The county record. [volume] (Kingstree, S.C.) 1885-1975, November 07, 1907, Image 7

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r" f 4 * r" ??gai [JUST I RECEIVED! j A big line of ladies'solid gpld ivatcnes ana cnains, hclnlaces, diamond rings, bracelets, stick pins, brooches, waist sets, in fact, everything in the jewelry line. Give me a call at Hotel Van Keuren building. Also, all kinds ^of watch repairing done on short notice. E. it. WATTS, Kings tree, S. C. 8-29-tf. j:.. Oils CLUBBING BATES. We offer cheap dabbing rptee with f a Dumber of popular newspapers and periodicals. Read carefully the following list and select the one or mogs that you fancy and we shall be pleased to send,.in yonr seder. These rates are of qonrse all cash hi adtance, which means, that both TwiReoord and the paper srdeied must be paid for, ndt 1, 2.3, 4,5, 6, 7, 8, ?. 10,11, but twbltl mojtthb ahead. Below ia the list of oar beet dabbing offers. Tn Record and Newt A Conner (Semi-weekly,) $1.60. The Record and Home & Farm (twice a month,) $1.35. The Record and New York World (3 times a week,) $1.75. The Record and Atlanta Constitmtion (3 times a week) $1.85. The Record and Atlanta Consti* tation (weekly $1.50. Thb Record and Bryan's Com, moner, $1.75. The Record and Cosmopolitoo Magazine $175. Thi Record and Tooth's Companion; (New Subscribers) $2.50. m t> C5 : TIT t.l_ J. ills XUSWJttn OCUII-WCCIkM UWIK. $2.50. Thb Rbcoed and LippiuoottV Magazine 1 year each 12.75. Ths Rboord and Natioaa Magazine, 1 year each, $160. H. R We do not club with an] daily papers. Tbe first issue yoc receive of the pacer or periodical if evidence that itbe money for sam< has been forwarded by ns. We ar< not responsible after that. THE COUNTY RECORD Kiagstree, S. C Kisgatree Lodge Knights ofPgtfjte Regular Conventional Every 4a<w?dM?aer eight* Visiting brethren always welcome. Castle Hall 3rd story Gourd in Building. Thos. McCutchen, c. a R. K. Wallace, k. b. s. ,LOUIS . 232 & 234 KINGS The Hoase I The Largest Wkelesale ni are aaj lataceaeit, we are I WE CUT FINE GOOD J . . .< ' I ? a mmmm A A THE SHfcUl Re; F01 | Describe je?r waits, sek is ai Ne ' ; * ? * s* r Our stocks are now compl All the newest effects in s Wen, Women and Children f line of Notions, etc. Don small orders as well as la / ' ' ' ' ' \ 4 I! IF YOU WANT A BUGGY . i se j i WHY NOT BUY THE ? Best on the Market? 1C i i ggggE^^SSSSSSSSSSSSSS1 EES1B55E5B? 11 j ; WE SELL THEM?THE TYSON & JONES. ? WE HANDLE A NUMBER OF OTHERSTANDARD MAKES, ALSO WAGONS, HARNESS, L?P ROBES, HORSE BLANKETS, ETC. i I all the best on the market, j F. C. Thomas, ZECIng-stiee, S. C. F>. PT 7 tPrtekly Ma |Mt ul Ntuahu.) ?nun potmn ccnss or Ai^voBMt ajr> staoh or V^i*aalMiP.r.r.Mt?l? > ? ?8l npti Mi ami. *iA ? ?MMM Mi |?Mte I CX9 w?*? * ""WSJ ?M lM Mi Mi ?f PiImmj, MMf tM ?m at P. P. P. ., MIMlMrlnMA l||hllMi Mi? UM wlw yM? ?? pHwti ?I MM, MMNi PtoM M Mpm, wkm MMIiH am l?|Mi iii?l?i? Mi Hp OmsWM, OM ChrMta UMrt tMt kwM tki twtaM Ml M SYPHILIS " SCROFULA Y MliMMUMMaWOMAMi ?mm tmmm Mm, (mm r?a*i* m rr\. fl M?i *" "* ? at p. p. p., MAMMMUMIM, Vr# MMMI.M.M MDrilDN?M P. P. P. k p?K MM Mi m ,.?rnrt J." MMtac M ll? "JJPJ F. V. LlPPMAN, PrapHatsr. VMM imM*. >VM ? mm Mi SMMnah, Ga. i ? taUn Mi Ml Mr trr P. P. P.. Mi RHEUMATISM ffian/c of Williamsburg, rrnrn r? r?rr e ^ lunu} rux, a. v. r ? S Capital StocOs: - - $-40,000. k Chas. W. 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 pay four per cent on deposits in Savings Department, payable quarterly. WE^respectfully solicit your business. Large or small it will re ceive our best attention. Boaid. Of Directors, Chms. 10. JVW/, 10. Zf. 10it kins, tP S. Sourdin, 10. / 9?extern, f. 70c Madden, fflkem, Zf. Jf. 58/akeSey, C. Srakam. fr \? r'' * * ( ? / >!/ > cuncrN <x TREET, CHA that Gives you "SATISFACTION" or year 1 \ * ** fl4 Retail Mail Order lease it tie 8eatl. We're after year lasiaess, aid II sare te ret It. TRT 18?Write far samples aid prices, yea'll receive tie r . y n S IN DESIRABLE LENGTHS, FOR MERCHANT? at W1 I .. . U I '?<} - ] I ALTY HOUSE OF THE S i__ u. _ ii 7 nAAr auy-to- w ear uwl ,N i ' t R LADIES, niSSES, BOYS, CHILDREN and. INFANT! i tpei trier, we'll satisfy yea, ail save jta aeaey, ail if itt satisflel, n w Fall Dress Goods and Sil ete, full to over-flowing with the newest of plain and fancy dress go< ilks in Plain, Plaids and Fancies. Best of Table and Fancy Linens. ; Carpets, Mattings, Rugs, Art squares and Curtains; Gloves, Hosier 't forget our's is a large establishment; we sell as cheap as others b rge ones. If you know your wants, we know how to supply them, T . ' ' ^ Notice. i Notice :s hereby given to all over-1 er* to warn out the hands on ! h? ir I ftions; and where there are none, j nplov enough t" complete the work | i the roads at once. S J SlNGLETARY. (.'ounty Supervisor. I " i J D-'Witfs I,it1le Ear!v Hirers are n- b-s! j?iHs tn t If. TiifV tin not ripe. 8)!*1 ??y W. L. W illace, M i. NOTICE! FARMERS jenuine Peruvian Guano, Guaranteed pure. Best Natural flanure to make (Cotton and To* f bacco. It leads. Also Nitrate, Sulphate and fluriate of Potash, * i Nitrate of Soda, Basic Sla;. All direct from Importers to you. j For price?, etc., write to J. J. SNOW; Agent, CHURCH, S. C. ! ft: . ' .?. ^9^1 B- "-c?"~ B^n] J >\ 1 / V '?. \ DOMESTIC SEWING MACHINES Be*t on the market for the money. If yoi want a high ;:rade machine at a low price call ot 1L, C. nontgomery, at Kennedy-Montgomery Co's. 8-22 Sin KINGSTREE, S. C. Registration Notice. ? - s+ -L ?' - .L^Ia t% TheofHce ol tne oirpervibur 01 xvrjt istration will be opened on the firs Monday in every month for the pur pose of the registering of any persoi who is qualified as follows Who shall have been a resident o the State for two years, and ol thi county one year, and of the polling pre cinct ia which the elector offers t< vote fonr months before the day o election, and shall have paid, mi months before, any poll tax then du< and paya?:ite, and who can both rea< and wnte any section of the constitution of 18W submitted to him by tb< Supervisors of Registration, or win can show that he owns, and has paic all taxes collectable on during tlx present year, pioperty in this Stato assessed at three hundred dollars 01 more. J. Y. McGILL, Clerk of Board , .71; JHP'Y: iBLESTON, S. C. I | !,?*. J Honey Back. ' I#w prices ftr CnIs ky return Ball. '' - V. I HOLESALE PRICES. SOUTH ON )S 5. >ar aaacy ekeerfally returned Iks ads in Black and Colors. Woolen underwear for y, Ribbons and a full y, and we want your 'BY US. SWIFT ANIMALS. A Comparison of the Speed of trie Fastest Runners. ^ The speed of the coyote is great I and has often been the subject of i comment, but I think it has been cove Vmod Thomnson < U>Vllab^U} CUJO I Seton in Success. After collecting j i data of various kinds, Such as ac- rj taal known records of dogs and I, horses, also the comparative records of dogs and hares, of horses and j I foxes and wolves and hounds and i automobiles, I have attempted a scale of comparative speeds: i Blooded race horse covers a mile I in about 1 m. 40 s. j Prong horned antelope 1 m. 50 s. First class greyhound 2 m. 0 s. < Jack rabbit 2 m. 10 *. ] Common fox 2 m. 20 e. Northern coyote 2 m. 30 s 1 Foxhound 2 m. 40 s. , American gray wolf 3 m. 0 8. I Many hunters would set the kit fox or swift above the greyhound, especially for a short race, but I have had no personal experience .. with the species in a chase. The little prairie cottontail can, I believe, get away from the swift in a hundred yard dash. They cannot keep it up for long, but their initial velocity is incredible and baffles the eye. Not a leg, not a rabbit is to be seen?nothing but a white streak across the prairie, till it promptly disappears in some burrow. What actually oounts in the race ~ m n?n?] the trifle more speed that each animal can command. Tor example, the gray wolf makes wO yards to the minute and the coyote about 700. But those fifty yards make all the difference between Bring and dying. That fifty yards' margin is probably the foothold on which the whole coyote race has been buBt up. It is a well known principle that the special development of an ani- I mal Is fts most variable part. Thus the peculiar bell in the throat of a moose varies enormously, the bill of the long billed curlew, the neck feather of the ruff, the spots of the ocelot, the white bands of the skunk, the horns of the elk, are so varied that rarely two are found just alike. Speed is one of the peculiarities of the coyote, as it is of the greyhound, and we must therefore look for great variations of rate. I have selected tn average for my calculations, but there are oocasional individuals, coyotes of rare gifts, whose speed and endurance would put them very near the top of our scale. At an Evening Party. 1 It in scarcely to be wondered at 1 that the ambitions of the amateur vocalist generally wither up like summer flowers in wintry blasts. That is Jenkins' opinion, and the reason thereof is because a little while ago he was requested to sing at a house1 whei'e the o'dest daughter-was slowly. recovering from 3 I nervous breakdown. , The. invalid * was the only one present who could play, and Jenkins trolled forth Tqs* f ti*B "Goodby" with all the requisite e sadness'and "final ffhpasfioned fer^ d vor- , *' " | r He finished. There raa a little * 11 1 11 t rustle ot applause, ana ner mom9 er*8 voice filled the awkward pause. _ "There," she said, "that shows e Gertie's getting better. Three ) months ago she'd never 'ave been 1 able to stand that right in her ear I hole, as you might say."?London ~r Answers. Getting an Extra Ration. . Medical Officer (going his rounds) ?Well, Murphy, how are you this morning? Private M.?Much better, sir. M. 0.?Is your appetite good? Private M.?Yes, sir. M. 0.?Are you gfetting enough to eat ? Private M.?No, sir. | M. 0.?What would you like in addition to your present diet? Private M.?Another pound of bread, nr. M. 0.?That I cannot give you, m the regulations do not admit of a soldier receiving a double ration of bread in one day. Private M. (after a moment's hesitation)?Could you not let me have the extra pound and mark it down as bread poultice ? He got it?London Telegraph. The Qypeies. Gypsies first appeared in Europe about 600 years ago. They were supposed to have come from Egypt and were called Egyptians, from which fact cornea their name. Now it has been proved conclusively from their peculiarlanguage that they actually came from northern India. Itoy ant appeared in Turkey and Greece, later finding their way into the Balkan states and Hungary. Fsom there latter countries they spread throughout Europe., Small end dark, nomadic in their habits and many of them "pettily theftnoos," to quote Robert Louis Stevensol^ they have never amalgamated with the people among whom they dwelt However, they are credited with many good qualities by persona who have studied them sympethetically .?London News. For Sale! We will offer for sale to the highest bidder, for cash, at Kingstree, on :he first Monday in December next, die following tracts of land, to wit: Oae tract containing three hunired and thirty-nine acres witnin $ anle of Johnoonville chnrch and jraded school, bounded as follows: North .a -d east by G. S. B Hug?in-j' land; .-outh bv Th ?s. Ginns' and, and west hv Mutidy creek swamp, the run being the line. 2d. Ore tract containing one hundred acres, oue and one half miles from Johnsouville, and bounded as follows: On the east by land formerly owned by J. L. Venters; south by land formerly owned by W. H. Johnson; west by land of estate of J. W. Kimball and estate of H. C. fl Lo 1 u ?_ si fnpmnplff ULaseiueu, uuitii kjj iuiiu AVIIIIV*?j owned by W. J. Deouis. 3d. One tract containing six hundred and thirty-nine acres, more or less., known as the Kimball tract, bouuded as follows: South by land formerly owned by W. J. Haselden; east by lands formerly owned by W. J. Dennis; north by lands of J. H. Chapman and estate of J. W. Kimball,and west by public road from Johnson's ferry to Georgetown, the road being the iine between said land and 8. B. Pueton's land. 4th. One tract containing two acres, situated at JobnsocTille and bounded as follows: North by land of John M. Eaddyiaast by land of the estate of H. C. Haeelden; south and west by & B. Poaton's land, & B. Haselden, Daisy H. C ooper. 10-17-9t. Coffee, 10 to 35 cts per lb at Hill A Dickson's Lake City. 10-31-tf There is nothing better for Stan- ; ach trouble than Kodo), which contains the same juices found in, a healthj stomach. Kodol is offered on a guaranteed plan for the relief of heart bnrn, flatulence, sonr stomach, belching of gas, nausea, and all stomach troubles So at times when you don't feel just right, when yon are drowsy after meals, and yoor head aches or when you have no ambition, and youjare (croes|[and irritable, take a littleJKodol. It digests what you eat. It will make you healthy.^Sold by W. I* Wallace, M. D. Want More Cotton to Gin. all ujp'sav v*e cuuuuut iu j we are doing, viz, ginning al the cotton that i is brought us^ without any one having to^^f t very long, in fart it- tooksri ; tiiat we canno4^ ^ crowded kny r* day, turning Qut tbe ah/ijrt&taple in as shw* time as ten to twills^ minutes, . "Whiie the price of seed is ! somewhat off, yet we are^paying more than the present conditions will warrant for all the seed accessible, that we might control the situation here among you. A home corporation doing business at home for the interest at home. ' To those who do not care to sell their seed for cash we are offering a strictly high grade meal in exchange. Our rate of exchange at the mill is i500 lbs. of meal for one ton of seed. It is a conceded fact cotton seed meal is a cheaper and .Jl ? 4.212 i.1 more enecu\e xerixiizer iu<tu cotton seed. According to chemical analysis of each 886 pounds of cotton seed meal are equivalent to 2000 pounds of cotton seed, but owing / to the superior mechanical conditionjof meal, it is-safe to awume that 800 pounds of meal are the full equivalent to one ton of cottonseed, therefore, what- , ever excess above 800 pounds of meal the farmer gets in exchange for a ton of seed is so much clear profit to him in comparison with using the ton of seed directly as a fertilizer. You can readily see that by exchanging your seed with us you realize nearly 100 per cent on the transaction. Bring your seed to us and not make the mistake of getting inferior meal elsewhere in ex- ' change. Our meal i6*open for inspection. Samples sent on application. Yours, {South Atlantic Oil Co., By Geo. E. McE., Mgr. Il-17-tf