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' TRUE PROGRESS consists in substituting the real for the unreal. , Why not substitute a Real bank account for that unreal one y, that belongs with your "Castles i^pain?" You will better appreciate the progress you have made > when you build your account to the point where you can make a profitable investment No account too small to receive ' *~1 -J.J. ? our most careiui aiieuuun auu t consideration. Small accounts grow,why not start yours today? You take no chances when you make this your banking place? rour ample capital and conservative management safe-guard I your money. BANK OF WILLIAMSBURG, KIN6STREE, S. C. SlSf^ Mary had a little hat? A stylish Easter bonnet. She wore it till a hungry cat Espied a rat upon it. f. * f Polk Miller at opera house to, - :<*ht. igbt in tn j held services at St Story T ^Ur.iay. Hiawath "Uncle RiHm FluittsP0111 Easter in , h relatives. K: . ii some p? f ' ) Chandleran Lide spent Easter at Wyche ga Darlington. /origin cettles visited Lanes, his eowulf" aih this week. V ancestors, th^d is jn Columbia takimportance is jsic Festival. r ?Wy telling, jjanahan is visiting her cepted as the -ttsburg, Pa. I ing literature , S?nce around the statue er gra es, ; -Q statu qu0 0?, APril.hbume, Esq, spent Easter has chargene jn Walterboro. partment . . . B Logan of Charleston visj| v Jjp.- mother here last week. Mr M L Allen made a flying visit to the little "Gate City" Monday. Messrs J E and R B Keels of Greelyville were visitors in town Saturday. At last our new press has arrived and we hope to print the next paper on it. Mtss Rosa Graham, who is teaching at Andrews, was noted here Sati, urd?>LeRoy Lee, Esq, visited the "City by the Sea" yesterday on professional business. Miss Elmer Hinds of Coker College visited her home-folk during the Easter-tide. Dr E T Kelley paid a flying trip v to his old home in Timmonsville on last Sunday. Mrs W P Young of Florence is visiting relatives in town and vicinity this week. i; Misses Emma Weaver and M S Hughes spent Sunday and Monday in Charleston. Mr B F Duke of Dunellen,Florida, is here on a visit among relatives at his former home. A short but timely slogan for ev? *~rtift? in Q/wi+h Pornlinq y LUWU CII1U v;ilj lu vjvsuvia v?i whmm would be: "Clean-up." We were glad to shake hands Tuesday with our. old friend, Mr J l^}axley of Lake City. Mr and Mrs 0 H Patrick spent Sunday at Central visiting the latter's father, Mr J J Strong. ?: Lingerie ? Silk Mull I French Nets | ? Persian Nets B ? Black and White Net fiilUUUUUliUlilulUUUUUiUi: 5 * I* m. The burnt district of St Stephens is being rebuilt with substantial brick buildings, adding much to the appearance of that thriving "berg" Mr W M Phipps and his little grandson, Clinton, of Scranton favored us with & brief visit Monday. Mr R L Blackman of Darlington, the popular cotton seed oil mill representative, was noted in town Tuesday. I There will be an eclipse of the sun on April 28 just before sun-set and the sun will set in eclipse at 6:14 I p. m. ! Dr and Mrs D P Frierson of; Charleston spent Easter with Mrs; Frierson's parents, Mr and Mrs Jas Epps, near town. Kingstree has some fine gardens now and the flower-yards will soon be redolent of bloom and beauty and 1 fragrant loveliness. Miss Stella Coward, who is a stu- j dent at a business college in Colum- J bia,visited her home folk here during the Easter holidays. Don't miss seeing the "Two Old Confederates," Polk Miller and Col Tom Booker, with their negro quartette, at the opera house to-night. Mr and Mrs R J Kirk attended 1 the elaborate and beautiful Easter services of the St John's church, Florence, on Sunday, the 16th in-J stant. ; I Mr E D Sallenger, the Charleston j News and Courier's traveling representative, was in town Friday of last j week looking after his paper's interests. I I Prof and Mrs Swittenberg visited J relatives in Sumter from Thursday ( until Sunday of last week and at-1 tended the services of the Lutheran church on Easter. Mr B B Epps of Bishopville visited in town and county several days la.-t week. "Burrie" is a prime favorite here and his visits are ever welcomed in Kingstree. Drs C D Jacobs and R C McCabe, Messrs W S and J D Gilland, Heyward Scott, W M Tobias and Miss Leila Fowler attended the Easter dance at Florence Monday evening. President Hugh McCutchen, of the Wee Nee Bank, and Cashier Epps, of the Bank of Williamsburg, are representing Kingstree at the, Bankers' association, which is in session at Summerville this week. Mrs L W Gilland and children of I Kingstree and Miss Janie Allen of! Florence arrived yesterday to be j guests during the Festival at the, home of Mrs J W Flinn on Blanding street.?Columbia State, April 16, Rev Dove Tiller, a preacher in the Methodist conference,died Thursday afternoon, April 13, in a Charleston ? T? If- TC11 fViio mnrmary. ivev mi una aci >cu uiw charge many years ago and is remembered by some of our older citizens. G F Stalvey, Esq, and Mr S W Puckette, were in town Tuesday from Lake City. Strawberries, beans, peas, lettuce, cabbage and cucumbers are daily on the bill of fare in Lake City, say these town boosters. Mr 0 P Barton,our "old reliable." made his annual pilgrimage to Charleston Sunday to hear the soulinspiring Easter services in the city churches, and stayed over till Monday to revel in the opulent beauty and luxurance of Magnolia gardens. Some of the young men from town who attended the dance in Florence Monday night intend to qualify as drummers?or at least it appears so, since they brought back as a little souvenir the bass drum of the First Artillery band. We were pleased to have a call yesterday from our esteemed friend, Rev S T Russell of Bloomingvale. 11 - ? ? tmfnvo Mr Kusseii is one ui me vcitiau warriors of the church militant and has devoted the best years of his life up-holding the Banner of the Cross. Prince McClary, a Boggy Swamp negro, was pulled here Saturday by the town marshal on a charge of selling liquor. Being fined $100 by Mayor Gilland, he appealed and was nmnfmmmmmmmmmmfi If It's Silk Chili Marquise Persian I New Ban< s Bordered BUTLE ItUUilllUUitMUIIIIIUUlililUU admitted to bail in the sum of $100 pending the outcome of his appeal. : There are others. | Communications coming to us af' ter Tuesday noon are not available I for the current, week. That is our extreme limit. We are able somej times to print short belated articles, but when they would throw us late i issuing the paper it is unreasonable to expect us to print them. And still another kind and thoughtful friend from Salters has paid his subscription two years ahead?to 1913. That's six dollars in three weeks from Salters; if the splendid example be followed by others the payments on that press will soon cease to disturb our dreams. We are requested to announce ' * - T I.' that the closing exercises 01 inumutown Graded school will take place Thursday evening, April 27, commencing at 8:30 o'clock. A C Hinds, Esq, of Kingstree will deliver the commencement address and a very interesting programme,consisting of music and recitations, will be rendered. The public is cordially invited. i We are informed that Messrs J G Slaughter, D J Epps and L C Montgomery have rented the KennedyMontgomery store building for a tobacco warehouse. They will add twenty feet to the building and remodel it so as to transform it into a warehouse. This means, probably, that three tobacco warehouses will be operated here this season, which ought to give us an excellent market. J McSwain Woods, Esq, of Atlanta, visited here and Lake City several days last week, combining business and pleasure. Mr Woods left Manning several years ago and opened a | law office in Atlanta. It was a pretty 1 nervy thing to do, for a young pracI titioner without a "pull" to hang 1 out his shingle in a large city, but Mr Woods tells us that his success in his adopted home has far exceeded his most sanguine expectations. A North-bound freight train was wrecked here Saturday about 2:30 p, m. The train was made up mainly of empty box cars and coal .barges. Just as it crossed Black j river trestle,at the end of the causeway this side, a "possum-belly" uni J At- - ?t ? i I aerneaui a coai car came muse miu ; dragged along the ties, causing the [ rails to spread. Three coal barges and a box car were derailed, being piled transversely across the track, and about thirty feet of the track was torn up. The wrecking train was soon on the scene and cleared the track for the afternoon passenger trains to get by only about a ,half hour late, 'i 1^1 ?j|i ?j|? "Mone; :: Worth c e CI have succeeded in gettin burg county with the celebrs IT Hakla, J V""*"' ft a machine that has been look fection. C The car is simple, strong, the most reliable car offered C These cars are absolu tthe buyer takes no chance, in your own county their opii loerue and demonstration, if } pect to be soon. I C. The 1911 Model is rea j "j* competition in its class. Just a looK will | H. H. Bj J, Mannii ^?"f?^??$* *1* "I*?*1*? New 1 on tte -awn jeaux Tissue R DRY Q i UlllUIUlUUUUUIUIUtllttUUUUI I i A fair sprinkling of whites and over a hundred colored people heard Rev Richard Carroll of Columbia at j the court house Friday night. Car-! roll has been called the "Booker i Washington of South Carolina" and his address wad along similar lines to those followed by the distinguished negro educator. The address, or lecture possibly fits it better, was full of sound thought and philosophy and he drove home his argument by pointed anecdotes. His advice to the negroes seemed not wholly acceptable to many of the colored folks present, though a number of them evidently agreed with the speaker in all that he said. In our opinion Car roll is doing good work for both 1 races and should be encouraged in I his efforts. I ? , Mrs. Emma Adair Flynn Dead, i Lake City, April 18:?On the ' , 10th of April, at her home at John- ' son, Florida, Mrs Emma Adair ' Flynn departed this life, at the age I of about eighty-five years. ' Mrs Flynn was a native of Wil- ' liamsburg county, being a daughter ' of the late Kinsey and Elizabeth ' Brown. She first married J \V ' Yause, and moved with him to! ' Florida l>efore Civil war. After the j' death of Mr Vause, she married A ' M Flynn, who preceded her to tlie ' grave. She left several children I and a host of grandchildren and ' even quite a numberof great-grand- ' children. All these, together with j' the friends, who in number would J make an army, will mourn her loss, M and mourn indeed. To all these ' she was bound by tenderest ties. I It is no exaggeration to say that "to ' j know her was to love her" with j I most lasting affection. Her nobili-jl tv of character was of the highest ' order, and'her life the lif:? of a true J Christian, oik- worthy of all that ' the name implies. She was a wo- ' i manly woman; as a mother, abso-^ | lutely devoted to her offspring aud ' i their welfare; as a neighbor, kind, j' considerate and helpful; as a wife, |' ' - _ rrv^ .4 i I loyal ami anectionaie. iu Mraugt-rsi this language may seem too highly ' i colored, hut to those who knew her ^ as friend or relative, it will express I but poorly an idea of her many vir- ^ tues. To these she is indeed "Gone: hut not forgotten"?no, not until ( they themselves have passed from mortal ken. J J Brown, Sr. rj^i ?j|? l|i ifc iji l|? 1^1 ^ y's 1 99 r i * 'hen a man buvs an Auto- j obile he shoulcl insist on 1 itting his money's worth. "a ig the agency for Williams- 1 ited n j? nd Car :ed upon as the height of per- a ? hi'? \ery pretty and positively to the public today. * ? 0 tely guaranteed and Ask the owners of these cars 1 j13 lion and ask me for a cata- ?'? F ,rou are in the-market, or exf e c idy for delivery and has no a ic Tl I convince you. r radham, 4; u*. s. c. f ; jSf, JL, JR. * ,g. .g.?I j T* T X"I? tr?J? *!' : I mwmmmmmmm We He French Mull Linen Lawn Wash Chiffon Silk Foulards Mercerized Flaxon 0 O DS CO 1 Mummmtmmmmi Is JUST A WORD TO MENl We are now conducting; a special cam- X paign on Men's Fine and Medium Price Pants. y| Just call and see the line of Men's Tub W) Pants we are selling at 65c. the pair, also a (f splendid line of Pants at $1.50, $2.00 and r) $2.50 the pair. X Our line of Men's Fine Pants, absolutely all wool, at $3.50, $4.50, $5.00 and $6.00 the X pair are wonders of beauty, fit and style, u# Call and see our line of pants. Costs you 9) nothing to see them?glad to show you. jC We are also pleased to show a splendid 71 line of Men's Summer Sacks and White Vests, X Blue Serge Sacks, Black Sicilian Sacks, Black JA Alpaca Sacks, Long Black Sacks for clergymen, w) We want to also impress the fact upon the Uf men that we are showing a line of light weight Jl Underwear for spring and summer that should X command your attention at this time. Q) 8jfi John Scriven's famous Elastic Seam Drill 0) 0 Drawers, in all sizes. B. V. D. Athletic Under- Gf j7 vests and Drawers to match at 50c. the gar- 9) jr mentor $1.00 the suit. Men's Balbriggan Vests jK J I of all kinds at 25c. to 50c. each. A full line of Jl M Men's Negligee Shirts at 50c. and $1.00. A full X 72 line of Men's Neckwear, Collars and Cuffs, Jl Men's Garters of all kinds. X Gents, if you want a nice Straw Hat or a 71 8 nice Felt Hat here is the place to get it. Men's X felt hats from $1.00 up to $3.50 each. Men's 71 Straw Hats from 25c. to $3.00 each. jK 1 JUST A FEW WORDS TO THE 8 & LADIES. V 71 We have just gotten in a new line of Bor- Jl if dered Lawns and Muslins that is now such X 71 a strong feature in the fashion magazines. Jl jjff Call and see the showing at 10c., 12 l-2c., 15c. jK \ jT Just received, a new lot of Spring Ginghams, *1 with a lot of Solid Calicos for fiouncings and Jl jf\ linings. See this beautiful lot of Ginghams, X f\ JUSTARRIVED--One case of Ginghams and m) A Cham brays in 10 to 20 yd. pieces only 5c. yard. (A 5 JENKINSON BROS. CO. 8 . t , "''>*1 ________ I ItiwM m yntif lfvlity, WT*? ?, <feeC> f"T f?"?pL*?, prir<?? anrl full pfiimLn. I CORTRIGHT METAL ROOFING COMPANY I Help Yourself by Helping Us. I Again we beg to remind our I * 1 *? . -ii __j. We hope the friends of The Rec- | inenas mai an nuuws remums tu rd, when they come to town to do | ney - mahinj? enterprises, for , . Al_ , . church, school or any other cause, heir trading,will patronize the busi-, are charge(j for ^ advertising at less houses that advertise in this one cent a word. All cards of >aper. Remember that without these thanks, for any purpose whatsoever, iberal merchants, bankers and other are charged for at the rate of one nterprising business men, the price jcen^ a word. It would save us a if subscription \tfould be at least $3 8?od deal of trouble and embarrassi year for such a paper as The Rec- mcnt If you would just count the ird. You'll find, as a rule, that the words and send the money along with nen who advertise are wide-awake y?ur copy," 33 if hardly pays us to ind on the alert and can give you keeP books on these little items. Yet letter bargains than those who do ^ the - aggregate they mean a conlot advertise. This applies not only siderable loss to the paper if not ,o Kingstree, but many live and up- collected,and they are so easily overo-date business men of Lake City, looked, tf Scranton and Greelyville recognize o ~ ?Tc he pulling power of an ad in The J i Eczema _ , . Are cured by Chamberlain s Salve. One applies* tecord. tl tion relieves the itching and burning sensationTTffTTJTtrTTTmTTHT Tnm TTTf TT thttttttttt mTmm!m>nTmTTTm ive It! J ? T???? ?? 3 Silks in All Colors g Long Silk Gloves ^5 New Styles in Neckwear 2 40 Inch Embroidery Flouncing 3 (With Bands to Match) 3 VI P A N Y 1 liUSUiUUUUtUUUiUUUUtilUUiUlUliUilUUiUlUUIUUUUIIUH . < 8 , >} ".'i