' / * THE NEWS AT HARPERS. Iwolowns Will Hardly Uirtle?Rose-: t mary to Celebrate the Fourth? Harpers, June 28:?There was au ! enthusiastic meeting of the citizens jt of Harpers ami Rosemary last v Thursday uigtit, June i;*. io cur-;j sider the uniting of the two towns ; t under one chiirter. but 110 definite jf conclusion was reached, the iuten-j'J duut of tiie town of Harpers not be- j S ing present. Another meeting has v been called fur next Saturday night ? and the people of llurpers have u?- ? cided to make no move towards 1 uniting the two towns before the I Mid of the present year. Then, if it S is deemed best, such action will be t taken as is necessary to extend the ? charter ovei Rosemary. Our pesple v seem very much opposed at present t to uiakiug any chauges in the v town's charter, hut we hope to see i our sister town become chartered if v cik. fi e er* i) a an had some- I I what extended speeches ou the night ( of the 24th inst by Messrs W H \ Audrews, If C Tallavast and J W a Doar of Rosemary on the subject of t extending the charter of Uarpets t over Rosemary. \ Your scribe made a dying trip to 1 Fioreuceone day last week. While there he was shown over town by 1 Mr J W Worford, the popular route ( agent of the Southern Express com- < pany. Mr Worford showed us < over the grand new station building, i This station would do credit to a ( city twioe the aise of Florence. Farmers ot the upper part of Williamsburg county have fine crops and everybody seems to be hopeful fo: the future. < VTi_L c._i. J?_ ... O-A 1??? jjeii oatuiuay is uuc mu \jl uuiy. What have become of the races aud ' the picnic which were announced for Rosemary on that date? It was ! said that they would ruu excursions from all points of the State 0:1 that date and they expected to have fifteen thousand people present, with.' several trass hands to furnish music. The Rosemary boosters were to give a grand ball on the night of ( July u. People are looking forward;' to this :>.3 a ' rod letter" day for' Rosemar'*. i hev v. ere to have races or then .u?> wok? and! several games cf baseball on th 'tj day. V*'e know that Rosemary never 8tarts things and fails :: their a-: complishment. We kuow all of thu will h" carried c .t. Tins will ?e a' day of great pleasure fui our peO j pie. Si'uscaiaER. ! Notes irofo tfood? Moody, June 28?Messrs W 0 and II A Camhn went to George j town Saturday. . ' 1 Mrs W It Camtin issuOfering from ! I erysipelas in the palm ot her hand caused from a bloou blister. \ There is a good deal of sickness in i our community, mostly chilis end i fever. J Miss LuU lia.field of Charleston j is spendi: g acne h:e :;ero wth j relatives. Miss Cari: - *i -i. . of ( :u eiauu, j Ga, a nvt-.i her. . *; * v a::u 1 will sjen the with re'a-J tives. The V. .-..it : r.; tb:-r they v. !. , f con 111 . :> % ii work , L . C. pres . i. v . i ... Frio.' the . r ... ( lor lift nti the water subsidv i -J C" 1 i I :r if " ;i \far.-. ??ro. % Si h i'J-i .... . found a ea & in S'.vit/.vi l.' : . of i.w'. 10.),00' - . i lib was in coaataut danger from wii i beasts. To-day the dit -.-.v.- ;!o .. A W | JJrovv:. .: A1 ... Me, largely f from deadly di ... "If 1: had not been for i . Ainu's Xew Discovery, r which cured i:tv. I ccuid not have lived," he v rites, 'sabering as I did . from a severe lung trouble and stub-, ^ born cough." To cure bore Luugs. Colds, obstinate Ccughs and prevent. ] Pneumonia, it's the best medicine on i ] earth. 50c and $1.00, Guaranteed ( I by D C Scott. Trial bottle free. Old papers for sale at this! ifi ce. * ( t TO GEORGETOWN BY WATER. apt. Constine Takes Party Safely Through on The Wanderer. The "Wanderer," a "joe bat" him-four feet long ami eight feet ride, propelled by a ten horse ?o\ver uaptha engine, arrived in his port Sunday night at 9 o'clock ' ? 1/" I??aa fl.? rii'or I'JIli L*. I UgmiCC, > Id t>*v>? The "Wanderer" l?ft Kingstree last i jaturday afternoon at 5:30 o'clock, kith her owner. Mr Conrad Con-1 tine, accompanied by the following ;entlemen, Messrs John Brittou, | david Scott, Royal Flowers, Rochel , ^lowers, Walter Dennis, H 0 , smith and T W Smith. Several of , hese young men informed our re-1 >orter this morning at Market dock, ; vhere the "Wanderer" is moored, < hat the trip down Black river was 1 e.j enjoyable, though the stream s tortuous and crooked. This is1 vhat the people of Kingstree are rying to have remedied by the Tovernment. Gould these curves >e straightened out, easy access up ind down Black river would be obained and Kingstree and Georgeown would be in closer touch, both daces beiug wonderfully benefited q a commercial seuse. The party of excursionists will Ake their departure Monday eveniog >r Tuesday morning for their ffe:urn trip, which the people of this nty hope will be as enjoyable and as utercstiDg as was their trip in jomiug down.?Creorgetow.i [tent. More Dairy Farms Needed. In Farmers bulletin No 349, B II Rawl, Chief of the Dairy Division ?f the United States Department of Agriculture, shows that each of fifty Southern cities, not to mention all the others, buy on an average ?459,157 worth of dairy products fiom Northern producers annually, rt would require 200,000 cows, better than our average, to produce the dairy products purchased by these fifty cities alone. If the cost of feeding these cows a year was $45 each, it would leave a baiance of $270,151 as the profit on furnish-1 ing the dairy products used and j bought by these fiftv cities from; Northern fanners. To bring the i fact; a little closer home, aud follow ' still further Mr Rawl's ideas, it j would require 10,000 dairy farms,' -.1 twenty such cows each, to supply j these fifty cities, or 200 such j farms for each city, which aftei paying the cost of feediug the cows, would leave a profit of about $1,100 per farm. Here is an opportunity for a large number of our readers to get "$500 More a Year." There ire hundreds of other cities in the South buying equally large quantities of dairy products in proportion to their population, and these offer a splt-ndid market for any Southern farmer who will produce a good product aud put it on the market i :q proper condition. At present we are shipping our! cotton seed meal to the Northern I States and Europe, aud in every iut. lobbing our soils of $10 worth j f plant food: while in leturn, woj are buying butter which does not j br:: s back i-o us i iiun.lreth part j .1 ti.j fertilizer material contained j . t: . i.-'. ls wiiicb produced it. - 1 t / '. / 2ui!J Uo Vdh? Town. V." f , ." ;>? fiMin 1 !ii> . . ;Vm X.- - ('mirier i : . . hf b memoriav ! it:: 1 -1. I ; to : t lers of I'll ?Q | Jj . . i - t.fn v..yt ym?r ' .. uL nou. . i_?it;U up tlu u. ,vn wi.ero ye.: live. The divorce: between home interests aud owner.! is almost a'.wuye a handi up.' i: ,i little e:..i A .of philosophy from the Waterbnry American vi;.v'l? felicitates itself upou the e:--. prosperity of its own home L. '.it; n'lf.erl'Ttry money ha-; It.en Invested h?iv at Lome.' Ton't forr.-t the philosophy of the Ameri- j :an: 'The divorce between home; interest and ownership is almost al-1 ways a handicap.' Salute all the, friends who oome to live among us, jut stick to the town yoursblf.?1 'iranqeburg Timet and Democrat. Old papers for sale at this jfiice. H W. C. T. U. DEPARTMENT. ? rrrr^-rrr^r^^nrrrnr^rr |j (Contributed.) The Loyal Temperance Legion will hold a silver medal contest at Scranton school house on the night f of July 8, 1909. Let everybody at- ( tend, for Miss Elizabeth Moore, { State President Woman's Christian e Temperance Union of North Caro- n Una, will be present and speak to us s on "Christian Citizenship." Miss <; Moore's credentials are here given: 1 Oik State Oii<;a>tizek. ri Miss Elizabeth Moore of Taylors- J ville, N C, having served acceptably during the past year as State Organizer and Superintendent of the Loyal Temperance Legion depart- fi meut for the Woman's CbristUa Temperance Union, was again unanimously endorsed by the executive ' board, and without a dissentin voice elected by the convention held in Elizabeth City October 2-6, 1907, * to the responsible duties of those offices. Miss Moore was a missionary to Japan for several years and is well known as a Christian worker in many parts of our State. We are fortunate to have one of such sterling traits of mind and heait as Miss Moore, and bespeak for her the recognition and cordial co-operatiou of all Christiau people j everywhere. r Miss Moore is authorized to take f collections and pledges for State j work. Sh? will not enlt organize t new Unions, Loyal Terapeunce Le- ] gions and the young woman's work, but will visit existing Unions. * in behalf of our work for our ( | Master, in the interest of humanity, we ask that Christian people open ( their hearts and homes to Miss 1 Moore, our State Organizer, and thus co operate with us in this work ? "For God and home and native ^ land." e Miss Elizabeth MArch, President. 1 Miss Notiie M Johnson, Cor 8ec. ] How to Control the Flies. Flies on the farm can be- made much scarcer by keeping the manure well cleaned up. Then the woven wire , screens are now made very cheaply ( and easily adapted to all sizes of win- ; (lows,and wire screen doors litUd with ' springs to close quickly will also aid ' in keeping out Hies and mosquitoes. The few that get in can be rapidly disposed of with-one of the fine wire brushes now sold in the hardware stores. With one of these, the housekerner ran to around the room and kill every fly on the wall or window very rapidly. Especially should there be the closest attention to keeping out tlies when there is sickness in the neighborhood, and people are careless about the wastes of the sick room. Attention was called last year to the fact that tlies in the dining-room caused the outbreak of typhoid at the State Normal College at Greensboro, N C, and doubtless many other cases of diseases that puzzled people tj tind the cause were due to the flies. Ilonce it is not only important for comfort to keep the Hies out, but! i especially important as a preventive j of disease. With a farm-house isolated f.om j o! J t buildings, it ;!iou! \ '< r.i-i to n vvent ln.i iy of tiie that are! . I usually found there, L. keeping the i i i f ii-\ nbsoli'telv ! clean of uuuiQrC) ami it out J wheiv il will t, ii.ivc horse ' manure and tilth tc ffewl In, and! jou do nuL v;.mi w-.-ft- c urivd into j your milk or other foo 1. --Progrc* ? j ' Sees Mother liron' Young. "it would bo hard to overstate the j wonderful change in my mother since she began to Use Electric Bitters,'' writes Mis \Y L Gilpatriek of' Danfortb, Me. "Although past 70 slie really seems to be growing young again. She suffered untold misery from dyspepsia for 20 years. At last she could neither eat, drink uor 3 sleep. Doctors gave her up and all remedies failed till Electric liitters worked such wonders for her health." They invigorate all vital organs,cure Liver and Kidney troubles, induce , sleep, impart strength aud appetite. Only 50c at D C Scott's. } I MEANS MUCH FOR CHARLESTON. laiiroads Make Tbat City Distributing Point for Coal Fields. New York, .June 25:?The Norolk and Western aud the Atlantic 3oast Line railroads through the resident and general counsel of ach road, today completed arange11 ?nt to furnish the Winston-Salem outh-bound railway with funds le [iiireil to complete its line from Winston-Salem, N C, to Wadesboro, " C, a distance of about 90 miles, j These two points are the termini of j he Norfolk uud Western and of the j Ulan tic Coast Line respectively, j md when linked up will establish a t hort line from Charleston N,j ;he Pocahontas coal fieh i hnnati and thence by other ? i joints North. The new lin" . | )wned jointly by the two & j juilding it. Although it t j i very heavy couoty, it \y' | :hele83 be laid ont in .?s v j i straight line as possible, anu ^ ?e constructed to take care of ;runk line business. No new lancing, it was said today, w ^ lave to be undertaken by either ( fto/l in onnnaofinn with t.hp nPf' V'UU A LA WUUVWIVi* ?? ?.? ??v ;oD8troction. Rheumatism. M F Ballautyne, of Ballautyne & j HcDonough's Iron Fouodiy, Savau- ] iah, Ga, says ftiat he has suffered ' 'or years from Rheumatism, and ( jould get no relief from any source, | >ut P P P, which cured him en- J irely. He extols the properties of ; P P P oil every occasion. P P P is the greatest known cure 1 !or Rheumatism; it eradicates the I lisease out of the system quickly | ind forever. I P P P Lippman's Great Remedy, , jures Salt libeum, ivith its itch and >urning, Scald Head, Tetter, etc. 1 P P P cures Boils, Pimples and I ill eruptions due to the blood. | P P P cures Rheumatism and all | lains in the sides back and should;rs, knees, hips, wrists and joints. P P P cures Blood Poison in all ' ts various stage*, Old Ulcers, Sores I ind Kidney Complaints. I P P P cures Catarrh, Eczema, ( Erysipelas and all skin and blood 3iseases, and Mercurial Poisoning. For sale by W L Wallace. If you want engraved visiting :ards or wedding invitations ve are prepared."'" till your jrder guaranteeing faction md price- See_p imples oefore ordering ( \ y ' Five Years ; of Heart Trouble Cured by 1 Dr. Miles' Heart Remedy "Before I began taking Dr. ( Miles' Heart Remedy I had been j suffering from heart trouble for | over five years. I had pains in | my left side, and under my | shoulder blade, could not sleep i on the left side, and was so short i of breath the least exertion j would bring on the most distress- | ing palpitation. I had scarcely | taken a half bottle of the Heart i Remcdv before I could see a ]| marked change in my condition, !j When I had taken six bottles I | i was cured." . jl . MRS. C. C. GORKEY, |j Northfield, Va. j! If t lie re is fluttering or palpi- ! tatic.i it is an indication of a , weakr.e^. of the nerves and mus- '1 clcs o i the heart, it ?s no1i. tees? sarily div.sed?;urt ivtfrom 1; over-work. 1 lie Ileant in y be j weak just the same as the es, II stomach or other organs. \ au ;j can m dee a weak heart strong !i y taking idr. Miles Heart. v. - ni ~ ij cdy. Get a ! ottle from your ! druggist, take it according tc di- 'j i ,ik ' ' [r ' i: l bene- !l j a t\ ' ) j V' McCALL PATTERNS Celebrated for style, perfect tit. simplicity and reliability nearly* -50 years. S >U in nearly every city and town in the United States art Canada, "or by mail direct. Jlme sold than any other make. Send for lrec catalog i.e. McCALL'S MAGAZINE More subscribers than any other fashion magazine?million a month. Invaluable. Latest styles, patterns, dressmaking, millinery, plain sewing, fancy needlework, hairdrcssing, etiquette, p>od stories, etc. Only 50 cents a year (wortn double), including a free pattern. ' Subscribe today, or send for sample copy. I WONDERFUL INDUCEMENTS < j to Agents. Postal brings premium catalogue } and new cash prize offers. Address [HE UcCAiL CO.. 238 to 245 W. 37th St.. NEW YORK ! p. p. p. m Makes Marvelous Cares in Blood Poison, Rbeoiatisi aid Scrofula. n P. P. P. purifies the blood, builds up the weak and debilitated, gives strength to weakened nerves, expels disease, giving the patient health and happiness, where sickness, gloomy feelings and lassitude lirst prevailed. In blood poison, mercurial poison, malaria, dyspepsia, and in all blood and skin diseases, like blotches, pimples, old chronic ulcers, tetter, scald head, we sav without fear of contradiction that P P. P. is the best blood purifier in the world. gm Ladies whoso systems are poisoned and whose Mood i- "n an impure con- 'jg dition due to menstrual irregularities, are pe<-ulinrlv hem lined ! v i':e wonderful tonic and blood cleansing properties of P. P P., l'lickly A;!., Poke .^3| Root and Potassium. . F. V. LIPPMAN, SAVANNAH, CA. 3] ^ooooooooooooooooooooooo^ ^ 5 ?:FROM THE: O 3 CRADLETOTHg GRAVE-8 R STACKLEY, the Furniture Man, X C X is still doing a X (^|RtrSHING BUSINESS O at tbe same oia stana- x mething for Everyone, g L. J. STACKLEY, 8 "The Furniture Man" x 5 KINGSTREE, S. C. O js corniTs and caskets. 8 J IS TO PLEASE YOU-S? f That's what we are working for all the time. Good, salable goods?! M suitable for TA WEIDlDIISra- MBESEaTTSgr f V STERLING SILVERWARE and SILVER PLATED WARE. X RICH CUT GLASS. A la.ge variety of * - ' CLOCKS and BRONZES. GOLD &ui SILVER JEWELRY.?/ ! Silver and Nickel V atches. B j A full line of OPTICAL GOODS. EVES FITTED FREE. Jl Remember we are WATCH INSPECTOR? for Southern Railway,W) Georgetown and Westeru Railroad and Consolidated Street Railroad.7A , WATCHES AND JEWELRY REPAIRED. (? MAIL ORDERS RECEIVE PROMPT ATTENTION. (# 1 fl S. THOMAS cSs BEO., fl 000006) m I III l| im If I in ll Mil IIMIMMIIIHim UNI I III IIIBW } BOWE & PAGE, I'J i Uei?"l Contractor* for Miuiicinal Work I ? in ?< ! i wriiii?.-wnriii ?iirrxmti'wiiiiiiwj jr?-?r ^an n ,?iij -t^?jw>?? |C | Street Paving. Concrete Sidewalks. | ?] * CVrY II" ;.!N't:i;its: Augusta. Gu.; Charleston, S. Thoirtasvil'e, Ga.; N 3 I.-'ke City, Fla.: Anderson, S. C.; Kingslrce, S.