The county record. [volume] (Kingstree, S.C.) 1885-1975, August 27, 1908, Image 8

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Ejr- V ? IE 1 King ?MIUMMMUMWMMUM Local and Personal. ^ laff Tn o tt fnr iUI OUI X CIC3 lUk -L UV.OUUJ AVi INew York. Mr J J Tisdale of Zeb was a welcome visitor at our office ; Tuesday. Miss Annie Elizabeth Rake* J :-straw of Cheraw is visiting- Mrs i JE M Allen. ] Look out for the "Merry Wid- j -ow Waltz" on page four. Try it on your piano. ] 1 Mr H A Meyer has returned 1 from a visit to his daughter's y family in Lexington, county. 1 Mr S H Boyd, of the Foreston J section, came in to see us Tuesday while in town on business. i -Mr J Yancey Tisdale of Zeb, j one of Qur county's sterling cit- 1 izens, was noted on our streets c vesterdav. c -7 ?r Messrs W K Scott, G Ollie t Epps and P G Gourd in have returned from a pleasant visit to Glenn Springs. * * LeRoy Lee, Esq, has been c " spending some days at South 1 'Carolina's popular summer re- c sort,Glenn Springs. ^ Klessrs.) L Richardson and t Bovd Baker, two of Lake City's s most popular young society * men, were among the visitors 4 noted in town Sunday. E Mr J H Pearce, now of Dar- ^ Uiogton, pleasantly reminded us j <of a past agreeable acquain- t tanceship by paying our sane- \ a friendly visit yesterday. * fc Kev Jno L Harley, superin- g t?ndent of the South Carolina c Anti Saloon League,will preach f in the Methodist church next ^ Sunday morning at 11 o'clock. \ Cashier F W Fairey, of the B??nk of Kingstree, was elected Tuesday to the office of father ^ of a winsome yttie baby girl, j He has been inaucted into a life- 1 time job. ? The picnic at Pudding Swamp 1 last Friday was a very""enjoy- 1 able event notwithstanding ^the 1 do^n-pour of rain. We had da- ^ ta for a complete write-up but ( our reporter lost his notes. The ] crowd present was estimated at f nearly 1,000 and several interesting speeches were made. Since our last issue the coun- ' ty Democratic executive com- ! snittee has received $2.50 each? the amount requested to help ; Day campaign expenses?from the following candidates: "For congress, William Murchison .and J E Ellerbe; for solicitor, J IB McLaughlin. All have paid 1 now except Mr A B Stuckey, candidate for solicitor. Anne Hollingsworth Wharton, author of "Italian Days and Ways" and other charming books of travel, ?oontributes a delightful sketch entitled "Zelphine in Warwickshire" to the September Lipvincotfs. Any ^one who has ever been over this historic ground, or who ever expects to go, will do well to read Mrs Wharton's paper, wmmmmmmmmmmmmi WA ;stree tiuiiiuitiiuiuaumiutiiiiiami BOBBY'S CHANCE He Returned From the Party Bringing Hie Sheaves With Him. Little Robert, aged four, presented his mother with a large sized shock the other day. It was a case of sowing a mild little breeze and reaping a full grown whirlwind. Robert is Mrs. B.'s first and has always had a large front seat in her affections. Even when Mrs. B. attended parties she remembered Robert and would slip a bit of canty into her handkerchief to carry home to liira. Not that Robert did not have as much candy of his own as was good for him?and more, too?but he took an awed delight in anything vhich came from ^ part}'. So his not her always produced some sourenir of her modest social dissipaions with which to satisfy Robert. A few weeks ago Robert himself vent to a party, his very first. A naid brought him home and left lim, together with a large paper )ag, in the eager arms of his wel:oming mother. The first rapture >f description had scarcely begun vhen Mrs. B. became conscious of he bulkv ^ag. "U'u,.* ir-^o+'a ?" T?ii?, llV/L/^1 ^ n nut o vino. I "It's for you. I brought it to you rom the party." With some misgiving Mrs. B. >pened the bag. It contained a arge orange, nuts, candy, grapes, akes?in fact, a very respectable issortment of refreshments suited , 0 the juvenile-taste. Robert had supposed it was quite he usual thing to take little conoling items to the uninvited mem>ers of one's family, and he had \ aken a generous delight in securing 1 truly noble collection for his nother. 1 That lady faced the double prob- ( em of explaining the situation to tobert's hostess and of presenting t o Robert a clear reason why what ras sauce for the goose, so to speak, t ias a totally different thing for the t gander. The explanation, which < immered down, of course, to a [ue&tion of size or quantity was far rom being clear to Robert, whc is ow in his mind and thinks he does lot care for society at all.?New fork Sun. What David Said. A count ry clergyman kept a roung servant lad. One Sunday norning before service he gave him lis orders about the dinner and said: "Go to neighbor David and ask lim for me to let you have some sripe on credit, and then prepare ne a nice plateful/' The lad did as he was told, and the clergyman went to conduct the service. As he stood in the pulpit ie called out in the middle of his sermon: "And on this subject, brethren, < vhat does David 6ay ?" At that moment his little valet stepped into the church, and, in the belief that his master was addressing him, he replied: "Please, sir, he says, 'No money, no tripe!'"?London Answers. Vegetable Ivory. The plant yielding the vegetable ivory is known to botanists as Phytelephas macrocarpa. It is a native of South America, found chiefly along the Magdalena river, in Colombia. It is a stemless, palmlike plant, the top of which is crowned with from twelve to twenty very long leaves. The fruit consists of a conglomerated head in six or seven sections, the whole being inclosed in a woody oovering, forming altogether a globe as large as a man's head. A single jfent sometimes bean six or eignt of these'heads, each weighing from twenty to twenty-nvs pounds. When young they contain a milklike fluid, which with age hardens until it becomes valuable as a substitute for real ivory. . ^ ^ nmfwmmnmmmtwnmmmwr T?ni ? Tl I i^n in Dry C aaaaaaaauaaaaaaalaaaaaai. Farmers and Bank r i _i r or L,aKc v Cap7\l. Surplus and Undivided Total i Hs Welcomes and ap your business whe or small and believ tensive resources a by over three > constant, consider; servative accomm a splendid endors its most saiisfactor to the people of L and vicinity. THE FOREHEAD. (Co rVhat Its 8izs and Shap?Are Said to Indicate. rifetie A high forehead to be very good fore 1 ihould be well developed about tbe syebrows. g"00"" Breadth of forehead 1^ always favor- respe ible. It Is distinctly connected wl?h jn < jreadth of character. A forehead- that curves back reveals rfctnai i poetic temperament, a fondness for a fam he arts and a talent for either music sev^n >r painting. Of course a broad forehead may be ent? 3 )art of a weak face, and a weak chin many ind mouth will naturally give a truer " mpresslon of character than even a A" oinblnatlon of a narrow forehead the p. with an otherwise strong face a bap If there is quite a perceptible bulge wj^0 >f the eyebrows, combined with a high 'orehead. the sign is of a calm, coql, some lellberate thinker. ' a. noti If with these eyebrows Is combined rnTnpt i forehead that slopes gradually back, i sensitive, poetic temperament is dls- meet; closed. If, again, they are combined with a short, narrow forehead, the ^ subject will be successful in business lad in everything connected with means: worldly matters, but he will be In- meann capable of appreciating to any extent >r or creating anyming connected wim the arts.?New York American. p0j< any SAW IT IN A DREAM. blethi medici A Lost Check and the Peouliar Way It w 1 Was Found. *" A wealthy New York lawyer sat up late one night writing letters he had Call not been able to finish during the day. stores It was past midnight when he went out to mail them, and when he returned ceries and was undressing he paused In dismay, missing a check for a large sum q ,, received during the day and taken home with him. In vain was the house basket ransacked at that late hour. He went ply C( to bed convinced that the lost check must be in the house. An,hour later he fell into uneasy slumber and beheld Ren as with his eyes of the fiesh the pink room j cheek'curled about an area railing four or five doors from his own house. ouppl So real was the dream that the troubled man woke up, dressed and, slip- gu, ping down the stairs into the street, gUDD) walked along the sidewalk to a spot still seen vividly in his mind, and there, sure enough, standing edge upward and p . partly curled about the iron, was the missing check. ' "I think," he reported to the Psychical Research society, "my subconsciousness must have noticed it ? . , fall from my pocket as I walked to the maili boi and my subliminal self pointed It out to me in sleep."?William O. U* g Fits-Gerald in New York Tribune. palpibv immmmmmmtmmiwr ISSPiS foods iUiiUlUUiiUp.. ?UUUiU Merc7! 4111;^ 7 I : ' \ '*V ? profits 35,000 150,000 >preciates ther large es its exeveloped 'ears of ate, conodations, ement of y service .ake City A Happy Occasion. mtinued &om first page.) s of cake was served betbe different families said -bye and departed to their ictive homes. >ome respects this was a rkable gathering. Out of ii)y of one hundred and i only four were not prestlthougb some had to come miles to be present.There lot a single mishap to mar leasure of the day. It was py day; one that passed >ut discord and yet as in beautiful music, threre is e of sadness as the thought > to us: "When shall we all again?" le give according to their ; some according to their ess.?September Lippincotts. ?y's Kidney Remedy will cnr se of kidney or bladder trouit is not beyond the reach of me. No medicine can do more. L Wallace. I at Farmers' Supply Co's two and supply your wants in Groand Hardware. I and get vonr cotton picking a and sheets at Farmers' Sup* >'s. lember, free stalls and hitching for your stock at Farmers y Co's. r your Tobacco at Farmers y Co. and save money. id the Farmers & Merchants s ad. this issne. id the Farmers & Merchants' 's ad. this issne.. For Indigestion. w* Relieves soar iteoMcb, UoaoiUwfaeart. Digesa wbaljoaeat mwnimmnmwnmwmwmfr kCE. v Compj aaaaauaaaaaaaaaaaaaaai Cokesbury Conk COKESBURV Founded In 1834. Located Id Piedmont Eelt.' Stude Health record hardly surpassed by any school in Tuition and Fees, 1115.00. W rite for catalogue. G. I 7-30-8t i In order to make room offer our entire stock of CLO, AND DRY Belo\ I : ( Special line of white si to go below cost. Also a full lin eof voile made skirts. | j. sTe ^ |-| ^ BANK OF KI iCinonh'pp. Sout CAPITAL $ 30,000 SI DIRECTO Jas F Cooper I D C Scott Collections made promptly. LOANS, large or small, made i i t Messrs D E Motley & Co, Lake City, S. C. Gentlemen:I am this day in receipt of dr surance Co. in payment of sustained on August 4th, to say the adjustment isfactory, and I wisl for your courteous the prompt m which this claim You and the compa sent shall have the be ance in the future. I shall take great pleasure firm to those who wish to be Companies, knowing you woul to be had. With warm ] Y 8-27-4t 3 ?fj 3 ' I I , any. f uutuaiiiUuiaiUiatUuiiiii^ ire nee School, I , S.C. -.'Sj nts have free access to famous Sulphur Springs the South Faculty of strong teachers. Board, 3EN0AMIN DUKES. Rector. |i ror our fall stock we ? SHQES f GOODS 1 Jo ST. 1] lk and lingerie waists and Panama ready www HJv ERON I ; 13 ' i NGSTREE ??11^? h Carolina. r rnpius. g lo ooo t H Kellahan * $gj J A Kelley I on approved security. | >3 jake City, S. C. August 17,1908.Y . ? I A aft Royal Exchange As? loss by lire which ,inst. I am pleased was entirely sat- *^^?3 i to thank you treatment and anner with was handled. < ,nies you repre- J nefit of my insur- ^ ! in recommending your insured in good honest d represent only the best personal regards, I am, ours very truly, S L Courtney & Co., Per S L Courtney Manager AH