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HOUSEKEEPERS ! We have the fosIowing seasonable Goods at prices that will interest you: HADIOCKS. Our line of Hammocks is perhaps the best ever shown in r wn The are rich in coloring, commodious in size. and are well made. Get our prices and we will -onvince you that they are good values We sell the Arctic Ice Cream Freezer; it has been the most satisfactory of any Freezer we have ever brought to the market. We have a nice line of Gem Ice Shaves, Ice Picks, etc. Do not fail to see our tall Glass Vases for longstem flowers, they are splendid for use on dining table. We have too, a lot of Perfection Oil Cook Stoves. These Stoves are not only great fuel savers, but are the greatest comfort in warm weather, doing away with the necessity of making fire in the range in the morning or evening. They will greatly aid you in keeping your house comtortable during the heated period. W e have just received a nice lot of Flower Pots and Churns. These are nice! clean goods and are the strongest stoneware that is made. FARMERS ! Do not fail to see us for MIowers and Rakes. We are selling. as we have for a number of years past, the Deering Mowers and Rakes. We are sure that this Mower is by far the best thing on the market. It combines lightness of draft with strength of construction. We ask that you examine your neigh s old Deering Mower. You will find that it has withstood all kinds of hard usage. The Mowers we have are the latest designs from the factory and are splendid 1 machines. We still have a good stock of American Field Fencing to select from. Get our prices, we are sure that we have -the best constructed Fence made. We buy this in carload lots and get the lowest prices obtainable. See us when in the market. Very truly yours, Manning Hardware Co. For Convenience and Safety, You should deposit your money in a good bank. As for safety, we have Burglary and Fire Insurance. Time Lock. Bonded Officers und Regular Examinations, and our con tinued growth is evidence of the contidence reposed in us by the people of Manning and the surrounding country. .Deposits October 1, 1904, $38,154,82. Deposits October 19 1905, $72,559.67. If your patronage has in any way contributed to oLr success, we thank you for same, if you are not already our patron you are invited to become one. Bank of Clarendon,xqnnrng,s.o. If You Were Asked to give your reasons for believing that the Home Life Insurance Co. of New York is one of the best companies, you would probably answer because is is Old, Strong and Reliable ! BEGAUSE it ss more than a generation since it was chartered. -BECAUSE its-business from the outset has been ably and conservatively managed, and its growth has been healthy. BECAUSE its -investments have always been prudently made, and its fmnancial affairs kept well in hand. BECAUSE of the high character of the securities it has always held. BECAUSE the Policy-Holders have been most amply protected, all olaims having been promptly and honestly settled. Is this not the Company to recommend to your friends ? This is what the -best known papers have to say: Honest company found at last by the insurance investigators. Home Life is square.-New Haven Union. 12-11-05. The good record made by the Home Life on Friday stood the test of further examination ye mera.N Yif orht shy205 o fhinances. Insurance company found with clear bill.-Wash ingtoa Times, 12-11-015. Mr. Hughes was rtoved to make this comment: "You have apparently 874,000.000 insuraace in force: how is it possible for you to do all that business with all your accounts on your books?" -N. Y. Times, 12-9-05. . The*Home Life supplied one of the marvels of the present investigation,-nn insurance company without any obvious scandals.--N. Y. Tribune, 12-12-05. The investigating committee hast at last found one company with what is apparently a per fectly clean record.-N. Y. Commercial, 12-12-05. Mr. Hughes failed to bring out a single questionable transaction.--N. Y. Sun, 12-12-05. Inquisitor Hughes finds one insurance company that benefits patrons.-Cincinnatt Fost, 12-11-05. Honesty found in an insurance company. No "yellow dog" fund. No campaign or legis lative payment by Homet Life.-N. Y. World, 12-9-05. -When President Ide of the Home Life Insurance Co'mpany finished his testimony before the Armstrong Committee this morning Mr. Hughes sighed: "It's hopeless!" He harvested a -mighty small crop of admissions.-Evening Sun. N. Y., 12-i1-05. The Horne -Life -Insurance Co. -of New York is one of. the strong and reliable financial institutions of the country. Its successful career of over FORTY-FOUR YEARS has been the result of careful and conservative management and honorable dealing -with its Policy -holders. T'HE HOME LIFE of New York is one of the strong, reliable financial institutions of the country. Its successful career of over FORTY-FOUR YEARS has been the result of careful management and honorable dealing -with its Policy-holders. ofurther information write to S. E. INGRAM, Manning, S. C. Dividends Apportioned Every Year. S. E. INGR AM, District Agent, Manning, S. C. WILSON BROS., General Agents, Columbia, S. C. SANzITATIION. S.~ L. KRASNOFF, Undertaker, - Opnday and night to meet the demands of the needy. Our Un- a Aera~ng Establishment is complete in every respect. We carry 2 T'Ofisfrm2.0t 50: Caskets from 810.00 to $300., finished andl Sdraped in temost aritcmanner. We have Hearses for both white ~ nd colored people. Residences, halls, rooms and contents disinfected by the most ap Sproved methods o~f modern science, destroying all contagious and in- a Seetious germs of every nature.Repcfly . L . Krasnoff. tlanning, S. C. ALCOLU RAILROAD. DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAYS. - Effective May 1st, 1906. NORTHEAST.--READ DOWN. SOUTHWEST.-READ UP. No.1. lNo. 3. No.5. N o.' 2.No4. No.6. Mixed. Mixed. Mixed. ISTATIONS. - Mixed. Mixed. Mixed. 20 745 .... OtAci. - 0o P3.P. M. 'P.M. 7 45 ... . . O Lv.... .... .... Aco u .. .. '. .. .. .A 25 ti s 00 .... ra n . .. . .. . 7oda s N50 ... .. J . .. . .. . M c e d*. .. .. ... N. . i2 5 . . . - - -- - W e n s s . o 0 0... . 5ri N . ..... ...H r y ...... .. |2 0..... ---- P.MP. R. ALPMN.F . COL. Monay.o.iu Fridays.Suerintndent Two Ways of Purting it. Two'groups of persons were seated n a railway station, according to LIp-. Aincotts Magazine. One consisted of a !ashionably attired pair, the other of a pair who looked as if they were from the counti'y. They had been there only x few minutes when a girl came in whose complexion was as nearly per lect as anything in this world ever is. While she was buying her ticket the Foung man remarked to the ladies with 1im: "Isn't Miss Cransford a beauty? Her .omplexion is as perfect as a rose." At the same time the other. man :lutched his wife's arm and whispered: "Lord, Nan, hasn't that gal got a purty hide?" A Good Complexion. A good complexion is impossible with he stomach out of order. If pasty sal ok people would pay more attention o their'stomachs and less to the skin m their faces they would have better :omplexions. Kodol for Dyspepsia will ligest what you eat and put your stom .ch back in right shape to do its own ork. Kodol relieves palpitation of the ieart, flatulence, sour stomach, heart urn, etc., Sold by The Arant Co.Drug store, successor to The R. B. Loryea )rug Store. Home Shy Wives. The home shy wife is a peculiar prod ict of the time. She rises late and hur des from home the moment she is ressed. To have luncheon, tea or din aer at home appears to her to be in tolerable, and she seldom reappears there excdpt to return to bed. "What is home?" was asked at a west end flinner table recently. "The place where the servants are kept," was the Immediate answer.-London Truth. Akin. "Do you think that marriage is a fail are, Mr. Askin?" said Miss Elder to a Foung man whom she knew to be en aged. "I haven't got that far yet," was the frank reply, "but I'm pretty well con rinced that courtship is bankruptcy." London Tit-Bits. A Year of Blood. The year 1903 will long be remem bered in the home of F. N. Tacket, of Alliance,Ky., as a year of blood; which flowed so copiously from Mr. Tacket's lungs that death seemed very near. He writes: "Severe bleeding from the lungs and a frightful cough had brought me at death's door, when I begat. tak ing Dr. King's New Discovery for Con sumption, with the astonishing result that after taking four bottles I was aompletely restored and as time has proven permanently cured." Guaran weed for Sore Lungs, Couglis and Colds, aEt The Arant Co. Drug Store,successor to The R. B. Loryea Drug Store. Price 50c and $1.00. Trial bottle free. Explained. "Pop!" "What is it, Willie?" "Why is they a 'w' in 'sword?"' "Ahem! For the same reason. that there is a 'k' in 'knock,' Willie." "Thonk you, pop!"-Kansas City In depe-.ent______ showed Her Age. Grace-They say that Miss Forty odde was named after her Aunt Geor gana. Gwendolyn-She looks as If she was named before her Aunt Georgiana. -udge.________ If men would consider not so much wherein they difter as wherein they agree there would be far less unchari tabeness-Addison. Not if as Rich as Rockefeller. If you had all the wealth of Rocke feller, the Standard Oil magnate,- you could not buy a better medicine for bowel complaints from Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhea Remedy. The most eminent physicia.n cannot prescribe a be~tter preparation for colic and diarrhoea, both for children and adults. The uniform success of this remedy has shown it to be superior to all others. It never fails, and when reduced with water and sweetened, is pleasant to take. Every family should be supplied with it. Sold by The Arant Co. Drug Store, successor to The R. B. Lorvea Drug Store. Nielsonl In Wolsey's Tomb. Lord Nelson's sarcophagus in St. Paul's cathedral has been aptly de scribed as a 'secondhand national tomb, for it was originally constructed for another great Englishman, Cardi nal Wolsey. Wolsey had cherished an ambition to be burled within the pre cincts of Windsor castle and caused his sarcophagus to be carved by one of the most famous sculptors of his time. But Wolsey died in disgrace, and the sarcophagus remained empty at Wind sor until Nelson's death, when it was thriftily employed to hold the remains of the hero of Trafalgar. - -A Bad Barn. For a painful burn there is nothing like DeWitt'sWitch HazelSalve. There' are a host of imitations of DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve on the market-see that you get the genuine. Ask for De Witt's., Good, too, for sunburn, cuts, bruises, and especially recommended for piles. The name E. C. DeWitt & Co., Chicago, is on every box. Sold by The Arans Co. Drug Store, successor The R. B. Loryea Drug atore. How England Got the Gout. Strange,efects have strange causes. What gave most English families of the upper class the gout was the treaty that broihght in the heavy wines of Portugal, 'much too heavy for use in this climate.-Dr. Emil Reich. One of the. secrets of successful achievement lies in giving one's whole mind to the details as they present themselves, never slighting one of them, even the smallest. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure Digests what you eat. Old Time Punishment. In "Pike's History of Crimes," volume 1, page 226, is found the following copy of the sentence of an old time traitor: "It is the order of the court that for your treasoo you be drawn and hanged and beheade'd and that your heart, bowels and entrails, from whence come your. traitorous thorughts, be torn out' and burned to ashes and that the ashes be scattered to the four winds and that your body be afterward cut into four quarters." Sore Nipples. A cure may be effected by applying Chamberlain's Salve as soon as the child is done nursing. Wipe it off with a soft cloth before allowing the child to nurse. Many t: dined nurses use this salve with the best results. Price 25c per box. Sold by The Arant Co. Drug Store, successor to The R. B. Loryea Let the ChUdren Pla?. It is too often true of the unhappy children who are forced to rise too ear ly in their classes that they are con ceited all the forenoon of life and stu pid all its afternoon. The vigor and freshness which should have been stor ed up for the purposes of the hard struggle for existence in practical life have been washed out of them by pre cocious mental debauchery-by glut tony and lesson bibbing. Their facul ties are worn out by the strain put upon their callow brains, and they are demoralized by worthless childish tri umphs before the real work of life be gins. I have no compassion for sloth, but youth has more need for intellectu al rest than age, and the cheerfulness, the tenacity of purpose, the power of work, which make many a successful man what he is, must often be placed to the credit zot of his hours of indus try, but to that of his hours of idleness in boyhood.-Huxley. Have you pains in the back, infeam mation of any kind, rheumatism, faint ing spells, indigestion or constipation Hollisters Rocky Mountain Tea makes you well, keeps you well. 35 cents, Dr. W. E. Brown & Co. Give' Your Borse More Water. Water should be before horses at all times when indoors, and at least no meal should ever be offered and no night lights ever turned out until every animal has had his chance at as many brimming buckets as he will take, says the Outing Magazine. The shy drinker may be tempted by many artifices, like mixing a little molasses, or salt, or oat meal, or flaxseed jelly, or bran, etc., with the water, and constantly varying the flavor. Horses may even have all they want right after feeding, provided they have not been deprived of water for some time previous. Many shy drinkers, like sby feeders, who are gen erally nervous, take all nourishment best at night, when it is dark and quiet, and morning finds the empty manger and bucket which it had seemed, by day, almost nauseated them. It Is Dangerous to Neglect a Cold. How often do we hear it remarked: "Its only a cold," and a few days later learn that the man is on his back with pneumonia. This is of such common occurrence that a cold, howeves slight, should not be disregarded. Chamber lain's Cough Remedy counteracts any tendency of a cold to result in pneu monia, and has gained its popularity and extensive saTe by its prompt cures of this most common ailment. It always cures and is pleasant to take. For sale by The Arant Co. Drug Store, succes sor to The R. B. Loryea Drug Store. Rogers as a Story Teller. Charles Dickens used to describe the way in wh1ch Samuel Rogers, the poet, told dinner table stories when grown old and feeble. A manservant stood behind Rogers' chair and at appropri ate intervals would thus admonish his master: "Tell Mr. Dickens, sir, the sto ry of the Hon. Charles Townshend and the beautiful Miss Curzon." -The old poet would start in a slow chant: "The Hon Charles Tovgishend became enam ored of Miss Curzon. She was bee yewtiful. He be-ribed her maid to con ceal him in her chee-amber and when she arrived to dress for a ball emerged from his hiding place. She looked at him fixedly, then said, 'Why don't you begin?' She took him for the 'air dresser." Ber the heKind You Hlave Always Bought . "In God We Trust." The word "God" never appeared in any government act until the year 1864, when, at the suggestion of the director of the mint, former Governor Polock of Pennsylvania, "In God We Trust" was stamped on the copper two cent piece. Before that time "E Pluri bus Unrum" had been the motto. Strange to relate, "E Pluribus Unum" on coins never was authorized by law. An Inference. Mrs. Jackson - Did you see Mrs. Briggs' collection of rare old china? Jackson-Yes. Her family must have been quite poor. Mrs. Jackson-No. Why do you think so? Jackson-Well, if they had been able to keep servants she never would have had that collec tienu of rare old china. Made Happy For Life. Great happmness came mnto the home of S. C. Blair, school superintendent,at St Albans, W. Va., when his little daughter was restored from the dread ful complaint he names.- He says: "My little daughter had St. Vitus' Dance, which yielded to no treatment but grew steadily worse until as a last re sort we tried Electric Bitters; and I re joice to say, three bottles effected a complete cure." Quick, sure cure for nervous complaints, general debility, female weaknesses, impoverished blood and and malaria. Guaranteed by The Arant Co. Drug Store, successors to The R. B. Loryea Drug Store. A Disintegrated Group. "What did the girl do when her fa ther discovered them eloping?" - "She burst into tears." "What did the young man do?" "Oh, he went all to pieces." "What did the old man do?" "He! Why, he exploded with rage and blew them both up."-St. Louis Post-Dispatch. It pours the oil of life into your sys tem. It warms you up and starts the life blood circulating. That's what Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea does. 3.5 cents, Tea or Tablets. Dr. W. E. Brown & Co. Just the Thing. Young Lady (to clerk in bookstore) I am looking for something suitable for an old gentleman who has been mar ried fifty years. Can you suggest something? Clerk (promptly)-"A Half Century of Confiet."-Life. As long as the heart is young and the thought is youthful old age cannot touch you.-Success Magazine. Bears the heKind You Have Always B~ught Signature Careful Auntie. "You-will never see your Aunt Maria again until you get to heaven," a little girl was solemnly told by her mother the other day, according to the Ion don Globe. "Will she ask me to wipe my feet?" was her only response. It throws a flood of light on Aunt Maria's character and history. roLErslio1%A-TAR An aiter Brother. In a case in the orphans' court of an eastern city one of the principal wit nesses was asked If he had any broth ers or sisters. "I had a brother," he replied, "but he died 150 years ago." "What? A hundred and fifty years ago?" echoed the judge, with an im plied rebuke for a possible jest. "Yes. I am telling you the truth. My father was married at nineteen years of age. Within the year a son was born to him, who shortly afterward died. Becoming- a widower before he was thirty, my father married again at the age of seventy-five. I was born next year. I am at present ninety-four years old. If you will make the neces sary calculation by adding my age, ninety-four, to the number fifty-six, which Is the difference between seven ty-five and nineteen, the ages of my father at the time of his respective marriages, the result will be exactly 150. So It is just a century and a half since my brother died." Stomach Troubles. Mrs Sue Martin, an old -and highly respected resident of Faisonia, Miss., was sick with stomach trouble for more than six months. Chamberlain's Stom ach and Liver Tablets cured her. She says: "I can now eat anything I want and am the proudest woman in the world to find such a aood medicine." For sale by The Arant Co. Drug Store, successor to The R. B. Loryea Drug Store. Should Have Been 'Put' Otherwise. An esteemed Perthshire minister was visiting a burly parishioner suffering from the "mulligrubs," or "Effie Lind say." The strong man was intensely irritated at being atfacked by disease, and he greeted his minister thus: "Weel, Messjohn, I thocht ye wad never come. I ken ye are busy wi' thinkin whatna fresh notion ye can gie huz on the Sawbath, and I ken ye maundung yer brains-as I jalose-by readin' a' the bit bookies ye can come by to hae a crap o' profitable notions for a'body. Sit ye doon, sir, in the big chair, and, Janet, gle Mr. Pottedhead a whang ' gouda cheese, a souple scone and the grunds o' the greybeard. The bite and sup will keep his boast, puir stock. Noo, sir, It's baith lamentable and awfae, but this is the first illness ] have ever had in a' my born days. I tell ye, my first illness!" "Well," re plied the minister, in a voice meant tc be plangent with suppressed emotior, "I most earnestly hope it may be yvu: last."-Dundee Advertiser. Was Wasting Away. "I had been troubled with- kidne3 disease for the last five years," write Robert R. Watts, of Salem, Mo. "] lost flesh and never felt well and doe tored with leading physicians and tried all remedies suggested without relief Finally I tried Foley's Kidney Cur( and less than two bottles cempletel3 cured me and I am now sound and well." During the summer kidney ir regularities are often caused by ex cessive drinking or being over-heated Attend to the kidneys at once-by using Foley's Kidney Cure. Honeymoon Reauxup. The house had quieted after the wed ding. Mother and Aunt Mary were it the parlor talking it over. "So it's over," said Aunt Mary, smil ing into mother's eyes. . "Yes," said mother bravely, aithougi a little tearfully, ."its over-and be gun." "They'll be happy, I'm sure." "Yes. They are very well suited t< each other." "Very. I could see that They botl have studious habits." "Yes. But, Mary"-mother paused and the gleam of mischief evoked ha~ Aunt Mary sooner than anybody els darted into her eyes-"Mfary, they can' have much sense of humor. Though it': my own girl, I say it" -"Why not?" "Do you know what she took to rea on their wedding journey? Stevenson': 'Travels With a Donkey.' "-Tit-Bits. War Against Consumption. All nations are endeavoring to cheel the rava'ges of consumption, the "whit plague" that claims so many victim each year. Foley's Honey and Ta cures coughs and colds nerfectly. an' you are in no danger of consumption Do not risk your health by taking some unknown prepare.ion when Foley' Honey & Tar is safe and certain in re suts. Ask for Foley's Honey and Ta and insist upon having it. The Aran Co. Drug Store, su.ccess to The R. B Loryea Drug Store. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA Ceunty of Clarendon. By James M. Windham. Esq., Probati Judge. IN THE PROBATE COURT. WHEREAS, Mary J. Murray mad suit to me, to grant her Letters o Administration of the estate of an< efets of Marshall D. Murray. T'ese are therefore to cite and ad monish all and singular the kindre< and creditors of the said Marshall D Murray, deceased, that they be an< appear before me, in the Court of Pro bate,to be held at Manning on the 31.s day of May next after publica tion thereof, at 11 o'clock in the fore noon, to show cause, if any they have why the said administration should no be ranted. Given under my hand, this 61th da: of May, A. D. 1906. JAMES M. WINDHAM, [SEAL.] Judge of Probate. H. J. Broadway of Summerton, ( S. C., says: *"The~ Carbo Magnetic Razor is the flnest I ever used. It takes away that dreadful -about to be executed~ feeling, and makes SHAVING A PLEASURE.- s 2EB cei50mee300 "Cro-anei"Elan bse oklet"Rintto~avers" For sale by D. 0. RHAME, Summerton. S. C. W.n 0. W. Woodmen of the World. Meets on fourth Monday nights at Visiting Sovereigns invited. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure Digosata what you eat. 0( The Arant Co. Drug Stor Cures Biliousness, Sick Headache, Sour Stom ach, Torpid Liver and Chronic Constipation. Pleasant to tale L1 The Arant Co. Drug Sto Do You Want' PERFECT FIT1ING ? 0' CLOTHES ? THEN COME OR SEND TO US. We have the best equipped Tailor ing Establishment in the State. We handle High Art Clothing sclely and we carry the best line of Hats and Gent's Furnishings in the city. Ask your most nirominent inen who we are,.and they will commend you to us. J, L, DA VID & BROI, Cor. King & Wentworth Sts., CHARLESTON, - S. C. Buggies, Wagons, goad. Oartz, and Carriages REPAIRED With Neatness and Despatch -AT R. A. WHITE'S WHEELWRIGHT and BLACKSMITH SHOP. I repair Stoves, Pumps and run water pipes, or I will put duwn a new Putnp cheap. If you need any soldering done, give me a call. LAME. My horse is lame. Why? Because I 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 Them Look New. We are making a specialty of re painting old Buggies, 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..WHIT E, MA NNING. S. C: NORTHWESTERN R. R. OF S. C. TIME TABLE No. 6, In Effect Sunday, June 5, 1904. BETWEEN SUMTER AND CAMDEN. Mixed, Daily except Sunday. Southbound. Northbound. No. 69 No. 74 No. 70 No. 68 - PM AM AM PM 6 25 9 36 Lve..Sumter ..Ar.900 5 45 -6 27 9 38 N. W. Junction....8 58 5 43 6 47 9 59...Dalzell...8 2 5 13 7 05 10 10...Borden...8 00 4 58 7 23 10 21...Rembert's...7 40 4 43 7 30 10 31...E11er be..730 4 28 7 50 -11 10..So. Ry. Junction..7 10 4-25 " 8 00 nh10 Ar... Camden..Lve7 00 4 15 PM PM AM PMT BET WEEN WILSON'S MILL AND SUMTER Southbound, Northbound. SNo. 73 Daily except Sunday. No. 72 PM PM 3 00 Leave....Sumter...Arrive..12 30 3 03...ummerton Junction...12 27 32.......M.il~ad............ 4335........ ....Smet.........10 3 55...........Dver.............1 00 o 5 4............danis.............9 45 6 30) Arrive..Wilson's Mtill.Leave 8 40 PM AM BETWEEN MILLARD AND ST. PAUL. Daily except Sunday. -Southbound. Northbound. ye. No. 73 No. 75 No. 72 No. 74 - p1 P M A M A M P M 8th 4 05 10 20 Lve Millard Ar.10 45 5 30 4 15: 1030OAr St. Paul Lve.10 35 4 20 -PM AM AM PM F'HOS. WILSON, President. .Th mi Notice to Creditors ah All persons having claimns-- against na the estate of Reese Bradley, deceased; pa fwill present them duly attested, and dOl those owing said estate will make pay.. fac ment to l1ng ARCHIE I. BARRON. yet Clerk of Court, beE Administrator. Manning, S. C., May 8, 1906. W. 'C. DAVIS. J. A. WEINBERG. the JAVlS & WEINBERG, of ATTORNEYS AT LAW , Ht MANNING, S. 0. nes Prompt attention given to collections. J. s wi~oN.CHARL.TON DURANT.J WILSON & DURANT, Attorneys and Counselors at Law, MANNING, S. C. .7. 11 swAfl wooDS. s. OmivER O'BRYAN. WOODS & O'BRYAN, MANNING, S. C. S Nettles Bldg., upstairs. 'Phone 77. H. LESESNE, j ATTORNEY AT LAW, a MANNING, S. C. i -OSEPH F. RHAME, __ -ATTORNEY AT LAW, * MANNING, S. C. j Money to Loan. is APPLY TO *WilSon & Du'Rant. FOEY3lORIB~wTAR ....,.ldsuPrvmaniPDeumona DYSPEPSIA CiE DIGESTS WHAT YOU EAT The $1.00 bottlecont~i 24 tmes the trial se. which ilIsfor 50 ceat, fl3PAEKU ONLY AT TXu LAZORATOSY Of E. C. DeWITT & COMPANY, CHICAGO. IL.. e, Successor to The it. B. Loryea Drug Store. Cleanses .the system thoroughly and clears sallow complexions of *t pimples and blotches. ative rfril Syrup m, -. It is guaranteed' -;-_: re, Successor to The R. B. Loryea Drug Store. THE ARGYLJE HOTEL@ Open for Theatre Parties and Special Dinners. E 13 ER 0 R = E A. N1 P4A N_. PETFO I A. M. THE RESTAURANT, . CA.ERRI - -- CHARGES REASONABLE. ROOMS EN SUITE,. WITH AN*D WITHOUT PRIVATE BATHS. NEW'ENTRANCE ON HASELL STREET. Charleston's First and Only Modern European Plan Hotel. THE ARGYLE HOTEL CO., Proprietors. s For Infats -and Childen. _ he. Kind You. Have - r.W3~rd"Alw ysBought AVegetablePreparatioflrAs similatig theFoodandlega tingmeStomachsamB eSof i Bears the Promotes DigestioCheerful nessandRestfrntainsneither OimMorphine nor14ineral. A ~ ~ kim Ofesyfr osia , L sr tomci0 he v8ASAISd RI7A Fogsat an Cidrn O ?lw use Aperfect RemddyforCoastipa lion, Sour Stomiach,Diarrboea Worms,Convulsions,feverish ness and Loss OF SLEE9P. -t O e For Over ThityYears NEW YORK. Thirty .. -3C CENCURCOMW WWROMC BRING YOUR I %J OB W 0 RiK TO THE TINES OFFICE. HE 'RELANICE LIFE INSURANCE COT PITTSBURG, PENN., Scomplied with the State laws of 44 different States, confines its operation the United States. Issues every conceivable form of insurance and has a aber of attractive features that have never been embodied in any other con Is the Only Company that Issues the Famous. Self-Sustaining Policy. 1st. It provides for cash loans: 2d.- Cash values; 3d. Incontestible after one r; 4th. Paid up values; 5th. Thirty days' grace after -he first premium is d; 6th. Extended values; 7th. The paid up values participate in dividends; It has a Total and Permanent Disability Clause, it is if the insured becomes totally disabled by disease or accident the pre im ceases and the policy is automatically paid up for face value, the privilege lbenefit remaining the same as if the premiums had been regularly paid by insured. 9th. It also provides that if the policy-hotder should make ten 'ments on the 20-payment plan and cease paying premiums the company will -his estate $1,000 for every $1,000 applied for should the insured death occur ing the second 10-year period and will not deduct a single premium from the e of the policy. 10th. Should the insure~d continue to pity his premiums dur the second 10-year period and if death should occur during the second 10 rs the company will add every premium to the face of the policy that has n paid during this period and pay it in cash plus the face of the policy. llth. This policy can only be obtained from Reliance Life of Pittsburg, compadyiing the LARGEST ORIGINAL SURPLUS to policy-holders mny COMP~NY IN THE WORLD-A SURPLUS OVER THE RESERVE D ALL OTHER LIABILITIES OF OVER ONE MILLiON EIGHT NDRED THOUSAND DOLLARS. Its Board of Directors is composed of recognized financial ability and busi s integrity, it is ofticered by practical and experienced insurance m-en. The right man can secure a position by applying to A MES H..R EED, President. Reliance Life insurance Co., S ~ Pittsburg, Penn. THE... Fidelity Mutual Life Insurance 003ol OF PHILADELPHIA, PA. A practical, mutual, protit-snaring American Company. No stock or proprietary interest to absorb insurance dividends. .. The portionfof premium that may be used for expenses is limited in policies, which limitation guarantees economy, protection of trust funds and liberal dividends to policy holders.__ The fulfillment of policy contracts is guaranteed by the reserve, __ protected by the undivided surplus, the companv.'s record of over & twenty-six years for promnpt payment of claims, favorable mortality, & and a POLICY JEXPENSE LIITATION. Ratio of Assets to Liabilities.......................... 1.21. Let me show you our contracts that insure your insurance. JOE C. McCREERY, FE District 1Vanager, Columbia, S. C., and Manning, S. C. F