The county record. [volume] (Kingstree, S.C.) 1885-1975, June 13, 1907, Image 3
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\H air-Food
fAyer's Hair Vigor, new im
1 * '? ? noniiinp
!prcvea rurmuia, is ? ,
hair-food. It feeds, nourishes,
; builds up, strengthens, invigorates.
The hair grows more
rapidly, keeps soft and smooth,
and ail dandruff disappears.
Aid nature a little. Give your
hair a good hair-food.
i Docs not change the color of the hair.
Jk Torm ul* with emch bottle
/| ? Shew it to your
Cxuers * * h^Tboot k.
^ V tben doee beeeye
You need not hesitate about using this
new Hair Vigorfrom anyfearof its cbanging
the color of your hair. The new
Ayer's Hair Vigor prevents premature
grayness, but does not change the coloi
of the hair even to the slightest degree.
?Mad* by the J. C. Ayer Co., LoweU, IUm.?
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and periodicals. Head carefolly
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The Record and Atlanta Constitution
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The Record and Atlanta Constitution
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The Record and Bryan's Commoner,
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The Record and Coemopoliton
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Thi Record and Youth's Companion
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^^The Record Semi-Weekly State,
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rTHE Record and Lippinoott's
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The Record and National
i *
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N. B. We do not club with any
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L THE COUNTY RECORD,
Kafitree, S. C
mw Kingstree Lodge
Knights of Pythias
^ ' V * Regular Cociventionf Every ,
2nd tod sth^Wedoesday nights.
Visiting brethren always welcome.
Castle Hall 3rd story Gourd in Building.
F. W FAIREY.C.C.
THOS McCUTCHEN, K. R. & s.
? *
I I
I rHE LlRtiEST WHOLESALE
AID RETAIL DRT COOD?
AND CARPET HDFSE
IN THE SOTTH.
-NEW
SPI
OUR STORES ARE
?
OUR READY-TOARE
THE MOST STYLISH 1
Ladies' |Nobby Eton Suits mad<
Panamas, Voiles, Black and Colored
from $18.00 to $30.00. Worsted suits
: Ladies' Shirt Waist suits in silk-la\
$6.00 to $33.00 per suit.
Ladies' Silk Jumper suits, "The la
per suit.
> . Ladies' Princess suits (also new) rr
ange drom $12.00 to $35.00 per suit.
LADIES'
20 St^r les here to every one to be fc
Whetf you intend buying a waist?
m Bend us your measure, state what pri
IM he prettiest and cheapest waist you
P We make a specialty of L
1 Mattings, Curtains and Uph
I \ Agents for Dr. Jagei
t Patterns, 10, and 15c.
Registration Notice.
Theoffice oi the Supervisor of Re?
istration will be opened on the first
Monday in every month for the purpose
oi the registering1 oi any person
who is qualified a> follows :
Who shall have been a resident ol
the State for two years, and of tlie
county one year.and of the polling precinct
in which the elector offers !?
vote four months before the day ol
election, and shall have paid, ?ix
months before, any poll tax tliei^dtu
and payable, and who can both read
and write any section of the eonstitu
tion of 1HH5 submitted to him by tht
Supervisors of Kcgistration, or wh<
can show that he owns, and ha:- paid
all taxes collectable on during tht
present year, ptoperty in this State
assessed at three hundred dollars or
more. J. Y. McGII.L,
Clerk of Board.
tioiui Mtirmoi
l*t and 3rd Monday
W*JrfJ] Visiting choppers corw/Sff/
dially invited to come
BRv up and sit on a stum;
or hang about on the
PHILIP STOLL,
9 27 12m. Con. Com.
CLESSON AGRItULTUKAL COLLEGE.
Sclwtarsbip aid Eitraice EiMii*
Mod to Fitsbaao Class.
The examination for the award
of scholarships from Williamsburg
County and ADMISSION
TO FRESHMAN CLASS will be
held at the County court house
on Friday, July 5> at 9 a. m. Ap
plicants for scholarships may
9ecure blank application forms
the county Superintendent oi
Education. These blanks must
be filled out properly and filed
with the county superintended
before the beginning of the ex
amination. Those taking the
examination for entrance to the
Freshman class and not trying
for a scholarship should file
their application with the Presi
'''>? Vf^.11 Tha arVinlarchinc art
UClil AUCll* L UV OVUVAUi ?
worth $100 and free tuition. 0n(
Scholarship student from eacl
county may select the Textih
course, others must take one ol
the Agricultural courses. Ex
amination paper will be furnish
ed, but each applicant shoulc
provide himself with scratch
paper. The number of scholar
ships to be awarded will b<
announced later.
P. H. MELL, President,
Clemson College, S. C.
7-4
Hereafter we positively re
fuse to .publish any commumca
tion received at this office late]
than Tuesday, moon, except k)
cal and personal items, whict
will not be available later thai
Wednesday, noon, for the cur
rent week. By trying to be ac
commodating we are thrown late
every week and we are tired oi
3t. This notice applies 1<
EVERY BODY.
4-25-tf.
Louis Col
232 AND 234 (IMG STR
Tkf Itouse tkit gltfi "Skit
i^ING AND
FILLER TO OfERFLOWIltt W1
WEAR GARMENTS
TO BE FOUND ANYWHERE,
e of Fancy Plaids and MixturesTaffeta
Silks. Price of silk suits range
i from $10.00 to $30.00.
vn, linen and lingerie. Priced from
test." Priced from $14.00 to $30.00
lade of lingerie, lawn and silk. Prices
WAISTS
?und in any other house in the South,
be it Madras, Lawn, Linen or Silk,
ce you want to pay and we'll send you
ever purchased.
adies' iMuslin Underwear; I
olstery Goods.
r's celebrated Sanitary a
The Rise of Jimmie Johnson. I
t
XI.?SENATOR JAMES JOHNSON. j
Wide and widening wai the fame of Johnaon, merchant prince; > i
Always occupying 8PACE in leading public prints. .
Legislature sent him on to Washington, to be *
In the U. S. senate?gets his ADVERTISING free. c
t
P. P. P. I
(Prickly Ask) Peke lest Mi Petaaalaea.) (
MAKK8 POSITIVE CURES OP ALL FORMS AND STAGES OF <
HyWlMi eliwi F. F.>. M? ip?w yaa will m?l? Ink mI Sm|A (
4H mmMmSoi, pwrik* t *ti BBBB| Waata ed aaea?y aad a? Steaae reaatee
(llll alMi iiMn fat tk nm?( all f*om rtudaa tta lyitia w wiU k> ]
Htm aeS ataca* at Piteij. BmaSary |MMB tha aaa at P. P. P.
[ Ml TiiIIiij BryailW, exalte >k? _ Ladlaa wkaa* ayalnaaaaa eefcaaaS aad
Mite, teaialoae mean wl Serat, wfceaa Maad ia la aii tapaaa aaadMea Sea
fflaafltV avaSiaea, Stenatte, XtO- la naaakaal lrrafilarttfca are pacaUarty |
ms OanpteSa, OMCteak tJSeara ttet Waited fcy Ik votevfal teak aad
i SYPHILIS " SCROFULA
kvc mill ik tonMV OtUrrk, ttti ^ m
Dtean. ?ew*, Okroawe Pa.ala ^ ^ blaod alaaadaff propcrOaa at P. P. P.,
Oonpteta, Karearta. l-otoaa. Tate. P**1* Aak, Poke Heei aai Pjl.lia.
^ | 8*M tf all DTM?I?
1 r ? P In KWtii voafc ui m I
bailmx , ||? I F. V. LI PPM AN. Proprietor.
' wtmrn M|M)7. Tfro. ar. ~k mC I Sovonooh, Go.
1 tMtta, mm* faai baAy try P. P. r? ?ofl |
RHEUMATISM
/
SBanJc ofWilliam
KINGSTREE, S. C.
Capital Stools $40,000,
Chas. Stoll, Pres. E. C. Epps, Cashier, F. Rhem, V. Pres,
WE do business on business principles.
WE extend every consideration consistent with safe and sound
banking. \
WE paj' four per cent on deposits in Savings Department, pay- ,
able quarterly.
WE^respectfully solicit your business. Large or small it will receive
our best attention.
\ .Bosixd. Of* HDixectoxs,
Char. W. cStoii, Itf. Zt. fifiiJcins, tP S. Sourdin,
W. / 9/exse/i, y. Wfcfcdden, Zfthem,
Zf. jf. Silakadey, C. Sraham.
,
|| ]
BRRERS FROM MERCHANTS j
*Cil V/v# filled with a guarantee 1
EET. CHARLESTON. S. C. OF SATISFACTION. f
SFACT10N" or w>ur bomy back. <
SUMMER STOCKS. |
Tfl THE BEST OF THE MARKETS OF THE WORLD.
SILKS AND DRESS GOODS. ?
The newest weaves and colorings. *
Plaid Taffeta Silks in a large range of colorings for Waists and Suits,
at 59e, 69c, 75c, $1 00. $1 39 and $1 50 per yard. li
Fancy Silk Suitings, beautiful colorings at 49c per yard. q
19 inch Changeable Taffeta Silk at 50c per yard. h
3t> inch Changeable Taffeta Silk at $100 per yard. ,
Bose Bay Taffeta Silk at 50c per yard.
"Si inch Rajah Silk at 75c per yard.
Black Taffeta Silk, .16 inches wide, at 84c, 1 00, 1 25, 1 50 up to 2 50 per si
yard. ji
DRESS GOODS. ?
j.
Large assortment of all the new plaids and fancies from 18c to $1 50 per
vard. t]
J
Full assortment of all the plain and fancy weaves from 25c to $2 50 per s]
yard. d
We carry the largest assortment of all the best makes of Black Goods j{
for Dress and Mourning. Write for samples.
c
toys' and Girls' Clothing; Gents' Furnishings; Carpets, ti
k
nd Woolen Under-Wear and Ladies' Home Journal"
8
0
J t
1
WEEKLY LETTER FROM
rHE NATION'S CAPITAL.
PEAKING OF BRYAN AND OTHER
CANDIDATES-OTHER MATTERS OF
CURRENT INTEREST.
Washington, D. C., June 8:?
Villiani Jennings Bryan was in
Vasbington this week and gave an
nterview tending to correct some
naccuracies that he said had crept
njo the talk that he gave out in
^ew York. He says that he did
lot say as attributed to him that
here were more important issues
han the tariff before the people.
-Vhat he said was that there were
hree issues before the people, the
rusts, the railroads and the tariff
ud that they were of equal importance.
There were other issues,
le said, but these three were
)aramount. He said he did not
hink it necessary to give supreme
mportance to any one of the three
ssues named. The Democratic
)arty, he said, was determined on all
>f them?thorough revision of the
anff, extermination of the trusts
ind strict regulation of the railroads.
3e did not say, it will be noted,
government ownership ot the rail oads.
Col. Bryan has come to the j
inclusion that he is too nearly'
ilone in his government ownership
theory to attempt to make it a part
)f the creed of the Democratic
party, but he knows that strict
supervision and control of the railloads
is a thing on which all mem.
bers of the party are agreed.
As to the possibility of President
Roosevelt nominating bis successor
in office, Mr Bryan said that it was
hardly a nedessary or laudable proceeding.
He said a candidate with
a clear record needed no sponsor.
* * *
Speaking of candidates, there is a
good deal of quiet amusemeDt among
the politicians in Washington and
there are a good many of them still
here, over the solemnly modest way
in which Senator Knox received the
endorsement of the Pennsylvania
convention on the launching of his
presidential boom. Senator Kucx
is a good man in a great many ways
and is personally well liked in Washington.
But it is thoroughly under?
i Kit.:
stood among practical politicians
that his boom is being worked up by
corporate interests as a stalking horse
in the fight that the managers of
the Republican party are afraid to
make openly against any man of
President Roosevelt's choice. Senator
Knox was the successor of Mat
Quay, probably the mcst brazenly
machine made politician of machineridden
Pennsylvania. Boies Peuiose
had the practical appointment of a
man to succeed Quay and was
hesitating between several possible
candidates when H C Frick and
President Passat of the Pennsylvania
Railroad walked into his office and
Baid that they wanted Knox appoint
ed. There was not a moment's
hesitation. Knox was given the
place and rumor has it that the
place cost somebody ?250,000 that
vent where it would do the most
?ood. Now if Knox should ever be
'lected President and have a trust
ight on his hands, it is hardly
ikely that the trust would get the
vorst of it.
* * *
The little flurry over tne uoiaing
id of two or three diplomats in
utomobiles near Washington on the
Jonduit road for exceeding the speed
iws has grown till it is becoming
uite a respectable sized issue. The
oldups referred to were the work of
he mayor and the sheriff of Glen
Icho, a little hamlet on the outkirts
of Washington. The town is
ist outside the District line and is
i small that one would hardly
now it was there if it were not for
he sheriff with his bicycle and
peedometer with which he runs
own and convicts offending motorits.
The members of the diplomatic
orps are much in the habit of using j
he road, and as it is a fine road,
ept in repair by the War depart- j
lent, there is every temptation to;
it out the machines and do a little
peeding. There was a great deal j
f talk in the papers over stopping i
he diplomats because a diplomat is j
?
under treaty protection anil exempt
from arrest, no matter what he does.
One would think that under the
circumstances they would be particularly
careful about not violating
police ordinances. But they are not
and they have complained bitterly to
the State department about being
stopped on the Conduit road. Now
the mayor and sheriff of the litttle
town have become incensed at the
persistent violation of the local laws
aud they say that though they can
not arrest a diplomat, that there is
no law against stopping him and
warning about the law. This ie jast
what the diplomats object to. Thej
say it is humiliating. But sheriff
r>-n: j.1 ?.u: i.n
ouuius buys lucre 10 uviuiug w v?iotinguish
an ambassador or a minister
from anbody else nnder a bear skin
coat and a pair of goggles, so he proposes
to stop every foreign envoy and
make him establish bis identity or
else carry a flag or some other distinguishing
mark on his machine.
The whole corps diplomatique declares
it is an outrage. The State
department says it cannot do anything
about it and up to date it
looks as though the mayor and the
sheriff had scored.
* *
There has been a good deal of talk
about graft and rake off in the purchase
of supplies for the Panama
canal, and it appears now that the
whole of buying is to be taken over
by the army, which will handle
practically all the purchases for the
work and the men. The purchases
of machinery and material for the
work are to be made by the chief of
engineers, those of medicines by the
annreon general's office and those of
o o
commissary material through the
commissary general's office. There
is one thing to be said about the new
scheme and that is that the officers
in charge of these departments are
about as nearly incorruptible aa
human beiDgs can be and there is not
likely to be much more talk of graft.
? # *
Accounts are being cast up at the
end of the fiscal year and it is found
*1 1 lL - ? - - ? DhaoIIInnf
tnac me expenses ox iuc x i?mvu?
for travelling have been almost ridiculously
small. There was an appropriation
of $25,000 made for this
purpose by the last congress and
there was some talk about its not
being large enough. The railroads
which had been furnishing prcai-dental
special trains had been spending
mouey like water and going to*
extravagant lengths. The President;
likes comfort but does not care about:
luxuries, and since he nas been pay.
ing his own way with government
money he has cut everything down
to every plain first class accomoda- ,
tions. The result is that the total
travelling expenditure comes inside
of $8,000 and about two thirds of
the appropriation will be turned,
back into the Treasury.
Saotee Sayings.
Santee, June 10:?This community
was visited by a small
hail storm on last Wednesdav.
J ,
doing-very little if any damage,
however.
Miss Louise Fulton of Foreston
spent several days here last
week as the guest of Mr and.
Mrs J P Gamble.
Mr Julian Tutle, who holds a.
responsible position as telegrapher
in Jacksonville, is visiting
his father, Mr W C Tutle.
Mrs W G Gamble and son,
Master William of Kingstree,
are visiting relatives in this
neighborhood.
Miss Hattie Tutle, who has
been holding a position as milliner
in Orangeburg, came home
this morning, to the delight of
her many friends.
Messrs A K Durham and Oscar
Nettles of Foreston took in
the preaching- at Richmond yesterday.
Strange thing young
men ride so far to preaching on
a hot summer day. Can anybody
guess why?
Santee.
Surveying.
During the next few week? I shall
be glad to make appoint merit? with
per-ons needing a competent surveyor.
Laurence U McCullough,
purveyor, Benson. S' C.
e 6-tf.
. 1