The county record. [volume] (Kingstree, S.C.) 1885-1975, June 24, 1897, Image 4

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* vv 5 . I l\ - Tfye Cntmto liccnnl '? i KtBUSIIED every Till rsday at kixgstrek, s. c. *:n ' Louis J. Bui stow, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. frf. . . _ SUBSCRIPTION' RASTE: l)wY?ir, inadvamv, - - *1.00 i 1 . Six Mouths, m aiivanoe. - - .50 Three Months, in advance, - .25 ADVERTISMEXTS inserted on liberal terms. Rates made known itrihi :?)>p.ieation. Pay no money to Agents, except upon express authority. _ - Thursday, June 24, 1897. fe.y. ? EhI*.. -x Kansas Populists are withdraw J*, : Jtnz from the Grand Army of the Republic, because they claim that the organization is being used in the interest of the Republican party. There is to be a grand free sil ver demonstration in Washington on July 4. Mr. J. C. Sibley, of , Pennsylvania, is to be the orator ? of the day. and each of the 13 original States are to be represented on the programme. Senator . McLaurin has accepted an invi&jL tation to represent South Oaroiil'-' ' I Editors, a9 a rule, are kindhearted and liberal. An exchange tells of a subscriber to a certain paper who died and left fourteen years'subscription unpaid. The editor appeared at the grave as the lid was being screwed down for the last time, and put in a linen duster, a thermometer, a palm leaf fan, and a receipt foi making ice. The State Democratic executive committee met in Columbia Tuesday night and ordered a primary for a United States Senator to succeed the Jate Seuator Earle, and lor a Congressman to succeed ItcLaurin to be held August 31st, and a second primary, of one ehonld be necessary, on Sept. 14th The Congressional Campaign meetintr for Williamsburg coun Ity will beheld on July, I61I1 and J7lh at place#.to be decided upon by the county executive commitW. D. Harris has solved the ^original package1' question. He sayythat when a hen lays an egg y. :'v the egg is an original package, f-- because it is impossible i'or a hen f to lay eggs bv the dozen. To avoid heavy freight charges eggs are shipped by the cr^e, containing a certain number of dozens. The same common sense rule applies to wiskey. If a barrel con I plains ten dozen pint bottles of Whiskey, being less than five galr Ions, a revenue stamp upon each ' bottle is unnecessary, and each bottle is, in his judgment, an origihal package. However, W. 1). is waiting for some other man to make the "flip" and decide the matter in the courts.?Union . Times. If there is any virture in indications, then there will most assuredly be a tremendous harvest of all kinds of crops this year as all indications point in this direction. From nearly every section of the country comes the cheerful news . that all crops are flourishing and in a healthy condition. More acrage bas been planted and more thoroughly and systematically worked than any previous year. sr. *ua uur seem 10 i>e ill a ? position to realize I he benefits of living at home and boarding at the same place.?Lexington Dispatch. Hamburg is the town of a prosIs. perous past, a desolate present and apparently no future whatever?Greenville News. Ham t burg will always have a future as the place for splicing runaway couples from Augusta.?Aiken W: Journal. I 1 . Why take Johnson's Chill & Fever Tonic? j Because it cures the most stubborn case of Fever in ONEDAY. There are live kinds of cnrt ! whUkev. to wit: Good, bad. rot j irut. popskull and certain death.? j Walballa Courier. I I ?^ The Declaration of Indenpec'ence Saved by a Woman In an historical article recalling i t he destruction of our National; |capital by the British forces in 1S14, Clifford Howard in the July Ladies'1 Home Journal will show that Dolly Madison, the most beloved and popular womon of her day, was courageous and fearless in the face of grave danger. In the mad stampede from Washing ton, that pieeeded the invasion by the British troops, Dolly Madison was the to seek safety in flight, and her final act before quitting the White House, as the enemy advanced, was to seize the Decla ration of Independence and carry it with her to a place of saletv. As the White House, was immediately afterward looted and burned by the British, Mr Howard declares that but for brave Dolly Madison the priceless parchnj&nl would have been destroyed. ' Coals are uot brought to New Castle?wool is imported to a goats house. Watch that the entire Egyptian cotton output is not dumped upon the great cot ton patches of Colonel McCall Chancellor Johnson over in Marlboro and Marion. Ko wonder that Frye and Iioar are coming to the help of McLauriu and Tillman.?Laurins Advertiser. The Southern farmer who believes that a tariff on Irs cot-ton will put up the prico and make him prosperous and happy, can draw a lesson from his brother farmer of the West, who has a tariff on his corn and wheat and who is, nevertheless, more heavi ly and hopelessly mortgaged than we of the South.?Orangeburg Palrio*. Divine power is not exercised to do that lor which human power is sufficient. God's blessing on the field does not do away with the necessity of tilling the soil. It is the dilligent man, not the slothful, who receives the blessing. His blessing on the church does not take the place of earnest, faithful work on the part of Ills people. It is when they do the i work given them so that He sends forth His power and causes the work to prosper. The divine blessing resting on the worldly, idle ehnrcji would be as hard to | find as a good harvest in a field unplouged and unplanted. Losing Flesh You naturally lose flesh In cummpranH ninnincrdown Is so easy. You get a little weaker each day without hardly noticing it There is loss of appetite, headache, weakness of the muscles, disturbed sleep, weakness of memory, and these lare the beginning of nervous : prostration. Iron and tonics and bitters may a.'ford some temporary relief, but what you need is a food for body, brain ' and nerves. ! Scct&Smuf&ioru ! of Cod-liver Oil with the Hypophosphites, furnishes just the i nourishment needed for those j who are run down and pale and thin and weak. If you lose flesh j in summer take Scott's Emulj sion now. Don't wait till fail j or winter before beginning. For Ml* at joc. aad |t.o* by all druggist* v "x,-. - . JOHNSON'S CHiLL AND FEVER TONIC Cures Fever In One Day. Young John McLnnrin issetlitigj his old master Tillman a worthy j example of senatorial dignity.? ! Charleston Post. "There's no use in talking," says i W. H. Broadwell, druggist, La j Cygne, Kas., "Chamberlain's Colic, i . i v; 1 1?I 1.. I cnoiera ami lsiarruuni jvuciueuy i does the work. After taking ined.! icinos of my own preparation and j those of other*, I took a dose of I i Chamberlain's and it helped me; a second dose cured me. Candidly and conscientiously I can recommend it as the best tiling on the market." . The 2o 50 cent size for sale by l)r. W. L. Wallace, druggist. The man who can't afford a new dress for his wife and hooks for I lie boys and girls, often has no difficulty in finding money for tobacco and whiskey. Johnson's Chill and Fever Tonic is a ONE-DAY Cure. It cures the most stubborn case of Fever in 24 Hours. Letters from the People. . (Advertisement.) Mr. Editor:?I am a straight in in the inkldle-of-lhe road populist and I want to know what the boys are doing all over the conn try. but I am not able to pay for several leading retorm papers, though I want to read ih'em every week, ('an you tell me the best plan to get them? Answer. If you will write enclosing a stamp to the National Reform Paper Club, No. 7, care People's Parly Paper, Atlanta, I f-J;i iliov viill <pnd vrui their Hub ' bing list, through which you can get almost every book and paper printed in the United States at the lowest wholesale priee. It you are a subscriber to this paper and will mention this paper when you write, we have made arrange! ments whereby vou will be given an annual membership in the club .absolutely tree: (The reg ular fee is one dollar for each member.) This offer is good for only a few weeks. The club handles all kinds ol reform books and papers and through its hun dreds of agents working in every county and are disposing of thousands of books?hence its mem bers get in on the ground floor and buy at wholesale prices. Ko-To-ll?c for Fifty Cent*. Guaranteed tobacco babit cure, makes weak men strong, blood pure. 50c, fl. All druggists. Owing to the increased demand for India rubber, caused by the use of pneumatic tires for bicycles and an I other vehicles, there is said to be serious danger of a rubber fam ine. JOHNSON'S CHILL AND FEVER TONIC Cures Fever In One Day. Several parties around Kingstree purchased the Columbian Eney clopa?dia when the agent was here last, and every set has given satis faction. ?adv Educate Your Ilonreh With Cuscaret*. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. 10c, Sc. If C. C. C. fail, drtiKRists refund money. In the days of Queen Elizabeth it was customary to strew green rushes on the uncarpeted floor of the actors retiring room in the theatres, hence the term "green room." Why take Johnson's Chill & Fever Tonic? Because it cures the most stubborn case of Fever in ON ED AY. ; ; . S'l'ATK OK ('rrv (>K ToI.KDO.f ^ I I.CCAS Coi'NTY. \ I Frank J. Cheney mrkes-oath that ho is tlie senior partner of the firm j of F. J Cheney A* Co., doiu^ business i in the City of Toledo, county and | State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of one hundred dollars for each and every case of Cartarrh that cannot be cured by the use of Hall's Catarrh cure. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscrib_.1 *i.s.. i!*i. .1.... tmi in my jfrcauiiut) uu? uui u.^ uj December, A. 1>. 18SG. Iseal. f A. W. GLEASON, Notary Public. Hall's Cartarrh Cure is taken internally and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the| system. Send for testimonials, fret? * F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O. fJFSold dy Druggists, 7"?. JOHNSON'S CHILL AND FEVER TONIC Cures Fever In One Day. | It is no unusual thing lor a vesIsel plying between Japan and I London to carry 1.000,000 fans as a single item of*its cargo To Care Constipation Forever. TaVe Casoarets Canity Cathartic. 10c or 263. If C. J. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money. Amerchnnt advertising his goods gave notice that lie would take in payment all kinds of country produce exept promises. Mr. Isaac Horner, proprietor of Burton House, Burton, W. Yn and one of the most widely known men in the State was cured of rheumatism after three years of suffering. He says: "I have not sufficient command of language to convey any idea of what I suffered, my -1 S?S.._ i,.1,l lUiU llic liiai iiuuiiug could be clone for me and my friends were fully convinced that nothing but death would relieve me of my suffering. In June, 1894, mr. Evens then salesman for the Wheeling Drug Co., recommended Chamberlain's Pain Balm. At this time my foot and limb were swollen to more than double their normal size and it seemed to me my leg would burst, but soon after I began using the Pain Balm the swelling began to decrease, the pain to leave | and now I consider that I am enI tirely cured. For sale by Dr. W, L. Wallace, Druggist. Bonds to the amount of $220,000,000 are held by Ihe United States government as security!" of national bank circulation. Johnson's Chill and Fever Tonic is a ONE-DAY Cure. It cures the most stubborn case of Fever in 24 Hours. An act by which we make one freind and one enemy is a losing game because levenge is a much stronger principle than gratitude. The hair ol\the head to be an ornament to the wearer should receive painstaking care, and if its color is faded Hall's Ha.r Renrwer should be applided. Quinine and other fe ver medicines take from 5 to 10 days to cure fever. Johnson's Chill and Fever Tonic cures in ONE DAY. Look out that you do not discuss politics, religion or love affairs in a public conveyance. I%ol'ure, !>'o Pay. That is the way all druggists sell Grove's Tasteless Chill, Tonic for Chills and Malaria. It is simply Iron and Quinine in a tasteless form. Children love it. Adults prefer it to bitter, nauseating Tonics. Price, 50c. "" "' "K E E P YOUR BO WE LS S /f>ANDY< ; Vuk&c ^^^CURECOH A ti.blet now and then will prevent dlarrhcea. dj w .result*. 8ampl? and booklet free. Ad. 8TEKLINO KKJ e e? ei?sei?M" w enne neeenw 4 ^ . ' ' " . - - yHundreds of thousands have been induced to try Chamberlain's Cough Remedy by reading what it has for others, and having tested its merits for themselves are to-day its warmest friends- For sale by Dr. W. L. Wallace, Druggist. If is estinated that there are less than 10,000 paupers in the Japanese empire, with its population of 37,000,000. Don't Toharro Spit an J Smoke Tour life Array. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag j netic. tuil of life, nerve and vigor, take N'o-ToBa<\ the wonder worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists,50c or II. CureguaranI teed Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Ilcmedy Co., Chicago or New York Bet ween t Paris and Berlin mail matter is now transmitted in 35 minutes by the pneumatic pro cess. How To Find Out. Fill a bottle or common grlsss with urine and let it stand twenty four hours; a sediment or settling indicates an unhealthy condition of the kidneys. When urinestains linen it it positive evidence of kid ney trouble. Too frequent desire to urinate or pain in the back, is also convincing proof that the kid | neys and bladder are out oi'order WHAT TO DO. There is comfort in the knowledge so often expressed, that Dr* Kilmers Sw*mp-Root, the great kid"ey remedy fulfills every wish in r dieving pain in the back kid neys, liver, bladdler and evers part of the urinary passagger. It corrects inability to. hold urine and scalding pain in passing it,-oi bad effects following use of liquor, wine or beer, and overcomes that unpleasant necessity of being compelled to get up many times during the night to urinate- The mild and the extraordinary effect of Swamp-Koot is soon realized It stands the highest for its wonderful cures of the most distressing cases. If you need a medi icins you should have the best. Sold by druggist, price fifty ecnts or./-! mio Hnllar Yrm mnv hnvp A nnu i/IIV ut/nui* A ?/u ?*?MJ . v sample bottle and pamphlet bo^h sent free by mail. Mention The County Record and send vour address to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bing hamton, N. Y. The propiitors of this paper guarantee the genuine ness of t his offer. Subscribe Now! o The Weekly Louisville Dispatch. A STRAIGHT 1>E OCRATIC NEWSPAPER. For the Free Coinage of Silver. For th? Chicago Platform. For the Democratic Nominees. For the interest of the Masses. All the Latest Telegraphic News. All the latest State News, Ath the latest Market reports. Correct Market Reports. Correct Court Reports Reliable News Reports. Honest Editorial Policy. The Weekly Louisville Dispatch and the County Record One year for $1.65. the sun. The first of American Newspapers, Charles A. Daxa, Editor. The American Constitution, the American idea, the American spirit. These first, last and all time, farever. Daily, by mail, - - $6 a year Daily and Sunday, by mail. $8 a year. The Sunday Sun. is the greatest Sunday Newspaper in the world. Price Be. a copy. By mail. $2 a year. Address The Sun 'New York, j TRO N G *AL LS U M M'E Rl CATHARTIC ihaXhs STIPATIOtC^ nifr?,*ll gmnmer complaint*, e*o?lnge??jr, natural , IKDYCO..Cnlcnro. Montreal. Can.. orNew York. 170 ,: I U WI??H???WOI Tax Land Sales. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA. Jl County of Williamsburg. fty tirtnre of sundry executions ? to me direeted I have levied upon il, and will sell the following deseribed lands for taxes before' the' couifc house door in Kingstreer on the tirst Monday in July next, tothef highest bidder for cash, viz: (1) 50acres of land in Hope town ^ ship belonging to Margaret Ann Wright and bounded North by Bradshaw, West l>y Montgomery, South by W.E. MeCollough &Brtv East Nelson Gist; 2. Also 44 acres of land in Hope township belonging to \V. F. Stack, Jr., and bounded North by lands of S. E. Conyers, South by Santee Road, west by S. E. Conyers, east by Greeleyville road; < V?H 3. 63 acres of land in Hope town- ^ ship belonging to J. S. Goins and bounded nortli by M. Goins, west ^ , by Bradshuw and McMilland, east l>y ? , south by .Brad4. Also 1 lot of land in Laws township at Lanes belonging 'o , Mrs. O. B. McC'laryand bounded north by lot of T. A. Nettles, east jyHI Central railroad, south by public 4 road or lot of W. H. Britton, west by lands of Northeastern railroad JEM company. * ~ 1 !>. Also 100 acres of land in Law9 ' 1 township belonging to Mrs. O. B. ? J McClary and bouuded north by .:i 1 Reaves land, east by Andrew Boyd south H. G. Browder, west by ||'J Alonza Staggers. a 6. Also f>0 acres of land in Penh M31 township belonging to A. Bice and ,'Jg 1 bounded north and east by C'tesar y n Wilson's land, south and west by^^-^JsB lands belonging to Jack Tisdale; .ia 7. Also 165 of land in Suttons \ township belonging to Nathan H. ^ ; MeCutchen aud bounded east by vj| lands of B. L. Gordon, north by '&3 | Alary J. Mishow, west by Santee < swamp, south by Pittmau Bros; N 8. Also 310 acres of land in Anderson township belonging to 11. J. \-3 Pipkin and bounded noriii by lands J9 of W. ?S. Camlin, south by It. P? j Johnson, east by George Camlin, west by W.S. Camlin; 9. Also 1 lot of land in the town ' of Trio in Anderson township belonging to Mrs. E. J. Brown and bounded north by Lota of McDonaid, south by Grants lot, east by < Public road, west by lots of Mrs. E. ,t1 J. Brown; 10. Also 50 acres of land In Anderson towhship belonging to J. T. JH Cummings and bounded north by J i xvout. uamiin, south by Johnson's | land, west by W. fc>. Camlin,east by J , E. llarper; 11. Also 10. acres of land in Ander- 4H son township belonging to Jacob 1 Peterson and bounded north by . . ^jj Jordan's land, east by Cooper, west by Smith, south by J. W.Kegis- >^8 12. Also 25 acres of land in Anderson township belonging to J. H, lirantlv and bounded north by Jj j lands of Pipkin, west by K. P. .J3 iJohnson, east by John Wheler, 1 south by W. 8. Camlin; 13. Also 343 acres of land in ^ Sumpter township belonging to W. P. MoKnight and bounded north J by lands of W. M. McKnight, south by Nelson, west by Williamsburg line, east by VV. M. Nelson, west by lap i XT V?* Ulmir/lort ?'.$ ?'" I xi u* JL ivnurii j 14. Also 2 lots iu tne town of Lake City belonging to Mrs M.J, Askins and bounded north by lot * of Mrs. Seals, east by railroad street south by Thomas street, west by J. A.Green; ^ 1"). Also 20 acres of land in ?Iin- ,13 go township belonging to Josiah ^ Alleton and bounded north by lands of Sam Graham, south by Morris, east by McConnell, west by Guns Dicker; 16. Also 97 acres of land in Min- ) go townshii) belonging to W. W. & Moyd and Daniel J. Britt and* ' ? bounded north by land of Parsons west by W. B. Baker, east by D. ,3 J Pipkin, south by Heny; 17. Also 128 acres of land in Min go township belonging to Newton McConnell and bounded north by -a lands of Pipkin, east by Parsons, -JB ttrouf Kir Do IrofO unnfK K\r TaKn .l-W. u ct7D ovum wj wuuu K4j| McConnell; 18. Also 07 acres of land in Mingo 1 township belonging to F. A. Haddock and bounded west by lands . 13 of A. C. McCrea, east by Henry Eadey, south and north by F. jl Rhem & Sons; 10. Also 186 acres of land in Johnson township belonging to J. R. Cox and bounded north by lands ofW. D. Altaian, south dy Branson Snowden, east by Edmund Ba- . ley, west by W. C. Snowden; 20. Also lj.J acres of land in Lee J township belonging to Zack Welch - i and bounded north by land of. . Martha Eaddy, east by J. J. Singletary south by E. Bostisk, west by Northeastern railroad; " 21. Also 1 lot in the town of Lake City belonging to W. w. Graham ^ containing l}g acres more or less and bounded as follows north and west by Tobacco ware-house Cos. ? ' lot, south by Main St, east by T. B? -^ Hinnant. ' .j t