University of South Carolina Libraries
. <? - * i1 % { SHOT THROUGH CAR WINDOW. iTiDmonsvill.; ran Wounded in Face L: m rtles tiring at Train. Scr.n.. November 2.-Special: Will Powers, of Timm^sville, \v?s shot in the lact and nose by unknown parties while on train Xo. 50, between Lake City and So ran ton. Twc intrt trn i r ncio uitv4 luiv w,i!i a shotgun, the tirst going into the negro car, doing nc damage. The second made a large hole in a window near tht rear of the car, with the above results. There is no suspicion as to who did the shooting. + ? Banquet cheese 20 cts per lb. a! Hill & Dickson's. 10-31 -ti *** 57 varieties of Heinz's pickles al Hill & Dicksou's. 10-31-tf Everything good to eat at Hill & Dicksons'. , . 10-31-tf, i " * ^ * """""" Hot, Springs Ark., it no competition against Lippman't reat Remedy tor cure of Rheumatism. - James Newton, Aberdeen, Ohio, days P P P did hi-m more good than three months treatment at. Hoi Springs, Ark. W T Timmons of Waxahatchie, Tex , says his rheumatism was so bad that he was confined to his bed lor months. Physicians advised Hot Springs, Ark., and Mineral Wells, Texas, at which places he re?U several weeks in vain, with th knees so badlv swollen that hi* tortures were beyond endurance. P P P made the cure and proved itself as in thousands of other cases, the best blood puritirer in the world, aa4 superior to all Sarsapari I las and the so-called Rheumatic Springs. Sold by all druggists AGE NO BAR. Everybody in South Carolina it eligible. Old people stooped with suffering, Middle age, courageously fighting, Youth protesting impatiently; Children, unable to explain; All in misery from their kidneys. Only a little backache first Comes when yon catch a oold. Or when yon strain the back. Many complications follow. Urinary disorders, diabetes, Bright*! ? disease. Down's Kidney Pills cure backache. Cure every form of kidney ills. J W Powell, proprietor of a general store and coal, wood and ioe dealer of Waverlv, living at 201C Blanding St, Colombia, 8 C, says: "My son has been afflicted with )ttdney and urinary'trouble from child? ? H.kta *A Art n f fn I iki UWU| UClUJf UWWV <u WUMVI MCI ecretiow especially when asleep. Since using Dunn's Kidney Pill* he AM entirely recorered." For sale by nil dealers. Price 5C cants. Feater-Milburn Co, Boffalo, New York, sole agent* for tta United State*. Remember the name? Dean's? and take no other. Fntif-Jacsls. We acknowledge with thanks the following invitation: Jdr. and Mrs. Samnel Berebardt request the honor of your presence at the marriage of their fj cousin Miss Clare Fendig to Mr. Sol Jacobs on the evening of Tuesday, the nineteenth of November at seven o'clock at Temple Schaari Zadek Tampa, Florida. Mr. Jacobs, the prospective bridegroom, is a former Kingstree boy and we extend in advance our most sincere felicita* tions. You can't be well if you have a weak, unhealthy tired out stomach. Neither can you feel good if by some little irregularity in eating you have caused the stomach to get out of order. These ^little stomach ? troubles are signs of indigestion, ' which may and very often does turn mto a very bad case of dyspepsia, Dent allow this to go on a single day without doing something tc overcome it Take soiqe good reliable and safe digestant like Kodol For Dyspepsia. Kodol is the besl 'remedy known today for heart burn, belching and all troubles arising from a disordered digestion. It ii pleasant to take aid affords relief promptly. Sold by W. S. Wallace. ? The Scrap Book: Should Be Patented. j "Mau.l.v, u ha' f<>* you pib dat bnby > ' a oig (ii?-e in |>vui\ !> i uu? ..... , L j you all know (K> po' chile choke on it V" [ "I>Inab. don' you see ile string tied ! ' i to dat piece oh fat pohk? I>e udder l end's tied to de chile's toe. Ef he j rj chokes he'll Uck. an' ef he kicks he'll ! jerk de pohk out. Ah reckon you all '; don' learn me nothiu' 'bout bringin' l' up chillun!" INGRATITUDE. Blow. blow, thou winter wind! Thou are not so unkind 1 As man's Ingratitude. Thy tooth Is not so keen. Because thou art not seen. Although thy breath be rude. Freeze, freeze, thou bitter sky, [ That dost not bite so high i As benefits forgot! Though thou the waters warp. Thy sting Is not so sharp As friend remembered not. ?Shakespeare. ' They Were Really Agreed. , Former Lieutenant Governor Woodruff of New V<?rk tells of the efforts of a kindly disposed man In Albany to arbitrate lvtwcen a man and hfe wife who were ailing their troubles ' on the sidewalk one Saturday even' Ing. -- "Look here, my man." exclaimed the , Albany man. at once intervening in i the altercation, "this won't do. you ; know"? j, "What business is it of yours?" demanded the man angrily. 1 "It's my business only so tar as i | may be of service lu settling this dla' pute. and I should like very much to I do that." "This ain't no dispute." "No dispute!" came in astonished i tones from the would be peacemaker. ^ "Why. you"? "I tell you that it ain't no dispute. She thinks she ain't goin' to get my week's wages, and I know she ain't! ' That ain't uo dispute!"?Llppincott's. I Willie's Cross Eyed Bear. Aunt Marion took her small nephew to church one Sunday, and when Willie got home his mother asked bim howhe liked to attend church. "Well," said Willie. "I liked it, only they sang a funny song." "What was it?" 1 "About a cross eyed bear." "What! You must be mistaken." But Willie was sure he was right. When Aunt Marion appeared, she was questioned, and this was found to be the hymn: "A Consecrated Cross I'd Bear!" Hs Had Lsft It A prominent railroad man hurried down the lobby of a Blnghamton hotel and up to the desk. He had just ten I minutes In which to pay his bill and reach the station. Suddenly It occurred to him that ha had forgotten something. . "Hart, boy." he oaUed to a negro bellboy, "run op te 46 god tea If I 1 lsft a box ob the bureau. And be 1 qcfek about It wtU you?" Th4 boy rushed sp the stairs. The ten minutes dwindled to asven, and the \ aaflroad man paced the oOcs. At , length the Dor tppMrea. ampry mod ' ad. "Yas, sub," be panted breathlessly. fcYas, aab, yxf left it scb."??rsry ) body's. a u? wmii M a?Ml* ? fed faced man was bofckng tba fttaottoo of a little poop wtth some . wonderful recitals. "Ybe oart excttlnc obese I erar had." be said, "linMf""1* a few yean ap> la Russia. One crifbt, abau sleighing a boot tea miles froca my destination. I discovered. to my latoaaa hor1 ror, that I was being followed by a pack of waives. I died blindly tale . tba Jack. killing ooe of ?be brutes. and, to ta+ delight, saw tba offcass atop to ' devour it After doing this, however, . tbey still came 00. I kept oa repeating the dose, with the same resort, sod each occasion pave me an opportunity to whip up my bones. Finally there was only one wolf left, yet on It came, with its fierce eyes paring in anticipation of a good, hot supper." Here the man who had been sitting in the corner burst forth into a fit of laughter. "Why, man," said he, "by your way of reckoning, that last wolf must have bad the rest of the pack inside him!" "Ah," said the red faced man, with1 out a tremor, "now I remember it did wabble a bit" Raally Amazing. An American tourist on the summit of Vesuvius was appalled at the grandeur of the sight "Great snakes!" he exclaimed; "It re. ininds me of hades." "Gad, how you Americans do travel!" replied his English friend who stood near by.?Ladles' Home Journal. I ; An Opportune Telegram. "One time when 1 and some other lawyers were engaged In defending a ' prisoner charged with murder," said i an attorney, "Judge Sho|>e was among those employed on the side of the pros' ecutloQ. We made a vigorous effort to 1 get oaf man's head away from the i halter, and our chances seemed fair enough until Shope addressed the Jury. ' He didn't seem to make' much of an 1 imprecision at first. They listened rath; er Indifferently, hut all at once a Circumstance arose that turned things in 1 his favor. ' "While he was speaking a meeeenI ger boy entered the courtroom and t handed him a tekgsam, which, still ' ; coadabUg lis afckwM to the Jury, be > marhsaitoally tare open. MMf Mi . \ J eyes dilated and stared intently on the words before him. Then his voice faitered and broke, his breath came and went in short gasps, his chest heaved and fell with deep emotion, and. turning his tearful eyes on the jury, he sai l in sobbing tones: "Excuse me. gentlemen. I fear I cnnuot go on. 1 have just received the I news of the death of a dear friend, one who has l>eeii of the most materia! l>enerit to me in my professi ?n and whose demise leaves a gap that none can ever till. Excuse me. 1 beg of you. 1 am utterly unmanned and broken down at tbis ?tul calamity.' "Some members of the jury expressed their regret and urged him to continue his address, and lie did so. The result was that he won the sympathy of that jury, and my unfortunate client was sent to the penitentiary for life. i "When the trial was over, somebody nL.UAil v. + tAlorrro r*\ tHafr hod QA puacu up' IIIC ICl CftiUU! iuuv Iiwx. ?v opportunely come Into the hands of the able advocate. It had been sent by a waggish friend and simply contained the favorite expression of a character In one of Charles Reade's novels, the old soldier In 'The Cloister and the Hearth,' which Is, 'Have courage, friend; the devil is dead.'" The Perplexed Minister. A Baptist minister In Virginia wa3 noted for quaint sayings. He was the owner of a few yoke of oxen, and at the loss of one of a favorite yoke?a loss he could 111 afford?was well nigh inconsolable. His good wife, endeavoring to comfort him, quoted. "The Lord gireth and the Lord taketh away." "Yes. Elizabeth. I know, but I can't see what the Lord wanted with an odd steer." "8. B. A. N." A senator from Kentucky was walking down Pennsylvania avenue, Washington. when a dapi>er young gentleman approached him and said: "Ah, senator, how de do? I called ou you this morning. Did you get di.v card?" "Yes," said the senator, "but what did you mean by writing 'E. IV in the Corner?" "Oh, that's the correct thing, you know, when you leave the card yourself. It means 'en personnel left In person." Next day It was the senator who met the young gentleman aud accosted him with the questiou: "Did you get my card? I called on you this morning, or, well?I called by proxy." "Yes, but I could not make out the meaning of *S. B. A. N.' In the corner?" "Oh, that's the correct thing when you don't leave the card yourself. That means 'Sent by a nigger.'" The Lord and tho Barbae. One of Lord Salisbury's pet anecdotes was of a barber whom be once patronised. On passing the shop a few dsyrf later be observed a placard in the window bearing tbta Inscription: "Hair cut, 3d. With the same scissors as I cut Lord Salisbury's hair, 6d." Canary Wrote an Editorial. A. f tory Is told that there was In the sfica of the oM New -York Tribune only one compositor who could read Horace Greeley's writing. Mr. Oneley. the ablest of sdfto?, was Bhswlse the poorest penman of them all. One day some of tbo other men tn the offtee. tn order to get a Joke on the old compositor, took a canary bird and. dtppfag Ma tost and taHiri writhe lak, Sowed K to bop around on a place of paper, whlcb was later bong wbare Mr. QrsMsy was In tbe be bit of Marine the copy be wtaiiad tbe old coaapoattor to set np. Tbe compositor looked at It pot It ap oa bla esse and want to work aa If there waa nothing naaaoal about It Finally, a boot halfway down tbe pace, be appeared to be stuck. He readjusted Ma glaaaaa tad looked and looked at tbe oopy and (tartly weat with It to tbe desk of Mr. Qraaley. "Here's a word I can't make oot" aald be. Mr. Oreetey looked abaaply at tbe oopy a moment ao tbe story goes, and then aald, "That word la eonstttotkm; go ahead." A Matter ef Gender. MI fear I cockroach toe much upon jour time, madam," politely remarked tbe F/renchmen to bis English bootees. "Hfrn-croacb, monsieur," she smilingly corrected him. He threw up bis hands in despair. "Ab, your English genders!" In a Pretty Bad Fix. Several men belonging to different nationalities happened to meet The Englishman asked the Scotchman. "What would you be, if you weren't a Scotchman?" "I guess I'd be an Englishman," answered the Scotchman. "And what would you be. If you weren't an Englishman?" asked the Scotchman. VI suppose I'd be a Scotchman," politely replied the Euglishman. "What would you be If you weren't a Spaniard." demanded the Italian. "Oh, I guess I'd be an Italian," answered the Spaniard. And so they went on making each other the same complimentary answer. At last came the Irishman's turn. "What would you be, If you weren't an Irishman?" he was asked. "Oh. I'd be ashamed of myself," be quickly Rnswered. 8hortly after hearing this anecdote I visited an old man named John Qra bam. Curious to know what answer be would make to the question, I related the anecdote. "And now, Mr. Graham," I asked the yeoerable Irishman, "what would you be, if you weren't an Irishman?" His answer was made In a Jiffy,, without thought st making a Joke ot it: "Faix, I'd he In a party bad flxrA.K.O. 1 Citation Notice. State cf south Carolina. County of Williamsburg. By 1'. M. Brockington. Esquire, Probate Judge. Whereas, Mrs Belled. Blakely made ' suit to me. to grant her Letters j j? f Administration of tiie Estate of and ,, I effects of T. A. B'akeiy I he-e are therefore o cite a'd ad- j monish all and singular the kindred , and v re utors of the said T A Hlak?-iy, ' de<-ea e I, and that (hey be and appear before me, in the Court of Probate, to ! be held at Kingstree, SC. on the Uth ; day of Nov next after publication j thereof, at 11 c'cloi k in the forenoon, |, to show cause, if any thfev have, why | the said Administration should not be granted. j Given under my hand this 28th day of October. Anno Domini, 1907. ( Published on the 31stday of October 1907 in The County Rkcord. ( P. M. Brockington, Probate Judge. 1 10 31 2t j Come See j ( what we are offering in ; Wall I Pa % 1 The most artistic designs and color, ings ever shown in Kingstrec. Novel schemes of decorations that will make yonr house different from others at modest prices. ALFRED WELLS, Painter and Decorator, Kingstree, S. C. Leave orders at Kiugstree Hdwe. Co. f-io-ir tiiuru rueo ff nbllb* tall You - Have Any KIND OF BUSINESS < la ?al Eitate See ; STOLL BROTHERS, ' Kingstree, - - 6. C. I' Y " -1T t^nsurance. Fire Insurance, Tornado Insurance, Plate Glass Insurance Life Insurance, Health Insurance, Accident Insurance, Burglary Insurance. We represent only Companies of unquestioned* reliability'and a policy is as good as a gold bond. 1 We'll Bond You.. As Cashier, Treasurer orj any* position of trust in any of the Iiargresi tympanies m America. The Williamsburg Insurance & Bonding flgencu, | OFFICE OVER L STACKLEY'8 STORE, Kingstree, - S. C. Frae Sfowv boWto obtain pa ten U. trade marka,|l eoprrtj**. *c., (N ALL COUNTRIES. Business direct vith Wasking ton saves tirns,m money m*d often the patent. I| kt?l Fieetfce Exehslrely. I m nisMnL.si.MM MM* IM OS?,I _ WRSH1NSTON, P. C. ' B O ? ' V * < 9 ?.?::?:@:@:@:@:@?:?:?:@,?:?:??:@::@:?@:?: ? ? @ The . ! !! jg) 1 Daylight Store.! ? ? @ w ^ The largest stock of fall goods we have ever carried has ?r- j&' ? rived and all and everybody is cordially invited to call gj and examine all goods. Exclusive agents for Walk- jgj * Over shoes for men, the best on the market; * ? Browns' Shoes for men and women @ gj None better. $1,000.00 worth of men's pants, best (?) gj quality and make. $1,000.00 worth of boys'suits and single jgj ? pants; Shield's Hats for men and boys', all styles and colon, prices gj $2 00 and $3 OO.The best line of Dry Goods, Millinery Goods, Fancy (?) Goods, Laces, Ribbons and Notions. We guarantee every piece jaj ? of merchandise bought from our store. . . $ : Stackley's Cash Store. | 2 ? KINGSTREE. S. C. 5 * A ?:?:?:?:@:?:?:?@:?:? :??:?::?:@:@:?.?:@? ^ ????????????????????ii i m > * iij PACK YOUR GRIP FOR CHARLESTON ~ r - 'Aft ?THE? Annual Fall Festival Will be Held Nov. 18 to 23. One Fare Plus 25c on all Railroads for round Trip. Grand Military Prize Drills and Parade. State Companies to Participate. Firemen's Parade and Horse Reel Contests. Fourth Annual Poultry Show (Admission Free.) Football: . Welsh Neck vs. College of Charleston." Citadel vs. College. Street Carnival, i i Illumination of City. Band Concerts. Free Shows, Spectacular "Fighting the Flames,'' nightly on s ' .. Marion Square. . $ i Kingsltree Graded School, S Kingstree, S. C. *?* , j ll Prenares bovs and girls for col left, or for the business pursuits | of life. Eight instructors. Musk department. Healthful locution. Pure water. A limited number of , I boarding pupils will be talcen. | T erms Reasonable Fall session begins Honday, September 16. For further information write to the Superintendent, or to 1 H E. 0. EPPS, Clerk B'rd Trustees. i A t I of age, Smoothness of taste HjjM I g\I^H(WH 9 the drink that wins the hearts of *^?ro9I^B?fl 9 connoisseurs, as it^has won them for |^HU59B^^99H| 1 half a century. The U. S. Uovern- HMl|j'Hiiinnn?.<m;i?a I ment stamp* guaranteeing 100? proof, -> *v- > >. t \ * : / i'J