The county record. [volume] (Kingstree, S.C.) 1885-1975, August 01, 1907, Image 5

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When the I Hnir Falls Sropit^ And why not? Falling hair is a disease, a regular i disease; andAyer's Hair Vigor, r" t^gpiade from our new improved formula, quickly and completely destroys that disease. The hair stops falling out, grows more rapidly, and all dandruff disappears. Poet not change the color of the hair. jl tottouu with ?eh bottle } show it to you* /!?//? w lik hlmtboot 1?. ^ v then do mho?y? The little book in etcb package gives the formula of our new Hair Vigor, tells w.hr each ingredient is used, and explains many other interesting things. After reading you will know why this new hair preparation does its work so well. kr midi by th? J. c. hw oo.. town.m?a I OUR CLUBBING RATES. We offer cheap clubbing rates with a number of popular news^ papers and periodicals. Kead carefully the following list and select * the one or more that you fancy and we shall be pleased to send in your r* order. These rales are of course all cash in advance, which means that both the kecord and the paper i'i ordered must be paid for, not 1, 2. 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, but tweive months ahead. Below is the list of oar best clubbing offers. % The Record and News & Courier :*. (Semi-weekly,) $1.60. IV* The Record and Home & Farm C. (twice a mouth,) $1.35. . . The Record aod New York World (3 times a week,) $1.75. The Record and Atlanta Constitution (3 times a week) $1 85. The Record and Atlanta Constitution (weekly $1.50. The Record and Bryan's Commoner, $1.75. The Record and Cosmopoliton Magazine $1.75. Tm Record and Youth's Com' panion (New Subscribers) $2.50. Th? Record Semi-Weekly State, $2.50. . Thi Record and Lippincott'* Magazine 1 year each $2.75. The Record and Nation*. Magazine, 1 year each, $100. N. B. We do not club with a?) daily papers. The first issue wt receive of the paper or penodioal if evideoce that the mo?ey for eaau ** has been forwarded, by u?. Wean cot reeponeible after that. THE COUNTY RECORD, Kofitree, S. C. vSKmgilree Ledfe jBE& Kni^bts of Pytbiaf ftegular Conventions Txrerf 2mt mb4 4tfe**'e4ara<fay afeiits. Visiting orethren ahwryi weloatne. Castle Hall 3rd story Goardin BuOdmg. P F. w FA TREY, a c. S THOS Mr CUTCHEN, k.l4s, I riE L1RKEST WHOLESALI I AXD RETAIL DRT GOODS R AXU CARPET NOFSE i IX THE SOCTH. I NEW SP r OCR STORES AR OUR READY-TO ARE THE MOST STYLISH Ladies'|Nobby Eton Suits ma Panamas, Voiles, Black and Colore from $18.00 to $30.00. Worsted sui I Ladies' Shirt Waist suits in silk-l $6.00 to $35.00 per su it. Ladies' Silk Jumper suits, "The Aper suit. I Ladies' Princess suits (also new) range from $12.00 to $3-5.00 per suit LADIES 20 Styles here to every one to be Wl^n you in end buying a waist Bend us your measure, state what p he prettiest and chea pest waist yo We make a specialty of I it:i 1Zr: i 1; 111 J p'l Agents for Dr. Jag< Patterns, 10, and 15c. .v -4 'i 1 V V I 1! YOU WANT A BUGGY : I 1 WHY NOT BUY THE ! a ; > Best on the Market? ! WE SELL THEM?THE TYSON & JONES. ] WE HANDLE A NUMBER OF OTHER STANDARD MAKES, ALSO WAGONS, HARNESS, - - ? n.r-, ^ uAr.Pp n, t MI/CTC CT/1 LAP KUKt^, nUK3C dlaimvu i o, L. I W., j all the best on the market, ! F. C. Thomas, mixxgrstree, S. C. j / i ? 1 p. p. p. (Prickly k>k, Pot* Poot tad Potavatum.) ] KIKES POSITrTC CURES or ALL FORMS AND STACKS Of FkjantiM <!! P. P. P. M ?*? JOB rrlll ra?Bia (W?h *nd ?d *o*0btn*tloiL. **4 y^mlb* a wHb HBipai oil Ammoo rontttaf grmt mtlttmN? t?r ?* mrm of alt onrtwriof tbo tjtfm ut ewad by tanm tad <b|M * PitHQ. ?*o?4mt tk* hi of P. P. p. ud NfHtrj IjjkUk, *rphilttk Mw U?m who** ijitrw wt pMmil ud msttmm, ImMm Cfl**** *nd Sons wbonVood to to as tapmw*e*d<tin* ? ? Qioadmlor SoiBlogi, Phono* flow, W- to onnttrool imculorttioow* p*crilt*rlj M) Cim?1oI^i. OKOwtbPtanlta# bowSiod by th* woadooful too* tod SYPHILIS ^ SCROFULA DfcaMoo, BOMB* Ckiwte fntli ***** **** "1"* >*?>?? ?* P- A *o.pbM.tan.M^aa., C/l P?WbiAW.*?i r?f?. SooMhoof, ots ?*?. BoM by oB Dnoffcot. P. P. P. bi jmmN Mbwl u ^ 11? i ltrriii. iiiiiu ^ tbo "JP P. V. LiPPlAN, PnyrMs,. ' rj i RHEUMATISM ' ?? :===^==. Sian/c of Williamsburg, KINGSTREE, S. C. f . ! Capital Steele - - S-4?,OOOJ Ches. W, SioClf Pres. & C.iEpps, Cashier, F. Rhem, V.Pres, WE do business on business {principles. ' WU extend every consideration consistent who saie anu wunu banking*. WE pay four iper cent on deposits in Savings Department, payable quarterly. WE^respeod^nHly solicit your business. Large or small it srilil fe-; cei ve oocr best attention. rE?-"'gi Td. Of Directors. Chaa. % Sloil, flSll 7j. WMecnt, ? S. SsMniin, SW / ^pe-jcsen, 9^c^add?mu &A?m, ZZ jt. SSUaAf/ejr, J. C. Snt/Aam. t* ' Louis Cohen & Co.' 232 AND 234- ING STREET. CHARLESTON. S. C. The Htise that *lre? fon ^SITISFACTIOV" #r jtcr ftf hack. RING AND SUMMER E FILLED TO OVERFLOWN; WITH THE SECT OF THE MARKETS 4 -WEARQARMENTS SILKS AND DRI TO BE FOUND ANYWHERE. The newest weaves and colorings. ide of Fancy Plaid* and Mixtures ?Ut'i?***?"'?' d Taffeta Silks. Price of ailk suits range ' V? "f,{1. .pel .. . _ ?,n aa a. ?oa aa Fancy Silk Suitings, beautiful coloring its from $10.00 to $-30.00. . \ ,, ' _ ^ . .T* 19 inch Changeable Taffeta Silk at 50c ] awn, linen and lingerie. Priced from 36 jnch changeable TaffeU Silk at $1IX Bose Bay Taffeta Silk at 50c per yard. latest." Priced from $14.00 to $30.00 27 inch Rajah Silk at 75c per yard. Black Taffeta Silk, 36 inches wide, at ? made of lingerie, lawn and silk. Prices yard. DRESS G< >' WAISTS Large assortment of all the new plaids yard. found in any other house in the South. M80r mrat of the pllin Md t, ?be it Madras, Lawn, Linen or Silk, yard. irice you want to pay and we'll send you we carry the largest assortment of all u ever purchased. for Dress and Mourning. Write for samj Ladies' Muslin Underwear; Boys' and Girls'Clothing; Gen olstery Goods. ir's celebrated Sanitary and Woolen Under-Wear and ' a. - VlW-I-V Thousands of people are daily suffering with kidney and bladder roubles?dangerous ailments that , hould be checked promptly De- , iVitt's Kidney ami Bladder Pills ( ire the best remedy for backache,', Liilnavs inflammation of the )ladJer. Their action is prompt . m I sure. A week's t^tnient for i !5c. Sold by W L Wtilfoee, M P. i ^ Notice of Sale and Partition- ! -TATE OF SOUTH < AROLINA, j Jounty of Williamsburg ( 1 Court of ? ommon Pleas, tfattie L Fulmore. Plaintiff, against ' Eleida V Fulmore, Defendant. Pursuant to an o der of this Court ' ssued in the above entitled case, dated , he 26th day of March, 190T, I will sell ' it public auction for partition between ;he plaintiff and defendant, before the Court House door in Kingstree on the first Monday in August. (the same oeing the 5th day of the month,Idur- , ing the legal hours of sale, to the highest bidder, for cash, the following de- i scribed lot of land, to wit:- All that :ertain piecd, parcel or lot of land situ- 1 ate in the town of Lake City, State und bounty aforesaid, containing 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 C ty to Kingstree, on the East by 'he 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 Gritton, Clerk of the Court of Common Plea< for Williamsburg county. July. 9 1907. 8-1 l-3t Kingstree bmzitiksi l?t and 3rd Monday UMI jwjl1 / Visiting choppers corWjgjW|K?v / dially Invited to come hang alont on tht ^ limbe. PHILIP STOLL, ft < C\ C*si L _T_ W G 4 l?m? Wii VA/ui* Registration Notice. Theofflce of the Supervisor of Reg istration will be opened on the first Monday in every month for the purpose of the registering of any person who it qualified as follows: Who shall have been a resident of the State for two years, and of the county one jear, 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 Mod write any -section of the constitution-of 18H submitted to him by the Supervisors of Registration, or who can show that be owns, and has paid all taxes collectable on during tbe present year, piopertyr in this State assessed set three hundred dollars or more. J. Y. McGILL, (.lerk of Board. Tornado Tips. Tharc are no totalities exempt from Tornadoes. Tbqy know nsither fear nor favor. Ti? number <of destructive windlitoaans increase each year. "We aint a'gioin to have no tornado." That's what tbe other fellow said. Now he's living in a font. Iflon't delajtoday and wish tomorrow. The wise man insures. The footob man does mot. Are you too? 4. ?. Motley & CoAgents, Lake City, - - S. C. 6-27-2M*. KRERS FROM MERCHANTs] FILLED WITH i GUARANTEE OF SATISFACTION. STOCKS. ?F TIE WORLD. E5S GOODS. colorings for Waists and Suits, yard. s at 49c per yard. per ya.ru. ) per yard. 14c, 1 00, 1 25, 1 50 up to 250 per ( 30 DS. i and fancies from 18c to f 1 50 per incy weaves from 25c to $2 50 per < I the best makes of Black Goods >les. ts' Furnishings; * Carpets, Ladies* Home Journal m -v Anotber Railroad Suggested. Editor County Record:?I have read with interest Mr Walter Hazard's discourse on the possibilities of a railioad from Georgetown through this county. The good that sucn an enterprise may accomplish can hardly be over estimated, but careful study leads me to beli-ve that a better route and one likely to be considered with gieate, favor is from Lane (or Kingsrree) through the Cedar Swamp section, Black Mingo, Rome and thence to Conway, 55 miles by direct line from Lane. Front Conway the route progresses southward 37 miles to Georgetown. This gives a mileage of about 92, or more than one hundred miles, as the road would probably lie, and opens practically the same rich territory as that proposed by Mr Hazard with the significant advantages of furnishing an outlet southward for the people of Horry and of reaching a territory not already convenient to a railroad. The cost of this road would perhaps exceed the estimated cost of the line proposed by Mr Hazard, but the cost of operating would be reduced to the minimum in the case of an electric line, which would do satisfactorily all that may be required for many years. Sufficient competition would be obtained and the likelihood of success materially enhanced by the selection of this route. Very truly yours, Laurence H McCullough. Surveyor muo?'ii) v/ w. Lines From Lambert. Lambert, July 25:? Well, Mr Editor, after a long silence I will push back my bat and take hold of my pen again. Throughout this community the crop prospect for thi9 year is very bright and we can't blame the farmers for having such joyful conntenences. I think Mr 1) F Baxley bears the palm of haying the finest field of corn in this v icinity,although the rain storm of Wednesday eveuing broke it up considerably. I saw some of the mutton ears broken by the storm that measured twelve inches in length. Corn twelve inches, not cobl You know, brother farmers, that corn of this length aeidem finds its way into our cribs. Mr Baxley has been for the pasi five years offering a reward of $1.0( for an ear of corn twelve inches it length. But finding it in his own field, I gness he will say no more about it. There is no great amount of to bacco planted in this section this year, bnt, I understand, the weed if bringing a fair price anyway. ] hear no grumbling from those wh( selL, If you will visit the new railroad now being constructed through this community you will note that idleness is a matter of the past. They have it graded within two or three miles of Lambert postoffice. And it is thought by the managers that they will have it in operation this far or even farther by September 1. This enterprise, I trust, will meet the long-felt need of a railroad through this section. Mr J T Huggins and daughter Miss Bessie of Healon, S C, spent Saturday with the former's son-inlaw, Mr J W Baxley, of this place. Messrs J M Spivey and W E Baxley spent last Thursday in Lake City on business; also Mr Cleveland Baxlev visited relatives in Lake City on last Sunday. Mr and Mrs Willie Joy have been seriously ill of typhoid fever, but are improving. DrW C Hemingway ha3 also been quite ill of fever for the past week, and is feared that it will develop into a case of typhoid. There have been more cases of this disease through this community than has ever before been known. Mrs A M Spivey of this place is spending a few weeks' vacation with her sister, Mrs E S Brown, near Leo. Misses Rectina and Lottie Baxley of Venters visited relatives near here last Sunday. Bat Coon. t ? ?^ Death of a CentenarfaB. Thomas Flagler, who claimed to be over 100 years old, died an few days ago in the Cedar Swamp section. "Uncle Tom'" was a peacable and respectable negro, who had the esteem of his neighbors, ooth white and colored He was owned as a slave by Mr William Flagler and his "3'oimg * missus," were she alive, would be eighty three years old. "Uncle Tom's" memory wat remarkable and many events that have passed into historvhe could recall distinctly despite the years that have intervened since they occurred. He . was not a member of any .church, paid no taxes and notwithsta-nd- V ing his extreme age and infirmi- v ties, never called on "the county to contribute to his support. ? flhltuarv. ' ? : A loving1 tribute to Ibe memory of my dear daughter, Editb May belle Morris, born March 13,1904, died July *20,1906. One sad long year to-day, Oh! how we miss her. Friends may think the wound is healed. but there is none who knows the sorrow Deep within my heart concealed. How I miss you, dearest Edith. Never will your memory fade, Tho' other loved ones are around meMy heart mourns for you still, Another hand is beckoning us Another call is given and glows Once more with angel steps The path that leads to heaven Our young and gentle child, Whose 8 mile brightened summer hours: Amid the dews of springtime Has left us like the flowers. The light of her young life went down* As sinks behind tiie hill, 'jA The glory of a setting star, ?$8 Clear, suddenly and still Fold her in thine arms, dear Father And let her henceforth be, A messenger of love between Our human hearts and Thee. Her Devoted Mother, i Carris, S C, July 20, 1907. ' V Children's Day at Greelyiflle. , (Written for last week.) ; Greelyville, July 22:?Simday, July 21, will loHg be remeai bered as a banner day by all the . citizens of Greelyville, especially oar t good Methodist brethren. It wa&: ) Children's day at the Methodist*/ i church and all the little folks i quitted themselves so well we feelu ? that we should reproduce the en^i^, l / . . J .-.3 r programme, Orgau Volu?y/j>, . j Opening Song?Tite School. ? .Prayer, 3 Reeponsive Reading?All Stand. I "Gloria Patri." > Apostle's Creed?School and Congregation Standing. Lord's Prayer?The School. ' Bible Reading?Edward Spigner. i Song?"Golden Harps Are Sound- ' ; ing." ' : Introductory Dialogue ? Lena Pack and Bettie Register. "Motion Song." Song?"Hark, Ten Thousand Harps and Voices"?School and s Choir. Recitation? Elizabeth Spigner Elizabeth Ridge way, Pressley Hogun, Eunice Clarkaon, Clinton C'larkson, Katie Hair. Recitation?Leonard Mishoe, Gussie Johnson, Livingston Grier, Nickle Clarkson, Sueida Spann, .Mc- > Donald Burgee. Song?' Crown Him With Many Crowns." Recitation, '-Our Sarior"?Eloise Moore, Rachel Ridgeway, Edith McElveeu, Elizabeth Ridgeway, Elizabeth Spigner, Anna Footman. Talk ? Superintendent T. W. Boyle. "Our Offering"? Brooks Spann. "Penny Song." Song?"Mizpab." Song?"All Hail the Power of Jesus' ISame." 1 Benediction?Mr. Hugh Montgomery. "We feel it our duty td commend the worthy superintendent and teachers"for their efforts in instructing and preparing these children for this occasion. We feel sure that the good effects of their efforts will long be felt in eur community. Joe. Keep the pores open and the skin clean when you have* a cut, burn, bruise or scratch. DeWitt's Carbolized Witch Hazel Salve penetrates the pores and heals quickly. Sold by Dr. W. L. Wallace. > -i i t K k ?*>? vt-i* y Ji:w i*