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IWe We That t! Weather h ful tArminj K 1 Ml i VI illltlt. I paper from I tempting b 1 12 Doz 10 quart tin ? 12 Doz Chair Bottoi One case yard wide B One case 8c Apron ( m Our entire stock of m prices that will surpri M 10 Doz Brass Curta j A large lot of Windc & Our entire stock of ? need shoes come and C Don't fail to att JUSTICE^E. B. GARY. PROMOTED To Head of Supreme Bench?Mr. T. B. Fraser Associate Justice. On Wednesday, January 10, the Legislature, in joint assembly, unanimously elected Eugene B Gary,Esq, of Abbeville, former Senior Associate Justice, to the position of Chief Justice of the* Supreme Court of South Carolina. Mr Justice Gary succeeds Chief Justice Ira B Jones, who has resigned his high office to enter the race for Governor. Thursday, the 11th inst, on the second ballot, the General Assembly,in joint {session, elected T B Fraser,Esq,of Sumter, Associate Justice to fill out the unexpired term of Eugene B Gary, now Chief Justice. On the same day, Thursday, C A Woods,Esq,of Marion was re-elected Associate Justice of the Supreme Court, with no opposition. The Supreme Court bench now has the five Justices required by the constitution. In the race for Associate Justice opposed to Mr Fraser were: Judge G W Gage of Chester, Judge George E Prince of Anderson and Mr G W S Hart of Yorkville. Mr Fraser was elected on the second ballot,the vote standing as follows. Mr Hart having withdrawn: Fraser 93, Gage 58, Prince 9. Total number of votes cast 160; necessary for election 81. When the result of the ballot was was determined President Smith, of the Senate, announced Mr T B Fraser's election as Associate Justice. The Williamsburg delegation in both Houses voted solidly for Mr Fraser in both the elections in which he was a candidate for Associate .TnctinA M-WW The State Supreme Court now comprises five members, instead of four as heretofore, viz: Chief Justice Eugene B Gary, of Abbeville; Associate Justices Thomas B Fraser, of Sumter; D E Hydrick, of Spartanburg; Richard C Watts, of Cheraw, and Chas A Weeds, of Marion. A letter to School Trustees. This is the t.me of year that returns are being made for the year's taxes. A considerable part of the school fund comes from the poll and dog taxes. Mar y polls are never returned, and I l>elieve if all the dogs in the county were returned they alone would add $2,000.00 to the a school fund. I therefore urge that the trustees of every school district in the county at once procure a man.oroneof themselves,to make an accurate list of :he polls and dogs in their respective districts and hand same in to the county Auditor by March 1, at the atest. Yours very truly, J G McCullough, County Supt Education. - >- irtlO 1 1 1_Qf January o, x-xa-w Arkansas haj more mineral springs than any State in the Union. ?? mt the Pe le Cold i as not cooled our at ition. Our Sale Ca week to week and >argains, then come Milk Pails only 9c each, ns, all sizes, only 5c each. Bleached Homespun will go jinghams will go at 6 l-4c. Wool and Cotton Blankets se you. Come and see the j in Rods, well worth 10c, will >w Shades, spring rollers, wi Shoes on sale at Special Cle see our bargains. You don' end this sale. We are detei FIRST PLACE FOR WILLIAMS In University Oratorical Contest - Won Place Last Year. A H Williams, Jr, of Lake City I won first place in the State prelimi-1 nary oratorical contest for the meeting to be held at Greenwood. The contest was held in the chapel of the University of South Carolina last night. This is the second time Mr Williams has carried off first honors in these contests. He won second place at Greenwood last year. J 0 Allen was chosen by the judges as second best speaker of the eventt The judges were Miss Euphemia McClintock, Senator Carlisle, Mr J ^ D/%fttna on/1 W HoTviol \J lvcavio aiiu l/i jl/ ?? a/cmmv?. Excellent music was furnished by . the university orchestra during the I intermissions. I The programme follows: Address of welcome, F Wm Capi pelmann (Euphradian), Charleston, < J D Brandenburg (Clariosophic),' Columbia, "The Door of the Tomb J Opens Not Inward." J B Murphy i (Euphradian),| Clifton, Ariz, "The i Immemorial Conflict" Music. J I F Brooks (Clariosophic), Spartani burg, "Is Democracy a Failure?" i A H Williams, Jr, (Euphradian), : Lake City, "Behold! the Dreamer Cometh!" Music. J 0 Allen (Clart iosophic), Columbia, "The Evolution of Government." R S Owens (Euph; radian),.Clinton, "Society and the : Crime." Music. Eecision of judges. D C Heustess (Clariosophic), chief marshal. Clariosophic, J S Edi munds, H J W Kiser, Euphradian, H E Danner, H S Welch.? The i Mat*, January II. In Perfect Order Bnt? * i? i. is your engine our 01 nx: as*ed a visitor to Farm and Factory office this afternoon. Hugh Philips, [ black and greasy, and working like the "devil," stopped long enough to answer him thusly; "Yes, sir, slightly. The flap-jack that works the thingamagig that pulls the flipity flop, that holds the push it again in the ding Willie, that connects the whopingcackee to the squirter caused the whickem-whackem to interfere with the caboodle and broke the pee wee, causing the diaphram to collaborate with the whatyoumaycallit, which throwed the pow wow slightly out of adjustment. Otherwise the engine is in perfect order." ?Farm and Factory. Death io Roaring Fire may not result from the work of firebugs, but often severe burns are caused that make a quick need for Bucklen's Arnica Salve,the quickest, surest cure for burns, wounds, 1 bruises, boils, sores. It subdues in- : flammation. It kills pain. It soothes i and heals. Drives olf skin eruptions, 1 ulcers or piles. Only 25c at M L Al lens. j Arkansas in 1910 raised agricul- , tural products worth $185,000,000. 1 ;ople to K Disagree; dor in the least ir rnpaign is just opi ' < i _ J note me spienai : with the money at 6c. and Comforts will go at roods and get the prices. I go for 5c. II go at 19c each, ati Sweep Prices. If you t have to buy if the price rmined to make this one < Proqresrive farmer. Mrs A R Tabor of Crider, Mo, had been troubled with sick headache for about five years,when she began taking Chamberlain's Tablets. She has taken two bottles of them and they have cured her. Sick headache is caused by a disordered stomach, for which these tablets are especially intended. Try them, get well and tay well. Sold by All Dealers. Yours truly, Jer THE TEST OF MERIT. KiDjjstree People Are Given Convincing Proof. No better test of any article can )>e made than the test of time and this is particularly true of a kidney mecicine. Doan's Kidney Pills bave stood this test and stood it well. What better proof of the merits of this remedy could you demand than the statement of a Kingstree resident who has been cured and has stayed cured? Read the following: Mrs P D Epps. Kelley St, Kingstree,S C. says: "I have no hesitation in recommending Doan's Kidney Pills, for I know from experience that they act just as represented. T> T CC J xwu years ngu x SUIICITU HUUI cui attack of kidney complaint and I had a lame and aching back. At that time I used Doan's Kidney Pills and they so completely relieved me that I have not felt the need of kidney medicine since. I cheerfully recommend this preparation in return for what it has done for me." For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co, Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name?Doan's? and bike no other. Pot Your Money in a Bank. It in good advice which a Colleton county, S C, exchange gives in urg ing xarmers to start oaint aauunu this full, no matter how small the amount left over after the year's debts are paid. We quote: "If one keeps money in his pocket,it is likely to go and he will never know how it goes; so though you have only ten dollars in your pocket, go to one of our banks and start a bank account. To have money in a bank will give one a feeling of independence nothing else can give. Do not think that because you have only five or ten dollars to start an account the cashier will not want your deposit. Any cashier will gladly welcome you as a depositor if you have but one dollar." We hope thousands of our readers will follow this excellent counsel. Having a bank account (1) encourages the saving habit, (2) dignifies the farmer by making him. more of a "business man," (3) provides a better system of paying out money than specie payments, (4) helps the community in which one lives, and (5) makes it easier for the depositor to borrow in case borrowing instead of depositing sometimes becomes advisable. Put your money in a bank.? The encu aizu uic pcu^i< d offerings we wi and get the goods: don't suit you. Ladies' sh special prices. Come and .? 1000 yards choice Calico.* goods only 5c yard. We have some special tli plow sh^es. Come and se A special offering in hou Bed Spreads, Sheets and P Clean Sweep Prices. >f the most impartant sale t ikinsoi Plenty of Eggs All Winter. I Let me tell your readers how I manage to get plenty of eggs all widter: (1) I get my pullets and hens ready for egg production by the 15th of October, April-hatched pullets and 1 ' ? 11 1 * ?Ml j two-year-oia nens wen careu iur win : , be ready for business by that time. | They must have pood feed and plen, ty of it. i (2) It is very important to have a good house for them. Let it be windproof on the west, north and east sides, with a two-foot space the whole length of the south side open, i with poultry netting to keep chickens in. Have a curtain of good thick ! cloth for the open space. Keep it , down at night and roll it up in the ' day. Have litter about 12 inches deep all over the floor of the house : for them to scratch in for their grain. Keep them in all rainy days , and out of snow. Never let them out as long as there is any snow on 1 the ground, for they will eat it and it will stop them from laying. (3) How 75 hens should be fed. Give them early in the morning 4 quarts wheat scattered in the litter in their house. At noon give them a mash made of two gallons bran and one quart of mealed clover. Use buttermilk, or any kind of milk, to make it up with if you have it. Give them about all they will eat up | clean. About three or four times a week put a little blood meal in their mash. Just before sundown I give them about all the corn and oats they will eat. I do not require them to scratch at this late hour. Give them the best quality of feed you can buy,for the best is the cheapest. They will pay for it with a good profit. Keep crushed oyster shells by them all the time. The next thing in order is to go around with a good-sized basket and get up the eggs,for you will need it. At least that is the way my Leghorns treat me.?Mrs J R Pace, in ^ The Progressive f armer. Of Interest to Teachers. Editor County Record:? I am especially desirous that every country teacher in South Carolina should have a copy of the Teachers' Manual for Elementary Schools. If there is a teacher in your county who has not received a copy of this book, I shall be pleased to mail it free on request directed to me at Columbia. For the good of the schools will you kindly extend this notice through your columns? Very truly yours, | W K Tate, State Supervisor Elementary xuiriu Schools. When you want us to change the address of your paper it will save lots of trouble to name the old i I as well as the new postoffica. Please i ! bear this in mind. tf I [now 4 * aoie i pushing our great i .1 : Clean Sweep Sale e can watch our ! ill quote. Read ca oes, men's shoes, children's ? going at 5c yd. Splendid lings to offer in men's hea e them. se furnishing goods?Rugs, illow Cases,Window Shades, ivents we have ever offered Mr. Camlln to Mr. Newell. ' J Editor County Record:? Pj I want you to please allow me a j U few passing remarks as to my friend,! Mr Newell. All of the readers of your paper will agree with me that j he is beaten and he is using the j coward's scheme, knock back as he | in the aggregate they mean a considerable loss to the paper if not ~~ collected,and they are so easily over- ( looked. tf as a laborer and human being. Closing this subject now and for all,I will say if Mr Newell will start out and walk between the plow; handles as many days as the writer has and work as many free negroes in the same time as the writer has,: he will see things differently from what they look like from behind a college door. Let me say right here,' Mr N, if you want to discuss the ? negro issue, get some one who is -< like yourself, intermingled with the negro, and excuse me, please, I pos itively will not take any notice of any other article from you. Yours respectfully, wsc. t When you want a reliable medi- ? cine for a cough or cold take Cham- ? berlain's Cough Remedy. It can al- t ways be depended upon and is pleas- i ant and safe to take. For Sale by J All Dealers. Again we beg to remind our \ friends that all notices relating to money-making enterprises, for ; church, school or any other cause, < are charged for as advertising at one cent a word. All cards of thanks, for any purpose whatsoever, are charged for at the rate of one cent a word. It would save us a er good deal of trouble and embarrassment if you would just count the words and send the money along with your "copy," as it hardly pays us to SP keep books on these little items. Yet ^ runs. As 1 said at the outset, he is a j Yankee or an offspring of that;fe breed. You can see that fact by Ei putting the negro and the white man equal. His running or retreat- in ing net-work of thought shows he; '*< knows nothing about what he writes, ibt m Mr Newell says I should get some-1 body to tell me how many years I, ac am behind the times. I am 8orry, he Mr N, that you are totally disquali- j field by ignorance to get the job of i instructing me. I guess Mr N is sub-1 sisting on the Government pap soaked from the University of South j Carolina, an institution upheld by! the taxes paid by our white people, i B a i . .1? xl I- i.L _ ^IT-l ! DUl iooks inrougn uie tuiairs ui , _ South Carolina with a pair of Yan-! kee spectacles that were used by the; Yankees in 1850 to '60. None of our j Southern people ever thought the negro down-trodden until Mr N saw it. He says the negro is so "in-' termingled" v/ith us that we can't oppress him. No one wants to oppress the negro, but we do say he should be and remain a laborer for the white man, and the white man should treat him fairly and squarely space in this b|9 irefully these 1 shoes, all going at Mpj >i3B patterns, splendid v Lvy work shoes and ) mI Window Draperies, m , |BB| all going at Special f IljH :CoJj its fn w Mm fm 9 OMII IMMf 'MM He would be a heartless father, In;ed, who did not allay baby's suf- vSjjraB ring as did Mr, E. M. Bogan, of hMl nterprise, Miss. He says: "My baby was troubled with break- JHfSH g out, something like seven-year Js :h. We used all ordinary remedies, it nothing seemed to do any good itll I tried HUNT'S CURE and In a?g w days all symptoms disappeared- ^ id now baby is enjoying the best of |lgH Jalth." Price 10c per box. .r; Manufactured and Guaranteed by A. B. RICHARDS MEDICINE CO. J! Sherman, Texas. Dr. W. V. BrocKin^ton, ''FfB Klntfslraa, S. C. laKeley-rlc Cull ought Co, 'fB Lanes, S. C. , ^ Hacker Manufacturing Co. I FOR SALE- | iek in any quantity to suit purchau . The Best Dry Press Machine-made fl XIBIRXCZEZ. X g|l >ecial shapes made to order. Oorre* ndenoe solicited before placing your H dera. W, R FUNK. SH Chamberlain's Cough Kerned! 1 Can* Cold*, Croup and Whooping Coagh? J out^caaui a cu < Giorgi S. Hiekir & Sob i Charleston, S. C BBAi vttW ,jH II jjHM jB^nnHnU udWBDbH * :^bjH I ' I ^Bftv w. Manufacture 1 Doors, Sash and Blinds; Col- - era IB nmns and Balusters; Grilles H and Gable Ornaments; Screen fl Doors and Windows. H We Deal la fl Glass, Sash Cord and Weights. fl BnaHaaauaaaaaaH fl t-t FOR SALE et | |j I 350 acre farm, 3 miles north of Kings- jfl tree on Sumter road. 80 acres highly cut- t tivated, and will produce a bale of cotton, J or 75 bushers of corn to the acre. Excel lent tobacco land. Pine timber 12 inches T diameter sold, cut and removed. 75 acres + of island land in Black River Swamp and 4 75 acres of rich, fertile bay land that can T fjBt be put in highest state of cultivation at ? > small expense. Four room dwelling, each room 20 feet by 16 feet, with 10 foot hall- J way. One tenant house, barn, sheds, *tc. I Conveniently located with respect to town, 4 county seat, churches, schools, railroad, 7 ^^B markets, etc. Price $15 per acre. NET. X Purchaser to pay for papers. Apply ^ J. D. GILLAND, \ / Attorney-at-Law t ^ I KINGSTREK, S C. J H