The county record. [volume] (Kingstree, S.C.) 1885-1975, February 06, 1913, Page SEVEN, Image 7
M
J?
H Prosperous far- ^Hj
11 mers all over the ^
I South are satisfied 1
with results obtained
from our fertilizers.
Ask^eur agent.
PLANTEF
FERTILIZER
bu Arnu m
irnvarfiAiL
ICHARLESTONJ
\Sej%Az&,^ yfc
JM|^ |?1 ~r
/
* Iljp>u grow peas a Star Pea
If you use fertilizer see our Fo
hopper holds 100 i>ounds. If yo
beam plow stock will not break o
to :h
/iay^La
Strong and Dui
Give steady, bright ligl
Easy to clean and rew
Don't blow out in the
AT DBAiJtRS STANDARD
imtWHKU
Newark. N. J.
I
I THE PEOPLI
^Hides, Furs
^ H. A. MILLER
CsfWhen Visiting The City
In at
OSCAR
Most 1
CLOTHE
I Just now prices are cut in
1 every p
|| 513-515 King Street,
J TJie HANDSOME
^?Bi^??
We selected and regis tered |
this trade-mark and it ap- I
pears on the bags of all our g
fertilizers. It is your guar- I
anfcie of 100% quality and R
protection against inferior |
fertilizers. |
Thia Giant Lizard?a land animal, H
weighing 25 to 30 tona, lived in n
. South Carolina during the iorma ?
Rk tion of our phosphate beds.
i cook for this |
i on the bag 1
*skfk I
'and mfJi'
iTRADEIf |/ WARK
CO. TO;:
REGISTERED
j
Huller will please and pay you.
rce-Feed Wizard Distributor, the
u plow cotton and corn, the steel
>r bend. Write us for circulars and
of this paper will interest you.
hine Company
rille, S. C. *
"i
j (
For Fishing,
[items Camping,
and Hard
Use Under All
rabie Conditions.
it Easy to Light
ick. Don't Smoke,
wind. Don't Leak.
I
OIL COMPANY j
tad it Naw Jareay) t
Baltimore, M4. 1
______ (
"ia ii inurT I1
: o IflflHMIl
i
DEALER IN
i
Kinds of Fresh
eats and Fish.
hest Cash Price Paid for
and Poultry.
:f PROPRIETOR
R" Tkfl Spa Dnn't Fail tn Ston I
LEVY'S
Reliable
IG STORE
half and still we guarantee
urchase at
S. W. Comer of Morris
1 GREEN CORNER
| Legal Advertisements. |
Summons for Belief
STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA,
COUNTY OF W1LLIAMSBUDG,
Court of Common Pleas.
S W Gowdy, Plaintiff,
vs
Many McKenzie, Arthur McKenzie,
Alex McKenzie, Manette Page, Isra
Page, Alex Page, William Mouzon,
Virginia Rose. Pink Burgess, Joe
Page,Emma Page, Jack Knight, Mattie
Knight, John Knight, Minnie
Knight, heirs at law and distributees
of Mabam Page,deceased.Defendants.
To the Defendants, Many McKenzie,
Arthur McKenzie, Alex McKenzie.
Manette Page, Isra Page, Alex Page,
William Mouzon, Virginia Rose, Pink
Burgess,Joe Page, Emma Page, Jack
Knight, Mattie Kuight. John Knight,
Minnie Page and all other persons
heirs at law and distributees of Mabarn
Page, deceased: 0
You are hereby summoned and required
to answer the complaint in this
action which was filed in the office of
the Clerk of the Court of Williamsburg
county on the 30th day of December.
1912. and to serve a copy of your answpr
tn thp said eonmlaint on the sub
scriber at his office in Lake City, S C,
within twenty days after the sen-ice
hereof, exclusive of the day of such
service; and if \ou fail to answer
the said complaint within the time
aforesaid,the plaintiff in this action will
apply to the Court for the relief demanded
in the complaint.
To the defendants Joe Page. Emma
Page, Mattie Knight and John Knight,
and the persons with whom you reside:
Please Take Notice?That unless
you apply and have some person apaointea
as Guardian ad Litem for you
n the above entitled action Vithin
twenty days after the service hereof,
exclusive of the day of such service,the
slaintiff will apply and have some suitable
person appointed for you,
Notice Is Hereby Further Givenrhat
a copy of the complaint in the
above entitled action wasnledin theoficeof
the Clerk of the Court of Common
Pleas for Wiiliamsburg county on the
10th day of December, 1912, and that no
? i i j- A
)ersonai aemana is maae against any ui
:he defendants above named.
Philip H Arrowsmith,
l-2-6t] Plaintiff's Attorney,
jake (.ity, S C, December 28, 1912.
Summons for Relief.
STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA,
counts of williamsburg,
Court of Common Pleas,
lohn Brown, Hester Brown, Betsy
Barr, Phyllis Barr, Julia Brown and
Lovenia Cooper, Plaintiff,
vs
ilanda Cooper. Oliver Cooper, James
Cooper. Harry Cooper, Herbert Cooper
and Margaret Cocper, Defendants.
summons to defendants for relief.
[o the defendants Mar.daCooper,Oliver
* -ooper, James Cooper, Harry Cooper,
Herbert Cooper ana Margaret Cooper:
You are hereby summoned and rejuired
to answer the complaint in this
letion which was hied in the office of
;he Clerk of the Court of Common
3leas for the county of Williamsburg
>n the 21st day of December, 1912, ana
X) serve a copy of your answer to the
;aid complaint on the subscriber at his
>ffice in Lake City, S C, within twenty
lays after the service hereof, exclusive
>f the day of such service; and, if you
'ail to answer the complaint within the
;ime aforesaid, the plaintiffs in this acion
will apply to the Court for the reief
demandea in the complaint.
Dated at Lake City, S C, this 21st
lay of December, 1912.
To the defendants Herbert Cooper
ind Margaret Cooper, minors, ~nd the
>ersons with whom you reside:
Please Take Notice?That unless
mu apply and have some person ap>ointea
as Guardian ad Litem for you.
n the above entitled action, within
;wenty days after the service hereof,
occlusive of the day of such service,
he plaintiffs will apply and have some
luitable person appointed for vou.
Please Take Further Notickrhat
the complaint in the above styled
iction was filed in the office of the
Jlerk of the Court of Common Pleas for
he counly of Williamsburg on the 2lst
lay of December, A D 1912.
Philip H Arrowsmith,
L-2-6t Attorney for plaintiffs.
Auditor's Notice.
For the purpose of taking tax rexirns
for the year 1918 the Auditor's
)ffice will be open from January 1 to
February 20, inclusive, except on the
lays mentioned below, when I or my
igent will be to take returns
January.
\t Greelyville, 14 and 15
44 Gourdins, 16
44 Suttons, 17
44 Andrews, 21
44 Trio, 22
44 J L Gowdy's store. 28
44 Mouzon, 29
44 Cades, 30
44 \V C Wilson's store, 31
February.
44 Benson. 4
44 Bloomingvale, 5
44 Morrisville, . 6
44 R D Gamble's store, 7
44 W R Graham's store, 10
44 Rome, 11
44 Hemincwav. 12
44 Ard's X Roads, 13
44 Johnsonville, 14
44 Vox, 15
44 Salters, 17
All personal property, poll, commutation
road tax and dogs must be returned
in township and school district in which
the taxpayer resides.
J J B Montgomery,
l2-12-t2-20 County Auditor.
Corporafors' NoticsPursuant
to a commission issued to
the undersigned corporators by Hon R
? o kaaua
ra hicvajwii. secretary ui state, uuuno
of subscription to the Johnsonville Hardware
Company will be opened at the
office of S P Poston, Johnsonville,S C,
on Monday, February 10, 1913. The
capital stock of the corporation is $10,000,
divided into 100 shares of the par
value of $100 each.
C C Richardson,
Arthur Rogers,
W P Jenrette,
Johnsonville, S C, Corporators.
February 3, 1913. ltp
I "I Am Well" I
ifl f x it ? n n._i HE
Iwmes Mrs. u rc. iwKer, w
of Bud, Ky., "and can do B
all my housework. For B
years I suffered with such B
pains, I could scarcely E
stand on my feet After fl
three different doctors had B
failed to help me, I gave B
Cardui a trial Now, I feel B
like a new woman." B
ICARDUI
The Woman's Tonic
A woman's health de
pends so much upon her Eg
9 delicate organs, that the 9
9 least trouble there affects K
9 her whole system. It Is 9
9 the little things that count, 9
9 in a woman's life and 9
9 health. If you suffer from 9
9 any of the aches and 9
9 pains, due to womanly 9
9 weakness, take Cardui at 9
9 once, and avoid more serf- 9
9 ous troubles. We urge 9
9 you to try It Begin today; flj
Regret is the corrosive sublimate
of life. Determination to not make
the mistake again is the antidote.
Try it!
If the government would put a
tax on grouches, it would'n need to
increase the tariff on lemons.
Surprise Your Friends.
For four weeks regularly use Dr
King's New Life Pills. They stim- .
! ulate the liver, improve digestion, 1
remove blood impurities, pimples !
and eruptions disappear from your
face and body, and you feel better. 1
Begin at once. Buy at M L Allen's. ]
adv.
_ 1
Tl 1
r ill ill isisuiiarg c*
Notice i? hereby given that on the 1
24th day of February, A D 1913, at 12 :
o'clock noon,I will apply to P M Brock- 1
i iton, Judge of ProDate of Williamsburg
county, for Letters Dismissory as j
Guardian of the persons and estates of
J ames L and Viola Gamble.
Lula M McGants,
l-30-4t Guardian. ;
Notice of Application
of Final Discharge.
Notice is hereby given that the under- (
signed will make application on the 10th ,
day of March, 1913, at 11 o'clock a. m., ,
to the Honorable P M Brockinton,
Judge of Probate of Williamsburg
county, for his final discharge as Admin- '
istrator of the estate of S W McKenzie
deceased, and that at said time a full
accounting will be made to the said Pro- ,
bate Judge of his actings and doings as
srid Administrator.
Dated at Kingstree, S C, this, the
1st day of February, 1913.
W A Gowdy,
Administrator, with the will annexed,
of S W McKenzie, deceased. 2-6-5t 1
Administrator's Notice
A nnlioofinn fnr Pi.
Ul nuu ivi At x
nal DischargeNotice
is hereby given that on the
17th day of February, A D 1913, at 11
o'clock in the forenoon, I will apply to
Hon P McClure Brockinton, Judge of
Probate for Williamsburg county, at his
office in Kingstree.S C, for Letters Dismissory
as Administrator of the estate
of W W Wilson, Sr, deceased
J S Fulmore,
Administrator of the estate of W W
Wilson, Sr, deceased. l-16-4t
Executors' Sale.
STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA,
county of williamsburg.
Pursuant to an order of the Probate
Court of Williamsburg county, dated
.1 onnnrv 97 1913. we will sell at DUblic
saleatGreelyville. S C, on the 15th day
of February. 1913,during the legal hours
of sale, for cash, the following personal
property, belonging to the estate of S J
Taylor, deceased, to wit:
1 two-horse wagon, 2 oxen, I buggy,
1 grist mill, 28 shares stock in Bank of
I Greelyville, 27 shades stock in Taylor
Gir. Co, 1 rice mill.
E 0 Taylor, M D,
S V Taylor,
Executors of the estate of S J Taylor
deceased. !-30-2t
Registration Notice.
The otllce of the Supervisor of Reg
istration will be oDen on the lsi Mon
day in each mon'h for the purpose ot
registering any person who is qualified
as follows:
Who shall have been a resident o:
the State for two years, and of th?
cou nty one year, and of the polling precinct
in which the elector offers to
vote four months before the day of
election, and shall have paid, sis
months before, any poll tax then dut
and payable, and who can both read
and write any section of the constitution
of 1895 submitted to him by th?
Supervisors of Registration, or wh<
can show that he owns, and has pair
all taxes collectable on during tht
present year, pioperty in this Stat?
assessed at. three hundred dollars ot
mors. H A Meyer,
Clerk of Board.
HE QOT A SURPRISE ^
The Offioial Who Insisted Upon Seeing
n Indian Qirl'a Face.
On the old Rosebud Indian reservation
In Sonth Dakota they still laugh
over the peculiar predicament into
-which a new Indian agent once got
himself.
The agent an unqualified "tenderfW>t
" vena fncnoctinf* nn Tnrlinn dfhnnl I
Noticing that as soon as he entered the
room every girl present brought her!
hair forward over her face, he asked!
the teacher to tell them to throw it
back so that he might see their faces.
But this they refused to do until, after
much urging, one girl did finally uncover
her face.
After school was over the agent wondered
at the strange actions of the girl
who had showed him her face. She
followed him to his house, entered after
him and set about getting his dinner.
ASKED HOW HE LIKED HIS NEW WIFE
A.s he spoke no Sioux and she no English
he could get uo explanation from
her.
Finally, to his relief, the teacher rode
up. Shaking with laughter, he asked
the agent how he liked his new wife!
Then the latter understood what he
had done. In certain tribes of the
Sioux Indians all a man needs to do in
order to get a wife is to iuduce a girl
to uncover her face. The agent had
proposed in the usual way?and been
accepted.
In vain did the agent pledd that be
already had a wife in the east There
was only one way to get out of It
It cost him the equivalent of fourteen
ponies to persuade the Indian girl's father
to take her back again.?Youth's
Companion.
A Lost Fortune.
Lowell once met an acquaintance of
dubious standing, whose cheerful face
and happy demeanor led him to ask
the cause of such exuberant felicity.
"Why," said the genial smiler, "Pre
discovered a way to make my fortune.
We all know that the reason for the
flue flavor of the wild duck Is the wild
celery on which it feeds. Now. I propose
to feed it to the domestic duck
Rnd supply the market" Some weeks
later, on meeting his acquaintance
again, Lowell found him quite depressed
and inconsolable. "Why are you
looking so unhappy? I thought the last
time I saw you that you were on the
point of making your fortune with I
'""i"' TFmiMn't It trnrk?" "No." W8S i
UUV.AO. Tl VUiUu v ?
the reply; "the ? things won't eat it."
He Meant a Wee Nap, Not a Wee Nip.
After a Macon (Mo.) barber had finished
up the stranger he raised the
chair, and his customer's head fell over
to one side. The barber straightened
him up and shook him a little.
"You were asleep," said the barber.
"So I was?so I was." agreed the gentleman
in the chair. "Well, you'll have
to come round to my place of business
and 'ike one on me."
"I don't drink," returned Charley.
"Neither do I. I'm the new preacher
at the Methodist church." ? Kansas
City Star.
Not a Boaster.
In the old days, when Kentucky was
a Whig sthte, there was one district
that was especially rock ribbed in its
Whiggery. Much to the surprise of
everybody in Washington, this Whig
Gibraltar once sent a Democrat to con-1
gress. When the new member reached
Washington he was congratulated on
his personal popularity that had enabled
him to overturn the great Whig
majority.
The old chap accepted the congratulations
and said he did not want to
boast, but proudly declared that he had
beaten two Whigs in that election and
could have beaten three if they had
been running.
Followed Instruction*.
A Kansas City woman recently took
her two small daughters to make their
first visit to her husband's people, living
in a small Kansas town. Naturally
she was anxious to make as favorable
an impression as possible. So the two
little people on going on an errand to
the depot were cautioned to be on their
very best behavior. To the mother's
surprise, they returned vigorously
chewing gum. As they had no money,
she asked them where they got it
"Oh," explained the older one, "it
said od the slot machine, 'Ask the
agent for pennies,1 so we did."?Kansas
City Star.
. . I - I *?
BENSON BBIEFS.
Items of Local and General Interest
Put In Tabloid Form.
Benson, February 4:?The springlike
weather has caused oats to grow
unusuallv laree for this season: in
fact, they are jointing and during
the normal growth this occurs about
the last of March. Some of our
older farmers declare that if cold,
freezing weather strike the country
in February the crop will be killed.
Some farmers have turned their
cows, hogs and sheep on them to
graze in order to retard the growth.
Farm work generally is progressing
in keeping with the unseasonable
climatic conditions.
Misses Jessie Bethea, Annie and
Sallie Davis spent the week-end at
the hospitable home of Mr and Mrs
Louis Jacobs at Kingstree.
Mr and Mrs David J Snowden of
Delmar, Del, returned to their home
Monday after having spent a week
with the former's relatives here. He
being a Williamsburg "product" we
feel at liberty to mention that he
still holds a responsible position with
the New York, Pennsylvania & Norfolk
railroad as locomotive engineer,
having been promoted while quite
young. He has been with this company
some eight or ten years.
Mr and Mrs H R Russell, of the
Bloomingvale section, were visitors
here last week.
We noted the presence of Mr
Solon Nesmith of Morrisville in our
midst Sunday at church.! Mr Solon
is a jovial young friend, who is an
admirer and keeps an eye squinted
upon the fairer sex.
Mr G Ollie Epps of Benson is in
attendance upon the corn show at
Columbia.
Mrs R S Bell has returned to her
home at Mount Holly, after spending
some time here with her parents,
Mr and Mrs J Y McGill.
Hog cholera and small-pox are
prevalent in the rural districts. The
one is quite destructive to the swine
raisers, the other brings consternation
to the quiet retreat of the
country folk. WES.
The Best Cough Medicine.
"I have used Chamberlain's Cough
Remedy ever since I have been keeping
house," says L C Hame- of Marbury,
Ala. "I consider it one of the
best remedies I ever used. My children
have all taken it and it works
ft ftnlrlo on/4 TO^AAn.
llltC C& tllCUUI* r vi vviuo uuu rriiw|/
ing cough it is excellent." For sale
by all dealers. adv.
Oar Clubbing Rates
f
We offer cheap clubbing rate
with a number of popular newspapers
and periodicals. Read carefully
the following list and select
the one 01 more that you fancy and
we shall be pleased to send in your
order. These rates are of course
all cash in advance, which means
that both The Record and the paper
ordered must be paid for, not 1, 2, 3,
4, 5, 9, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, but twelve
months ahead. Below is the list of
our best clubbing offers.
The County Record and the Southern
Ruralist (twice a month) for
$1.25 a year.
? ^ - 1 TT Q_ n
THE RECORD ana nome ac rami
(twice a month,) $1.35.
The Record and New York World
(3 times a week,) $1.75.
The Record and Atlanta Constitution
(3 times a week) $1.85.
The Record and Bryan's Commoner,
$1.65.
The Record and Cosmopolitan
Maprazine $2.00
I he Record and Youth's Companion
(New Subscribers) $2.75.
The Record Semi-Weekly State,
$2.50.
The Rfcokd and Watson's
Magazine SI.65.
The Record and The Jeffersonian
SI.65
The Record and Lippincott's
Magazine $2.75. i
The Record Z land) I National
Magazine $2.00.
N. B. We do not club with any
daily papers. The first issue you
receive of the paper or periodical
is evidence that the money for
same has been forwarded by us.
Wo or-a not ToonnnciVilp flftpr thflt.
If C Hig UVV iVO|A/UWIWIV ?
The County* Record.
If you insist on 'driving business
and pleasure in the same harness,
make it a tandem team, with business
in the lead.
The County Record job office is
better equipped than ever to do your
printing. Send it to us at once.