University of South Carolina Libraries
Your Hair Contrary? j I^Jt inclined to run away? Doil^ punish it with a cruel brush af.d comb! Feed it, nourich ?r It u irh Avfr'c Hairf VM *} ? * V VT J w* w mmwmrnm Vigor, new improved formula. Then your hair will remain ar home, on your head, where it belongs. An elegant dressing. Keeps the scalp healthy. Does not change the color of the hair. Formal* with e*ch bottle JW Show it to your /IUPTQ ?' IM m Atk him about it, _ thau do a8 ho aaja We certainly believe this, or we would not say so. Ayer's Hair Vigor, as now made from our new improved formula, is a great preparation for the hair and j vScalp. Stops falling bair. Cures dan- | ' druff. Promotes the growth of hair. j Med* Wy tteJ. C. 4y?r Co., Lowell, Heee,? OUR CLUBBING RATES. ; We offer cheap clubbing rates with a number of popular newspapers and periodicals. Head carefully the following list and select the one or more that you fancy and 1 , we shall be pleased to send in yoor order. Tbese rates are of coarse all I cash in advance, which means that, both The Kecord and the paper ordered most be paid for, not 1, 2. 3,' i 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, but twelve | months ahead. Below is the list of oar best clubbing offers. The Kecord and News & Courier (Semi-weekly,) $1.60. The Record and Home & Farm; (twice a month,) $1.35. The Record and New York World (3 times a week,) $1.75. The Record and Atlanta Constitution (3 times a week) $1 85. The Record and Atlanta Constitution (weekly $1.50. The Record and Bryan's Commoner, $1.75. The Record hoc CoemopoHton Magaziue $1.75. Th> Record and Youth's Companion.(New Subscribers) $2.50. The Record Semi-Weekly State, $2.50. The Record and Lipjkoootfs Magazine 1 year each $2.75. The R boo id and * National Magazine, 1 year each, $1 <6$. N. B. We do not club wsth any daily papers. The first i?6ue you reoeiveof tbe pa^er or periodical is evidence that tbe money far same has been forwarded by ns. We are Dot responsible after that. THE COUNTY RECORD Kititrw, S. C ' Kmgatrce Lodge J|e|1S Knights of Pythias j Secular ConventioM Every . tAmm aaa. Visiting brethren always welcome. Castle Hall 3rd story Gourdm BmWing. F. W FA IHEY, C. C. THOR &r CUTCHEN, K. E. A s. THE LARGEST WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DRY GOODS AVD CARPET HOUSE IV THE SOUTH. NEW SP] OUR STORES ARI OUR READY-TOARE THE MOST STYLISH ivtau.. r*.? ?; .ltauics uiajh ^uils may Panamas, Voiles, Black and Colored from $18.00 to $30.00. Worsted suit Ladies' Shirt Waist suits in silk-la $6.00 to $35.00 per su it. Ladies' Silk Jumper suits, "The L per suit. Ladies' Princess suits (also new) i range from $12.00 to $35.00 per suit. LADIES 30 Styles here to every one to be i ^JThen you intend buying a waistsend us your measure , state what pi he prettiest and chea pest waist yoi We make 1 spd;:a!ty of I i:i 2 r. i 1; 111 J p'l Agents for Dr. Jage Patterns, 10, and 15c. R. \ . IF YOU WANT A BUGGY ! WHY NOT BUY THE i Best on the Market? : WE SELL THEM?THE TYSON & JONES. WE H.-aNDLE A NUMBER OF OTHER STAND! ARD MAKES, ALSO WAGONS, HARNESS, LAP ROBES, HORSE BLANKETS, ETC., all the best on the market, I ' ==^= F. C. Thomas, SZija.g:stifee, S. C. P. P. F?. \ (Prickly Ask, Poke Root asd Potssslon.) MAKES POSITIVE CURES OF ALL FORMS AND STAfFS OF Ry^hH liilli f. y.P. u ? ho wit! r?jr?it fl??b and rtrenfth. did eomMaaRoa, aad ?>r?iombe R witk, Wa?e<d?t>er*jr >ao all dwoaaBe rwaMaff (ml MtiRMtln far the ewe* S all 'ram o^enannf the iriwa ?*? corrd by ferM aad <Uf? of Primary, OotemAary tim un of P. P. P. aad TorMary yphilie, Syphilitic Muu- I?<ei ahooe eyrteme a?a yoiaowd aad matkm, Am Mai to I Clean asd Soro*, artmae blood it id an tBipMecnBdiilfa dao (Haadatar SaaBiafft, Khwtt?. Kid- OoMrneiraal trrejruUntte, *r? prrullaily My OoaptaUAh, Old CkroakTAeanthat bemefliod by the woBdeefn) lite and SYPHILIS) ? SCROFULA k*?ewM? afi > ! !* Ottarrh, ftkis T ,|,, cft_iu?*j blood ctokMtag prar?**> ? P. P. P., CwpUita, BffOT* Mm, TMtat. Prickly iA, Pfctai CtxxA ?nd P.l.wl?. taldkMi. 8aM by ?J1 t>i ?ihii. j r. p. *. < ? iw? *??? ?4 u ^w<r Iim~nm until Midi By tk? F. V. LtrPMAW, Fr?prt?A??. ^npW;. ^ ?N?Nkul StWDMtl. G?. Mk, n4 M tatty *T T. P. P-, aad RHEUMATISM f/Sank of Williamsburg, KINGSTREE, S. C Capital StocQr - - $40,000. Chas, W< Stoti, Pres. ?. C. Epps, Cashier, F? Rhem, V, Pres. WE do business on business principles. WE extend every consideration consistent with safe and sound banking. WE pay focr per cent on deposits in Savings Department, payable quarterly. WE^respectfnlly solicit your business- Large or small it will receive our best attention. Board Of Directors. Ckms, ii/. JiW/, 1t/. 7j. lifilJcins, tP S. Sourdin, / tyexsen, Jf. TfyeJ^adde*, <&. Zftkem, TJ. Jf. ZBiakeieg, C. Srmkmm. i Louis Cohen & Co. 232 AND234- ING STREET, CHARLESTON, S. C, The Hmse that gtre* y?a "SATISFACTION" ar year Boaey hack. RING AND SUMMER 3 FILLED TO OTEKFLOWIYC WITH THE BEST OF THE MARKETS WEAR GARMENTS SILKS AND DR TO BE FOUND ANYWHERE. The newest weaves and colorings. le of Fancy Plaids and Miaturea- #l Taffeta Silks. Price of silk suits range at^ ' *' ??- '',i9 , J* a from $10.00 to $30.00. ^ancy 1b.lk Su,t.ngs b?ut,M colon* 19 inch Changeable Taffeta Silk at o0c wn, linen and lingerie. Priced from gg jncjj Changeable Taffeta Silk at $11 Bose Bav Taffeta Silk at 50c per yard itest." Priced from $14.00 to $30.00 *7 inch Rajah Silk at 75c per yard. Black Taffeta Silk, 36 inches wide, at nade of lingerie, lawn and silk. Prices yard. DRESS G ' WAISTS j Large assortment of all the new plaids yard. ound in any other house in the South. mor mnt of sll thf p|ain ud -be it Madras, Lawn, Linen or Silk, yard. ice you want to pay and we'll send you We carry the largest assortment of &1 i ever purchased. for Dress and Mourning. Write for sanr -adies ' Muslin Underwear; Boys' and Girls' Clothing; Gei olstery Goods. r's celebrated Sanitary and Woolen Under-Wear and . .. - * Thousands of people are daily! suffering with kidney and bladder j tronblee?dangerous ailments that should be checked promptly DeWitt's Kidnev and Bladder Pills are the best remedy for backache, weak kidneys, inflammation of the, bladder. Th-ir action is prompt I an I sure. A week's treatmtnt for j 25c. Sold by W L Wallace, M P. ?. - Notice of Sale and PartitionSTATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, / County of Williamsburg i Court of ? ommon Pleas. Mattie L Fulmore. Piaintiff. against Eleida V Fulmore, Defendant. Pursuant to an o der of this Court issued in the above entitled case, dated the 2 th day of Mareh, 1907, I will sell at public auction for partition between the plaintiff and defendant, before the Court House door in Kingstree on the first Monday in August. 1907, (the same being the 5th day of the month,)during the legal hours ol' sale, to the highest bidder, for cash, the following described lot of land, to wit:- All that certain pice, parcel or lot of land situate in the town of Lake City, State and pounty aforesaid, containing three quarters (S-4) of an acre, more or less, bounded as follows: North by a ditch running from the N. E. R. Road to the public road leading from Lake City to Kingstree, on the East by the public road. West by the N. E. R Road and South by lot ?>f Mrs 0 E Singletary . Purchaser to pay for papers. H 0 0RITTON, Clerk of the >urt of Common Pleas for Williamsburg county. July, 9 1907. e-ll-St CAMP NO- 22. f!BOri_A IK MEIT1X.B 1 At and .Irfl MondSk\ PHILIP STOLL, 9 2712m. Con Com. 1 . Registration Notice. Theoftk* oi the Supervisor of Reg titration will be opened on the first Mondav in every month for the purpose of the registering of any person who is qualified as follows: Who shall have been a resident of the State for two years, and of the county one year, and <>f the polling precinct in which the elector offers to rote four months before the day of election, and shall have paid, six months before, any poll tax then dae and payable, and who can both read and write any section of the constitution of 1896 submitted to him by the Supervisors of Registration, or who can show that he owns, and has paid all taxes collectable on during the present year, pioperty in this State assessed at three hundred dollars or * v \i i r r Iliiurv. ? I. JtlATILfli^ <,l?rk of Board. Tornado Tips. There are no localities exempt from Tornadoes. T hey know neither fear nor favor. The number of destructive windstorms increase each year. " We aint a'goin to have no tori\ado." That's what the other fellow said. Now he's living in a tent. Don't delay today and wish tomorrow. The wise man insures. The foolish man does not. Are you wise? D, E, Motley & Co., Agents, Lake City, - - S. C. 6-27-Jms. ORDERS FROM MER<HA\TS FILLED WITH A (.TARAMEE OF ~ ,.s '* * '* STOCKS. OF THE WORLD. ESS GOODS. : colorings for Waists and Suits, \T yard. js at 49c per yard, per yard. K) per yard. 84c, 1 00, 1 2^, 1 50 up to 2 50 per OODS. i and fancies from 18c to $1 50 per f fancy weaves from 25c to $2 50 per I the best makes of Black Goods iples. nts hurnishings; Carpets, I Ladies' Home JournaP t Barncto Won tho Bet. There la a legend of an amusing ' competition in connection with a discussion regarding^ the financial value ] of literary genius. Barney Barnato, . who was a genius, but not literary. J began to chaff some financial journalists. "Yon bloomin' fellers don't know nothln' about literature. I'll back myself to write a little piece 1 - - i 1 against any or yer. The challenge was laughingly ac- \ ] cepted. and a referee appointed. The i papers were thrown Into a hat. and i1 the referee, after analyzing them, said: 1 "Gentlemen. I am bound to say |that ] the palm must be awarded to Mr. , Barnato. His piece Ls terse, faultless 1 In form, Irreproachable In matter. . You yourselves shall Judge." And he j read out the following essay: I promise to pay to Mr. X. the sum of ?100 for his kindness In acting as referee | 1 in this Interesting competition. . j. B. I. BARNATO. 1 / The award was unanimously con- 1 firmed by the competitors, and the J j check was duly bocored.?London j Telegraph. t Delicately Put. "A footman." wild a banker, "called his master t:p by telephone and said: " 'I regret to Inform you, sir, that your bouse is on fire and fast burning I ( down.' " 'Oh.' cried the master, 'what a terrible misfortune! But n:y wife?Is she safe?" " 'Quite safe. sir. She got out among the first.' " 'Ar?* my daughters?are they all right?' " 'AH right, sir. They's with their mother.' "There was a pause. Then: " 'And what about my motber-in-law. James?" " That, sir,' said the footman suavely, 'was what I wished to speak to you about, sir, particularly. Your motherin-law 19 lyln* asleep In the third story back, and kaowin' your regard for her comfort, sir. 1 wasn't sure whether 1 ought to disturb her or not, sir.'"? Los Angeles Times. Which Is Your Shortest Hour? "W Dai IB juur RUUi urn uvu< ui Uiv day?' asked a business man of an acquaintance. "Don't say you have none. You have, although you may not know It Everybody has. Of course, reckoned by actual measurement each hour is composed of sixty minutes, yet notwithstanding that chronological exactness the hours vary In length. Ify shortest hour Is from 2 to 3 o'clock In the afternoon. I find upon Inquiry that this is the fleetest period for many people. In my case so swiftly do those sixty minutes'hurry by that I try to crowd into them as many ol the disagreeable, yet inevitable, things of life as I possibly can. If 1 have to Interview a bore, 1 see him then; if 1 have to visit the dentist, I do It then. That hour la bound to slip sway quickly, no matter what happens; therefore the agony of disagreeable scenes seems of shorter duration."? New York Sun. > Naked Truth. An encounter of wits once took place between the late Eugene Field and a New York woman. It was at dinner, and the woman was in evening dress, which was rather decollete. After a skirmish between toe two relative to I the respective merits of a well known author it would seem that Field came j off second best. "Oh, Mr. Field." exclaimed the wo- j man exultantly, "you must admit that jon are fairly beaten at your own gamer Field bowed politely afcd, with a smile, promptly rejoined. "At any rate, Mlaa Blank. 1 bare one consolation? yon can't laugh at me In yoar sleeve." ?Llpplncott'a. Legend ef the Violet. A Latin poem of the sixteenth century has a pretty legend of a violet that lb mythological days, was a i maiden called Ianthls, one of Diana's nymphs. She attracted the attention of Apollo, whose admiration she did not return, and. flying from his pursuit she implored Diana to destroy the beauty which occasioned her so much trouble. Diana granted her request and turned her face to a dull purple. IsatWflf "Tl <j (fever, soon regretted the loss of her beauty and was pining away with grief, when the goddess had pity on her and changed her Into a flower, which still shrinks from Apollo (the sunl and bides her modest head in the shade! At Regular Rates. Miss Matilda Owens bung on the arm of the editor of the Laneville Bu-1 gle, to whom she had been engaged , tor uree yeira, ana enaeavureu tu iuru his gaze toward the sky. "Just notice the moon, William!" she said In a melting voice. "At the nsoal rates, Matilda, I shall be happy to do so," be replied.? Tooth's Companion. i Toe Strenuous. "My son tells me you've discharged him," said the office boy's mother, "and I think tbafs strange. Yon advertised for a strong boy, and he's certainly"? "He's too strong, madam," Interrupted the employer. "In the single day be was here he broke all the rales of this office and some of the furniture."?Catholic Standard and Times. Enduranos. EJtbeJ?How long can a human being Hvs without food? Jack?I don't know about human beings, but I know posts who hart been writing for years.?Judge. It has beoome necessary to modify the old aaytng, "Life la what ws make ' 14" life Is what ws make tm it?Los . Angelas Times. I . ,V9 Ma|. Hemphill tor Senator. Three men are recognized leaders beyond others in the press of the South. Tbey are Henry Watterson of the Louisville Courier-Journal, Clark Howell of the Atlanta Constitution, and James (J. Hemphill of the Charleston News and Courier. Col. Watterson has never beld political office but has \ rather declined all propositions involving public station. Mr. Howell has been among the leading politicians and statesmen of Georgia both as editor of the newspaper first made famous by the unrivaled brilliancy of the late Henry Grady and as member of the legislature and presiding officer in turn in both branches of that body, and also as Lieutenant uovernor. Major Hemph li has followed until this time the example of Col. Watterson in abstaining from public office, but his friends have taken the business in their own hands and are making great progress in a campaign in his behalf for the seat in the United States Senate now held by Senator Latimer, whose term expires with the present congress in 1909. Of his eminent ftness for that great office there is no room for doubt His work Bj for twenty years as the directing mind and chief editorial writer of the News and Courier has been of so admirable a character in breadth of view, soundness of argument from his premises, and energy of statement, as to have made him the * ->$8 most influential man jn his state for the welfare of South Carolina. Major Hemphill nas natuie s gift of a superb personal presence and that rare finish of manner which has been characteristic for generations of the finest type of the Southern gentleman. He has added to the collegiate training of his youth the further <* advantages of continual contact with public men and close acquaintance with public affairs, i He has acquired the wisdom of | years while his eye :!s not dimmed nor his natural forct abated. He will not resort Ut% the pitchfork as a weapon Offense against the President tc> the lasting injury of the Sttaute* < and her loss of influence whi'cfi really belongs to her though represented by a senator opposed in politics to the nation ai calvuuvc. i V .-JH Most of the public business is done with small regard for political points. Reasonable men in the senate can do- well for their States though not of the majority on party questions. If Major Hemphill is elected he will till the position so ably and yet with such urbanity of temper and manner as to repeat the proud days of the Palmetto State and regain for it that de? gree of respect and power which the old commonwealth has just- ' ly enjoyed for generations;? ?J Buffalo Evening News ? Sheriff1 s Sale. State of South Carolina, > County of Williamsburg.) Edmonds T. BrownCompany, Plaintiffs, against W\ P. Cooper, trading as Cades Supply Company, Defendant. By virtue of an execution to me directed and issued out of the court of Magistrate J. H. V. Gaskins in the above entitled suit of Edward Brown Company, Plaintiff, against W. P. Cooper, trading as Cadesf Supply Com pany, Defendant, and dated July 15th. 1907, I have levied upon and will iell at public auction at the store house of the Cades Supply ( ompany, at Cades, S. C., on Monday, August 5th, within the legal hours of sale, to the highest bidder, for cash, all the stock of goods, wares and merchandise belonging to the said Cades Supply Company, or so much therof as may be necessary to satisfy the judgment, Amounting to the sum of one hundred dollars in said suit, and costs, the said stock of goods, wares and merchandise consisting of hats, caps, umbrellas, shoes, hardware, medicines, groceries, notions, store fixtures, etc. GEORGE J. GRAHAM, Sheriff of Williamsburg County. July 17th, 1907. KodnlPor Indigestion. * Relieves soar stranarh, palpitation of the heart Digests what you eat . . _j