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5f7mm doctors inthe cots and now I am en we~l-e A who suffr wob JJ U wehofids Caa cnturey b ead up '-~~*~a realst mesave. y; =of destaen. .mk difcl as psie he -Two Traveles, a matter o experiment a -ntokancertainho ee ~ecould (Idal ZD-lm wu~by means of maps ~4~iiescription. To .make - difficult as- possible he, .of icigio*hat' 5 h~ade no knowledge except1 e crIacter. He punr At the end of four a non who had just re Vbm-. e~e~ " e last in Mada at~e a :. -'prnrabout- t al~a^ w; :parently kn r A ap e those who have lv SAd ., sage: a I ouid no work. .I adne medicine"vbich = e a e Twobottles Pb~me*~ andaos I -~ - k~nofweek. Icheerfully .1 - -a bioc r - ~eau fhone4 pot -- enn -w tate c eut their~ 4be st cutnn sittheni out et tharwood. umdmm~tRNIDa great daenoey.a atavPgon a sta co h Atewas asked tobo fiveoIunds Rlwpassenger~aiart efaedes Stitegames which were to .be thoe amus5ement of the passen .'a Y9mansna camei *se ch 6tmd beseg commIt-4 enpd askied that 'bit name be with 3.si "What's the matter? Are you agtidt sid the chairm, somewbat pbd fur my opponent sits at my ta tisandiat diswlastaight*il leaned em td -me -and--said. 'Whates this IsIl& 'GIleise- I see on the Uas? I knew right away that he lam a sough. gaf. who .had. lifed all in thrDe open. If you want me to gh~t you've got to find a man that *kirs a dermna hen-h es It." - gw York Tribune. Fortmss in Faces. There's olsen much-trush in the say n"her face is'her fortune," but its sevr said where pimples, skin erup -tioan, blotches, or other blemishes dis Igare it. Impare biood is back of themi all, and shaws the need of Dr. Kine'% Nw Life PIUs. They promote health andeauBty. Try them. 25.cents at all Quit. Familiar. -sEtr Is not Jnueh In .a name per gassaid - a yoqng Sunday school eessee "StlIit id give mea turn istandiday when I asked a boy In w-y.-: h bw smapy apostles .there we.Mbive dibadook up' and -reply erelly, Oh, adozenorsol'" Tribute. nicer--8 Jones Is a famous ergnk? Bocker--YeU. When .he dies ihey will stop the wheels In every body's head for five minutes.-Phila delpaLedgr H. Koew. Employer (to applicant) - Do you know anything about an elevator? Ap picant-Sure! I was brought up on ne-New York Times The one who refuses to be beaten ---teve--ntuall +e the ct fl--White Rhinoceros. The white. rhinoceros is not muet whliter than the common rhinoceros but instea&.of ending in a triangular upper lip its muzzle is square. The white rhinoceros is the largest -aninal on earth; with the exception of the elephant. The common rhinocero; lives .on leaves, roots and bulbs, which he digs up with his frontal horn. The common rhinoceros is vicious and cruel; the white rhinoceros is calm and living exclusively on gra* and bege. Though long regarded as n one horned animal, he has two- horns. But the smnal s af the two, set back of the ronta1horn, is so rudimentary that It Is not seen from a distance. The forward horn is four and one-half fet-In Iength,-and one of its sides is Bat. Some of the frontal horns are srooved. Thiewhite rhinoceros close ly resembles the unicorn of antique legends, whose horns, when used as ringki vessels, sterilized poisons and randred.them. harmless.-Harger's. Waterproof Foliage. -An -e .l -scholar was 'giving. an address on the philosophy and religion af east Es-English was of good galty, only now and then becoming E erest ng from the humbrous point t.vieur when he attem colloquial Dns. _Ater describ .-itk fervor iets pgrthe one who can wall amid the dfiulties ang.perplexitiesof mor a Oistence and-.yet,. unaffected by iese, retain .his perfect serenity-the asaker was looking about for some gentne-omparjson by which-to-bring ome the idea to his hearers. "Ab, I have it!" he said, pleased at the-recolection that rewarded his ef fort. "It 'is an expressive saying of pn.eon language, said to me'b a ladywith whom I was last evenig conversing. Take that familiar brd; the duck. It is. possible to .pour- a ucketful of water upon that duck.and et the water can never get -Into -his leaes." Savedby His Wife. She's a wse.-woman who knows 4ust hat to do when her husband's:l1fed1&in iges bus Mrs. R. J. Flint, Brainee, t., is of that kind. "She insisted on my using Dr. King's New Discovery," rriteis Mr. F. "for a dreadful cough, rhen I was so weak my friend .all bought I had only.a short time-to li e, nad eler s die" A ni ek aapre ii'sa themeost ab an - h :edicine- for many ip,'bion hitis, croup, whooping cough.eqigsy Dnsilitis, hemorrhages. A -trial will oQvince you. 50oand $1.00. - Guaran ee by alAduggists. pqpp edhalnbos-tn 3iiiYork. e1h.-=a nathing as..a telephone umber has some significance in the tandng- of. a firm," remarked a man hhi eelse to do but talk and eErse. "How so?" asked the other. E -ke-the low numbers-'Broad. 1' or. atenee-and, as a rule, It will be be nuniber belonging to. an old estab ishe *m, provided, of course, that rm-bas remained In.one location. The irmn _now bearing the abere number gas in e lsrence before telephones mere in use at all, and In like manner t: possible to ascertain 4the old es ablised business houses.. If a firm oves, but reminn in the same ex bait has the privilege of retain g 1toriginal telephone number. Lmecans don't care much for age 1 dong.'established anything, as a fit-brear an u8n in this Ity that are proud of then eehn iteerslin a system where the num eusseruntIgh up in the thousands.'" (ework Press.. -eersd His Deoise . ".onceada .customer," said .an nlertaker; "who had lost his wife nd-who-cmne to us to bury hr,-whicli me did. f Ater the fuieral .he came lack t s He..had; selected the cas at.In.which his wife was burled,.and o.he bought one Just like It for him elf., e-was a man in health, with no respect of death, so-far as that was redrned, but-he. was greatly grieved nd cast down'over -thee death of his rite, andwhen he should dle he want &to babnrled-in a casket just like hat $swhich-we had buried her. So e,:hoghtthls casket, and .we held It "SomethIng- more than a year after e Ather woman with whom he e in love and whom he married, ad after that we got a letter from im sayin 'Sell my casket -ve.no use for It aow.'."-New York'Sun. -gr. Peter Holan, 11501 Buckeye Bd, ~levead, O., says: "Yes, indeed I can ecomead Folev's Honey and Tar ompound. My little boy had a bad aseof whooping cough, some time he rs blue in the face. I gave him Fol sy's Honey and Tar Cdmooud, and it iad a remarkable effectqand cured him n a~shors time." Contains noharmful rogs. The Dicksnn Drug Co., Manning, . C.,and Leon Fischer, Summertdft, Out of Her Line. The horny .handed son of toil whoc had just inherited a fortune went tc see a manicure. "Can you do anything with these, ma'am?" he asked, exhibiting his hands. -- "Yes, sir," she said, "after you've gone to a surgeon and had those cracks stitched~up. I don't meddle with jobs that belong to the regular practition ers."-Londoni Tit-Bits. The Exceptiolns. Mrs. White-And do you mean to say that you and your '-husband always agree about everything? Mrs. Black Always, except, of course, now and then, when he~s out of humor or pig headed or something of that sort. London Answers. Cynical. "That doctor is something ofa cynic." "As to how?' "He says when a man has a malady It's a disease and when a woman has It ts a complaint."-Washingtonl Her. The Work That Tells a Story. Better the rudest work that tells story or records a fact thana the richesl without maning. There should not be a single ornament put upon great civi< buildings without some intellectual in tentons.-Ruskn. Mr. Jas. V. Churchill, 90 Wall St. Auburn, N. Y., has been bothered witi serious kidney and bladder trouble eve; since he left the arm, and says: "I de. sided to try Foley Kidney Pills as the: had cured so many people and I soot round they were just the thing. My kid neys and bladder are again in a health.: coridition. I gladly recommend them.' The Dickson Drug Co., Manning, S. C. reonFisher Summrtnn. S. C. QIL -ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT simiatigftde PromotesDigestio& nessand1esContatnsi 4 Opitan.Morphine nor NOTN'ARCOTIC. ApefectRemedyfor "~f tion,SOUr Sa,Dalt WormsoDsiRSF everiS nressandLOSSOFSLEEP. FcSimile Sijnaue of NEW YORK. ; . . Io Exact Copy of Wrapper. Children of Today. Modern children are eery precocious. A Mount Washington man asked his little nephew if he knew who Cinder ella was. "Sure!" said the urchin. "rve seen her." "You've seen her?" gasped his uncle. In astonishment. "Sure I've seen her. She's a charac ter In- a musical comedy."-Pittsburgh post. _ Good Amendment. Busband-ThIs cake Is very good, my lear. - but it .seems to me there ;qaght to b'e a little more- Wife (In clear. ley. Incisive . tones)-That cake came..by mail and was made by your mother Husband-Yes.-as I was say ing. there ought to be a little more of It. Only.in a Business Way. - "So Clara rejected the plumber.' "Do you know why?" '"Somebody told her to be careful about encouraging him. -as he hit the plpe."-Haltimore American. As to Success. Griggs-I should say that the .two keys to success 'are luck and - pluck. Brigg-Sure! Luck &r finding sorze uine to plack.-Boston-Transcript. He who ktnows.only his own side of the ense knows little of that,--Mll. .A L.og on the Track of the fast express meins serioug trou ble ahead if not removed, so does loss o appetite. It means lack of vitality, loss of strength and nerve weakness. If appetite fails, tale Electric Bitters inickly to. overcne the cause by ton ig up the stolpach and-curiner she in d.gsion. Micheel Hessheimer of Lin con, Neb., had been sick over three years. but sixboattles of Electric Bittei-s put him. right on his feet again. Tgey 'ave helnied thousands. They give pure blood, pr:ong nerves, good digestion. Oly 50 cents at all druggists. A Perplexingauestion. -The funny man In the party said: "Can you name an animal that -has eyes that cannot -see, legs and cannot wak; but can jump as high as the Eifel tower?" Everybody racked his brains, and there was ileep silence for awhile, and then they all gave it up. "The answer," said. the funny man, "Is a woodeni. jiorse. It has .eyes and cannot see and legs and cannot walk." "Yes: but how does It jump as high as the Eiffel tower?" asked one. - The Eifel tower." said the funny uan. as he made preparations for hur' ried departure.- "can't jumpr" Clever Deduction. "My son." explained the new client, "had a dog named Crimson. This dog was taught to growl when anybody mentioned Yale." -- "One minute," Interrupted Sherlock Holmes. "I deduce from this that your son went to Harvard." "So he did!" exclaimed the new cli ent. "Marvelous!" cried Dr. Watson. Louisville Courier-Journal. Mrs. Paul Wehling, 316 Smith St., Peoria, Ill., had kidney and bladder trouble, with terrible backache and pains across the hips. Just imagine her condition. She further says: "I was also very nervous, had headaches and dizzy spells, and was fast getting worse when I took Foley Kidney Pills. and now all my troubles are cured. Foley Kidnev Piils have done so much for me I shalf always recommend them." The Dikson Druig Co., Mannina. S. C.. Leon Fischer. Summerton. S. C. The Gamy Bluefish. The bluefish is one of the gamest ish that swim. Take him on light tackle, and you have done something to be proud of; take him on the recog nized hand line, and you have perform ed a feat that will give you a thrill of pleasure when memory takes you nine fishing. lie Is a fighter from Bulldog yille and, being free from all restric tions, makes no distinction of class, but furnishes rich and poor alike with real enjoyment. For a time it is great sport to haul in bluefish at the end of a 300 foot line, hut if the fish are large. weighing from ten to fifteen pounds. the recruit from the city is done after his struggle with three or four great ish. Hauling aboard a big bluefish is like pushing a freight car with the shoulder. If the fish run small t'e city angler will find his limit at or before he has landed fity of them and will be glad to quIt, with the sensation that every bone in his body has been sirash -ed. For hours he can scarcely raise his arms, and the aches in a person will continue for several digys.-New Yok Sn. CASTORIA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of Use For Over Thirty Years ISI.ORIA TN[ CENTAURCOAN.N'OICT. Heroic Training. - Concerning a region in Tibet an -au thority says: "The only satisfactory feature about the people's condition was their fine physique and their agreeable, .cheery disposition under the most depressing- cnditions. Their su perior stature and build are accounted for partly by the fact that the day after their children are born their mothers carry them to the nearest stream and plunge them into the wa' ter even in the depth of winter, when the temperatire' is .often down to 15 or 20 degrees below zero. Infants which survive this heroic ordeal are then smeared thickly all over with grease and exposed for several hours every day of their young lives' In, the open air, so that they may grow up. strong- and..bardy.and fit to defy ..all. weathers. which;4 he.majority of them are certainly .well able to do/' .Old Time Election Laws. .American electors were at one time required to possess very high qualifica tions. In. parts of New England dur ing the seventeenth century voters had to reside in "a stone house of the di mensions of twenty feet by - sixteen wth on or moe brick or stone chim ney or chironies." Each voter hird also to .be certified by ,his neighbgs "of. sober and peaceable conversation." In Conctu sevry candidate ~for - the 1.ocl asemblbadto furnish a certifi cate from the Jselectmen of the town where he.resided~that .he was "of quiet and peaceable beharlir and civil con versation." That .the.mselectmen might exercise due care -in.signing'.such cer-* tiicates .'hey were .liable to is.fine of $25 in case the candidate .turned out otherwise than was represented. --Era of .the Olyn as. The "era of. the Olympiads," or the "Olymplar era," began July 1, 776 B.'C. Ai. Olympiad .was a ped~od of four years, the games being celebrated every, fourth-year. When It was first proposed to use the Olympian era the earliest record that could be found was that. of the victory of Choroebus, who won the great foot race .long before horse racing and chariot racing were ntroduced. His victory was taken as the starting point of the Olympiads. A Courageous Physician. Doctor-Mrs~. Knagg, "your husband needs six months' rest Half of it he: must spend In Europe. Mrs. Knagg Oh, splendid! I shall be delighted to go there. Doctor-That's.. what I've planned. You can go for three months after he returns. -That ..will give a full six months' rest-Boston Tran srit. Saves Leg of Boy. "It seemed tha't my 14-year-old boy would have to lose his leg, on account of an ugly ulcer, caused by a bad bruise," wrose D. F. Howard, Aquone, N. C. "All remedies and doctors treat ment failed till we tried Bucklen's Ar nica Salve, and cured him with one box." Cures burns, boils, ekin erup tions, piles. 25c at all druggists. SC. R. Sprott, SPresident and Treas. _. Mannini MANUFACT SCotton See Al ~Higrh Grade The Hat Question In 1790. The Handel festival was originally given in Westminster abbey, and the official notice of 1790 announced that "no ladies will be admitted with Hats, and they are particularly requested to. come without Feathers and very small Hoops, if any." As ecclesiastical law demands that female worshipers shall cover their heads in church, this regu lation was curiously. anomalous. A suggestion in regard to ladies' head gear was also made by Sir Frederic Cowen in 1905, when he gave it as his opinion that the ladies might discover in their wardrobe some "extremely fas cinating flat hats," which would not ob struct the view. The afascinating flat hats" were, however, chiefly conspicu ous by their absence, owing presuma bly (we write subject to feminine cor rection) to the fact that the flat hat was not among the fashions of that year.-London Globe. Horace Greeley and an Autograph. In his "Recollections of a Busy Life" Horace Greeley tells the story of how he once dealt very effectively with a persistent autograph hunter. A gash ing youth wrote to Greeley'as follows: Dear Sir-Among your literary treasures you have doubtless preserved several au tographs of our country's latejlagnented. poet, Edgar Allan Poe. If so. an'd you can spare one, please inclose it to me and receive the thanks of yours truly. To which Greeley replied: ZDear Sir-Among my literary treasures there happens to be. just one autograph of. our country's late. lamented. poet, Edgar Allan Poe. It is a -note ,of hand for a0. with my Indorsement across the back. It cost me exactly $50.7-, including protest, and y.o inayavelt.or half 'that amount. Yours respectfully, HORACE GREELEY. The autograph was found among Greeleys.possessions after his death. The Lion's Share. - It -is really not the male lion; with bi -terrfic roar and, formidable ap-. pearance. that the explorer fears, but his.mate. .The male. lion is a good looking pgger, .but -when it comes. to business it is his wife who counts, a la the African.native. Game is pulled down by the female lign, and ,then the male beats hei off uutl he bas feasted to repletion: when she-may have what is left; hence "the lion's share." Mrs. T..,. Town, 107 6th St., Water town, S D:,'writes: -SMy4durchildren; are subject to hard cofds and T always use,-Foley's Honey and Tar Compound witb.splendid results. :$ome time ago I had- a severe attack of la- ripne. I can alwaijsdpen-upoanFoley's.-oney~.anaI T'r Cqmpound.and and am sure.of good results. ''TheDi eson 'Drag Co., Man ine, S.S,,anI7Leon Fischer;.Summer ton, S. C. Tower of..London. A royal palace; consisting of no more than what isnow known as the "White Tower," appears to have been the be gtnping of the Tower of London. It was commenced in -1078 by Wllifam the Conqueror and finished. by Wil liamn's soD. William Rufus. who, in 1098, surrounded it with walls and a broad ditcb. Several succeeding kings made additions to it, and. King Edward 1: erected the church. In 1638 the 4 old White Tower. was rebuilt, and in the reign of Charles IL a great number of additions .were made to it. The new buildings in the Tower were corn pleted In 1850. . Called His Bluff. "Sarah," said Mr. ,lolliboy -to his wife as he finished his breakfast. "l shall not be. home to dinner tonight My old.friend Bill Peters Is in town '' "'Goodr' said Mrs. .lollihoy.. "That sui tu e to a T. I'~ .not going to be home to dinner myself. My old friend Gerge Watkins telephoned me yester day" Both dined at home. - Harper's Weekly. , * His Standing. - "That young fellow seems to have made 'himself solid at your house." "Yes-, I judge he has. Ma Is looking up his~family, while pa Is investigat ing his commercial rating."--Louisville Courier-JournaL. The Spirit of the Times, It is an age -of artificial devices. Rare, indeed, Is the man and rarer still the woman in whose physical makeup there is not something false. either eyes or teeth or hair-Atlantic. It Is easy to make acquaintances, Tint dfficult to shake 'them off.-Washlng ton CnaarLroS DURANT. P. D GRAtAM DURANT & GRAHAM, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, MANNING, S. C. -Prompt attention given to c'ollections J. H[. LESESNE, ATTORNEY AT LAW. MANNING. S. C. F. D. Hunter. . Vice-President and Sec.- 3 RERS OF - - dProducts Fertilizers 3 ARRIVAL OF FINE Horses and Mules! Will have carload fine ? Horses and Mules Saturday, Sept. 7th. Call and look at them. D. C. SHAW Co 10, 12 and 14 Sumter St. 'Phone 553. SUMTER, S. C. Get The Girl a Dress or Two : f ea A You will be sure to get the kind .she hil hieyi t i.. a- simple, but dainy-the 1 ~~~~pensiveaneaiylud ered-be -kind mothers - like best. Surely you should not nege lect to get her, a New Dress wben the-prices are so low. Dresses, 50 to $1.25. Boys' The. Line is Much.Ldrger.Now Than it will be Later. R . P. JENINSON. 5: -1 I "WHAT'S THE USE" paying some one else more for your supplies and re pair work than 'we charge you for the best. We are well fixed to serve you in any eapaciy and solicit'your business - on a square deal basis.'' We lhave increas -ed our supp'y. business in every line and guarantee *every article we sell : .' ' THANK YOU FOR YOUR PAST FAVORS. H. H. BRADHAMJ IWE CARRY in Stock the following:-Hardware, Tigware, Crockery-2 ware. Enamn'l1ware, Glassware, Woodenware. an Buggy and WXagon M .er ial, Pumnps and Pipeing. Farm Implements of all kinds, Guns, Ammunmtion and Sporting ".Goods, Pocket and Table Cutlery, Paints, Oils, Stains and Paint Brushes, Alabastine Wall Coating, Sheet, Tin, Sheet Iron, Nails, Bolts. Etc Stoves Ranges, Stove Pipe and( Stoneware. Perfection Od Cook Stoves and Heaters, Rubberoid and Corrugated Steel Roofing, Wire Field, Garden and Poultry Fencing. A Hearty Welcome for all our Many . Friends, TIH MANNING IRD!R CO. Notice of Discharge.: I will apply to the Judge of Pro ate for Clarendon county, on the 6th day of October, 1912, Lor letters 1 discharge as administrator of the state of Marion Edwards, deceased. SHEM-EDWARDS, Administrator. axville, S. C., September 14th, 1912. BON-ON PRESSING ClB. We solicit your ;eaning and Pressing work. and promise prompt and rood service. We have employ d pressers and cleaners with -- xperience, and all work entrust d to us will be guaranteed. Seid your clths to the' Bon 7uu Press:ng Giub. 1018 BROOM. Mais Notice Books Registration. The registration books for Claren on coupty will be opened on the.. rat Monday in October which is the. ch, for the purpose of registering dose who are entitled to the same. E. D. BOD0E, -Chairman. ALL. IAMAUdd COVERED d very often a good chance to start ain under better circumstances, is bat is assured by a policy of FIRE INSURANCE. We ask the public to point out a bet :r investment for the amount of the pony than the premium for insurance i a good company. An while we don't ty that your house afire would be a reak of good lack, we do say. that a ve policy is the best next thing to I. - not insured, call or send postal and e we will instantly .place your house pf.ety. . GERALD-DAVI$ CO. Manning, S. C Faley Kidrey Whit Tby Will De fr Yep Theyaigcorn yg -eec-ha trcCgthen yori0s.0 sct rinaryirgutesy Lp the worn out tissus, a$ lilite the esa urle add hateauses rheutnatism. Pro. entBuight'as Disease and Dia. ates, and restore health am trength. Refuae ssttust.a Dickson'.iDugetoro~ )R. 3. FRANK GEIGEI DENTIST, MANNING, S. C. acker Mfg. Co StrCCEsSORS TO 60, S~ IlaCke & Son, CHARLESTON,.S. C. !e Manufacture Doors, Sash and Blinds; Columns and Balusters; Grilles and Gable Ornaments; Screen Doors and Windows. [E DEAL. IN Glass. Sash Cord and Wd~ghs.. W.O. W. Woodmnen of the World. Meets on First Monday ,nigs - latngSovereligns invited.. R~ MBN ~ND LADIES Everything of the best. for the personal wear and~a4gn .ment of: both sexes. We fi11 mail orders carefauy and promptly. )AVID )ITFITTING COMPANY, Charleston. 80 )R. J. A. COLE, DENTIST. Upstairs over Bank of Manning. MANNING, S. C. Phone No- '77. Icden'sArnlcaSaOve The Best Salva In The World.