The county record. [volume] (Kingstree, S.C.) 1885-1975, February 27, 1908, Image 7
? V " '
Announcement!
Having removed my business
into one of the new brick
stores' near the railroad
1 be? to offer
a select
line of
Jewelry, Clocks, Watches
Silver Ware and Gold and
Silver Novelties. : :
^ Also
watch and
,4 clock repair
) work done on short
notice at competing prices.
Look for the Watch Sign.
E. A. WATTS,
Kingstree, S. C.
8-29; tf
OUR CLUBBING RATES.
We offer cheap clubbing rates
with a number of popular newspapers
and periodicals. Head carefully
the following list and select
the one or more that you fancy and
we shall be pleased to send in yonr
order. These rates are of course all
cash in advance, which means that
both The Record and the paper
ordered must be paid for, not 1, 2. 3,
4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, but twelve
months ahead. Below* is the list of
our best clubbing offers.
The Record and News & Courier
(Bemi-weeitly,) $1.00.
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 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.
Th? Record and Youth's Com
panioti;(New Subscribers) $2.50.
The Record Semi-Week It State,
$2.50.
The Record ami Lippiocott's
-^lagazine 1 year each *2.75.
*The Record and National
Magazine, 1 year each, $1-60.
N. B. We do not club with am
daily papers. The first issi>e you
receive of the paper or periodical is
evidence that the money for same
has been forwarded by us. We are
riot responsible after that.
THE COUNTY RECORD
Kingstree, S. C.
^ K. of
i ^ IT . V 1
ViSLy ruogsiree Lodfe
jliljf Knights of Pythias
Regular Contentions Every
*y_ 2nd and 4Ui^Vedoeaday night*.
Visiting brethren always welcome,
t&astle Hall 3rd story Gourdin Building.
H. A. Myer, C. C.
s A. C. Hinds, K ii. &.
/
I LOUIS
232 & 234 KING S'
The House I
Tie Largest Wholesale art
are any ladneeBent, we are i
WE CUT FINE GOOD:
tTHH SPECI
Re;
" v
Describe year waits, send is an
l Ne1
f Our stocks are now comp]
? All the newest effects in s
Men, Women and Children
line of Notions, etc. Don
small orders as well as la
t H
r.
1 ?< .
Il ???
! IF YOU WANT
WHY NOT BU
! Best on the 1
i
WE SELL THEM?THE T
WE HANDLE A NUMBER (
ARD MAKES, ALSO WAC
LhP ROBES, HORSE BLA
...
all the best on t
I j
F. C. Th<
i i
Kin.g'stx&e
p. p.
(Prickly Ash. Poke Root a
MAXES POSITIVE CURES OP ALL P
TMjeMiBi mtmm F. P. P. m t ?pi?ndM
mbUhKov Id ytooeriho It with
|tnl HlWMIIw far th? urn of all
(was Ml Unii of Prtaarr, bmlur
mi Ttrt^y tyyhl'.W, Syphilid KW i
atHM, BcaMoaa tTVwrf ul Bor?i,
ithlir BwoBio^o, RWmaattaa, Kid- , M , ,
MT OMrMMe, OK OhrvBir Ukm that
SYPHILIS ^
hava mMn ImlMt. Ctkrrk, *ki?
Nmm, Imm, OkraM F 1 ^
riWlflMr. Marar*. Poto*a, IWn, #
lltlttll i, Mi., Ml*.
F. P. P. la a jKnr?rfBl to*l? **4 *
nan aypMaar, kaUdlac ap tfc*
mMm wpMfr. If y?* in W**k u4
bMb, **4 f*al tadly try P. P. P., tad
RHEUMS
?????WW II
I .
I Siank ofWih
KINGSTREE,
wl J>~ J. w wv-L
Chas. W. Stoll, Pres. E. C. Epps, Q
i
i WE do business on business principle
WE extend every consideration consi
banking.
WE pay four per cent on deposits in ?
able quarterly.
"WE^respectfully solicit your business
ceive our best attention.
Board. Of ZD;
Chas. W. Stoll, W. V. fi/iUki
W. S. 7/ex son f. J. 9fc
?. C.?pps, C. Sraht
; COHEf
rREET,
hat Gives you "SATISFY
Retail Mill Order House fi the South. W
jtre to ?et it. TRY US?Write for sanplf
S IN DESIRABLE LENGTHS, F<
tk m^a %.? ^
ML I T MUUot
ady-to=Wej
R LADIES, HISSES, BOYS, Ch
i open order, we'll satisfy yon, and sire yo
w Fall Dress G
lete, full to over-flowing with the newes
iilks in Plain, Plaids and Fancies. Besl
; Carpets, Mattings, Rugs, Art squares
't forget our's is a large establishment;
rge ones. If you know your wants, we
A BUGGY ! j
b
Y THE a
Vlarket? ,b
^saw?
YSON & JONES.
)F OTHER STAN D:rkVC
H ADMPCC
IV/i ^ J, i ?ni\? 'uuc/,
NKETS, ETC. 8
; t
he market,
<i
(1
1MB?W
S
Or c
e
c t0?*
* *? l>?| j
1J. I
ad Potasslnm.) c
ORMS AND STAGES Of t
yon will raffala fleeh and itiwnftk. j
Wmu of ntrfr aad all
from OTertailaf th* ryetam are earod by c
th* aa* of P. P. P. (
Ladle* who** tyateM are pafcoaad aad ^
whoa* blood i* in aa impart aaadttlaa da*
V* meartraal irrofalaiitie* or* peculiarly 1
baaofliod by the woad*rfal toa>* aad j
SCROFULA :
\
blood etoaattaf proparti** *1 P. P. P.,
Prtc?y Aah, Poke Pool and PaUaatam. 1
SaM by all Dra??tot*.
F. V. L1FPMAN, Proprtatar.
Savannah, Ga.
(
|?1IBI1??WI ?
mswi ;
Hams burg,
S, C. j
- $40,000.|
4
ishicr, F. Rhem, V, Pres.
s.
stent with safe and sound
lavings Department, pay.
Large or small it will reixectoxs.
77 J, !P S. Surd in, | w
Madden, & SP/iem,
im. g
J&CC
#UI A I
btanl
lCTIOI" or your !
e're after yoir kaslness, int If
8 ul prices, yta'll receive tkei
OR MERCHANT^ at Wh
OF THE S
ar GOOE
IILDREN and INFANTS
i ley, aid if net satisfied, vo
oods and Sil
t of plain and fancy dress goc
: of Table and Fancy Linens,
and Curtains; Gloves, ffosier
we sell as cheap as others bi
know how to supply them, T
Everything taken into the stomach
hould be digested fully within a
ertain time. When you feel that1
otir stomach is not in good order, '
hat the food you have eaten is not
eing diges^ed, take a good, natural
igestant that will do the work the 1
igesiive juices are not doing. The (
est remedy known today for all *
tomach troubles is Kodol, which is e
natural digestant: it digests what (
on eat, it is pleasant to take and is s
old h. re by W L Wallace, M D. *
Bring Your Cotton Seed.
We have closed ' 'ur <
finneries for the ser se , '
here is no more c .n.
We are paying 1 for ,
food, sound, d eed,
lelivere'1-*t or *
To' ?>no utt not care to
e' . seed for cash we are ,
.ennga strictly high grade f
neal in exchange. Our rate of 1
xchange at the mill is 1(500 lbs. \
>f meal for one ton of seed, It j
s a conceded fact cotton }
,eed meal is a cheaper and j
nore effecthe fertilizer than1/
otton seed. According to1!
hemical analj-sis of eacli^ 886, (
)ounds of cotton seed meal j
Lre equivalent to 2000 pounds j
>f cotton seed, but owing
o the superior mechanical J
:ondition of meal, it is safe to j
ifsume that 800 pounds of meal \
ire the full equivalent to one ton ;
>f cotton seed, therefore, what- j
;ver excess above 800 pounds of j
meal the farmer gets in exchange
For a ton of seed is so much clear (
profit to him ra comparison with
ising the ton of seed directly as
l fertilizer. You can readily see
that by exchanging your seed 1
vith us you realize nearly 100
per cent on the transaction.
Bring vour seed to us and not
make the mistake of getting
inferior meal elsewhere in ex:hange.
Our meal is open for inspec
lion. Samples sent on application.
Yours,
South Atlantic (5il Co.,
By Geo. E. McE., Mgr.
10-17-if
DOMESTIC SEWING MACHINES
Best on the market for the money. If yoa
ant a high jrrade machine at a low price call oo
L. C. riontgomery,
at Kennedy-Montfromery Co's.
-22 3m KINGSTREE. S. C.
MTP^f
ULESTON, S. C.
loney Back.
<
low prices for good Goods ]
i by retirn Bill. J
i
IOLESALE PRICES. ,
;OUTH ON :
kC
;
ur money cheerfully retimed J
ks :
h
>ds in Black and Colors. I
Woolen underwear for
p, Ribbons and a full il
iy, and we want your b
RY US. b
h
t]
\
LEARN WHAT TO EAT.
Study Your Needs and Select Your J
Food With Discretion.
In our ignorance of what the va ious
tissues of the body require for j
loing their work we crowd the sys-1 j
em with a great mass of unneces-!.,
arv food, only an infinitesimal part i ^
>f which can possibly be of use in
itrcngthcning us for our occupa-;*;ion.
j ^
There are about a dozen difTerent, r
cinds of tissue cells in the body. [ j
>ach one requiring a special food.
.r,a 4lw?co nro nsnerMulIv ac- !
UIVOV ???***,? ?t. v ? |
:ive in our line of work require aje
nuch larger amount of food partic-jt
llarlv adapted to their use than thpja
>ther tissues, which are almost; j
wholly inactive in our vocation. |f
Thousands of men are forcing s
heir brains to do work by siimu- ^
ants which only exhaust and do c
tot nourish, and then they wonder
hat they have nervous breakdown'!
ir pare-'s. f5t!,or thousands, in j
heir ignorance of scientific feeding.:
force their !trains to do work every j *
jit of which is abnormal, beeause s
:hev do no' hu e sudi. iont nourish-M
nont. L
An a- five brain "o:!:er requires a I.
Irrcat do;:! of albuminous foods, r
foods which (ortai.i phosphorus?I
like fish, oys'.ers and other kinds of {
diellfish and e gs. Meat is distinct- <
Iv muscle food. It is suitable only (
for those who do physical work.
The locomotive engineer studies
fuels. He does not throw all sorts '
of combustible things into his fire 1
box just because they are combusti- ;
ble. He finds out the best kind of (
fuel for his engine, that which will ,
im-n V> irv> +Via n?oofncf nft?ctHlc '
gnc 111X1 A. XXXV VUV vc v
amount of combustion with the
least waste. He makes a profession 1
of his business and studies the re- j
quirements of his engine. But most 1
people seem to think that they can
run the most complicated machinery 1
in the world?the great human en
pine?without any special study.
The result is that we use all sorts
of fuel without reference to the
particular work we are doing. ?
Success Magazine.
.
A Royal Humorist.
Poorly educated as George III.
was, he was capable to a surprising
degree of uttering at times shrewd:
and humorous remarks. - In the |
"Life of George III.," bv Lewis j
Melville, under the title of "Farmer'
George," there will be found not a
fnrr- /\f 4Via r.-ivil cnviil(T5 \\ hon :
IV" ut VUC IWJtti, cutii.^w. J
Chief Lord Baron Mncdonald, a;
great snuff taker, and Baron Gra-,
ha in, an inveterate talker, were sitting
in the Westminster court. "The |
court of the exchequer," remarked '
the king, "has a snuffbox at one end :
cr.d a chatterbox at the other." j
George" sometimes endeavored to j
find amusement in poking about.
Windsor, asking questions of all he
met in his rambles. "Well, my lad,
what do you want?" he asked a stable
boy. "What do tbev pay you?"I
"1 help in the stables," the youngster
grumbled, "but I have nothing
Ibut victuals and clothes." "Be eonlent,"
said the monarch philosoph- j
ically. "I have no more."?Westminster
Gazette.
Hourglasses For Pulpits.
The twenty minute sermon is a
purely modern invention, as is
proved by the number of pulpit
hourglasses that are still to be found
in many old churches. In the register
of St Catherine's, Aldgate, the
following entry, dated 1564, occurs:
"Paid for an hourglass that hanged
by the pulpit, where the preacher
doth make a sermon, that he may
know how the hour passeth away,
1 shilling."
A modern pulpit glass, probably
the only one of its kind, is to be j
iouna in tne unapel tfoyai, savoy, j
It is an eighteen minute glass and i
was placed in the chapel on its res-1
toration in 1867.?Westminster Ga- j
zette.
-An Awfu? Thing."
A certain man whose wife had recently
got angry and gone away to :
live with her mother was met by a
friend, who in apparent sympathy
accosted him thus:
"Man, Jamie, this is an awfu' <
thing that has befa'en you. IfB a
^reat peety that your wife has gane
in* left you/' 1
"'Deed, man," quote Jamie,
"she'll dae waur than that yet." ,
"Whof nranr oon cVia rlofl fhon
v* muv nam V/i*i? ouw uuv vumm |
that V* anxiously inquired his friend. (
"Shell come back again," replied
ramie ruefully.?Pearson's Weekly, j
Followed His Example. '
A New Yorker who does his bit
>f "globe trotting" tells of two old j
intries that he saw in the visitors' ^
ook of a fashionable resort on the
thine.
A few years ago one of the Paris ,
nembers of the Rothschild family t
iad registered as follows: "R. de
'aris." (It
so chanced that the next vis- ^
tor to inscribe his name in the
ook was Baron Oppenheim, the ^
anker of Cologne, and he wrote j
is name beneath Rothschild's in ^
his wise: "0. de Cologne."
/
' *
??mmm?1^
THE NEWS AT KINGSTREL
"
toll for Solicitor?Graded School
Annex?Cats and Dcgs Poisoned.
Kjngstrek, February 22:?The
jutting of Florence county into
l new circuit has caused a vaancy
in the office of solicitor of
he old third'circuit. Friends of
Jr Philip Ii Stoll are urging his
lame on the governor for ap
jointment. Mr St oil is now in
Columbia looking alter his fenc;s,
and his friends here hope
hat he will be honored with the
ippointment. He is well qualiied,
in the prime of life and a
graceful and ready speaker. He
vould make a fearless and vig*
>rous prosecuting officer.
Connty Supervisor Singletar}''
las called on the local hardware
lealers to make bids for an iron
'tnce to enclose the court house
.
square on the Main street side.
iVhenitis erected it will sup)ly
a long-felt need and is a
step in the right direction.
The work on the annex to the
graded school building goes
steadily on. The walls are
rompleted and the roof is being
aised. It is expected that at
east the lower floor, which will
J ' 1? 1 -l? nri+Vl fVlO
oe entirety iaacu up W 1 III tiiv.
luditorium, will be ready for
:ommenceraent exercises in
Vlay.
The poisoner has recently
been abroad in our town. The
majority of the cats in one portion
of the town have been killed,
and three valuable fox
bounds, the property ot Mr W E.
Brockinton, were killed, one
night thi^ week. Should the sufferers
obtain sufficient evidence^
prosecutions will likely follow.
The council is having some
much needed work on the streets
attended to and the shade trees
trimmed up.? Xeic.f if* Courier.
Stop that tickling Cough! Dr
S hoop's Cough Cure will surely stop
it, and with perfect safety. Ir is so
thnininrhlv harmless, that Dr Shoop
" ^ J '
tells mothers to use nothing else even
with very young babies The wholesome
green leaves ami tender stems
of a lung healing tnountatnousshrub
furnish the curative properties to Dr
8 hoop's Cough Cure. It calms'the
cough, and heals the sensitive bronchial
membranes. >To opium, no
chlorofonn, nothing hard) used to
j injure or suppress. Demand Dr
i Shoop's. Tal e uc other, 8old by
D-C Scott.
Notice* -!
present them, dulyattested, to the un.
dersigned; aJso those indebted to the
I estate, will make payment promptly ' v 1
to the same.
W D McClaky,Jr.. Administrator, t
Stimmerton, S. C.
2-19-4t
The Problem Solved
' n
"Life here has its drawbacks,"
said the visitor to the cannibal
isle, "but nevertheless I notice
that you are not bothered by the
servant problem as we have it
in the civilized world."
"We settled all that long ago,'r
smiled the king easily. "We
made it a rule that when a cook
quits work she shall be cooked
and served by her successor."?
March LipgincotCs.
DeWitt'e Carbolized Witch Hazel
Salve is best for cute, burns, boils,,
bruises and scratches. It is especially
good for piles. Sold by W. L.
Wallace, M. D.
Citation Notice.
STATE OK SOUTH CAROLINA,
County of Williamsburg.
ByPM Brockinton, Esquire,Probate
Judge.
Whereas, Maggie E Van Keuren
roade suit to me, to grant her Leters
of Administration of tht^s:ate
of and effects of H Van Keuren.
These are therefore to cite and adnonish
all and singular the kindred
ind creditors of the said H Van
keuren, deceased, that they be and
ippear before me, in the Court of
Probate, to be held at Kingstree., S
},on 29th day oftFebruary next affcer
)ublication thereof, at 11 o'clock in
he forenoon, to show cause, if any
hey have, why the said Adminisration
should not be granted.
Given under my hand, this 15th
lay of February, Anno Domini,
908.
Published on the 20th day of
February, 1908, in the Couxty
tecord.
J M Brockinton, Probate Judge.