The county record. [volume] (Kingstree, S.C.) 1885-1975, May 28, 1908, Image 6
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Marcu
wm WILSON' REMOVES. i
Another Effort of Florence People to
Get a White Postmaster.
y-s Washington, May 23:- -The'
i i r .i n . \ I
enure memoersnip 01 ine ooamuar-1
olina delegation in congress called f t
the White House to-day and saw the
president in regard to the situation
at the Florence postoffice. J.E Wil- i
son, the present colored incumbent,'
has been the postmaster the re for
about sixteen years, aud recently a
movement was commenced by the citz;nsot
Florence to have him removed.
Several meetings of the people of
that place have beeu held with this
object in view. Representative
Ellerbe was the spokesman for the
party to-day and told the President
among other things tha^Wilsou is
and for s?>nie time past has been
incompetent to properly discharge
nf thn r\f?i
?-"V UUHVJ Vi U1V VUiVVi
lie is quite au old man and is not
-able to five personal attention to the
work of the office. The assistant post master
and the clerks and employees
r ?in the office are young negroes, and
the conduct cf the office, because of
Wilson's age and physical condition,
has fallen on them. It is said that
they are impudent, impolite and
wanting in a high degree in courtesy
And politeness. It was shown in addition
to this that nearly 100 per cent
of the patrons of the office, including
both white and colored people,
desire a change. Mr Ellerbe asked '
that some suitable person be named '
for the place, and that if it was not ,
-possible to do this uow that the
president would at least not make a
recess appointment.
The president told the delagation
that he would give the matter the ,
?inost careful attention. The name of
W.J. Stroud has be<-n submit!ed for
Wilson's place, and it is understood
that his appointment would give entire
satisfaction to the patrons of the
office.?Xctrs if Courier.
A Californian's Luck.
-'The luckiest day cf my life was
when I bought a box of Bucklen's
Arnica Salve;'' writes Charles F.
Bud.thn, of Tracy, Califoruia. "Two,
-25c. boxes cured me of an annoying!
case of itching piles, which bad)
troubled me for years and that yield- j
ed to no other treatment.'' Sold nr.- i
der guarantee at 1> C Scott's drug |
st ore.
- t 9
COMMENCE MEMT EXERCISES.
iDiOi. Graded School, May 31, June 1
and 2.
The Fifth Annual Commence j
ment of Cnion graded school
will be held Mav 30, June 1 and I
1* in the school auditorum,1
Come, S C.
The following programme has
.>een arranged for the occasion:
Sunday, May 31, at 11 o'clock,
Commencement Sermon by JW
Daniel,DD, of Columbia.
Sunday,at 8:30 o'clock,Lecture
by Dr J W Daniel, DD
Monday, June J,at 10 o'clock,
The Francis Marion Literary Society
Medal Contest.
' ' ' 1
Monday, at 8:30 o'clock, Kxercises
by the School.
Tuesday, June 2,at 8:30 o'clock,
Exercises by the GraduatingClass
and Delivery of Diplomas.
The public is cordially invited
Tj2 all. exercises.
Notice.
All persons are hereby forewarned
against plowing in the public roads. All
overseers are notified to prosecute any
one disregarding this notice.
8 J Singletary,
S-14-4t. Co. Supervisor.
L
e Coat
THE FIf
it would then hav
feature, which yoi
S PRE
Corn and Cash.
Corn in the crib is just like cusli
in the bank.
Most farmers who have corn at
this season also have cash.
There are very few farmers who
have cash a-'d no corn.
The man who buys coin at this
time has to send out of the country
cash that would be very acceptable
at home.
If York county should raise all
the corn she needs,there would be a
great deal more ?ish than there is.
because, approximately speaking,
every bushel of corn that comes
here from the West pinches one dollar
off of the local circulation.
All good business men have more
or less appreciation of the extent to
which corn is a money crop. It is
only those who have less business capacity
who hold that there is no
money in corn.
It is very rarelv the case that a
farmer who makes enough corn to
run him until the next crop geta into
financial difficulty and it is almost
as rare when a farmer who fails to
make sufficient corn to run his place,
gets to the nest crop without
troubles.?Yorkville Enquirer.
The World's Best Climate
is not entirely free from disease, cm
the high elevations fever prevails,
while on the lower levels malaria is
is encountered to a greater or less
extent, according to altitude. To
overcome climate affections, lassitude,
malaria, jaundice, biliousness, fever
and ague, and general debility, the
most effective remedy is ElectricBitters,
the great alternative and
blood purifier; the antidote for every
form of bodily weakness, nervousness
and insomnia. Sold under guarantee
at D C Scott's drug store.
Prices 50c.
The Successful Nan.
The successful man is the n;an
who has made a happy home for
his wife and children. No matter
what he has not done in the way of
achieving wealth and honor, if he
has done that he is a success.
If he hasn't done that,and it is his
own fault,though he be the highest
in the land,he is a most pitable fail"
. l
lire now many men in a niau pursuit
of gold, which characterizes the
age, lealize that there is 110 fortune
which can be left to their families
as great as the memory of a happy
home?Ex.
Pain, anywhere, can quickly stopped
liy one of Dr Shoop's Pink Pain
Tablets. Pain always means congestion?unnatural
blood pressure.
Dr Shoop's Pink Pain Tablets simply
coax congested blood away from
pain centers. These Tablets?known
1 ? r?_ cm r,
DV (U'Uggli-IS a* vr oxiuujt s utrauache
Tablets?simply equalize the
blood circulation and then pain always
departs in 20 minutes. 20
Tablets 23 cents. Write Dr Shoop,
Racine, Wis,for free package. Sold
by I) C Scott.
Anatomical Ironies
Though a roll of college parchment
Is a thing to be despised,
And a graduate is happy
O'er the knowlege he's acquired;
Yet the gulf in earning power
He observes with some alarm
'Twixt the brain he brought
from college
And a baseball expert's arm.
?Nei.ee Parker Jones in -tunc
Lippinmtt 'n.
PeWitt's Little Early Risers are
small, safe, sure and gentle little
pills. Sold by W L Wallace.
1
I
that Fits
1 around the neck is not the
should be :o made that it
re a greater chance of tittim
u could get at S. MARCUS'.'
Also a n/~
ss GOODS
Jefferson Davis.
j Let those who call him "traitoi
reail his farewell s}>eech to the Sen
at*, and they will stand mute. The
'accusation will die unutteret} on
' their lips.
In that speech, a masterpiece of
> logic, and burning with the eloquence
' | of sincerety and supreme conviction,
'j Mr Davis said: "I well remember
an occasion when Massachusetts was
| arraigned before the bar of tlie Seni!
ate, and when the doctrine of coer,
cion was rife and to be applied
against her because of the rescue of
I a fugatite slave in Boston. My opI
inion then was the same that it is
now. Not in a spirit of egotism,:
but to aliow that I am not influenced I
in my opinion because the case is
my own, I refer to that time and
that occasion as containing the opinion
which I then entertained, and
on which my present conduct iV
bused. I then suid, if Massachusetts,
following her through a str
line of coaduct, chooses to-take
last step which separate her r <e
Union, it her right to gi id S
will neither vote one dollai jr oue
man to coerce her back; but will
say to her God-S|ieed in memory of
the kind association which once existed
between her and the other
S tates."
Whatever others may have thought
of him?and strong iu his own convictions
of right and wrong, he respected
the opinions of others who
differed froia him?to his own people,
thinking as he thought, believing
as he believed, he was and will
always b? the object of the?r devotion
and undying love.
Others there were who came?not
friends of the time when he was
president. James Redpatbjhe fiery
abolitionist,, the man who wrote the
"John Brown Invasion" and the
"Life of John Brown," the man
who had denounced Jefferson Davis,,
was entertained beneath that hospitable
tree.
Walking beneath the g>*nt oaks,,
strolling along the sandy beach, sitting
upon the great wide veranda in
the twilight, they came to know
each other ultimately and well, and
there sprung up between them aj
friendship born of mutual respect, |
of lofty purpose urnl of noble minds. j
All was over then, tne bitterness,'
the blood-shed, the fighting. Didj
zens of a reunited country, they
!could look back over the past-with
9
j no bitterness, no regret. Each had
i done his duty as God had given hnn
I to see it. What may have been said
j between them in the days of that
j winter, n<> one will ever know; but
. their souls were gripped together, as
' it were, with hoops of steel. During
that time Mr liedpath came to
see that Jefferson Davis was a man
among men, and after Mr Davis'
death it was he who wrote for the j
Overland Magazine that superb1
eulogy ou his life and character, entitled
"Jefferson Davis Was Not a
Traitor."?From "lieauroir" by
Saunders Wilburn, in Taylor Trotwood
Magazine for June.
When the baby is cross and has I
j you worried and worn out you will
H .. 1 il. .. i .. little t 11.*?>11 I
I 11I1U IIKIL i? 111 Lie Uttsmsnccv^ iu\, ?? v .
J known remedy for babies and chil-j
jdreu, will quiet the little one in a!
| short time.The ingredients are print-1
I ed plainly on the bottle, contains no J
j opiate. Sold by W L Wallace:
Title, Mortgage, Bill of Sale,
Lien on Crop, and Lien and Bill of.
Sale combined blanks for sale at
this office. 2 13tf {
> Aroum
V.
on1 iderat/^'^-^^*
sits an^'
I al? '-Kin :t
v
tfl
1 Of
%
get
-Hiwchles
r
i.
>
.. chao
wi nanage to
talk t Ji life, and get
alont; j? that.
Duty ill 11. ,f.o cultivate a
| more agreeable vo oefore it will
l>e able to comma n! universal attention.
It is generr ) to call a
I man a fool. on it lie agreeswith
yon, h" think he is net
such a foo j need the information.
Miser* ikes company even better
when it isn't like the company.
So* ings that may be had for
M ;aie dear at the price.
eople grumble eTerytime
pare themselves witih- other
people, and so do the other people.. 1
?Wflljam E Mc&knxa 'n? Jims
LipjHwrttt'*.
Weak women get prompt? and
lasting neip oy using ur cwioop s
Night Cure. These soothing, healing,
antiseptic suppositories,, with'
full information how to proceed are
interestingly told of in my book
"No 4 For Women." The book and
strictly confidential medical advice
is entirely free. Simply wuite l)r
Shoop, Racine, Wis^or my book No
-k Sold by J) C Scott.
i
Final Discharge-.
Notice is hereby gi-wen that the un^
dersignod will apply to the Jndge of r
Probate for Williamsburg County at j
hisoffioe at Kingstreeon the 22nd day
of June. 1908, at 12 o'clock noon, forl.etters
Dismissory as- General Guardian
oS Annie B. Graham. (Nee ?'ok.er)<
5-dl-tt J C Lysch.
Clerk's Sale.
STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA
Willi " msburg County
Court of Common Pleas*
S W Jckenzie, Plaintiff,
Against
W P 'ooper, Defendant.
I'mier andjby virtue a decree of Fereclosure
and sale rendered in the Ccurt
of Common Pleas on the 2tith day of
March. 11*08. I will sell at public auction
before. the court hoiwe door in
Kingstree S. C. on the first Monday in
1 une. 19<?8. the same being the 1st day of
said month, between the legal hours of
sal**, to the highest bidder for cash,the
following described lot of land?to wit:
All that certain piece, parcel or lot
of land lying, being and situate ir. the '
town of Cades, count y of W illiamsburg
ard State of South Carolina, containing
one-half (1-2) aero and bounded on |
the North Uy the Indiantowrn public
road, on the East by lands of Wilson!
Bros, on the South by lot of J H Pearcej
and on the West by the North Eastern 1
Railroad. Purchaser to pay for all pa-,
p.*rs
H 0 Britton,
C C CP and (I S Williamsburg Co.
5-14- 3t.
A
Guarantee!
JOHN BRADEN,
the Handsome,,Standard-!
bred Stallion, is now to be
found at the stables of
i
mm Tni II I I flf
J. 1U. I KULUVIX,
A GUARANTEE, - - - - $20.00
Lake City Horse Co..
LAKE (ITT, S. (.
-1-1 G-tf
I
i the N
f t
i
......... ....it
a i>uu, out a coai
iund the neck, for
lacks this important
I
NERY 1
'V =
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Q Tom Watson'
15 Are Read By >
?r Pen
WEEKLY 1
EERSONIAN
. Price $1.00 BOTH TO
V I Wr <* > AA P.
91 I
Q While these have the sai
jX different in raake-np. They
i* ing- and advocating true Jefft
V contain choice stories, serial
O interest every member of the
ft At the time, when a Pres
rN and a>l citizens are keenly
X questions, no one sliould be v
ft Address TH08. t WATSW
Kxxxxxxxxxxxx
I GET E
1 O
;
Gointf to L J Stackley^s whe
4% ture at reasonable prices. We
f? house, price and quality con!
AO T?> i. .
J| rumiturc,
Jf _ Rugs
^ tdison '
S AL:
:? Coffins
3 an
^ Undertakers
so
^ Services Rendered Day an
? L. J. ST/
<9 KINQSTRE
pwrnmrmmmnmrnmn
B A Thing of Be
I Bull Irl
B A FINE ASSORTMENT
? ALSO PLATED WA
B WATCH I
?E For Southern, Georgetow
g Also Consolidate
| STEPHEN THi
g 257 KIXU STREET, I
g MAIL ORDERS RECEIVJ
fimmimmmiMiii
| Away AboVi
| McGuffy Mall
ii Primro!
[J All Guaranteed by Us un
| STRAUSS, PRITZ 8
FOR SALE AT YO
'ttztrK-zszzx* i^.'tff.TTg^gnp
-4 *V. L'. \\L'v / * 4V,
eck!
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Marcus y
s Periodicals v
All Intelligent X
P'6> WATSON'S O
JEFFERSONIAN X
'G ETHER MAGAZINE Price X
?r lear. j ^1.00 rer lear. | *
ne purpose they are wholly Q
make a specialty of explain- X
s and general- literature to V
i family circle. 1 O
idential campaign is opening- A j
interested in governmental rj
rithout the Jetfersonian. X
xxxxx>O0O<xxx^ 1
V - *1
HABIT I :i
F ?
r ?
n you want reliable fnrni;
compete with any furuitnre {
sidered. A complete line of ?
?
Matting *
i and ^
Phonographs. ?
SO $ ' I
Caskets ? \
d J ]
Supplies. S
d Night. Yours to Serve ?
\CKLEY, I 4
E. S. C. . t?
mmmmmmmmu, - 1
.. HJ* "
auty 3
> a Joy Forever. 3
2
ces and Lockets, Bead ?2
ces, Crosses, Brooches, 3
f Pins. Barretts and zs
ins. - - -3
OF STERLING SILVER, 3
iRE TO SHOW YOU. 3
SPECTORS. 3
m and Western Railroads. 2
:d Street Railway. 3
OMAS & BRO. |
CHARLESTON, S. C. 2
E PROMPT ATTENTION. 3
? Everything """ "j I
: Whiskey | ' J
ic Tom Gin 1 I
der the Pure Food Law J I
CO., Cincinnati, 0. | I
UR DISPENSARY I fl
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