University of South Carolina Libraries
?- mmmmmmmmmmm The Dili ? ?7 f ??^"WPP??' ,-T?? PUBLISHED j A. B. JO jL 11^ ' 'JBSCR1PTIC "toTi'Ix" ,0f Ku^.-ad at the pu ^ ?crouu-< AQount ? tMlWCU Dillon. 5. 1.50 >?-*7.36 Now is tb ^ 1J'^ premises a 22.93 little lime an 14.50 a big doctorb 1 ? 19.30 'y -T** .75 A problem * 5 qo gun to solve ?. - t 30.26 has 83 wivt i 5.00 midst of the > 4 00 7 83 is found to t * 30.83 ( CO in cash. 6.40 ch f \ 25 00 i re CivU I ' , ? la.w earnest effo - ' 25.00 tll. c . j Co # 6.70 thc&amtar 4.40 but to maJ.; t 5 i\j 5.O0 place to honirias ? 10.41 mendations?* The Heraki** ? ? remit oc Furniture premises a|($ 42.25 lime are wi^Ti jdj 3.50 sing- notic<^dw*f? Co 56-96 time of thJvi wU * * of the old^mm 29]87 prevention ' 3.75 cure" is 3 00 The Leagi j 15.3o* assistance / 25.00 cial sense /? ?;? going ah in7t and dete Jh - 38.00 to win laii' ' 140.89 vice is wt|. ?? 1 u i iWation road tax tohelpyg^TT, 1000 guided b; 3gL#.;; 2.00 List of ' 4.00 tfW *\ 17.86 J ^StJP^W 2.00 K. T. Cttoyd r ' 2-00 A- D. 2.00 G. D. Crt i 14.15 J- W. W1 OOKPTIKGRJiT J. R. Haohn C. 10.10 F. M. Wifc-^fnai 2.50 J. O. Sta 7s. 3.05 J. L. BirjR.JT l 13 35 2 00 ^ 100.0C WJ. D. 2."77 ft J. D. l .oo [ardwatv Company 5.50 gCt p.Del. and Tel Co 9.00 *Ks 2.0O >Dert l so ? in 5.00 ^2 % Receiver .15.44 ZZ^ 6.50 0>? AMD POOR St<~? V-?-^ 2.00 1>ZZ 18.00 3.00 *-.( 14.00 ***-- a. 3.00 ^ tnw. S. ; 17.25 ZZ*> in. G. 3.00 fJvA. & Son 1.20 -ru-W. J. & Son 4.00 V 3.00 '1. D. 6.00 Co. 6.50 'as 29.50 24.00 'Jj. 71.57 t *Jro 6.00 X" - -- m W I? m nn ? ^ m*. ouu ju.W ' 4-?0 " MO||TKM AhD LUNACY rR.l?. Clmd 11.05 t9!o5 M. BOAAU OF EDUCATION "**" ^ATIONER Y \ 6.00 18 00 14.00 2.00 6.00 14.70 6.oo 1 A AA 1U.W 5^: 12.00 2.00 x 6.00 ^2 r 16.10 rT t J 11-90 it 13.50 V :-m 6.00 ^2 4.00 ZZ2 2.00 &}< 6.00 fe*- i lw*} 15.40 ^2 , *77 2.00 Z?^' 4.oo { $K 600 ':< 6.00 fc f 16.80 ~3 L_ ? ?*:$ 2.00 si: ' ; v ' mbi Stanley W. fe. 13.6C Thomas S. W. 6.0C CONSTABLE Webster Robert 32.5( dieting prisoners BlueW. E. 167.4C salaries Beathea John C. 26.0C Blue W. E. 150.0C Lane J as P- 66 67 Martin D. J. 83.37 Miles D.tF. 41.67 Montgomery J.D. 33.37 Willcox John 33.37 $2323.51 Total amount of claims approved numbered 3952 to 4087 inclusive rv - uamei j. iYiarun, County Supervisor, John Willcox Clerk of Board Mav 14. ! 909. \n English inventor has produced an instrument which he calls a sexaphone, and which, he declares is an infallible discoverer ol sex. It consists of a pith ball suspended at the end of a piece ol magnetized steel and copper wire with a wooden handle at the opposite end. If it is a male creature the pith ball rotates steadily, but if held above a female the ball swings backward and forward like a pendulum. The instrument, according to report, has been tested successfully on rabbits, mice and other animals, and the inventoi claims, that it will tell the sex ol eggs. The English opponents ol woman suffrage argue with laughter that the sexaphone furnishes the most Complete scientific prool of the incapacity ^f woman for th< ballot. It shows, say they, tha the man is an all around ere at up while the female merely vacillates m ? MASTER'S SALE. By virtue of a decretal order to me d rected in CAse or F. S. Jackson, plaii tiff, against Flora Wagstaff and others,d< fendanta, in the Court of common Pies for Marion County, the undersigns will sell at public auction, fot- cash, c sales day in June 190U within the usm hours of sale, before the Court Horn door at Marion, 8. C . All that certai piece, parcel or lot of land, situate an being in the Town of Dillou, in tl County of Marion and State aforesaic i bounded and described as follows, i ) wit: On the North Seveuty Five (7? cucii. uy uainooD 'inm; jumi une nui ' dred and Fifty (150) Feet by Fi'th At enue; Ponth and West by lands of 1 8* Jackson. Terms of sale cash. Pa chaser to pay for papers; and the pu chaser failing to comply property wi be re-sold at purchaser's risk. Marion, S, o., May 19th 1909. J. D. McLncas, Master. Trespass Notice. All persons are hereby forbid den to hunt, fish or otherwis trespass upon my lands. Any on violating this notice will be deal with according to law. D. H. Hyatt. 5-13-3t May 6 th 1909 $6.85 To SAVANNAH, Ga. and RETURN VIA. ATLANTIC COAST LINE Account GENERAL ASSEM BLY PRESBYTERIAI CHURCH in UNITED STATES May 20th-29th. _ Tickets on sale May 17th, 18th 19th and for train scheduled t< arrive Savannah up to and inclu ding, but not later than midnigh June 2nd. For farther information call oi Ticket Agent or write. W. J. Craig, PASS. TRAF. MGR T. C. White, GEN. PASS. AGT WILMINGTON, N.C. In the rush of goinsr to ores the accout of the death of Mr / P Edwards was inadvertantly omitted in this issue and will ap pear next week Winthrop College SCHOLARSHIP end ENTIUNCE EXAMINATION. Tbe examination for the award of va cant Scholarship* in Winthrop Oollegi and for the admission of new stndenfc will be held at the Oonaty Conrt Horn on Friday. July 2 at a. m. Appli oants moot be sot lose than fifteen yean Of aits. Whw BoholarShtp* are racant after Jnly 2 they will be awarded U thoee making the high set average at this examination, psovided they meet be oonditiona gorsmlf the award.t Ihiyk fbitfli Mejiilue ehonld wrlta t?>isiflisi Jshasen -before the exam ^^^^f^^^Mtership examinatioi MYT , impure Ice ' HaryOhtlh# Prem Polluted tiuraafr Hou??hold Uh. ) The parity end wholesomeneai the Ice supply have heretofore eeei ' to be a matter of much lees concert both sanitary engineers and cousi * era than the quality of the \rater i 1 ply. Yet. in view of the Increasing ti of Ice, tta purity la rapidly becoiuiu , matter of but slightly less Import* than that of water. While the cb leal composition and the factors wt affect the purity of water have i celved a large amount of attention : the agricultural experiment statu I little study has been made of Ice e i plies in station laboratories. From Shallow Ponds. The consensus of opinion Is that i oral ice formed to a reasonable de [ Is comparatively pure under usual cnmstances, but that It Is very Ilk to be contaminated If It freexes to ran aeptn or a snauow pond or strt or If It Is flooded, particularly v ' surface water. The Vermont exp i merit station found that of a su number of samples of pond Ice exi . lned all were unfit for household us The following extracts from a rec publication of the New York state : partment of health regarding Ice i Ice suppllea bear directly upon 1 " question: In general there are a great mi , conceivable ways that ice and Ice t plies may become Infected. The d ger from many of these causes of L feet Ion may, however, be so remote . so Infrequent as to hardly merit tloe. There are, however, a few i ' gars associated with the formation I natural Ice and the harvesting of ^ Ice supplies as now generally practl wmcii no mem consiaerauoa. Insanitary Conditions, t The first ot these dangers is the P fihs to tba harvesting of Ice from ; hated soarcee. This lee may be ta from poods or rivers which have b > polluted by sewage and may conl [ the germs of typhoid fever and ct I Picture jjg BIG LINE < M BIGGEST BARGi * QQ Oval Shapes. Gi !] w 10c up ): M While Ofi Herald 'u".V 11 "1892 [ Will Not . \ Cheapest] ; s* m,n< 0fp~ 1 som ^ut ^^51*. _ r"_u L 1 11 f M caus m emu of** \ ?ubj Phtl . ? bach | I Only a few : I are sh< ; J wh frto Second?Ice *i*y become tontnmltfcllfed dorlof the period and operations if of harrMtig by filth which may have tome from Infected sources. The hands , to tod feet ef laborers or the hoofs or torses may be the channels by which Infection may be transmitted to the Ice mp even after It has been taken from the l8e* water and notwithstanding the purltjr k ? of the water. nee Third. ? Ice may become Infected em- from surface drainage from the ndja tlch eant lands during thaws. The water re- which has thus flowed over infected by fields that may have been fertilized or >ns. otherwise Infected may be carried on tup- to the ice and settle and be frozen Into It A Feed Hopper. . When dry feed Is scattered ou the ground where It is wet or muddy there c 1 * Is often mote or - *V leas waste of // le the grain, and /r !*1" feed saving hop- Ar ' pers are there- jy er~ fore used In Ar 00 1 poultry yards. sm" Thelllustratlou, WyiMjsy e" | from American e" Agriculturist O e* suggests a stvle prBnlV^ . - .,q which can be 8 J easily made from wood at | ' email coat. !ul>" When the upper /~\ an" hopper 1b empty the lower one CROfla ssctiox of ! ?* may be tilted to uorrKn. no~ remove what feed has dropped Into It. an* and this feed, being cleau, muy be used ' again. This hopper is easy to construct ? and will pay for Itself many tliues over. A Self Feeder. . a seir feeder In the poultry house la P~ " a convenience on atormy dayB; but. then, it la a atandlng Invitation to rats *ln mnd 0,U* her Franrs | - uy JUST RECEIVED. UNS EVER OFFERED. w; lit or Black. All sizes. &f: > to $2.50 fe They Last. Hy Book Store. || Pure Al Rust, Crack, Because Best ?. at last, is the ideal kitchen d cooking utensil?"THE ARE THAT WEARS"? 1 Pure Spun Alum num. and anteed by the makers to last 25 years i average usage. "Spun" Aluminum, 1 you, not cast Aluminum, which will etimes crack and scale. Spun Alumi* i Ware will never crack, peel, scale r?.ak. >sts a trifle more than ordinarv c. but is many times cheaper in the run, because of its wonderful duray and fuel saving. Enamel ware is coated with colored glass. Iron exIs with heat. Colored glass does not, chips off into the food with dangerous Its to those who eat it. hat the use of enamel kitchen ware les cancer is a view held by some nent medical authorities. Dr. William hefanbach of New York, in a paper en1 "Observations on the Etiology of :er." read before the Bureau of Sanitary nee and Public Health during the km of the International Homeopathic [ress at Atlantic City, discussed this ect. \ :cording to a special dispatch to the sdelphia North American, Dr. Diefani advanced the argument that chipping of the "1892" Pur. >wn here. Compl eeler Hardw; - ^?* 5ij8 Pr S \ + 'lH1- v|fe Tne Maiden insurance company is 4 singular Denmark Institution. It is confined lo the nobility, and the nobismin, as soon as a female child is born to him, enrolls her name on the company's books and pays In a certain Bum and thereafter a fixed annual amount to the treasury. When the j young girl has reached the age of i twenty-one she is entitled to a fixed Income and to an elegant suit of apartments, and this income and this residence, both almost princely, are hers until she either marries or dies. The society has existed for generations. It has always prospered. Thanks to it, poverty stricken old maids are unknown among the Denmark nobility, but every maiden lady is rich and happy. uron * . Address, Tdk Bij Evans Pi uminum ^ Break, Scor LgL Will Last HT of the hard-coated d 19k preparation of meals al but dangerous partic matter to become mi food, these being taken into the ! where the cancerous growth is cai abrasions which they make in the the organ. "1892" Pure Aluminum War doctors' bills. It enables you bread, pies, pan cakes, etc., withou which is the great cause of dyspej indigestion. Aluminum griddles re grease; hence are smokeless and < "1892" Pure Aluminum Ware scorch or burn, is easily cleaned, rust, or corrode. H andsome in app Looks like silver, but weighs on! one-fourth as much, and is light t venient to handle. The original and rmlo Aluminum Ware is made by th< Pure Aluminum Co. at Lemont, 111. piece bearing their trade-mark, the Cross, and marked "1892" Pure A1 Ware is absolutely pure, wholesc hygienic, and guaranteed for 25 ye See that you get the right go accept no substitute. P Aluminiitv* P W M. UUllllllUIll V/V/l lete line will be : ire Compa.i T * % ^ - I "ftti First ftoae. According to n very ancient legend, the first rose appeared upon the earth at Gullstan. The lotus had loug reigned alone, but the flowers became dissatisfied because their drowsy queen conld only keep awako by day. They wished for one who would l?e us fair I In revels under the tnoon as in the garish day. It was then the rose np peared and was chosen the queen of flowers. She sprang Into being at the song of the nightingale and was purest white until colored with the blood from the nightingale's breast. As earth's sweetest singers are those who have felt the thorn, so, it is snid, the nightingale sings his exquisite music to the rose with his breast upon thorn?Clrcla 4 ' TiRtY , t ' >dine \We"Kf\ow -BLOODINEWill Help Xou T6 lUfftin Your Strength and Energy* Report of the Heed PhytloUa fn e beetling New York Hospital on the Cure of Caterrh. 41 A d? *" " a i?w yearn ago we considered that we were doing well if wc cured ten per cent, of the cases of catarrh brought to us, but since the introduction of "Bloodine" into our hospital we cure more than 90 per cent, of all the cases of Catarrh in its various forms brought to us. Catarrh of the Head, Catarrh of the Eves, Catarrh of the Bladder and Uretha, Catarrh of the large intestines, Catarrh of the Larynx, Pelvic Catarrh, Catarrh of the Throat,, and Catarrh of the Stomach are quickly cured with "Bloodine." Itbuildsnew tissues, gives new energy, new life, new blood and strength to any part of the body attacked by the Catarrhal germs.'r Bloodlne is a powerful tonic, nourishing food medicine, composed of valuable tonic stimulants obtained from vegetable drugs. "Bioodine" contains no narcotics or other dangerous drugs which merely deaden pain temporarily, but give no permanent relief or cure the cause of your disease. "Bioodine is a powerful body builder and blood maker; it is the best remedy known to the medical profession to nrich thin, watery blood and supply new, rich red blood to tha whole body. FREE - To prove the wonderful jnsrits of BLOODLNE we will mail a large sample bottle for 10 cents lA til* ver or stamps for postage. oodin'k Cobpokation, Boston, Mass. harmacy. i Ware I ch or Burn I a Lifetime ) ishes used in lowed minute ixed with the c saves to bake "^^?r JO t grease, % ?sia and ^ ly ind conuminum 8istf23^ ime and / <*^e^ ods and I 9k )king Utensils^ found at iy.. flE