^ 4 Our Clubbing Bates 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 TknnA rotoo oro rvf nmircp , UIUCI . JL UCOC X C* W-O Wiv v* VVM?WV 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; "10nths ahead. Below is the list of r best clubbing offers. ^he County Record and the Southj ^uralist (twice a month) for I v , a year. yj tn6fc > Record and Home & Farm II perl a month,) $1.35. | YOr . Record and New York World ' (3 times a week.) $1.75. A * The Record and Atlanta Consti- j tution (3 times a week) $1.85. The Record and Bryan's Com-! moner, $1.65. The Record and Cosmopolitan *t r% /\/\ Magazine ez.uv Ihe Record and Youth's Com- j panion (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 f Magazine $2.75. The Record and 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 ' V\tT HQ same nas ueeu j.ui vyoiucu vj uo. We are not responsible after that. The County Record. Piles Cared 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 % to 14 days. The first application gives Ease and Rest. 60c. rHave you se F Ol {ford and a fu FORD F I always o ^ Come and 1 I SUMTER,S. C. D.USfl J % The For 1-30-tf i_ I The Fall T 1 1/iiirnTnrr rntnrr I AINUdlKIX UHAUtl I Septembi f Aj All departm< Bin. Good Wo Parents who intend enter Will please do so during til Patrons and friends of th< Jjwisit the school at any *ime( Any further inforr applying to I I J. W. Swittenberg 1 Superintendent Lf I Kingstr i Arrival of Passenger Trains at i Klngstree. The Atlantic Coast Line railroad has promulgated the following schedule, which became effective Sunday, October 15, 1011: North Bound. No SU - - - 7:4.1 a m *No 46 - 11:37 a m No 78 - - - 6:10 p m South Bound. No 79 - - - 11:13 am *No 47 - - - - 6:10 p m No 89 ... 9:09 p m * 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 reme- j dies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed condition | of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube, When this tube is inflamed you have a rumbling; j sound or imperfect hearing.and when it is entire- | ly 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 catarrhl^hat cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. FJ CHENEY & CO, Toledo. 0, Sold by Druggists, 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation, adv FOR SALE. Brick id Hny quantity to suit purchat er. The Best Dry Press Machine-madf x- !BZEBIOUZ_ jc Special shapes made to order. Corn.pondence solicit ed belore placing you? order*. 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. F. H. HODGE. CHICHESTER S PILLS THE DIAMOND BRAND. A L*dle?t AkkyMrDrnubtfor aK W4H DliBMilBrtait/A\ 111b in Rt4 nod WoM nct?ilic\V/ T-v ?Tvrl boie*. sealed with Blue Ribbon. V/ W thW| Toko m other. Boy of yoor V \1 ~ Iw AUforCIII^ireguTERi I C JM DIAMOND BRAND FILLS, foe Vf B ?enn knows is Bex. Satat. Always Re)Ublo r SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE i sen the new *D? CARS 11 line of >ARTS >n VicmH 'XX IXUllUt rake a Look. PHONE 553. lawCo. 'd Man. I erm of the I AND HIGH SCHOOL ?an er 16, 1912 jnts are now rking Order ing their children in the school | .'st week of the fall term. 1 3 School are cordially invited | nation may be had by , E. C. Epps, Clerk Board of Trustees. ee, S. C. I?f BEAUTY SPOT OF THE BLUE RIDGE MOUNTAINS is ! CHIMNEY ROCK and BAT GAVE 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 given. 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 manv 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 I the most competent instructors should J write "Literary, Arts and Handk- rchief Association. Teachers who want to join the Teachers' Outiug t lub,"where they share expenses and thereby get tfceir 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, :ind tents, can be rented at reasonable rates. Write for information. Address, Fkeeman's Camp, 3-20-8t Bat Cave P 0. X C. Wilson Gets First Check. Woodrow Wilson received his first aUaaI/ no Prnoi/^onf nf tHp ITnitpH yckj LllCCfV OO X l(.OIUV?iW v? V..V w? States, when Secretary McAdoo presented him with a treasury warrant for $5,625, representing his salary from March 4 to 31. On pay days hereafter,however,the President will receive $6,250, a full month's proportion of his $75,000 annual stipend. The treasury department contemplates establishing a precedent in the method of paying President Wilson. Since the days of Washington, the President has been paid by what is known as an "accountable warrant" which means money to be accounted for. A "settlement warrant" which closes an account has been given the President only on his last pay-day when his services are debited in booksjagainst the credits-which have ^ ? ? ?U1 rv? /Itiwtn/V Kio fovrn UcTfU mauc lu 111III UUllIlg uig h.iiu of office. Mr Wilson,however,probably will be Riven a "settlement warrant" each month and his salary account with the government balanced monthly as his term transpires. No one today knows why the President'has always been paid by an "accountable warrant", which is issued in other cases only in connection with advanced money. The President is the only official whose salary is paid directly by the treasury department. Vice Presi-j dent Marshall will receive from the secretary of the Senate the portion he has'so far earned of his $12,000 annual compensation.?Exchange. /|f THE BEST f^v f REMEDY Jv All AI m ( rwr a?> ivnus vi h t RHEUMATISM 1 f I r^ff. triilhii. Bout. Nwiil ft gla, Kidney Troubles, Cetenrb and H Asthma "5-DROPS" 1 8TOP THE PAIN $ Gives Quick Relief q, It stops the aches and pains, re- B lieves swollen Joints and muscles If ?acts almost like magic. Destroys IK the excess uric acid and is quick. fir safe and sure in its results. No fir other remedy like it. 8ample r free on request. ; SOLD BY DRUGGISTS | One Dollar per bottle, or sent pre- & paid upon receipt of price if not flf obtainable in your locality. R' ftllfXIienM MIPIIklATIR CURE CO. J?" iwuk, s'trMt 'if CNtiajg j^^onttipatloB,8iok1Haadaohi^A B Sour Stomaeh.Belohingand Wfi Liver Troubles. ISO Per M ^ ^^ ok at Druggists. >M 1 ECZEMA, ACNC.RUS.nim.ES, SCALDS, I SMAtisiM* ail* Bun ill BIMA m. PVHII#, WWRM| HbB nn>?W| mn? _ m WORM, It^ qiMly ImM by Mb* tbt I "5-DROPS" 8ALVE f J Mo Per 8w ?t Prmilitt | For pains In the Mek a good remedy Is Dr. Miles* Antl-Paln PIU?. * HEALTHY LIVER MAKES BEAUTY. Famous Actress Finds that a Healthy Liver Is Necessary to u^cd Looks , and Youtbfuiness. One of the best known women of | the American stage is writing a series 1 of articles on the preservation of beauty. She attaches great import- ! ance to keeping the liver active at i all times, and she is right. Neither ; ! good looks nor happiness will stay j long with any man or woman who lets the liver get lazy and sluggish. It is not always safe to take calomel, the old liver remedy. Doctors agree that it is a very uncertain ! drug. But Dr W V Brockington has a remedy for sale that he guaran-1 tees to take the place of calomel ab- j solutely, and still be harmless, caus- i ing no restriction of habit or diet, j This remedy is Dodson's Liver Tone. Dodson's Liver Tone is a pleasanttasting vegetable liquid,but it starts the liver gently and surely and relieves constipation and biliousness so promptly that it has become a dependable remedy in thousands of homes in the United States. There are scores of families in this vicinity who will not be without it in the house and who would not think of starting on a trip without a bottle of it. Dr W V Brockington has sold so much Dodson's Liver Tone that he !o AAmrinAA/1 nf ifo morit anrj will mo wuruivcu vi iui iiivtiv m*'v* ??... give any person his 50 cents back who buys a bottle and does not find that it takes the place of calomel to perfection. adv The Expected Happens. Following the adoption by the Democratic caucus of a programme of a reduced duty on woollen goods, ; comes promptly from Rhode Island the announcement of a big manufacturing firm: "The provisions in the new Wilson tariff bill make it -i :ui_ *? aDsoiuuriy impussiuie iui us uj successfully compete with imported goods, therefore, a stoppage of machinery will lake place immediately." The expected has happened. When the present tariff was under consideration Senator Aldrich said: "There is no person who is acquainted with the tariffs of this or any other country who does not know that an assault upon the wool and woollen schedule of this bill is an attack -upon the very citadel of protection." S?natAr Dnllivpr said: "I intend to fight it. * * * I do not purpose that the remaining years of my life shall be given up to a dull consent to the success of all these conspiracies which do not hesitate before our very eyes to use the lawmaking power of the United States to multiply their profits and fill the market places with witnesses of their avarice and their greed." Aldrich and Dolliver are gone. The issue" remains. But this time it will be set right and settled. ?Yew 1 York World. a I4mba Ia* DhnnmoMom ruuuu d Lure lur nunuiiiaiioiu- < "I suffered with rheumatism for 1 two years and could not get my right hand to my mouth for that length of time," writes Lee L Chapman, Mapleton, Iowa. *T suffered terrible pain so that I could not sleep or lie still at night. Five years ago I began using Chamberlain's < Liniment and in two months I was ( well and have not suffered with ( rheumatism since." Foj- sale bv all dealers. adv 1 HELP THE KIDNEYS. , Kingstree Readers Are Learning the Way. It's the little kidney ills? The lame, weak or aching back? The unnoticed urinary disordersmi . i?i j , inai may leau lu urupsy auu Bright's disease. When the kidneys are weak. Help them with Doan's Kidney Pills. A remedy especially for weak kidneys. 1 Doan's have been used in kidney 1 troubles for 50 years. ' Endorsed by 30,000 people?endorsed by citizens of this locality, 1 George June, Manning:, S C, says: "My kidneys troubled me and the ! kidney secretions were unnatural J on/4 filled with Mv back i J auu iiuvu vtivi* wvuii..*-., ?? ? was lame and I didn't g-et much rest at night. Doan's Kidney Pills removed the lameness and soreness, < and after taking this remedy I felt much better in every way."j : 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? i and take no other. adv. \ SIX MILLIONS A DAY. The Amount Spent In New York by Women. How much money is spent eyery day in New York's square mile of shopping? How many hundreds, thousands, millions of dollars change hands every twent>-Iour hours in tne area twenty blocks square, trom Fourteen street to Thirty-fourth street,inclusive? Remember, this area is not merely the shopping centre of the largest city on the western continent, but really the shopping centre of that continent. When Mrs Knickerbocker and her country cousins from Georgia, Kansas and California go out to shop, how much do they spend? According to the most carefully considered judgments of representative merchants in this great whirlpool of buying and selling, the total sum passed over the counter every business day of the year is not less than $6,000,000, and very possibly amounts up to'$10,000,000. In short, it would take the entire fortunes of from six to a dozen men ordinarily accounted rich to pay one day's shopping bills in this square mile. No such enormous sums change hands in any other great shopping centres of the world. The composure of the staid merchants of Bond and Regent streets in London would be rudely shattered if they were ac cused of "taking in" from $1,000,000 to $3,000,000 daily. Even in the great and gay Parisian shops on the Rue de la Paix and the Avenue de l'Opera such tremendous disbursements are unknown. New York has long been known as the shoppers' heaven and now we see how densely populated is our paradise. There is probably no street or avenue in the entire city which is wholly devoid of shopping or shoppers. But a careful observer must agree that the most thoroughly shopped section is bounded by Fourteenth street on the south and Thirty-fourth street on the north, with Twenty-third street as a mid-rib. This square mile of course extends east and west to include Broadway and Fifth and Sixth avenues. Each one of these three thoroughfares has shops which may not be omitted from the most cursory summary of the city's shopping facilities. There are several methods of solving these problems. This is one chosen by a member of the firm of a great department store. "There are at least ten department stores of the first rank in New York's square mile of shopping," he began. "By actual count it has been ascertained that from 30,000 to 60,000 per#)ns enter each one of these 9tores every business day. It is fair to assume that the average purchase is $5, for in almost any shop the ayerage is from $10 to $20. So, $5 per customer per day is a conservative es tirnate for all trie department scores. "Taking the lowest average num ber of customers tor each shop, 30,000 and .multiplying that by ten, you have a daily total of 300,000 customers. If each buys $5 worth the amount of money spent per day in these ten shops aggregate $1,500,000. It is alst conservative to estimate the wholesale and mail order business in th< square mile from Fourteenth stree' to Thirty-fourth street as three time, the retail business?say $4,500,000 i day. That brings the grand tota up to $6,000,000. "Of course, the business conduct ed by the wholesale and mail orde houses is merely long distance shop ping and I am sure that I havegrea ly underestimated the daily return of these enterprises. Several other merchants put thdaily shopping bill at $10,000,000 One,however, asserted that $15,000, 000 came nearer the truth. Now,for one final bunch of statistics about our wonderful square mile. It contains approximate^ 25,000 shops of one sort or another. Its great department stores, placed all together, would make a building 362 stories in height, with a base 1,000 by 800 feet. Allowing a height of fifteen feet to each story, this 1 MJ? U R ,|Ofi PUlICling wuuiu wwci Li.iLiu icci above the street level. It has been estimated that at present the department stores cover real estate worth $200,000,000, and that each one averages 6,000 employees and a 3tock worth $5,000,000.?Nno York World. i BARTER IN BABIES. Demand For Children For Adoption Greater Than Supply. Babies are bartered for in Chicago ' ? ^ .1 ? AM V\ HAI1 /. U f in^A I even neiore meje aic uiuugm. mw the world by girl mothers; physicians recommend maternity homes to prospective patients and then split the fees with the management of the homes; Chicago is a clearing house for foundlings throughout the Middle West; the demand for "orphan babies" is three times greater than the supply?these were among the most startling statements made before the State legislative committee which is investigating charity homes and maternity hospitals. At the conclusion of the hearing, Chairman Thomas Curran, said: "Dealing in babies is the most dastardly business existing." The legislators were told that mothers, before the birth of a babe, signed an agreement which ends: "I promise and declare I will never see said child, but do release and oKon^ nn if fnrouor 1' UUUtlUVIl IV They were informed that babies were shipped out of the State when only a few hours old, and that their mothers were hired out to nurse the infants of the Wealthy. Superintendents of maternity homes admitted they kept no records, that once a child was sent away there was nothing by which it could be traced. "But don't you ever inquire how these babies are treated, whether they live or die?'\inquired Chairman Curran of Dr Charles S Wood,of the Union Park Maternity Home. "We keep no records at all." The testimony brought out the fact that 85 per cent of the unmarried patients in the "lying-in" hospitals are girls f}om out of the State who come to the city to hide their shame. "Wo oan't fnrniqli nil thp hahie* we are asked for," said F W Briney, / head of a sanitarium. "We have a yearly contract for advertising in two Chicago papers, in which we of- < fer babies for adoption, but the real purpose of these 'ad' investments is to solicit the patronage of expectant mothers," The committee learned that Dr Briney contracted with unmarried patients so that after giving birthto children they were hired out as nurses. Their own children, how- . ever, were reared on artificial food. "We make contracts with the girl mothers before their babies are born," said the witness. "Speedltfs." Recorder Broyles of Atlanta has discovered a new disease and a cure for it at the same time. It is"speeditis," and the only remedy for it is the extraction of "kale," commonly known as "long green," from the afflicted. according to one of the At-' lanta papers. The price of one dose is $25.75,and a second application is rarely found to be necessary. Mr Broyles says that the germ of "speeditis" lies dormant in every one.butcan be precipitated only after one purchases or drives an auto. The disease has reached the epidemic stage in Atlanta, and as a means of wiping it out, the Recorder is administering the same treatment to every body, white and black, rich and poor. We wonder how many cases of "speeditis" there are in Edgefield. Surely there are signs that the disease is rampant on the square every day, but what has been done toward administering tc it? We believe that Recorder Broyles' cure, namely the extraction of long green, wouia ao the work. By the way, how many stop. watches are there in Edgefield?? Edgefield Chronicle. Coughs and Consumption. Coughs and colds, when neglected, always lead to serious trouble of the lungs. The wisest thing to do when you have a cold that troubles you is to get a bottle of Dr King's New Discovery, You will get relief from the first dose, and finally the cough will disappear. 0 H Brown of Mus cadine, Ala, writes: ' My wife whs down in bed with an obstinate cough, and I honestly believe had it not been for Dr King's New Discovery, she would not be living to-day." Known for forty-three years as the best remedy for coughs and colds. Price 50c and[$1.00. Recommended by Kingstree.Drug Co and M L Allen. adv