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Now Open and Ready for Business. just received a car load of Chase City Wagons, a car load of assorted Buggies. We can furnish the public with Harness from the best manu f;tcturers, and we are also agents for the celebrated Woodruff Hay Press. We cordially invite the public to visit our sak-s stable. and evervthing bought from us has our guarantee. Respectfully, COFFEY & RICBY. e Now Ill O NRle r We are in our new quarters at the same old stand. next to Jenkinson's, where we are prepared to fill all orders for Groceries. We will be glad to see you and "figger" on any bill of Groceries you may need, and feel assured we can satisfy you both in qual ity and price. The Manning Grocery Co. A New Convenience. Suiter Maehinery Company, U N c o t A -rE ST.MTER, S. 0. W. S. BURNS. President. T. H. SIDDALL, General Mlanarer D I R E C T O) R S: XV. B. BI-RNs. C. G. ROWL.\ND. T. HI. SIDDALL. CHARLEs DEWEY. RICHARZD I. M.ANNIN;. GRO. D. SHORE. FlRST CLASS MACHINE SHOP, Iron rand Brass Foundry. SComplete and up-to-date equipment for repairinsr machinery. s Grate Bars and Building Irons our j I - Foundry Specialties. A\gents for WVinship, Pratt, Munger, Smith & Eagle Cotton Gins, Gin ning Mlachinery and Presses. - 2. Steam Engines and K-i 2 .Boiler~s in Stook. Write or call if we can serve you. shops situated on W., C. & A. R. R., east of passenger depot, on block south of East Liberty street. THE . .. IIFidelity Mutual Life Insurance Co, ii * OF PHILADELPHIA, PA. S A practical, mutual profit-sharing American Company. No stock or pr'oprietary interest to absorb insurance dividends. ___ :g- The portiou of premium that may be used for expenses is limited m 3 in policies., hc limitation gurnte eo my, protection of trust EE __funds and liberal dividends to policy holders. e The fulfillment of policy contracts is guaranteed by the reserve, c Sprotected by the undivided surplus, the company's record of over E twenty-six y'ears for prompt payment of claims. favorable mortality, 9 Sand a POLICY EXPENSE LIITATION. E Ratio of Assets to Liabilities.............. ............- -21. Let me show you our contracts that insure your insurance. SJOE C..McCREERY, District wranager. _ S Columbia, S. C., and Manning, S. C. ~~ QGHFAR~ioif VL * A~belween Ihc f R T HAJNDSOQU TH I Florida-Cuba. A passenger service unexcelled for luxury and comfort,equipped with thelatest Pullman !Dining, Sleeping and Thoroughfare Cars. For rates, schedule, maps or any iniforma tion, write to WM4. J. CRAIG, Gleneral Passenger Agent, uril...:..~, .. C.e THE SUNDAY SUHOL. LESSON XI, THIRD QUARTER, INTER NATIONAL SERIES, SEPT. 10. Text of the Lesson, Ezek. xvlvi. 1-12. Memory Verses, 3-5.-Golden rext. Rev. xxii, 17-Commentary Pre pared by Rev. D. MI.'Stearlr. [Copyright, 105, by American P-ress A.eldationl.J W have in this lesson the record of a river of living water issuing forth from the temple of Jerusalem and flowing eastward to the Dead sea. bringing life and health everywhere. On either side of the river areeep trees of unfading foliage, fruit e'aring, the fruit being for meat and the leaf for mtdicine. or, as In the margin, for bruises and sores. Referring to the same time to which Ezekiel refers, the Spirit says in Joel iii, 17, 18, "So shall ye know that I am the Lord your God, dwelling in Zion, my holy mountain, * * * and a fountain shall come forth of the house of the Lord and shall wa ter the valley of Shittim." Again in Zech. xiv, 8, He says: "And it shall be in that day that living waters shall go out from Jerusalens, half of them to ward the eastern sea and half of them toward the hinder sea. In summer and in winter shall it be." In verse 9 of ou- lesson we read of "rivers" and in the margin "two rivers," doubtless the same as those of Zechariah. Our lesson is in a portion of Scrip ture which tells of the future glory of Jerusalem, with its literal temple re stored, the name of the city from that day being Jehovah-shammah (the Lord is there). The context in Zechariah tells of a change in the contiguration of the earth in and about Jerusalem, and there is no reason why we should not expect a literal fulfillment of every prophecy concerning the land and the people, but every reason why we should expect it, for the mouth of the Lord hath spoken It. Now, while the principle "literal, if possible," stands for all Scripture, we must remember that as in the story of Abraham and Ishmael and Isaac these things had also another meaning, so here we must seek the lesson for our hearts which will work out in us more of the life of Christ, for to that end all our study of the Scripture must tend. God, who commanded the light to shine out of darkness (a literal event), not only hath shone in our hearts (if we have truly received Christ). but will increasingly shine there as we weekly receive His word in our hearts (II Cor. Iv, 6; Ps. exix, 130). A literal rock in the wilderness gave forth literal water with which literal men and women quenched their literal thirst (Ex. xvii, u), but the other meaning is seen in I Cor. x, 4,-wiere we read, "That rock was Christ." In Jer. Ii. 13, the Lord speaks of Himself as the fountain of uving wa ters and complains that His people had forsaken Him for water from their own broken cisterns. In John iv, 13, 14, the same Lord told the woman of Samaria of water that did not satisfy, and also of water that would satisfy and become in the believer a well of water springing up unto everlasting life. The line of truth suggested by "water" in the first seven chapters of John's gospel is most refreshing and inspiring, but the complete story takes us back to Gen. i, 0-8, and on to Rev. xxii, and the cry is ever sounding forth: "H1o, every one that thirsteth, come ye to the waters;" "Whosoever will, let him take the water of life free ly;' "If any man thirst let him come unto me and drink" (Isa. lv, 1; Rev. xxii, 17; John vi, 37)' The four times measured river of our lesson may suggest to some the river that went out of Eden and was parted Into four, or the fourfold story in the gospels of Him who is the foun tain of living waters. But it certainly suggests the ever increasing revelation of God in His wonderful word and the breadth and length and depth and height of His love, which a little child can grasp in some measure, but which is also too deep for even the most spir itual to understand. Our range of vision must take in not only the present blessings of the gos pel while the church is being gathiered out, but the greater blessing to all na tons when "Israel shall blossom and bud and fill the face of the earth -with' fruit:" when "the earth shall be full of the knowledge of the Lor3, as the wa ters cover the sea;" when "the nations of them which are saved shall wvalk in the light of the new Jerusalem and they shall bring the glory and honor of the nations into It (Isa. xxvii, 6; xi, 9; Rev, xxi, 24, 26). Who shall see and share all this? Whosoever chooses now to take the water of life freely. But how can they take It who have never heard of it? There is our resp~onsibility as stewards of the grace of God. Let him that heareth say come! What are you do ig about it? If we really know what it is to drink of the pure river of the water of life, clear as crystal, proceed ing out of the throne of God and of the Lamb (Rev. xxii, 1) we cannot but want to have others drink also. And it we do not most earnestly desire that others may know and drink it Is a question whether we ourselves have tasted. There are many worshipers who do not worship in spirit and in truth because they have only a form of godliness with out the power thereof (II Tim. iii,5; Isa. xxix, 13; xxxiii, 31, 32). Some of them make iuch -of turning to the east when they worship, possibly not knowing that facingtheeast meant turning the back to the temple. See verse 1 of our lesson and Ezek. viii, 16. In the first verse of the lesson there are two very sugges tive phrases-"the door of the house" and "the altar"-each of which points to Him who is the only sacrifice for sin and the only entrance into the pres ence of God. Men Past Sixty inDanger. More than half of mankind over sixty years of age suffer from kidney and bladder disorders, usually enlarge ment of prostate gland. This is both painful and dangerous, and Foley's Kidney Cure shouid be taken at the first sign of danger, as it corrects ir regularities and has cured many old men of this disease. Mr, Rodney Bur nett, Rock Fort. Mo., writes: "I suffer ed with enlarged prostate gland and kidney trouble for years and after tak ing two bottles of Foley's Kidney Cure I feel better than I have for twenty years, although I am now 91 years old." The R. B. Loryea Drug Stor-e, Isaac M. Loryea, Prop. Out of His Line. Crawfoot-I say, if you are so smart at problems, tell me how far off thun der is when you hear the first roll. Calulator-I can't do that, sir. Craw foot-You can't? Calculator--No; I'm the lightning calculator. Bens theThe Kind You Have Always Bought The Original. Folev Co... Chicagro, originated lionev 'and Tar as a throat and lung rmalMv. and u atccolt of the great m Mrilt and poiularity of Foley's Honey Sand Tar many imitations are offered for the genuine. Tlicsc worthless imita tions have ;imilar sounding names. Be w'are of them. The genuine Foley's Honey and Tar is in a yellow package. Ask or it aud refuse any substitute. It is tha best remedy for coughs and cohls. Thle Ui. R. Loryea. Diru Store. Me~w \l. Loryea. 'rop. THE HORSESHOE. 11 11aM AlwnyS Been Accounted an Emblem of Good Luck. The origin of belief in horseshoe !ck" is so ancient that it never has been determined with certainty, and no superstition is more universal. Ever since horses began to wear shoes those crescents of iron have been account ed lucky emblems of all peoples, races and nations that have been acquainted with their use. The Chinese. for instance, say they nail them up over their doors as a charm against evil spirits because of the close resemblance in shape between them and the arched body of the sacred snake. Nagandra, one of their princi pal deities. Ask a Turkish Mohammedan for in formation on the subject, and he will tell you that it is because they are in form like a crescent, the sacred em blem of Islam. A Polish Jew will explain that at the passover the blood sprinkled upon the lintel and doorposts in the manner directed by their ritual forms the chief points of an arch; hence, obviously, the value of arch shaped talismans such as horseshoes are. The stolid and unimaginative Russian peasant, on the other hand, maintains that the luck associated with the horse shoe is due chiefly to the metal, irre spective of its shape. iron being tra ditionally a charm wherewith to nulli fy the malevolent designs of evil spir Its and goblins. Very different is the story by which the Irishman seeks to account for his liking for the same talismanic symbol. The name "Ironclad" or "Ireland," he will tell you, originated as follows: The whole island was once sub merged in the sea, out of which it only rose once in seven years and then only for a short time. Many attempts had been made to break the spell and in duce the country to remain permanent ly above the water, but all were vain until one day a daring adventurer threw a horseshoe from a boat on the topmost peak of Wicklow mountains just as they were disappeqring beneath the waves. Then, at last, was the ban removed. The Emerald Isle began forthwith to rise again from the ocean depths into which it had sunk. And it has been dry land, more or less, ever since. In England up to comparatively re cent times horseshoes were extensiveLy used almost everywhere as antiwitch charms, and the custom is not even yet an extinct one. No witch, it used to be said, could enter a building over the door of which a horseshoe or, better still, three horseshoes had been a fixed, prongs downward. The origin of this particular belief is referable to the old legend of St. Dun stan. This versatile English ecclesiastic was a skilled farrier, and one day while at work in his forge the evil one entered in disguise and requested Dun stan to shoe his "single hoof." The saint, although he at once recognized his malign customer, acceded, but caused him so much pain during the operation that Satan begged him to de sist. This D)unstan did, but only after he had made the evil one promise that neither he nor any of the lesser spirits, his servants, would ever molest the In mates of a house where a horseshoe *as displayed.-Chicago Chronicle. Lovers and Friends. Next to the married people who are lovers they are happiest who are thor oughly good friends. The greater in cludes the less, so that genuine lovers are always friends. Just as friendship often ripens into love, so also, while passionate love rarely cools off into friendship, the true husband or wife is always the other's truest friend. True friendship makes a quietly hap py marriage, because friends make each other's interests their own. They have similar tastes and that congenial ity or disposition and pursuits which go far to make up compatibility In mar riage. For never was any man yet, as I ween, be he whosoever he may. Who has known what a true friend is and has wished that knowledge away. The society of a sympathetic friend Is always pleasant, and there is a tonic stimulant in it which keeps one's feel ings fresh and quickens one's ambi tions and aspirations. Even if a hus band and wife have not been friends In the truest sense of tbe word before marriage it is a duty and ought to be a pleasure to become so afterward, an end which may easily be achieved if each is steadfastly purposed to do his or her part In the matter.-Womnan's Life. The Villain's Attack. An amusing incident not down on the bill once occurred in an Albany thea ter. One of the actresses purchased a coat at a North Pearl street store and ordered it sent to the theater. A small boy was delegated to deliver the gar ment, and he arrived at the theater when the actress was busy delivering her lines on the stage. The manager of the show ascertained the boy's'qr rand and told him that when the cur tain dropped he could go back on the stage and collect the money due. In the meantime the manager directed one of the ushers to place the boy In a private box. The one nearest the stage on the right hand side was selected, and the youth settled down to enjoy the play. He was just getting interest ed when the villain rushed on, and, looking directly where the boy was sit ting, he exclaimed: "You here! Out this instant! Begone, base fellow!" The messenger didn't wait for any further trouble. He left the theater and hurried back to the store, where he informed the boss that the woman's husband had put him out. The affair was straightened out later in the after noon, and everybody connected with it had a good laugh.-Albany Journal. The Colonel's Waterloo. Colonel John M. Fuller. of Honey Grove Texas, nearly met his Waterloo from liver and kidney trouble. In a re cent letter he says: "1 was nearly dead of these complaints, and although I tried my family doctor he did me no good: so I got a 50c bottle of your great Electric Bitters, which cured me. I consider them the best medicine on eareh, and thank God who gave you the knowledge to make them." Sold and guaranteed to cure, dyspepsia. bil ousness and kidney troubles, by The Letter to J. W. Heriott. Dear Sir: Would you like to hear of a 20-year paint? M1r. James A. O'Neil's house, Hen derson, N. C.. was painted 20 years ago with Devoe lead-and-zinc, and never painted again till last year; it then looked better than common paint in half that time. The reason is: Devoe is all paint and true paint; while the common paints are part true and part false. Don't pay to monkey with paint. And Devoe costs less than any of 'em; not by the gallon, of course; by the house and year. That's how to recken it. Go by the name. Yours truly, F. W. DEvOE & Co. '. S. Manning Hardware Co. sell our Paint. 64. THE PROFESSOR KNEW IT. Yet if lie Hadn't Seen It He Should Never Have Believed It. . It is often easy for a man to con vince himself that he believes a cer tain thing, but to act on the belief sometimes requires a powerful faith. That was evidently the quality lacking in a college professor who went with Mr. Simon Lake into the diving com partment of hi- -;abmarize boat. The story is related in "Submarine Naviga tion," by Mr. Alan Burgoyne. Every one knows that If an uncorked bottle filled with air Is placed in water mouth down only as much water will enter it as is required to compress the air in the bottle enough to equal the pressure of the water. if the air pres sure could be otherwise increased no water at all would come in. For more than half a century this principle has been made use of in sub marine boats to provide a mode of egress for a diver. In the Lake boat there is an "air chamber" forward in which the air pressure is made a trifle greater than the water pressure outside. When a door in the bottom of the car is opened no water comes in, and thc! in the boat, reaching down with a short rake, are able to plck up oysters, sponges or whatever they see on the bottom of the ocean. The professor was a learned man, and he knew all about the theory of the case, but still be had not quite faith enough to trust himself under water in a bottomless boat. Mr. Lake took him into the diving compartment' to exhibit it. After closing the air lock door he noticed beads of perspiratk .i standing on the professor's forehead. When the compressed air came in with a great noise, the professor grabbed one of the frames and looked longingly at the closed door. "By the way, professor," said Mr. Lake, turning off the air,. "are you troubled with heart disease?" "Why, yes," he said, "my heart is a little affected." "Well, never mind," said the invent or. "This little distance will not dis turb you. If you feel any pain, swal low as if you were drinking water." He turned on the air again, and the professor began to swallow. During the half minute or so following, while the pressure was increasing, he swal lowed enough, the inventor said after ward, to have drowned himself. When the pressure was right Mr. Lake stoop ed and began to unscrew the panel in the floor. "What are you doing?" demanded the professor. "I am going to open this door so you can see the bottom." "No, no," said the professor, throw ing out his hands, "don't do that I would not put you to all that trouble for the world." .Tust then, however, the door dropped open. The professor, who had turned deathly pale, started forward. Not a drop of water entered. As he saw the calm surface of it there beneath his feet as unruffled as if it had been the very top of the ocean, instead of al most the bottom, the color came back to his face, and he drew a great sigh. "Well!" he exclaimed. "Well! Of course I knew it wouldn't scome In. I know why it doesn't,come in. But if I had not seen it I should never have believed it!'' How Wellington Won Assaye. The battle of Assaye, the most san guinary for its size-. that Wellington ever saw, came about as the result of the purest chance plus the ability of one man to turn that chance to ac count. The duke confessed that his ar my was in a terrible predicament at the time. .He had got the best native guides that money could secure, but when they came to the river Kistna they could not tell him of a ford. An enormous borde of native cavalry was threatening him. The very existence of his army depended upon his reach ing the opposite bank. But how could he do so? Failing all other meth ods, he took the whol4e ,.f his cavalry for escort and iersonally reconnoitered the river. By the aid of his glass he saw that there was a village on the right bank of the river and another village exactly opposite It on the other bank. Still his guides insisted that there was no ford. "Now," said Wel lington, "men could not have built two villages so close to one another on op posite sides of a stream without some habitual means of communication." On that he formed the desperate reso lution, as he called it, of marching for the river and trusting to there being a ford. He was right. He did find a pas sage, and his troops got over and won the battle of Assaye. Nature's Jokes. Gardeners all over the world are toll ing to produce new flowers. Nature, in a freakish moment, will sometimes accomplish what generations of horti cultursts have been unable to effect, says Pearson's Magazine. As an instance in point, there is a Malmaison rosebush in a garden at Violet Hill, Stowmarket, t'hich one summer recently produced a most as tonishing floral freak. The rose grows near an apple tree, and when one of its largest buds first burst into bloom it was seen that live perfect apple blossom petals were springing In Its center. A flower discovered on the Isthmus of Tehantepec in the early morning blooms a pure white; by midday It has cha'nged to a perfect red, but before It loses at nightfall it has turned to a pad blue. Even more wonderful than its change of color Is the fact that at noon only does It give out any per fume. But the strangest flower is the New South Wales flannel flower. It is so alled because it has the exact appear ance of having been carefully cut out of white flannel. A Clear Complexion and Bright Eyes. In most cases a sallow, bloebed com plexion and dull heavy eyes are due to poor igestion and an inactive liver. Drino Laxative Fruit Syrop aids diges iion and stimulates the liver and bow als and makes the complexion smooth ad clear. Orino Laxative Fruit Syrup :loes not nauseate or gripe and is mild md pleasant to take. Refuse substitutes. The R. B. Loryea Drug Store, Tsaac M. Tonea Prop. Solc. by T-I The new Laxative that does not gripe or nauseate. 91easant to talie. L The I. B. L Do You Want PERFECT FITlING CLOTHES? THEN COME OR SEND TO US. We have the best equipped Tailo. ijg Establishment in the State. We handle High Art Clothing solely and we carry the best line of Hets and (ent's Furnishings in the city. Ask your most promineut men who we are, and they will commend You to us. J.L, DAVID & BRO., Cor. King & Wentworth Sts., CHARLESTON, - S. C. Buggies, Wagons, Road Carts and, Carriages REPAIRED With Neatness and Despatch -AT R. A. WHITE'S WHEELWRIGHT and ISLACKSMITH SHOP. I repair Stoves, Pumps and run water pipes, or I will put down a new.Pump cheap. If you need any soldering done, give me a call. ,- LA M E. My horse is lame. Why? Because 1 did not have it shod by R. A. White, the man that puts on such neat shoes and makes horses travel with so much ease. We Make Then Look New. We are making a specialty of re painting old Bugies, Carriages, Road Carts and Wagons cheap. Come and see me. My prices will please you. and I guarantee all of my work. Shop on corner below R. M. Dean's. R. A. W HITE, MANNING. S. C. Tle Balik of Mallliill MANNING, S. C. Capital Stock, - $49.000 Surplus, - - 30,000 Stockhiolders' Lia liity, - - 40,000 Total Protection to Depositors, $110,000 SAVE your money and v-oor time by having a Bank Account with a good thoroughly trustworthy BANK. No up-to-date business man would think of trying to carry on his affairs without a bank account to his credit. If you deal with us you will get abso lutely fair treatment at all times. Northwestern R. R. of S. 0. TIMz TADL No. 1, In effect Sunday, .June 5, 1904 lietweenz Snoter andi Camden. Alixed-Dlaily exep.t Sunday. Souzth bhond. No.rthbund No. 69. No'. 7 L No 70. No. 68. P M A M A M P M 6 25 9 36 Le..xmu~te~r ..Ar 900 545 6 27 1)38 N. W..Junctn 858 54:3 647 '.59 ...Daz!z.ll... 825 513 7 05 10 10 . . . liarde.n.. . 8 00 4 58 7 23 10) 21 . RembIerts . 7 40 4 43 7 3(1 10 31 .. Ellerbee .. 7 30 4 38 7 50 11 0(0 N Ry -jfnnetn 7 10 4 25 81110 11 10 Ar. .(tiuden . .Le 7 00 4 15 (S ti & G E~x Depot) P al P 1I A M P M Between Wison's MnH and Sumter. Suthonnd.. Northbond. Ni). 73. Daily except Sun day No. 72. P M1 Stations. I' M 30(0 Le.......Suter.....Ar 12 30 3 03 . .Snmmerton Jncetion. 12 27 3 20..........Tindal......... 11 55 3 35.........Packville .... 1I 30 355...........ver ..........1100 530 10...ili5 530.......Mla..... 10 4 45 ....Snmmeti ton... 10 15 5 25...... .....]havis..... 9 1.5 S45 ....Jordan.... .. ...9 00 63C Ar. .Wilson's Mills...Le 840 Ietween Millard and St. Paul. Daily except Sunday. Soutbounzd. Northbound. No 73. No. 7.5. No. 72. No. 74. P M A M Stations A M1 P M1 4 05 10 20 Le Millard Ar 10 45 .5 30 4 15 10 30 Ar St. Paul Le 10 35 4 20 PM A M AM P'M THOS. WILSON. President. THE SUMMERTON HOTEL Having made special preparations,.I am now better prepared to entertain the traveling public than ever before. I especially invite the transient pat ronage. H. A. TISDALE, DIGESTS WHAT YOU EAT The $1.00 bottle contains 2% times the tris.1size. which sells for 50 cents. PREPARED ONLY AT THE LAWORATORY OF E. C. DeWITT & COMPANY. CHICAGO. ILL. 3e .. "E3. I.cryea "Dru.g Store. Cures Stomach and Liver trouble and ntive Fnit Syrup Chronic Constipation. )ryea Drug Store, Isaac M. Loryea, Prop. G L ENN SPRINGS M IN E R A L 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 W.0. BROW0NA1i c -4cO. IF YOU WISH TO BORROW Money on ]on; or short time, Oil on improved real estate, I am Improved in a position to serve you. Improved Current rates of interest *t and reasonable charges. Call on or write to Attorney at Law, Manning, S. C. Alderman Stock Farm. For sale at all times, at prices to suit tb farmer and of 'breeding and qual ifications to suit the fancier, SHORTHORN AND JERSEY CATTLE,4 AND BERKSHIRE HOGS of either sex and all ages. Correspondence solicited. Come and see our stock whether you intend to buy or not. A.OoLU, S. C. D. W. ALDE~RMAN. Prop. - SAML G. BRYAN, Supt. IProvident Savings Life Assurance SocietLy. EDWARD W. SCOTT, President. PEACOCK & GOLD COMPANY, General Agents for North and South 'Carolina. -District Agents Wantecd By an established old line Life Insurance Company, with attractive policy contracts. South Carolina presents an unusually good-field for Life Insurance soliciting. Under our contracts-offered to disbrict agents-men of charac te-r and, ambition have excellent opportunities for rapid rise to positions of wealth and influence in their commu nities. It will pay you to consult me. Write today. FORREST TAYLOR, State Manager,. ASTORA 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. ~"~'~"'Allow no 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, lMorphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. .It cures Diarrheoa and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatnlency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea-The Mother's Friend. C ENUI NE CASTOR IA ALWAYS Bears the Signatulre of The Kilid ou Have Alway Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. - THE CENTAUR COMPANY. 7T MURRAY $TREET, NEW YORK CITY. BRING YOUR '4J OB W OR K TO THE TINES OFFICE