The county record. [volume] (Kingstree, S.C.) 1885-1975, July 18, 1907, Image 3
>?*? v. * - ?
L^/nnc Wtf/rl
?> ? W.
Falling
Ayer*s Hair Vigor, new improved
formula, will certainly
dtopfalling of the hair. Indeed,
we believe it will always do this
unless there is some disturb-1:
ce of the general health, p
Then, a constitutional medicine
may be necessary. Consult
your physician' about this.
jM Tormnl* with each bottle
/ *1 ft Show it to jrowr
I jTlycr's
The revswn why Ayer's Hair Vigor stops
fallinK hair is because it first destroys the
Srms which cause this trouble. After
is is done, nature soon biiags about a
lull recovery, restoring the hair and
scaTp to a perfectly healthy condition,
bj the J. C. 4jw Xa?*.?~
OUR CLUBBING RATES.
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with a number of popular newspapers
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oar best cluWiitg offers.
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The Record and Atlanta Constitution
(weekly $1.5$.
The Record and Bryan's Commoner,
fl.75.
The Record and Cosmopoliton
Magazine $1 75.
Th> Record and Youths Companion
'(New Subscribers) $2 50.
Thc Record S?ni-W*ek(y State,
$2.50.
Tke Recor? and Lifpiucotfs
Magazine 1 year each $2.75.
Tke REOjiD and National
Magazine. 1 year each, $1 <0.
N. B. ' We d?? not clab with any
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* erid*uce that cfee money for same
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THE COUNTY RECORD,
Kingstree, S. C.
K.ofP.
vSL/ Kmgatree Lodfte
Kitigfyts of Pytlrias
B-ecviar ConT?aiot> Ever*
M aof ashrWedeeedey aigttt*.
* . i, - brethren always welcome,
Castle Hall 3rd story Gourd? Building.
F. W FA IREY, a c.
THOS M CUTCHEN, k. B. & s.
v '
t "
? '
THE LARGEST WHOLESALE
A\D RETAIL DRV CDDDS
A.\R CARPET HOUSE
IX THE SOUTH.
NEW SPJ
OUR STORES ASI
OUR READY-TOARE
THE MOST STYLISH '
Ladies' | Nobby Eton Suits mad
Panamas, Voiles. Black and Colored
from $18.00 to $30.00. Worsted suit
Ladies' Shirt Wai6t suits in silk-la
ni 90~ A/?
KHJ. V J iu fg-/.W OUil><
Ladies' Silk Jumper suits, "The li
per suit.
Ladies' Princess suits (also new) r
1 range from $12.00 to SSS.OO per suit.
LADIES
20, Styles here to every one to be f
\?*en you in end buying a waistsetid
us your measure, state what pr
he* prettiest and cheapest waist yoi;
We ms1^ a specialty of I
at tings, Curtains and Uph
Agents for Dr. Jage
Patterns, 10, and 15c.
! IF YOU WANT A BUGGY !
WHY NOT BUY THE
! ?
Best on the Market?
I :
WE 5ELL THEM?THE TYSON & JONES.
WE HANDLE A NUMBER OF OTHER STAND'
ARD MAKES, ALSO WAGONS, HARNESS,
LAP ROBES, HORSE BLANKETS, ETC.,
all the best on the market,
~ZESEEESS^^^~ZSSSE^~
I F. C. Thomas, :
KZin.g'stXfce, S. C.
! I
I P. P. P.
(Prickly Ask, Poke loot etd Pofasstua.)
MAKES POSITIVE CUKES OP ALL PORM9 AND STAO?? Of
w4twi P. F. F. w ? aplae- joe will rafale flaah aad rtirertk
yraaariba M with fW ^aMaof aaarry aad all dw,a?at rwultia?
fiaat aaWrfattlaa far Iha nna af all 'rc? orartazief tb* ijiub err eerrd ly
him m! atafaa af Pilwaij, 8eeae4ary |SMi tba oar of P. P. P.
aad TarHaif OfUlk, SyphlMUe Maa Ltlln *Now tytUtm ara pa^onaC ul
Mai. OWN* ud fte*e% "hoer bleod i* in en itnpv??r<tx1il>n. ,tne
Wiillihi liifll?ni BkHMMw, KtA- UbmhtmI trrecnUuitto e*?- i*r:<!>u!y
mmj OtaflM, OHOkmte DWi(hit Will? tiwtiid by th? vooderfm l< n c e: d
! SYPHILIS ^ SCROFULA
???? o ????
I beet Mbht all twrt?t. CMwA, *? mmm
MMM, StMMs <N?? b,0?* P. P P.,
Coa^kti, Pefee*, Tmm, PrteWy Atb, K>bt Root end I'oUatuv
InllHwil, ate., ?c. SoU by ell tmnbh.
F. P. P. bt ymMM*?a w
r nT MMb| ? tb? "3^ F* V *?!** AW, PPOprUtbP.
VrtHi ?*Cy. Bye. ?m weak m* ^ Savannah, Ga.
I feeble, aa< M teAy *7 F. F. F? ?M
RHEUMATISM
Sftank of hJelliamsburg,
| KINGSTREE, S. C.
Capital Stocfe - - $40,000
* I
iChas. ^7, Stall, Pres. E. C Epps, Cashier, F. Rhem, V. Pres
|
! WE do business on business principles.
; WE extend every consideration consistent with safe and soun<
banking.
| WE pay four per cent on deposits in Savings Department, pay
able quarterly.
WE.respectfully solicit your business. Large or small it will re
ceive ocr best attention.
Boaid Of ^Directors.
Chas. ft/. Sioii, ft/. 77. ft/j'iJcins, ZP $. Sour din,
ft/. / Zfexson, & 9/fcS'tidden, S?Aem,
Z7. -rf' SBlaMey, C. Srcham.
Louis Cohen & Co.
232 AND234 ING STREET. CHARLESTON. S. C.
Tie Heost that girts yta "SATISFllTIOV' or yur Baity hack.
RING AND SUMMER
! FILLED TO OFERFLOWTXG WITH THE BEST OF THE MARKETS
WEAR GARMENTS SILKS AND Dl
j|
ro BE FOUND ANYWHERE. The newest weaves and colorings.
e of Fancy Plaid* and Mixtures- '
Taffeta Site. Price of silk suits range ? c' ' ??'1 ',il a"d $1 50 f
s from $10.00 to t?.00. ^nCy,Si!k Su,t"P;bd"Ut^U ,Col?"'
'19 inch Changeable Taffeta Silk at >0
wn, linen and lingerie. Priced from 36 inch Changeable Taffeta Silk at $1
Bose Bay Taffeta Silk at 50c per yar<
itest." Priced from $14.00 to $30.00 it7 inch Rajah Silk at 75c per yard.
Black Taffeta Silk, 36 inches wide, a
nade of lingerie, lawn and silk. Prices yard.
DRESS <
' WAISTS |j L,arge assortment 01 an me new piau
yard.
ound in any other house in the South. | Fa? >SJOr m(nt #f a|| th(> p|ain and
-be it Madras, Lawn, Linen or Silk, yard.
ice you want to pay and we'll send you We carry the largest assortment of a
t ever purchased. j for Dress and Mourning. Write for sai
.adies' Muslin Underwear; Boys' and Girls' Clothing; G(
lolstery Goods.
r's celebrated Sanitary and Woolen Under-Wear ani
Free .Samples of " Preventics" and
: a booklet on Colds will be gladly m tilj
ed you, on request, by I>r Shoop. ha-1
.cine, Wis., simply to prove me:it.
I Pre^entic- are little Candy Cold Cure'
i tablets No Quinine, no Laxative, i
nothing harmful whatever. Preventics i '
prevent colds?as the name implies ;
?when taken early, or at the " Sneeze ;
? " - 1 . .1 J T
j Stage, t or a seated coia <>r i^avrrippe,
| break it up saiely and quickly with
Preven ics. Sold by D 'I Scott.
Hereafter we positively refuse
to publish any communxa-ii
tion received at this office later i
than Tuesday, noon, except lo-!
cal and personal items, which j
will not be available later than
Wednesday, nooD, for the current
week. By trying to be ac- '
commodating we are thrown late
every week and we are tired of j
it. This notice applies to
EVERY BODY.
4-25 tf.
Let me mail you fr??e, to prove merit,
samples of my Dr Sloop's restorative,
\ and my Hook on either Dyspepsia, The
Heart, or The Kidn?ys. Adaress me,
Dr Shoop, Racine. Wis. Troubles of
the M maeli, Heart or Kidneys, are
merely symtoms of a deeper ailment.
1 >un't make the common error of treating
symtoms only. Sy in torn treatmen
is treating the re-ult of your ailment,
and not the cause. Weak stomach
nerves?the inside nerves? means
stomach weakness, always. And the
Heart, and kidneys as well, have their
controlling or inside nerves. Weaken
th**se nerves, and v ou inevitably have
have weak vital organs. Here is where
Dr. Shoop's Restorative has made its
* ** ATfan nloima
lame. i>u utuer icuicuj cim vw.??>
to treat the "inside nerves." Also for
bloating, biliousness, bad breath on
complexion, use Dr. Shoop's Restorative.
Write for my free book now. I'r.
Shoop's Restorative sold by D ScottfljTJT
A xurui utrriMii
?Y| lot at <1 3rd MnwUj
Pnu)/ Visiting chopper* cor- ,
dially invited to come
v^syPc<y'/ up and sit on astumj
or hang about on tin
PHILIP STOLL,
9 27 12m. Con Com.
Eegistration Notice.
Theoftiee oi the Supervisor of Rejt
will he onened on the first
Monday in every month for the purpose
of the registering of any person
who is qualified as follows:
Who shall have been a resident of
the State for two years, and of the
county 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 1895 submitted to him by the
. Supervisors of Registration, or who
can show that he owns, and has paid
all taxes collectable on during the
present year, piopertv in this State
,, assessed at three hundred dollars or
more. J. Y. McGILL,
(Jerk of Board.
Thousands of people are daily
. suffering with kidney and bladder
troubles?dangerons ailments that
" should be checked promptly. DeWitt's
Kidney and Bladder Pills
are the beet remedy for backache,
weak kidneye, inflammation of the
bladder. Their action is prompt
' an I sure. A week's treatment for
'25c. Sold by W L Wallace, M P.
ORDERS FROM MERCHANTS
x
FILLED WITH A I.FARAMEE
OF SATISFACTION.
STOCKS.
OF THE WORLD.
?ESS GOODS.
I
)f colorings for Waists and Suits,
er yard.
lgs at 49c per yard,
c per yard.
uO per yard.
J.
(
t 84c, 1 00, 1 25, 1 50 up to 250 per
300DS. j
Is and fancies from 18c to $1 50 per
fancy weaves from 25c to $2 5") per
<
11 the best makes of Black Goods ^
mples. <
(
tilts' Furnishings; Carpets, t
t
i
t
d Ladies' Home Journal" j
t
V
I
*
SACRED HORNS.
fh. Queer Adornment of Peouliar
Chinese People.
Adjoining the Chinese prefecture
rf Chienchang is a deep gully
barred by a river which no Chinaman
is permitted to pass until he
Ends bail for his good conduct in
Lolodom.
The Lolos are a slim, well made.
?i?
muscular ratrc, hi in uvai uuui.ui
brown faces, high check bones and
Eointed chins, from which the beard
as been carefully plucked. They
are far taller than the Chinese and
indeed than any European race, but
their marked peculiarity is the horn.
Every male adult gathers his hair in
a knot over his forehead and then
twists it up in a cotton cloth so
that it resembles the horn of a unicorn.
?
The horn is considered sacred,
and even if a Lolo settles in Chinese
territory and grows a pigtail he still
preserves his horn. The Lolo
man's principal garment is a wide
sleeveless mantle of red or black
felt tied about the neck and descending
almost to the heels. The
trousers are of Chinese cotton with
felt bandages. No shoes are worn,
but a conical hat of woven bamboo
covered with felt furnishes a head
covering as well as an umbrella.
The Chinese divide the Lolos into
two classes, which they call respectively
"black bones" and "white
bones," the first being the nobles
and the latter their vassals and retainers.
There is also a third class
of captive Chinese and their descendants,
called "watzu," practically
slaves, who are tattooed on the
forehead with the mark of their
tribe.
The Lolos never marry except in
their own tribes, captive Chinese
women being given to their bondsmen.
The marriage of a "black
Dorr is a time 01 great lesuviues
and many banquets. The betrothal
is celebrated and ratified by the
present of the husband to the
bride's family of a pig and three
vessels of wine.
On the wedding morn the bride is
richly dresse^ with many ornaments.
She is expected to weep
profusely, whether she feels so inclined
or not. In the midst of her
tears the rroom's relatives and
friends dash in, 6eize the bride, the
best man carries her out of doors
on his shoulders, she is clapped on a
horse and hurried off to her new
home. Here she finds horses, cattle
and 6heep, provided by the
groom'a family, while her own people
send clothes, ornaments and
corn. Women occupy a high position
among the Loloe, and a woman
chief is not unknown among the
tribes.?New York Herald.
A Mecjevt Yln,?< BTaoEJlnTttt"- ?
The little village could notboaat
of having many entertainments, and
a concert was an event which was
looked forward to with delight by
the inhabitants. It was at one of
these "musical feasts" that a stranger
sang with great feeling "The
Village Blacksmith."
In response to "a vociferous encore
the singer was about to start "Rocked
In the CradlJ of the Deep," when
the chairman tugged his coat tail.
"Better sing the owd ,iui over
again, mister," he whispered. "I
'appen to be the chap you've been
sin zinc about?the villacre black
0 0 -
smith?and I reckon it'd only be
fair to me if you was to sing it all
over again and pop in another verse
sayin' as 'ow I let out bicycles/'?
London Mail.
Satisfaction.
On one occasion some remarks of
Incledon, the once famous singer,
gave offense to a man who resolved
to have "satisfaction" for his
wrongs. Accordingly he hunted up
Incledon the next afternoon, finding
him at dinner in a noted hotel. "Mr.
Incledon," said the visitor, entering
the room in a towering passion,
"you have been making free with
my name in a very improper manner,
and I've come to demand satisfaction
!" After some parleying Incledon
rose and, striking a graceful
attitude in the center of the room,
began to sing "Black Eyed Susan"
in his most delightful style. When
he had finished the song he said
coolly, "There, sir, that has given
complete satisfaction to several
thousand people, and if you want
anything more I've only to say
you're the most unreasonable fellow
r nvnr moi !"
The 8lrloin.
The term "sirloin" of beef i? ft
iorruption of "surloin," from the
FVench word "surlonge," meaning
>ver or upper portion of the loin;
ilso because King James I., when
lining at Hoghton hall, in Lan:ashire,
in one of his fits of humor
aid to an attendant, "Bring hither
hat surloin, sirrah, for 'tis worthy 1
>f a more honorable poet, being, as
[ may say, not surloin, but Sir Loin,
die noblest joint of all."
t
"^Jrl
AN ANONTAOtS COR RESPONDENT.
Eiideotly a Negro, Takes qs to Task (or
Opposing Compolsory Education.
As i rule we pay no attention to
anonymous communicitions, but aswe
have received several letters along v
the same line evidently emanating
from the same source, we will giv*
this one 'the light of publictiy.
Some of the contributions from this
anonymous scribe have been rather
abusive and the head and front of
otir offending the whole way seems tobe
that we have opposed compulsory
education, which our nameless
correspondent?undoubtfully a negro
himself?appears to object to as
aimed atthetace be represents. Be
this as it may, we are disposed to
treat the negro fairly and give him
every thing to which he is entitled,
but we do not believe compulsory edi-n
hp hpst for him or for the
white man either. Here is the letter
and clipping.
White Man Lynched In GeorDalton,
Ga., July 1:?Dock
Posey, a middle aged white man,
the self-confessed assaulter of his
nine-year-old step-daughter, was
taken from the Whitfield county
jail here between 1 and 2 o'clock
this morning and hanged to a railroad
viaduct in the middle of the
city and his body was found there
at day break. ? Pjl
Posey on the way to bis death admit
ted the crime. The crowd, consisting
of about 25 men, marched to
the jail, covered the officials with
guns and took the prisoner. Sever- . ?
al policemen were foiced to accompany
the crowd, but not a shot was
tired. Posey, who lived with his
family, some miles from town,
brought the girl hereafter the crime
and accused another*man of the assault.
Posey acknowledged the
truth, however, and added that he
made an attempt to assault bis vie*
tim's elder sister about a week ago.
Editor County Record:?Does
not this clipping from The State
of July the 3rd, prove to your young
and feeble mind that the negro hasn't
a cinch on that disrespect for the
moral or civil Thou Shalt Not? And
that the great white gentleman (?)
hasn't a monopoly on the proper regard
for the moral and civil codes?.
A negro who forges a white man's ;s|
^kme to a check because of the
former's education does just what a
human,homo would do; but a man (?)
who will commit vour Georgia white
jpan'$ :uqst go down amon^ the
canine kind,
Hn?h vonrr '
? j??- juui^ lAiiic uiuutu auu
See yourself as other# see you!!
Yours truly, w
One Interested In You.
^ " *?
Whiskey Selling on Sanday.
A few days ago Dispenser Patterson,
at Walterboro, wr^te to the At- ^ v/;
toruey General to know what he l??
should do about people bothering
him to get liquor ou Sundays .with
physicians' prescriptions. To-day
Mr L/on wrote him:
"Dear Sir: When in doubt as to
your duties u ider the dispensary
law you should apply to your county
dispensary board, as you are
amenable to it in the discbarge of
your duties. However, I am pleasrd
to give you the information requested
in your letter. Section 14
of the dispensaiy law provides: 'No
sale or delivery permitted under
this Act shall be made on SunJav,
on a legal holiday, on a general or
primary election day, or between
sunset and sunrise of any day.'
"There is . no exception to this
rule in any case."
Notice of Sale
and PartitionSTATE
OF SOUTH CAROLINA,/
County of Williamsburg S
Court of < ommon Pleas.
Mattie L Fulmore, Plaintiff, against
Eleida V Fulmore, Defendant.
Pursuant to an order of this Court
issued in the above entitled case, dated
the 26th day of March, 1907, I will sell
at public auction for partition between
the plaintiff and defendant, before the
Court House door in Kingstree on the
first Monday in August. 1907. (the same
being the (>th day of the month,^during
the legal hours of sale, to the highest
bidder, for cash, the following described
lot of land, to wit:- All that
certain piece, pared or lot of land situate
in the town of Lake City, State
and County aforesaid, containfng three
quarters (3-4) of an acre, more or less,
bounded as follows: North by a ditch
running from the N. E. R. Road to the
public road leading from Lake City to
Kinsrstree, on the East by the public
road. West by the N. E. R. Road and
South by lot of Mrs 0 E Singletary .
Purchaser to pay for papers.
H 0 6RITT0N,
Clerk of the J<>urt of Common Pleas
for Williamsburg county.
July, 9 1907. 8-ll-8t