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a Offerion In o ider to get in on the groi sayto buy many lines of gC Sies. We began making F anticipating a bumper short crop business ha 'W have the goods at the ri disposed of. Beg to name tl -consideration: feoh Sea Island Homespun.... 5c yd The above Is avery good Homespun in lengths from 10 to 20 yards. IS I ne yarn heavy Sea Island Homespoon at ............ 6c yd ..6cd n ease 100 Shambray and Ginghams. dad Ginghams at ................ 4 ---."d -rhe abbye was bought in case lots ad Is positively-as good as you ever bought at 10o per yard. Ladies we have a swell line be sold. We are going to See what we have bef< nounce that we have secure Patterns. We have right of $350 worth of patterns f take subscriptions for B EI INEATOR, two years i R. R. JF WE C in Stock the following:-Ha ware, 'Enamelware, Glassw and Wagon Material, Pump / Farm In of all kinds, Guns, Ammu Pocket and Table Cutlery, ] Brushes, Alabastine Wall Iron, Nails, Bolts, Etc. St< Stoneware, Perfeqtion Oil Rubberoid and Corrugated Garden and Poultry Fencin A Hearty Welcon Frig IHHI Low Excu SAtlantic 4 ACC SChris tmaa Years Reduced rate round tr e all stations on the Atlanti E-South of the Ohio and Pot Ssippi River, including Was SOhio, and Evansville, Indi Sber 13, 14, 17, 19, 2(4.21, 2: ~E1, limited returning, to re Sreturning not later than n SFor further partienla Stions, etc., apply to Atlan Sor address, EEW. J. CRAIG,. Pass. Traffic Migr., SAtlantic Cos = Personal] SPanama-Jamaica SV ia thle OVet OVER THE I C is offered at: SMALl STne cruise will be on the Nev SSteamship Evangeline of the P S& 0. S. S. Co. Length 364 fe-et : with 262 staterooms. Sailing frort SKey West January 7, 1913, Jan Suary 21L Feb. 4 and 18, March Sand 18, A pril 1 and 15. F. M. JOL LY. 1 Traffic Agent,!A S(Havana Office: ,Janaary 1 -It will only cost a pos wagt the particulars. e at Jenkioson. : ind floor on prices it is neces- $ pods early and in large quan- * preparations for the fall last :rop and big business Owing s not panned out as expected. ght prices and they must be * te following specials for your e e One case of Meng' 50c Jaegsr fleeced lined Undershirts and Drawers to match at 3Sc the garment......Tc suit One case Mens' pure bleached fleeced lined Undershirts and Drawers to match at 45c the garment......90c suit One case pound prints 39c the bundle (about 20 yards) value.........-50c One lot Ladies' Messaline satin Wait in white black and colors, value $3.00 will put on sale at...... ----.-----$1-75 of Coat Suits and they must names prices to move them. re you buy. Beg to an rd the agency for Butterick S here in the store a stock yr you to solicit from. Also utterick publication, T H E or $2.00. NKINSON. : ~ARRY. rdware, Tinware, Crockery are, Woodenware, and Buggy s and.Pipeing. iplements nition and Sporting Goods, aints, Oils, Stains and Paint Coating, Sheet, Tin, Sheet )ves Ranges, Stove Pipe and Cook Stoves and Heaters, Steel Roofing, Wire Field, ie for all our Many ends, Bum VRI CO. rsion Rates ~:oast Line OUNT s ~and New olidays. ip tickets will be an sale at Coast Line to all points 3 mac and East of the Missis- a mana for all trains on Decem- a . 23, 24, 25, 31, and January * ach original starting point a idnight oif January 6, 1913. s, schedules, rates,. reserva~ ic Coast Line Ticket Agents~ - T. C. WHITE, - _ Gen. Pass. Agt., ilmington, N. C. Lst Line Tour y Conducted =Cuba and Florida 2 '-Sea Railroad ~LORIDA KEYS i comparatively ~_. . COST._ For full information, the ap- -:: rroximate cost of the trip from a any point desired, and for sche- 2 dules and reservations on trains a and on the ship, address the uin- 3 Idersigned, who will accompany a the party.. lilmington, N. C. tlantic Coast Line,. to Midsummer-Prado 61). Tax Notice. The County Treasurer's office will be open for the collection of taxes for the fiscal .year 1912, on the 15th day of October 1912. and close on the 15th day of March 1913. Following are the tax levies: For.State, 5+ mills; ordi nary county, 41 mills; court house bonds, 1 mill; county bonds, 1-2 mill; county back indebtedness.. 1-2 mill; constitutional school, 3 mills.-Total 151 mills. Also, special school taxes in th-e various school districts as fol lows: No. 1, 5 mills; No. 2. 3 mills, No. 3, 4 mills; No. 5, 3 mills; No. 7, 4 mills; No. 9, 10t mills; No. 10, 3 mills; No. 11, 2 mills; No. 13, 4 mills; No. 14, 4 mills; No. 15. 8 mills; No. 16. 8 mills; No. 17. 4 mills: No. 18, 2 mills; No. 19, 10 mills; No. 26, 8 mills; No. 21, 3 mills; No. 22, 9 mills; No. 24, 4 mills; No. 25, 3 mills; No..26, 4 mills; No. 27, 4 wills; No. 28, 8 mills; No. 29, 4 mills; No. 30, 6 mills; No. 33, 2 mills; No. 52. 4 mills. L. L. WELLS, Treasurer Clarendon County. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of Clarendon. COURT OF COMMON PLEAS. Rebecca Harvin and Eugene Harvin, Plaintiffs, - Vs. Hampton Williams, Defendant. (Summons.) To the defendant above-named: You are hereby summoned and re qoired to answer the complaint. i this tion, of which a copy is here. witl servet upon you, and to serve a copy of your answer to the said complaint on the subscriber, Davis & Wideman, at their office in Manning South Carolina, within twenty day after the service hereof, exclusive o1 the day of su'h service; and if you fail to answer the complaint within the time aforesaid. .the plaintiffs iI this action will apply to the court foi the relief demanded in the com plaint.. DAVIs & WIDEMAN, Plaintiffs' Attorneys. .To the defendant Hampton Williams You will take notice that the sum, mons and complaint in the above en titled action were filed in the office of the Clerk of Court for Clarendor County on the 23rd day of Novembei 1912. DAVIs & WIDEM IN, Plaintiffs' Attorneys. November 25th, 1912. W. K TAVEL, Civil Engineer Land Surveyor, . Sumter, S. C. Office Over Bank oft Sumter. APPAREL SHOP FOR MEN - AND LADIES. Everything of the best fc: -the personal wear and adorn ment of both sexes. We fill mail orders carefulI; and promptly. DAVID QUTFITTING COMPANY, Charleston, S. C w. 0. W. Woodmen of the World. Meets en First Monday nights al 830. Vsting:Sovereigns invited. W.C. DAVIS. J. W. WIDEMA3 DAv1s & WIDEMAN, ATTORNEYS AT LAW , MANNING. S. C. JOHN G. CA RS so outhI arona).e JOSEPH D. WRIGHT. CAPERS & WRGHT, AT ORNEYS AT LAis Evans Building, WASHINGTON, D. C. LOANS NEGOTIATEI On First-Ciass Real Estat4 Mortgages. . Pa~ty SiOByn ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Manning, S. C. SONJON PRM IN ClU. We solicit your Cleaning and Pressing work, and promise prompt and good service. We have employ ed pressers and cleaners With experience, and all work entrust ed to us will be guarantee9L Send your clothes to the Bon Ton Pressing Club. LOl8 BROOM. Mlnol. R. 0. PRDY .8. OLIER oBRY PURDY & O'BRYAN, Attorneys and Counselors at Law M~ANNING, S. C. J.H. LESESNE, ATTORNEY AT LAW, IMANNING. S. C. C HARLTON DURANT, ATTORNEY AT LAW, MANNING, S. C. Prompt attention given to Collections. Antiquity of the Saw. The saw is the earliest tool that has been traced In Egyptian history. It was found first in the form of a notch ed bronze knife in the third dynasty, or about 5,000 years before the Chris tian era, and was followed in the fourth and fifth dynasties by larger toothed saws, which were used by carpenters. but there are no dated specimens until the seventh century before the Chris tian era, when the Assyrians used iron saws. The first knives on record were made out of flint and were in fact saws with minute teeth. They prob ably were used for cutting up animals, as the teeth would break away even on soft wood. Rasps, which are but a form of saw. were first made of sheets of bronze, punched and coiled round, but the Assyrians In the seventh cen tury used the straight rasp made of iroui similar to the modern type. In the present day the saw is probably used more than any other tool. It has taken three distinct forms for the working of both wood and met'l-the straight saw, the band saw and the circular saw. The Canvasback. Of all the wild fowl family the can vasback duck is easily the king. Its flesh is matchless in sweet flavor un less it be by that of the redhead, and the extremely high price : of It shows how precious and rare it has become. Not many years ago there was little difficulty in procuring a good bag of this bird on the shores of the Chesapeake, where it feeds upon the wild celery that gives distinction to Its flesh. Today the canvasback is a rara avis. indeed. It is going the way of all flesh, only faster than most, and its disappearance will be. unlike that of the dodo, a 'gustatory calamity. Its funeral procession follows close upon the obsequies of the prairie hen and the wild turkey. Voraelous man' gun in hand. has been as thoughtless as a gluttonous child and sought to eat all his cake at a gulp.--Philadelphia Press. A Very Lucky Smoke. A curious story comes from Vienna. A young man, the representative of a famous firm, who carried a large sum of money with him, spent the night at a hotel at Pressburg. According to his usual custom, he remained some time smoking in bed. Suddenly the burn ing cigar fell to the foor. He bent over to extinguish it when he saw a hand project from under the bed and put out the fre. It made him very uncomfortable, and he lay for fifteen minutes thinking. Then he said aloud: "How very cold it isl I must gety my fur coat." Jumping out of bed, he ran to the.door, opened It and shouted for help, and the robber was caught. He confessed his crime and then added that he had been a fireman formerly and culd not resist the impulse to ex tinguish the burning cigar. Got His Answer. A grocer said to a little girl one elee tion day: "Who is your father going to vote for this morn , my dear?" "I don't know." the little' girl an swered. "Will he vote the Republican ticket?' "I don't know." "I wonder If h6'll vote Democrat?" "I don't know." "He wouldn't vote Prohibition sure-1 ly?" "I don't know." The grocer as he tied up the little girl's package sugered: "Well, you don't know much, and that's a fact." "You know less," the little girl an swered, "or you woui4n't he askin' so many questiobns."-Exc2hange. Pa A Visi to or cshir an hewil coninc yo thatwe hve veryfaciityfor and lingyou baning busnes wit ac curac anddisptch.Our inan i standng i Pihth rates Aourtsindcnsd eto, r caher ahclcontslare you Thw ee veran ciik forMan nng Fa ulmnint busiesscury. c Acuriadristyof urnt fnancia stadr n isthttprdcsasokt whihelyonde utnestio snsi teand aito suret alu cstanmers poite retst corthsyc and consid detonte b there acountes disage eo Theins Banki of cMrrnnisypa thtc Fnuenceintese errybechm cury cmios that odcs a shockg to it ich dalloerubstWancs reunirdt prosuce restlsiton tis fth randgenera own lfbility ofa aleosivesito bare deonited by oryen.r les distntwer, oinstace The iturete of syota (teter),nfwhec i the teribe iemr due xlosacionll impresoned ogen ono re t h eatpo along withg charcoal an immense heat is developed, which causes the gases to expand sud denly, hence explosion. - Mournful. Emma sent her plate back three times to be filled with turkey, and she was helped bountifully each time. Fi nally she was observed to look regret fully at the unfinished portion of her dinner. "What's the trouble, Emma?" asked Uncle John. "You look mournful." "That's 'just the trouble," said Em ma. "I am more'n full," and then she wondered why all the others laughed. -Youth's Companion. -The Return. "I believe," said the cheery philoso pher, "that for every single thing you give away two come back to you." "That's my experience," said Pham- - ley. "Last June 1 gave away my daughter, and she and her husband came back to us in August" Lucky. Dentist iprodding a patient's gum In search of a fragment of root)-Funny, I don't see m quite to feel It Patient Horses and Mules,I Buggies, Surries, Wagons and Harness, see us. A com plete line of the following Moline Iiplenents: Grain Drill. Cotton and Corn Planters, Blue Bird One and Two-horse Steel Turn Plows, Middle Bursters, Harrows, Etc. 'Agedts for Rock Hill Buggies. Terms and prices right. We expect to have a big line of the new Foid Automobiles on hand in a few days. D. C. SHAW CO 10. 12 and 14 Sumter St. 'Phone 553. SUMTER, S. C. FOR SALE EXTRA FINE COTTION SEED. We have about 500 bushels of specially selected long staple cotton seed that we are offering, and wbich we can safely guar antee to the farmers of this - county. The following letter from one of the best cotton brok ers in Charleston is self explan atory: Charleston, S. C., November 15, 1912. Messrs C. M Davis & Son. Davis Station, S. C. Dear Sir,:->We bee to say that the ojo 8 bales of cotton that you sent us for sale is as handsome extra staple cot too as we have seen grown in this State.' The staple is 15-8 and 11-16 inch and the staple is sound and even and such seed is very valuable. Yours Truly. E. H. Frost & Co. We urge those who desire to se cure this seed to apply at once as 500 bushels will not last long. Price $2.00 Per Bushel. Davis Station, S. C. ~C. R. Sprott, 'F. D. Hunter, - SPresident and Treas. Vice-President and Sec. iNNIN OIL ILLd Manning, S. C. MANUFACTURERS OF Cotton Seed Products AND ~High Grade Fertilizers WAHT IT'S NAME IMPLIES A Trust Company should be exactly what its name implies-a Trust Company. As such, is fitted better to administer trusts than the private indiviual. This comn pany is equipped for active, efficient service. Try ia. THE SUMTER TRUST CO., SUMTER. S. C. ' BEST QUALITY. EXPERT WORKMANSHIP. L. WETIfER MORN & SON, + Manufacturers of CYPRESS o " DOORS, SASH AND; BLINDS, Charleston, S. C. " . Prompt Deliveries. Estimates Furnished. Charle RstnS C If you grow Peas a STAR PEA HULLER-will please and pay you.. If you use fertilizer see our Force-feed Distributor, the Hopper Holds 100 pounds If jou plow cotton and corn. See Tbe J. M. B. $20 Cotton and Corn Plow Stock, The Steel Beam will not break or bend. Write us for circulars and prices. Our offer to the readers &f this ey erzvil_ n est.on. Bennettsville, & Andrew Carnegie 5ays: "It is not capital that men require, it is the man who has proved that he has the business habits which: create capital." The greatest proof of business habits is the HABIT SOF S'AVING. When you start an account with us you simply press the Button of Prosperity. Why not call and talk it over with us NOW? Bank of Turbeville hii SDon't Waste Your Tiine trying to find the best place to buy Ladies' and Gents' Furnishinigs j and the -problem will be solved. You Don't Waste Your Money~ either when you buy of us. That is the rep* utation we have- won;-for you can depend on what you.,can get as being the best, -and feeL sure that you will~ not have to pay more than - the a icle is worth. D. Hirschrnann. FOR SA LE. Twenty cents a pound* cotton. IMPROVED PEELER LONG STAPLE ginnied on private sin. Passed government inspec tion 0. K., for boll rot and wilt. Mr. S. Clements, Long Staple Expert, pronounced this cotton the best he had seen this season and gave 2ac per lb., for it. Makes Makes as much per acre as short stable. Seed for sale at* $1.50 per bushel. Cash with order: COUlSAR & NAPER, I Jordan, - - - - S. C. CYPRESS. Sash, Doors and Blinds. Largest manufacturing stock house in the South. Special sizes on shor t notice: A. H. FISCHER C~O. CHARLESTON, S. C. '.K n ' Ne ife PilIe I IMulYU ONWFAMDTAI