of discharg'e as Administrator of the Estate of WiI lam B.Wh ite, deceased. I ALFED J.Administrator. Manning. S. C , Mar-ch 14, 1910. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of Clarendon. B;JmsM. Windhamz, Esq.. Jludge B:J es of Probate. W E ES Wiliam F. Rush made suitto m to ranthimLetters of Adminitration of the estate and effects of Richard A. Green. These are therefore to cite and ad onish all and singular the kindred and creditors of the said Richard IA. Green. deceased, that they be and a ppear before mne.in the Court of Pro bate, to be held at Manning. S. C.. on th. 7th day of April. next, after Ipublication hereof, at 11 o'clock in the forenoon, to show cause, ii any the' have. why the said admninistra tion should not he granted. Gien under my hand, this 22nad da of March A. D. 1910. JAMES M. WINDHAM, s-i-.A Juidge of Probatte. F~p3UOEYA~T p The shooting, tearing pains of neuralgia are caused by excitement of the nerves. Sciatica is also a nerve pamn. Sloan's Liniment, a soothing external application, stops neural gia pains at once, quiets the nerves, relieves that feeling of numbness which is often a warning of paralysis, and by its tonic effect on the nervous and muscular tissues, gives permnent as well as immedi ate relief. One Application Relieved the Pain. "I advie a lay ho wsagea sferer frm neuagat try Soan ini met. After one application the pain left her and she hsnot been troubled L.* 1R11Reni joints and Sprains and all Pains. by e e t reme fo heu es atic m Si ff alow.nrv At AU Druggists Price 25c.1, 50c. and $1.00. Sloan's Li n the arso ngt Fre e adpM: c * DR. EARL S. SLOAN TN, quetsT M s. We are now manufacturing at Manning pa grades of Cotnercial Fertilizers and so licit your patronage. We. use only high p-ade matenal, and "NO F JllER." atefrtilie. Seu eoeyuby C. a R.se a SPROTT.h wreidtaadreatsfeefomeuagat lansurini mhe S mter Ir on Wh anlf e n h a oen rokle LierNiwmentgmn stthers-es eam o REumis. -f oNsage Spris all saizs.adtps Slon' Teas.onth Hrs BntFre.Th.r e FETrLIFounRS! FERTacILIZERS. WVne Sarew milsanuWood-wring atManing lici you icksonge &WE. use onyhg MEAMURESMABILECILY W mate righ price rh and onsaisactrate sa opisfacin efulpriasGie us beoeao triay. C.ho yo .YSR OTurs de nt rulyas The Sumter Iron Work U MTES. RAGOS. CAN. UnderlNw Manerl, Lirmters-eentcea nginer.Shin StoeDrain Enie.&c NatgWeat Ber, all ar e s canod tras. phontr Fo. nryad10cie.o BOVOTH AwRll a VE W ST-orkin Mcin The uisUTR &S. M ussingou Your ve rinin tuly,