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It May B( before the trading public < H as they can now get at Jer I muil^jr AX ^ Heavy Work Shoes and D] L Children can be had at t Money Raising Sale. It r H good to give us a lock. Several hundred pairs I Cut and High Cut Shoes, ^ MK and three pairs of a kind, will pay you to look this b? some wonderful bargains. W crops this bargain pile of w serious and careful attenti I Children's Km I We are closing out a 1 I Suits, in sizes 3 to 12 year f make you go down in your Ten dozen Boys' Knee prices range from 25c up t Ladies' We have quite a lot o beautiful all wool material out and, if you are interes and look them over. We whether you buy or not. interest you. Children's and ^ We are featuring a 1 School Dresses that sho busy mothers. They are 1 Children's Dresses, 3 Misses' Dresses,8 to 1 Ladies, come and see 1 and quality will please yoi A big line of Ladies from $7.50 to $10.00, our s Ricr linp nf CreDe and K 3 Wall Paper, now wort B | 10c the roll Little Red S of School Supplies, Pens, Pen Tablets, 5c; Pencil Ta W Crayons and all kinds of m Supplies all at 5c. It will | School House line of Scho( r We want your trade, f Give us a look. W. E. JE I Reduced Rat A V Second Hs $ | Forty-Eigl * Columbia, 0< (UP 5 Sped 8 Frt Official I \ Queen s Coronation (Skating Carnival Bai (FAIR < $17,000 Unusual Exhibits Free Acts ^ ion South Car i Jubilee at i Many Years I ;an reap such bargains in Shoes I j ikinson's big I I Raising Sale I ress Shoes for Men, Ladies and g )ig bargains at this wonderful g nay do your pocketbook lots of' S ; of Ladies' and Children's Low | vorth from $2.00 to $3.50, two piled out at $1.00 the pair. It irgain pile over for it contains In this country of devastated : Shoes should command your on. >e Suits and Pants ? ot of Children's Two-Piece Knee s old, at prices that will just pocket for the price. Pants, 4 to 12 years in size, ;o$1.29 the pair. Coat Suits f Ladies' Coat Suits on hand in Is that we are anxious to close ted, we will thank you tc call will be pleased to show them We feel confident our prices will tisses' School Dresses ) line of Misses' and Children's uld command the attention of beautifully and stylishly made, ts 6 years of age, only 48c each. a vflarc a era affc and 98c each.' -X JIMXKT V* ^v, T these pretty Dresses. The price 1. ' and Gents' Rain Coats, value ale price only $4.98 the coat. Mantel Paper, 8c and 10c piece, ;h 15c the roll, sale price only chool House Line Pencils, Writing Tablets, Etc. .blets, 5c; Pens and Penholders, Little Red School House School pay you to look the Little Red )1 Supplies over. We need your encouragement. :nkinson|| es to South Carlina's ir vest Jubilee an A iith State Fair ? 23-27,1916 TOWN) acular Parades ;e Acts Daily Opening Monday Masquerade Ball General Dancing ad Concert jROUNDS) | .00 in Premiums Racing Football Mammoth Midway Are Expected olina Harvest td State Fair | A COLUMBIA MAN GAINS 24 POUNDS ON TANLAC. Atlantic Coast Line Yard Foreman Given Remarkable Results. | HEALTH WAS RESTORED Had Been In Very Bad Health Over Two Years and Almost rasi boing ior rour munui9< Though he had been almost constantly under treatment for four months, and intermittently during the previous two years, and though lie had wasted away until he was hardly more than skin and bones, and could hardly walk because of his weakness, G G Anderson, of bOO Whaley St, yard foreman at Columbia for the Atlantic Coast Line railway, gained 24 pounds on seven bottles of Tanlac and was restored to good health by "the master medicine." His statement follows: "I suffered from a greatly run down and weakened coddition. I had been in very bad health for several years, and just before I liegan to take Tanlac I had been contin iously under medical treatment for four months. I was told I had , nervous indigestion. , "For almost two years I had been j so weak I could hardly work. I was just skin and bones, I was in ' such bad health, and I scarcely ever ; ate more than a few bites at a meal. : I was in bad shape. One time, shortly before I began taking Tan- ' lac, I was under treatment continu- , ously for twenty-one weeks and j steadily got worse. I just could not j * i i x t ,i:.i r?_ a. eat, ana wnai iuue iuiu iui^u uunn i hurt me and caused me to feel puff- i ed up and gave me a severe pain in my chest. My nerves were very 1 bad, too. Really, I was just about ( past going at all. "I had read about Tanlac, and 1 finally I lost heart in the treatment 1 I was under and began taking Tanlac. "The relief Tanlac gave me was , as folbws: I took seven bottles and , gained 24 pounds. I picked up right , away and added a lot of strength, j When the seventh bottle was gone I was really a new mar. in health and ^ strength. I did not begin to feel much better until I had taken the second bottle of Tanlac, but then I went up right along in strength and weight. Soon I was eating three big meals a day, so great an improvement did Tanlac make in the I condition of my stomach. ?t . ! - ?rr?i? \r... JL quit UlKUlg I amau 111 iUitjr ami I feel fine now, and I have been a different man ever since Tanlac built me up. "I am glad to recommend Tanlac ( and to give you this endorsement, , for it may help others to find a way ] to regain their health. I sure can , recommend Tanlac highly, for I < do not know of a better remedy, 1 and I have spent many dollars for i many kinds of stomach remedies that did me no good." 1 Tanlac, the master medicine, is sold by Kingstree Drug Co., Kings- j tree; Mallard Lumber Co, Greely- , ville; R P Hinnant, Suttons. ( The biggest value we have ever 1 offered our subscribers is The Rec- ; ord and four standard magazines, all 1 one year, for only $1.50. ' You can get four standard maga?oox ZC\ nonfc oYfrfl hu silica UUC J C C4I JLKJl UV vavi m renewing your subscription to The Record. KiNGSTREE EVIDENCE FOR KiNGSTREE PEOPLE The Statemenls of Klogstree Residents Are Surely More Reliable Thau Those of Utter Strangers. Home testimony is real proof. Public statements of Kingstree people carry real weight. < What a friend or neighbor says * compels respect. The word of one whose home is ' far away invites your doubts. : Here's a Kingstree man's state- j ment. And it's for Kingstree people's benefit. , 2>ucn evidence is cunyim-uiK. That's the kind of proof that backs Doan's Kidney Pills. S A Nettles, ex-hotel prop, Mill St, Kingstree, says: "Several years ago I hurt my back, lifting a heavy piece of iron pipe. After that my ' kidneys acted irregularly and my back pained me severely. I was so sore and lame I could hardly stoop. , The kidney secretions passed too freely at times, and then again they were too scanty. The least cold I i got would settle on my kidneys and make me worse. When a friend recommended Doan's Kidney Fills, I used them as directed and they relieved all symptoms of kindey trouble." Price 50c, at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy?get , Doan's Kidney Pills?the same that Mr Nettles had. Foster-Milburn j Co, Props, Buffalo, N Y. COTTON WILT; HOW T( '' A recently Wilted Plant side by side wi mon Occurrence.?James I At this season of the year cotton wilt Is very active; and. reports from var rious sections of the State indicate i that this troublesome disease is more widespread this season than ever before. Until recently, wilt has been confined to the coastal plain but now It is also being reported from the Piedmont section; so, every farmer in the State should keep a close lookout for the disease and as soon as it is found take steps to prevent its spread. Plants affected with this disease shed their leaves, wilt and die. Upon examination, the wilted plants will be found to be black on the inside. If the i jtem is split open black streaks are found beneath the bark and in the tissues of the stem. This black coloration is very characteristic of wilt. Cotton wilt is caused by a fungus which grows into the roots and stems ; pf the plants from the soil. It gets in the water ducts and vessels of the plants and finally plugs them up; and. In this way. cats oft* the circulation of ; water and plant food, causing the plants to wilt and die. This fungus will live in the soil indefinitely so that soil once infected with it will remain ! ilseased for a long time. The disease is spread from one place to another THE ONLY GOOD WAY | TO KEEP MILK SWEET; I i ! Follow Two Simple Rules and Milk Will Bring the Best Price on the Market When milk or cream is sold from | form /irmhtiAss the farmer has 3Men had losses due to the products becoming sour. Whether the milk or cream is intended for the table, the creamery or the milk market, it must be sweet if it Is to bring the beet price. To keep milk eweet, just two simple things must be carefully looked after: (1) It must be cooled as completely ind as quickly after milking as possible, and (2) absolute cleanliness of pails, cans, and cows must be secured. If this is done, thunder storms will no longer sour the milk. The warm, damp weather which we have lust before thunder storms really does tend to cause milk to sour because it has not been properly cared for. A Milk Pall That Makes It Kaeler. The Top is Two-Thirds Covered and There Are No Seams to Har bor Germs. Tbe souring takes place because lit' tie invisible plants called bacteria get Into the milk In dirt or by lurking in the corners and seams of poorly cleaned pails and cans. The remedy is plain. Keep the bacteria out by using seamless palls and cans and seeing that absolutely no dirt or duet gets into the milk in the stable or anywhere else. Profits from milk will be greatly increased by good supply and proper use of clean hot water and an ice house or good cold spring. ?Clemson College, S. C. The extension, division of Clemson College is well equipped to assist ? a# Ortu + Vi Parnlinfl farm?r? m <%uy ^ai i ui uwuiu vw* vkmm with any problms In livestock that may arise. The college has two men giving all their time to beef cattle and swine extension work, three dairy extension experts and one extension; poultryman. This is one of the larg-1 est and best equipped animal husband-; ry extension forces in the United! States. South Carolina farmers' should take advantage of their oppor-; tunities along this line to get expert help free of cost? The insect fight muet begin in the fall and go right on through the winter, spring and summer. Burn the grass off the terraces as soon as frost falls on it, and by so doing kill thousands f insects. ) PREVENT ITS SPREAD ! '^/ily' v/v* jj !**,+.'. r.+jlzi xtotfA'&.y'ii : \J?| th the healthy resistant plant,?A com sland, South Carolina, August. through plows or Implements of an3 kind that carry soil from the diseasee areas to other parts of the farm. 11 might also be carried In drainage water. Where the disease is found in the fields at this season of the year, pre cautions should be taken to prevenl its spread. Cut out the diseased patchet and do not plow through them, and pre vent drainage water from these patches from getting on to other parte of the farm. It is also a good plar to pull up and destroy the diseased plants where wilt occurs in small patches. When wilt is already prevalent, il can be controlled by the use of dls ease resistant varieties. The Dixie and the Dillon are two varieties which are almost immune to the trouble These varieties are being grown sue eessfully on lands wnicn are so Daaiy diseased that no other varieties will grow on them at all. The United States Department of Agriculure and Clemson College are co-operaing with a number of farmers throughout the State in the production of high grade wilt resistant seed and will be glad to pat those who are suffering from wilt in touch with the people who have such seed for sale. An Old Sweetheart of Mine. As one who cons at evening o'er an album all alone, And muses on the faces of the friends that he has known, bo I turn to the leaves of fancy till, in shadowy design, I find the smiling features of an olc sweetheart of mine. I can see the pink sunbonnet and the little checkered dress C3U- u.kon T firct ViaaoH VlAr ?l"lf one *rvic nucu * itiov twuwvM ?? she answered the caress, With the written declaration thai "as surely as the vine Grew round the stump," she lovec me?that old sweetheart of mine. And again I feel the pressure of hei slender little hand, As we used to talk together of a future we hand planned? When I should be a poet, and with nothing else to do But writejthe tender verses that she sets music to. When we should live together in a little cozy cot Hid in a nest of roses, with a fairj garden spot, Where the vines were ever fruited, anc the weather ever fine, And the birds were ever singing foi that old sweetheart of mine. When I should be her lover forever anc a day, And she my faithful sweetheart till th< golden hair was gray; And we should be so happy that wher either's lips were dumb They would not smile in Heaven til the other's kiss had come. But, ah! my dream is broken by i step upon the stair, And the door is softly opened, and?mj wife is standing there; Yet with eagerness and rapture all mj vision I resign To greet the living presence of that olc sweetheart of mine. ?James Whit comb Riley. An investment of only 50 cents ir our splendid magazine club offer wil xLI, give you and your tamiiy a montmj income of enjoyment and instructiot for a whole year. Let U3 show yoi these magazines. SHE DROVE 1,357 MILES. Rock Hill Teacher Came from Michigan In Her Car. Rock Hill, September 23:?Miss Ina Olesen, supervising teacher of music and drawing in the Rock Hill city schools,who lives in Big Rapids, Mich.drove her little Saxon roadster through from her home to this city, arriving here the morning of the school opening. The distance was 1,357 miles and she made the trip;n 10 days.using 70 gallons of gasoline. She was accompanied by her friend, Miss tiertrude van Antwerp, wno teaches in Indiana. The trip, which carried them through about a dozen States, proved a most enjoyable one, with no mishaps to mar it, and the young ladies arrived in Rock Hill as fresh as daisies. The above speaks well for the little Saxon roadster, which is sold in Kingstree by Mr M F Heller and is very popular among the numerous ; owners in the community. 1 Taxation Plans That Would Help This is the alarming situation as it exists today. Home-ownership is t necessary for the preservation of the i earth's fertility and the development of the highdst rural civilization, and ' for this reason every State should i adopt such policies as will encourage 1 home-ownership and discourage ten1 ancy. This can proably best be done t through the power of taxation, a suggested programme being as fol! lows: 1. Tax* a resident owner's fir3t $1,000 of real estate at only half the ' usual rate. 1 2. See that personal property is [ not taxed at a higher rate than real 1 estate. 3. See that land held out of use ; for speculative purposes is taxed as i much per acre as land held and occupied by industrious resident citi- . zens. 4. To insure publicity, require the publication in the county papers of the rate per acre at which every man's land is assessed,each township, beat or school district being published separately; and compel the tax assessors to fix a uniform standard I - ^ ?1 ~ (a. lirtrra AnrcAO 1 U1 yttiutrs 1U1 taiuc, II vgo, uviovw, farm products, etc. Publicity offers i the best way to remedy present inequalities and discrimination by 1 which the strong and powerful are t favored and the weak robbed.?Progressive Fanner. I No matter which political party is in power, the other side consistently r and vociferously yells "pork" until it gets its own hand in the barrel. Orphanage Day. ' Attention is once more called to , the Orphanage Work day that has been announced for September 30 inst. Appeals have gone out from the various institutions to Sunday- . f school superintendents and all others who are likely to be interested in the 1 project. Emphasis might be given to the fact that Sunday-school and 1 1 ?Af tko /\n1v nnpa cnurcn peopie aic uui uk ?w.j v..v. who could take part in such a de* serving work. The destitute and > helpless orphan should appeal to every individual within our State. > Contributions may be sent to any institution that one may prefer. It 1 certainly looks as if any person might afford to give one day out of the 1 year as Labor day for the orphan children and contribute the results of the day,or the income of the day. j I to their care and training. It is to be hoped that thousands and thou1 sands of our people will co-operate in the Work Day effort. Stop the First Cold. l. A cold does not get well of itself. 1 The process of wearing out a cold ' wears you out, and your cough bej comes serious if neglected. Hacking /Irnin thp pnprtrv and saDthe IWUgua v..~ ~ ? r 1 vitality For 47 years the happy combination of soothing antiseptic . balsams in Dr King's New Discovery lias healecl coughs and relieved congestion. Young and old can testify to the effectiveness of Dr King's New Discovery for coughs and colds. Buy a bottle today of your druggist, oOc. England has arranged for another big loan in Wall street?this time AAA AAA Osvw*/* Put a paiiry $<sov,uuu,vuv. uumc day we'll get reckless and drop over Wall street way ourself. Chamberlain's Cough Hemedy Cures Colds, Croup and"Who:oi?g Cough.