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arangemen were not made at the time the Icehouse was buSt and filled for the drainage of the water therefrom, this should be attended to before the warm weather sets In. Those who have tried It recommend hot soapsuds as an excellent means of ridding cabbage and cauliflower of the green worms which Infest them. A strong resin soap and soft water give good results. Ground tobacco placed where the shee can get what they want will rid and keep them free from attacks of stomach worms. This seems to be a case where the acquiring of the to bacco habit is really an aid to health. Rather oddly, while dairy cows seem to show an instinctive aversion to profane and rough language in their caretakers and will shrink in their milk If this becomes the rule, they do not mind whistling or a song In the least, but seem rather to enjoy it. Dampness, blight and rot funguses go hand in hand. On this account many irrigated sections of the semi arid west are almost entirely free from these pests, due to the bright, fine weather which prevails almost unin terruptedly during the growing season. -A donar a bushel is a good price for wheat, but the first prize bushel which was recently exhibited at the meeting of the Wisconsin Agr entural Expei ment association brought $W. It was of the winter variety and win doubt less be used for seed in the growing of prise wheat for next year. The spraying of previously untreat ed orchards can be counted upon to increase the yield of fruit from three to four times as well as to remark aWly improve its quality. What It will do for a sien orchard can esily be weked out on the above basis. The cost of spraying good sized bearing trees in materials, labor and machin ery should not exceed 2D cents amnal ly for three or four sprayings. The sbapes, or long split shnges, which have been used in many see tos of the west in place of the ordi nar shingle, are cut chiesy from the gr pine, wbih posseses a re nmakahy straight and even grain. The water foows the grooves of the pain veW closely. while the method of laying them insures a good circula tion of air and tends to check the rot which iso destructive of closely laid TheDellom aple when tasted fal *T bears outsat sime, being Juicy and t a delbleos Sagr and pomsuing a nod color that Is hardly surpassed by the Spitaenbeii sowever. it Is ten 4w e the Jonathan and ofabout the same season and should be put on the -mte+ by Christmas time if the con saumris togett at tsrehne. The Delieiou apple has been on the mar kat but a few years, being "rinted by a southern Iowa nUreyman Many a nlpait has a bad blot e n its rpttonhecauseof the wretch eg anatton of the thoroughfares lead inag dereto when timely work done withr a road rnae and drag would grVeatly iinspeare 'their can.ttoan In ino iany case these same "rocky" . oads are- found in townships and towns whseadpeviorser street .amnmelaeemart-drawing 'good sal ~atenSior taking care of the highways, -'idle I2IE equmen* for keeping them Ka order Is acquiring a coat of rest in scen vacant lot or alley With a view to doing some advanced orialong the lin. of developing In enOed staisof Sitnaard- Amerian oret f opotatoes and to develop. inus ones the experimnent station at -S3rt jCoDis Cob., a state where the r isi potato Auds arzamethly con genial boie, Is seekIng to learn the st- etaanimosand establmshed v* esi bspurpose of knowingi Sthied..ncn hich lies behind ,-n, sh.wiie-tbearnishe to an pms'awo able to itve thei ,==mtlonhfl.those who aid in the mo~eeidw2 be givenr copies of the pub kleton on the hitory ofthe potto. Mot ame the rmeron-'ling veg -tablease i more tooansoe than as -.),a smalR bed of whicbwilll (gginefct rato *nrnlsh all a familyI Einwatnd some to spare. In start in e smln plants may be used ~portins of the roots of an old bed Aered before the sprouts start. TheI 1pants ahould be set to a depth of abot eight inches In soiB made mel 3bw and enriche with a, good supp'y afwell rotted stable mnnre. Aspars bedsholdte enwatesed. and If ther raif is not enough it shonld be freigatad during the growing seal son. . Statistles which have seen compiled Sthe diepartment of agriculture at 10Wsbington cantain som interesting ~ures relattre to exports of farm4 prdacts drng the past sixty years.! byshow that these expors conis in chiely. of -cttn grain and grain prodetb and packing .honse products, have increased In value from an aver age'of $15&000,000) a'year In the dive *ear period from 1851 to 355- to an. saerg of $04,00,000 a year in the perIod 3901 to 290G whbe.ln two sub sement Fuars. 3902 and 1908, they have exceeded in value the above; av tot - $10004O00000. The sta 1osu how that the increase in the uoan and value of agricultural ex gots has far outstripped the increase I-the ountry's poplation. The interrogation mark or "pin" (i) was originally a "q" and an "'o," the latter placed under the famer.! -hey were simply the first an ls letr fthe Latin word "questlo." So, too,.with the sign of exclmatto r interjeetion (. In Its original Pn rity It was a combination of "1" and -, the latter unteath,. as In the question mark. The two stood for -o," the Latin exclmation of joy. The paragraph mark Is a Greek "p " the initial of the word paragraph. The early printers employed a dagger to show that a word or sentence was ob jetionable and should be cut out. A Silent Man. Jorkins-There's Perkins-yon know Perkins-entered Into an agreement with his wife soon after their maY rige, twenty years ago, that when ever either lost temper or stormed the other was to keep silence. Bob-And ,the scheme worked? Jorkins-Admi1 rably. Perkins has kept silence for twnty years. A whole lot of farmers will be pull Ing off the remarkable stunt of husk Ing two crops oi corn In 1910. This does not mean that conditions have changed so tisat they are producing two cropS % year, but only that they got balle up in their husking opera tions last fall. Recent investigations Into the life habits of the mole show that his chief diet. when he can get It, consists of the large white grub and the larvae of the June bug, which do much dam age to lawns, iowers and strawberry plants. On this account alge the mole is entitled to man's protettion. The disk drill Is generally recog nized as the standard machine for sowing small grain. Not on.ly does It mean economy in the use of seed, but It puts the grain at an even depth; covers all of it and thus insures a uni form germination and even stand. which means uniformity of growth and ripening. The end gate seeder is a relic of a bygone era and should be relegated to the scrap pile. As a result of the heavy freeze of last December it is estimated that 10. 000 cars of oranges were damaged In southern California. This is about one-third of the annual output and will constitute a very heavy loss to the growers. Where the fruit was not enlirely ruined its quality was so in jured that it not only will not pay for the expense of marketing. but tends to seriously demoralize the prices for good stuff. As a general rule, sires of merit of either dairy or beef types are high pdced. But rather than buy a low priced sire of little or no merit a bet ter plan is for two or three neighbors who are breeding the same type and strain of cattle to unite In the joint purchase of a really good herd animal. When he has been used as long a time as Is feasible arrangements could be maee to exchange him for another sire equally good, but not related. In sections where clover and alfalfa are the chief forage crops many horses are lost annually as a result of the feeding of a ration too rich in protein, and the loss is especially heavy during the winter months, when the anianls ax taking the least exercise. A par tial means of obviating this trouble lies In substituting for a good share of the leguminous ration cean, bright strw and timothy or wild hay where available and allowing the horses to have daily exercise The agricultural department at Wash Ington. after maRing tests with them. recommends yantlas, taros and dash eens for culture In portions of the south where the land is too wet except for the cultivation of rie. These plants compise salad plants, tubers which are excellent for table use and as stock feed and roots which are val uable sources of starch and from which alcohol can be made. They have been the staple food of native Hawailans and an Important food crop in Japan, China and a number'of other countries._ Nothing is thought of paying from $1 to $1.50 for enough oats or other snall grain to plant an acre, yet many a fellow wili balk at paying more than $2 a bushel for seed corn. This seems a bit lnennaistant, for at the unusual pice of $14~ a figure which prevails in some sections of the corn belt this eson, the cost of seed for each acre would be but $1.Z on the ssenmption that a bushel will ueedrelght acres. In dtermining hew much a fellow can afford to pay for his seed corn this sprngItlswell for one to keep these igures in mind. As a reult of extensive expediments which he has made Protfeeh Bolley of the North Dakota experiment station presents the view that flax does not do eil after flax, not because of an ehaution of the fertiling elements, of the soil, but as a result of the de eopment In the soil of root rots and other blight producing funguses, which attack the plants and greatly reduce thdr vital!ty. He holds that the same Coatin apply to spring wheat and some other sinan ran His remedy fr this situation Is the planting of the seed of blight resistant varieties of flax and jrain, the formalin treat ment of seed and a roation of crops, which will prevent the several fun gses from getting a foothold In the so. It is generally considered that 343 ubic fleet of wild hay wil1 make a ta 400 cubic feet of timothy and 512 cubic fleet of clover or alfalfa, the bar being settled in each case not less than a couple of months. One who has measured much hay in the stack has found a convenient method of e-asuing to be the following: Take oe-third of the over-distance' from the ground on one side of the stack to the ground on the other-for the square of the stnak This would give the number of cubic feet in each run nng foot of the stack. For example, if the over were thirty feet, one-third of this would be ten feet, which. squared, would give 100 cubIe feet as the contents per rnnning foot. If the stack were thirty 'eet long It would contain 3,000 cubie feet, from whieh igure the number of tons could be easily ascertained by dividing by the umber of cubIc feet per ton for the different kinds of hay. A Wandering L.ake. Lake Nor, In the Tabi- desert, in southwestern Asia, which has been sale the "wandering lake," presents a phenomenon about which contra dictory views have been entertained. Perhaps the Swedish explorer Sven Hedin has given the most plausible explanation touching this phenome non. It appears, accorirf. to that explor er, that the Tarimi rf rer, entering the lake from the west, brings down dur ing the period of high water late In summer a great quantity of salt, which has the effect of driving the lake lying on the level floor of the desert toward the southeat. But the sum mer wind, drifting the surface sand and darkening the heavens with dust, blows generally from the northeast, and it, too, tends to drive the lake be fore It. The combined effect of the urging by the wind and the river is to force the lake southward. Yet It is thought the migration of the lake is not constant in direction, but It shifts back and forth Intermittently, -aodin as te rcnmsaam es change. Figure It Out For Yoursef. If you want a hard case there is the case of a man who late at night bought a bott!e of whisky at a public house-price. 3s. Gd.-says the London Globe. He handed over a fire pound note, and the publican would not change It. "All right," said the cus tomer. "Gtre me the whisky and 10s. Gd. and ktcp my five pound note." Next morning the customer came in, planked down four sovereigns and said, "Give me back my fire pound inote and we shall be straight." The publican and the sinner looked at each other. Can Z-ou tell at a glance which got the better of the bargain when the customer went away with his five pound note In his pocket? The question puzzled a whole office full of literary, financial, sporting, philosophical and editorial men-until It reached a girl of eighteen who Is en gaged in dealing with cash. All the rest were calculating on paper and reaching the result by devious ways. The cash girl saw it in a flash of the eye. Do you? Shut your eyes and do it in five seconds if you wish to beat the cash girL Wonderful Victoria Falls. "It Is weli nigh impossible to de scribe a scene of such wonder, such wildness," says Lady Sarah Wilson in her "South African Memories" of the Victoria falls. But she gives this graphic description: "Standing on a point flush with the river before it Imakes Its headlong leap, we gazed first on the swirling water losing it ,self In snowy spray which beat re lentlessly on face and clothes while the great volume was noisily disap pearing to unknown and terrifying depths. The sightseer tries to look across, to strain his eyelknd to see beyond that white mist which ob scures everything, but It is an impos sible task, and he can but guess the width of the fails, slightly horseshoe In shape. from the green trees which em so far away on the opposite bank and are only caught sight of now, and then as the wind causes the spray to lift. At the same tube his attention is fixed by a new wonder the much talked of rainbow. Never varying. never changing, that perfect shaped arc Is surely more -typical of eternity there than anywhere else." Curran and Lord Cla. Curran, the Irish advocate, was on terms of intense enmity with Lord Clare, the Irish lord chancellor, with whom, when a member of the bar, he fought a duel and whose hostility to him on the bench, he always said, caused him losses in his profession al income which he could not esd mate at less than ?30,000. The inci dents attendant on this disagreement were at times ludicrous In the extreme. One day when it was known that Cur ran was to make an elaborate state met In chancery Lord Clare brought a arge Newfoundland dog to the bench with him and during the prog ress of the most material part of the case began In full court to fondle the anima. Curran stopped at once. "Go on, go on, Mr. Curran!" said LArd Clare. "Oh, I beg a thousand pardons, my lord! I rea&ly took It for granted that your lordship was engaged in con sultation!" Two Smart Actors. In a popular historic drama the ac tor who takes the part of Napoleon Is required to read aloud a document of cnsierale length which is brought to him by General Berthier. This, being written at length, Is seldom com mitted to memory. A short time ago, however, the property master at an nglish theater minlad the document, and Napoleon, who was new to the part, received instead a blank sheet of paper. For a moment he was aghast; then, eager to escape from his pre dicament even at the expense of a fellow actor, he handed the paper to General erthier, saying, "Read It to me." The other actor was not In the least confused. "Your maajesty," he said, handing it back, "I am only a poor solier of fortune, and you must ex cse me. I do not know how to read!" His Emancipation. Away back in l'7l Josiah Woodbury of Beverly, Mass., thus published his happy' emanctpntion from matrimonil woes: Beverly, Sept. 15, I1fl. Ran away from Josiah Woodhury, coop er his house plague for seven long years, Masury Old 3Xoll, alias Trial of Venge ane. Be that lost will never seek her; he that shall keep her I will giv, two Buhet of Beas. I forewarn anl Persons in Town or Cownty from trusting said Trial of Vengeance. I have hov, all the od (shoes) I can find for joy,. and all my negbore rejoice with me. A good Rid dane of bad Ware. Amen! J'SSIAH WOODBURY. Not Troubled. Irate Tenant-I asked you when I ented this place If you had ever been troubled by chicken thieves, and you said no.' Every one of my chickens was stolen last night, and I am told that the neighborhood has been infest ed with chicken thieves for years. Suburban Agent-I never keep chick ens. A Narrow Escape. "What! You a widow, dear cousin?'" "Yes." "Well, that's a lucky escape for me. Do you know, I nearly married you once."-Bon Vivant. A Roast. "It takes Freddie so long to make up his mind." "Why should It? He has almost no material to work on."-Cleveland Lead Frugality is founded on the princi ple that all riches have limits.-Burke. Foley Kidnev Pills contain in concen rrated form ingredients of established therapeutic value for the relief and cure of all kidney and bladder ailments. W. E. Brown & Co. Long Words. While our language does not contain suh long words as are found in some other tongues nor so many words of unusual length. vill we have several that are awkwardly long for conversa tional purposes. We bave -philopro genitiveness." with twenty letters: -in tercnvertbltes.' with twenty-one; "intercommunicabilities." with twenty two: -disproportionableness." with twenty-three, and '-transsubstantiation alists" and "contradistinguishalbility." each containing twenty-four letters. An effective little word is "synacategor mttic." as It manages to compress eight syllables Into seventeen letters. The lon;:est monosyllables contain nine letters, and there are four ex amples: "splotched." -squelched." srengths" and "stretched." -New IYork Tribune. No Toadying. Among the good old ways of "merr4 England" Is the tendency to democracy prevaAng in her boys' schools. Par ents can be assured, it is said, that rn pampering will fall to the lot of theft sons, however exalted may be thell rank or great their possessions. At English paper tells the story of an Indian official of high rank calling upon the house master in a famous public school, where a young prince, son of a rajah, was being educated. This official brought a special message from his master, the rajah, to the ef feet that he wanted no favors or ex ceptional treatment of any sort ex tended to his son on account of his ex alted birth. "You may set tie mind of the rajab at rest on that score," said the house master, struggling to keep back hi smile before the dignified anxiety Of the Indian official. -If the authorities were Inclined to dLscr;..;inate In the prince's favor. the b.-,:.of the school would set the matter right. Among them generally the rajah's son an swers to the name of 'Nigger.' and I understand that with his intimates he Is familiarly known as 'Coal Scuttle.' Sinister Motives. Two men-Wilians Jones and John Smith-were neighbors and deadly en emles. They often crossed swords in court and out of It. and Jones, being what might be called more clever than Smith. invariably got the better of the encounter. In the end so cowed was Smith that the slightest more on the part of Jones made him nervous and suspicious. ar.d with the remark. -1 wonder what object he has In thi'T he called up all his reserve faculties to combat the fresh attack which poor Jones never contemplated. One day a friend called on Smith tand greeted him with: "Well, old man, have you heard the news?" "No," said Smith. "What newsr "Jones is dead. He iled last night at midnight," replied the other. Smith paused, drew a hard breath, raised his hand to his forehead and thought, then blurted out: "Dead, did you say-Jones dead? Great heavens? I wonder what object he has In this?" .ights His Pipe In a Gale. I write as one who has smoked In his time more matches than nost people, and it wil be und"stood how I regard the bus driver's ability in lighting a pipe. A gale may be blowing, the horses requiring special attention, his left eye engaged on the refection of the o..mibus In shop windows, a pas senger Inquiring who won the Derby in 1, constables issuing directions with right arm, a fare hiling him from the pavement, and amid all these distractions he can strike one wooden match, hold it In the curve of his hand and the tobacco is well alight. AlsO while hats are blowing about the streets in the manner of leaves In au tumn his headgear never gr s from its place, rarely moves from the angle de cided on the Orst journey. I have-al ways assumed that he takes It off at night before retiring to rest, but to part with it must mean a terrible wrench.-London Express. Spontini's Decorations. Casparo Spontini, the composer. re garded himself In the light of a demi god, and when Inspirations crowded upon him hie donned a wide, tog like gown of white silk with a border of gold and a fez of white silk em brodered In gol from which a heavy tassel hung down. With great dignity e sat down before his desk, and if a grain of dust was visible on the paper on which he penned his music e rang the bell impatiently for his servant to remove the obstacle. Spon. tin owned so many medals and deco rations that they could no longer be accommoated on his breast. At a grand musical reunion at Halle an old musician remarked to a comrade. "See how many decorations Spontini has. while Mozart has not one." Spon tini, who overheard It, replied quickly, "Mozart, my dear friend, does not need theni." A South African AnimaL There is a curious looking animal in South Africa that looks for all the world, like a piece of toast with four legs, a head and a tall. It resembles a pussy cat about the forehead and ears, but its nose Is distinctly that of a rat, while its tail is not very dis. simila to that of a fox. This strange animal Is called the aard wolf and doubtless dwells la South Africa be cause. judged by his looks, he would not be admitted into good animal so efy anywhere else. Why He Desired a Cannon. It is related that an Indian chief once approached General Crook and wanted to borrow a cannon. "Do you expect me to loan you a cannon with which to kill my sol. diers?" the old veteran inquired. "No," the chief replied; "kill soldiers with a club. Want cannon to kill cow boys." - Thermometer Down. Little Willie-Say, pa, doesn't It get older when the thermometer falls: Pa-Yes, my son. Little Willie-Wel. ours has fallen. Pa-How far? Little Wile--About fie feet, and when It struck the porch floor It broke. Her Prize. Daughter-DI)d you have to fish much, mamma, before you caught papa? Mother--Fish. my dear-fish! 1 was bear hunting..-London M. A. P. Josh BIing~s used to say that when a man begins going downhill all cre ation seems ;:reased for the occasion. For More Than Three Decades Fole's Honey and Tar has been a household favorite for all ailments of the throat, chest and lungs. For infants and cildren it is best and safest as it con ains no opiates and no harmful drugs. None genuine but Foley's Honey and Tar in the yellow package. lhefuse sub stitutes. W. E'. Brown & Co. Appropriate Treatment. The Thoughtful Man--What woukl you recommend as trentnear fora man who Is always going aroundl with a poor mouth? The Funny Fellow Send him to a dentist. He Did. "Did Simkins get any' damages In that assault case?" "Did he? My dear fellow, you ought to see his face" A man without patience is a lamp without oil.-De Musset. Bucken's Arnica Salve -rba lest Salvo In The Worhl ~.CATOiIA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have ALCOHOL 3 PER C Always Bought SibdEwR Bears the Prmmes Diggesioa a o NOT NA COTIC. 0mm :It SApdymor&ME q-- f J 'tion, Sour SDa o Wo~oo~s~&1 ~For Over MesandLOSS OF SLEEPI FrOe Thirty Years c C CASTORIA E~ace"ofWh-VWe. r~ Mi c A9 m gow e o FII Z FER11IZE We are now manufacturing at Manni all grades of Commercial Fertilizers and c licit your patronage. We use only hi grade matenal, and "NO FILLER." MEAL MIXTURES A SPECIALTY. We make the price right and guarantA satisfaction. See us before you buy. Manning Oil Mill C. R. SPROTT. President and Treasure If You Passi our door without a purchase, you- miss an opportunity that comes very seldom to any one wishing anything in the Hardware Line. Another lot of those Eureka Ranges at $30 which give as much satisfaction as -W others at $60. Oil Stoves of the best make, that bring rest and- comfort to the tired housekeeper.- As usual, a full Lineof Hardwar Crockery, Glass ware, SCREEN DOORS AND WINDOWS, Paints, Oil Varnishes. Brushes, Wire Fencing, Poultry Netting, Plws. Harrows, Cultivators, Weed ers, Tobacco Flues. All at lowest prices. So don't miss us. Yours for business, nu the Levi "Busy" Block. dmk W fm - I;., for Headquarters frHay, Grain. Rice Flour, Ship Staffd Mixed Cow Feed, and Chicken Feed. We Sell Lime, Cement,Acmne Wall Plaster, Shingles l.aths. Fire Brick Drain Piye. &c. Our usual assortment of Ilorsts and Moles, and a full stock of Buggies, Wagons j arid Harness to select from. BOOTlHARBY LIVE STOCK CO I SUMTER, S. C. BRING YOUR MJ OB W OR.K TO THE TIMES OFFICE. J. S. BELL, VR GENERAL MACHINIST. |IW 14I Sanitary Plumbing, Steam Fitting | \SI and Automiobile Repairingj A Specialty. / gent for Maxwell Automob~les.I You will find mue at my shop every dav, and to serve you will be a pleas re-All my work guarante'ed. South. Min Street. one block from Court House Sucehnrvrytc el essniafateianecceaf.e~ bIn nerhaps pitoheraaninataon femmos weaknese they are the suprm remedy, as thousands have te'e. bte av oka ll~~ppsi FOR KIDNEY, LIVER ANDyorkchnftwi. STOMACH TROUBLE it is the best mredicine ever RsoldnSTRS overa duggar' couter 1Al12 Klming ist reat, Chr eston Clareido PessentClub to he intenned Drugealth: S e ls kitch n g niaonisms paiimporkantnof inlifor-foussordorsrmayU' 4 Sit 3D111e Gil (Sp O il een Raeangros ostt All kinetter have-arlookTaatoallithaMprteagis Gi~mea al. Pon N. PRy &1 rlSES WAMA A SIT, roIARN'S ATU STORE MANNINO, S. C.Everanhing. S C h. .:d the Charge. At the men's :-r"ice in a Yorkshire parish the vicar :ried to convey the lesson th--t the truest heroes and hero Ines are those who do noble deeds In the secret corner of the home, where none can se: or applaud.. ."Few of you seem to think," he con cluded. "that your wives staying at home uncomplainingly to mind the children and prepare the meals are heroines. and yet their touching devo tion to duty proves them to be so." It certainly hadn't struck one old farmer in this way before, and as soon as he got home he promptly told his wife that the vicar had called her a heroine. "Whatever does that mean?" asked the good lady. "Oh. if means a woman who stays in t* house instead of goin' art to show hersen." explained the farmer vaguely. "Then I'm not a heroine, an' I'll thang t' Ticar to mind what he's say in'," snapped the wife. "I go to his church as much as t' other women do. an' he must be blind if he can't see me. Why. I'd five different colors In t bonnet I wore last Sunday!"-Lon don Spectator. An Ideal Nusba is paLient, even with a nagging wife, for be knows she heeds help. She may be so nervous and run-down in health that trifles annoy her. If she is melan choly, excitable, troubled with los. of appetite. headache, sleeplessne-s. con stipation pr fainting and dizzy sre's, she needs Electric Bitters-the most wonderful remedy for ailing wonen. Thousands of sufferers from female trou bles. nervous troubles, backacbe and weak kidneys have used them and b. come healtby and happy, Try thni Only 50c. Satisfaction guaraute'l by a:1 drngists. The First Balloons. Te chemieni philosophers have dis cov-ered a ;odly (whieh I have forgot ten, ut will inquire) which dissolved by un acid emits a vapor lighter than the atmospherical air. This vapor is caught, among other means, by tyin:; a bledder compressed upon the bottle in which the dissoition Is performed. The vapor, rising, swells the bladder and tills It. The bladder Is then tied and removed and another applied till as much of this light air Is collected as is wanted. Then a large spherical case is made, and very large it must be. of the lightest matter that can be found, secured by some method like that of oliing silk against all passage of air. Into this are emptied all the bladders of light air, and if .there Is light air enough it mounts into the clouds upon the same principle as a bottle filled with water will sink In water, but a bottle filled with ether will float. It rises till it comes to air of equal tenuity with its own if wind or water does not spoil It on the way. Such, mrdmn, is an air balloon.-From Dr: Johnson's Letter. Sept. 22, 17S3, to Mrs. Thrale. What Everybody Wants. Everybody desires good health which is impossible unless the kidneys are sound and healthy. Foley's Kidney Rem edy should be taken at the first indica tion of any irregularity.. and a serious illness may be averted. Foley's Kidney Remedy will restore your kidneys and bladder to their normal state and ac tiit". W. E. Brown & Co. Beethoven's "Moonlight Sonatr..'' The story runs that Beeth.,ven's *-.\oonlighzt Sonatai--always so called, though he so rarely gave a descriptive name to any of his works.-was com posed on an occa~tion when he had been playing to some stranger folk by chance. Walking with a friend, he overheard in a hrmble house some one playing with much feeling a bit of one of his sonatas. He paused to listen. In a mment the music ceased. and a girl spoke longingly of her wish to bear some really good concert. The voice was so appealing that the com poser r-tep~ped without hesitation to the door and knocked. Admitted to the wondering host, he saId. "I will play for you." and played wonder fully till the lamp baard out. Then with ?he moonlight tiling the room he bega.z to imp~rovise-the~ mysterlous delicate br':things of the beglunng of that w,.nderful so'na.a then the trcksv elf-llke second p'art. and the glory of the' closo.- C'hristian S-ience .\onitor. The High Cost of Living Increases the price of many necessi ties without improving the gqoality. Fo! ev's Hone-v and Tar maintains it'; hig-h stndard of exel-lene and its great eur ative qualities without any increase in cost. It is the best remedy for coughs. cols, croup, whooping cough and all ailments of the throat. chest any lungs;. The genuine is in a yellow package. R~e fus sustues.r WV. F. Brown & Co. Notice of Discharge. I will apply to the Judge of Pro bate for Clarendon county, on the 18th day of May, 1910, for letters of discharge as Administrator of the estate of James Cantey, deceased. MALACHI CANTEY, Administrator. Pinewcod. S. C.. April 18, 1910. STATE OF SOUTH.CAROLINA County of Clarendon. By James M. Windham, Esq., Judge of Probate. WH EREAS, Powell P. Johnson made suit to me to grant him Lettersof Administration of the estate and effect* of James Thomas Logan. These are therefore to cite and ad monish all and singular the kindred and creditors of the said James Thom as Logan, deceased, that they be and appear before me,in the Court of Pro bate, to be held at Manning, 8. C..on the 5th day of May, next, after publication hereof, at 11 o'clock in the forenoon, to show cause, if any they have, why the said administra tion should not be granted. Given under my hand, this 23rd dav of April A. D. 1910. JAWES M. WINDHAM. [sicaL.1 Judge of Probate. Winthrop College Scholarship and Entrance Examination. The examination for the award of va can .scholarships in Winthrop College and for the admission of new students will be held at the County Court House on Friday, July 1. at ) a. m. Applicants must t. not less than fifteen years of age. When Scholarships are vacant after Jul' 1 they will be awarded to those making the highest average at, this examination. provided they meet the conditions governine the award. Applicants for scholarships should write to President Johnson before the examination for Scholarship examina tion blanks. Scholarships are worth $100 and free tuition The next session will open September 21, 1910. For fa'rther in formation and catalogue. address PRESIDENT D. B. JOHNSON. Rock 111, S. C. SMITH BRO.S' o RC HESTRA till fill engagements anywhere at reasonable rates. Will play for Picnics, Dances, Etc. Address, I WAYMAN A. SMITH. Box 45, Manning, S. C. The Dodging Period of a woman's life Is the name often gient ''change of Ilfe." Your mimlSC come at long intervals, and grow scanter untfl they stop. The chaenge lasts three or four years, and causes much pain and sufferIng, which can, however, be cured, by takng OFCARDU01 Woman's Refuge in Distress at quickly relieves the pa!'i, Derw Sousness, lrritability, m~iserableness, finting, dizziness, hot and cold ri1shes, weakness, tired feeling, etc. Cardul will bring you safely through t ,s .odn per'', and build up your strength for the rest of your life. Try it (You can get itat all druggistslin SI1.00 bottles. S"EVERYTHING BUT DEATH -- .rtes vir;:Ia Robso'.or Easi .em. E.."unt!! 2 took Ca.*. .kis Cured -c ose' utkiv I: sur:'rised my ctor. Who Make Kidneys and Bladder. Rtiht Rifl ii 'ATA