The county record. [volume] (Kingstree, S.C.) 1885-1975, March 26, 1908, Image 7
I
Announcement !
Having removed my bu>i:ie>s
into one "1 the x\v brick
storey ear the railroc
1 be^ to ol*
e r a > e 1 e c t 8
line o!
Jewelrv. Clocks. Watches I
Silver Ware and Gold and j
Silver Novelties. : : :
Also
watch and
T V lock repair
t work done on short
noticeatcompeting 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 Dumber of popular newspapers
and periodicals. Read carefully
the following list and select
tbe one or more that you fancy and
we shall be pleased to send in yonr I
aider. These rates are of course all I
cash in advance, which means that I
both The Record and the naner I
ordered must be paid for, not 1, 2. 3,
4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9,10, II, but twelve
months ahead. Below ie the list of
*N our best clubbing offers.
The Kecord and News & Courier
(Semi-weekly,) $1.-60.
The Record and Home & Farm
(twice a month,) $1.35.
* -U
The Record and New York Work
(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 Cosmopolitan
msmitino va !
Thi Record and Youth's Companion|(New
Subscribers) $2.50.
The Record Semi-Weekly State,
$2.50.
The Record and Lippiwoott'e
Magazine 1 year each $2.75.
^ The Record and National
Magazine, 1 year each, $1.60.
N. B. We do not club with anydaily
papers. The first issue you
receive of the paper or periodical i6 (
evidence that the money for same
has been forwarded by us. We are
not responsible after that.
THE COUNTY RECORD
Kingstree, S. C.
I 4
^ K. Of IF.
v !% Y Kingstree Lodge
swJSPl. Knights of pylhias
r"^r > Regular Conventions Every
2nfl>nd 4thJWedncsd?>mights.
Visiting brethren always welcome, '
Castle Hall 3rd etory Gourd in Building.
H. A. Myer, C. C.
j ' A. C. Hinds, K. R. S.
11 ni tn
232 & 234 KING STREE"
THE HO
Th Largest Win
W \ -SPLENDID i
OUR
For Ladies, Mis
And They Were Ni
' I New Dress Goo<
I All the newest weaves in th
^ fashionable fabrics are here.
' Satin Striped Embroidered Voile
Fille Voiles.
Dotted Etamines
And a full line of Panamas, P
tiues and Fancy Plaid, Strip
- Checked Wool Dress Goods.
' ^Wpte *or samples, our prices i
V lowest.
White Wash Go*
.Large variety of the latest in fir
weave. Suiting Linens. Figui
dras, Persian Lawns, Embr
Linen, Plaid Lawns and
fc' Mercerized Chiffon, Plain anc
edBatiste, Linen Lawns, Oxfo
ings, etc, etc. All at popular
S
\ %
\
r'
i k
STOLL B
we STC
BLY B S
and a
5ELL L A I
It will pay you to alwc
any business of this kind,
fctf" OFFICE OVEK KAN
It never misses a mark
i regulating an accurate a
point of the pen, and the
in the pocket, always rea<
the instantaneous call 1
stock from which to sele<
I al*o handle all text book
,, South Carolina at prices fix
G OLLIE EP
in i ' i ' " . ' '
f Ftorai
?
9~?
B During 1
| - Winter
EE |~A~T
I The Atl
I c
EE Would be just tl
EE worth living. S
schedules and ti<
XZ advantage possi
attractive trip,
pamphlets call o
XZ a^ent, or write
1 W J. CRAIG,
EE Pffisetftr Traffic ttanag
| WILKIN
^UUUUUiUUUUUttl Ui
^coh]
r
' >
USE THAT GIVES YOU
7/esaJe and Red
&RRAY OF THE NEWEST F.
READY-TO-\
ses and Children. Surpass
ever so Reasonably Priced S
ds. I Ladies'
e most I The greatest stock
1 and choose from
s. I White Linen Waist
plain to the most
irilliau- White Linen Waist
ed and hand embroider
ire the
Lace and I
XlS. Ecru Lace Waists
lish and White Lace Waists
red Ma- Black Lace Waists
oidered White China Silk V
Linens, *"-50 each.
1 Figur- Black China Silk
rd Suit- S10.00 each,
prices Taffeta Silk Waistf
ROTHERS I
ICKS WE ~~ J
\ID5 BUV '
ND | AND
Si D 5 SELL 1
lys see us when you have
Kv OK wiujami.IUKO netf I
RY SPARE MOMENT
\H BE UTILIZED
^ WITH A ^ I
&1 OfeiS*1^2BSl llifei?}
it immwmFm
, i
, ana with the Spoon Feed
nd even tlow of ink to the
! Clip-Cap holding the pen
iy for use, is permanently at
of the owner. A complete
:t may be seen at my store. [
a adopted for public schools in
:ed by State Board of Education
}pQ King* tree,
South Carolina.
ii ; __ _
^ ri IRA I
wiin ^
"hese Cold 1
Months. - %
rip Via h- |
antic ]
oast Line |
ie tiling to make life r2S
uperb trains, excellent ^5
:kets which offer every C3
ble for a pleasant and "ZS
For full information or Z3
m your nearest ticket ~Z2
T. C. WHITE, |
er, Geueral Passenger Agent,
OTON, N. G. f
it
N & C(
kTISFACTIOIT OR YOUR MONEY
ill Mall Order Horn
ABRICS FOR SPRING AND SDMM
VEAR QARMEI
5 Anything in Style Ever Show:
ietid in Your Measurements. We
^faists^^^TLadies
in the South to pick
s from the severely Made of W
elaborately trimmed Striped i
..75c to S15.00 each. Plain, Far
^ plain tacked and C[)ecke(,
S2-50 to $15.00 each. Madame
^ Pony Co:
Met Waists,
$2.98 to $20.00 each. I Walkii
$3.75 to $25.00 each. ]
$6.00 to $15.00 each. *ifaists
from $2,50 to ~ x.
v Our xew
Waists from $2.50 to Panama,
I All Cut in '
i
if vo'i wouM ]:k?"* to fool ?ome 1
u >? i.V;': - l ri tiv-. u ;i?> as iliaO'ff'.v
on ta.-t- atp.l llivor," ?jnifIv
niak'- f.?r liit>: a batch < :" Hr Sh?? ?}i*
Health C'lJl' - " and o-rv.- it j?ij?inir
hot. It UeCtiv-U M;> JSh<"]'. iiiul
A.i, I :m-Iv-- ?--? ativ <?n?\ Atulj
tli. i- i> not a itrriin >?f r-al '.'uftYr in,
11 ...I#!. / v - . ...... I.. i
it. A 1 ' III I 1 \? V..r? IT IIIUH'
j-'ir- grains, is;: r. mils ,tc*j
ii! :i in;11!it n<> LO to :;o inir.- j
uttrs tedious lulling. 1A pounds -5c. I
iM- rcai ' <' .
Read the Farmers \ Merchants'
Rank's ad. this issue.
Bring Your Cotton Seed,
We have closed down our
ginneries lor the season because
there is no more cotton to gin.
We are paying $20 per ton for
good, sound, dry cotton seed,
delivered at our mill.
To those who do not care to
sell their ^eed lor cash we are
offering" a strictly high grade
meal in exchange. Our rate of
exchange at the mill is 1600 lbs.
of meal for one ton of seed, It
is a conceded fact cotton
seed meal is a cheaper and
more effecti\e fertilizer than
cotton seed. According to
chemical analysis of each* 886
pound% of cotton seed meal
are equivalent to 2000 pounds
of cotton seed, but owing
to the superior mechanical
condition of meal, it is safe to
assume that 800 pounds of meal
are the full equivalent to one ton
Oi coixon seeo, inereiore, wudiever
excess above 800 pounds of
meal the farnyr gets in exchange
for a ton of seed is so mnch 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 exchange.
Our meal is open^for inspection.
Samples sent on application.
i Yours,
South Atlantic Oil Co.,
Up Cao TT MrF M <rr
10-17-tf
DOMESTIC SKWIXG MACHINES
Hort on the market for the money. If you
want a high grade machine at a low price call on
L. C. ilontgomery,
at k'^nno^v-MAtifanrnftrv Pa's
?? V.l IQVM.V* / ?.
i -22 :3m kingstree. s. c.
)np'Y
CHARLESTON, S. C.
BACK
>e in the South.
ER WEARNTS.
n in the South.
Guarantee a fit.
' and Misses'
Tailor-Made Suits
nnl ^nrl milr Ploin
v/* vim. x uiiujU) x lauij
md Fancy Mixed Worsteds,
icy, Striped and Phantom
and Striped Panama, in
Butterfly, Prince Chap, and
it Effects
....$10.00 to $75-00 per suit.
rig Skirts For
,adies and Misses.
Line is Composed of Silk,
Plain and Fancy Mixtures.
the New 1908 Models
$2.50 to $25.00 each
Just :t little Cascasweet is -.til
that ia necessary to give your baby
\vh?*u it is cross ami peevish. ('aseaswcet
contains n?"j iati-'nor harmful
drugs au i highly r< commend
ed bv mot!.? j> ev? rvwii- re. Conform
- to rh'* \ ttn nai 1 lire Food
and I >r*.i-_r Law. Sold by W L Wallace.
Fruit Cures.
"(i rapes are wonderful thing?,'"
paid a nine grower. "In Switzerland
they have in the autumn a
grape cure. Thousands of anaemic
and nervous persons are benefited
by this cure. Eating a huge bunch)
of grapes every ten minutes all day
Ion;:, their cheeks soon bloom, they
soon recover their health again.
"Fruit, all fruit, is medicinal. As
a drink cure and as a blood purifier,
what is there better than an apple?
Did you ever hear of currant leaf
poultices for gout ? They are excellent,
I assure you. And black currant
ielly in water is a remedy for
sore throat.
"Pineapples are good for diphtheria,
strawberries for rheumatism,
mulberry juice for fevers, elderberry
for chills and lemon for colds
for headache and for bile." Cincinnati
Enquirer.
A Sailor No Longor.
Painting is almost a continuous
performance on Borne of the ocean
liners. "On a certain 6hip one
day," said a traveler, "I put my
hand on a freshly painted ventila*
-* ?--i :
lor, ana wnne rvmuviug
smear I fell into conversation with
the seaman who was responsible foT
the trouble. He was an elderly
chap, and he had visited many outlandish
places. As he plied tha
brush we had an interesting chat
*How long have yon been a sailat T
said I finely. 'Sailor ?' the old man
grumbled, dipping his brush into the
can. Uless yer heart, sir, Fm no
sailor nowadays. Fm a bloomin'
artist, that's wot I am!'"
BUILDING
DONE
At
Your
(Jwn
Price.
C. E. HARRIS.
General Contractor
and Builder - - fireelyville,
South Carolina
116-tf.
*
CAMP NO- 27.
imcui Mzrnxoa
OW^BWrll 1 and 3rd MondH
W^Vc^^K W$f3H Visiting chopper* coi
\v dially invited to eon
S<<3P// up and sit on a stum
or hang about on th
PHILIP STOLL,
i 9 2712m. Con. Com.
THE THRICE A-WEEK WORLD IN
PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN YEAR
More Alert, More Thorough and Mori
Fearless Tbao Ever- Read In Every
English Spoken Country.
A president of the Unitec
States will be elected this year
Who is he and who is the mar
whom he will beat? Nobody
yet knows, but the Thrice-a
Week World will tell you every
step and every detail of what
promises to be a campaign of
the most absorbing interest. It
may not tell you what you hope
but it will tell you what is. The
Thrice-a-Week World long ago
established a character for impartiality
and fearlessness in
the publicacion of news, and
this it will maintain. If you
want the news as it really is
subscribe to the Thrice-a-Week
edition of the New York World,
which comes to you every other
I day,except bunday, and is thus
practically a daily at the price
of a weekly.
The Thnce-a-Week World's
regular subscription price is
only $1.00 per year, and this
pays for 159 papers. We ofer
this unequalled newspaper and
The County Record together
?
for one year for $1.75.
The regular subscriptinn price :
oi the two papers is $2.00.
"n jJhcr Crown Jawel.
DiKi), Satmdav af*cin'?un, March
1 1, in Manning, Mrs Lily .Scott
Ihignal, in th'-oTtii year of her age.
Wife of Ca|>\ I. I. Magiu'l. Toe liecvase*!
leaves surviving 1>-sides Uel
husband ami six children, two sist
rs, Mrs \V K Brown cf Manning,
and Mrs II CBIanding of OuKunt.
I'iie funeral sei vi e * ).\ place *;i
the church in which slie was reared.
Presbyterian, .Sunday afternoon.
The pall b-arers were young men
who were or had been members of
her household, Messrs I)r J A Cole,
Oliver 0 Bryan, C J Lesesne, Lutie
Plowden, Willie O'Brvau and Lucius
llarvin. The church was tilled
to its utmost capacity, not only
the people ot Manning, but many
from the country were present to
bear testimony of love for the deceased
and sympathy for the bereavjed.
It was an immense congregation
of sincerely sorrowing friends.
The service was conducted by Rer
A R Weodson, assisted by Rev C A
; Waters, of the Baptist church, and
Rev D A Phillips, of the Methodist
! church. After the church service
the immense throng followed the
funeral cortege to the cemeterjr
where the beautiful and impressiveservice
concluded. As loving
hands were tenderly laying upon thetomb
the many floral tributes and
moistening them with their teare,
the sun was fast sinking amid the
hallowed silence,
| "Scattering his beams about him aa lie sink*..
And gilding bearan above, and aeaa beneatb.
With paint no mortal pencil can express."
j' And when th9- benediction way
i pronounced many lingered with
j heavy hearts for silent prayer, for
, the departed and ber grief-stricken
loved ones.
Lily Witherspoon Bagnal was the
third daughter of the late Mr and
Mrs Junius E Scott She spent her
entire life in Manning, and from her
; childhood to the moment God called
1 k-.M . 01 Itlico qKo U/Ual
IIICI IV CkCl uai V1IOC) OUV new /viv ? X
?a general favorite. Her childhood
and young womanhood were
! ideal; prettv, bright, intelligent and
i lovable disposition. In May, 1892,
J she became the wife of Capt. I. I.
j Bagnal, and leaves to him six children,
Iler home life was character'
istic. cheerful, affectionate, modest,
1 wife and mother. She toiled aud
^ j lived for her children, to bring
them up in the right way, her world
i washer home, and her lovliuess was.
* #
| shared by her neighbo-s and fri^ocfe-.
I, In the death of this noble woman. ?
the writer feels that he l*t>? shares
- in the loss, for he ha? known her*
intimately since her early childhood,.
; and learned to regard her as if
;own. And as he feel?, so do others.
' | who were neighbors at any time,
r_ the contact with the lovely child,
and noblest of women, was to make
ie its impress for all time. Death
naturally brings sadness. It bursts
the wellsprings of the heart, aud
tears flow, but when we know of a
meeting in the great beyond?the
resurrection:
, "Even such is time, that takes on trustOur
ycuth, our joys, our all we have,
And pays us hut with ape and dust;
J Who in the dark and silent grave,
Who.. n-n ho ,.o a -II
....v.. ..v, ..niv noiiuciiuoii our ways
Shuts up the story of our days?
But from the earth, this grave, this dust.
[ My God shall raise me ap, 1 trustt"
J The consolation is great, it is soli,
acing to feel that when death ha& *
'! robbed us of those we lore, we can
. still cherish the hope of a grand reI
union when we "shall come apparelled
in more precious habit," and
when the grating sounds of a busy
earth are replaced by the sweet sounds!
of heavenly joy. Manning Times,.
Dyspepsia and General Debility
are curtd by P. P. P., Lippman's
Great Remedy, the superior of all
sarsapanllas.
I p p p ;a
X X X 10 HJCgiCatCOL lUIJIU 1U1 IUC
stomach that was ever known,
indigestion, Bad Dreams, and
Biliousness give way rapidly to the
powerful tonic and blood cleansing;
properties of P. P. P.
A prominent Kaiiroad Superintend
ent living at Savannah, Ga, (in whieb
city he was born), says he feels
better than he ever did, and he had
the worst case of dypepsia on record,
i He had no appetite, and the little he
I ate disagreed with him, causiug him
| to vomit often; he had pains in the
j head, breast and stomach; but after
i) i) D
UfcilJg LUICC UU111CS U1 . I . I X uc
i felt like a new man. He says that
he feels that he could live forever if
he could always get P. P. P.
His name will be given on applies
tion to us. Sold by W L Wallace.
I
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>s