The county record. [volume] (Kingstree, S.C.) 1885-1975, September 24, 1908, Image 5

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* ft Ml fl rC Thu I Octobi ? Miss Lthyle | ALL P ' A o : ~v t' w V ' V 6 L ^pfficial Retui ? For Congress, 6th Distric J E Ellerbe j W Ragsdaie For Solicitor, SrJ Circuit J B McLaughlin Philip H Stoll For House of Representativ T B Gourdin J S Graham For Road Engineer ? J J Graham S J Singletarv For Coroner R K Gamble I lirpere lapfeitigs. [ Harpers, September 19:?Crops in this community are suffering from lack of rain. We have not made enough peas for seed in this section for seteral years and this means that the crop will likely be a failure again. The Rosemary cotton ginnery had qnite a blaze Saturday night, September 19, caused by a match in the cotton. The ginnery was in imminent danger of destruction bnt happily the fire was put out without danger. The ginnery at Harper? is running daily and is getting h^gdbd patronage. The Georgetown chaingang is doing some excellent work on the streets here under the able manage - a ** r /\ ir.iti mi meat ok i>ar u xvx maunews. ki? town of Harpers expects in a few weeks to hare roads and streets second to none in the State. Oar town is fast coming to the front, onW the Georgetown part B|?ne free-holders who live on NrT^illiamsburg side of Harper and the free holders from Black river to Oak Ridge bay will petitipn the next general assembly to change the connty line, taking one and one-naif miles by seven miles into Georgetown county. The free-holders of ' Harpers want to have the whole town in one county, putting it with Rosemarv into one school district. - . . . . . 4. . . . T , V: ILLINE irsday, F ?r 1-2-3.)en Wilkins in charg THE L/ -FRENi ordieil lnvitatH Stew; ake City, rns of Second I = I ill S j I ? - ? ? rz 9 U ^ mmm 2 *Cfl . .a v? c E ^ S ? r ?, s ce X1 "if ~ 5?m ?? o <3 s =e ~ s9 a CQ^Q.J^a.HOt 34 46 42 194 58 43 32 4< 1 16 1 140 42 6 1 6 4 15 11 218 41 18 0 * 31 48 32 114 59 31 33 2i 6 47 2 95 11 2 1 21 29 15 41 240 88 47 31 1' 11 34 41 97 75 2 28 1] 24 29 2 232 26 47 5 81 83 il 43 67 36 4 23 9 2 52 0 266 <H 45 10 3( We have a special district now laid off and bonded and expect to have a $5,000 school bnilding completed by January 1,1909. The trustees have the money in band, but so far this is all in Georgetown county. Oar people nave a ngnt to want to be pat into Georgetown county that we may join the band of progress as it passes. I ask the readers of The Record to look at the Georgetown side of the town and compare it with "dear old Williamsburg's" side and note the contrast. Subscriber. Nttice tf Opeitag Bttks if Sibscriptfti. Notice is hereby given that on Thursday, October 1,1908, books of subscription to the Kingstree Tobacco Ware House Co. will be open at the office of Kiugstree Hardware Co., Kiugstree, S C., for the purpose of receiving subscriptions to the capital stock of the said company. Capital stock to be $10, 000, divided into 1,000 shares of the par value of 10 each. Hugh McCutchen, W H Carr, E C Epps, Corporators 10-21-1t Go to Farmers' Supply Co's for your china, crockery and cooking utensils. '-+4 . W - ? :ry oi riday an ;e of o u* Millinery E VTSST CH BON \ on to aH to atl art & 1 = = = Sout Primary Electii 1 I.[ | c 0 = i e> I : > n= % c ? J :S3-S 2 g ? -c Lj=?j?S&2? = C tfl ^ 2 ez -O 2? c ; ? ce h-= ? 15 ? J [) 36 28 41 88 176 35 56 15 8i \ 5 26 0 28 74 9 1 03 ) 6 87 0 19 18 7 3 0 .4 } 85 16 41 98 230 87 54 15 71 J 0 14 2 40 110 24 83 6 4 Ml 40 39 77 182 20 22 9 8] L 3 15 41 29 200 19 24 18 6' J 88 38 0 88 51, 25 38 1 1' V 1 8 5 41 5 199 86 38 15 1( J 88 49 0 112 49 8 18 0 71 | NO TROUBLE FEARED. j ! Saner ( Negro Uprlslig Near ladlaitavi Pestafflce Exaggerated. Sheriff Graham went to Mr Bell's place near Indian town postoffice last night on account of threatened trouble between whites and negroes growing out j of a difficulty between Mr Bell: and a negro hand. The negro, it is reported, used offensive and threatening language to Mr Bell 1 Al_ - 1 _ A A I A _ A L Al_ I ana me latter snot at mm witn a shot gun, but the load did not take effect. When the sneriff arrived on the scene everything was quiet and it is supposed that the incident is closed. Cotton is quoted today on the local market at 8 15-16, seed $14 a ton. Trespass Notice. All parties are hejeby warned not to trespass upon' the lands of the undersigned and the estate of M S Feagin, deceased, in any manner whatsoever. R C Marshall, P B Feagin, J A Feagin. 9-24-4t Read the Farners A Merchants Bank's ad. this issne. 200 boxes crackers just arrived, fresb aDd good. W T Wilkins. f PEDUM id Saturt EEEEE Octobei department will have STYLE! INETSrz tend thiy open. r i Floyd, h Caroiin on, Held Septe - C. ' ? i iJ 5* v ? Za S ^ QQ = 15 > > i> 1 I r & ^ ? t~1)a>?<oaC g PuOC'U*^ ^??? 3 73 60 57 19 47 37 25 14 2 15 29 19 12 <'2 16 10 5 , 16 22 42 13 66 4 3 1 2 9 73 63 34 18 43 43 32 18 18 4828 1436 5 2 1| I 70 39 48 30 66 45 29 17 2: 7 12 62 69 26 45 50 35 16 9 [ 76 SI 7 3 64 2 0 3 % ) 17 81 76 25 20 51 38 18 * j rt9 ^ ^ Tir*d mt *h? Ev?n Thousand. John Hollister was one of the most popular men in Washington. He was always doing favors for other people and never asking any for himself. An acquaintance, knowing his proverbial good nature, had abused his confidence. One day Holliiter was standing in the Arlington hotel lobby when this man came up to Hollister and said very effusively: "I'm a thousand times obliged to 5ou for what you said to Secretary 'oster. I got the place." "And you are a thousand times obliged?" queried Hollister in his most innocent manner. "Yes, indeed, a thousand times." "Say, cant you make it 1,200 iust once? You've been a thousand m times obliged on several occasions, if I am to believe you." Panama Hat a. That panama hats are woven under water is denied by a man who has all his life been engaged in the panama hat trade and has himself ! made the hats. The hate are woven in the early morning hours, J when the atmosphere is damp, as the heat of the sun makes the fiber ; brittle and unfit for manipulation. At night the hat is hung out in the open air, where it absorbs the dew and is in condition for work again the next morning. This accounts for the great length of time (from one to three months) required for ' the making of a panama hat.?New York American. Get prices and call on W T Wilkins. Will not be undersoldV t p u. lay, V r I-2-3.| i on display 3 OF ing. a. mbcr 8, 1908. ====^T~ ? . V ? u es ?T3 J2 2 * ? * s he o w ? Si *. ? c 5 ? s g g -8 S ! | | ! IX a .g j| ?3 g h-q. 9 118 32 41 ? 1JH t 18 2 10 2 i tj io n 16 2 674; i M W 36 44 16?| v f? -2:4 fi 2 7081 i | 49 10 I 45 | 44 J 1483 ' 19 34 44 42 1173 r 111 o 7 4 1U14 , t 70 20 46 39 1107 I 65 14 6 7 1090 THE ONE GREAT CATHER1NG OF SOUTH CAROLINIANS; The State Fair This Year?October j 26 to SO. The fortieth annual State Fair will be held at Columbia this year October 26-30, and it gives promise to be the greatest State Fair ever held. No matter how bad the crops or how hard the times, everybody goes to the State Fair at Columbia. It has been the custom now for nearly half a century, and it will ever continue so with crowds increasing each year. The State Fair is the one time of the year that work can be put down and everyone have a good time for a few days. Old acquaintances and relatives meet at the State Fair if they are not fortunate enough to meet elsewhere during the year. Friends meet friends and college men meet their college rhates and renew friendships with good stories of the good times of the past. This year the fair holds even more than that for South Carolinians. It will be made up of new exhibits that will teach the farmers new methods and improvements that mean money to every one of them. The races will be the Dest ever seen In the South. This being the first year that the Fair Association has entered the Virginia-Carolina Circuit. The stake raoes will bring many of the country's very finest racers. The two football games will draw thousands of enthusiastic "rooters" from both the Carolinas. Columbia is better fitted to take care of her guests than ever before, with more hotel accommodations. The railroads will all put on special rates, as usual. President John G. Mobley, of the Fair Association, has worked hard to get everything in ship-shape, and he predicts the largest crowd in the history of the fair. Farmers' Supply Co have just received a solid car load of 0 K cook stoves. Don't fail to see them before buying. 300 sacks rice at rightprice. WT Wilkins. ' ' ' 1 > DISASTER TO AIRSHIP Keenly Felt in Washington, Where Test Was Made. Washington, September 19:? The disaster to the air ship of Orville Wright in which the in ' ventor was badly wounded and hi? companion killed is felt keenly id Washington, where the experiment? were beiug made. The official test was to have been made this wees, and Mr Wright and the officials of the War department, as well as thecrowds who have dailv attended thetrial flights, were confident that the aeroplane would easily puss all of the tests. It lies now in the shed where it had been kept, a mass of broken wires, splintered wood and torn muslin. Lientenant Self* ridge, who accompanied Mr Wright, is dead and Mr Wright with a / broken leg, several broken ribs and many brnsies, is lying in the army hospital at Fort Myer in the suburbs of the city, still unaware that his . companion in the flight was killed.. Of courge everv one has a reason> ? - _ _ _ ^ why the propeller should Have falleu but it takes little technical knowledge to see that when a flying machine gets anything wrong with its machinery while in air it has but one thing to do and that is to obey the law of gravity and reach the earth by the shortest line. When an automobile stalls on a bill it may be ^ annoying but it is not dangerous. When a flying mechanism fails it is not only dangerous but probably fatal. This fact postpones by many years-the time when flying machines will be useful either for war or transportation aud before that- time it will doubtless demand a heavier vital toll than those who have aireaay fallen victims to the experiment*. Lieutenant Selfridge was a clever, promising young man of twenty six. He had for several years taken the keenest interest in all air ships and had made many ascensions. He was also the inventor of some of the 'VA parts of the Baldwin dirigible balloon and was fearless in experimenting with them. His death, happily, was painless, as he never regained consciousness atter striking the ground. Bryan Campaign Fund. We acknowledge the receipt of the following subscriptions to the Bryan campaign fund: C W Wolfe $1.00 E C Edds LOO- - E L Hirsch 1.0G? 8 J Kirby .50 W D Bryan 1.00 J D Carter 1.00 Philip Stoll 1.00 J E Davis 1.00 T B Gourdin 1.00 J W Cook 2.50 R H Kellahan 5.00 Co Executive Committee 25.00 M D Nesmith 1.00J H Blackwell l.OO J D Daniels 1.00 D E Motley 1.00 J W Floyd .50B W Stewart .50J P Mathews .50J S LyDcb .50 L L Caldwell .50 L A Winston .50 J L Tbomas 1.00 S 0 Eaddy 1.00 S B Poston l.OO H E Eaddy 1.00 W E Nesmith 1.00 W 0 Camlin 1.00 P M Brockinton l.OO H 0 Britton l.OO Kingstree Dem. Club 4.20 Greelyville Club No 2 W N Clarkcnn 1.00 A W Montgomery 50 S J Taylor 50 4 T W Boyle l.OO J F Register 50 F Misboe 50 R S Brunson, Jr 50 C E Register 50 T J Hogan 1.0O P C Shirer 25 "W H Branson 25R S Brunson, Sr 25 W H Fair 25 t l)r 1 N Boyd 25 Dr J F Haselden 25 D J Bradham 1.00 Total 168.70 # ? " . >?