The county record. [volume] (Kingstree, S.C.) 1885-1975, November 25, 1909, Image 2

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NEWS REPORTED FROM ANDREWS. NEGRO ATTACKS AGED WHITE MANMASONIC LODGE TO GIVE SMOKER-PERiONAL. Harpers, November ?An e.\<rifcug occurrence took place in West End of town Saturday. Ev Convict Jiitt Washington ami Mr L A Mcr Cants hud some word- at ttie Harpers (lin CVsgin house. Washing-, tort, who i? a burly negro about 21 j years olil. caught Mr McCants and I crushed him to the ground and would no doubt have killed him but for Messrs C 1\ Feagin and II C Marshall running to Mr McCants'res-j one. Mr McCants is an old man,! nearly 60 years of age, and :s weak j physically. This is the negro who j broke the store of \V I? Cainlin in M;tv. l'JUU, and served a terui of two and a half years in the State prison. As ;0on as his term was out, about I two months ago, he returned to this town and was at once taken up by some of our white people in town and given work. Now,this is the outcome ?an old white man brutally attack ed and no doubt would have been murdered but for the timely help of his friends. The matter was reported to the town officers and the negro has been arrested. We await the outcome of the case at the hands of the authorities. Mr McCants is an old Confederate soldier and is one of the best and most quiet and conservative citizens of this community. His assailant is one of the same family of Hannah negroes with such criminal records. One Dare Hannah killed his father, Alton Hannah, and escaped thechaingang in Georgetown county four years ago. His brother, Albert Hannah, killed Charley Scott here in town two years ago and is uow serving a five year t?Tiu in tilt- cnaingang in ueorgeiown county. Thia negro who assaulted Mr McCant8 ia of the same family, only younger. What will be the outcome ia yet to be seen. Our white people are greatly enraged over the matter and threats can be heard in all parte ot the town. It ia generally .believed that the negro was put up to de this act by some white people whose actiousat present bear out this belief, Supt Walter H Andrews, of the G & W railroad, is expected in town to-Jay, having just returned from his bridal tour. Mr J J Morris of Lake City spent several days of last week in town. The people ot our town are always delighted lu set- Mr Morris. His cheering words and pleasant smile are ever welcome in our midst. The members of the Harpers Masonic lodge, No 225, will elect their officers for the ensuiug year next Thursday night, the 25th inst, and will serve a smoker or luncheon to their members and friends. All are lookiug forward to a grand time. We have a flourishing lodge at this place and hope to have our District Deputy with us on this occasion. Subscriber. State of Ohio, ) City of Toledo, >ss. Lucas County, j Frank J Cheney makes oath that he is senior partner of the firm of F J Cheney A* Co, doing business in the city of Toledo, county and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of Hall's Catarrh Cure. FRANK J CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this 6th day of December, A D1836. A \V GLEASON, (Seal.) Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken inernally. and acts directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonals free. F J CHENEY & CO, Toledo, 0. Sold by all Druggists, 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. We have just got in a - splendid lot of all kinds of stationery tine bond papers,ruled headings 100,000 envelopes, and Dennison's shipping tags with brass eyelets and wire strings, the best made. See our samples before ordering elsewhere. tf j hbhb > How to Cure a Ham. I A general cure which would 1 j make a good ham under proper conditions would include as follows, j according to the American Agii-. eulturalist: To each 100 pounds1 I of haul, use 1 1-2 pounds Liverpool fine salt, 1 1-2 pounds granulated, ; sugar and 4 ounces of saltpeter. Weigh the meat and the ingredients j in the above proportions, ruu tne, meat thoroughly with the mixture,1 and pack closely in a tierce. Fill1 the tierce with water and roll every! seven days until cured, which in a temperature of 40 to 50 degrees! would require about 50 days for a, inediutn ham. Large hams require j ten days more for curing. When; wanted for smokiug, wash the hams in water or soak for 12 hours. Hang in the smokehouse and smoke slowly 48 hours and you will have a very good ham. Another method of pickling hams and shoulders, preparatory to smoking, includes the use of molasses. To 4 quarts ot fine salt add 2 ounces of pulverized saltpeter, add sufficient molases to make a Dastv mixture. The hams having j 4 huug in a dry, cool place tor three or four days after cutting up, are to be covered on all sides with the mixture. Put it more thickly on flesh side, then lay skiu side down for three or four days. In the meautime, make a pickle of the following proportions, the quantities here named being for 100 pounds of ham: Coarse salt 7 pounds, brown sugar 5 pounds, saltpeter 2 ounces, potash or pearlash 1-2 ounce, soft water 4 gallons. Heat gradually, and as the skim rises remove it, Coutinue to do this as long as an7 skim rises, and when it ceases, allow the pickle to cool. When the hams have remained the proper time immersed in this mixture, cover the bottom of a clean, sweet barrel with salt 1 inch deep. Pack in the hams as closely as possible, cover them with the pickle, and place over tlnm a follower with weights to keep them down. Small hams of 15 pounds or less, also shoulders, should remain in the pickle for five weeks. Larger ones require six to eight we^ks, according to size. Let them dry well before smoking.?Nucs <l Courier. What Christmas Present? Which makes the better Christmas present?the 52 issfies of/The Youth's Companion, costing only $1.75 for the whole year, or one book, costing $1.50 to $2.00? In quantity, variety and value of reading The Companion excels. Is not such a paper, bringing every week iuto the home circle charming stories, articles on a thousand subjects by famous men and women,delightful short sketches, humorous anecdotes, and an infinite variety of other wholesome, entertaining reading?is not such a paper the very one for au appropriate, acceptable Christmas present? Think of it! In i vaar Th#? rinmnaninn mvps von ns much reading as twenty 400-page books of travel, history, fiction, miscellany, biography and humor, and not a line in it that shakes one's faith in truth and honor.nota phrase that makes light of the things that are sweet and pure. Is it not a Christmas gift worth having ? a Christmas gift that is "worth while"? Send your subscription ($1.75) at once so a3 to receive free all the issues of The Companion for the remaining weeks of 1909, as well as The Companion's "Venetian" Calendar for 1910, lithographed in thirteen colors and gold. THE YOUTH'S COMPANION, Companion Bldg, Boston, Mass New Subscriptions Received at this Office. i Card. i nis is to certiry tnat an uruggists aie authorized to refund jour money if Foley's Honey and Tar fails to cure your cough or cold. It stops the cough, heals the lungs and prevents serious results from a cold, prevents pneumonia and consumption. Contains no opiates. The genuine is in a yellow package. Refuse substitues. D C Scott. Old papers for sale at this office. Illinois Again Unfortunate. Again, almost within the shadow 1 of the home of Abraham Lincoln,! aud with the memory of Spring tield's riot still vivid, has a mob wreaked vengeance that was the law's. It has fallen to Cairo, 111., to furnish the '"ost serious f inot.iim.-, rtf ill/kVk I il tllAI^U 111CUUIVV V/i 11 r / u ivivnt v ) involving the problem of the races within the year. The passions of the mob were were aroused by the brutal and fiendish crime of negroes, the same well-recognized cause of illegal mob vengeance which lias stirred communities from time immemorial; which figures in history, ancient and medieval, as well as modern. Grimly enougn, but evidently as an afterthought, the mob continued its work by putting to death a white man who had murdered his wife; making apparent effort to eliminate the element of racial antagonism as the actuating cause. But is impossible to get away from the fact that this was the primary cause, the match that set ablaze the powder train that brought explosion of human passion. The lynching of the white man, following that of the negro, gave unique turn and unusual color to the deplorable tragedy, bat otherwise, in all of its circumstaAes and details, it differed little from the many which have preceded it, finding its foundation in the same passions which nave remained unchanged, except as to control, since the days of barbarism, and which, under given conditions, will burst through restraint today the same as they did a hundred or a thousand years ago. As in the case of the Springfield riot, the unfortunate, outburst at Cairo demands sympathy as well as reproof. It matters not where people live . ila lu^cuici iu uuuiftuuunj) iuuc 10 present that same sleeping volcano et human passion, which, under given conditions, will break into eruption. It matters not what the latitude or longitude; it is only a question of supplying the proper fuel for the flame. Of course, such mob outbursts must be met and repressed as speedily as possible by legal force; but too often the work of the mob is done before legal repression can be applied. Essential though they be, however, the ultimate remedy will not come through these momentary manifestations of the power of the law. It must he, at least, in that education which will reach both the minds uud souls of mei:, inculcating a firm and well-grojiiied respect auu regard for lav/ aud erecting it as an effective and lasting barrier between disorder and peace. It is not the law, but the full grown and well developed re spect for law, in which must be found the cure for the 1110b.?Atlanta Constitution. Tbe Newspaper Indispensable. Occasionally a man is found iu every community who thinks he cannot afford to be a subscriber to a local paper. Does he take out his pencil and figure in a cool, methodical way the cost of a weekly paper at one dollar a year? Does he calculatingly prove that this expense is but twenty-five cents for thirteen weeks, eitrht and a third cents a month, less than two cents a week, a quarter section of one cent a day? Does he, in fairness to himself, make comparison of this newspaper expense with his tobacco bill or other indulgence which he might forego with profi? Not much. That daddy dollar which pays for the local newspaper has been dangliug before his eyes and growing bigger at every glance, until it assumes the proportions of a Ferris wheel in his imagination. xt- -a.: i ._ t_ . m i>u citizen can anoru to ue Wlin-1 out a local paper, and all of the newspapers in his neighborhood, for no one page can give all the happenings of human interest. It is safe to say that $5 a y<?ar represents the actual value cf a local newspaper to the average subscriber. There are ideas advanced and suggestions given, the value of which to the reader is little thought of. As a business proposition the local newspaper is worth many times the remarkably low subscription price asked, saying nothing of the question of sentiment..?.#* * Veteran County Auditor Resigns. Columbia,November 19:?William ' II Dorrill, for thirty-four years auditor of Georgetown county, has re- d signed. Mr Dorrill in his letter of * resignation to Governor Ansel states that he is forced to give uj> the position on account of his eve-' and fail- ^ ing health. The resignation was ac- j cepted by Governor Ansel *'.vith j much regret." The resignation is to j take effect on January 1 and Gov- j ernor Ansel has requested the George- J town delegation to recommend some j one to tak" the place of Mr Dorrill. j I J Asnearasitis j Possible I for us to tlo so, we trae> | J piano sold by ns, and pro'eet our I H customers from the misrepresent- 15 ations of unscrupulous ami in- J competent tuner- and repairer* H ofpi ino*. If you own a STIEF F \ PIANO, be very careful who J tampers with it. We maintain a 5 corps of competent men in this } li.ie. and will furnish one to look after your instrument anytime i it needs attention. Our representatives are duly accredited,and J if a chance caller represents that N he is from the ( HOUSE of STIEFF insist that lie show you his an- J thority. We stand hack of every V representation made by our rep- \ resentatives and this fact has C tempted dishonest persons to f masquerade as our represent*- r tire-. If your visitor can show f the proper endorsement, trust S him; if he cinnot, the chances L are you've caught a swindler, in f whi?h caae we'd thank you to S let u< know?we'll look alter him. a We don't propose that the peo>* f pie shall be mulcted at the cost S of our reputation. C Ohas. M. Stieff, s Manufacturer of \ Artistic Stieff, Shaw, and i Stieff Self-player Pianos. i Baltimore, Ml. S SOUTHERN WABE800M: S 5 West Trade Street, \ Chariot^? N. C. J C. rfvWILMOTH, 5 ^Manager. f (Mention this paper. C HI / rax notice. The tax books will be open for col- lection of taxe- the 15th day of October " next for the yt-ar 1909. Tax levy as follows: For State, 51^ mills * Ordinary County, 2% *' Special Roads, 1 ' * Roads, 1 " " Constitutional School, a " A capitation tax of $1.00 on all male persons between the ages of 21 and GO years, also 50cents per head on all dogs, also 2 mills for retiring bonds in King>tree township,4 mills for retiring bonds in Lake City township and 2 mills for retiring bonds m Greelyville school district, No 22. Commutation (Road) tax,$2.00. Lew for special school districts as follows: N'os 17, 26, 27, 28, 29, 33, 35,36. 4 mills; Nos 15. 24,31. 3 mills; Nos 19, 20. 21, 22, 25. 32, 2 mills: No 18. 1 mill; , Kingstree, No 16, 4 mills special, 2 mills High sch??o!. I will be at the following places mentioned below for collection of said taxes: Oct Kingstree, 15, 16, 18,19, 20 and 21 Hebron, J L Gowdy's store, 22 baiters, 23 ~ - .1-. 3 .)C (ireeiyvwc, to ?nu -o Gourd in*, 27 Suttons, 28 ? Trio, 29 Harpers, 30 Nov. " Benson, V W Graham's store. 1 Bloomingvale, 2 MorrisviTle, 3 Rhems, 4 Church I* 0, W R Graham's store, 5 Rome, 0 Lamberts 8 Ards X Roads, Eaddy's store. 9 Johnsonville. 10 Vox P O, 11 Prospect, 12 Leo, 13 Scran ton, 17 and 18 Lake City, 19 and 20 Cades. 22 LaWe City, 23 K'ihffstree, 24, 26, 27, 29 and 30 Doc Kintrstrec, 1, 2. 3, 4 and 6 Lake City, 7 i ixuigoutv, From 8th to 23rd and from 2Sth to 31st December, inclusive. Those who desire to pay their taxes through the mail would expedite mat| ters by dropping the Treasurer a postal asking for the amount of their taxes so as to avoid sending the wrong amount, also stating the township or townships, (if property is owned in more than one) ana if possible give school district wh^re property is located, also state whether poll or road tax, or both, are wanted. Alter paying taxes examine your receipts and see if all of your property is covered. If not, see about it atonce. By following the above suggestions complications and additional cost may be avoided. J Wesley Cook, 1-1-10 County Treasurer. ' > / n 1vu/>and hides I mmi H16HBST MAIDET PUO MBatSs&B mm llfm ?ai? roi iaw ro?s MSSS97 I IKJl AND BIBBS. H Wool Cooahelco. Writ* lor / fli ^ price-list meatiociflfthi. *4 ^a^E3R$3BBM& BSTABLI8HBD1837 "Wg|i || || || | WHITE A. CO.. LoouTXbi.au K*. < vwwwwwtwwvwvwvywwv^^ FIBE ZZTS-CTZS^ztcie. 5 Winter is coming- and the danger from tire will of ne- ^ eessity he increased. You had better be "safe than ^ sorr}'." Let us make you safe. ^ OUR COMPANIES ARE STRONG. 5 ^ Such names us Continental, Liverpool and London and 5 Clobe, .Etna and New Hampshire prove it ^ ; WE PAY THEIR LOSSES PROMPTLY . 5 The testimonials of our customers prove it. Here is one ^ , Kixostree, S C, November 0,1 909. ^ klngstrek insurance, heal estate Oi L/UA.N VXJ, Kings tree, SC. ^ * Gentlemen:?We received sight draft this morning for $305.73. ^ settlement in full for our policy with the Equitable Fire Insur- ^ ance Co of Charleston. Said loss occurred by tire on November 2. ^ * Please accept our thanks for your prompt adjustment and settle- ^ ment of this matter. Yours respectfully, ^ McIntosh & Moore. ^ Per W K Mcintosh. 3 Give us a trial. We insure anywhere in Williamsb ur^ ^ county. Yours for service, ^ ^ KtNGSTREE INSURANCE, REAL ESTATE & LOAN CO | 1 <AAMMAAAAMMMAMAMAAMAAAAMAMAAMAMMMMX j , 3^ fl |aprese^SEIM| !! } We have a number of handsome 5 Oil Paintings and Photogravures, a ) 16x20 si/.e, suliable for framing; also Q ?z/ > Fancy "\77"orlc Patterns 9 S that we are giving away absolutely free with Q> | THE WOMAN'S WORLD, | 1 a high class Magazine for the ladies. The Woman's World com- rj 5 tains 48 pages devoted to literature by the best writers, fashions U W / and a dozen or more recipes in each number that are easily worth V mm r the small price of subscription. ? v Kfinember you get the Picture, the Pattern and a first class X \ Magazine ouce a month for 12 months all for the nominal sum ^ 1 of 25 Oils in connection with The Kecord. This offer is open to A ( 5 old or new subscribers. O r We have the pictures and the patterns ready for yeu when you V ^ TLL! B si n Ik i in g Bm?!m@??? ^ Vnil have more or less ot it. Possibly it is with us. | 1111 If such is the case you know something of our 1 service. If not already one of our patrons, why not consider the advisability of becoming one? ; . OUR SAVINGS DEPARTMENT l is calculated to serve all classes. It receives deposits m f > from $1 up, and allows i per cent interest compounded ' r j quarterly. Fj i Bank of Williamsburg, |)H KINGSTREE, S. C. ifjM Rugs and Art Squares] | We have just received a large shipment of the HANDSOMEST L/NE OF RUGS AND ART SQUARES r mat nas Ever Been Shown in Kingstree. |Jif Call and look at them. * We also have " ZE-VEIES-Z-IKIISr3- ELSE jt'l K needed for the home. , 14 COFFINS AND CASKETS. Services rendered day or nierht. . J| L. J. STACKLEY, if j "THE FURNITURE MAN," J