The county record. [volume] (Kingstree, S.C.) 1885-1975, March 11, 1909, Image 1

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?\$ Coxintj) fttfofd. VQL. XXII. KINGSTREE, SOUTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY, MARCH 11, 1900. NO. 52fc ^ HBHKI s L 111 I INAUGURATION DAY MARREI BY RAGING BLIZZAH CEREMONIES GALLED OFF AND TKOI ANDS DISAPPOINTED-TALK OF f CHANGING INAUGURAL DATE. Washington, March <"> Inauguration day, the foui ?.?u t i ,^+ ^ 1? .ililUll, na?> iuu^ yct'i iivtw ' ous for inclement weather, b | the fourth of March,1909,the d of President Taft s induction office, attained a climax of e mental violence. >>ever befc i'. had such preparation been ma for inauguration c e r e m o n i e More money had been expend than on any previous occasii for street and stand decoratic for fireworks and for the inau / ural ball. Every prospect pie; ed and only the weather w I Bvile. A blizzard set in the nig Jj^r before the fourth and rag with increasing violence un after the time for the Preside and the President-elect to pi ceed to the Capitol. It was pi ful to see thousands of soldie and visitors making an effo i- ? i ? in spue ui me e lemeuus, iu & a parade that did not form J march. The banked seats ai chairs that lined the south si Pennsylvania avenue by t thousand were vacant. The a enue was deep in snow a slush. Water and snow, mixe at the curb was from four to s ji inches deep. At the appointed hour, Pre dent Roosevelt and Presidei I elect Tait drove down t avenue in a closed carriage, e corted by a troop of dragoor They drove rapidly and reach I the Capitol in good time. T President-elect took the oa and instead of reading his a dress from the East front of t Capitol,where an elaborate tei porary platform and provisi< lor seating two or three thor and nenrde had been made. read it in the Senate chambe M After this ceremony, ex-Pre* J dent Roosevelt rose to go a] taking President Tatt by tl BL hand, bade him goodbye aj n good luck. The President p B his hand on Roosevelt's shot Hfcder and Roosevelt respond' HB and the President and ex?Pre HHident 'embraced like brothei H This spontaneous, nnrehearse .. tool Clothes | for summer wear must be p Ik carefully tailored, or they ? will lose their shape in I no-time. The making-to-order P , of lightweight suits (only |? i partly-lined to secure IS I greater comfort in hot weather) is a specialty I t The Globe 1 Tailoring 1 Company ?$ I Of Cincinnati m f ?iney guarantee pci uidnciu n |Vf shapeliness. A special line M ami of "tropical suitings" of Eg Vf serviceable quality is one of Wl the features of The Globe's I fg immense variety of seasonable f J K fabrics. See them here. jr? We abo have a splendid ut line of Stylish Ready- r Made Summer Clothing. E J impressive, leave-taking' caugh the sympathy 01 the audieno |{J? and tlieie was approvin applause from the lloor an> nj_ the gallery. E.\-Presiden f Jloosevelt had an ovation as h went to the TTnion station, onl three blocks distaut from th .tlj Capitol, and there takinga sea rj_ Iwith his family in the car. wen lUt to New York for the first tiin ay in eight years as a private oil izen. j J The inaugural ball was th onlv successful public fete c >re , - . . r d ;tlie inauguration ceremonie.' It was well attended?in fac d ; crowded, although the aduiif i sion was $5 for every man an j woman. There was but littl (r''dancing. All interest centere ^ in the appearance of Presiden j^'Taft, who with Mrs Taft an ht the managers of the ball, mad ed an entire circuit of the immens hall in a roped off space an then proceeded to an enclosur ro> in the balcony where the part was, for an hour, the cynosur of all eyes. ' There is more emphati c tal r ' than ever before about chant 00 ing the inauguration date froi 0r March 4 to April 30, or to th ^ last Thursday in April. C ~~ course, there is no assuranc e that there may not be occasion ^ al rain on this later date, but i ^ will be almost certainly not b \ ' cold rain or snow and absolute '1X ly certain no such blizzard a was experienced at this inaug S1" uration. There have been spas modic efforts to change the in auguration date from the bois iS" terous season of early March t< ls* the later and more salubriou ec* season, but there has alway been some congressional cranl or cynic to object and such sal utary change as would be possi ble and easy under a benigi despotism appears to be nex on i to impossible when it depend: ls"! on three or four hundred mem bers of Congress pulling at crosi ;r- purposes. This seems to be th< curse of democracy in mon ways than one. What is every he body's business is nobody's bus 3d mess and what is nobody'i at business is everybody's businesi *1" to mar and wreck, ed There seems to be very gen :s- eral approval of Presiden rs. Taft's inaugural address. Then d, is nothing startling in his ad I N * ?6 <Sfrca\ <1? TR<y^ <ki r:: ? ^ Cu>ii ILDa ^ For Ladlies a FKjsam ! ii j minisirauve or legislative pro- : 5 j gramme as announced. That g i he would uphold the Roosevelt d i policies was expected. He was tr chosen and elected to maintain e them. He comes into office with \ y a clean slate; with probably, e many friends to reward but it is l to be hoped with no enemies to J t j punish. It is evident that al-; e j though he has adopted the J t- Roosevelt policies, he is determ- j ; iued not to estraflge from him-j e self and his administration the ^ Roosevelt enemies. His administration is begun with recipro* cal good feeling betweenhimself 5' and the national Congress. ** Members of the Ananias club e have already been invited to ^ dine at the White House and it lt is believed that the well known ^ geniality and bonhomme of the ? Pr*?eiflf?n + -ocill lfcup nn fr? e oil the gudgeons of politics ^ which have ground and grated e somewhat creakingly during the y strenuous regime of his predee cessor. k Of course the most important part of the inaugural address is ' that which announced that Congress will be called in extra ^ session March 15 to re/ise the tariff. This prompt keeping of a pre-election pledge is praisej4. worthy,though expected. The tariff must be revised, for as it ? stands, it is the cause of many s ~ ~ ' r. i MULES! II s ? = Mr. Farmer: a t s Do you need a young- mule? ? come around t s load that I pe I can PLEASE and the price; ; M. F. H a \ * ? . / I Aire tine I BEST for Sprting l?S?(Mi wb"M**~1"i ; ^mngimgnsMBH conflicts in monopoly and restraint of trade which will not disappear until the schedules have been revised. Government revenues are falling off. A deficit ot 140 millions is looming up. TWO TOBACCO WAREHOUSES! Work on Buildings Has Commenced? Will Have Market Here Next Season Kingstree Tobacco Warehouse Co now have all of the lumber and brick in place on the site selected in North Kingstree for one warehouse and a portion ot the materials for the second warehouse on the grounds.They have been waiting: for the arrival of this material before commencing' the buildings and now that it has arrived, the wort will be vigorously pusnea to completion. Mr W R Grimes will superintend the erection of ail the buildings and his force is working like beavers every day. It will be only a few days now before the frame of the first warehouse will be up, and both the buildings will undoubtedly be completed before the tobacco season opens. We predict that Kingstree will become one of the leading markets of South Carolina. IS! MULES! i nice, smooth good straight or a pair of mules? If so, o my stable and look at? a carrsonally selected in the West. 1Y0U, in Mules and Horses, md terms will suit anyone. ELLER i .. ; / I ^ V W* the purchaser style and very little wear. Others wear :':>'^Ql'''l but have little style or comfort. The ^wfiWSjjk. King Quality fj m shoe has all Let us these three re- // snow )ou YSk - . // the new styles quisitesm // / KM x. // that are full of isS just the// >y snap and character.^ rig t pro-//will surely please portion^ you " ?wi urn ii?l? Ill: Taft's Cabinet. ; President Taft's cabinet com-: prises the following1: Secretary oi State?Philander | C Knox of Pennsylvania, j Secretary of the Treasury? i , Franklin MacVeagb of Illinois.; Secretary of War?Jacob MI I Dickinson of Tennessee. Attorney General?George W ; Wickersham of New York. I l Are Drags Ne Do Drags Ci CanNatur i If people were bom right and afterwards lived right, there would be no nse for medicine. Every doctor knows this. So do other well-informed people. One thing more. When a person lives wrongly, or acquires bodily weakness by heredity, medicine can do only very little. Medicine can Dot cure him. Only charlatans claim that medicines will cure disease. Medicines may palliate symptoms. Medicines may urge the powers of Nature to resist disease. Medicines sometimes arouse the efforts of the human body to right itself against derangements. This is the most that medicine can do. A man accidentally pnte his finger in the fire. Instinctively he wets bis finger ir ^ * month, then blows on it for the c. ag effect. This is no cure. He knows it very well. But it makes it feel better for the time being. People eat unwisely. This produces dyspepsia or indigestion. The only rational cure is to eat correctly. Yet if a palliative is at hand the pains of indigestion can be mitigated, the throes of dyspepsia assuaged. The medicine canJ not be said to have cured. It simply I palliates disagreeable symptoms. The I cure must come through right living. Take Pernna, for instance. No one elaims Peruna is a cure for dyspepsia. Bnt Pernna will stimulate the stomach to perform its function properly. Peruna will increase the flow of digestive fluids, without which digestion cannot be carried on at all. It will increase the relish of food, the appetite. It is admitted that all this can be accomplished by right living, but there * - ?..*11 are-so many people vdo eunct vm* or do not know how to eat correctly that a tremendous atnoont of good can be done by the wise use of Peruna. A stomach that has been frequently abused performs the function of digestion very lazily. Such a stom ach allows the food to remain undigested for some time after it is swallowed. This leads to fermentation of the food. Sour stomach is the result. This goes on week after week, until the blood is poisoned with the products of fermentation. This condition is very apt to produce rheumatism. It Is not claimed that Peruna will cure rheumatism. Nothing will cure rheumatism but correct living. Bat it is claimed that Peruna will assist a badly Abused stomach to perform its work. '1 -* " ^ honest shoe made by the i H best workmen fc? men ? B who appreciate good >f B things in foot wear. - H SkS Vt The King Qual- 3 9 I HI mm ^ '+ Postmaster General?Frank Hitch ~ock of Massachusetts. secretary or trie jnavy-.ueorge Von L Meyer of Massachusetts. Secretary of the Interior? Richard A Dal linger of Washington. ' M Secretary of AgricultureJames Wilson of Iowa. Secretary of Commerce and Labor?Charles Nagel of Missouri. cessary? Lire Disease? ',k, e be Assisted? If a person would correct his habit* ' persist in right eating and temperate ways, undoubtedly the stomach would 1 1 right itself, the blood would rid itself oi the poison, and everything would be j right. But as said before there are & ' multitndeof people wliowill not or canj not adopt right methods of living. To such people Peruna is a boon. A dose before meals will assist the stomach U j do its work. This prevents fermenta[ tion of the food, brings about normal i digestion, and all the traiu of ills that 1 follow indigestion disappear, j In other words, Peruua is helpful to i those who live bully, or those who 1 have acquired some chronic weakness. 1 Peruua does not cure, but it assists the i powers of Nature to bring about a cure. The whip does not increase the power of the horse to pull a load, but judiciously used it stimulates the horse to use his powers at the right time, without which he could not have pulled the load. This illustrates the effect of Pemna, or any other good remedy upon the system. Taken at the right time, it calls forth the powers of the human system I to meet the en. roachments of disease. ' and thus cuts short, if not entirely ends, the diseased action. No one shbuld ever attempt to substitute medicine in the place of right living. In the end such an attempt will prove a disaster. But an occasional use of the right medicine at the right time is a godsend, and no reasonable person will undertake to deny it. Those who know how to use Peruna find it of untold value. By and by the world will get wise enough so that through correct living no medicine at all will be needed. But that time ha* not arrived. In the meantime, while the world ie approaching that perfection in w hich all medicine will be eliminated, Peruna is a handy remedy to have in the houne. Slight derangements of tho stomach; slight catarrhal attacks of the liver, the throat, bronchial tubes, lungs or bowels; these attacks are sure to lead to grave diseases, and can be averted by the judicious use of Peruna. Wouldn't you like to read a few unsolicited testimonials from people who have used Peruna, and who stand ready to confirm the above statements concerning it. If so, address the Peruna Drug Manufacturing Co., Columbus, Ohio, and we will send some prepaid, i ; - MA fm ?