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' M S, I m (BT Mcar &5S&5 fifeijS In fact, it se ijwS on the . AwM dollar-fo: SgS5S the "Stn about it. jS&i But don't de ><53? At least 'ffi? to promi Stratford Fairfield 1 Linwood l?LXfj/. Brook lands af^rj Dartmoor Limousine' m Srajj Paige-Detroi MOTOR SAI jflSMy Clarence J b8L? Class Pins and Medals which tice. Man orders receive promp Bring me your broken Watche mended. Repairs made same di T. E. BA< i JEWELER, - | Wlnthrop College 1 SCHOLARSHIP and ENTRANCE | EXAMINATION. The examination for the award of i? vacant scholarships in Winthrop ne College and for the admission of e(j ? new students will be held at the county court house on Friday, July * 6. at 9 a. m. Applicants must not m be less than sixteen years of age. an When scholarships are vacant after ed July K they will be awarded to those w, making the highest average at this examination, provided they meet the conditions governing the award. Applicants for scholarships should a 1 write to President Johnson for schol- re trship blanks. These blanks, prop- b0 erly filled out by the applicant, . diould be filed with President Johnson by July 1. he Scholarships are worth $100 and op free tuition. The next session will open September 19, 1917. For fur- ^ tber information and catalogue, ad- an dress President D B Johnson, Rock he Hill, S C. 4 26-6t-e-o-w W Spartanburg is erecting a cane p yrup mill. J ^ . No. 6@6 { This is e prescription prepared especially n [: MALARIA or CHILLS & FEVER. ? : -e or six dj3es will break any case, and q ' aK-n thi-Q as a tonic the Fever will not " .. acts o.i the liver better fJ5a.i Z ^ -ocu uoca r.ot gripe or sickett. 25c u \ \ imtm yiost Beautiful Carin/bm people are frankly astonished i n that such a large, ultra luxun as the Paige Stratford "Six-5 chased for $1495. ems to be generally recogni vid t American market offers sc mi [-'dollar value. If you have in itford," you probably feel the :lay too long, please, in placing y make a reservation while we cai se early delivery. "Six-51" seven-passenger $1495 1 o b "Six-46" seven-passenger $1)75 f o. b. "Six-39" five-passenger $H75f o b "Six-51" four passenger - $1695 f o. b "Six-39" 2 or 3-passenger $1175 fob "Six-51" seven-passenger $2750 f o b Six-51" seven-passenger . $23001 o b "Six-59" five-passenger $1775f o. b "Six-51" seven-passenger $2750 f o b it Motor Car Company, Detrc LES CO., - Sumte Mtbrook, Local Agi., Kingstree, Now is the Tims for you to make your selection for the sweet girl graduate. Make your gift a lasting remembrance. I have for this occasion a selection of beautiful goods in Diamond Rings, ! n.u nr.i.i T? i.i. vjoiu vYatcnes, r>raceiei Watches, Cameos in all settings, Brooch Pins, j Necklaces and Hat Pins, ' also an assortment of ! can be engraved on short not attention. Phone 44. ? 1 s, Clocks and Jewelry to be ly received. GGETT, KINGSTREE.S. C The Joke Turned on the Joker. Some time ago a commission man ' St Paul.Minn, sought to initiate a j iw employe, but the "worm turn- j I," and the real joke was on him. He sent the youth about half a ile down the yards for a "cowi ichor." The youth.when he return- j I with a 150-pound sack of iron, i as given "ha, ha!" In the office was a box of flowers j e commission man had ordered for j dear friend. His victim carefully | moved the flowers and filled the >x with paper. Unmindful of the ange, the joker carried the box to - 1 1X7L-*. ~ J ?.1 r nume. vrntii sue saiu wneu sue iened it is not known. To make matters worse,the wouldsmart man had to carry the "cow ichor" back to thescalehouse. Now t is done with practical jokes. The grand lodge of Knights of rthias will tneet at Union Tuesday. ?UB-MY-TISM Vill cure Rheumatism, Neudgia, Headaches, Cramps, Colic prains, Bruises, Cuts, Burns, Old ores, Tetter, Ring-Worm, Eccma, etc. Antiseptic Anodyne, sed internally or externally. 25c i\m 'f. P* \W>PJ r/?K? $ tigs f |rl \ J : 0 : M ; r % ' ^ Sr%>*jj u -" M ' jvhen tney lu^J^g ious motor 11 ivSiS ?_ i INurae* > i uui uc lot no car ve jch actual GE&i b ivestigated 1 same way I our order. 3 i continue | Detroit f S ^|r0"' 1 )it, Mich. fi ^ ! 55S?^5555SS5!^555"5SS"55"5S g \ (fn a flEPffpCTSpffSPTTBE r i r tw fliBiaiiaiiHH & Protects Your Profits I By kit-ping aD Live Stock Healthy. e i n Easy and Safe to Use [ a Frnnomirw 1 | Kills Lice, Mites, Sheep Scab and n ; Ringworm. Heab Cuts, Scratches, Wounds and common skin troubles. ! t< Prevents Bog Cholera * and All Contagions Diseases ^ Experiments on live hogs prove 1 that a 2 Yift dilution of Kreso Dip 5 No. 1 will kill Virulent Hog Cholera p Virus in 5 minutes by contact. _ P Write for free instructive booklets w on the care of all live stock and poultry. w Kreso Dip No. 1 ia Orifinsl Psdtsges ai fsr Sale by The p Scott Drug Company, p Kingstree, S. C. L_????J h .. - e Receipt Books, Blank Notes, Mortgages and c all Legal Blanks in demand, for sale at * The Record office. If we have not the a form you wish we can print it cn short c notice. APPRECIATION OF TWO 1 SISTERS QUICKLY WON 1 f AYS BOTH ARE THANKFUL FOR i THEIR GOOD FORTUNE?MOTH- j ER BROUGHT NEWS. Ireenville Woman Gives Her Views jj On the Momentos Prepared- 1 nesa Question. "1 had indigestion so badly that 8 ften I would begin to hurt after I r lad eaten only a few bites and at c imes the pains would be so severe 0 hey would almost draw me double, ^ >ut I have not been troubled with in- E igcstion since I took Tanlac," de- 0 lared Mrs C W Quinn, of 44 Ninth z It, Sampson, Greenville, in a state- 11 ner.t she gave March 21. "I cer- n ainly did suffer with indigestion, 0 hough, and my sister, who lives 1 lear Campobello, had this trouble c ar worse than I did, and she final- ^ y got so that she could not eat any- 11 hing at all and she had lost flesh ^ mtil she was almost skin and bones, teally her condition became awful. 8 Ihe looked like a skeleton, and com- c dained of suffering terribly all the h ime. I never have seen anyone b kho looked as badly as she did and v et be out of l>ed. t "Tanlac had done my sister so . nuch good I decided to take it, and 1 t proved a fine medicine for me in e very way. I have not been trou- o ?led with indigestion since I took r Mac. "My mother visited me and told ne how Tanlac had helped my sis- 1 er and also my sister wrote me. | ( itv sister said no medicine could be Is tetter than Tanlac for indigestion. fl the did not give any details, but he wrote a lot telling how fine she 8 ound Tanlae to be. My mother * aid Tanlac just made a new woman r >f iny sister. s "I am glad to praise Tanlac, for t t did so much for us, and I think hat a bottle of Tanlac should be ' :ept on hand for any emexgency." v Tanlac, the master medicine, is i old by Kingstree Drug Co, Kingsree; Mallard Lumber Co, Greely- t rille; Farmers' Drug Co, Hemingway; S S Aronson, Lane; R P Hinlant, Suttons; W D Bryan, Bryan. * PAYING FOR THE WAR. j Haws of a Leading Newspaper on the Proposed Revenue BilL The War Revenue Bill, the most . weeping measure of taxation ever J >roposed in the United States, should e subjected to searching criticism \ nd amendment before it becomes a | aw, but in the main it adheres to orrect principles. Contemplating a yearly levy of t 1,800,000,000, which will bear ~ eavily upon every man, woman and hild, it wisely avoids the financial rrors of early Civil war days, when 1 esort was had only to bond sales c nd fiat money. Staggering as its . urdens must be, the present gener- 1 c tion is by no means to meet the ntire cost of the war, but its pay- r lents from earnings and savings a re to be heavy enough to stabilize * redit and preserve a sound eco- ' omic policy. While nearly all of the vast sum 8 ) be raised will come from direct ' ixes, not one of the new internal c evenue imposts in the bill as drawn p ixes the table. The application of 0 10 per cent tariff to goods now imorted free and the addition of 10 p er cent to existing custom rates ' ill produce a considerable revenue a rithout restoring the old inequalities v nd extortions. It is so palpably a ^ rar revenue bill that in all honesty a . must be repealed in most of its 0 arts soon after the conclusion of n eace, leaving conditions as they a ere. ^ Income and excess-profits taxes v ave been doubled, with smaller ex- c mptions for individuals, and the i.^fovoc nnr.n incnmps PVPPpHincn ^ 5.000 run a9 high as 33i per cent. 11 'robably these features of the bill n rill receive close scrutiny .in both 8 louses, for economic questions of v lie utmost gravity are here present- 1 d all along the line, especially in ^ f egard to the excess-profits tax, now ilaced at 17 per cent. Liquors and tobaccos are to pay normous increases, and practically t 11 forms of amusement, sport, "] y Vhenever You Need a General Tonic Take Grove's P The Old Standard Grove's Tasteless f hill Tonic is equally valuable as a a general Ton*c because it contains the ? veil known tonic'pro^ertiesofQUIXIXE ind IRON. It acts on the Liver, Drives iut Malaria, Enriches the Bloou and e luilds uu the Whole System. 50 cents, i c i :ravel and communication are to I rield money to the tax-gatherer. ?rom automobiles to chewing-gum, Torn musical instruments to playng-cards, from jewelry to grapeuice, from motor-boats to patent nedicine, from inheritances exceedt ng $50,000 to a bottle of pop, nothng escapes. ^ For some reason, the most elabore ite system of stamp taxes on docunents ever devised omits bank hecks, an easy and natural source if revenue; but the authors of the ' ~ . v ?ui did not rorget to restore 3-cent rcstage and 2 cents for postal cards, ^ r to insist upon the objectionable one system in fixing exorbitant nailing rates for newspapers and nagazines. In this way publications 1 ? f wide circulation which do much o co-ordinate American thought, in- ^ luding all the farm journals, are iscriminated against, and revenue, nstead of increasing, will positively Q lecrease. Retroactive income taxes must alo furnish legitimate grounds for r ontroversy. The supreme court ias upheld legislation of this kind, mt it is in sharp conflict, nevertheless, pith the spirit of the Constitution. Vith almost unlimited resources at ts command, Congress has a poor xcuse indeed for collecting a secmd time after it has once given its ? eceipt in full. When in 1862 Representative Just- 1 n S Morrill nf Vprmnnt one of the 2 'ivil War Tax Bill of that year, preented it to the House, he said with imotion that it was the most drastic ict ever applied to a free people; >ut, on behalf of Government, he egistered a solemn promise that it hould not outlast the war. Vexaious as that measure was to a peo>le unused to searching taxation, it vas mild in comparison with the bill low in hand. Ought not some one in authority ;oday to repeat to those who pay 'or the world's deliverance from tutocracy the pledge made fifty-five rears ago to the generation that jaid for union??New York World. An Army Aviator's Lock. \ Many an aviator among the fightng nations owes his life to miracu- ? ous good fortune, like the British lir man whose escape is described in rales of the Flying Services by C G 5rey. \ An officer went out on a bombing 1 expedition and met a German ma- \ ehine. In order to save weight he i lad left all his small arms behind 1 rim, but he thought it was a pity to i >ass by a good target, and so he de- ] ided to drop a bomb on him. But ( Iropping a bomb on a swiftly mor- c ng mark is not the same as firing at i fixed point. So he missed the Ger- i nan. Unfortunately for him, he i lso exposed himself to the fire of he enemy, and received a rifle bul2t in the thiprh. To be strictly accurate, the bullet j truck his trousers pocket, hit a five- ^ ranc piece, broke itself and the ^ oin, and distributed the assorted c ieces of metal about the lower part j f his body. c Fpplinc that hp was badlv hit. the ^ ilot shut off his engine and dived ^ or the ground from a height of bout six thousand feet. When he c ras a thousand feet from the ground q e espied some aeroplanes in a field, nd, not knowing whether he was ^ ver German or Frence territory, he ^ lade up his mind to land among the ^ eroplanes, certain that if they did appen to be German machines, he ;ould be well treated by the flying ^ orps. r Two hundred feet above ground ie completely lost consciousness, but ti some curious subconscious way he ^ nade a perfect landing?right along- , ide a British motor ambulance, so ,'ell did he land that for some minites no one troubled about him. Vhen they did go to look they t ound a badly wounded officer in a f tate of collapse. 8 He was promptly put into the am- ^ ?ulance and sent off to the hospital. ?here it was found that the bullet c lad cut a large artery and that the S >ilot would have bled to death in a I ew minutes if the bullet had not r ilso cut a muscle, which had sprung V >ack and wrapped itself like a piece if elastic round the artery and form- t d, as it were, an automatic tourni- i luet. c \ V 1 r / ECONOMY IN THE HOME. ~~~ \ 'z\ Sari Vrooman, Assistant Secretary of Agriculture, Gives Good Advice. The domestic life of a modern irmy should be an example to every American housewife. In the army he ration is well balanced, the heapest nutritious and palatable oods are purchased, and the most conomical means of preparing them ire used. It is a patriotic duty at this time nd all the time, whether there it par or peace, for every American voman, rich or poor, to keep her lome "prepared." Home prep'aredtess means substitution of cheap, ppetizing dishes for costly foods, iractical elimination of waste, and cientifically balanced rations. There are two great groups of ood that enter into a balanced hunan ration?the protein group, like neat,eggs and beans, and the starch :roup,such as potatoes, rice, cereals, read, etc. The protein foods as a ule are more expensive than the tarchy foods. Some protein foods, lowever, are cheap. The prime facor in economy in foods is the choice f protein foods that are at the same ime cheap and palatable. A cheap food, rich in protein and ats, is the ordinary field soy bean, iften sold under the name "togo >ean." Ten cents' worth at the >rice of 15 cents a quart will supply ?ver five ounces of protein, while tverage beef at. 20 cents a pound vill supply little over' one ounce of >rotein for the same money. Don't depend on one kind of food. Nhen potatoes are dear, remember* hat one pound of dry cornmeal prorides about five times as much fuel >r energy and five times as much issue-building as one pound of raw jotatoes and costs from one-third to me-sixth as much. Save fuel and labor by making hot jreads only when using your fire for looking other foods. Avoid the danger of overcooking,and conserve the lavor of your dinner by using a fireess cooker. You can make a good >ne yourself very cheaply. By such expedients as these every voman can "prepare" her home not >nly against war but also against tickness and hard times. To Dispatch Trains by Telephone. Washington, May 11:?Train diaDatching on the Southern railway )3tween Washington and Atlanta vill be done entirely by telephone, t became known here today. After Tying out the teiepnone in aispatcnng trains between here and Spencer, C, road officials have just issued irders to construct telephone circuits between Spencer and Atlanta. Telegraphers who have been dong the work will be retained in the oad's service, it was said. ? J Big Money In Irish Potatoes. It has been stated by some that Florence affords an indifferent mar;et for the sale of vegetables, but dr W M Kennedy, who is trucking >n a small scale on the outskirts of 2ast Florence, can testify to the ontrary from his own experience )n February 22, Mr Kennedy plant- v. d three-quarters of an acre in Irish otatoes. He used no fertilizer, exept a small amount of stable insure. On May 8 Mr Kennedy gathred his crop, amounting to forty ushels. He sold the potatoes in 'lorence for $120. He does not hink he spent more than $30 for eed, rent, laoor, etc, maxing a nei irofit out of the crop of $90. Mr Cenned.v is much pleased with the esult of his potato crop. He in" ends to make this same threeluarters of an acre yield him twice 190 before frost comes.?Florence Vimes. An Excellent Reason. Not every maid combines the aptiude for blundering and the talent or ingenious explanation that charicterize the young woman about vhom the United Presbyterian tells hiss diverting styy: "What do you suppose has come iver my husband this morning, lophia?" exclaimed a conscientious ittle bride to the new servant. "I lever saw him start down town so lappy. He's whistling like a bird!" "I'm afraid I'm to blame, mum. I rot the packages mixed this rnornng, and gave him birdseed instead >f his reirular breakfast food, mum." dJUi