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Publishes Al County and Twn Of fidal Advertisements. MANNING. S. C, AUG. 30, 1916. STONE WRAPPED CAKES t. They are made in a San itary Plant and contains ony pure ingredients, in cluding fresh country but ter and eggs. Serve these Fine Cakes and hear the approving comments of guest and family. IOc. LEON WEINBERG "Everything Good to Eat." Today is general 'Clean-Up" day. Mr. H. C. McKelvey spent Sunday in the up-country. Mr. S. Katzoff and family spent Sun day in Kingstree. Mrs. S. I. Harvin and children are visiting in Mayesville. - Miss Katie Clark of Columbia is visit ing relatives in Manning. The county campaign meetings came to a close here last Saturday. Mr. David Levi has returned home from a trip to the mountains... Misses Addie Weinberg end Irma McKelvey are visiting in Sumter this week. Mrs. N. G. Gonzales of Columbia vis ited her brothers in .Manning this week. Mr. Clarence Bagget has a"pted a position in the Peoples Bank as book keeper. Mrs. Herman Huggins has returned home from a visit to her parents at Pomaria. Mrs. Ashley Avant of Florida is vis itinghersister Mrs. J- H. Rigby in Manning. Dr. Champs, pharmacist at Dickson's drug store, has returned home from a trip to New York. Mr.. Charles Nelson of Summerton is visiting at the home of Mr. F. P. Ervin near Manning. Mr. Joe Plowden of Atlanta spent Sunday in Manning with his father, Mr. H. D. Plowden. Mr. C. 0. Edwards has returned to Manning, after several weeks at the seashore and mountains. Mr. T. F. Coffey and family returned to Manning last Saturday after making a trip through North Carolina by auto moie. Mr. R. C. Wells has resigned as cash -fer of the Peoples Bank and accepted positioa of bookkeeper for Levi Mer cantile Co. Mr. Frank Barr'on has resigned his position with Levi Mercantile Co., and will move back to Charleston, where hewl eengaged in business. .There will be a box party at the Woodman Hall on next Friday even ing, 8:30 o'clock for the benefit of the -Paiville Baptist church. Everybody wili be welcome. Miss Fannie Weaver, who has been milliner at D. Hirschmanni's for sever -al seasons, will open a millinery depart mnent in the store of the Manning Dry Goods Co., about September fourth. A ball team composed of such stars -as Charlie Wells. -"Chub" Plowden, Al yin Rigby and others went to Jordan last Thursday to plaiy tnat town, and -was defeated 30 to 6.Joe Sprctt umplir ed and was'nt mobbed. Mrs. M. L. Sauls and daughters left Saturday for Winston Salem, N. C., where they will make their future borne. Mrs. Sauls' sons, Allen. Austin and Morgan are employed in thait city. and wishing to keep the family togeth or, she decided to go to them. Mr. Willie Flowers, who has been truck driver for the Manning fire de partmnent was taken to Columbia last week for medical examination, an& it was discovered that he had an incura ble malady, which necessitated his re signing his position with the depart ment. The Manning baseball season came toa. close Saturday afternoon, losing the last game to IBishopville, S to 4. The people of our town seemed to be ball hungry this summer, and the team gave some fine exhibitions of the sp:>rt. We hope next season to see even bet ter ball than we had this summer. One of M4'. E. G. Stukes fine milch cows went mad Saturday and had to be killed Mr. Stukes was offered $100 for this cow last week. He has always taken great pride in fine cows. It will be remembered about one month ago a little collie dog belongingr to Mr. Stukes went madi and bit several of h:s children. ana it must have been this little dog which bit this cow. Mr. Stakes milked this cow Friday morn ing and used the milk, the cow then showing no tigns of being sick Services at The Methodist Church. Manning Methodist, Church, Dr. Watson B. Duncan. Pastor. The Sunday School will meet at 10:00 a. mn., Mr. ,)os. Sprott, superintend ent. The Men's Bible Class mneets at the same hour, Hon. Charlton Dullant, Teacher. Preaching at 11 a. in., and 8:00) p. m. by the pastor. Morning subject: "Freedom From Sin." This will be the first sermon in a series on the Eighth Chapter of Ro mans. Evening subject: "The Rejection of. Cain." Bible Ditmculties, No 2. Epworth League 5 u. mn. Mr. Mor 'gan Sprott, President. Prayer service on Thursday at 5 sb will be followed by the Teacher --rining Class. Public cordially invited to all ser a oTo the voters of Clarend n county, I make haste to extend to you my sincer est thanks and deepest appreciation for the "handsomely big'' vote you gave me on Tuesday the 2ith. I am truly one of the happiest men in the county. Sincerely yours, Edgar.C. Dickson. To The Members of The Poultry Club. I have before me a letter from a hos pital offering 20 cents a pound for chickens. They would like to make permanent arrangements with one club to furnish them with chickens and I eggs the year round. There is another latter from a hotel in a nearby town offering 1S cents a pound F. O. B. lanning for fat chick ens. I have just shipped to a hotel one order for 25 cockrels and one hen, which netted $26.0S. These cockrels were hatched otT lave in April and t were milk fed for two weeks before shipping-according to Prof. Hare's di rectiors. A irocervman in the town to which they were shipped saw them on the express wagon and has written to know if we could make him a ship ment at once of hens, fryers. ducks. t and eggs. A conductor on the train saw the chicks rnd has sent in an order. There is also an order from a lady for ten hens and a cockre!. d I shall be glad to give these address- d es to any Club Member who can fill the 1 order. Perhaps one or two neighbor ing members could _et together and S make a shipment. a Twenty cents a pound sounds good now. but we expect to build up an ev en better market. Of course we will a have to guarantee fresh eggs and fat chickens. Last winter one of our P members sold in three mouths in the t local market, over A40.00 worth of eggs from sixty hens. If these had been t properly marketed she could almost C have doubled her money-. Let us get to work and put in a good h crop of green feed for our hens this t winter so that we shall have a big egg yield. Then if each trember will get off some chicks now while it is easy to raise them, in three months they will e be ready for market and we are sure of getting 20 cents a pouud for them. We will be olad to have anv one in terested to join our Club and hell) us supply the Market. Mrs. F. P. Ervin. Pres. Poultry Association. fl BUSINESS LOCALS. Bring your old shoes and harness to n Manning Harness Factory and have e them made new. Work called for and a delivered. Strayed or Stolen-From my premis- s es in the vicinity of Alcolu, four red t spotted shoats. Finder will please no tify G. K. Ridgeway. Alcolu, and get reward. Rye seed now in stock. W. P. Legg. Wanted-Men who deisire to earn a over $125.00 per month to write us to day for position as salesmen: every op- a portunity for advancement. Central Petroleum Co., Cleveland, Ohio. a Card of Thanks. To the Voters of Clarendon County: C The count in the first primary has s contained me in the race for the house c and I take this opportunity of thanking g the voters for the support they give me and trust thai it will be their pleasure o continue their support to the end, a that I represent them in the lower i house for the next two years.n WV. WV. Johnson. C .Notice of Discharge. r I will apply to the Judge of Probate ~ for Clarendon County on the 2nd day F of October 1916, at 11 o'clock a. in.. for letters of dischar-ge as administrator of the estate of Thomas P. Broughton. deceased. P. H. Broughton.I Administrator. Pinewood, Aug. 28, 1916. SOE OLD PAVINGS, RECORDS -OF QUEER MATERIALS THAT HAVE BEEN USED. Tombstones Sometimes Employed In England for the Purpose-Glass Used on French Street-Ex travagance of Monarch. Tombstones are not infrequently employed in different parts of England for paving purposes. Some four or fie years ago the inhabitants of Bel voir bitterly protested against the use of such material in the construction of1 a road leading to.,the parish church, despite the assurances of the local authorities that with the lIberal sup ply of old and broken gravestones at their disposal the plan had been adopted with a view to saving the tax payers quite a sum. In Lyons, France, the celebrated Rue de la Republique is paved with glass blocks eight inches square, wvhich ~have been so precisely fitted together as to make them absolutely water tight. Compressed grass, It is claimed, has been used in the construction of pavements in German towns and with admirable results, and in Russia com pressed paper has been utilized for a similar purpose. Many interesting instances of indi vidual eccentricity or extravagance in the selection of material for paving may be cited. It is relnted that when Maximilian Emanuel succeeded to the throne of Bavaria he celebrated the event by causing one of the roadls leading to his palace to be paved with plates of burnished copper. This, gleaming in the sunshine, gave all the effect of gold. Louis XIV, it is said, paved one of the courts at Versailles with squares1 of silver, each of which had recorded upon it some triumph of the French arms. In the center of the court stood; a large tablet of gold in representation of the luxurious monarch's favorite emblem, the sun. Memoirs of the time of Louis make mention of a lodge erected in honor of Louise de la Val lee. The aipproach was paved with mirrors, whereon was painted an alle gory setting forth the undying devo tion of Louis.1 Ar eccentric nobleman of Milan con ceived the idea of paving the court yard of his.' palace with slabs of1 marble, granite and other stone, each] from a different land. It is said that Europe. America, Asia, Africa and Australia all contributed to make up this quaint mosaic, composed of more than a thousand pieces, every one of which was suitably inscribed with the name of the country or state whence it came.] Optimistic Tunought. .There is sometimes more to be feared from the physician thau fromn would Wake Mother With Loud Groaning 1iss Madge Cleveland's Health Was Very Bad ---Operation Fail ed---Gained 12 Pounds. -er Mother Says Three Bottles of Tanlac Gave Such Great Relief That It Is Hard To Believe It Is True. There really seems to he no limit to ae number of cases wherein Tanlac, the master medicine." has given re ef that can ba considered truly won erful And the case of Miss Madge leveland, of 135 Main street, Equinox, nderson. S. C., considering tne re alts Tanlac gave her, takes rank with he most remarkable. Her mother [rs. L. E. ('*veland, vividly describ ci her daughter's long train of troub s and her many ailments. and ex ressed deep appreciation for the won erful effect of Taniac in building up er health anp strength. Mrs. Cleve mfd's endor-enent of Tanlac and her atement re:arding the case of her aughter follows: "My daughter, Miss Madge Cleve end, sutTertd from a number of ail tents. and her system was badly run own and weakened. She had no ap etite at all. and would eat scarcely core than one biscuit for breakfast. he had twice been operated on for imor and appendicitis. The first op raion was not successful, and the sec ad was necessary. As a result, her ealth was undemined and her condi on became very bad. "She was so weak she could hardly aik, and she. was s- oestless at nigbt .at she reallb was very lirtle refresh :I when morning came. She would ake us at night many times with her de where the cuts were made when fe was operated or: that caused her much pain. And. too, her system as generally out of order. "She has already taken three bottles Tanlac. and if I hbd not seen the im rovement Tanlac made in her condi on, I don't know whether I would illy believe it could be so great, bould someone have told me that. he has gained 12 pounds and now eighs 122 pounds more than she has - ver weiebed before. She has a very ood appetite and it is steadily improv jfg. Really 1 have told her if she con inues to increase the amount of food he eats I will have to make her stop yo king Tanlac. And what she eats is rih ourishing her. 8 "Her health has improved in every mi av arid shie is very much stronger. he goes to sleep now just, as soon as he gets in bed, and she sleeps soundly re li night. Her nerves are quiet and is tronxg now, though they troubled her m lot before she began to take Tanlac. ihe used to have bad spells of head- in che, too, but Tanlac broke them up be nd she has not had an attack since she of egas taking it. hi "Just before she began taking Tan ic, she decided to go on a visit to Pell di ity, Ala., but was told she could not Of tend the trip. But she left for that th ity just two days ago in tine health, so plt reat was the benefit three bottles of 'anlac gave her. "Tan1ac is just r wonderful medicine nd we can't say too much in praise of e :, and I certainly am glad to recomn-c iend it. The Tanlac did her more ood than any of the many other medi- so ines she took. pr "TIanae," the Master M\edicine, is xclusively sold in Manning by the qu ickson Drug Store; in Summerton by . 0. Rhame, Jtordan L. WV. Nettles, ~ew Zion Shaw & Piowden, Pinewood armers Supply Co., Silver Davis andse ohnson. fri AN WHO HAD THE HABiT *e the abilities of an Experienced Toast- on master Displayed at the Fain-e ily Table. he ha The man who always acts as toast- a aster was seated at dinner with is mmediate family. 'i 'Papa," began five-year-old Willie, sti may I have-" w "Hush, Willie," corricted mamn fr< Papa hasn't introduced you yet- be ow, papa." -m The man who had the toastmaster lai tabit here clinked his tumbler with a an ork and arose at his place. he "Some five y'ears ago," he said, in pr ts best banquet manner, "an interest--m ng event occurred in this house. It ras prefaced by considerable excite nent and not a little anxiety. When he worst was over, my good friend, 'tu )octor Soakum, administered a brisk an ut good-humored spanking to a very th ed atom of humanity, and a voice At ew to these premises was heard in pr brill pipings. of "This voice has since grown in Al trength and range as its owner has t1t leveloped in stature, and It affotds lie ne great pleasure to say that it has wl nade this house cheerier and happier fri y its varied tones. The atom of hu- Se nanity has expanded and thrived, and -M ve have it with us tonight. Again ne say that it is with great pleasure at hat I introduce my son, Willie. Now, or 'illie, what was it you were about to 01 emark?" ' wi "Papa," said Willie, "may I have an- ini ther piece of steak?" tr "No, my boy," said the man who te tad the toastmaster habit, "but you nay have another baked potato." Thi FUTOR HAD HER SUSPICIONS anm ift of Roses From Tony Called for ing Searching Inquiry, and Truth Gr Came Out,.h Public school teachers in the Italian uarter are constant recipients of gifts rom admiring scholars. When the in ;risic value of an offering is beyond a yertain limit, and they vary all the way from ripe tomatoes to bits of ewelry, the teacher usually institutes n inquiry as to its original source. One boy made frequent gifts of flow rs. As long as they were somewhat faded the teacher accepted them un :uestionably, but when Tony turned up one morning with a large bunch of expensive white roses she felt con strained to ask the boy where he got hem. Heaven and earth were called upon to witness that the flowers had been purchased, later that they had been a gift, and finally Tony's mother bad sent them as f token of her re ard. The teacher grew more stern n her demand for particulars in re ard to Tony's flowers-there wasn a lower stand near by. "Tony," she said, "tell me the truth. Where did you get those flowers?" "Teacher," said Tony, at the end of bis inventive powers, "I gotta from da hurch on Brooma street. Da man, he so care-he's dead."-New York Amer [can. oIEmI~oRNyTAR n....s Cemds P..vest PnnmaonIa Plant The Wonderful Winter A small plot planted lars in several years. WE HA\ Price, Single Bush< When you plant Bi on the poor i Makes richer and mo all-round farming. If yc about hopeless-Nobody to make cotton and corn &c.. &c., then you will be Abruzzi Rye, Bushel $3.1 Dwarf Essex Rape, 12 1-2c. Ball Turnips in Bulk. We'll Get You Eno and tell Come Se CRIMSON CLOVER, 9 The Mar CI ist Not Love Employers' Daughters. If we both love each other, surely ur father will agree to our mar ge," urged a wistful and eager ain to the eldest daughter of a rchant in Berlin. 'He will kill you, mine liebling,"' lied the lady. "Wait till the war over, and you and I will have more ey." This part of a conversation came out the evidence adduced at a trial tore the industrial arbitration court Berlin, at which a young man sued employer for damages for illegal nmissal. holding that he was sent out the works at a moment's notice by employer on his learning that the intiff was courting his daughter! 'he court took the view that he1 s "undermining the happiness of his: ~ployer's family," and decided .the e against him. But does not love always upset eone's happiness?" replied the secutor. ['e court looked gravely at the stioner, but deigned no reply. Bullet-Proof eaps. ['e steel caps which are being ed out to British soldiers at the t are marvels of lightness and egth. They are made of manga e steel, and are bullet-proof to a ~bley automatic at five yards.- Fur ~rmore, during a recent experiment, of the caps was only slightly dent when a heavy poker, raised over the1 d and brought down with both ds and all possible force, was' shed upon it. he British helmets are called "soup,3 Ltes' by the soldiers, and are so con-1 acted that they not only protect the rer from the enemy's weapons but am fragments of the cap itself. Rub studs are placed between the he4 | and the skull, while next to the er is a double lining of wadding i felt This not only renders the . met more comfortable but helps to. tect the skull from jagged frag nts. Explorer Has Great Record. SIr Aurel Stein, who has just re- 1 ~ned to Calcutta after a prolonged . important trip of exploration to Russian Pamirs, is the greatest - iatic explorer of the present, and bably one of the greatest explorers' all times. On his march down the a valley he was able to trace addi-) na1 indications supporting the be fthat through it passed the route aich the ancient silk traders followed m Bactria to thle "country of irinus of Tyre. His subsequent jour-1 down the Oxus was attended by abundant harvest of observation the historical typography, arche gy, and ethnography of Wakham, leh in early times had formed an ortant thoroughfare between Bac , East India, and the Central Asian ~ritories of China. Strong Withstand the Heat of Summer Better Than the Weak , lpeoplewho are feeble, and younger ple who are weak,will be strengthened enabled to go through the depress heat of summer by taking regularly ve's Tasteless Chi'l Tonic. It purifies enriches the blood and builds up whole system. 50c. fi tl ECA~iHRlC TABtT.ES Somadt Sweet -Iiver-dv-lwI Rdeular d again buyinq Seed. See selling, we b Seed and in Richardson an Bur C and Spring Pasture. It Valuable Seeds. properly this fall will be worth E THE BESS :1, $1.10. Five or M ir and Crimson Clover y Louse and head straight fo re productive soils, smaller ferti u are satisfied to jog along the can help you. But. if you are tir to sell to pay for fertilizers, and interested down to your toes i )0 and $3.75. Winter Rye, $1 ound. Ruta Baga, Cow Horn ugh Inoculation Fr< you all you want to know ab( ,e Us Now--Don't I the king of Cover and Green Ma "< ning Gro ARENDON'S SEED PEOPLE BELGIAN BELLS WAR VICTIMS Famous Towers and Carillons in Un fortunate Country Have Been De. stroyed in the Confl-ct Among the many unfortunate con sequences of the European war is the lestruction of many of the bell towers and carillons of Belgium. Mr. William Gorham Rice, In his "Carillons of Bel gium and Holland," explains that the 'arillons are a set of tower bells at tuned to intervals of the chromatic scale. Sometimes there are more than rour octaves of bells, the lowest sev ral tons in weight, whereas the small st scarcely weighs twenty pounds. The bells are connected with a key board by means of which the perform er causes their clappers to strike the Inside- of their sound bow, or with a lockwork mechanism that causes a ammer to strike the outside. The correspondent of a London ewspaper, describing a recital giv n by Joseph Denyn, municipal caril onneur of Mechlin (Malines), wrote: "Inh these northern countries the day s long In August, and it was still twi ight. Against the southern sky rose he broad, rugged tower of St. Rom old's. High up near the top of the ower shone a faint light. After the lock ceased striking and the vibra ion of its deep and solemn tones had led aw'ay, there was silence. So long t silence it seemed that we wondered f It was ever to be broken. "Then, pianissimo, from the highest, tIghtest bells, as if very gently shaken rom the sky itself, came frills and uns that were angelic. Rapidly they rew in volume and majesty as they escended the scale, until the entire eavens seemed full of music. "Seated in the garden, we watched he little light In the tower, where we knew the unseen carillonneur sat at his clavier, and yet we somehow felt hat the music came from somewhere rar above the tower, and was pro lced by superhuman hands. Some imes in winter there comes a thaw, nd cne by one the Icicles tinkle own; gently and timidly at first, then uder and louder, until, like an ava anche, the largest ones crash down ith a mighty roar. All that the nusic suggested. "It was low, it was loud; it was trom one bell, and it was from chords f bells; it was majestic, It was sim ple. And every note seemed to fall trom above, from such heIghts that the whole land heard its melody. "Sometimes the sounds were so taint and delicate that we found our elves bending forward to hear them. t other times, great chords, in the rolumes of many organs, burst forth apturous~y."-Youth's Companion. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children n Use For Over 30 Years dway ear Signature of , , Have a Care. The Ohio preacher who was fined r auto speeding at least should have e consolation that in the next world '1l never be accused of scorching in evil wagons.-Mtlwaukee Sentinel. Are (Cotton us before uy Wagon Car Lots. d Epperson, PINEWOOD, S. C. over! nproves Land. Makes many hundreds of dol [ SEED! ore Bushels, $1.00. ou turn your back r prosperity. lizer bills and better >ld way your case is ed of buying fertilizers to buy more fertilizers, i this Clover doctrine. .80. Winter Barley, $1.60. Purple Top and Golden :e For Two Acres ut it. Out Off. nure Crops, 20c. lb. 2 lbs, 3;c :ery Co., BEST CLAY FOR BRICKMAKING Wealth That Is Found Upon the Shores of the Hudson River in New York. Magnificent and inspiring as the scenery is along the towering banks of the lordly Hudson, it isn't any where near as much of a moneymaker as the lowly bricks which are made along the shores of that favored stream. In the ten years past some 11,390,100,000 bricks, valued at $60, 407,258, have been fashioned out of the clay close to the water's edge, the New York World states. These bricks if laid flat, would make a sidewalk that would reach around the world. And it is estimated that there is still enough clay left on the banks of the Hudson to make 1,200,000,000 bricks a year for the next 50 years. The stratum of clay extends along both sides of the Hudson from New York to Cohoes, above Troy, and takes in ten counties, one of them in New Jersey. It is the greatest brickmak ing district In all the world. For a century the industry has thrivied, and, strangely enough, the method of man ufacture has changed hardly any in the lapse of these years. It was in 1817 when the industry be gan to thrive. James Woods, an Eng lishman, had learned the trade of brickmaking in his native land and was attracted to Haverstraw, up the west bank of the river a few miles from New York. The vast quantities of fine brick clay there and the abun dance of wood for fuel appealed to him, and~ he started the first-success ful brickyard in Rockland county. To Woods Is given the credit for discov ering that road dust made a fine ingre dient for good bricks. He also in vented tempering, mixing and molding machines, and these, but little modi fied, are used even in these times of new appliances for all .forms of the industry. SEVERE TESTS FOR WATCHES Those Intended for Use in the British Navy Have to Be Absolutely Perfect In Make. Only the best inade chronometer would ever survive the tests watches are made to undergo at the Royal ob servatory in Greenwich, England. Usually there are always about two hundred watches under examination at the observatory for use in the Brit ish navy. On certain occasions there is a complete trial of chronometers open to all makers who have sufficient confidence in their watches being able to withstand the severity of the tests. During the competition the watches are exposed to every possible varia tion of temperature. They are baked in furnaces sufficiently hot to cook a roast of meat. In fact, so great is the heat that a badly made watch has been known to tumble to pieces during the baking test. The moment a watch is taken out of the oven it is plunged into mix tures registering 40 degrees of frost. To such perfection has the manufac ture of some chronometers attained that even the most stringent tests fail to cause the slightest variation in the accuracy with which they tick off the seconds. Good Joke on Mean Man. The other day the mills had just - stopped, and a weaver named Dick, who was noted for his stingy and - miserly ways, was going home. Dick hadn't been very well that day. Just - as he left the mill he happened tc meet a doctor. So, thinking he could - get some medical advice for nothing, he stopped the doctor and said he was - very ill. "Where do -you suffer most?" said - the medical mian. "In my chest, doctor." "Ah, that's bad. Please close your eyes. That's right. Now put out your - tongue, so that I can examine it close Dick did as he was told. After he had waited for about ten minutes he - opened his eyes to find an amused crowd of factory people round him, the doctor having meanwhile disap peared. To Rernove Putty. To remove old putty from a window after the glass has been taken out, pass a hot soldering iron or poker over it. This softens it and it is easily re Unoffical Returns; The tabulation below gives the incomplete vote o' Clarendon; Bfease and Manning will run over for governor. Gamble, Browne'. and Heriot, re-elected. Dickson has tied the vote of both of his opponents. Whaley defeated Padgett for congress. Johnson,Rush, White, DuBose, Lesesne, Mellett, run over for the legislature. Bar wick re-elected magistrate; Graham at Foreston; Bradham at Pinewood; Fleming at New Zion; Richbourg at Summerton; Baker at Tnrbeville: Young an d Harvin run over at Alcool. Gerald and Kelly run over for supervisor. Tobias and Thames run over for coroner. -3 0,- e ,...nx ~ '...po seone o -as 2. Wen:-e oxo-D E 6'cnA n . . 0 0 - : : : . . . . . . - Cole L.. Blease. WOR. A. Cooper. ."acce AO-cc C "_4=W -7 o 010 Cz . M. DesChamps. Tohn T. Duncan. -Richard I Manning E. C. L Adams. .- Andrew .J Bethea. 1C.:' oe 00. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . __o' W. Banks Dore. P J 0~t: A t: 1"attt 01 -H o G. W. W ightman. .. .. CA I 0 J O I OGA O CC~ ~ A ap C OAC p r m C Q ... r . a s o e . . WCbar.o W. Sawyer ..0 W. T. CaMr er. O I tolt-0" GD 0,000PC Or C . OO 0 00.40 ""___ _ _ Al A"o Aa0_to A A A .0_ I. 5888288 J. E Swearingen. ? a a eu:: a a E 0' r0 . Thos. H. Peeples. _ tv A00e cG a t t a e axe ;j~~E ~o J. Wu'tsoD. 0 0A tr : 0C o A ~ o oC~--a t:oa.Iames Canoler. - t1 .O Ato --0-aZ.E-A_- -~~ 00AC.P : : : :Albert S Fant. - - -= G. McD. Hampton. .B to 1~ to0 M-.C"+ ~OO t. A- .O - ac it.1Ju. tuLu --W. H. Kelly. --. - -W T. Thrower ~vmcoo~.to. G. Padgett. co m..o. S.Wb o-aal .Wey. 4 g ag.~: -ae2 o e ac Philip H. Stoll. . ~ 00,. . -.~~C. R. F._Baker._ owl R.S. DesCIamps. owlJ. H. DuBose. a V1 ~0~ohn ..Epps. ,... ..~,W. W. Johniso~n -. ~ ~ ~ ~ J H Leesnec ~~c, R D..White. .. L. .B. Cantey. .. I ce- de a ,. d&ar C. Dic'son . ,... ,... t e t cccwT. Mitch Wells ce c e0 tow etoE.B.a reE.B ae~. $2a s -a ~mcea ._r~to.: otc ____ - ,.. : - : N. G. Broad way - -. -. : : .e : .- ~ J. M. Fleming - 0 cc : Calvin J. ULhdiv. - .- ci to. oc o, toto J. EKell.. ~~tto-t.. ...::to - .l. H. Timmons. SIG ti0CJZc_ o eacn-oeto ______ .. I ~-a4-ea se:.. E. J. Browne. ce ----eea e c -,e-a e14- ee e eto J. Ingram Wi Mo)n. - - ce .gj ic, a..ozc- co ,.eces .- e a o~c o ce ..e a . t -c -- Theodore V. Gray. - -: 4 : : : : :: i. Allen Shorter. 0 - -- o c toa e. J.-h,. P Thame.. . S K~.z.: ~ . ...:J. W. Hler i-t. ~ -. a-:R. L Ridgrill. B.. -ry ~. ~.. : J'ran~ I Ean Sto W. D Young. V. W . Iraluddin. I: ~ ... . ... . .. Hugh P Gibbous. . . . . . . . . . . . . . -S D. Powll. .. .. . .. .D. Edd.Tubvle - - -W. E. Fleming. ::..... ......- :P. M.Gibbons.- ~ i J .. E. Richbbourg. 1__-_-_-_ ..:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:A. J. Richbourg. - : :.::.:.:.::.:.:. L. S. Barwick. .............. . . . . ....------. --..-. .- T. Parker Brown. : : - E. M. Bradham. -