University of South Carolina Libraries
[. | Professional Cards. | I DR. A. G. EADDY, JOHNSONVILLE, S. C. Office hours: 8 to 10 a. m., 2 to3p. m. and by appointment. Office at residence. 3-13-6m DR. R. J, MCCABE, Dentist. KINGSTREE, , S. C| ["Office Next to Cojrt House Square. ( PHILIP H. ARROWSMITH ; AI 1 UKNtY-A I-LAW LAKE CITY, - - S. C. ! W. Leland Taylor,: DENTIST. 1 Office over Or W V Brockingtou's Store, !' KING5TREE, - S.C. 5-21-tf. M. O. Nesmith DENTIST. 1 LAKE CITY, - - - S C. | BenJ. McINNES, M. R.C. V. S. ,( d i/-t? u-iwmcc m n v m r\ I Fu. rvaici iTikiiniL.^7, in* >/m t . v< VETERINARIANS. One of us will be at Kingstree the ;] first Monday in each month, at Hel- \ Iler's Stables. 9-28-tf I, E. K. BEATY L. H. SIAU Georgetown, S. C. ! < Beaty & Siau j (Over Bank of Georgetown) j ( Civil Engineering, Land Surveying i Farm Drainage Levels General Contracting Concrete Walks a Specialty 3-13-4m i II JV KINGSTREE: l^c^' Lodge, No. 46 /n*S*r\ A.F.M.; meets Thursday before full moon each ( month. Visiting brethren are cordially ' i vinyited. M H Jacobs, W M. ; ] UEL Montgomery, Sec. 2-27-ly : \ [ '< s? Tz. o? ^rj' I v^pL/ Kingstree Lodge : I N?* 91 J L W$m Xniabts of Outbids 'J i " 1 r ^ Regular Couventlous Every j HV 2nd and 4th Wednesday nights | Visiting brethren always welcome, H Castle Hall 3rd story Goordin Building. ( B P. H. Stoll (j. C. j B R. N. Speigner, K of R & S. BB > aaeouaa "isnift J V i **.* r xl^aru 1 at *nd 3rdMosds; V f ' I) K'fflU* in each I ^wBSS' asswssrt?&, NX*/ ,-iiup and sit on a Btumy ) B or hang about on tbf 1 H B. E. Clarkson, 1 87 13m. Con-Com. 1 ? ^?^^?a^?^ I LIGHTNING RODS. H. L. WhitlocE, Lake City, S.C. H Special Salaa A^ent. Representing the Largest Manufacturers of All j1 muua H !?proved Copper and Galvanized Section Rods I (Endorsed by the Highest Scientific Authorities ' and Fire Insurance Companies). PURE COPPER WIRE CABLES, ALL SIZES. Bw Our Full Cost Guarantee GivenVith Each Job. KW I sail on doss mania of profit, dividing conH mission with my customers. S-7-tf i W Couqhs, Colds, Watery Eyes m Cared la a Day ; by taking Cheeney's Expectorant? ^B also cures consumption, whooping cough, droppings from the nose, and throat, bronchitis, and all throat - J 1?~ "iiKIQQ PKM>npv's Rmcp. | I-H.nl 1 iUIlfc Wvuimwo. J z torant a liquid preparation, tested for 50 years. Try it. Safe, sure and satisfactory. Drusrgists 25c and 50c. ll-7-7mp-adv. | WANTED From six to eight good, J fat Beef Cattle a week, I for which I will pay the I best market price. I All Kinds of Meats I in season at living prices, I also a choice line of Fruits, I Vegetables and Canned I Goods. ! Cpps' MarKet ? Cr. Ae?df?r <B> Mill SU. I Legal Advertisements. * Summons for Relief(COMPLAINT SERVED). THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, COUNTY OF WILLIAMSBURG, Court of Common Pleas. S B Poston and J W Brown, qualified executors of the estate of S Poston,i j 1 r? i ~:.. *: er~ ueceaseu, nam una. against Amanda Cooper, John Wesley Cooper and Sam B C'-oper, Defendants, To the Defendants, Amanda Cooper, John Wesley Cooper and Sam B Cooper: You are hereby summoned and required to answer the complaint in this ac;ion, of which a copy is herewith served upon you,and to serve a copy of your answer to the said complaint on the subscriber at his office in Kings- j tree. S C, within twenty days after the | service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service: and if you fail to answer the complaint within the time aforesaid.the plaintiffs in this action will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the complaint. Date, February 13, 19f2. LeRoy Lee, Plaintiffs' Attorney. Io the absent Defendant, John Wesley Cooper: Take Notice?That the original summons in this action, of which the fore- j ?oing is a copy, together with the com-' plaint, was filed in the office of the Clerk of the Court of Common Pleas of Williamsburg county. State of S >uth Carolina, on the 21st day of February, 1913. LeRoy Lee, 3-27-6t Plaintiffs' Attorney. Dated 21st day of February. 1913. Notice of Application for Final Discharge. Notice is hereby given, that the uniersigned will make application on the >th day of May. 1913, at eleven o'clock | i. m., to the Honorable P M Brockin-1 :on, Judge of Probate of Williamsburg :ounty. for his final discharge as Ad-! ninistrator of the estate of L G Blakeey, deceased, and that at said time a < Full accounting will be made to the said Probate Judge of his actings and doings ; is said Administrator. Dated at Kingstree, S C, this, the (1 J9th day of March, 1913. T E Blakei.ey. (i A rltMinlafwnfA** rtf XT cf O fo nf I. (~l R I "1 L" P. I luililiiiouau/i vi uovavv v* v , ley. deceased. 4-3-5t J Notice of Application for Final Discharge. Notice is hereby given that the unlersigned will make application on the < >th day of May, 1913, at eleven o'clock i.m..to the Honorable P M Broekinton, fudge of Probate of Williamsburg rounty. for his final discharge as Adninistrator of the estate of Thomas E tagin,deceased, and that at said time a full accounting will be made to the said ,1 Probate Judge of his actings and doings j is said Administrator. Dated at Kingstree, S C, this, the J9th day of January. 1913. A J RAGIN, Administrator of the Estate <>f Thomas E Ragin, deceased. 4-3-5t rinol T^ienTiororo A AU(bA,J/10UUWA g V> Notice is hereby given that on the 5th iay of May, A D I9i3, at eleven o'clock n "the forenoon, we will apply to P M Brockinton, Judge of Probate of Wiliamsburg county, for Letters Dismisso y as Executors of the estate of S J Taylor, deceased. S V Taylor, E 0 Taylor, M D, k-3-5t Executors. Final Discharge' Notice is hereby given that on the 3d iay of May, A D 1913, at eleven o'clock n the forenoon, I will apply to P M Brockinton, Judge of Probate of Williamsburg county.for Letters Dismissory as Guardian of Norman Thomas. J Edward Duke, i-3-5tp Guardian. Final Discharge. Notice i? hereby given that on the 26th day ot April, 1?1?, at iz o ciock. noon, I will apply to P M Brockinton, Judge of Probate of Williamsburg county, for Letters Dismissorv as Administrator of the estate of T E Salters, deceased. T E Salters. 3-27-4tp Administrator. NoticeNotice is hereby given that stockholders of the R-O'B-K Co and the Greelyville Mercantile Co will hold a meeting on Monday, April 28, for the purpose of dissolving the above corporations. Books of subscription are now open for the Consolidated Co of Greelyville S C. Wm O'Bryan, E D Rhodus, P R Keels, 4-3-2t F Mishoe. Registration Notice. The office of the Supervisor of Reg istration will be open on the 1st Monday in each month for the purpose of registering any person who is qualified as follows: Who shall have been a resident ol the State for two years, and of the county one year, and of the polling precinct in which the elector offers to vote four months before the day of oiort.inn and shall have Daid. sia months before, any poll tax then due and payable, and who can both read and write any section of the constitution of 1895 submitted to him by the Supervisors of Registration, or whc can show that he owns, and has paid all taxes collectable on during the present year, pioperty in this State assessed at three hundred dollars or more. H A Meyer, f.lerk of Board Undressed LumberI always have on hand a lot of undressed lumber (board and framing) at my mill near Kingstree. for sale at the lowest price for good material. See or write me for further information, etc. F. H. HODGE. f MALARIA J ^ headache, biliousness, in- m Idlgesnon, rneumausm, m pimples, blotches, yellow complexion, etc., are all M signs of poisons in your H blood. These poisons M should be driven out, or serious illness may result m To get rid of them, use $ E5" Thedford's j Black-Draughtl the old, reliable, purely I vegetable, liver medicine. M Mrs. J. H. Easier, of Spartanburg, S. G, says: B 1 had sick headache, for years. I felt bad most of ' the time, I tried Thed- ! ford's Black-Draught, and ^ j m now 1 teei oener man when I was 16 years old." m Your druggist sells it, in i 25 cent packages. - M 1 Insist on Thedford's 1! Notice of Application!, for Final Discharge- , Notice is hereby given that the uhdersigned will make application on the 12th day of May, 19 i 3, at eleven o'clock , | a.m..to the Honorable P M Brockinton, ! ' .Tiidtrp of Probate of Williamsburer county, for his Final Discharge as Administrator of the estate of H L Grayson, deceased, and that at said time a full accounting will be made to the said j 1 Probate Judge of his actings and doings as said Administrator. j j Datod at Kingstree, S C, this, the: , 5th day of April. 1913. Leon M Grayson, Administrator of the estate of H L Grayson deceased. 4-10-5t 1 i NoticeAny and all persons without proper written authority are hereby forbidden I from entering for any purpose what ever upon the lands of the undersigned j company wherever the same may be i 1 situated in the county, and especially i j lands in Santee river swamp. All unau-1 , thorized hunting and fishing upon said 1 lands is hereby particularly prohibited. Santj.e Riveh Cypress lumber Co, 1 By M W Seabrook, Attorney, t Sumter, S 0, April 4, 1912. 4-10-4t 1 ' ? i IFOR RENT. I < > One good two-horse farm | j < > two miles from Kingstree, | \l on Sumter road, dwelling | j J and out-buildings. Very j o convenient to town, rail- : o road, markets, schools, i j | churches, etc. Fine land for j < tobacco, cotton and corn. Z ' First applicant gels the | ' form for 1Q13 Annlv tn ' X i.01111 AVI XVAVt vw ~ , | J. D. GILLAND, | ! X f Attorney-at-Law, I ' | KINGSTRtE. S. C. , , X i ILK BEAUTY SPOT OF THE < BLUE RIDGE MOUNTAINS ! CHIMNEY ROCK and BAT CAVEj Situated In Hickory Nat Gap. There are many hotels and boarding houses and country homes where boara can be obtained at lower rates than at any other section where the same class , of accommodation is given. Before you i make up your mind where to go write us for printed information, which will be sent free of cost. If you want a few picture postal cards of the many beau- < ty-spots around here send 10 to 25 cents in stamps and we'll buy and send them them to you. Teachers of public and private schools who want to take special courses under the most competent instructors should ArfounH HflnHlf?>r^hipf write UltCl ?1 vu MWU ..%.w?.Wv.v?.v. Association. Teachers who want to join the Teachers' Outiug Club,"where they share expenses and thereby get their outing at smallest cost. Write "Outing Club." Doctors, bankers, lawyers, merchants and manufacturers can get printed information that is of special interest to them. It costs less to send your family here than to any other section. Furnished cottages, single room for housekeeping, and tents, can be rented at reasonable rates. Write for information. Address, Freeman's Camp, 3-20-8t Bat Cave P 0. N C. CHICHESTER S PILLS W THE DIAMOND BUXD. A U4k*l AikTwrOrudMfor A yS\ UlSu CtktwtertMMeailBrul/AX jj 'ill iTjWL mill in Red ?nd Oold mcti4lic\V/ Sn. boxes, sealed with Blue Ribbon. \/ ifl Tnkn m other. By of yonr V jl/Stt&ClfiE i r SOLO BY MUGfilSTS EVEKVWHERE ?.tANT ANOTHER MAN BY LOUISE HEILGERS. "When will you come back?" asked the woman. "Next spring." answered the man. "Just when the leaves are green I shall be here with you again." "They are yellow now," said the woman, her eyes on the fading trees about them. A cold little wind sent plenty of bronze and golden treasure fallen from their branches scurrying about their feet. There was a smell of damp earth and bracken in the air. On the gray river beyond more yellow leaves floated, heralds to the water fowl of the coming winter. It is not easy in the autumn to think of spring. The young woman sighed as she looked "It will seem a long time," she said. "But spring comes every year, just the same." the man reminded her "It is here really all the while buried in the bark and the earth, just waiting for the signal to come to life again." "I was not thinking of the spring just then." said the woman, "but of you." "What are six months?" asked the man: "six months out of a lifetime?" "Everything or nothing," the woman returned. "You may forget." "But. on the other hand, I might remember." The man slipped an arm through hers caressingly. "Come. Marion, cheer up. I refuse to be depressed by dismal prophecies. I am yoursyou are mine. Nothing can alter that?save death." "And another woman." The words slipped from her almost unconsciously. "You will meet so many on your travels, and the nearest woman is always the dearest." "You talk as if I were some silly boy." the man frowned. "Have I ever given you cause to be jealous of me, Marion?" "No," she answered, truthfully. 1)111 IUC11 ?UU lla>c UCICl UCCU anu.i before." "Next time you shall come with me." the man promised her. "We shall be married. Marion, when the leaves are green." He caught her to him with a suddefl passion.' "Marion, think of the spring and me," he whispered to her. But, womanlike, she could only think af the coming winter. A man and a girl walked upon the grassy slope of a hill in southern Prance. All about the crocuses gleamed like jewels among the grass The sun was daffodil, the wind had bandfuls of violets, the sky was a big hyacinth. "I love the spring?don't you?" said the girl, turning a pink and vivid face to his. "It makes me feel as if I were being born again. Everything seems bo fresh and new." "You make the spring for me," anm'Brert thp man and his hand touched tier dark, uncovered hair. "But I don't make the sun and the buds and the flowers," objected the girl smilingly. "And the leaves?see bow green they are!" His hand fell from her hair. "When the leaves are green." What bad he promised another woman last year? To be back when the leaves were green again! The leaves were green. He caught bis breath; then suddenly a thought came to his aid. The trees were green here?yes?in the south, but in England they would still be bare and toss empty branches to the sparrows and the wind. He had another month at least. He turned Impatiently to the girl. "Kiss me." he said Imperatively. Their lips met. In April trees are green. But April came and went, and one woman walked alone; May, June and July sped by, all rose and gold; August stalked through the land with a sevthe beneath his arm; September, red-cheeked, with wind-blown hair, passed like a dream among the orchards. Then came October and the fall of the leaves. A man and a woman walked together through the woods to where the water gleamed among the trees, like a big, white bird with wings outstretched. "You are six months late," the woman answered dully. "But Journeys end In lovers' meetings," he returned lightly. "Business kept me, sweetheart?not my will." "You are six months late," the woman said again. "Too late," she added significantly. He stared at her. "What do you mean?" he asked. She turned suddenly and faced him, a red spot of color in either cheek, her eyes dark, intense. "What does it mean," she asked. "when a man leaves a woman for months without a letter or a word? It means another woman. What does it mean when a woman, left alone for months, turns to somebody else for companionship? It means another man." "And you promised to wait for me!" The man was white to the lips. She laughed?a bitter little laugh. "'Till the leaves were green,' you said. Well, I waited. But now"?she pointed all around to where from every tree the leaves hung brown and gold. They were everywhere beneath the paths. Even upon the water they lay yellow, floating seaward, like the little f.reboats that Hindus send after their dead. A two-faced person makes a specialty of bare-faced lies. m\9b*+tmn i I are under double strain? 1 I strength to live and learn and | I strength to grow?they must I have nourishment?not over9 loaded stomachs, but conI centrated nutriment to aid J nature during the growing g The wonderful record of I Scott's Emulsion as a body-' I I builder has been proved for three generations. It strengthens 9 the bones, muscles and sinews; ; builds f/.t body, creates energy and vigor; prevents and relieves colds and fortifies the lungs. Millions of delicate and undeveloped children have been made strong, sturdy and hearty with Scott's Emulsion, Insist on having SCOTT'S. Scott & Bowne, Bloomfield, N. J. 12-68 Paying As We Go. The paternalism of large corporations toward their employees continues to develop in new directions imd furnish new proofs of tender regard. In addition to model dwellings and schools and pensions and compulsory thrift, it has of late undertaken to supervise recreation and even marriage. The latest development is reported from Philadelphia, where a large firm employing 700 men has offered to give each one of them 15 cents every time he takes a bath, provided he does not exceed one a day. To give the plan an economic standing, it is called "Cheap Insurance Against Disease." It is to be '-111 it-- :?L aaaeu, ine company lurmsuca mc bathing plant with soap and towels. The plan is not whimsical. It accords with proposals in many localities . to pay children for going to school. In ancient Athens citizens received pay for going to the theatre. We may some day pay citizens vote as well as to bathe; we may ev en offer a premium for marriage and bounties for babies.?-V Y World. TAKE IT IN TIKE, Just as Scores of Kiogstree People HaveWaiting doesn't pay. If you neglect kidney backache, *1 * 11 / _ 11 urinary rrouDies oiien ionow. Act in time by curing: the kidneys. Doan's Kidney Pills are especially for weakened kidneys. Many people in this locality recommend them. Here's one Georgetown case: Mrs Jasper Martin, 3 Wood St. Georgetown, S C, says: "My back was so weak and lame that I could hardly get around to attend to my housework and I suffered all the time from backache and pains across my kidneys. I had little strength or energy and the kidney secretions were unnatural. Hearing about Doan's Kidney Pills, I got a supply ai^d they cured me. I have had no need of a kidney medicine since. ** i - 1: iou are welcome to cunuuuc me publication of my former testimonial." 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 take no other. adv. Ye Old Time Joke. It was the opening of the winter session and the teacher was making up her list of pupils. "Well, my boy," she said to one youth, "what is your name?" "Tom, ma'am," replied the boy promptly. "That does not sound well," she said; "you ^should always give tne full name. You should have said 'Thomas.' And what is your name?" turning to the next boy. Flushed with the consciousness of having learned something new, the young man arose and said proudly: "My name is Jackas." ? Ladies' Home Journal. Drive Sick Headaches Away. Sick headaches, sour, gassy stomach,indigestion, biliousness disappear quickly after you take Dr King's New Life Pills. They purify the blood and put new life and vigor in the system. Try them and you will be well satisfied. Every pill helps; every box guaranteed. Price 25c. Recommended by Kingstree Drug Co and M L Allen. _ adv BEAR KILLED NEAR MANNING. H Brain, Betrayeb by Tracks, Easy IB victim 01 noniers. n Manning, April 5:?A party of ' about a dozen white men and fifteen H or twenty negroes indulged in the H| rare sport of bear hunting a few miles from Manning this morning. Hj They succeeded in bagging a huge H bear, weighing about 450 pounds, H which was divided among the hunters, so that many families will have the novelty of bear meat for their H Sunday dinner tomorrow. H According to report, the bear's ' H tracks were discovered early this morning near Bloomville by a negro H named Witherspoon, who saw the H tracks in his yard when he first got H out. He called his brother who liv- 9| ed near by, and they started to fol- H low the tracks, which was easily done M after the rain last night. They were H soon joined by others, and the bear H was traced to a cypress pond near H Providence colored church,about four miles from Manning. The pond was fl j.j i j t. a rta.. Hi surruunueu uuu uugs scui iui. vjtucr u men with guns joined the party and ^ H the bear was soon routed. It requir- J| ed several shots to kill him. Judging from the direction the H bear was traveling, he was evidently fl making his way from Santee swamp , Bj to Black river swamp.' It is known fl that many bears 'inhabit the Great fl Santee swamp, but they very rarely fl j. ] e L...? B curne uui any instance auu icw uarc ? ever been taken as large as the one killed today. A peculiarity is the fl fact that the bear was fat so early fl in the year. fl When It Pays to Stick to tbe Farm I A Tennessee reader asks our ad- 9D vice as to whether he "had better JH sell his farm, on which he owes con- Vj siderable, or had he better stick to 11 the farm and try to improve it,make M a living and pay out?" ' We frequently receive such re mipsts for advice and aoDreciate the w compliment which they imply, but . " we cannot give advice in such cases, ' not because we do not wish to, for nothing would give us more pleasure than to give correct advice to any one needing it; but because we can not possibly know enough about all the conditions, which knowledge is 1 necessary to enable anyone to give safe advice. \ In the first place, much depends .. \ on what the man can do or earn when he leaves the farm. For instance, it would be absurd to tell a man to stay on a small iarm wno couiu euru $2,000 or more a year, as many men can do at some other business; but > : on the other hand, if a man has a family to support and cannot earn more than $50 to $75 a month after he leaves his farm, he should remain on the farm if he can make a living there and pay the interest on what he owes on the farm. We believe any man who will work and study his farming business can do this and 11 A 1 ? ? ? ? ? 1-^. ? UaMam Kinnrr on/4 J mat ne can mane a uciict u*iuK uUU ^ save more on the farm than he can working for small wages in the city or anywhere else. During the last fe# months there have appeared a number of reports in The Progressive Farmerpi how men have "made t good" under such adverse conditions and any man who will study these and plan his fan. ing in the light of the suggestions which these reports contain, can get sufficient help to enable him to make good if he is able to make good anywhere or at anything. A man who makes a living for himself and family and leads a clean, honest life "makes good." We know of nothing which offers a better opportunity for doing this than farming. The hardships are no greater, even though* they sometimes are great, and the chances of making an honest living are more certain.? The Progressive Farmer. For Burns, Bruises and Sores. The quickest and surest cure for burns,bruises, boils, sores, inflammation and all skin diseases is Bucklen's Tn fmir Hovq if rured muita uai<c. xu xvi? u-jm .w ? L H Haflin of Iredell, Tex, of a sore on his ankle which pained him so much he could hardly walk. Should be in every house. Only 25c. Recommended by Kingstree Drug Co and M L Allen. adv <4 "For sale," "For rent," "Lost," "Wanted"?makes no difference what it is, let it be known through our "special" ad column. Results r a* will surely follow. ';?W. J