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Sltr (Cmrnty iKrrtiri). KINQSTREE. S. C. ! C. W. WOLFE. EDITOR AMD PROPRIETOR. Entered at the postoffice at Kinpstree, S C as second ciass mail matter. 1 TELEPHONE NO. 83TERMS SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One copy, one year oi 25 One copy, six months 75 One copy, three months 50 One copy, one year in advance ? 1 00 Obituaries, Tributes of Respect, Resolutions of Thanks, Cards of Thanks onrl oil ni-Vitir r<j?Hincr notices.not NEWS. CMIU .... :c will be charged for at the rate of one cent a word for each insertion. All changes of advertisements and all communications must be in this office before TUESDAY NOON in order to appear in the ensuing issue. All communications must be signed by the writer, not for publication unless desired, but to protect this newspaper. ADVERTISING RATES: Advertisements to be run in Special colum. one cent a word each issue, minimum price 25 cents, to be paid for in advance. Legal advertisements, $1.00 per inch first insertion. 50 cents per inch each subsequent insertion. Rates on long term advertisements very reasonable. For rates apply at this office. In remitting checks or money orders make pavable to TUT OATTVTTV P PPARD 1 11U X X ?vwv "In men whom men condemn as ill, I find so much of goodness still; In men whom MEN pronounce divine, I find so much of sin and blot? I hesitate to draw the line Between the two?where God has not." KIXGSTREE?THE GATEWAY TO OPPORTUNITY. THURSDAY. SEP. 19. 1912. Of Interest to thg Home Seeker. Located in the extreme north end of the Art Hall, the Atlantic Coast Line railrod company has come all the way from the South-east to -how , our Michigan home seekers the advantages of Southern soil. This exhibit is truly interesting to the prospective farmer. Not seeking to sell you land, the Atlantic Coast line representatives are showing the pc ssibilities of this territory through which they operate. Land in this section is sold at a very conservative cost. In nearly all cases, two or more crops are raised annually. The soil is excelled in no part of the United States. Sugar cane plays a .? X OA 1.. Of\ conspicious pari, yieiuing ou iu oo t6ns per acre, at an average price of $3.50 to $5.00 per ton. Alfalfa oats, watermelons, pineapples,peaches, barley, wheat and all tropical fruits are shown in profusion. Especially interesting is the showing of corn. Standing about 18 feet high, this is not by any means the least exaggerated. It is there for you to see. Many interesting pamphlets are to be had for the asking, which explain in detail just what the respective crops yield per acre and the number of crops to be raised annually. The writer was much impressed with the showing made, and wishes to speak for them in calling the attention of the fair visitor to make a visit to this exhibit whose attendants are more than willing to go into details relative to the territory t-jjfc that they represent. This exhibit is located at the extreme north end of the Art Hall, main isle.?From the Grand Rapids News, Grand Rapids, Mich, issue uf September 11, 1912mm 'Help Yourself by Helping Us. We hope the friends of The Record, when they come to town to do their trading,will patronize the business houses that advertise in this paper. Remember that without these liberal merchants, bankers and other enterprising business men, the price of subscription would be at least $3 a vear for such a paper as The Rec- i ord. You'll find, as a rule, that the men who advertise are wide-awake I and on the alert and can give you I better bargains than those who do I not advertise. This applies not only; 1 to Kingstree, but many live and up-j B to-date business men of Lake City, I Wk Scranton and Greelyville recognize be the pulling power of an ad in The Record. tf BHv Running up and down stairs, HI cureonino- and bending over making I beds will not make a woman healthy or beautiful. She must get out of doors, walk a mile or two every day t and take Chamberlain's Tablets to improve her digestion and regulate her bowels. For sale by all deolers. Mr. Camliu I-lures Up. Editor County Record: ? I note with Surprise. Mr Editor No 2. yore j>ersonial criticisum upon me in Mr Wolfs Record but wold suppose from yore writings you .1.:?i. ..?Mi- TPi-Utnr I ; the subscribers of his paper. Watch J the offect of yore peace on yore Bosses Paper. I Dear Say if yore Body wear for Burial to Day yoi Have not 8 feet to Lye on Ast j if this pore thing you speak oi is in that fix. The noted Evangulesl Sam Jones Said once if you throw i stone in a Gang of Dogs the one j that went off criple an Howlinp wear the one that Got Hit. Whe Howled at my peace It seems that you want to say that I am AGar.si the primary scystemj You will ne I ( wit U/vSfinrr on arv mar liUlll I1IJ TT Utlllg uu Viij VV.?V? wold say my articiul of the 10 weai in Defence of the primary. Have the State Exitve Committy Cariec out the Rools of our primay elec tion I am in favor of our prima} Scystem Being Caried out to th< Letter But not Bing changed to Suii the Dictates of a few. Now, Mr Editor No 2, you have seen fit to make several Dirty Re marks as to my person without Enj Cause what ever I am not Going ir to Eny Controversey what ever; thi: is Simply to explain my self If yoi try this agan I'll Hold you persin ealy responcible for Eny Remark ai I will Call pn you in a few Days ii person anl Gess Wee Can settle thi: matter in person Now this is m: last peace to your sheet W S Camun. Sir I am a criple But I am not i coward I Hope this matter can Bei settled But you Have Treated m< With a most Dirty Insult. wsc. Andrews, September 16. As readers of The Record wil understand, the foregoing is M Camlin's reply to an editoria reference to his article which ap peared in our last week's issue the offending criticism being writ ten by myself, Waite F Tolley who has been editor pro ten during Editor Wolfe's protracte< illness, and to whom Mr Camlii refers as "Editor No 2." "Editor No 2" is entirely responsibh : for what was said in referenc* J to Mr Camlin, and in justice tc him we publish his reply verbat im et literatim as nearly as i: practicable and close the argu ment, as "Editor No 2" does noi j believe in wasting ammunitior j shooting grass hoppers with gat: ling guns. , | If you knew the real value ol Chamberlain's Liniment for lame back, soreness of the muscles,sprains and rheumatic pains, you would never wish to be without it. For sale by all dealers. The Imperial hotel at Greenville has opened its doors to the public. Few, if any, medicines have met with the uniform success that has attended the use of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. The remarkable cures af colic and diarrhoea which it has effected in almost every neighborhood have given it a wide reputation. For sale by all dealers. LIUI1K 11 JUICS. liuvt, 1>11 ^v?.vv-. No 2. the Constitution of the State an United States Gives all men A Rite of public speach an a Rite to worship under his vine a tiff tree According to the Dictates of his mine, an if I Have Seen fit to wor ship Cole L Blease.what have you tu Do With it The Laws of S C Give Evry white man in S C a Rite to Run for Eny oflice in the County or State an if I Pay my Dues an comply with the Demards of our primary election what have you to do with j this I pave the County Record my printing in the Campain. Do I owe ! you a peney? What have you Got tc Do with my Runing if 1 am Runing Day an night so 1 pay yore paper my Dues Now as to my Being a pore thing an you trying to Saveinjj t me. I am not Depending on anoth; er man an the income from a Little County Sheat for my Bread an j Butter an then in the absence of s ; Sick Boss take the Swell Head over State Poleticks an try to Drive ofl J Nichols of Spartanburg, as a mem}; ber of the board of regents of the 1 j State hospital for the insane, vice J ' Wright Nash, resigned and named . ! Wm M Hamer of Dillon to fill the I j vacancy on the board of trustees of : the University of South Carolina,vice '! R P Hamer, his brother, deceased. H XXX The supreme court handed down t a decision last Saturday by which a i number of men appointed to offices41 of magistrate in Spartanburg and An'' derson counties by Gov 31ease were * j ousted. Section 982 of the last code r! makes it specifically incumbent upi j on the Governor to submit appoint5' ments of magistrate to the Senate 1 for its approval. This the Govern! nor did not do. XXX II Mr Harris Bristow, a popular and ^successful merchant-farmer in the s i Brownsville section of Marlboro f! county, died Monday evening at j Florence, where he had been taken i for an operation. Mr Bristow was one of the most prominent and use1 ful men in his county, and his work s and influence will be greatly missed. ? In addition to his large business interests he had been serving, by appointment, as County Commissioner. XXX A verdict of not guilty was rendered Tuesday afternoon in the 1 court at Anderson, in the case r against Furman Bagwell, the young man who shot and killed Milton Taylor, while being initiated into the i-1 order of Woodmen of the World last July. Taylor was leader of the ' degree team and Bagwell became - frightened when the team fired blank cartridges at him, rushed to his coat for a pistol and began fir1 ing. j XXX ^ Sunday afternoon twenty five naval apprentices in training at the Great Lakes Naval Training Station 2 on Lake Michigan were swamped in a cutter a quarter of a mile off Lake - Bluff and ^en were drowned. Five ) bodies have been recovered. The five missing must naturally have been lost, as they did not reach shore. Of 3 the twenty-five boys, all between sixteen and twenty years of age, and from Middle and Western States, ont ly three are said to have been able i to swim. XXX Sidna Allen, leader of the Allen clan, which shot up the Carroll county court house at Hillsville, Va, ? March 14, killing Judge Massie and others, and his nephew, Wesley Ed? wards, were arrested at Des Moines, I Iowa, Saturday afternoon last. Ed wards, for the love of whom Miss ' Maude Iroler of Mount Air.v, N C. had innocently led detectives to Des Moines, was captured as he was returning to his boarding house after having worked all day with a paving gang. The arrest of Sidna Allen, who had been working as a carpenter, was effected earlier in the day at the boarding house. They have been brought back to Virginia and will be tried for murder in the first degree. Rub-My-Tism will cure you. i 4 K TOPICS n r ,T:Tnrrr:rTtnr^:"T:"r:nr-r:^:nr | Mr J no B Brooks, a prominent) business man of Laurens died Aion-1 day nijrht. f X X X Mr Edward F Seegan. an aged! citizen of Charleston passed away: yesterday in that city, where he has ' been prominent in business aft'aits; , for many years. XXX "Gyp the Blood" and "Lifty Lou-! ' ie", the last of the gang implicated in the Rosenthal murder at New > York, were captured last Saturday i and lodfced in jail. X X X Washington, 1) C was chosen as ; the next convention city of the Great 1 i Council of the independent order of 'j Red Men of the United States, at j the final Executive session of the ,! convention at Charleston last week. XXX J B Smeltzer, one of the best ! known young men of Columbia was '; drowned, or is supposed to have been ' drowned, in the swimming pool at i; the new Y M C A Thursday morn, ing last. Heart failure is also supposed to have caused death.. XXX 1 Albert Windham, tried this week : in the court of general sessions at ? Darlington, on the charge of killing t a negro in the town of Lamar last { fall,was acquitted Tuesday by a jury iof his peers. This was the second ' j time the case had been brought to trial and was hard fought from ) start to finish. . j , XXX 1 The Governor has anDointed Sam Hair Falling ? You certainly cannot lose ? your hair and keep it, too. Which shall it be? Lose? ' Then do nothing. Keep? ? Then use Ayer*s Hair Vigor. That is about all there is to ? it. Ayer's Hair Vigor is also a splendid hair-dressing and hair-tonic. It keeps the hair V V VUU V V VVU FIREWOOD, STOVEWOOD, SHORT WOOD, LONG WOOD i I have a good supply and am prepared to furnish the trade with good sawed wood. Will deliver at short notice. Call 'phone 15, or leave your order with M. L. Allen. It will be given prompt attention. M. S. MONTGOMERY, _ Whole Family Benefited By Wonderful Remedy ! There are many little things to annoy us, under present conditions of life. The hurry, hard work, noise and strain ail tell on us and tend tj provoke nervousness and irritability.. Wc are frequently so worn out we can neither eat, sleep nor work vii.ii any comfort. We are out of line with ourselves and others as well. A good thing to do under such circumstances is to take something like Dr Miles' Ar 1 Pain Pills to relieve the strain on the nerves. Mrs. J. B. Hartsfjeld, 33 Corput St., ; Atlanta Ga., writes: "I have on several occasions been I vastly rellcNed by the u-e of your med- j le!n-c3, especially the Airl-Fain Fills, > which I keep constantly on hand for j the use of myself, husband and two ) sons. Nothing in the wrld equals thent j a" ;i Iiv<&uac?ic l' Hixjy.J. J. C.?. enabled by the r?e of one or two or the Pills to continue my housework when otherwise I would Lc- in bed. My husband joi-.s me in my praise of the Antl-I'ain Pills end Nervine." Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain PiUs are relied upon to relieve pain, nervousness and irritability in thousands of house:.olds. Of proven I merit after twenty years' use, you can have no reason for being longer without them. At all Druggists, 25 doses 25 cents. MILES MEDICAL CO., Elkhart, lad. 11 I Notice to CreditorsAll persons holding claims against the estate of W J Burgess, deceased, will please file the same at once, and all persons indebted to said estate will make payment to R C McElveen, Executor of the Estate of W J Burgess, deceased. 9-19-3t The price of subscription for The j Record is $1 25 a year; we allow 25 cents discount when a whole year is paid in advance. If you are six months or a year behind don't ex- \ pect a receipt for a whole year for one dollar. This applies to all. tf sott and smootn ana greauy promotes its growth. It does not color the h^h\ Consult your doctor freely. Doctors are studying these%hair , /vnnrfi'rinff tnnoh mf\YO ff)3n qutomjiio iiiuv.ii iiiuiv uitui in former days. ? Made br the J. C. AYER CO.. Lowll. Kui. SEND YOUR LAUNDRY TO G.S.CHUl THE CHINESE LAUNDRYMAN I found it impossible to do good work with the well water on my place, so have connected my laundry with the city water system and have every facility for doing good work. Send me your Shirts, Collars and Cuffs and I will give you satisfaction. Wnnil Wnnrl ANNOUN NEXT V Under the Hi "Our Openin We will give to the 1 of Williamsburg Coi of what we propose turn for the money t with us. It will be a pane of the various lines For Months and moi i i ~ ueen luuiung xuiwa vent of Fall and lay for the coming stru it to say that our s will be the best an plete we have ever town of Kingstree. Ladies, don't miss splendid description then come to our st ^the picture has beei Courtney' J* ' OPEN SEPTET ] On and after the above d has been closed during the sum 1 for the benefit of mv old custor * ! Meals will be served at all hour: t until late in the evenings. A first-class bill of fare wil $? prices reasonable. Satisfaction I ev refunded. * When in town try Courtney f j* P. S. Courtne '.M9-3m v s.,_ .e j* e ,g. v ? s <r> { *1' Xx r X4 Visit the Store Wi J. S. El * Where you will lindt best assortment of Goods, Notions, Hal and Gents' Furnishir est prices offered in ' 9-19-3m Jenkinson B IMPORTANT ?4*?4' 4?4?4?}f M s Cafe J flBER 19 + I ate my Cafe, which*f jJR mer, will be opened ? tV I ners and the public. I flBH s during the day and "t" 1 be maintained and JL ^Hi i guaranteed or mow A, f's regular dinner. :y, Prop. - H A II ifc tit it A ?y< A ________ | fh the Goods I SON J ;he largest and Clothing, Dry :s, Caps, Shoes igs at the low- Bfl H Kingstree. ros. Co.'s ICEMENT I 7EEK. M fading of ' g Guns" 1 trading public iinty an idea to give in rehey will spend ramie sketch IHj we will offer. ^9 nths we have 9 ,rd to thead- 9 ing our plans '^9 ggle. Suffice 9 tock this Fall 9 d most com- jm shown in the s reading this ' of Fall Goods, 9 ore and see if 9 fi overdrawn^^ M