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* *, [iszlApe a b rWsi j your ! r jfljL/ your taste Tke Lnsiaiiiie Gauutei: go & It, oftor aoing 1/m oontmd gG a/? am, jou ?r? not astiafied rnfllc in o very mpeof, jour ?rocor wiU rofmd yoor monoy. Ask The Reily?Taylor C< J8888 IScott-Loga Wholesale Provision Meat, Lard, Flour, Rice, thing wanted in Bu at lowest p< Cotton Seed A | Lorn a j|! W. T. Wiikins' old stand ||i Kingstree, TAKE NO ALCOHOL PREVENTS Colds, La Grippe, Rheumatism f A pleasant but * eftectlve emulsion, which - rebuilds the tissues, revives the system, adds strength and stimulates the nervous system. It has absolutely no alcohol, and Is in every sense a tonic. mt #\n or o ROTTI.E. ? A^aa u <v A ? _ _. . Ask Your Druggist M?nttfadur?d Sol?ly by The Ferrol Company Mt-lSt Colombia. S. C. THE TNRICE-A-WEEK EDITION OF THE HEW YORK WORLD, Practically a Dally at Die Price o! a Weekly. Ho Other Newspaper Id the Verld Gives so Hich at se low Price. The value and need of a newspaper ir the household was never greater thai at the present time. The great war ii b Europe is now half-way into its third r year, and, whether peace be at hand oi vet be far off, it and the events to follow it are sure to be absorbing interest for many a month to come. These are world-shaking affairs, in which the United States, willing or unwiiling. is compelled to take a part Nc intelligent person can ignore sucn issues. The Thnce-a-Week World's regulai subscription price is only $1.00 per year, k and this pays for 156 papers. We offei r this unequalled newspaper and The t County Record together for one yeai I for $1.85. | The regular subscription price of tlu l two papers is $'2.00 Remember The Dead Monuments a o: every style and desciptrion a lowest prices. Satisfaction guar anteed. See S C Anderson Kingstree, SC. 3 8 I oTbp-aff Fine Meal rhat could be better than a (or two) of good, old ? ? ? ? anne? The aroma will tiCKie nose; the taste will tickle palate; the price will please purse; and all will live hapever after. Luzianne tastes he way down. If it doesn't ' better and go twice as far ny other coffee at the price, et your money back. NOW t a can of Luzianne and e it do what we say. Do that for profit-sharing catalog. MEcoffee j >mpany, .New Orleans J nComDanvl i Grocers 1 Merchants I Grits or any and every- ? Ik can be gotten here ? >ssible prices. 5 deal and Hulls p nd Hay L Near the Depot, ig South Carolina | <FW?W* W-vw? -v,* V Legal Advertisements. ? Citation Notice. THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA. COUNTY OF WILLIAMSBURG, By P M BrockjiiU'ii, Esq, Probate Judge. Whereas.Sarah Jane Hanna made suit to me to grant J S Fulmore Letters of Administration of the Estate and effects of Cyrus Hanna. These are, therefore, to cite and ad! monish, all and singular, the kindred j and creditors of the said Cyrus Hanna, j deceased, that they be and appear before me in the Court of Probate, to be held at Kingstree, S C, on the 17th day of March next after publication hereof, at 11 o'clock in the forenoon, j 10 show cause, if any they have, why ! the said administration should not be i granted. Given under my hand this 3rd day of March. Anno Domini, 1917. P M Brockixton, 3-8-21. Probate Judge. Estate Notice. I The creditors of the estate of W S J Flowers,deceased,are hereby notified to render to the undersigned, at Trio. S C, or to LeRoy Lee,his attorney, at Kingstree. S C, an account of their demands, duly attested, and all persons indebted , to said estate are notified to make payment to the undersigned. yj j Flowers I Administrator of the Estate of W S J Flowers. Deceased. 3-8-3tp Notice of Final Discharge. t Notice is hereby given, that the un[ demurred as executor of the last Will and Testament of Mary A Yarborough, . deceased, will apply to the Judge of ; Probate of Williamsburg county, at his office ki Kingstree, S C, at twelve m., on the?>th day of March, 1917, for his . final discharge as executor of said last > Will aac Testament 2-22-5t Clinton J Yarborough, Execctor of Last Will and TesUment , of Mar> A Yarborough, deceased. :j Eaecutors' Notice. All pesons having claims against the i estate ol S R Cockfield, deceased, will present he same, duly attested, to the ; undersigied or to their attorney, LeRoy Lee, of lingstree, S C, and all persons [ indebteddo said estate will make pay. ment to he undersigned as the duly qualified executrix and executors of said estab, at Johnsonville, S C. Ellen Nixon Cockfield ' Rl Cockfield, 3 W Dickson, Executrx and Executors of Estate of S R Corkfield, deceased. 3-l-3t | __________ Admiiistrator's Notice I Notice i hereby given that all persons i having clsms against rhe estate of J W Grahat, deceased, will present the f I same duly attested to the undersigned t; for allowsice, and all persons indebted to said estte are requested to settle the "' same. W G Graham, ? Administrator, \ 2-^2-5t Leo, S C i * Notice of Sale. THE STATU! OF SOUTH CAROLINA,', COUNTY OF WILLIAMSBURG. Court of Common Pleas. O w Stoll, Plaintiff, against Duke Tisdale, John Tisdale, Susannah,] Tisdale. Mary Tisdale, Joe McBride, I t Viola Cooper, Robert Tisdale, Joseph ; McBride. Alex McBride, Lula Mc-,| Bride, and Isaiah McBride, Defend-! ants. Notice is hereby given, that under | and by virtue of a decree for forclosure i and sale, made by his Honor, Judge R !' tit u : I ty lYieimiuuger, picrsiuiug juu^c, ioouvu out of tf.e court of common please, for ( Williamsburg county, in the State aforesaid, in the above entitled action, on 1 the 27th day of February, 1917,1 will sell at public auction, in front of the court | house, at Kingstree. South Carolina. , during the legal hours for sales on Mon- ' day, April 2, 1917, the following described real estate: "All that certain piece, parcel or tract of land, lying, being and situate in the county of Williamsburg, State of , South Carolina, containing sixty-three ' (63) acres, be the same more or less, ! and bounded as follows to wit: 1 On the North by lands of Nelson Dennes; on the East by lands of Derry Tis- ( dale and Ben McClary; on the South by 1 lands of Sam Washington, and the West i by lands of Jacob Tisdale." II 0 Britton, Clerk of Court for Williamsburg County, South Carolina. 3-14-3t. 1 Executor's Notice. All persons having claims against the . estate of the late Will McClary. also , known as William Lesesne and William McClary, will please file the same, duly 1 verified, with the undersigned or with i Kelley & Hinds, his attorneys, and all persons indebted to said estate are nereby notified to make payment of same to the undersigned or to his said attorneys. Samuel McClary, Executor of the Last Will and Testament of Will McClary, also known as William Lesesne and William McClary. deceased. 3-8-3t THE BEST Tobacco Transplanter. I If you want to be positively sure that you will get the 5 machine that will do your 1 work perfectly, there is just , and only one transplanter to | buy, and that is the Original , 11 r\ T % T\ I . fuller & Jonnson semis, i made by the Madison Plow Co, Maaison,Wis. It has revolutionized tobacco setting, and by its use you get a bet- : ter quality and a better yield Carter Distributor Co., 1 ELLIOT, South Carolina! 3-15-4t I or^^s^s! If you need Glasses, come . to me. Single and double Innnnn /inma/tfItt of 1 rkTTT 1CHOCO llbbCU ab 1VT?est prices. Broken lenses du- < plicated* i T. E. DAGGETT, Jeweler, Registration Notice. The office of the Supervisor of Registration will be open on the 1st Monday in each month for the purpose of registering any person who is qualified as follows: Who shall have been a resident o: the State for two years, and of the coanty one year, and of the polling precinct in which the elector offers to vote four months before the day of election, and shall have paid, six months before, any poll tax then due 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 collectible on during the present year, property in this State assessed at three hundred dollars or R r Pf ADVOAXT UJUIC* U AJ viiAitncviii r lerfc of Board. ^ Undressed Lumber. I always have on hand a lot of undressed lumber (board and framing) at my mill near Kingstree, for sale at the lowest price for good material. See or write me for further information, etc. I F. H. HODGE, 1 Piles Cured in 6 to 14 Days Your druggist will refund money if PAZO OINTMENT fails to cure any case of Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles in 6 to 14 days. The first application gives Ease and Rest. 50c. I Send us the news. ' HEMINGWAY HAPPENINGS. Delightful Entertainment?Personal and Religious Notes. Hemingway, March 13:?Mrs G Bj Eaddy, daughter. Miss Iva. and son, ] Winston,aud Mr R N Speigner spent Saturday in Kingstree. Miss Martha Jenkinsnn was called to Manning Saturday by the death }f her grandmother. Mrs D F Edwards was taken to a fharleston sanitorium Sunday for treatment. Mrs Monroe Altman of iMarion is spending some time here with her sister. Mrs S J Ilaselden. Mr C L Creel spent Saturday in Manning. Dr L G Day spent Sunday at Fork Mrs W C McDowell and sons, William and James, of Kershaw are spending some time with her sisters, the Misses Burney. Mr M E Poston left Monday for St Matthews, where he has accepted a position. The officers of the Ladies' Missionary society were installed Wednesday night. The programme was very interesting and enjoyed by all. 1 The Young People's Entertainment club met with Miss Allean Cannon Saturday afternoon. The hostess lives two and one-half miles from j town, and the club girls walked the distance in about an hour. After the 1 transaction of business,they engaged ' in outdoor sports until the ringing of the bell called them to th? dining room, wnere a sumpiuuus supper was served^ They were then joined by the young men from town and attended services at Muddy Creek church. i The Young People's Missionary society held its regular meeting Sun- . day afternoon. We expect good work from this society. Mrs D G Huggins and daughters are spending some time with relatives at Lamar. Mrs S L Kut has returned to her ; home after spending some time with tier niece, Mrs H E Eaddy. Miss Uleo Clyburn, the efficient i milliner for Eaddy-Creel Bros, came i jp from Charleston last week and is , jetting everything in readiness for , ler spring opening. Miss Rena Barnes of Johnsonville 1 ;pent toe week-end with friends i lere. < Dr W C McDowell returned to , Kershaw Friday, having been called , lere by the illness of his little son lames, who, we are glad to report, 1 is somewhat better. Trying Suit lor $50,000. , Florence, March 12:?The United ' States court for the Eastern district of South Carolina, with Judge i HAM Smith presiding, continues i in session here this week. This will < be the longest sitting of this court at Florence since the district was es- ' tablished. The criminal docket was cleared late Saturday and today Judge Smith heard civil business. < The case on trial today was that of i a suit for damages against the At- 1 lantic Coast Line Railway. The ( amount being sued for is $50,000, and the plaintiffs in the case are J C Long and his wife, Cathleen Long. Mrs Long claims damages for alleged injuries received in falling over a suit case left steading in the aisle of the car in which she was riding when she was suddenly jerked by the train when rearing Savannah, Ga. Carelessness on the part of the railroad company i9 alleged. A verdict was (riven the plaintiffs for $2,000. In every home Sloan't Liniment has earned its place in the medicine chest as a relief ! from pains and aches. Quickly penetrates 'without rubbing and soothes the soreness. Cleaner and more effective than ' mussy plasters or ointments, it does not stain the 6kin. For rheumatism, neuralgia, gout, lumbago, apraim and strain, use Sloan's Liniment. At all druggists, 25c. 50c. $1.00. iSmWitSTy 0 t ' t . I Don't Have Catarrh One efficient way to remove nasal catarrh is to treat its cause which in most cases is physical weakness. The system needs more oil and easily digested liauid-food, and you should take a spoonful of Korrs EMU15WI after each meal to enrich your blood and help heal the sensitive membranes with its pure oil-food properties. The results of this Scotii's Emulsion treatment will surprise those who have used irritating snuffs and vapors. Gettneiienuinesumrs MAY GO B%RE FOOTED. Europe Soon May Have No Shoes Left. Rome, Feb 22 (Correspondent of the Associated Press)?"A barefooted Europe is not improbable if this war continues," said John F Stucke, vice president of the American Chamber of Commerce in Italy and general manager of an American shoe machinery company, in an interview concerning supply and business conditions met by Americans abroad. "At the present time a pair of heavy mountain shoes lasts a soldier but six weeks,"he said. "These shoes have their heels and soles studded with nails at that. The shoes are largely made in Italy but with American machinery and American leather, and the quality of the materials is the best we can furnish, but that quality is of course inferior to that sold before the war. When manufactured by the hundred thousand these shoes cost the government ibout four dollars each. But the supply is always behind the demand, 3ince materials arrive very slowly from America. On one ship, the Palmero. which was torpedoed in the Mediterranean, off the coast ofSpain, in early December, the material for nearly half million pairs of shoes was lost. "The retail store trade in Italy is now obliged to pay nearly $.7 wholesale frip chnps that. hefnre the war :osl. $3.50 and it is probable that American shoes will be selling in Italy 3oon for $10 and $12 the pair. The American shoes, because of their 3hape and fit have long been the chief product on the market here, and particularly since the war, as the handmade shoe cannot be made quickly enough." I EARLES SCHOOL NOTES. ? ? HONOR ROLL FOR MONTH BEGINNIG FEBRUARY 12, ENDING MARCH 9. Grade 1?Norman Wheeler, 90; Mollie Thomson, 90; Eva Parsons, 90; Grade 1, advanced?Annie Avant, 92; Ruth Wheeler. 92; Holly McCants, 91; Daniel Lambert, 90. Grade 2?Lonnie Wheeler, 95;^ Olis Parsons, 92 Grade 3?Willie McConnell. 93; Thetis Camlin, 92; Kinsey Marshall, 92; Lizzie Barrineau 91. Grade 4?Dewey Wheeler, 91; Suj:~ \i/i?? qi. r 07u 1^.. qi UIC Tf IICCICI uciia ?? Iiccici, %/*. Grade 5?Mayme McConnell, 92; Dora Howard, 91; Kathryn Howard, 91; Meddie Feagin, 91; Myrtle McCant3, 91. Grade 6?Lucille McConnell, 93. Grade 8?Grace Parsons, 93; ThesBie Camlin, 93; Dorothy Terry, 93; Mabel Haselden, 92; Herman Camlin, 90. Grade 9?Ruby Feagin, 91. Grade 10?Edna Feagin, 90. A Good Job. When one has the same caddie at golf for several days running, it is natural to be interested in his personal and home affairs. Such an interest in one of the caddies at Camden, S C, this winter led to this conversation: "Your father living, Zeke?" "Oh, ysssir; my ole man livin'." "Does he work?" "Oh, yassir, he wukin', now." "What does he do?" "Well, cap'n, my ole man he used to be a Methodis' preacher; den he ijuit an' got to be a Presbyterian preacher; an' bimebye he quit dat an' got to be a Bapti9' preacher." "Is he a Baptist preacher now?" "No, cap'n; he all right now, suh, :ie's a caddie, up at Pinehurst."?' New York Post. ?e - - ----- ' jHH CHEATED WIND AND SAND. M * SB Mow Franco Conquorod tho Shifting Dunoo of tho Bay of Biscay. IBB How France subdued her shifting land dunes is of a piece with Hoi- B land's conquering the 9ea. MM? A hundred years ago France .^^B awoke to the liideous threat contain- I ed in tho sands of the bay of Bis- * cay, covering a coast line of 300 -1 miles. To such an exient were the sands being blown inland that the ^^B most fertile portion of the country B was threatened. Finally, years lat- 1 er, came the idea of a great lateral J dune along the entire coast as a vj means of checking the encroaching destroyer. 1 So France set to work in earnest | and after fairly starting found a \ I willing helper in nature, which coA- * J pleted the task. The entire coast line was fringed by a fence, consist- i ing of posts driven into the ground at close intervals, and the spaces between them were interwoven with willow branches and brush. So<fl? the strong winds blowing in from the ocean banked a great wall against this fence? and eventually. it was entirely covered sand. Then a second line 0/ fence was erected on the small lateral dune thus created. In time this fence was covered by the sand which banked up against it. This operation was repeated many times, and then othe:r means of increasing the size of the dune were used. Native ^ grasses that thrive in sandy soil wpta nlsntftd alorn? the ton of the. """ X O - f ? ;? dune. This served to keep its height as uniform as possible by preventing the winds from carving Indentations in the fac% of the pil|^ fcine trees were planted along the top. These sejved to check the wind blown sand as the fences had done in past years, and day by day the dune grew in height and widened out. As it increased in size more pine trees were planted. Today a great forest 2,500,000 acres in extent fringes the coast line as the result of this initial experiment. It represents France's greatest supplv house of turpentine and lumber. The country lying inland from it is rich and fertile. The sand menace has disappeared, and it cannot return.?Argonaut. -> A Tiring Task. Instead of reprimanding the office boy for soldiering over his work the manager unctuously requested him to count the ticking of the clock for five minutes. For five minutes the K/vir AAiin^A/l Af 4-Vm loaf VIA UUT WUUlllWi VliV 1U>JV avvvuu attacked his work with unusual earnestness, and for the rest of the day his interest never flagged. "That is a scheme they tried on me when I was a youngster and inclined to be lazy/' the manager said. "To this day I do not know the secret of its success, but I know that to deliberately count the ticking of a clock will cure the worst spell of indolence."?New York Sun. Th? Chines* Language. The Chinese language is the chief among the small class of language? which include the Tibetan, Cochin Chinese, Burmese, Korean and Chinese and which is usually described as monosyllabic. It is language in its most primitive form. Every word is a root, and every root is a word. It is without inflection or ^ even agglutination. Its subs tan-' tives are indeclinable, and its verbs are not to be conjugated. It ia destitute of an alphabet, in the sense in which other languages have an alphabet, and finds ita expression on paper in thousands of distinct symbols or picture forms. A Witty Scot. At an auction sale in a Scotland village the auctioneer was trying to sell a number of domestic utensils, including a porridge pot. As usual, he was making a great fuss. Finishing, his keen eye caught a well known worthy, the beadle, standing at the back of the crowd, and he shouted out: "HT.-ivator AfpTaviflh mako an of fer for this pot! Why, it would make a splendid kirk bell!" "Aye," replied the beadle, "if your tongue was in it!" Preparing For the Woret. "My dear, I think you ought to learn to make beds and sweep and ^ cook a little." "Why, mamma?" "Well, every year the servant girl problem gets worse and worse, and even though you should marry a' millionaire you never know when you may have to do your own housework for a day or two."?Detroit Free Press. Pleasures Out of Season. "Everything comes to him who . waits," remarked the ready made philosopher. "Yes," replied Farmer Corntossel. "But the patient man don't always get things when to needs them. Anybody kin have the hammock after all the rest of the sum-?^ mer boarders have left."?Washing ton Star. , ^