Newspaper Page Text
The purifying action and curative properties of this great remedy have made "S. S. S. For The Blood " a household saying, and thousands who are today enjoying perfect health owe their recovery from blood or sk-in diseases to this universally used blood medicine. S. S. S. is made entirely from roots, herbs and barks which possess not only cleansing and healing ingredients, but building-up and strengthening properties to keep the blood in perfect order. - No bne can be well when the blood is impure; they lack the energy and strength that is natural with health, the complexion becomes pale and sallow, he vitality is weakened and they suffer from a general broken down condition. When the waste or refuse matter, which nature intends shall be thrown off. is left in the system because of a sluggish, torpid condition of the expelling members, it is absorbed into the CUARANTEED blood, making this vital stream weak, sour and acrid. and its condition is manifested by boils, F R E E F R O M pimples, rashes, blotches and other eruptions of M I N E R A L S. the skin. S. S. S. goes into the circulation and removes every particle of blood taint or poison of every character, makes the blood fresh and strong and gives energy to the entire body. When the blood has been cleansed by S. S. S. all skin diseases and eruptions pass away and the smooth, clear skin, glowing with health, shows that the body is being nourished by rich, pure blood. Rheu matism, Catarrh, Sores and Ulcers, Scrofula, Contagious Blood Poison, etc., are all deep-seated blood disorders, and for their cure nothing equals S. S. S. It does not injuriously affect the most delicate parts of the body and can be taken with perfect safety by old or young. Book on the blood and any medical advice desired without charge. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATL.ANTA, GA@ FARMERS,. You are again brought to face the problem of stocking your farms for another season with tools, implements, etc. We want you to call on us when doing this. W..are in the best position to serve you that we have ever been. Our stock is the best tha,t experience, perseverance and money can make it, and we are enabled to offer you a few things at very low prices, not withstanding thp general advance in goods. These goods are possibly a little cheaper than you can buy them in other mar kets, to wit: Dixie Boy Plows, Farquhar Plow Stocks, Georgia Ptatchet Plow Stocks, Steel Shapes, Etc. Besides these we have an excellent stock of SYRACUSE PLOWS and TWO-HORSE.MIDDLE-BREAKERS. We are selling for the third season the K. P. Guano Distributors. This distributor has easily proven itself to be the best thing of the kind for general use. We also have the COLE GUANO DISTRIBUTORS, which do such nice work distributing around ' the growing crop. Do not fail to see our Corn and Cotton Planters. American Steel Wire Fencing. We are prepared to furnish this in any quantity. Let us know what are your needs, our prices will induce you to buy. 0. K. Stoves and Ranges. Commence by doing the right thing. make the cooking a pleas ure instead of work. You can do this by putting one of our 0. K. COOK STOVES IN YOUR KITCHEN. They never fail. Very truly yours, Manning lHardware Co. To Farmers and Garden Planters. We have added an up-to-date Seed Depart ment to our' grocery line and have just fe ceived otr first shipment of Seeds fromn the. reliable house of T. W. Wood & Spns of Rich mond, Va. We Have Exclusive Control of Their Seeds For Manning, and can supply your .wants at catalogue prices. - We also carry -in stock Wood's Poultry Grain Food anid Shredded Alfalfa, the proper foods to make .hens lay during the Winter months. -Our motto is, to keep what the other fellow: don't and~ if we haven't got it, let us know* and we will get it. The Manning Grocery Co. ALCOLU RAILROAD. .DAILY' ENCEPT SUNDAYS Effective May ist, 1906. ORTHEAST.-READ DOWN. SOUTHWEST.-READ UP. No.3. No.5. No.4.INN.6 - -- - PM.P. M. *0 Allsttins xcpteL ah... and.. A lcou are a to sfo r ins Mondays..No.c2e.d.. .a N o.3 3 2'in?day 80 . I n o 3 . .Duat. ?li3 Thur d 0'.I .. a d a.. F.l L.CO10 I S SinFl90rida -lC uba. -4 430 nd- comfrte uippedithh Lts Pu0llman DAiong SleBeng and Toou hare Ca"'~in~.r trs. ion, . t 2. tod~ 0, WednesaysWM.. J.aCRNo.G3 Tra~~mGe eralnPasengeruAen it idfl Wilmngtn, . C TEMPERANCE COLUMN. Condicted7 bv Paxville W. C. T. U. National. Motto-"For God, Home and Na tive Land. State Motto-" Be Strong and of Good Cour agte.* OuiWatchword-Agitate. Educate. Organize. Pledgte --God helpina me, I promise not to buy, drink. sell or Oive Intoxicating liquors while I live: From bad companions I1'l refrain And never take God's name in vain." 0 Training Citizens. MRS. ANTOINETTE A. HAWLEY. The mbst s e r i o u s problem which confronts Sunday School workers is,in my judgement,how to keep the boys from twelve to twenty under their influence.' "Helps," scholarly and pictur esque, have been multiplied; the brightest minds have elaborated the most perfect "methods;" but the fact remains, we do not hold the boys. What is the remedy? Plainly such a linking of the Sunday School to vital questions of civic duty, as shall open to our boys and our young men new vistas of usefulness to so ciety and every-day possibilities of heroism in fighting the very real devils intrenched behind greed and law, who menace the home and the state. The Inter national Sunday School Conven tion met in Denver, had a glim mering notion of that fact, and therefore suggested that World's 0 Temperance Sunday be made Christian citizenship day, when V special interest shall be laid up on God-like ideals of civic re sponsibility, such as can be un- a derstood by the youngest child. Dear Sabbath School teachers, P let us have some phase of that thought, not only on temperance Sunday, but every Sunday; boys S are eager to be "doers;" they b positively tingle for an outlet for h their energies. Passive good ness is not attractive to them, and Judge Lindsay has demon strated that they can be made to feel that they are an important part of the city's force. From its inception the sublime purpose of e the great white ribbon host has been to unite that mighty trinity tz of forces, the home, the school, p and the church, under the ban- ti ner of the cross, and to so bring s, them to bear upon the young C itizen that, clear-visioned and God-impelled, he will use every ivic function as a lever to lift up his fellowmen to lift up his e fellow-men to that high plane tc where it is "easy to do'right and a hard to do wrong," and the Sun- tj lay School is preeminently the 1( place for such teaching. a We of the W. C. T. U. covet B these boys and girls of today, bcause the future incarnated, t nd it is ours, we believe, to lead b hem up to a heroic manhood and womanhood that will stand it earlessly for every effort to re- a eem the race from the world vide slavery of evil appetites-. rhen, too, from twelve to six- t een -boys are in a transition eriod, whieh they do not under tand, and which is rarely taken ccount of by parents and teach- s ~rs. Wise and tender, indeed, a ~hould be the words to the boy ei mn the verge of manhood, that ~ie may see clearly and purely y iis own relation' to his race be ore the slimy serpent of impur ty has wrapped him in its dead y embrace- The boy whose pur ty is fortified by knowledge; the C oy who sees in politics some- o ~hing nobler than a fight for in pois; the boy who has been to ~aught to apply the ethics of the a unday School to all ethics of ett ublic policy; such a boy will so ot be afraid to stand up and be ta ~ounted on the side of civic ~ ighteousness. to Let every white ribbon woman gi o her part to make the Sabbath de chool of which she is a mem-b A ertheWest Point of the church a: ilitantthat shall graduate year fter year trained "soldiers to he cross" who can be depended n to "stand up for Jesus"at the allot box, as well as on the treet or amid the temptations th f business and society.-Colo- re ~ado W. C. T. U. Messenger. I; ________tb pl Moderate Drinking, at If moderate drinking led to SU oderation, and that to total ab- Iii tinence. it would not be dan- ' erous..- The trouble is that it at eads to more drinking and in- m ~emperance . Fifty years ago,in tb rance, the people drank freely at f light wines,using little strong rink. Usut the French people qt ae learned a sad lesson. The ec ines created a thirst for intoxi- Sh ~ants, and now strong drink has firm hold upon that people ight wines are no longer satis ~actory, distilled liquor and st runkenness 'are the common b ~hing. The average consump- el ~ion of alcohol is thirty-three b< pafts a year to each -inhabitant, as ~wice as much as in any other 0 ountry in Europe except Switz- a ~rland; eight times as much as w: nU Canada. It is a sad commen- w ~ary on moderate drinking, butR very suggestive one.-Herald a ad Presbytery. R The surest method of arriving t a knowledge of God's eternal urposes about us is to be found fe n the right use of the ^present ct noment.-F. W. Faber. T A Year of Blood. - PI The year 1903 will long be remem- ai red in the home of F. N. Tacket, of re sliance,Ky., as a year of blood; which al owed so copiously from Mr. Tacket.'s re Lungs that death seemed very near. He p writes: "Severe bleeding from the be Lungs and a frightful cough had brought C< e at death's door, when I began tak- 5 ing Dr. King's New Discovery for Con umptipn, with the astonishing result hat after taking four bottles I was a ompletely restored and as time has a >'oven permanently cured." Guaran eed for~Sor-e Lungs, Coughs and Colds. m t The Arant Co. Drug Store,successor o The R. B. Loryea Drug Store. Price 3nc a SLO Trisal bottle free. of LESSON IN ECONOMY. Many are Beginning to save up for the Tames town Exposition. (Charles Frederick Stansbury.) "Where are you going to spend your vacation next year?" "At the Jamestown Celebra tion at Hamton Roads, Virgivia," is the reply of six out of ten peo ple-especially young people within a certain radius of :Nor folk, Va., the headquarters of the Exposition Company. Most f the young people referred to ire just now conjugating to "save up",conversely-and have zotten from "I shall save up"-to "I am saving." The area within the radius nentioned can be marked out 2pon the map of the radius men ;ioned can be marked out upou Ihe map of the United States by my boy or girl who will take a air of compasses and sticking he point into Norfolk, stretch he pencil end to the Mississippi iver and describe a circle. Am )itious and patriotic young per ons within this area are begin ting to hoard dimes, quarters, ialf dollars and dollars, so that t the end of a year they will i iave enough money-for at least 1 two week's sojourn among the ! elights and wonders of the fampton Roads celebration. 1 The young people are not the uly ones who have begun to ave up. Many elderly couples e rhose children are married and i cattered are economizing and t aving in order that they may ttend in the pleasant evening f their lives the interesting Ex osition, celebrating the nation's irth in Virginia. The saving up process is a a imple one, and the money can I e got together even by those in d umble circumstances by begin ing to save in time. It goes b ithout saying, that the result o ill more than justify the care a ad self denial required. t n Take, for example, the young 0 tembers of the various branch- b , of the Y. M. C. A. Every S ear many of them combine to F F1 6ke a vacation trip to -some s int within their means. For iis purpose many of -the boys ve up for months beforehand. an anyone doubt where they, E ith boys' love of water, ships, ageants and adventure, will tc ant to go next year? It is not 7ery year that can get a chance a > visit so interesting and varied h 2 exposition as that celebrating tc ie founding of Jamestown in ti 507. The outing will be at once ti picnic and a liberal education. it :ere will be seen the armies and b ivies of the world, in addition 'N the industrial and artistic S canches of the ensemble. Where the boy thbat would not wil. a agly cross the continent to see a exact reproduction of thea .ost fainfous sea duel in the si orld on the spot where it ac tally occurred? To enjoy this excursion, the "a >ys and girls and men and wo- at en, who were not born with a ti iver spoon in their mouths, P ust begin to "save up." The tu erlier they begin to save, the di ore fun they can have next in Relief is Possible. It is possible to obtain relief from bI ronic indigestion and dyspepsia by ti e use of Kodol for Dyspepsia. Some bi the most hopeless cases of long stand- m g have yi~elded to it. It enables you qi digest the food you eat and exercises so :orrective influence, building up the to iciency of the digestive organs. The to >mach is the boiler wherein the am is made that lkeeps up your vi- p ity, health and strength. Kodol di- at sts what you eat. Makes the stom- I4 h sweet-puts the boiler in condition W do the work nature demands of it- be res you relief from digestive disor- M rs, and puts you in shape to do your at st and'feel your best. Sold by The -ant Co. Drug Store. successor to the B. Loryeo Drug Store. News From Sardinia. 0 le itor The Manningr Times: pr 'he farmers of this section are rough planting and are now getting la ady to do battle against Gen. Green." te Lm glad to see the energy in which m e young farmers of this place dis- a iy. They go at it in a business way, og d like all o&her business they are cu re to succeed-. Mr. Editor, I guess this year irill be s :e it was two years ago. The woods .11 be full of- candidates as the News .d Courier puts it, and some of them n easily hide behind a sapling. You: ty say to them that Salem wvill judge sp e man by the brand of his smokes d the No. of his X's. No two for a ke will be considered.m The Gun club of this place has proven s .ite a success, it will be run on a very onomical scale. After a round of forty ots they go out and pick up from Cl irty-five to forty unbroken pigeons. hi me get broken by the lall. Miss Pearl Wheeler of the "side- la vs" school is now completing her des at Sardinia. 05 he Sardinia school, which was taught Miss Violet Moorhead of Union will be ~se on the 8th of this month. We pe iMiss Moorehead will accept it ht ain this season.* Mr. J. M. Player was taken to ,arleston by Dr. I. M. Woods on last ednesday for medical treatinent. He hi ts treated at the Sumter hospital, but t L not benefited to any extent. - t Rev. James Bradley and his brother, n. Robert Bradley, of llinois, spent m Eew days this week with their father, v. Robert Bradley, M OccAsIoNAL. h Not if as Rich as Rockefeller. cc If you had all the wealth of Rocke- al ier, the Standard Oil magnate, you uld not buy a better medicine for he >wel complaints from Chamberlain's lic, Cholera and Diarrhea Remedy. or le most eminent physician cannot be escribe a better preparation for colic or d diarrhoea, both for children and A1 ults. The uniform success of this ha m-edy has shown it to be superior to m lothers. It never fails and when fie duced with water and sweetened. is ha easant to take. -Every family should supplied with it. Sold by The Arant . Drug Store, successor to The R. B. >ryea Drug Store. C1 No woman can lace herself as tight ct a man can drink himself.a Never put off until tomorrow the tO mn that you can do today. sa A full man and an empty pocketbook St New Zion Dots. Editor The Manning Times Miss Itasca Turbeville passed through here enroute for Sumter. Misses Marion and Lucy Hicks paid a visit to Turbeville last week. There is to be a large mercantile store built at New Zion depot soon.The projectors are Messrs Robert McFad den of Sardinia, J. B. Buddin, and B. M. Hardy. Tbis will make four stores to be built at this place. There is also a W. 0. W. hall to be built and a graded school building. The effort to have a graded school here before has not been successful i,ecause the people did not understand I must say something about our fir-_ artesian water of which "G" cabnot boast of. If Turbeville is the metrop clis the people of this place do not in tend that it shall lead, that is if energy ,an put us to the front. All visitors to this place brag on on the water, and ;ay it is the finest in the county. Wben THE TIES arrived last week ,rs. B. hauled me up at once to read Buster's letter. I believe once upon a Aime she and Buster were kin. It is tratifying to read Busters letters. I feel compelled to say something tbout the article in the Sentinel signed -eorge R. Jones. I have never read ] he letter myself, but heard some, ,peaking of it, they told me what was >ublished. I have decided to let the L'LMES editor judge whether or not I iave said enough. The people are fu ious over here about Mr. Jones' call ng them "wool hats," they regard his nsinuation a reflection upon them, and hey express themselves by saying hey wish the TBIES Editor and B. ould make it still hotter for George. )o far as I am concerned he can sit iack and bay at the moon as much as ie'wish6s for I do not mind what he ays. I think he has a purpose in his rritings, it is reported George has an ye on a job over in Columbia, if so, I ope he will be able to hold it down. I hink a recreation of the mind would e beneficial to him. B. ciatica Cured After Twenty Years of Torture. For more than twenty years -M.r J. L Massey, of 3322 Olinton St., Minne polis, Minn., was tortured by sciatica. he pain and suffering which he en ured during this time is beyond com rehension. Nothing gave him any ermanent relief until he used Cham erlain's Pain Balm. One application that liniment relieved the pain and iade sleep and rest possible, and less ian one bottle has effected a perma ent cure. If troubled with sciatica r rheumatism why not try a 25-cent Y :ttle of Pain Balm and see for your- i Ilf how quickly it relieves the pain- t or sale by The Arant Co. Drug Store, tecessor to The R. B. Loryea Drug :ore. C a Summerton News. Y litor The Manning Tunes: We are enjoying much needed rain day and the crops look fine. re regret very much on account of ill ,alth the past week we are unable -to w ve a detailed acdount of the ball game n ,re between Manning and Summer. T n last Wednesday. Manning played >od ball and Sam Barron made a beau- w ful long fly catch from Matthis bat in IB e right field. Up to the 6th inning looked as though Summerton woulk beaten, but when the tide changed anning proved an easy prey for our )ys. The score was 5 to 4 in favor of immerton. We think the Manning boys felt like crowd of young men that had ridden m a picnic in the scorching sun to en- el y themselves with the girls, and on or -riving found the girls would not no- g< 3e them. s Under ther supervision of Messrs V oung and Barnett, Capt. Thos. Wil- ei n is having some beautiful work done at -ound the depot and side track. They C -e hauling sand and clay, building up L .e road bed and filling in the low aces. Mr. J. M..Plowden with his bride,re rned from their bridal tour Thurs .y of last week, and are now at home a the "Hotel Canopy." - Mr Jake Weinberg of Manning . re 'esented Jim Brunson before Judge ichbourg charged with burning storest ~d other buildings in this town. After ti e witnesses were examined Mr.Wein- ,be ~rg Iconvinced the magistrate that si .ere was not sufficient evidence to di nd the accused over, and he was dis- d issed. Mr. Weinberg is not a fre- * ent visitor and theplace has changed much since his last visit,that he had P get Mr. Tisdale to show him where It go.s While the Sumimerton graded school hi pils were having their annual picnic es Scott's lake last Friday . Claude, the ai year old son of Mr. and Mrs. T. J. alker, accidently had a leg broken, etween the thigh and iknee. Doctor e ood promptly set the broken limb, tC d the little sufferer is doing well. H. si It Is Dangerous to Neglect a Cold. ~p How often do we hear it remarked: ~ :ts only a cold," and a fe w days later er amr that the man is on his back with hI eumonia. This is of such common hi. currence that a cold, howeves slie-ht, ould not be disregarded. Chamber in's Cough Remedy counteracts any ndency of a cold to result in. pneu onia. and has gained its popularity vt id extensive sale by its prompt cures ce this most common ailment. It always de res and is pleasant to take. For sale a The Arant Co. Drug Store, succes- sa r to Tbe R. B. Loryea Drug Store. -a . ly Pinewood News. S D ecial to The Manning Times. A party of young ladies and gentle mn spent last Wednesday in the, amp on a picnic and a general fishing position, one Suck-er was caught. 01 Mr. Clifford Kolb has returned to tarleston to have Dr. Parker take out Seve. Mr. Henry B. Richardson, Jr., spent 11 ;t Friday in Manning. Mr. Furman Geddings has been home sI a visit. ci Miss Lillie Gregg of Sumter has al en visiting her sister Mrs. A. P. Lide- at Miss Maggie McColl of Society Hill b4 s been visiting Miss Lela Geddings. Mr. T. C. Cuttino is repairing thae Ler works at Millford. Dr. Geo. Srgth of Summerton is at ai me for a few days.t Mr. J. W. Weeks has been confined le his room for a few days. ci Dr. M. D. Murray is sick at Balti- nj >re, Md. Mr. and Mrs. R. S. Beckham spent in nday in Summerton- fr. e. Henry Richardson has retui'ed t9 s home in Orangeburg, Mr. Warren Weeks who has been nfined in bed for several months is out m -ain.i Mr. McCormick agent at Rimini was H re Sunday. j 0 Prof, Carl Schmidt of Germany, W gan builder, repairer and tuner has en in town several days, his cheapest ran is 81000. and his best $200,000. I made in Germany. The best organ s ten thousand pipes, smaller pipes e! ide of gold and silver, it is fifty live .w et high has two hundred stops and ce s two hundred and forty four keys. sa BUSTER. .y Sore Nipples. A cure may be effected by applying jamberlain's Salve as soon as the id is done nursing. Wipe it off with soft cloth before allowing the child ha nurse. Many trained nurses use this Lye with the best results. Price 25c 2< r box. Sold by The Arant Co. Drug ore. successor to The R. B. Loryea Turbeville Dots. Editor The Manning Times; Dr. W. H. Woods went to Charles ton last week to take Mr. John M Play er of Sardinia to the hospital for treat ment. Mrs. J. L. Cole is visiting Mrs. Julia Cuttino of Manning. Miss Itasca Turbeville accompanied Miss Gaynell Collins to her home in Sumter last Wednesday and after a de lig htful visit returned home Saturday night. Mr. H 0. S. Jackson of Elloree stop ped over in Turheville for a few days last week. Messrs Woods and Carson of Man ning were over for a short time last week visiting Dr. W. H. Woods,who is soon to be married if there be any thin& in reports. Thd closing exercises of the Pine Grove Graded- chool will take place at t the school building on the evening of the 18th, followed by a picnic and an iddress on the 19th. The public is cor- a lially invited to attend G. c War Against Consumption. All nations are endeavoring to check I ;he ravages of consumption, the "white a plague" that claims so. many victims ach year. Foley's Honey and Tar a mures coughs and colds perfectly, and ,ou are in no danger- of consumption. )o not risk your health by taking some s inknown preparation when Foley's J Eoney & Tar is safe and certain in re- t ults. Ask for Foley's Honey and Tar C Lnd insist upon having it. The Arant a 30. Drug Store, success to The R. B. ryea Drug Store. n - t< In Memoriam . c CAPT. W. S. BRIGGS. ri His was a heart of emotion, tl Warm and most tenderly kind; s< None with a sweeter devotion, Love or true friendship enshrined. E His was the pain of his fellow s Pierced by an arrow of fate; h Few with a nature so mellow, Fronted that sombre estate. His was a hand there extended, Filled with the balm for a wound; st The hurt of a brother amended, V In silence 'twas sweetly entombed. What was his fault? and his foible? fi: Dots on a life which is done? - tl BoTh what we know was but toyful- n Spots on the beautiful sun. ai ONE WHO KNEW HIM. PI fey 1st, 1906. to [A typographical error marred some hat the sense and rhyme of the above e : our last issue, hence its reproduc on.] s p bi C< Why take a dozen things to cure that ce >ugb? Kennedy's Laxative Honey th 3d Tar drives the cold out through Dur bowels. Sold by The Arant Co. 'rug Store, successor to The R. B. Di( oryea Drug Store. PC du Teachers Association. ya The regular teachers' examination ill be held at the court house, Man ng, from 9 A. M. to 4 P. M., Friday, V ay the 18. Questions will be on hand for those " ho have been taking the teachers' * eading Circle course. e S. P. HOLLIDAY, an Supt. of Education. as Apr 1st, 1906.- tu col an A Lazy Liver.- I A torpid, inactive liver can produce i ore bodily ills than almost anything pl se. It is good to clean the system gJ it occasionally. Stir the liver up and WI i into shape generally. The best re- lu lts are derived from the use of De- w~ ritt's Little Early Risers. Reliable, IO ective, pleasant pills,with a reputa- ai >n. Never gripe. Sold by The Arant sh ). Drug Store, successor to The R. B. lel raDrug Store. -an The Bird That Wouldn't sing. il Gabrielli, the great prima donna,p1 ice "suffered" a twelve days' lmpris ment for a whimiscal refusal to sing her usual first rate style. It was ta e occasion of a state dinner~gtven by tui e viceroy at Palermo. Gabrielli had lac ~en engaged for the function, but as' e did not put In an appearance the , nner was delayed and a messenger st spatched to ascertain the cause of bo4, r absence. The messenger was ar: omptly Informed that Gabrielli was tai bed,:where she had become so ab. 30 rbed in a favorite author that sheB d forgotten the engagement. Re ating the command for her appear ice, the lady began by singing her ry- worst, and when the viceroy urg- Ai I her to be less foolish she refused na sing at all. St "TIhe viceroy may make me cry," said ax ~e, "but he can never make me sing." p1 For this freak Gabrielli was sent to Ma ison, as we have indicated, for twelve by ys, during which time, having lib- Al ty to do as she pleased, she feasted in ~r friends in great style and enjoyed un rself in -a variety of ways. a is Had a Close Call. co: "A dangerous sergical operation, in- gri lying the removal of a malignant ul- NI r, as large as my hand, from my tic .ughter's hip, was prevented by the the plication of Bucklen's Arnica Salve," ag" ys A. C. Stickel, of Miletus, W. Va. 'ersistent use of the Salve complete cured it." Cures Cuts, Burns and Is juries. 25c at The Arant Co. Drug oro, successor to The R. B. Loryea. ug Store. - dis Crossed Cheeks. S "There are no certified checks on the los her side," said an English financier. sor kny funny business in the shape of all eck kiting when the wherewithal Is Fi t in the bank to make good and you an d yourself behind prison bar in cu ort order. But they have 'rs re' ecks'-that is. two horizontal lines ces >out half an Inch apart ar dra At ross tim check, and '& Co.' is written Fo tween them. That means when you t a crossed check you cannot at once Ito the bank on which it is drawn td demand payment, but must deposIt e check in your own bank first and tit take the usual course through the ~ earing house. This gives the other to] an a chance to -inance his affairs, vo hich just at that time may be very Ea tricate and- onerous, and prevents you Co nm jumping at his throat right away." Is] on) tal Eave you pains in the back, inflam- cel ~tion of any kind, rheumatism, faint- a g spells, indigestion or constipation >llisters Rocky Mountain Tea makes w u well, keeps you well. 35 cents, Dr. ne .E. Brown & Co. so1 -by The Whole Thing.* t ackson Parke-What do you consid- rai the two most Important places in the a orld? Gotham-Oh, that's easy, of h rse- .Tackson Parke-Oh, don't b y New York for one. G ta-I asn't going to. I was going to sa nhattan and the Bronx," of coursg. - Philadelphia Ledger. aingr a Splash. . "I see that our friend has taken a mad in politics." I "I am not sure," answered Senator rghum, "whether he has taken a E d init or merel.yputhis footin. it. ashingtnn Star. Features of Interest of the Jamesown Expo sition. In the immediate vicinity of the Jamestown Exposition is the Norfolk navy-yard, which has cost the govern ment over twenty million dollars. It employs more than three thousand men. who build, repair. or equip ships of the navy. Fortress Monroe, immediately across Eampton Roads, is the largest Amer! !an fort, a.nd one of the best equipped, strongest and most picturesque -mili ary points in the world. It dates from 614. Midway between Fortress Monroe md the Exposition is Fort Wool,or the tip Raps, an adjunct to the larger for ification; recently improved and strong y equipped. At Newport News is the grdat ship 'ard where so many battleships, cruis-, rs, torpedo boats, destroyers, and sub arines have been built. 'It,.has the argest dry-dock in the world. The United States Naval Hospital ,t Portsmouth is the largest institution I its kind in the country. The aged nd disabled sailori are there treated t Government expense. At Hampton is the National Soldiers' Iome. Between four and five thous nd United States pensioners are kept ere, in a beautiful -park. The town iso has the Hampton Normal School, rhere Indians and negroes are trained. Jamestown Island,the site of the first ttlement, is about thirty miles up the ames River. Williamsburg is, about ie same distance. Yorktown, where ornwallis surrenderedis within pleas at-sailing distance. Petersburg and ichmond, both famous in history, are t far away. The txposition will be largely his )ric, so far as its land features are con :rned, and situated in the most his >ric portion portion of American ter tory. Those interestrd in pursuing ie Nation's story may visit famoup enes without inconvenience. To an extent, it will be an industrial xposition, but it will contain only 5h exhibits as are likely to prove ost interesting and exemplify the ghest developments of industrial art. The international naval rendezvous, Iwhich will participate all of the orld's naval powers, *ill be the most upendous display of sea power ever itnessed. The international military ancamp ent will offer to Americans fdr the 'st time an opportunity of viewing Le military representatives of many ,tions encamped together, and in size id general scope-will be the most com ete international encampment in his ry. The Exposition will be the first one *er constructed which will illustrate distinctive style of..architecture. It ill be entirely colonial. All of the ildings erected by the Exposition mpany will be replicasof seventeenth ntury structures or elaborations of em. The Concessions Division, called the ar Path, will contain a varied collec n of the best amusement enterprises ssible to secure. These will be con cted by recognized experts in their rious lines. The historical exhibits will be col "red and displayed under the super dion of the Historical Societies, and )st of the manufacturing exhibits I represent live work-that is, the nvrting of raw material into finish product before the eyes of the-visi es. The section devoted to the Arts d Crafts will display handiwo-kers t ing outsfinished articles from flax,- b zton, woo- iron, copper, silver, wood di d straw. Public amusements of -various sorts . 11 be seen. Innumerable bands will iy at numbers of points 'about the ounds, Military parades and drills 11 be of daily occurence. Naval evo ions of many kinds, above and below ter will he witnessed. Dirigible bal ns and acroplanes will trayerse the -and convey passengers from the are to the ships. Large outdoor .ath ic meets will be held on the water f on the land. Expert open-air per -mers will divert the visitors. Salt ,ter batning will be a feature. The ~st spectacular fire-works will be dis syed, and reproductions of the battle tween the Merrijnac and the Moni -will be given at stated intervals. 'here are innumerable other enter fing, interesting and amusing fea es which might be set forth, but for kof space. ave you weakness of any kind mach, back or any organs of the Sy? Don't dope yourself with ordin r medicine. Hollister's Rocky Moun- I nTea is the stipreme curative power. I cents, Tea or Tablets. Dr. W. E. own &Co. st. Nicholan. santa Claus was born in Patavia, in sIa Minor. That was not his real me. He was an abbot and named .Nicholas. He afterward became chbishop of Myra. At the latter I tce he dedand was duly burled. In" ny, 1087, his remains were carried4 some pious Italins to Bai, on the - iriatic coast. They are now at rest a splendid church which bears his me. The people around about make pilgrimage to his shrine every year. >one seeking food on that occasion refused It by the priests, while ac modation Is given to as many pl ims as the edidece will hold. On St. eholas' day, Dec. 6, a great celebra n takes place in his honor. Early in Smorning the populace take his-im e from the priests and carry It; -ough the town. At night the city grandly illuminated. Was Wasting' Away. 'I had been troubled with kidney ease for the last five years." writes bert R. Watts, of Salem, Mo~ "I t flesh and never felt well and doc 'ed with leading physicians and tried remedies suggested without relief. ialy I tried Foley's Kiliney Cure less than two bottles completely 'ed me and I am now sound and 11." During the summer kidney ir- - p~ilarities are often caused by ex sive drinking or being over-heated. tend to the kidneys at once by using ey's Kidney Cure. Hardest Water. 'he Rev. Samnel Peters was the man . made Connecticut's blue laws fa- L >us by their publication in his his y of that state- In that interestingL tume the following original bit of ural history is to be found: "In the nnectcut rIver, 200 miles from Long and sound, Is a narrow of five yards L, formed by two shelving moun ns of solid rock, whose tops Inter t the clouds. Through this chasm T~ compelled to pass all the waters ich In the time of, floods oury the q thern country. Here water Is con- se idated without frost, by pressure, of swiftness, between the pinching, th rdy rocks to such a degree of indu- ni :ion that an Iron crow fioats smooth- thi down Its current. Here iron, lead of I cork have one common weight; an -e7 steady as time and harder than af .rble, the stream. asses, Irresistible de aot swift as lighttnlng." - - ta 3ASTOR IA " For Tnfnants and. Children. e Kind You Have Always Bought Gee3i 960cK MANUFACTURRw07 C= Doors, - ash Blinds,' Moulding and Buildinz Material,, CH ARLESTON,,S. C. Sash Weighits and.Cords. Eindovand. Fancy Wass a Suecialt. T H EN YOU.COMiE' - TO TOWN CALL AT' SHAVING SA.LOON 'Which is fitted up with an eye to the comfort of his customners . HAIR CUTTIN IN ALL STYLES, SH AVIN0 A"D SH A MPOOING Done with neatness and. dispatch . . .. .. A cordial invitation is extended.. J. L. WELLS. [annin~g Times Block. HOLISTER-S Rocky Mountain Tea Nuggets a sy Medicine for Busy People, - rengs Golden Health and Eenewed Vigor. A. sn-cifle for Constipain Lugs i ve utd KXne Troubles, .ipmEcea Impure ;:!oo:d, adBreath, Sluggs oes meadina ,nd Backache..- It's RokE outi Tea in tab.. et form, 35 -cents a box.' Genuine made by IOLLs-rza Davo CoxP~xr, 3a~Wis "OL.DEN NUGGETS FOR-SM.IOW PEOPLE . Undertaking - r A complete stock of caskets, Cof Hns and Fu - rlSupplies always on hand. Mv hearse will. sent to any part of she county, and calls wl tresponded to by *Mr.--A. J. White.dluneral Mector-and undertaker, nighi-day. W R JENKINSO .CO. Sas Widys and ords. Wingan Falinsy ofass aets: ty heixoBoon, N.U CY. era Wnica oftedp Nwit Yok reyssote om r of hiepha ewsYoner writers'.A. enc share you bneess aoicd . dispath -Corliss-.. A oria i Coton a - isuc exte e rohes bu teatnnin Ts Bose. Sae tionk oth a e Tsceaenued-bma have syri ed cn for invin.chi epess Ao saile byr ConsUtin LdgEstoLVe foma cnnn a So. C.nia .aeby lz aendoxrx M09.asoWs COD~ URT ETOFCOMAON PES. >U ndp ert.akni ng agamplte stoc of-ses ofisa4 stoan part,.h DawonCatr, Brdcsil repoe Rtfu Carter..ht. Herrer a ro ns, SundEterle Flder, athn Paros, and Margaet arter, D enanncE F (CoLaiAcnt andrveA.) .' Thce Dfe~ nsanAoe Namhed flo ire tomans eh ompint ti lion, on of wih as sheth yaourdo nswrtod Copaon hix sscibr aterook ic iN Y a gtS.n.,twithnftwenw ysafe - .serice Fre of clusie ha such serican of New York.t esweheclvaint of ihiadelhiane rescieatiof inPhiaelpian Lomepp o New Yort. herle Fhew YorkenderDwnriter Awil.1 ,inten ofi nacdera iedi.h seo hae Cler yor Cuies oCired K. CoutyonAil1thr106 - AVch WEINBERsG,5 Plaitie's ters. Copie Style - akhemand