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L We specialize on Old [ Straight 1 0 0-p roof goods. Note our prices on a few leading brands Write for full list* RYES Bankers' Rye ? Gibson 100 proof Sherwood 100 proof Mellwood 100 proof. Stewart 100 proof Highspire 100 proof Bob Burton Tidewater Bourbon Major Comfort Bourbon Bob Snyder CORNS Kelley's Royal Virginia Queen 100 proof Cumberland El Maize North State ...... Old Valley All of the above bra will be shipped in one ga prices. WE PI PHIL. G. KE SPRING Dl Our line of Spring and we are in position 1 test and prettiest fabrii should see our display 1 Dress Goods. 1 Spring ( I . We have on display and complete lines of been shown in this st very latest in style and as low as the suits can Spring We take especial p ing this season. It is i just discription here, sc fore you have made yc glad to show you our li Spring 1 Everyone knows Shoes we sell and that represented in our 1 f nrices are right. Call L ? styles. They are beau S. M THE BIG STORI When in To i Store He >gZWE$ 16 1-2 4Qts. 8Pts. Pts. Bottled $5.00 $5.10 $5.20 Old Private i 4.00 4.10 4.20 Huron River. 3 75 3'f? Weldon (Cor: 3.75 3.85 3.9o 3.75 3.85 3.95 Miv^ellan 3.75 3.85 3.95 3.50 3.60 3.70 Casey s Malt 3.00 3.10 3.20 Rooster Gin .. 2.50 2.60 2.70 Old Hollister 2.25 2.35 2.45 Old Orchard 100 proof . 3.85 3.95 4.05 Old Southar 3.20 3.30 3.40 Brandy 3.00 3.10 3.20 Old Nick Ap 2.60 Special2.50 2 60 2-70 Corn, Brar 2.25 2.35 2.45 or 1 Gal. G nds excepting Bankers' Rye lion Glass Jugs at twenty-five REPAY EXPRESS CI ILLY - - bmhhmam m conns IbUV WWW Dress Goods has arrived to furnish you the very lacs for Spring attire. You before you buy your Spring Coat Suits / one of the most beautiful Coat Suits that has ever jction. They embrace the material and the price is be sold. Millinerv r/ ride in our Millinery Showmpossible for us to give it ; ) invit e you to our store be>ur selection. V/e shall be ne. I Footwear j the high standard of the same high standard is well | 5 showing. Our styles and and see some of the latest ties and will please you. arcus - nu tup mrnpr L Ull I Ilk UUMISL.II wn Make Our adquarters. | II Undressed LumberI always have on hand a lot of ui dressed lumber (board and framing* i I my mill near Kingstree. for sale at t) I lowest price for good material. See < write me for further information, et | F. H. HODGI | Receipt Books, Blank Notes, Mortgages ai I all Legal Blanks in demand, for sale i The Record office. If we have not tl mm | form you wish we can print it cn sho S3 j notice. bbbbbbbbb^ I Send your order to ft K us. We are direct distributors and ship m M promptly. Send your ordertoday with remittance to cover. Satisfaction guaranteed or * i your money refunded. ; 16 |j 1-2 | in Bond 4Qts. 8Pts. Pts. | Stock ?4.75 $4.85 $4.95 : 4.00 4.10 4.20 n) 5.00 5.10 5.20 eous Liquors . 3.50 3.60 3.70 , 3.50 3.60 3.70 Gin 2.75 2.85 2.95 Apple Brandy. 4.50 4.60 4.70 npton Apple 4.00 4.10 4.20 pie 2.25 2.35 2.45 Our famous No. 10 Rye, idy or Gin, 100 proof, 4Qts llass Jug..? $5.00 and those bottled in bond cents less than the 4 quart 1AKU1V9 I 29 North 17th St, I RICHMOND, VA. I I How to Help McLendon Meeting. Smile. Be sweet. Preach the Word. Be Spirit filled. Pray without ceasing. Don't be afraid of the collection basket. Quit your meanness. Cut out all intoxicants. Get right with God. Pray for the evangelist. Prayer for the backslider. Pray for the unconverted. Be a worker and not a shirker. Ask your pastor how you can help. Establish the family altar. Ask God's blessing at meal time. Do What is asked of you without grumbling. Say all the good things you can ( ahnut the meetine. i Stop all criticism of others, re-1 membering that you are not without imperfections. Remember that there will be some good in every service and seek to obtain it. Abstain from all appearance of evil. I Remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy. See that you put no stumbling block in another's way. Acknowledge God in all thy ways and he shall direct thy paths. Attend the services regularly. Try and bring some unconverted person with you. Join the choir and help the singing. Confess your sins before God. Remember that he that covereth his sins shall not prosper, but whoso confesseth and forsaketh them shall find mercy. Yours for a revival, A E Riemer, Pastor. EVER SALIVATED BY I CALOMEL? HORRIBLE! Calomel Is Quicksilver and Acts Like Dynamite on Your Liver. Calomel loses you a day! You know what calomel is. It's mercury; J quicksilver. Calomel is dangerous. | It crashes into sour bile like dynamite, cramping and sickening you. Calomel attacks the bones and should { never be put into your system. t When you feel bilious, sluggish, ;constipated and all knocked out and I believe you need a dose of danger- i ous calomel just remember that your c druggist sells for 50 cents a large ? bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone,which i is entirely vegetable and pleasant to t take and is a perfect substitute for i calomel. It is guaranteed to start c - your liver without stirring you up i inside, and cannot salivate. 1 Don't take calomel! It makes you 1 sick the next day; it loses you a day's c it work. Dodson's Liver Tone straight- i ie ens you right up and you feel great. 3r Give it to the children because it is perfectly harmless and doesn't gripe, j nn-z rrr*. a. r -.rmTmn? - IjUjhijS oo iiUUAirrri . 5 cr 6 doses 666 will break any case of Chills & Fever, Cold: i ** Sz LaGrippe; it acts on the liver ' ^ better than Calomel and does ' i 'rloe or sicken. Price 25c. Stomach T CI Most stomach C3 ? V ? U. ease3- The stc A Tired out. T ^^rtonlc is what is needed. A few ^will furnish natural strength. Tha do for you. It will start the stoma the stomach will take care of itsel PE-RU Good the Yeai Always Ready-to-Take er time a remedy is needed for a w< whatever. The old, well-tried rem pose for such cases, a *e a great de hand prescription. Peruna is the have relied upon for a great many take, composed of pure drugs, of Not an experiment. Peruna is a 8 forty years of splendid history beh no risk. You know what you are i 1 Colds 1 UV should be "nipped in the [Kj fl/ bud", for if allowed to run fL NTV unchecked, serious results 1 J may follow. Numerous v\ij cases of consumption, pneu- j|j monia, and other fatal dis- 2 eases, can be traced back to a cold. At the first sign of a g cold, protect yourself by I thoroughly cleansing your ^ ! system with a few doses of ij THEDFORD'S BLACK- j DRAUGHT ( ! the old reliable, vegetable R liver powder. * Mr. Chas. A. Ragland, o< ? Madison Heights. Va., says: ill "I have been using Thed- 111 * J'- DU.I. ft ...x.lil |n> Iff rm| ioru s oidLK-Lyiaugm i w i ymyr 11 stomach troubles, indiges- IV ' W tion. and colds, and find it to I be the very best medicine I /V Jl\ ever used. It makes an old 1|t \T\ man feel like a young one." V L>| Insist on Thedford's, the D jnJ original and genuine. E-67 K TO OPPOSE RAGSDALE. larllngton Lawyer after Scalp of Sixth District Member. The announcement was made in Columbia last week by Hon Julius S ilclnnis, a member of the Darlingon bar and one of the Darlington :ounty delegation in the State Legslature.that he would enter the race 'or Congress this summer against J N Ragsdale, incumbent,whose home s in Florence. iMr Melnnis made the statement to :he representative of The Times that te had canvassed a considerable por.ion of the district and had received lattering assurancesof support from i great number of strong men ;hroughout the district. He says hat there is much dissatisfaction vith the present occupant of the ofice from numerous sources and he jelieves that the people want a thange. Mr Melnnis states that vhat it takes to give Mr Ragsdale a lard fight to retain his seat he has it uid will proceed to deliver it when ;he campaign opens next July. Mr Melnnis is a graduate of the State University Law Department )f June, 1915, and leu the county in ;he race for the Legislature in 1914. Vloaewe Times. Colds Quickly Relieved. Many people cough and cough? nun the beginning of fall right (trough to spring. Others get cold ifter cold. Take Dr King's New Discovery and you will get almost mmediate relief. It checks your told, stops the racking, rasping, tissue-tearing cough, heals the inflantn.atinn. soothes the raw tubes. Easy ;o take, antiseptic and healing. Get i 50c bottle of I)r King's New Dis overy and keep it in the house. "It s certainly a great medicine and I ceep a lx?ttle of it continually on land," writes W C Jesseman, Fran;onia, N H. Money hack if not satsfied, but it nearly always helps. When a man gets through waiting ind hoping the undertaker calls. Get tbe Best. A full line of pure fresh Groceries ilways on hand. Send us an order, rry our pure Cane Syrup. There's lone quite so good. 3-16-2t People's Mercantile Co. rouble (15V troubles are not dis- #1 j j \ V\ unach Is simply weak, if I * vk he right kind of a I ' meals, well digested, t Is what a tonic will j ch going right. Then j? na yt 'Round M e Is no use of writing w prescription every >ak stomach. No use edies, put up on pur- ^ ^ ai better than an off remedy that people years. It Is ready to 1 uniform strength and composition. I lubstantial, household remedy, with I lnd It In buying Peruna you take K getting. ? THE INSURANCE FIGHT. McMaster and McLanrln Getting to tbe Bottom of Things. Insurance Commissioner McMaster j and Warehouse Commissioner Mcj Laurin are in New York looking in| to the insurance situation, and they are working in harmony to arrange ' the differences with the companies that have withdrawn from the State. The New York Journal of ComI f i . n a i l_if_i merce or last oacuraay puunsnes au interview with an unnamed iusurance magnate, who is quoted as saying that it is not desirable for the insurance people to compromise the South Carolina situation until the officials down this way have been made to sweat awhile and learn who is boss. This idea is that if the business interests of the State are deprived of fire protection to sufficient extent they will bring sufficient pressure on the Governor and Legislature to make them "eat out of the hands" of the insurance magnates. The Enquirer has information that certain large financial interests of Columbia and other parts of the State are urging the New York fire companies not to compromise with Messrs McLaurin and McMaster; but to hold them off until the people feel the pressure. Positive evidence has recently been secured to that effect, and it is said that some of it is in such shape that it can be used in court if necessary. The Enquirer has names of the traitors but is not jTet authorized to make these names public. One expression at the South Carolina end i3 like this: "All we have to do is to stand pat, and we can force the South Carolina Legislature to meet in extra session ! and allow us to come back on our i own terms." A private letter from New York make this statement: "Most of the I big stock insurance companies are owned in New England, and most of their business is done in the South and West. New England people a? q rnlo rlo nnf insure in their own stock companies, but in their mutual companies because they are cheaper." There is.a printed circular from a I prominent South Carolinian being circulated among: New York bank: ers, urging: co-operation with the insurance companies against South I Carolina. One of the arguments being used with the insurance companies is that j Virginia is contemplating actior |simi!ar to that of South Carolina : and that it is necessary to make an j example of South Carolina so as tc make Virginia more careful.? Yorl Enquirer. For Your Child's Cough. If you child has a cold, nose run? or coughs much get a small bottle of I)r Bell's Pine-Tar-Honey. It's a pleasant pine-tar-honey syrup, just what the children like and also just the medicine to soothe the cough and check the com. Aiier rasing, children stop fretting, sleep good and are soon entirely well. Insist on Dr Bell's Pine-Tar-Honey. 2oc, at your druggist. A dead sure thing is often dead enough to interest an undertaker. Ad Ideal Spring Laxative. A good and time tried remedy is Dr King's New Life Pills. The first dose will move the sluggish bowels, stimulate the liver and clear the system of waste and blood impurities. You owe it to yourself to clear the system of body poisons, accumulated during the winter. Dr King's NewLife Pills will do it. 2>c, at your druggist. OUTSIDE AID ] NOT NEEDED. 1 BRAVE AUGUSTA DECLARES SHE CAN PROVIDE FOR VICTIMS OF THE DREADFUL FIRE. Augusta, Ga, March 24:?Though ' many tenders of financial aid from 1 outside points have been received by the authorities here.it was the sense of the meeting of citizens and central relief committee held here this morning that, as far as possible, Augusta would take care of her own destitute families. The fund which was started at a meeting held yesterday morning has already grown considerably, and the relief committee has already begun the work of looking after the needs of those who were penniless and without clothing save what they had on when the fire occurred. Augusta is greatly indebted to the , outside cities that sent aid in the way of fire equipment. The Columbia department, so far as the apparatus was concerned, *as of little use on account of the fact that the hose , would not fit the fire plugs here. The firemen, however, did valuable service. The city,through its businessmen, is determined that a bigger, better and more beautiful Augusta shall , rise from the mass of smouldering , ruins which now marks the path of , the disastrous fire of Wednesday night. The area from Green street ( LO Ifltr rivt'I liuiii uaa uccu icn vvilii , only partly standing walls and chim, neys to mark the spots where for, merly stood handsome and imposing , residences and business structures. In addition to these buildings, which included a number of the largest in the city, something like 40,000 bale3 of cotton were burned, and the contents of a great number of the build< ings went up in smoke. Many of those who stood and watched the fire , in the business section later hurried , on to their homes to find them all ablaze. They were forced to work , hurriedly to save a change of cloth, ing and a little household furniture. The streets were converted into little camps, where those who had lost I their homes and possessions jealously , guarded what little was left them in , the way of worldly belongings. While the rich of the city were ; hard hit by the flames, the poor and the negroes are in a destitute condi tion and it will be among these that t the relief committee will have most ! of its work to do. Wednesday night was one of horror and destruction. The fire, fanned by a fifty-mile gale, devoured all in its . path. The property loss will amount . high into the millions, and it will be f some time before the city will again i sec all of the burned district rebuilt, j The business men, however, are de, termined to rebuild their city, and I many of them have already under ' consideration plans for modern structures to rise where their burned > | buildings once stood. .' The fire attracted hundreds of . people from all parts of Georgia and i South Carolina. They came on the trains and in automobiles to view I the scene of the ruins. They drove ; through the section of thecity where (' lay the smouldering ruins of forty t city blocks. The fire lasted from i about 6 o'clock in the evening until , shortly after#? o'clock in the morn ing. 1 Three companies of militia were ordered out to prevent looting and i did good work. The chimneys left standing and the tottering walls in many sections ' of the city were dynamited during this morning. Hank Foolishness. . You occasionally see it stated that colds do not result from cold weather. That is rank foolishness. Were j it true colds would be as prevalent j in midsummer as in midwinter, i The microbe that causes colds flourj ishes in damp, cold weather. To ! get rid of a cold take Chamberlain's J Cough Remedy. It is effectual and is highly recommended by people ' who have used it for many years as oceasson required, and know its real !vo!no Ol.tninnlilp pvwwIiwo You never miss the water till the , well runs dry?especially if you happen to be in a prohibition territory. j The man who is afraid of work deserves to be scared to death. e>A f,