The county record. [volume] (Kingstree, S.C.) 1885-1975, April 17, 1913, Page THREE, Image 3

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Our Clubbing Bates f We offer cheap clubbing rate j with a number of popular newspapers and periodicals. Read carefully the following list and select the one 01 more that you fancy and j 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 f ordered must be paid for, not 1, 2,3, 14, 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 SouthRuralist (twice a month) for 25 a year. H he Record and Home & Farm H ce a month,) $1.35. liliE Record and New York World times a week.) $1.75. The Record and Atlanta Consti|tion (3 times a week) $1.85. PBThe Record and Bryan's Commoner, $1.65. The Record and Cosmopolitan Magazine $2.00 I he Record and Youth's Companion (New Subscribers) $2.75. The Record Semi-Weekly State, $2.50 The Record and Watson's Magazine $1.65. The Record and The Jeffersonian $1.65 * The Record and Lippincott's . yr Magazine $2.75. T The Record and National Mjjcrarinp $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. We are not responsible after that. The County Record. Piles Cured in 6 to 14 Days Your druggist will refund money if PAZO OINTMENT fails to cure any case of Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles in 6 to 14 days. The Erst application gives Ease and Rett. 60c. aJt-?=? Hn nave you se F 01 Km FORD L and a fu I FORD I always g Hr Come and 1 W SUMTER, S. C. I D.CSh I I The For 1 OA A. J? l-du-ii If= I I The Fall T I I KINGSTREE GRADE! I I Septemb< |i| All departm< | | in Good Wo | I Parents who intend enter I / will please do so during tne m I I Patrons and friends of th< B to visit the school at any cime, H Any further inforr B applying to I J. W. Swittenberg Superintendent Arrival of Passenger Trains at I Ktngstree. The Atlantic Coast Line railroad j has promulgated the following sched-1 ule, which became effective Sunday,! October 15. 1911: | North Bound. No 80 - - - 7:43 a m j *No 46 - - 11:37 am XTrt 7Q _ . . fi-IOnm, 11U IU - v.?v r ... | South Bound. No 79 - - - 11:13 am i *No 47 - - - - 6:10 p m No 89 - - - 9:09 pm * Daily except Sunday. Deafness Cannot be Cured by local applications.as thev cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitutional remedies, Deafness is caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube, When this tube is inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing.and when it is entirely closed. Deafness is the result, and unless the inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever; nine cases out of ten are caused by Catarrh, which is nothing but an inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be ' cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Saad for circulars, free. F J CHENEY & CO. Toledo. O, Sold by Druggists, 75c. [ Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation, adv FOR SALE. Brick in any quantity to suit purclia er. The Best Dry Press Mactaine-mad< X BI3IC2C. v ?!rvo.-?iai chants made to order. Corrt I vpvv???i pondence solicited before placing you' orders. W. R. FUNK Undressed Lumber. I 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. I F. H. HODOE. CHICHESTER S PILLS Wcv TIIE DIAMOND BRAND. A Lad ire! A ah yomr Sntrlit for /a\. y ( Qsu Cktekta-ltrtl>liiieiiJllrtiiit/A\ MjJagL 1MIU la Red and Laid mcUlliAX// V mW| hoies. sealed with Blue Rlbhon. \/ M fh Wf T?l? other. Bar of roar V if IT '"MW. Ark for CIII-OlIfcR-TER 8 I W J DIAMOND BRAND PILLS, for SS VP 0 yearskaowo as Best. Safest, Always Reliable r SOLO BY DR1IG6ISTS EVERYWHERE , ==rl :en the new KD? CARS .11 line of >ARTS in hand. \ fake a Look. PHONE 553. taw Co. 'd Man. , erm of the I AND HIGH SCHOOL jan 1019. A V/^ m. MM ;nts are now rking Order I ing their children in the school | rst week of the fall term. I 5 School are cordially invited ?i? nation may be had by , E. C. Epps, Clerk Board of Trustees. ee, S. C. Ijjf BEAUTY SPOT OF THE BLUE RIDGE MOUNTAINS CHIMNEY ROCK and BAT CAVE Situated lu Hickory Nut Gap. There are many hotels and boarding houses and country homes where board can be obtained at lower rates than at any other section where the same class of accommodation is giver.. Before you 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 beauty-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 write "Literary, Arts and Handk-rchief Association. Teachers who want to join the Teachers' Outiug < lub,"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. Fur^fifred cottages, single room for housekeeping, ;md tents, can be rented at reasonable rates. Write for information. Address. f REEMAN s uar, 3-20-8t Bat Cave P 0. X C. Black River School. HONOR ROLL. Grade 1. Jennings Joye G Thomas Gamble G Grade II. Carroll Player 96 Ethel Gamble _ -.90 Grade IV. Annie Belle Gamble ? -..90 Grade VI. A1 Mamie uamDie vi Mouzons, April 10. WORDS FR01 HOME. Statements That May Be Investigated. Testimony ot Kingstree Citizens. When a Kingstree citizen comes to the front, telling his friends and neighbors of his experience, you can rely on his sincerity. The statements of people residing in far away places do not command your confidence. Home endorsement is the Kind tnat backs Doan's Kidney Pills. Such testimony is convincing. Investigation proves it true. Below is a statement of a Kingstree resident. No stronger proof of merit can be had. Mrs P D Eppst< Kelly St, Kingstree, S C, says: "I suffered from an attack of kidney complaint and I had lame and aching back. I used Doan's Kidney Pills and they so completely relieved me that I have not had any need of a kidney medicine since. I cheerfully recommend this fine remedy in return for what it has done for me." For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Mil burn Co, Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name--Doan's? and take no other. aav. THE BEST # REMEDY '% M For all forma of ? f RHEUMATISM | Lumbago, Solattoa, fiout, N aural- V g gta,KUnay TrouMts, Catarrh and g Asthma I I "5-DROPS" 1 1 8TOP THE PAIN ? B Aluaa OnlrtU Dallaf K* I It stops the aches and pains, re- ?r fa lieves swollen joints ana muscles k H ?actsalmost like magic. Destroys Ft m the excess uric acid and Is cuick. Br E safe and sure In Its results. No Kv other remedy like it. Sample N" ifl free on request. g! 80LD BY DRUGQIST9 L H One Dollar per bottle, or sent pre- K paid upon receipt of price if not F B obtainable in your locality. m SWAN SON RHEUMATIC CURE CO. ijk 168 Lake Strwt &S CMMp ^Fcaaatlpatiaa.Siok HMdtob^B HI Soar SfconaoH, Balehlag and MM Llwar Troubiaa. ISO Par MB 1 tCZHU.ACHt.WLP. fmWJS.tCALPt, f 1 BURNS, WOUNDS, SALT KHEUM, MMI m WORM, Efe, ?*Mdy IwaM fey u?hf UN "5- DROPS" SALVE f _ SPA Nf B? s? PrmliU | For pains in the buck a rood remedy Is Dr. Miles' Antl-Paln Pills. i . [ ; Lameness Sloan's Liniment is a quick and reliable remedy for lameness in horses and other farm animals. "Sloan's Liniment surpasses anything on earth for lameness in horses and other horse ailments. I would not sloop without it in my stable."? Martin Doyle, 432 West 19th St., Not York City. Good for Swelling and Abecass. Mr. H. M. Gibbs, of Lawrence, Kan., R. P. D., Xo. 3, writes:?" 1 had a mare with an abscess on her neck and one 50c. bottle of Sloan's Liniment entirely cured her. I keep it all the time for gulls and small swellings and for everything about the stock." SLOAN S LINIMENT is a quick and safe remedy for hog cholera. Governor of Georgia uses Sloan's Liniment for Hoc Cholera. I heard Gov. Rrown (who is quite a farmer) say that ho bad n. rcr lost a hog from cholera and that his remedy always was a tablespoonful of Sloan's Liniment In a gallon of slops, decreasing the dose as the animal improved. Last month Gov. Brown and myself were at the Agricultural College building and In the discussion of the ravagm of the disease, Gov. Brown gave the remedy n*me<l a* unfailing." | " Observer." Savaxnah Daily News. At All Dealer*. 25<\. 50c. & 1.00. Sloan's Book on Horse*. Cattle, Bogi and Poultry sent free. Address Dr. Sari 8. Sloan, Boston. Diversified Farming Pays. i Mr J T Gaskins of Gallivant's Ferry, Horry county, believes in diversified crops. His experience is of interest to every farmer in the Palmetto State. When Mr Gaskins landed at Gallivant's Ferry to make his first business venture he had $400 in cash?nothing more. He settled to work, bought a small amount of poor land and commenced to farm and to improve his land. "I did not raise an all cotton crop, as so many ! of my neighbors do," he said, "I plant tobacco, corn, ribbon cane, peas, potatoes, raise hogs and plant some cotton. 3y following this plan I made some profit each year and invested it in land, stock, etc." The past year Mr Gaskins sold 700 gallons of ribbon cane syrup at 50c a gallon which netted him about $250, he sold $2,700 worth of tobacco from 16 acres?the profit was about $1,500, he sold several other kinds of produce at a good profit. The 10 bales of cotton which he sold brought far less profit in proportion to the { amount of capital and labor invested X 1 J X 1_ ,L 1 I man any proaucr wnicn ne nanuifu. Mr Gaskins has bought and paid for 250 acres of land and has cleared , and in cultivation about 110 acres. Last year he refused an offer of $12,000 for his plantation. \The acquiring of this large farm, a nice dwelling, good barn and tenant houses, stock, cattle, modern farming machinery, etc, is an excellent record, but they do not represent all of the earnings of this in- , dustrious farmer: he has other in- ' terests besides his farms, but the | money was all made on the farms, j and Mr Gaskins attributes his successful farming operations to diversification of crops. He says many , other farmers in Horry county have ' worked as hard and lived a? econom- , ically as he has and are still poor, simpiy Decause iney siuck lu a tuiton crop while he was raising tobacco, making molasses and feeding , hogs.? Florence Times. Pains in the Stomach. If you continually complain of pains in ?the stomach, your liver or your kidneys are out of order. Neg- , lect may lead to dropsy,kidney trou- , ble, diabetes or Bright's disease, i Thousands recommend Electric Bit- i ters as the very best stomach and < kidnev medicine made. H T Alston 1 of Raleigh, N C, who suffered with 1 pain in the stomach and back,writes; j "My kidneys .were deranged and my ( liver did not work right. I suffered much, but Electric Bitters was recommended and I improved from the first dose. I now feel like a new % man." It will improve you,too. Only 50c and $1.00. Recommended by Kingstree Drug Co and M L Allen. 3 adv t \ REFORMING OF A MAN j By GADSDEN KILLIAN. Mrs. Lawrence came back from the woi.tan's club with a firm determination tL.t her husband should reform This feeling had been aroused by s very remarkable paper by Sarah Jane ni/--hir,?<in nf Rnsfnn wlio had man ped out an elaborate system wherebj r.t'.sbnnds could be reduced to theii proper subservient and helpful statt in the household. Mrs. Lawrence's husband's reform was to begin on Wednesday. Mrs. Lawrence wisely refrained from mentioning the fact to him. Sarah Jane Hutchinson had said that the more subtly one acted in the matter the better would be the results. Mrs. Lawrence was thankful that the prescription didn't call for an opening conversation with the patient. Her husband had an awful temper and he might not understand at first Just how good the treatment was going to be for him. The plan was going to he a very easy one to work. According to Sarah Jane Hutchinson, if the articles of wearing apparel which the husband flings about in the morning are left undisturbed until his return in the evening hte chagrin and the effect upon his clothes will be so great that he will be a model of neatness from that time on. Wednesday morning Lawrence strewed arouhd the flat the usual number of collars, neckties and shirts. He got out his mackintosh and umbrella and then, having decided that the day would be clear, took down his new fall topcoat On discovering that the temperature was too high for this garment be dumped it Into the Morris chair and made a hurried exit from the house, tossing a couple of soiled handkerchiefs on the divan as he went out of the door. .La ? Uni T .q tlTOnrP r or mc hi oi kiuiu Burveyed this scene with satisfaction. Nothing could be a better object lesson for her husband than the flat in its present condition. She decided to do the breakfast dishes and the leaving for her sister's house. She preferred that her husband should face the confusion alone on his return. In the course of an hour she set about dressing for her visit She had to put away some of the neckties In order to find her toilet articles. She was obliged to put the collars in the drawer so that she could make the bed. The clean shirts which had been rejected in favor of the one which Lawrence wore that morning could never be left on the window seat, for a shower might come up and Boak them. The laundry was paid for out of the house pocketbook, and it wouldn't be good policy to be so extravagant in this reforming business Before she realized it, the bedroom was quite neat and free from the original appearance of disorder. She upbraided herself snd then reflected that the parlor and dining room would be bad enough to teach the desired lesson. She had to take the hat and raincoat off the sewing machine in order to sew up a rip in her skirt and r?oiiv thp puniest thing to do was to hang them up to get them out of the way. When she left the house there were just three of her husband's belongings still misplaced?the two handkerchiefs and the new topcoat. This last would be an awful example to him, for It was In a nice little heap In the seat of the chair and would wrinkle beautifully. Mrs. Lawrence made a long day's visit and returned home at 6:30 In the evening. Lawrence was due home at 5 nnd his wife thought how touching the scene would be when James Bhould take her in his arms and say, 'Dearest, I see the error of my ways. Never again will I be so careless." She didn't know whether to say. "Darling, I forgive you," as her heart would prompt her to do, or to re mark coldly. "I hope you will remem ber this lesson," as Sarah Jane Hutchinson had suggested. She walked Into their apartment and looked about anxiously. There wasn't a soul in sight. The coat was btill in its reformatory heap. The mail was untouched. Evidently James had not returned! After all, It would be rather fun to see just how he took it. At 7 o'clock she heard the familiar sound of the latch key in the door. Then in walked James with two members of the firm whom he had brought home to dinner. Mrs. Lawrence was excited. She hurriedly made the Morris chair ready for the corpulent senior member and flung the new fall overcoai ? lior nut UII I lie uru. ./muco iuuunvu "V. w-v to thp kitchen and demanded a hurryup dinner. He had to go that evening with the two men to put through an important business deal. He rushed out after dinner with the men, and Mrs. Lawrence had the evening to herself. The coat worried her. Really, men have so much to do that it is hard for them to think of little things. She hung up the wrinkled garment penitently. The next morning she smuggled it down to the tailor's to be pressed, using the money that she had saved out for the matinee. Lawrence never knew how narrowy he escaped being reformed.?Chicago Daily News. Exnlalnina. "Show me some tiaras, please. I vant one for my wife." "Yes, sir. About what price?" "Well, at such a price that I can ay: 'Do you see that woman with ;he tiara? She is ny wife." ? a - A I True Christianity. ! The Bible says in effect that no manlis without sin. We believe that to be absolutely so, not only as applied to laymen, but preachers as well. We make the above statement * , 4 because we read recently a press dispatch from Lynchburg-, Va, where a Methodist conference is in session, ttrVinm flin -?rvl 1 n nri n rr vooa! lift all txrua nfutit biiv iviivnui5 ivoviuvt^u "? introduced in the meeting and referr- I ed to the committee on moral reform. I The substance of the resolution I was to condemn the appointment of a H E Schoewolf of Baltimore, as door 1 keeper of the United States Senate, B because he was formerly a salooa I keeper in Baltimore. I The spirit of that resolution does | not comply with religion as taught I by Christ. It is too narrow and sa- I vors of a want of the true spirit of I Christianity. If that barkeeper has | reformed and is anxious to lead a I better life, the Methodists should try | to aid him, instead of damning him. I We must lift up the fallen and not j push them deeper into sin. We must j show that charity that Christ tells us j about. Charity is the greatest light of Christian life, and without it no preacher has the right to get up ia his p'llpit and attempt to preach the gospel, because in such an event he would not be a fit person to preach the Bible. Why hound the man down? Why should a great body like a conventioa named attempt to damn a man who is trying to do better? It is thai spirit among some of those who sel themselves up as our religious leaders that is injuring Christianity and the cause of temperance. We must uruauen uur views, pmy lur cuainj and try to lift up our brothers by Kindness and brotherly love. When jM we see a man down morally, do not pass by on the other side of the road and then go about vilifying him, denouncing him, and spurning him. That is not the true spirit of Christianity, and any one, behe laymaa or preacher, who acts in that way is not,from aChristian standpoint, much above the man he spurns. The"better than thou" man in his own estimation claims to be the true Christian, but is he? No. Denounce sift 4 if you will. That is right, but try to save the sinner.?Edgefield Chronicle. ] ,J Death of Morris Bow. ' R Israel, of the firm of Bow & Israel,of this place, was called to Baltimore, Md, last Wednesday by a telegram from the Johns Hopkins hospital stating that his firm partner, Mr Bow, was in a serious condition m at that place. Mr Bow died a few hours before the arrival of Mr Israel. Mr Bow left Mullins on March 2 for the purpose of attending the inauguration. The day after the inauguration he was taken very sick and went over to Baltimore for treatment at Johns' Hopkins hospital. Upon his arriyal at the hospital it was found that an abscess had formed on his liver. A surgical operation was found necessary and two weeks after he was taken ill he yielded to operar tion and it was thought that he woutf recover. He was reported to be fast improving when an unexpected crisis came, and on Wednesday afternoon at 4 o'clock he died. Mr Bow was 28 years of age, and was unmarried. He was a successful busii ness man, having half interest in a firm in Mullins and being at the head -? in TimmnnQrillfl Ul a LIU Li II lift 31VIC 114 ijmujvuuf.iiv, Mr Bow was a member of the Knights of Pythias, the Woodmen of the World . v and was a member of the Masonic order. Mr Bow was a native of Austria.?Mullins Enterprise. Mr Morris Bow passed away at Johns' Hopkins hospital. Baltimore, about noon last Thursday after an illness of several days, following an operation two weeks before for sorae liver trouble. He was born in Austria 26 year* ago, coming to this country when nnlv 19 vpnrs nlri In 1Q1A hp name to Timmonsville and opened a mercantile business and did well here in his adopted home. He rapidly made friends among- all classes and was most highly esteemed by everyone. His remains were taken to New w A w York, where he has relatives, and F there laid to rest.?TimmofisviU* Enterprise. t , ? M