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SensUjMfe Women Know * As ^RfWomen becorre < more ge3pr?w,?>otfy j(*he newspapers 1 and oi IW. plaxform, the mass of women are hjjfejhmn? to realize what the more ; cultwffed have always known, that i goon health cannot be found in a powder ? box. The ".externals of health may be < obtained .in that way. but the basis of < health lies deeper, and yet is just as ea- ! sifv obtained. ' The moslfcrnportant thing that a woman can herself,and about which I she is oftefcqpost neglectful, is to watch i the condition^f her stomach and bowels, The wdiy eyes, the bad breath, i the frequent peadaches, the pimples, i the generalamof lassitude is nine times out of ten theTesult of constipation or indigestion,vCfli both. Many simple rem- < edies cdfl.be.obtained, but the best in : aL - ? mAet wAmon ia Dr me esumauuu ui uiu.n nvmv? ? Caldwell's Svi^p Pepsin. It is mild, i pleasant to thi'taste and exactly suited to her needW;It is far superior to salts. ANDREWS INNOVATIONS. j I Meeting ol the "Home Makers* Club"--Llnen Shower, etc. Andrews, June 17:?The ladies of i the "Home Makers' club" held their regular meeting last Wednesday and j were entertained by Mesdames John and Ben White, who are charming hostesses. Delicious refreshments were served. Everyone enjoyed the ;? R*?nHinirs ! tu lid unuvov *?vMv....ov were given by Mesdames Payne and Porter. This club of composed of matrons who meet every two weeks. It is entertained by two members of the club at each meetihg. The next meeting will be at the Rosemary Inn by Mesdames Bell and Porter. Our domestic science teacher,Miss Clara Gibson of Union, decided she liked Andrews so well that she , would stay among us. , Be it said much to our joy, the last day of school was June 10. Miss Clara Gibson and Mr John , Grant were happily married in the 1 little white Methodist church on the hill, with a few of their chosen friends to witness the ceremony. Mr Grant is a popular young man of our town and holds a fine position with the Atlantic Coast Lumber 1 oorooration. He is a brother of our J ~ Mayor. |i The young ladies of the town gave Miss Etta Isokriet a linen shower last Friday at Mr May's residence, the long,wide porch being especiallyj suited for the entertainment. The j presents were dainty and useful, I with a word of advice and congrat- j' ulations in each parcel. Dainty re-1 freshments were served. The even- 1 ing will long be remembered as one of pleasure. Invitations have been issued to the marriage of Miss Etta Isokriet to Mr Chillum Blakely, June 19, at the Methodist church. If Madam Rumor is correct (and we think she is) we shall have several more weddings before many moons. Mrs Medlin will,in about a week's time, move into her beautiful new home,which is just being completed. I Mrs S J Jenkins is on a visit to her parents at Pinopolis. The Baptist Sunday-school of Georgetown is to give a picnic here next Tuesday. We have a lovely grove, fitted with seats, swings and tables,an ideal picnic ground, just in the suburbs of town. YAM. Woman Accused of Holdup. nzM?/-xn .Tnnp l.i;?There have! 1 1U1 v uvv , W _ been a number of complaints recent- , ly of holdups about the neighborhood of the old passenger depot, which is on a curve of the Charleston road, and just where a number of men jump from the trains as they i stop at the Church street crossing at night. Last night the holders-upgot hold of the wrong one, C P Bailey,a traveling nan. One of two women : 'an against him, and he struck her. She fought back and slashed him with a^knife, but he gathered her in and delivered her to the police. On 1 examination his pocketbook and val- f uables were gone, so he got the po 1 T*\lono ^ lice to return ana KUIUI kllc pmu.. | They found the poeketbook cut open j and went at once to a house where I j they thought likely they would find ( the mate to the woman in jail. They i recovered the money on condition of 1 no prosecution. The other woman, < Sarah Diggs, is in jail on the charge of highway robbery. j i Jones?The pass system is about * done away with. Smith?Not as regards dividends in the corporations whose stock I 1 hold. * i Legal Notices ? Report of Treasurer of Town of Kingstree Report of receipts and disbursements by the town of Kingstree for five months.from .January 10 to June 11,1912: RECEIPTS. Money on hand January 10 $ 1,903.08 Fines to date 336.40 Licenses to date 1,280.00 Taxes... 7,158.99 Auctioneer's License, M F Heller 100.0C Other Licenses, etc 116.0C Rent 20.0C Total $10,914.4' Disbursements _7,225.2S Cash balance June 11 $ 3,689.2? DISBURSEMENTS, JANUARY. W M Vause & Son $ 3.0( J W Cook 10.0( Street Work 4.1J T J Springs 50.0( People's Mercantile Co 1( C Wnrlr Q( financed the crusaders who captured Constantinople and set up a Latin kingdom there; another, the London branch of the Virginia Company, first planted permanent English settlements in the new world. These; were international monopolies. Of the lesser national or secticnal monopolies there were many. Every guild organized in the Middle Ages included some features which we would call monopolistic, while kings bestowed upon individuals the sole right to sell various luxuries or necessities, which right was sold or leased to the merchant or the producer. The story of Joseph in Egypt is one of the prettiest examples of cornering the food supply and exacting a monopoly price therefor of which we have record. We are told in Genesis that the Egyptians gave in exchange for bread their money, their cattle, and finally, their liberty and their land,which they afterward worked as tenants or serfs of their royal master. Aristotle tells us that an Athenian citizen once cornered the iron market in Syracuse. Solomon as a monopolist surpasses any of our modern trust magnates. We know that he levied heavier toll on the caravans passing over his roads than the most grasping transportation manager of the nineteenth century ever dared to do. We are told in the Book of Kings that he brought linen yarn out of Egypt, which his men of business sold at a fixed pi ice. He imported war horses from the same country and sold them at a high price to the princes and warriors of the whole region. He Bent out trading ships which brought back immense quantities of gold, so that "Solomon exceeded all the kings of the earth for riches," In ev^ry case the aim was the same: to get the business, to monopnopolize it,and the consuming public paid. Practically every feature of modern monopoly to which objection is made is another version of an old story told long ago. The methods in the past were much the same as those pursued today, except that they were more vigorous. The little finger of the ancient monopolist was thicker than the loins of his degenerate successor. There is no real need of anyone aeing troubled with constipation. Chamberlain's Tablets will cause an igreeable movement of the bowels vithout any unpleasant effect. Give ;hem a trial. For sale by all dealers. Converse college has been offered m endowment of $50,000, on condi;ion that the college raise $100,000. Sumter leads all cities in the Union n having the commission form ef government with a city manager. Foundation of Health ?athartic pills.waters, etc,which are entirely too violent. Women should see to it that they have at least one movement of the bo we is ?ach day. and when showing any tendency to constipation should take Dr Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin in the small Jose prescribed. A brief use of it will so train the stomach and bowel muscles that 'sli forms of medicine can be dispensed with. These opinions are voiced bv thousands of women, after personal experience, among them Viola Caper. Covington. Ga. and Mrs E E Brewer, Central. S C. Anyone wishing to make a trial of this remedy before buying it in the regular way of a druggist at fifty cents or one dollar a large bottle (family size) can have a sample bottle sent to the home free of charge bv simply addressing Dr W B Caldwell 405 Washington St. Monticello, 111. Your name and address on a postal card will do. Some Ancient Trust Offenders. Why not compare monopoly with itself? Why not study the trusts of today in the light of the trusts of yesterday? Step by step the problem will grow simpler. One by one those features of trust practice which we have thought so new will be seen to be old, and they will grow less important as we see how our fathers met and dealt with them. A series of interesting parallels will result. We shall find that competition was the uncommon, and monopoly the usual condition of business in the past. Trusts will be found from Hudson Bay to the Bay of Bengal, from the Baltic to the Gulf of Mexico. One trust ruled India and controlled the destinies of millions of people; another made the Baltic an inland sea, making treaties and dethroning monarchs as need arose. Another OUCt V ** V4?* Jail Fee l.CK Street Work 3.4! " 5.1< Jail Fee l.CK ?? ? I g( One Lock 1( FEBRUARY, J A Harper 65.0C L P Kinder 25. o( J T Sullivan.. 6( Bond Buyer 7.5C LeRoy Lee 25.11 L P Kinder 17.0C W H Carr 3.9C W U Tel Co 1.1; Street Work.. 1.8; L P Kinder 1.7C M F Heller 22. OC M H Jacobs 40.OC L D Burgfss 50.0C Jail Fee 1.0C ' " 1.0C Kingstree Hdware Co 5( Street Work 4.6! T J Springs 50.0( Street Work... 2.7C Jail Fee 1.0C " ? l.OC " " l.OC " 44 1.4C Polish for Harness...._ 5C Expressage 3.0C Lamp 5( MARCH. J A Harper 65.0( M F Heller 22.0 L P Kinder 25.0C Street Work 4.7! M H .Jacobs 4U.0C Will Davis 3.0< L Jacobs 9.0C LP Kinder 15.0C J Z McConnell 4.5( Street Work 5.0! Repairs on Well l.OC H 0 Britton 2.0C L D Burgess 50. (X Street Work 5.5( T J Springs 50.0C Ditching 22.9! Jail Fee l.CK Ditching 10. (X Street Work 6.3? Lamp Posts 1.2( Jail Fee 1.0( " " 1.4( " i.a Street Work 30.0( APRIL. J A Harper 65.C( L P Kinder 25.01 M F Heller 22.14 M H Jacobs 4<>.0( VV P Baker 14.0C J A Scott 37.5( Lane & Huggins 140.2; Wm L Stack Co 11.75 L D Burgess 50. Ot Jail Fee 1.4C Street Work 9.1C W P Baker 21.0C Jail Fee 1.4C Kingstree Hardware Co 5.6S People's Mercantile Co 10.5C " 'T <v L?ane <s nuggins WP Baker 10.1C S W Epps 2.44 Lane & Huggina 297.5C Street Work 5.5C Ed Nelson 5.0C Ditching 15.OC Jail Fees 1.4C T J Springs 50.0( Ditching 12.0C Street Work 6.0C Registered Letters 1C J T Nelson 250.OC Jail Fee 1.4C County Record 43.75 Lane & Huggins 217.43 Street Work 7.25 Jail Fee 1.40 " " 1.40 MAY. J A Harper 65.00 L P Kinder 25.00 M H Jacobs 40.00 Oil and Axle Grease 25 Engineers Record 47.20 M'f'g " 12.00 Ditching 15.00 Street Work 7.00 J N Johnston 50.00 L D Burgess 50.00 Ditching 11.13 Lane & Huggins 399.50 W T Wilkins 80 Farmers' Supply Co 42.26 Blank Executions 1.50 Kingstree Hardware Co 16.70 " 421.00 Pleato Hand Engine 50 Meeks Construction Co 33.22 Isaac Pressley 12.00 Germania Savings Bank 1,050.00 ?1. 8 IK OUCCl IT VI IV Chemical Engine 1.00 Frank Runnells 1.25 T J Springs 50.00 Isaac rressley 18.00 Ditching 3.15 Jail Fee 1.40 4 4 44 1.40 44 44 1.00 44 44 1.40 44 1.40 44 44 1.40 Street Work 11.50 Jail Fee 1.00 P 0 Arrowsmith 25.00 Jail Fee 1.00 Sewer Sinking Fond 333.34 WW 44 44 666.66 Meeks Construction Co 14.77 Isaac Pressley 30.00 Street Work 10.34 Lane & Huggins 212.84 44 " 4? 399.50 11 ?? ) ! $ 17.30 froi i National Democratic Ci ) > ???? E) q I On account of the National 5 i ing in a Southern city, there o; from this section. A great mj I have this opportunity of witn ^ I fiAwol nrofVioririrrc Ta Ai ' Walker and Linguish Walker, Lie fendants. To the Defendants above named: You are hereby summoned and re quired to answer the complaint in thi action,of which a copy is herewith serve upon you, and to serve a copy of your an swer to the said complaint on the sub scriber at his office in Kingstree, S C within twenty days after the date of th service hereof, exclusive of the day o such service;and if vou fail to answer th complaint within the time aforesaid, th plaintiff in this action will apply to th court for the relief demanded in th< complaint. Robt J Kirk, Plaintiff's Attorney Kingstree. S C. June 11, 1912. To the defendant Linguish Walker: Take Notice: That the complaint ii this action was filed in the office of th< Clerk of the Court of Common Pleas foi Williamsburg county. So Car, on th* 12th day of June, 1912. Robt J Kirk, 6-13-6t Plaintiff's Attorney Registration Notice. The office of th* Supervisor of Reg titration will be open on the 1st Mon day in each month for the purpose o registering any person who is quali lied a^ follows : ' Who shall have been a resident o the State for two years, and of thi county one year, and of the polling pre cinct in which the elector offers t* vote four months before the day o election, and shall have paid, si: months before, any poll tax then dui and payable, and who can both reai and write any section of the constitu tion of 1895 submitted to him by th Supervisors of Registration, or wh ' I can show that he owns, ami nas pan . I all taxes collectable on during thi * I present year, pioperty in this Stati ' assessed at three hundred dollars o 'more. H A Meyer, Clerk of Board I | "Clean Up the Bowels and : Keep Them Clean" , There are many remedies to be I had for constipation, but the diffiI culty is to procure one that acts I wit1-out violence. A remedv that t, ^ does not perform b y force what should be accomplished by prrsuasion is Dr. Miles' L:x.,tive Tablets. After '.vlnrr them, Mr. N. A. Waddcll, 3 1 s V, ashin.s'tou St., Waco, Tex., "Almost all my life 1 have been ' i.oubk.0 with oonsti-vition. and have t-iod many niaedles. ail of which ( seemed to efni?e pa'n without g.'ving , much relief. I finally tried Dr. Miles' Laxative Tablets and found them excellent. Their action Is pleasant and 1 mild, and their chocolate ta.-te makes 1 them easy to take. I am more than I glad to recommend them." ' "Clean up the boweh and keep them clean," is the aJvicc of all physicians, because they realize the danger resulting from habitual constipation. Do not delay too long, but begin pro-n-r curative measures. Dr. Miles' Laxative Tablets area new remedy for this old complaint, and a great improvement over the cathartics you Lave been using in the past. They taste like candy and work like a charm. A trial will rnnvincf von Dr. Miles' Laxative Tablets are sold by all druggists, at 25 cents a box containing 25 doses. If not found satisfactory after trial, return the box to your druggist and he will return your money. MILES MEDICAL CO., Elkhart, Ind. 12 The County Record job office is better equipped than ever to do your printing. Send it to us at once. The price of subscription for The Record is $1 25 a year; we allow 25 cents discount when a whole year is paid in advance. If you are sia months or a year behind don't expect a receipt for a whole year foi one dollar, this applies to all. tl J Jail Fee .. l.OC Isaac Pressley 20.OC june. J A Harper .... 65.0( Street Work - 3.7( Jail Fee 1.4( L P Kinder 25.(X M H Jacobs. 40.0( L P Kinder (Rent). 9.0( H 0 Britton.. 1.21 Conklin & Roberts 60. (X L D Burgess 50.0' W R Scott 10.1< L P Kinder 5.4 F. Dis. Co 53.0 Farmers' Supply Co 33.0 Vbase & Son 10.2 Isaac Fressley 25.0 Street Work 3.0 $7,225.2 M H Jacobs, Clerk and Treasurer. ' Request for Sealed Bids Notice is hereby given that, unde ' and by virtue of a resolution for thi purpose duly passed by the Town Coun cil of Lake City, S C, sealed bids w*l L . a. 1 L.. *La /?/ ue acrepieu vy uie lnu-nuani ui :ai< io*vn for the erection of a municipa building to be erected in said town, ac cording to plans and specifications there of which maybe seen at the law office of Philip H Arrowsmith,Lake City, SC said building, when erected, to be twenty by thirty-five feet, two-stor brick building. Each bid to be consid red must be accompanied by certifies check for fifty dollars. The Indendan reserves the right to reiect any and al bids so submitted. Said bids to be open ed Monday, the 1st day of July, 1912. a 12 M o'clock, 6-.'0-2t Summons for Relief. (COMPLAINT SERVED). STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA. COUNTY OF WILI.IAMSBURG, Court of Common Pleas. S B Poston, Plaintiff, against N M Venters, Julia E Burgess, Georg Q WlVXiai 5U bllV/l l llgo* JL\J V1UO VI The Atlanti has annour ;i S17.30T0 BALTI j d tickets being sold June 20 to! J reach starting point not later : THE ATLANTI a y operates three through dining [j the North. Ample Pullman j t For reservations, rates, se 11 dress: t T. E. 1 T. C. WHITE, General Pas 6-13-2t e MBBBBflBSESSBBKIi if Go To I T JV TiJm WHEN YOU NEED JU ; A record of more tha hind him. With a bunc , on hand, he is always r< ' Also Feed an o J. L. Stuckey, f & | The Fall' ' KIVfiSTRFF fill AM I1I11UU HLL IJI1UUL Will Septemt All departm in Good W< Parents who intend ent< will please do so during the 1 i Patrons and friends of tl to visit the school at any wim Any further infor applying to J. W. Swittenberj Superintendent. Kingsti m Kingstree. If invention, Baltimore, Md/ii T Democratic Convention will be a very large attendance,? "*: any of our people are anxious ? iessing one of these great Na- ? c Coast Line MjJj iced a rate of J; I MORE AND RETUBNijgn 24, inclusive, with final limitrro\?M|l \ , than midnight of July 3, 19J? IU LUAS1 L1INC. ^Ifam ? trains between the South ana *| p m service available. I hedules or any information, SI 3AGGETT, Agent, p m Kings tree, S. CjX P senger Agent, ' WILMINGTON, N. Offi V -y cannot Yfis a blood o^cui* it IIHBBI-tly uponV Catarrh 1 ^ re scribed 1 ?^?M?mtry for 1 is comwith thr Oi 1 V"w.T btuckey k* 4 . I IYTHIN6 IN HORSEFLESH Jf| n twenty vears stands be:h of nice horses and mules [ eady for a sale or a swap, d Livery Stables. / Lake City, S. C. 1' ^ / j rern^^lie "^ , iD AND HIGH SCHOOL | [ Begin V" >er 16, 1912 | tents are now J )rking Order. I j ;ring their children in the school I irst week of the fall term. | | :ie School are cordially invited e. * mation may' be had by fMh *, E. C. Epps, 'm , Clerk Board of Trustees. ree, S. C. i THE REFAIRIH6 OF A CARRIAGE requires the utmost skill. Wear and tear and accidents sooner or later bring every vehicle to the repairer. If he knows his cntft / the carriage is made as good as ^ new at comparatively little ex- H pense, but the novice bungles , j the job, loses time over his own blundering?and charges for it The job costs a lot and looks patchy. Not so here! We am experts. /i W. M. VAUSE & SON. 4 .J....