University of South Carolina Libraries
% She (Count!! IJerorl KINGSTREE. S. C C. W. WOLFE. EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. TERMS RUBS RI1TIOX RATES: one ropy. one year, ? ? ? $1.00 One e??py. six huhijus ? ? ?. .5? One copy, tii ee months, ? ? .25 St?b->erii>iion payable ir ;.lvan<-e. OBITUARIES. Obituary notices will he published free up to I'M words. * xcept poetry. All obituary poetry will be charged for at the rate*oi one cent a word. When obituaries are extended beyond H?0 words count the words and enclose money or stamps to make up the difierence. Remembek, we publish free only one hundred word's obituaries, tributes of Respect. Resolutions, etc., tree. Also, only one obituary of the same person will be published* free. This does not apply to news notices of deaths Sent us as news. This notice will be strictly adhered to. THURSDAY. OCT. 241907. Decree for Sale and Partition. State of South Carolina, J County of Williamsburg. { Court of Common Pleas. H W McCutchen, A E Green, Sal lie L Bristow, J E McCUtchen, Julia McCutchen, E Belle Turner, L Addie Cockfield, Laura A McGee, A Veila McKinzie, Maria L Jennings, E T Moodv, H E Moody, J W Moody, P M Moody, W T Moody, E M Webster and L M Belk, Plaintiffs. against J B McCutchen, Leila McCutchen, Anna May McCutchen, vvjiijam W McCutchen and'Albert S McCutchen, x Defendants. . By virtue of an order issued out of the Court of Common Pleas in the above stated case to me directed, dated the 10th day of October, 1907,1 will sell at public auction, to the highest bidder for cash, before the court house door in Kingstree, S C, during the legal hours of sale, on Monday, November '? 1907. the following described tr. ?ts oi land, to wit: Ail that certain piece, parcel or tract of land lying, being and situate in the County of W illiamsburg and State of South Carolina, containing four honored eighteen and one-half (418>t) acres, more or less, and bounded on the north by lands of J S McClam, Mary Graham and Estate of Charles McClam; on the east by lands of H Parker and Gadsden Floyd; on the south by lands l!m,.?/4 on/4 unnnr nnnnia onrl 1 Uwiaucn nuru uuu wuuw, <?,u on the west by lands of S McKenzie, John Floyd and Estate of William Brown. " A I.SO r?'" All that piece, parcel or tract of land lying, being and situate in the County of Williamsburg and btate of South Carolina, containing forty two (42) acres, and bounded on the north by lands of E A Dennis; on the east by lands of Marie Jennings; on the south by lands of Estate oi M A J Cook and on the west by lands of J T Keeley. Purchaser to pay for papers. H 0 Britton, Clerk of Court of Common Pleas, for Williamsburg County. October 15, 1907. ~ For Sale! We will offer for sale to the highest bidder, for cash, at Kingstree, on the first Monday in December next, the following tracts of land, to-wit: One tract containing three hunninn OAfOO vifnitl 4 UiCU OUU IU14 WJ-U1VIV \ o 2 mile of Johnsonville church and graded school, bounded as follows: North a >d east by G. S. B. Huggins' land; south by Thos. Ginns' land, and west hy Muddy creek swamp, the run being the line. 2d. One tract containing one hun- j dred acres, one and one-half miles rN from Johnsonville, and bounded as follows: On the east by land formerly owned by J. L. Venters; sonth by land formerly owned by W. H. Johnson; west by land of estate of J. W. Kimball and estate of H. C. Haselden, north by land formerly owned by W. J. Dennis. 3d. One tract containing six hun\ dred and thirty-nine acres, more or less, known as the Kimball tract, bounded as follows: South by land formerly owned by W. J. Haselden; east by lands formerly owned by W. J. Dennis; north by lands of T IT Phonman anrl pafftfp nt .T. W. V# XX* VU?|/iUWU MM%? w?w. v V- w? . - . Kimball,and west by public road from Johnson's ferry to Georgetown, the road being the line between said land and S. B. Pus ton's land. 4th. One tract containing two acres, situated at Johnsonville and bounded as follows: North by laud of John M. Eaddy; east by land of the estate of H. C. Haselden; south and west by 8. B. Poston's land, S. B. Haselden, Daisy H. Cooper. 10-17-9t. If real coffee disturbs your Stomach, your Heart or Kidneys, then try this clever Coffee immitation?Dr. Snoop's Health Coffee. Dr. Shoop has closely matched eld Java and Mocha Coffee in flavor and taste, yet it has not a single grain of real Coffee in it. Dr. Shoop's Health Coffee Immitation is made from pure toasted grains or cereals, with Malt, Nuts, etc. Made in one minute. No tedious long wait You will surely like it. Get a free sample at our store. People's Mercantile Co, h " ' HOW THEY DINED. I I Methods of the EngHsh at TaMs In i the So von toon th Century. The old English had three nieais j a day, of which the chief meal was taken when the work of the day was i fiiished. The first meal was at 9 o'clock, dinner was about 3 o'clock, and supper wa6 taken just before + TVio "Wnrmnnc at j UCUllliiC. AHV ?- j the old English breakfast time or a little later and supped at 7 p. m. ! In Tudor times the higher classes j dined at 11 and supped at 5 o'clock, but the merchants seldom took their meals before 12 and (^o'clock. i The chief meals, dinner and supper, were taken in the haH both bv the old English and the Xormans, for the parlor did not come into use I until the reign of Elizabeth. Break-1 fast did not become a regular meal j until quite lately, and Dr. Murray | in the Oxford Dictionary gave 1043 as the date of the earliest quota-1 tion in which the word occurred. The meal did not become recognized until late in the seventeenth century, for Pepy6 habitually took his draft of half a pint of Khenish wine or a dram of strong waters in place of a morning meal. Dinner was always the great meal of the day, and from the accession of Henry IV. to the death of Queen Elizabeth the dinners were as sumptuous , and extravagant as any of those now served. Carving was then a fine art. Each , guest brought his own knife and spoon, for the small fork was not ; introduced into England until 1 Thomas Oorvate of Odcoir.be pub lished his "Crudities" in 1611. ; Pepvs took his spoon and fork with him to the lord mayor's feast in , 16G3. The absence of forks led to ( much stress being laid upon the act of washing the hands both before and after meals and to the rule , that the left hand alone should be , dipped into the common dish, the j right hand being occupied with the ; knife. i The perfect dinner at the best time of English cookery consisted , of three courses, each complete in itself, and terminated by a subtlety ' or device, the whole being rounded , off with hippocras, after which the : guests retired into another room, , where pastry, sweetmeats and fruit ( were served with the choicer wines. ( The English were essentially meat < eaters, and it was not until the time of the Commonwealth that , pudding attained its extraordinary popularity, indeed the first men- 1 tiGfi of pudding in the menus of ] the buckfeast at St. Bartholomew's ( hospital did not occur until 1710, and in 1712 is an item of 5 shillings , for ice.?London Times. Whtn They Know It. All. The proud father includes among ] his boasts the following school es- 1 sav of his voung hopeful: j "A horse gets up bv giving a sud- ' den jump to its front legs and then , gets on its hind legs. "A cow drinks by putting its ( mouth in the bucket and sucks the ( water. , "A duck picks up the food by its j bill, then throws his head back. "Maple leaves begin to bloom about the 1st of May. j "A locomotive while going around a corner bends very much to the inside. "A passenger train when about to stop the wheels of the locomotive , stop revolving and 6lide? along the * tracks. , "A locomotive has to be very | much heavier than the train to | overcome the weight of the train ; ^ 1 - V., agaiii6t it. .Because wnen a Douy ] gets a-moving it has a tendency to keep moving."?New York Post. j Amateur Doctors. i There was an ominous stillness in < the house as the great physician entered and made his way to his pa- , tient's room. Hastily he ma4e ms ( examination, his eves showing the , deep sympathy he felt. ( '\Madam," he 6aid, "I am indeed , sorry to see you in such a condition ] as this. What has happened? Have you been run over by a motor car?" With infinite difficulty and obvious pain the patient roused her- , self, and the white lips slowly 1 moved. "No, doctor," she moaned, "but I fainted in church and was brought to by some friends who have been studying first aid to the injured." Then the ffreat physician took out his notebook and entered the case in the "very serious" column.? London Telegraph. Had Something Else. An old darky in Richmond once experienced considerable difficulty in securing the sum due him from a prominent business man whose stable the negro had whitewashed. One afternoon as the old darky came painfully up the walk toward the house the master thereof called to him from the porch: * What's the matter, Mose? Got the gout ?" "No, Bah," came in respectful tones from Mose,' "Ts got de bill for dat whitewashinV?Exchange. INTESTINAL TROUBLES. Colitrs, Ha Cause* and the Way li Should Be Treated. Colitis is an inflammation of the rolon, or large intestine. It occurs in several forms. Simple catarrhal colitis is a not uncommon affection. It may arise from the same cause as catarrh of other mucous membranes, as of the bronchial tubes, for example, or it may be caused by the presence in the intestine of indigestible or partly decomposed food. A not infrequent cause is constipation, the matters which should be discharged being retained and bv their presence setting up an irritation. The most frequent symptom is diarrhea. This usually comes on suddenly and 1s watery in character, often tinged with blood. Associated with this is considerable abdominal pain, occurring in paroxysms? coiic ? and following the course of tlie large intestine at one or the other side of the abdomen or along its upper border. The appetite is poor, the tongue is coated with a white fur, nausea is common and vomiting sometimes occurs. There is usually more or less fever, and the pulse is rapid and weak. The treatment consists in absolute rest in bed, a very restricted diet (preferably milk and limewater in 6mall quantities) and the administration of astringent remedies. The latter is, of course, to be left to the physician, for much harm may be done by injudicious medication. The symptoms of dysentery are very similar to those of the disease under consideration, but dysentery is a much more serious affection. The possibility that the disease is dysentery rather than simple colitis is an added reason for seeking medical advice and not attempting to cure the trouble with domestic treatment. Another and more serious form of inflammation of the colon is what is called membranous colitis. This disease occurs usually in young adults and in women more commonly than in men. The initial ymptoms are similar to those of simple colitis, but the diarrhea does not last long and alternates with periods of obstinate constipation. In the passages, especially luring the periods of constipation, are patches of membrane, sometimes of considerable size, looking like wet parchment, formed of sheets of feliacious mucus. The subjects of this disease, which iB chronic in character, are usually dyspeptic, suffering much from flatulence, anaemic and depressed in spirit. The treatment is mainly hygienic. The patient should live much in the open air, have long hours of sleep, eat plenty of nourishing food, scrupulously avoiding fried meats, pastry and other indigestible articles of 'diet. A :hange of air and scene is often curative in its pffects. The patient should also if possible have 6ome light out interesting occupuuun, which will serve to turn his mind from his ailment.?Youth's Companion. Won His Bet. One of the mo9t singular wagers which might be taken to be the outcome of a growing industrial age was made and deeided in 1811. Sir John Throckmorton at that time bet a thousand guineas that he could have a coat made in a day from the first shearing of the sheep to the last stitch of .the tailor's needle. According to the agreement, at 6 in the morning Sir John gave two Southdown sheep to a Mr. Coxeter. The sheep were 6horn, the wool r<6pun," the yarn "spooled, warped, loomed and wove," the cloth "burred, milled, rowed, dyed, dried, sheared and pressed." At 4 o'clock in the afternoon it was in the hands of a tailor. At exactly twenty minutes past 6 that workman finished his task and the completed ooat was presented by Mr. Coxeter to Six John, who Dut it on and appeared in it before a crowd of 6,000 applauding spectators.?Metropolitan Magazine. Tirsd of the Even Thousand. John Hollister was one of the most popular men in Washington. He was always doing favors for other people and never asking any for himself. An acquaintance, knowing his pro verbis 1 good nature, had abused his confidence. One day Hollister was standing in the Arlington hotel lobby when this man came up to Hollister and said very effusively: "I'm a thousand times obliged to Sou for what you said to Secretary 'oster.. I got the place." "And you are 'a thousand times " "??? :-J u Via ODIlgea r querieu avuuwt m uu most innocent manner. "Yes, indeed; a thousand times." "Say, can't you make it 1,200, just once? You've been 'a thousand times obliged' on several occasions, if I am to believe you."? Brooklyn Eagle. m v REPROOFS IN BUSINESS. flomothing That Call* For tha Exorcia of Much Tact. "If there'6 one thing," said th business man reflectively, "that call for the exercise of infinite tact it i the giving of reproofs. There are o course some occasions when th manner of rebuking doesn't have t be taken into consideration?occa sions when the reprimand shouii be as decisive and sharp as you cai make it. .But there are other time ?plenty of them?when a quid word is the worst possible medicin to administer. An employer or i superintendent owes it to his posi tion, to say nothing of what he owe to the men under him, to take int consideration the kjnd of man t whom he is talking. Personally don't believe in coddling, but 1 know that gradations in reproof give weight to those I want to mak emphatic. "Every one makes mistakes r. one time or another, and I think it' only fair to be charitable to the em ployee who errs through zeal or a the result of ignorance. If a raai is trying to do his best you know i or you ought to, and such a man in cvitably loses his interest in hi work when he i> subjected to any thing that looks to him like injus tice. "Some people?and this classifies tion includes one or two by whon I've been employed myself?don' seem to realize that feelings aren' entirely eliminated in business deal ings. They are hard taskmasters their method of riding is roughshod They'd get more help on the way i they used different tactics. "It's the spirit of co-operatioi that I'm trying to hold up as ai ideal. The moment* the head of ai c-tablishment gets his associates b sense the fact that they are all pull ing together for a common end h' has gone a long way toward assur ing success. That needn't detrac from his position as director, rule ?whatever you want to call it?i] the least. It's 6imply insistence 01 team play, and it is by team pla; that our industrial and commercia games are won."?Exchange. A Brib? Which Failed. The incorruptibility of EnglisI judges is practically beyond disput? yet some of the countrymen of th judges do not realize it. Judg Morris tells of a case in which ai Irish baronet, who held strong no tions as to the divine rights of land lords, refuged to pay for the dam ages done by his aeer to the turni] crop of a fanner into whose field they had broken. The baronet' point was that the deer were wil I and that therelore he coma not o J held responsible for them. Th court, needless to say, made shor work of his plea. But before th case came on he must needs hav one of the deer shot by a keepe and a haunch 6ent to the judge wh was to try the issue. Of course th girt was returned with a scathin, denunciation. "My dear fellow, said Chief Justice Monahon whe: the righteous judge told him of th affair, "you should have taken th scoundrel's haunch, eaten it an 6ent him to jail for contempt o court!"?London Standard. Th* Effect of Wind on Lake*. Attention has been called to th very remarkable effect of the win on various inland bodies of watej It is not anuaual for the resident in towns on the shores of lakes t be gre atly inconvenienced, provide a heavy wind blowing on shore cor tinues for any length of time. I the Baltic sea the level has bee: altered for upward of eight feei Sometimej the water is blown on of a channel, leaving it almost dr] In one instance a depression of si feet occurred on one side of a bod of water, with a corresponding ris of six feet on the other. Lake Eri has been known to alter its level distance of fifteen feet on accoui of heavy winds, and Lake Michiga was at on* time the subject of cor siderable interest from the sam cause. The wind was heavy an continuou; and piled the water n on one side, while the other was s low that people walked out upo rocks where in the memory of ma no feet had ever trodden. Great Minds Think Alike. Fat hac got hurt, not much mor than a scratch, it is true, but hi employer had visions of being cozr pelled to keep him for life and ha adopted the wise course of sendin him at once to the hospital. After the house surgeon had ei amined h:.m carefully he said to th nurse: "As sulxmtaneous abrasion is nc observabl?, I do not think there i any reason to apprehend tegumer t&l cicat:*ization of the wound. Then, turning to the patient, h asked quizzically, "What do yo think, Pat ?" "Sure," said Pat, "you're a woi derful thought reader, doctor. Yo took the very words out of m mouth. That s just what I was gc ing to say."?Pearson's Weekly. DeWitt's Carbolized Watch Hazel Salve is good for boils, burus, cuts, scald8 and skin diseases. It is especially good for piles. Sold by W L c Wallace, M D. s ! Tit iiiirtt nil m KINGSTR 0 TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN: j We, the undersigned, having pur 1 Columbia, Ohio, through their repress . imported French Stallion, Val-de-Sai * of $3,600.00, we can conscientiously a horse that we have ever had the pie * wish to improve their 9tock of horses ' Thos McCi 9 M H Jacob M F Heller, John F McFadden, s J C Everett, L P Kinde i VAL-de-SAIRE will stand the i t $25.00. For full particulars call on o - manager of F C Thomas' stables. 8 Aug. 30 '07. Organized 1903. 1 Bank of I Lake it ! Capital Stool f Surplus i SAVINGS DE 1 Interest allowed at the rate of 4 a quarterly: July, October, J 9 i OFFK A. H. Williams, Pres., W. J. Singletary, Vice Pres.,v W. L. Bass I DIREC , A.H.Williams, W. J. Si II W. T. Askins, J. B. Di 1 Henry P. f We are prepared to afford yeu e 1 and balanc b ij SHIN( 1 SOLID CAI p BLIZZARD HA 3 LAKE CI S : " ^ No. 1 All Heart at $5.26 per M. e per M. No. 3 A very gooc t 1 CARL( g Come to us, we can save you r grade Lime $1.25 a bam 0 One carload of' Pittsburgh Per p before placing your order. SEWING MACHINES-A hi ?> to please, $20.00. e BLIZZARD Hi d LAKE CI f . y , 0 \ ? \ ?L 0 \ YOU WA 1 HOI ( a A. lb a & NICELY Pi p *4/ ? % THE LATES1 n it 2 ANY NICE it * i* DONE YOU ; & <s # YOUR ORDI ' V : KINGSTREE HARI L" Mr A WELLS of Savann e u time, and is an Artist in tl i- you satisfaction. ? WMr Well, will ri.it Lake C " Wall Papei i rm J De Witt's Little Early Risers are goi tl for anyone who needs a pilL 'J'bey are small, safe, sure, little pills that do not gripe or 6icken. Sold by W L Wallace, M D. ??=7'M n inf. in mil Hi :co? EE. 5. C. . : chased from McLaughlin Bros., entntive, Mr R I James, the gi?n? jmu ire, registered No. 4162, for the sum ^^7! say he is the grandest specimen of asure of looking at, and breeders who v | will do well to see him. J FTCHEN, Pres. ts, Sec'y and Treas. r B S Smith, ? Directors. season at F 0 Thomas' stables. Pee r address any of the above officers or ?. > ' The OI<} Reliable. ^ake City y, S. C. k $20,000. - 5,000. PARTMFNT. percent, per annum, payable -~r anuary and April. :er& E. W. Yates, Cashier, D. E. Motley, Asst. Cashier, , Attorney. tors: ingletary, J. A. Green, iRant, J. C. Lynch, Williams. very facility which your business :e justify. ? 3LES! i RLOAD FOR RDWARE CO.. ry, 5. c. No. X a Good Shingle at $4.25 1 shingle at $3.00 per M. )AD LinE money and give the highest , f feCt Fence just arrived. See us ? 1 1 igh grade machine, guaranteed \RDWARE CO. TY.SC. . --Ni. ; ; n r NT YOUR USE \PERED IN 2r STYLE, OR ? m PAINTINO )ft * CAN LEAVE $ 7 * :R WITH S IWARE COMPANY." ah, is here for a limited tat line and will guarantee ity 25th msL, with a full line r Samples. /i'{ . *.> . - A J.:, > . *A. > ' t-V