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The Manning times. [volume] (Manning, Clarendon County, S.C.) 1884-current, December 24, 1902, SUPPLEMENT TO THE MANNING TIMES, Image 7

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Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn86063760/1902-12-24/ed-1/seq-7/

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PAINTS PAINTS PAINTS, +!!
The Greatest Display of Stoves andl
2 aanges in South:Carolina{
+ Can be found in our store. 'We want you to come and
I W see them. + 0
We' are headquarters for NIachinery Supplies of +
+ Il kinds and sole agents for the best Itubber. Leather ;
and Canvass Stitch Belting.
+ We invite speeial attention to our stock of
F A ISNod With*
-HARNESS. SADDLES. WHIPS. There is no 4
t + stock superior to ours.
Come and see our stock of Guns and Sports- +
H+men's Supplies, the largest and best ever seen ou this 0
market.
Farmers and mechanics can find any implement or +
+ tool in our store, made of the best material and at+
+ prices which defy competition. O
+ Lubricating' Oils of the best quality and at low
+ price-s
We solicit the trade of the people of Clarendon
O with whom we have had business for so many years.
OF
Sumter+ 0
L. B. DuRant, 5. C.
aGLENN
SPRINGS
MINERAL
WATER.
Nature's Greatest Remedy
FOR DISEASES OF THE
Liver, Kidneys, Stomach
and Skin.
Physicians Prescribe it,
Patients Depend on it, and
Everybody Praises it.
FOR SALE BY
-err -m -ra-ra oW3Nr d CO.X
Look to Your Interest.
Here we are, still in the lead, and why suffer with your eyes whei yo
can be snited with a pair of Spectacles with so little trouble? We carry th
S
/000/
Celebrated HAWKES Spectacles and Blasses,
Which we are offering very cheap, from 25c to $2.50 and Gold Frames at $3
to $6. Call and be suited.
W. M. BROCKINTON.
SJ R. VENNING JEWELER.
OEAL.ER IN
Watches, Clocks, Jewelry and All Kinds of
FANCY NOVELTIES.
I make a specialty of WEDDING and HOLIDAY PRES
ENTS and always carry a large and handsome line of
Silverware, Hane-Painted Cina, Glassware
and numerous other articles suitable for Gifts of all kind.
COME AND SEE T-HEM.
All Watch, Clock and Jewelry Repairing done promptly and
guaranteed.
L.EVI BLOCK, - - MANG. S. C.
The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been
in use for over 30 years, has borne the signatnre of
and has been made under his per
sonal supervision since its infancy.
Alowno one to deceive you in this.
All Counterfeits, Imitations and "Just-as-good" are but
Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of
Infants and Children-Experience against Experiment.
What is CASTORIA
Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare
goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It
contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic
substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms
and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind
Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation
and Flatulency. It assinmilates the Food, regulates the
Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep.
The'Children's Panacea-The Mother's Friend.
GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS
Bears the Signature of
The Kifid You Have Always Boug
In Use For Over 30 Years.
ID0110,11 DJo'llI~Sl I.
f(
[CONTINUED.]
IHe stood by the end of the table,
and we fell into a sort of group around
it. The light was above, and it showed E
our inverted images in the black and h
polished surface. h
"It was all in the past," said Donald. ir
"I feared that it might be so. I cannot
help you, Mr. Kelvin, further than to n
assure you that the deed of transfer
once existed and that it came into the e
posse sson of the rightful ewncr of b
this property after having bec'n in the
hands of i ra l. This I judge by the i
scene iLtSel. I know nothing of the tl
people." b,
"Come:" midl.dy. "iThat's worth
knowin::. it's he:!r your story." h
I tun, wo ; was standing leside me,it
sudde'niy ea ned un my shoulder.
"I feel a "it raint," he said and point- t)
ed dow n to the reflections in the table,
where for a certainty we all looked
like dead men. d
"I'll have to do the best I can," s:'id k
Donald, with something like a groan.
"This takes the life out of me, but I'll
have to go through with it somehow.
It's as if I saw this room, but a good
deal different, of course. This table ise
here, and there is a single candle burn
ing upon it. Beside the table is a man el
sitting in a chair. Ie seems to have a
a sort of light sack coat on over a part si
of a ilitary uniform. He is very ,
broad in the shoulders. He's one of E
the strongest looking nien that ever I
saw, though not very tall, I should
judge. He has a little black mustache
that is too small for his face. It looks
ridiculous on a man with such a heavy
jaw."
"That's Westcott - Norman West
cott:" gasped Bunn. "When I was a
boy"- -
Donald went on without seeming to in
hear this interruption.
"I never saw a man sit so still," said ST
lie. "It startled me at first. I thought a
he was dead. After quite a long time
another man comes into the room-the
man whom I described to you this
morning. Ie looks seared; lie has
a pistol in his hand. He comes in
by that window, and the other man
seems to see him without looking' that
way. -
"'Have you brought it?' he asks
without a movement except of his lips. a
The other seems to go into a sort of a
panic. He walks up to the table like a
crab, the pistol in his left hand and t
tZr.t side of him coming foremost.
"'Yes; I've got it,' he says, and then
he breaks into a sort of harangue. 'No
tricks:' he cries over and over again. et
'You'll do as you say-Westcott!' t
"That's the officer's name - West- a
Cott." er
"And the other's Walmsley!" exclaim- bc
ed Bunn. d(
Donald looed up dreamily. ju
"Walmsley?" he repeated. "What a
was I saying?" T]
"Keep quiet, everybody," said Reedy. ic
"Don't break in. This is too big a fa
thing to be fooled with. 'No tricks;' ..
that's what you said. He was afraid e3
the other fellow would do him out of
something."I
Donald lookcd down at the table and
put his fingers lightly upon the scar in*g
it before he proceeded. 01o
"'You shall have your price, Walms- a
ley,' said Westcott, 'and you shall leave B:
this room with it in your pocket and I e
will not put the law upon you for this F
crime. I give you my word as an ofii
cer and a gentleman. Put the deed on '
the table.' '
"'The money first,' said Walmsley. Ir
"Westcott had had both his hands!p
under the table. He withdrew the left e
hand and threw down a little bag.1b
Walmsley, still holding his pistol, man-* C1
aged to open the string that fastened p
the mouth of the bag, and he poured s
out the gold coins upon the table. Then at
he counted them off with his right p:
hand, putting each into his pocket a
"'it's right,' he said, 'and here's the Si
deed.'
"He took it from. the breast of his, ti
coa" and laid it before Westcott. As" to
in
d<
f4
- a
pi
IIIfr
"Riqt thre!"he cied trikng Ii eftr
"Risghts thea" he restcikin haris-i
hdhiaTdocuent lcaytween
hendd onald lowerd his fingerlpn theb
nex scnot unestasnnin wacrssse
itle ooveWalmsleylga bu hr ie ta
soee wildardal Ite sntch the de b
thinkh must. Mavie meantcot rits
nyway hisofeet, hibrgh hand eistlnogbet
he hmny dipaThe document adtwee
them n taheru ta ke s tr. agi ano
And hiomnad waid s fiet pponhi ain
eaipo. si
hea canno whslnersond ofhtisane f
imulsabrurte tabled Walmsley' h
inershedrward ponc the deed. -andb
tikhe wamdainst tardmen him Tetse
thimne, loisplndyellw rocmtando
cased tracheoul thake bit oaane r, eeu
fer thae ha fll awon from othe s
arn, hsevmind cwa by het trongehsat e
thatI hevperfsoremehaicaly.n"
heieror, fogttn thau e urss wfhi I
wawett dea onde beapwth
aher rihtar, incudigymyself.Ica
hea louly, whitine sond. "It ws thor
thred atir. Hev hanee hlding atcav
uponaerne the table. itntWlmsley'
uht him dang itptwd him. gTshose b
iners, n and lowrema devrtingd
eaped adu hat obeith frpaper eve
Hfte tht ande awa ro m the
wabawe thalw;teer lie dideathed
thing t heist tw a ying the heere
uponteris Itable. Wnhinstt wst
one ano tna stump wrappea in cloths,
e picked Walmsley up in his arms,
)r the man had fainted, and carried
im out through that window."
"To the doctor's, of course," said
~unn.
"I have not followed him," responded
oonald. "I have seen nothing that
appened outside this room. Wait!"
e cried suddenly. "Westcott is com
ig back. He takes the hand from the
ible, the deed still in it. By the Eter
al"
le sprang toward the wall and pull
fI away a movable bookcase that had
cen put in since the Keivins' advent
[ow he could have swung it away
'om the wall I really do not know, for
ie thing with its load of books must
ave been a great weight.
"Right there!" he cried, striking with
is left band upon the wall. "He put
: there!"
We all ran forward and examined
2e paneled wall, which seemed to be
erfectly solid, but Reedy sounded it
i the place indicated by Donald and
eciared that it was suspiciously hol
>w. After perhaps ten minutes' work,
-hich showed him to be very expert
i such matters, the detective found a
pring controlling a panel which open
I outward, revealing a recess contain
ig the dust of many old papers and
me parcbments well enough preserv
:. There was also the right hand of
man long dead, and the bony fingers
ill clasped that deed of transfer
hich Norman Westcott had bought of
zra Walmsley, the misc'r.
VIRGINIA SWALLOWWORT.
s Beautiful Blossoms Are Pitfalls
For Bees and Bugs.
Honey bees and insects and bugs of
ss degree find pitfalls and often death
the beautiful blossoms of the milk
ed, otherwise known as the Virginia
rallowwort. If these flowers are ex
nined any sunny day, one will be
etty sure to find them decorated with
miscellaneous assortment of strug
ing or dead ipsects with their legs
st in the slits of the peculiar blos
ms. The pollen of this common plant,
stead of being a powder, as in the
se of most plants, consists of sticky,
axen masses hidden within the blos
im. When a visiting insect thrusts
proboscis or leg into the opening of
ich a flower, some of these masses
'ck to it, and the natural course is for
te insect to flay off to another flower
id fertilize this with the adhering pol
n. All insects, however, are not strong
ough to extricate their legs from the
icky places, and then ensues the slow
rture of hanging there until death or
helping hand releases them from mis
y. Besides being beautiful, it could
quite a useful plant if we cared to
velop Its virtues. Thus its milky
ice contains caoutchouc. Brown sug
has been made from the flowers.
be silky hairs of the seeds are serv
eable in the manufacture of textile
hbrics, as cotton Is, and a fiber of
)od quality for ropemaking may be
:tracted from the stalk.
The London Silly Season.
"Always at the beginning of Au
st," says Sydney Brooks, "the editor
each London daily casts about for
subject that will 'fetch' the great
itish public and fill the correspond
ice column, such as 'Is M~arriage a
ailure?' 'The Decay of Domesticity,'
nglish Versus American Women,'
Chy Don't Young Men Marry?'
hould Women Work?' or 'Are We
provident?' A member of the pa.
r's staff will write a letter to the
litor opening the bail. Another mem
r will reply to him. Instantly from
lapham and Brixton and throbbing
orincal households there sets In a
eady stream of letters-all genuine
ad argumentative and for the most
trt quite appallingly earnest It is
most curious phenomenon, such, I
ppose, as no other country can show.
or thousands of men and women
iese annual discussions would seem
be their one chance of really open
g their hearts and minds to the
orld, and a very strange spectacle
ey make when opened, the minds es.
~cially. No one who really wanted'
study England could ignore these
~bates. They throw more than a lit.
a light on the English character and
e average English intelligence."
Chinese Etiquette.
The polite Chinaman will always re
'r to himself in deprecatory terms.
his trait of Chinese etiquette Is aptly
pressed in one of their own tales, in
hich a visitor is represented as call
ig in his best clothes and seated in
e reception room awaiting the ar
val of his host A rat that had been
-ying in a jar of oil on a rafter above,
ightened at the intrusion of the call
-ran away and in so doing upsetb the
1 jar, which fell on the visitor, satu
tting his elegant robes with oil. Just
Sthe face of the guest was. purple
-ith rage the host entered, when the
:'oper salutations were performed,
'ter which the guest proceeded to ex
an 'the sltuation, "As I entered your
norable apartment and seated my
lf under your honorable beam I in
lvertently terrified your honorable
t, which fled and upset your honora
Le oil jar upon my insignificant per
n, which is the reason of my con
mptible appearance in your honora
e presence."
Unjustly Punished.
A friend of mine returning to camp
ter a day's shooting, says a writer
Navy and Army, suddenly came in
ght of a big she bear with two cubs
flowing in single file proceeding
ong a ridge, the forms of the three
ing sharply silhouetted against the
:y. It was a very long shot, but he
~termined to try it, so drew a bead
i the old she bear and fired. The re
ilt was curious. The procession
opped, the she bear scratched her
If hastily, then turned around and,
garding the cub immediately behind
ith grave disapproval, boxed its
trs soundly and then went trundling
along the ridge, evidently under
e impression that her frolicsome off
>ring had been up to some unusually
jectionable tricks.
Satirical.'
"Did you know," said the young man
ho tried to pose as a handy volume
information, "that there was a time
'hen it was considered a crime for a
an to kiss his wife on Sunday?"
Indeed!" rejoined Miss Cayenne.
and now there are a number of in
:ances in which it would probably be
ooked on more as a penance."-Wash
igton Star.
Overplayed Themselves.
"Confound it!" esclaimed the sallow
ispeptic in the fifth row, under his
-eath. "We've overdone the applause.
istead of merely coming out and
>wing her thanks, she's going to sing
hiin."-Chcgo Tribune.
Child labor is an undesirable "infant
MEN WHO DELIVER MAIL.
Heart Trnazedies That Line the Route
of Letter Carriers.
"Tell you a story? Why, yes, I might
tell a good many stories if that was in
my line." The letter carrier blew a
pearly wreath of smoke upward and
fiecked the dead ash from his cigar,
says the Denver News. "Let me see.
There's an old lady on my route down
in Alabama who sits knitting the live
long day by the front room window.
Every morning and afternoon when I
whistle at the door of her next door
neighbor she lays down her knitting
and peers with a tired, eager face out
of that window until I go by. She's
got a boy somewhere out west. Ile
doesn't write to her twice a year, yet
twice each day the whole year through
she sits there, with that anxious look,
waiting, waiting, waiting. I feel a
twitch at my own heart every time I
pass by and see the look of expectancy
fade into disappointment. Sometimes
I'd give .70 to be able to stop and give
her five lines from that good for noth
ing boy of hers for whom she's eating
out her heart."
"That reminds me," said a younger
man who heard the letter carrier's sto
ry, "of a pretty baby on my route in a
Louisiana city. She's a dainty tot
about four or maybe five years old.
She has blue gray eyes like a wood vio
let that look a fellow straight to the
heart. Some little girls can do that
after they are older. This tot's mam
ma died six months ago, and for a
month afterward she used to come
tripping down the walk to meet me
with a little white note In her hand,
and, looking me to the heart out of
those big trusting eyes, she would say,
'Mr. Postman, won't you please take
this letter to my mamma in heaven?
I used to take the dainty missive from
the w=e pink hand. I couldn't tell her
bow far away her mamma was. One
day she came without a letter, and
there was pain in the great, sweet eyes.
'Mr. Postman, baby wants a letter
from mamma. Please, Mr. Postman,
tell my mamma me wants some letters
too.' And, boys, every day for a week
[had to pass that baby with the pain
in the gray blue eyes, and I wondered
the angels did not find some way some
how to make her baby heart under
stand."
FRUITS AND FLOWERS.
Water in which mignonette has been
placed should be changed often, since
it quickly becomes foul.
The best use to make of old bones
5s to break them up and bury them
aear tha roots of fruit trees and grape
rines.
By sowing nitrate of soda in small
;uantities in showery weather under
trees a most beautiful verdure will be
>btained.
It is not a good plan to fill an old
3rchard with young trees. The soil
is too much exhausted by the growth
)f the former occupants.
Geraniums bloom most satisfactorily
when grown in comparatively small
pots and soil which is termed rich, but
sot rank with excessive manure.
Stir, spade, rake and pulverize soil
thoroughly before planting or sowing.
he importance of this work cannot be
verestimated] if you desire fine blos
soms.
Geraniums that have been used for
ummer bloomers will not flower again
sntil the late spring months. Plants
or winter blooming should be grown
aspecialy for this purpose.
THE SNIPE.
lueh Lead Is Wasted on the Artful
Dodger at Migration Time.
The snipe, properly Wilson's' snipe,
lallinago delicata. but commonly
snown as English snipe and wrong
ully called half a dozen other names,
s a widely distributed species. It vis
ts every state at some season. Its
orthward migration extends within
the arctic circle,- while it is known to go
uthward to northern South America
d the West Indies. Comparatively
ew of the birds whlich move north
vard from February until May breed
south of the internationg line. It is
uite true there are breeuing grounds
it various points of the northern states,
ut the great breeding range extends
rom latitude 42 degrees north to some
.determined point much nearer the
pole than most sportsmen will venture.
Some time In September the first
southbound birds pass below the Cana
lian grounds, and soon most of the
suitable marshy bits of east and west
2ave their share of long billed prizes.
rhen begins an astonishing attack
Tvhich extends from ocean to ocean and
renerally sweeps southward from Can
ida to California, Probably tons of
Lead, half of which is wasted, are fired
t the artful dodger.-Edwyn Sandys
. Outng._______
That Awmul Boy Jones.
Fitty or more years ago "that awful
by Jones" wvas the torment of Queen
Victoria's life, and his short career in
public contains a mystery which would
try the mettle of Sherlock Hoclmes. -
He was a barber's apprentice who in
some unexplained way discovered a
passage into Bluckingham palace, with
which he alone was acquainted. When
be was first found trespassing, he was
ently admonished and sent home.
Soon after he was encountered again
in the palace. He would not tell how
be obtained access. Again he was sent
ome, and again he reappeared.
Once he calmly admitted that he had
been lodging in the palace for a fort
night. He had laid snug during the
day, sleeping in the royal apartments,
and at night had wandered from i'oom
to room, helping himself to the food
Left over from royal repasts. Hie had
seen the queen repeatedly and indeed
bad never been far from her.
The matter was considered so serIous
that the boy was summoned before a
special meeting of the privy council.
Ie refused to give any account of his
secret. Soon after he disappeared, and
it is supposed that he was removed un
er state protection.
Promising For the Tenors.
Three tenor's while strolling in Paris
began to talk of their engagements for
the coming season.
"Where are you two fellows going?"
isked one.
"I'm going to Rio Janeiro," answered
yne of his companions.
"So amn I," answered the other one.
"That's very 'queer," said the first
speaker, "for I'm going there too."
They then compared notes and, find
[ng that the same theatrical manager
bad engaged each of them, they called
:m him and asked for an explanation.
"I don't see why any of you should
be dissatisfied," he replied. "I've en
;aged each of you because 1 don't want
to be left without a tenor in Rio Ja
neiro. It is very probable that before
you are acclimated there yellow fever
will carry off two of you, and wouldn't
[ be in a nice fix then if I hadn't a
third tenor on hand?"
Experience worries more men than It
THE FASTING FAD.
There !s No Advantage to Be Gained
From Gcing Ilungry.
We are living in an age of fads, re
marks Good Health, and as its opinion
has been solicited in regard to the
"fasting fad" it proceeds to give it as
follows:
There is no particular advantage to
be gained from going hungry. Hunger
is the voice of nature telling us that
the system necds food and, like all of
nature's warnings, should be heeded.
To be sure, a great many, we might
say the majority, of people eat too
much as well as too often. But the
entire abstinence from food is an ex
ceptional remedy if it is used at all.
In cases where one's stomach is filled
with germs it is far better to fast than
to go on eating in the usual way, but
even then it is not necessary, for one
can get all the benefits of fasting and
more without discomfort by subsisting
for a time upon a fruit diet. In this
way the germs are starved out, the
fruit juice acting as a disinfectant.
Usually one or two days of this kind
of fasting is all that is needed, and
it is not always necessary to use the
fruit entirely alone even then. Some
dry sterilized bread, such as zwieback
or granose, my be taken with it with
out interfering with the purpose of th3
fast. It is really wonderful what.can
be accomplished by the use of fruit in
ridding the digestive tract of germs.
Eau de Cologne.
How many of those who use cau de
cologne from Cologne daily, one might
almost say hourly, are aware of the
fact that it was invented by an Italian
and not by a son of the Fatherland,
which gives its name?
Almost 200 years ago an Italian
priest, Giovan Maria Farina, eked out
his modest fortune by selling perfum
ery, little art objects and so on at Do
modossola. In 1702, happening to -be
in Cologne and making use of some of
the finest vegetable productions of the
country, he discovered the secret of
the miraculous perfume, which has
never been revealed to this day except
to his descendants. He soon devoted
himself to the sale of his Invention,
which was so satisfactory that, need
ing help in its manufacture, he had his
brother and nephew join him from
Italy.
The increasing fame of the water
brought increasing difficulties of rival
ry. New firms who stole his name, his
trademarks, stamps and so on sprang
up like mushrooms, but they could not
steal his secret.
Smoking a Narghile.
"The narghile is the best instrument
to smoke tobacco through, provided you
use it in the right way," said a man
who knows. "Most people use it in the
wrong way. They load i: with'tobacco
and light up with a match as though
it was a pipe they were smoking. This
is incorrect, and the narghile, so
abused, has an abomlna&le taste and'
odor. The right way to use the nar
ghile is first to dip your tobacco in
water, squeeze the water out and place
the so'ked, damp mass in the pipe
bowl. Then you take a lump of burn
ing charcoal and set It on the top of
the wet tobacco and begin to smoke.
The tobacco itself, you see, Is not really
alight; it's the charcoal that's alight; it
is the burning charcoal that eats the
tobacco up. This is the secret of nar
hile smoking, And a narghile, smoked
properly, is .delicious-makes, in fact,
the very best smoke in the world."
Philadelphia Record.
Hler Great Fault.
A Georgia citizen recently said that
while riding out from Savannah on
horseback he saw a typical southern
matron outside a whitewashed cabin,
while on the lawn in front a bevy of
young colored children were playing.
There were eight of them altogether,
seven of their number being very, very
dark, while the eighth one was light
complexioned.
"You've got some fine looking chil
dren there, auntie," he said.
"Deed I hab, boss," she replied.
"Dere ain't any better pickaninnies in
de whole state of Georgia den dat first
sben, but dat eighth one, dat mulatto,
she done make me more trouble dan de
whole oder seben put togedder."
"In what way?" I asked.* And she
replied:
"'Cause she done show dirt so easy!"
Chased and Refined.
At a recent police court sitting a man
wasged 40 shillings and costs for as
sauuug a policeman. Considering him
self a much injured man, on reaching
the door he began abusing the magis
trate in very violent language. The
magistrate sent an officer after him,
and the delinquent found himself once
more in the dock and fined again for
contempt of court.
"My man, if you had been more
chaste and refined in your language,"
sid the magistrate, "you would not
have been chased and re-fined."-Lon
don Tit-Bits.
plow Goshawks Are Trained.
A French traveler states that the
goshawk is still used in Persia In hunt
ing the gazelle and that it is trained to
feed on that creature's beautiful eyes
by placing its food in the emptied eye
balls of a stuffed gazelle, so that when
used in the hunt the goshawk stops its
victim by attacking Its eyes, a horribly
cruel form of sport.
A Lovers' QuarreL
"Halloa, Fitzy! where did you get
that black eye?"
"Oh, it was only a lovers' quarrel."
"Lovers' quarrel! Why, your girl
did not give you that. did she?"
"No; it was her other lover."
The ink of the Greeks and Romans
was merely lampblack mingled with
gum in the proportion of three parts of
the former to one of the latter.
Sheriff aiS ls
BY VIRTUE OF SUNDRY EXE
ntions issued by S. .J. Bowman,
County Treasurer Clarendon cou nty,
State of South Carolina, and to me
directed, I will sell at the court
house in Manning on Monday. 5th
day of .Jainary next, it being~ sales
day, the following real estate for de
linquent taxes:
Futon Township-Taxes 1901, 1ev
ied upon as the property of Alex. Du
Bose-four lots; hounded, north, by
right of way of M. and A. railroad;
east, by Santee Cypress Lumber Co.;
west, by Mrs. C. B. DuBose and Wil
liam Mcl~night: south, by Antiochi
colored Methodist church.
St. JTames Township-Taxes 1901,
levied upon as the proper'ty of Mid
dleton & Ravenel-sixty four and
one-fourth acres; bounded on the
north by A. C. Cobia and R. RI. D)in
gle, agent: east, by estate of J. M.
Sprott: south, by' S. A. Brunson;
west. by A. C. Boebette.
Ters-Cash.
~uchase'r to pay for papers.
.J. EILBE RT DAVIS.
Sheriff Clarendon County.
[19.-4t
pure Corn Whiskey.
HiFll a e uil
i.fo.li 009.
This is old stock W e.
it up in plain cotton So and
ses. holding " Four, Six and
welve bottles to case. No
arks to indi- cate contents.
iis whiskey I s ciallY
itable f o r ' ~ medicinal pur
)'-4.". b e in Von,-, nd Of th
LS L quality. u z
-ty to have 2 our famuy
ysician test t and if not
tisfactory re turn it at 0
:pense and I will ref un
o U r money. No f a m i I Y
tould be with out a case. No
r d er m u st call for less
Lan four qts. by express pre
it interested in whiskies write for full price
st. In ordering remember whiskey cannot be
11pped C. 0. D., and all orders must be accom
anied by cash.
Address all communications to
3B. A. XLO3'WT.
HAMLET. N. C.
Vloney To Lend
We have arranged to negotiate loans
a first mortgages of improved farm
roperty at 7 per cent interest on sums
F one thousand dollars or more, and
per cent on sums of less than one
iousand dollars.
No commissions are charged-on these
>ans, and fees are reasonable.
LEE & MOISE,
Sumter, S. C.
Vloney to Lend.
Loans made on Improved Real Es
ite.' Interest at 7 per cent.
Time as long as wanted.
Apply to J. A. WEINBERG,
Attorney at Law.
0
0
cor
CD-~
0 ::r '
.0
AMMON
3uggies, Wagons, Boad
Oar'ts and Carriages
?1BPAIRE3D
Wimi Nbatness and Duspatch
-AT
1. A. W HIT E'S
WIIEELWRIGHT and
sLACKSMiIH SH OP.
I repair Stoves, Pumps and run water
ipes, or I will put down a new Pump
If 'you need any soidering done, give
Le a call.
L~ iME.
My horse is lame. Why? Because I
id not have it shod by 1R. A. White,
le man that puts on such neat shoes
ad 'makes horses travel with so much
Ve Make Them Look New.
We are making a specialty of re
inting old Buggies, Carriages, Road
arts and Wagons cheap.
Come and see me. My prices will
lease you, and I guarantee all of my
Shop on corner below R. M. Dean's.
.A. WHITE,
MANNING. S. C.
rhings We
Like Best
Often Disagree With Us*
Because we overeat of them. Indi
Bstionl follows. But there's a way to
scape such consequences. A dose of a
od digestant like Kodol wiN relive you
once. Your stomach is sip, toe
,eak to digest what yo a. Thts a2I
idigestion is.Kdo get the food
!ithout the stomach's ai.Thus the
amach rests while the body is-strength
ted by wholesome food. Bietn is un
ecessary. Kolol digests anykn of -
ood food. Strengthens and lgrtS
odol "'rch Red Mood.
repaeol y~.ZZTO heg.
The R. B. Lorya Drug Store.
)R. J. FRANK GEIGER,
DENTIST,
MANNING, S. C.
Phone No. 25.
Eodo Dyspopsia Sure
Digests what you eat.
THE R. B. LORYEA DRUG STORE.
SHAIR BAL.SAM
STATE OF SOUTH UAROLINA)
County-of Clarendon,
COURT OF COMMON PLEAS.
Saniue'l M. Nexsen, Plaintiff,
azrainst
Elizabeth Mack, Joe Mack, Jr., Ag
nes McBride, Edmund Macjk and
Lizzie Ragin, Defendants.
Judgment for Foreclosure and Sale.
UNDER AND DY VIRTUE OF A c
T
Judgment Order of the Court of Con- m
mon Pleas, in the above stated ac- IT
tion, to me directed, bearing date S1
November 22,1902, I will sell at publie b
auction, to the highest bidder, for er
cash, at Clarendon Court House, at P'
Manning, in said county, within the e)
legal hours for judicial sales, on Mon- y
day, the 5th day of January, 1903, be- s
ing salesday, the following described a
real estate: P:
All that piece, parcel or tract of
land situate, lying and being in tile ii
county of Clarendon and State afore- s]
said,containing ninety-five (95) acres, P
more or less, and bounded as follows,
to wit: On tlhe north, east and south
by lands of S. M. Nexsen, and on the
west by lands now or formerly of C.
H. Pack and R. R. Dingle, it being -
same tract of land conveyed by deed
of S. M. Nexsen to Madison Mack and
Joe Mack and the interest of Joe
Mack, conveyed by deed to Madison
Mack, dated February 7th, 1890. o
Purchaser to pay for papers.
J.ELBERT DAVIS. o
Sheriff Clarendon County- 8
Mannihig, S. C., December 10, 1902. t]
[19-4t
STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA,
County of Clarendon,
COURT OF COMMON PLEAS.
Samuel M. Nexsen, Plaintiff,
against
Hannah Revine, Minnie Bennett,
Amanda Simmons, Ephraim Fel
der, Stephen Felder, Cleveland
Felder, .Leonard Felder, David -
Felder 'and Sevilla James, De
fendants.
Judgment for Foreclosure and Sale.
UNDER AND BY VIRTUE OF A
Judgment Order of the Court of Com
mon Pleas, in the above stated ac
tion, to me directed, bearing date of
November 24, 1902, I will sell at pub
lie auetion, to the highest bidder for
cash, at Clarendon Court House, at
Manning, in said county, within the
legal hours for judidkl sales, on Mon
day, the 5th day of January, 1903, be
ing salesday, the following described
real estate:
All that piece, parcel -or tract of
land situate and being in the county
of Clarendon and State aforesaid, on
waters of Santee river, containing
forty-two acres as per plat of Jos. C.
Burgess, D. S., made January 27th,
1877, and bounded as foll.ows, to wit:
On the north by lands formerly Din
gle,now L Lyons; on the east by lands
of estate of Felder; on the south by
lands of J. J. Frierson. and on the
west by lands of Dublin Felder, Isaac
Felder and Daniel Felder.
Purchaser to -pay for papers.
J. ELBERT DAVIS,
Sheriff ~Clarendon County.
Manning, S. C., December 10, 1902.
[19-4t
STATE OF SOUTH CAROUINA,
County of Cfinendon,
COURT OF COMMON PLEAS.
Marion Moise, Plaintiff,
against
Catherine B. DuBose, V. C. Badham
and John H. Claussen and J. D.
S. Claussen, copartners as J1. C.
IIL Claussen & Co. and M. G,.
Ryttenberg and Abe Ryttenberg,
as survivors of the firmi of J. Ryt
tenberg & Sons, D)efendants.
Judgment for Foreelosure and Sale.
UNDER AND BY VIRTUE OF A
Judgment Order of the Court of Com
mon Pleas, in The abov'e stated ac
tion, to me directed, bearing date of -
November 22, 1902, I w ill sell at pub- J
lie auction, to t'he highest bidder for
cash, at Clarendon Court House, at
Manning, in said coun ty, within the
legal hours for judicial sales, on Mon
day, the 5th day'of January, 1903,
being sadlesday, the following de
scribed real estate:I
"All of that lot of i:.nd in Claren
don county- and State aforesaid, in
the village of Rimiini, being one-half
of lot No. 5 on a plat of building lots
recorded in the Register's ofmce for
said county in Book W. W., at page
424 and bounded north by lot of Wil
liam McKnight, (being the other half
of said lot); east, by lot of Alexander el
DuBose; son th. by Antioch church
lot, and west by the Caiden and n
Charleston public road, said lot
measuring fifty-six and one-half feet
on its northern anid eastern bound
aries, and one hundred feet on its d
southern boundary and twenty feet t
on its western boundary." a
Purchaser to pa for papers. e
J. ELBERT DAVIS,
Sheriff Clarendon County.
= Manning, S. C., December 10, 1902.
[194t -
C
STAE OFISOUTH CAROLINA,
Omuty of Ciarerdas
COURT OF COMMON PLEAS.
Mamie J. Graham, Annie E. Rich-f
bourg,H arriet L. Brunson, Henry
Brunson, Mathew E. Brunson,
Jane T. Richibourg, Lula Brun
son, William J. Brunson, David
0. Brunson. Jr., Laura L. Browv- u
der, Alice Brunson and Ellen
Brunson, John P. Brunson, Lin
wood Lee Brunson, Alice Brun
son and Letitia Lowder Brunson,
infants, by their guardian ad
litemn Joseph Sprott, Plaintiff,
against
Nettie B3runson, Nexsen Brunson,
Harvey Brunison, Carrie L. Man
deville and Williatu F. B. haynes- g
worth, executor of the last will e
and~ testament of S. C. C. Rich- g
ardson, deceased, Defendants. 8
Decree for Partition. il
UNDER AND BY VIRTUE OF A s1
Judgment Order of the Court of Comn- e
mon Pleas, ini tile above stated ac- n
tion, to me directed, bearing date g
November 24, 1902, I will sell at pub
li auction, for eash, to the highest
bidder, at Clarendon Court House, at
Manning, in said county, within the i
legal hours for judicial sales, on Mon
day, the 5th day of January, 1903,
being salesday, the following de
scribed real estate:
All that tract or parcel of land ly -
ing, being and situate in Santee
swamp, in Clarendon county andi
tate aforesaid, containing twenty-i
six hundred and twenty-three (2,623)|
acres, and bounded on the north -by _
lards of Carrie L. Mandeville; east, -
oi lands nowv or formerly of estate of I '
John C. Davis; south, on Santee
river, and wvest on lands now or for
mierly of estate of John A. Colclough.
Purchaser to pay for papers.
J. ELBERT DAVIS,
Sheriff Clarendon County.
Manning, S. C., December 10, 1902
[10-4t
Ringou nr Job Work to The Times offiCe.

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