The county record. [volume] (Kingstree, S.C.) 1885-1975, September 16, 1909, Image 7
II CLEMSOK COLLEGE OPENS.
| jsident Meil Makes Earnest and
I Impressive Talk to StudentsI
ClemsouCV . September 10:
[The openin.: ?-<i*rci?e>'of Clemson
College wore j r. i Ufticriljiv morn- :
i:.b, the liev V II Mil!: '. <>!iductiugJ
the chapel exercises.
l>r 1' H Mell made a very earnest I
talk to the students, impressing ui>- '
on them tlr? importance of starting
their college career in the right
....... ii- th^ni that he. as !
fwajr. ur ii?ui\.u ,
president of the college, and hisi
coworkers would do all they could
to help them in the serious work of !
getting an education and in their j
efforts to take advantage of the
great opportunities now offered them.;
His plea was that the students'
should strive to make the best of',
their opportunities so as to be pre .
pared to do the work of well equipped
men.
Capt M Stokes, the command. J
ant, has the military department well I
organised, and the new men arc'
rapidly learning the way of military ,
life. All the old uniforms have j
been inspected, aud soon measure- j
ments will betaken fur uniforms.
n'Ua ovamitmtinns will be i
i. L1C tUHMHVV - (
concluded tomorrow, and old students
will matriculate Saturday.
Dunug this weeK- old students who ,
had work to make up have been ,
busy getting ready for the beginning
of regular class room workMonday.
There are now over 400
students here, and the total will be
aboyt 750/
l . Senator Tillman, Hon J E
| Wannamaker, Col M L Donaldson ]
and Hon B H Rawls are here doing <
some committee work for the board
of trustees.
^ Pea Vine Hay
Let the peas grow till the pods turn
yellow, and there is 110 hay more
easy to cure well than cowpeas, notwithstanding
all the talk about the i
difficalty in curing them. They
will cure if you just let them, ami
do not go to monkeying witn all
^ sorts of contrivances to spoil them.
I had a letter today from a farmer
who said that he would not have !
barn room for his pea crop and
wanted to know if they would keep I,
well stacked. He really answered I
his own question, as he said that a
neighbor had stacked some when
well wilted and limp and they heated
and steamed. But to his surprise ,
he found that they cured perfectly.
If be had opened the stack and
tried to cool them off, he would,
doubtless have had mouldy hay.
Mow the peas in the morning, and,
if possible, put a man behind
the mower to keep them tossed up
and hasten the wilting. Rake the
morning mowing into windrows j
that afternoon. Turn them the I
next morning and lee lie till afteri
noon while cutting more. Cock
[ theui that afternoon and when the
hay in the cocks can be taken aud j
twisted hard, and no sap runs to 1
the twjst, haul them in. If to go
into stacks, make the stacks well,
and rake down the sides, but. cover
tops of the stacks with straw or
dry hay. This hay will cure, even
if the stacks heat. Put some rails
imder the stacks to keep the hay off!
the ground and prevent its absorb- !
ins: moisture from the ground and j
you have as good hay as in t he
barn.?Raleigh, (.V. ('.) I>rogres$ivl,
Farmer.
Why We Are Stronger.
The old Greeks and Romans were
?reat admirers of health and strength;
.heir pictures and statuary made the j
nusclos of the men stand out like
sords.
As a matter of fact we have athetes
and strong men?men fed on
ane strength making food such as
Quaker Oats?that would win in any
ontest with the old Roman or Greek
champions. 2
It's a matter of food. The finest food
?or making strength of bone, muscle
<nd nerve is fine" oatmeal. Quaker
Jats is the best because it is pure, no
(lusks or stems or black sr .cks. Farmers',
wives are finding that by feeding
;he farm hands plentifully on Quaker
Dats they get the best results in work
ind economy. If you live in a hot clinate
buy Quaker Oats in hermetically
sealed tins. It keeps sweet and fresh, i
Old papers for sale cheap by
the hundred at The Record
, office.
I
SAYS COOK LIED.
Peary Claims to Be the Only anc
Original Discoverer of Pole.
Th.' News anu Courier says:
The lie was hurled today concern
ing the discovery of the North Pole
and the foundation laid for a con
troversy unparalleled in history,
Commander llobert E Peary h
makiug uncertain progiess south
ward off the coast of Labrador it;
his ship, the Koosevelt, but there
came from him today a message ac
direct as his homeward journey ha;
been slow. It challenges the veiacity
of Dr Frederick A Cook, oi
Brooklyn, and further complicate;
a situation which the whole world
is discussing.
In effect Peary discredits Cook's
claims with the intimation that he
(Peary) and he alone, planted the
American tlag at the North Pole on
April C, 1909, and that Dr Cook,
who asserts that he unfurled the
dag at the pole ou April 21, 1908,
must substantiate his claims.
At Copenhagen, Cook, shown his
rival's statement, tonight stood by
his guu, declined to enter into a debate
and calmly asserted that hia
records would sustain him. To
prove his right of discovery before
the entire world, beyond a shadow of
doubt, be annouuced tbat he will
dispatch a ship to Greenland aud
briug to America his Eskimo companions,
then with their testiqn,i
hie .lain )ip il^nlari-s that
lll^lltco QI1U U1P V4UbM) 4JV ?*vv?w?
he will staud ready to face all detractors.
In the meantime Peary continues
his homeward journey on the icescarred
Roosevelt, and is tonight at
Battle Harbor, Labrador, more thau
400 miles from North Sydney, Cape
Breton, the objective point of the
homeward cruise, through the strait
of Belle Isle.
Subscribers who order their
papers changed from one postoffice
to another must give us
<
the name ot the former office as
well as the one to which they
wish the paper to be translerred.
tf
The Road To Success
has many obstructions, but noue so
desperate as poor health. Success
to day demands health, but Electric
Bitters is the greatest health builder
the world has ever known. It
compels perfect action of stomach,
liver, kidneys, bowels, purifies and
enriches the blood, and tones and
invigorates the whole system.
Vigorous body and keen brain follow
their use. You cau't afford to slight
Electric Bitters if weak, run-down
or sickly. Only 50c. Guaranteed by
D C Scott.
OUR CLUBBING RATES
We offer cheap clubbing rates
with a number of popular newspapers
and periodicals. Head care
fully the following list and select
the one or more that you fancy and
we shall be pleased to send in your
order. These rates are of course all
cash in advance, which means that
both The Kecokd and the paper
ordered must be pan! lor, not i, z. o,
4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10. 11, but twelve
months ahead. Below is. the list of
our best clubbing offers.
The Record and News & Courier
(Semi-weekly,) $1.85.
The Record and Home & Farm
(twice a month,) $1.35.
The Record aud New York World
(3 times a week,) $1.75.
The Record and Atlanta Constitution
(3 times a week) $1.85.
The Record and Atlanta Constitution
(weekly $1.50.
DnriAnr\ n%-w1 iNron'u ( !nm_
IX1L litiA/rbi; auu injuu o wui
moner, $1.75.
The Record and Cosmopolitan
Magazine $2 00.
Thf Record and Youth's Companion
(New Subscribers) $2.50.
The Record Semi-Weekly State,
$2.50.
The Record and Lippiucott's
Magazine 1 year each ?2.75.
The Record and National
Magazine, 1 year each, $2.00.
N. B. We do not club with any
daily papers. The first issue you
receive of the paper or periodical is
evidence that the money for same
has been forwarded by us. We are
not responsible after that.
THE COUNTY RECORD,
Kingstree. S. C.
I
! Southern Mills Must Improve Goods
But in face of all the obstacles
I that confront him, the Southern
i cotton manufacturer should be determined,
no matter what the cqst
| or what the sacrifice, to produce a
; higher class of goods. It is oniy
bv manufacturing such cotton
.
I fabrics as are produced in England,
J Alsace and Lorraine, and to a limits
1
jed extent in New England, that
(; he can hope to realize his natural
, birthright. This does not mean
, that the South produce no hue
. cotton iioods at all. for it does: but
>
that the great majority of Southr
em mills manufacture only the
. j very cheapest grades of staple goods.
I The cotton manufacturer's best
market always will be at home, no
matter what the increase in foreign
trade, and it is the home trade for
which the Southern manufacturer,
should strivv, for the home trade
i
; need^he highest class of goods ob,
La ..ole, and are willing to pay for
them. The i, again, the exigencies
of the cotton market, which often
times affect the low-grade fabrics
very seriously, exert no appreciable
influence on the high.
In the development of the South's
huge water powers will lie tile solution
of cheap power. At a conservative
estimate there is enough
undeveloped power in the 8outh to
propel' all the cotton spindles in
the woild. This power should be
available at fully a third less than
the Northern cotton manufacturer
can buy his coal?and coal is only
halt the cost of producing power.?
"Glorious OUl Georgiain September
National Magazine.
i
20 Years
WithHeartTrouble
"Dr. Miles' Heart Remedy has
* ? * .f
cured me 01 neart disease 01
over 20 years' standing. I was
so bad that I could not do my
work, and could scarcely draw
a full breath without fainting or
smothering. The doctor told me
he could do no more for me;
then I commenced taking the
Heart Remedy. I shall never
forget that night. I slept better
than I had before in months. I
kept right on \ etting better, until
I was peri, tly well."
MRS. LAURA RUSSELL,
Logan, Iowa.
When the heart action is
weak, it fails to pump the blood
through the lungs With sufficient
rapidity. Then the lungs do not
absorb the proper amount of
oxygen, although they may be
taking in a normal amount of
air. The result is shortness of
breath, smothering spells, diffi!
cult breathing, oppressed feeling
| in chest. Dr. Miles' Heart Remj
cdy strengthens the heart nerves
! and muscles, and in this way
' increases the circulation.
I t-^1- r A^rr.
LieC a UOiyc UUIII y\jui uiuggist.
Take it according to directions,
and if it does not benefit
he will return your money.
IB
I OUR BIO BUSIK
GROWS BIGGE
CONSEQUENTLY we ha
^enlarge our buildings, ai
J stores when completed w
five hundred feet long runn
Arcade form, right throu^
block from King to Meeting
giving us a floor space of
thousand feet.
Call whi
GET INSIDE.
Your Frirnds and Neighbors in
kiugstree Will Show You How.
1 i
Kubbing the buck won't cure'
backache.
A liniment may relieve, but can't'
cure.
Backache conies froui me inside?
from the kidneys.
Doan's ft.mney fins get insm^?
i They cure sick kidneys.
Here is Kings tree proof that this
, ia so:
Mrs Louise Alsbrook, E Main St, !
Kings tree, is C, savs: "I do not;
hesitate to say that Doan's Kidney
i Pills are a tine remedy as I have used
th?ni and they have given me entire!
j satisfaction. For a long time mv j
kidneys were sluggish and the aecre- j
! tions were irregular in passage and'
filled with sediment. I was also
subject to fiequent headaches and
pains through mv loins. Since using j
i Doan's Kidney Pills, procured from j'
Scott's drug store, the kidney diffi- J
eultv has been disposed of and my j
; back has not pained me. I have felt j
j much better aud stronger in every j
i way and J am certain that Doan's.
. Kiiliiev Pills effected this great'1
j change."'
For sale by al) dealers. Price 50
cents. Foster-Mi I burn Co., Buffalo,!
j New York,sole agents for the United j'
I States.
Remember the name? Doan's? .
and take no other. j'
THE THRICE-A-WEEK WORLD,
The Greatest Newspaper of its Type, j,
It Always Tells the Truth as It Is, j
Promptly and Fully.
Read in^very English-Speaking
Country.
It has invariably been the
great effort of the Thrice-a-Week i
edition of the New York World |
to publish the news impartially
in order that it may be an accu- .
rate reporter of what has hapjpened.
It tells the truth,irreI
-ntr-itr irH fnr that
[SpCCLIVC ISi U?v> .v.
reason has achieved a position
with the public unique among
papers of its class.
If you want the news as it really
is, subscribe to the Thrice- j
aWeek edition of the New York
World, which comes to you every
other day,except Sunday,and
isithus practically a daily at (he
price of a weekly.
The Thnce-a-Week World's
regular subscription price is
only $1.00 per year, and this
pays for 156 papers. We of-er
this unequalled newspaper and
The County Record together j
for one year for $1.75. I
The regular subscription price j
of the/ two papers is $2.25.
??????f
NoticeAll
persons having paid $*2">.00 for
seed cotton and unpacked lint cotton ?
license can have refunded to them $10
by calling on
.1 Wesi.ky Cook.
U-16-4t County Treasurer.
___
t Kings tree
* CAMP NO- 27. j y
N\ aiUCLAl VDTI?M I U
U\ lat sod 3rd Mondaj <1
JJ Night a In^ each | j-J
W Visiting choppers cor- ! ?
!/ dially Invited to oomt t.
up and ait on a stomp
or hang about on tha r
limbe. r
Thos. McCutchen,
27 12m. Con. Com.
HI
? lii Mm
i/a \r\ "
. V ^ IU
id cur 232 and 234 King St
ill be
ing in
is ^ a[
forty House la tl
m you h
-. ' ik 1a . y '
FHMIHR
OtHreov?T Sluglctary Building. l'hone
M. A. WOODS,
fIST*
LAKE CITY, S. C
C. A YTON &COOKE,
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW.
LAKE CITY, ... SC.
Office in Siuzl'-tury Buildinti.
Special A'tvnci'Xi f> Oollejltous . 2*2 > -cft>
W. Leland Taylor,
DENTIST.
Office over I>r W V Brockington' ? Store
KINGSTREE, - - S. C*
5-21-tf.
M. D. Nesmith
DENTIST.
LAKE CITY, - - - S. C.j
\/\ I,L. BASS
Attorney at Law
r a vt? riTV q n
JU-fk II 1/ VI >. VI v.
Dr R J McCabe
Dentist.
SIN^STIEE, - S, C.
d. D. MOUZON'S
BARBER SHOP
?in the?
Kellahan Hotel
is equipped with up-to-date ap- i
pliances. Polite Service. < ompetent!
Workmen.
5?8-08. J
Registration Notice.
The office ot the Supervisor of Reg
stration will be open on the 1st Moniay
in each month for the purpose of
egistering any person who is quali- I
lied as follows :
Who shall have been a resident ot
he State for two years, and of the
:ounty one year, and of the polling pre:inct
in which the elector offers to
rote four months before the day of
rlection, and shall have paid, six
nonths before, any poll tax then due
ind payable, and who can both read
ind write any section of the constitu- I
ion of 1895 submitted to him by the I
jupervisora 01 jsegiscrauon, or who
an show that he owns, and has yajd
til taxes collectable on during tne j
>resent year, pioperty in this State '
issessed at three hundred dollars or !
nore. J. Y. McGILL, |
Clerk of Board.
:>?<' jwry-SSQ
FORSAKE!
Poland-China Pigs
Also a few toung Boar- and Sows: full-blooded
lock entitled to registration: ages from <j weeks
[> H months. Prices from f.'?. 00 to 110.00. Prices
uoted are less than one-half what the same
rude of hogs will cost you in Virginia or IVnCSBee.
These are line sjieeinieus of hogs, from
ay experience far suj>erior to the Berksnire
'liougli I have a few Berkshire* for sale too, hut
lot full-blooded.
Come and see we or send in your order. 1 wit
tease you.
J. J. H. GRAHAM,
Cades, 5. C.
6-17-3mos.
Mir
n WB,LE 1
& Cl. ou
* efit i
, Charleston, S. C.
* ROOM?Cost
li Still! lit!! Wttf;*
i. |fully as
IS SOUl our elb,
to 1-2 o
is to C
/L * ,
FFOLEY'S
;HONEY?TAR
The original
LAXATIVE cough remedy.
For coughs, colds, thr&at and lung
troubles. No opiates. Non*aJcoholio.
Good for everybody. Sold everywhere,
The genuine
rniTY'S HONF.V and TAR lain
{ a Yellow package. Refute substitute*
Prepared only by
Peley A Company, Chicago.
W. L. Wallace.
vlPj i#i
McCALL PATTERNS '
Celebrated for style, perfect fit, simplicity and
rc!i.ibii'-'y nearly 40 years. Sold in ilcarly
every city and town In the United States and
I Canada, or by mail direct. More sold than
I any other make. Send for free catalogue.
McCALL'S MAGAZINE
More subscribers than any other fashion
I magazine?million a month. " Invaluable. Uat|
est styles, patterns, dressmaking, millinery,
plain sewing, fancy needlework, nairdressing,
etiquette, good stories, etc. Only 60 cents a
year (worth double), including a free pattern.
Subscribe today, or send for sample copy.
ttU.VIJOrUL l.1UU?.Linblld
to Aecnts. Po'tnl brine* pro-rum catalog
;:nd new cash prizo otTcis. Address
TBI McCAlX CO.. 233 to 243 W. 37th St.. NEW YOCft
I *
Paint Your Buggyl
1
We can make it look like new.
Any
n. Mil, ih
or other vehicle
j Ipri lOO Per Cat.
in appearance by painting1.
Also
ifel It Horseshoeing
and Gen- ; ;
eral Repair Work on short,
notice.
* .4
Bring Us Your Work.
W. M. Vause & Son
6-10-tf
f
Hacker Mfg. Co.,
Sl'CCksSORS TO
GEO. S. HACKER 8r SON,
CHARLESTON. S. C.
? PJJjmL^
^BBHI fVLrgjttl)
WE MANUFACTURE
Doors. Sa>h and Blinds; Columns
and Balusters; Grilles and Gable
Ornaments; Screen Doors and Windows.
WE DEAL IN * ' s
Glass, Sash Cord and Weights. *
HI
HESE ALTERATION SALES ARE
GOING ON
ana your friends can ben- 4
by the richest money savnces
that ever came yotfr'
WE MUST HAVE THE
?Profit is not thought of
is lost sight of. No matit
you want, write us an
1 order, we'll fill it as care
; if you were standing at
dw, and save you from 1-3
n every purchase.
9
kleslm
I
X
J
f,
' 1