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Jl HEL1 | We seB FIF No second-hj into our store, direct to you, i store you get it I In Corsets we the famous American n i _ _i to suit an iaai< trial is all we s In Men's Sh we handle the BRAND, to su All ? IPR I SILVtH DEPARTMEI . I KINGSTREE. R. K. WALLACE ATTORNEY-ATXAW FLORENCE. ... S. C. f/f OiMcc Second Floor Masonic Temple. 9-27-6mp Dr. D. Zed Koweli Dental Surgeon Kelly Building; First Room in Front Andrews, South Carolina DR. ROBERT! MCCABET DENTIST, KINGSTREE, ? S. C Office in Nexsen Building. 3 doors from Postoffice. Phone 78. Itl.D. NESMITH, DENTIST, Lake City, S. C J. DeS. Gillaind Attorney-at-Law Second Floor Masonic Temple FLORENCE. S. C. General practitioner in all State and Federal Courts. BenJ. M-'NNES, M. R. C. V. S. B. Kater McINNES, M. D.. V. M. D VETERINARIANS. One of ua will be at Kingstree the first Monday in each month, at Heller's Stables. 9-28-tf If you need Glasses, come to me. Single and double lenses fitted correctly at lowest prices. Broken lenses duplicated. T. E, BAGGETT, Jeweler | Undressed LumberI always have on hand a "i?t li an-1 dressed lumber (board and framing) at; my mill near Kingstree. for sale at the j lowest price for good material. See or write me for further information, etc. F. H. HODGE. LO, PEC 1ST CLASS G( ind, shopworn nor i Our sroods come fr -w so when you buy ? ; first hand, handle ^ isk. '"Vic In SHOES we h Florsheim and V ;wo of the best ] For ladies we handle DOLLY MADIS satisfaction always irts and Collars fl I famous LION I / it all. | ( UAM'P ' * llflHEl0 HT STORE, ? SOUTH CAROLINA ff Insurance! When you want Insurance of any kind, call on us. We write Life Fire Lire Stock Plate Glass Accident and Health Bonding a Specialty We are the largest and most experienced agency in Williamsburg county, and are in a position to give you the best service. Kingstree Ins., Real Estate n i ?_ l.l. I& Loan uu., Agis., c PHONE 85, KIN6STREE, S. C. I KINGSTREE Lodge, No. 46 A. F.M. meets Thursday before full moon each month. Visiting brethren are cordially inyited. S P Harper, W M. J D Britton. Sec. z-27-iy tKingstree CAMP NO- 27. inoui uamcium* \{ The Third Monda; ); Night Id (Mb i7 V laltlng chopper! 001 llally Invited to com* np and alt on a stumj or hang about on tb< P H STOLL, J M Brown, Clerk. Con. Com. FOR SALE 200-acre farm located sevin miles west of Kingstree. 115 acres cleared. Good tobacco land. Near church and school. A good place. Terms $2500 down, balance to suit purchaser. For particulars, write Box 583,1 Georgetown, S. C. ll-8-3tp >PLE! 30DS Only. m fire goods come 4-U /"V -Pn /l4" /\ VIT T I I urn iiic ictutui^y mything in our ' t ~/r ; / ' /t t '' * </?/ / iMs' < _** iandle the ^.L. Douglas ines for men. the well known ON SHOES given. LRJUULMI Q BOXFORD MADE WITH THIS OVAL JUTTON HOLE. TRY IT. N EXCLUSIVE FEATURE OF *ion (pilars 3LDC&T 0HATO ?ii ? _ SHIRT A COLLAR CO.. TROT.*. T? I HANDS, ARMS, UMM ASLEEP And Was RoDown, Weak and Nertont, Says Florida Lady. Fhe Bottles of Cardui Made Her Well KathiettJ. Ha.?Mrs. Dallas Prino, I of this place, Bays: "After the birth I of my last child...I got very much run-down and weakened, so much I that 1 could hardly do anything at all I was so awfully nervous that I could scarcely endure the least noise. My condition was getting worse all the time... I knew I must have some relief or I would soon be in the bed and in a serious condition for I felt so badly and was eo nervous and weak I could hardly live. My husband asked Dr. about my taking Cardui. He said, 'It's a good medicine, and good for that trouble', so he got me 5 bottles... After about the second bottle I felt greatly improved.. .before taking it my limbs ^and hands and arms would go to sleep. After taking it, however, this poor circulation disappeared. My strength came back to me and 1 was soon on the road to healfV. Afto- I1 e lice nf ohnnf 5 Ket_ ties, I could do all my house-work and attend to my elz children besides." Yon can feel eafe In giving Cardul a thorough trial for your troubles. It cont?ins no harmful or habit-forming drugs, but Is composed of mild, vegetable, medicinal ingredients with no bad after-effects. Thousands of women have voluntarily written, telling of the good Cardui has done them. It ahrvld help you, too. Try it E 74 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 or tbe State for two years, and of the countv one year, and of tbe polling pre cinct in which the elector offers to vote four months before the day of election, and shall have paid, sii 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 whc can show that he owns, and has paid all taxes collectible on during the present year, pioperty in this State assessed at three hundred dollars or more. B E Clarkson, rlerk of Board. Five hundred bushels government inspected seed oats on hand at 10-4 Scott-Logan Co.'s. i ASK FARMERS TO 1 INCREASE WHEAT SOUTH CAROLINA CONGRESSMEN TO CONDUCT QUICK CAMPAIGN BEGINNING SATURDAY. Columbia, November 19:?At the urgent request of Governor Manning, W W Long, chief farm demonstra j tion agent, and D R Coker, United ! ^totoe fArtH nHminiarrat.or for South | Carolina, the South Carolina delegai tion to the lower branch of Congress will carry out an intensive campaign of speeches in behalf of winter wheat. This plan was agreed upon at a conference held this afternoon in the Governor's office with A F Lever, of the Seventh district; Fred | H Dominick, of the Third district; James F Byrnes, of the Second district, and Mr Long present. Three other Congressmen, R S Whaley, W ! F Stevenson and J W Ragsdale, will join in the campaign, the matter j having been presented to them by telephone. Sam J Nicholas is out ' of the State in the West. The meeting will be held with the ! primary purpose of reaching the farmer, and to that end it was decided that as far as practicable the . meetings be held in the smaller tDwns. Itineraries for the six Congressmen are heing made and will be announced later. The meetings opill hp aHvprtispd through the well organized channels of the State Council of Defense and through the extension department of Clemson College. The slogan of the campaign, which will start Saturday, will be "Two acres of wheat to the plow." Such a campaign is necessary because of the general situation in the wheat market, coupled with the demands of the armies and the delays of! transports tian. A Bad Year for Ticks. Washington, D C, November 19:? Here are some of the reasons why December 1,1917, will a memorable day in the Southern States: An area greater than ever before freed from federal quarantine against the cattle fever tick will have been released between March and December. More than half of the 728,565 square miles heavily infested in 1906 will have been pronounced clean. Farmers will be free to ship their cattle to the great markets for competition on their own merits with other cattle, and noi. under the quarantine handicap which requires sale at buyers prices for immediate slaughter. Cattle will increase in value, weight, milk production, appearance. health, productivity and length of life. Farmers will be able to bring to their farms better stock and thus raise the standard of their herds. The Southern States will have taken big strides toward their position as a great cattle-raising coun try, to which their natural advantages entitle them. While South Carolina does not share in the record-breaking releases from cattle-tick quarantine authorized for December 1 by Secretary of Agriculture D F Houston, the tick work in that State has shown such progress that department of agriculture officials believe it can be finished in 1918, and that all of the State then can be placed in the free area. The counties still under quarantine are Beaufort, Berkeley, Charleston, Colleton, Dorchester, Georgetown, Hampton, Horry, Jasper and Williamsburg. On July 1, 1906, forty-four counties were under quarantine: 34 have been released. The area quarantined on July 1, 1906, was 30,495 ?:i? Ti? l 1 square nines. me area reicaseu since then is 21.876 square miles, or 72 per cent of the State. An order signed by Secretary of Agriculture Houston directs releases on December 1 for 65,520 square miles in nine Southern States, Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, Oklahoma, and Texas. These releases will be the greatest ever authorized at one time and will boost the releases for the year to 70,754 square miles. December 1 will be the greatest day and 1917 will be the greatest year in the fight against the cattle tick since the cooperative State and federal campaign began actively in 1908. Celebrations are announced to be held in many localities. Notable in connection with the December 1 releases will be the fact that a broad wedge of tick-free territory will be pushed through the tick lines to the Gulf of Mexico. This avenue will lead through Mississippi, all remainiog counties of which are to be taken from under quarantine. Because of the great progress this year leaders of the tick fight believe their goal of "a tickfree South in 1921" is near realizaI tion. COFFINS AN A large and varied asso Automobile Hearse Horse-Dray Experienced Ser Day 01 If inrretvAA H IAVltlgOLl V/V 111 Phones 35. 4 We Lead; Ot Bone Vail PULVJ Untreated Bone Valley Phosphato greatly increase the pro< Phospoate alone is not i does not contain ammon contain a high percentagi is one of the three esseni i i xi D usea in connection i supply ammonia and pot vet beans, soy beans, co\* leguminous crops plowed a sufficient amount of i the absence of cover cro tankage or stable manur< well filled with humus (< phosphate alone is suffici An average crop of vel acre approximately 150 p pounds of potash. This and nearly four times as plied in a ton of commer formulae commonly kno? At the present market material, a crop of velvet in nitrogen approximatel about $24.00, or a total o tility, due to the plowing beans, to say nothing of added to the land, but i is not a complete fertilis phoric acid, as it is com to plant life. This eleme number of sources; a tor phate will supply 320 poi a cost of approximately cent bone meal will su] phoric acid at a cost of ton of Bone Valley ply 64O Pound 1 Acid at a cost of 916. Write for I Harby & Co. nicfriKntnrc tnr Fa I/UU1UU1U1U ava mm 11-15-tf "@?p| the saiisiieu customer We are always z by showing ther their paint jobs. LEAD nwii It contains no x stuff. It is mad old-time painter Zinc. Pure Lins mixed by machir it absolutely un capacity?always Let us tell you 1 THE KING HARD KINGSTREE, SC ?1 D CASKETS. rtment to select from. and Rubber-Tired m Hearse. ' vices Rendered Night. ardware Co. 8, 59 or 122 hers Follow. ley Brand BI7FT1 Phosphate. j when properly used will faction of farm products, i complete fertilizer. It ia or potash, but it does e of phosphoric acid, which tial plant foods. It should 1 vith something that will ish. Cover crops of velrpeas, clover or any of the [ into the soil will supply immonia and potash. In ps, use cotton seed meal ?. On miiMr lands nr lands iecaying organic matter) ent Ivet beans will supply per founds of ammonia and 50 t is equal to more potash much ammonia as is sup- ! cial fertilizer of the usual vn as 8*2-2. price (1917) of fertilizer j t beans plowed in is worth [ y $36.00 and in potassium f $60.00 in increased fer- [ * under of a crop of these j the value of the humus immonia and potash alone j ser. Phosphorus or phosimonly known, is essential snt can be supplied from a l of 16 per cent acid phosmds of phosphoric acid at ; $19.00. A ton of 23 per . ?ply 460 pounds of phosapproximately M5.00. A Phosphate will sup? of Phosphoric j .DO delivered. Literature. j I ? SUMTER , Inc., S. C. stern South Carolina. 1 \ ST inxious to save money for our customers n how to get more years of wear from That's why we recommend and ZINC PAINT ? GALLONS - WEARS LONGER vhiting, silica, china clay or other such e of the same pure ingredients that the used: Pure White Lead, Pure White eed Oil. and notkini/ else. DEVOE is tery, 500 gallons at a time. That makes iform in strength, color and covering low little it will cost to paint DEVOEWARE COMPANY UTH CAROLINA TftaVtETCEflH ? ?\jjj