University of South Carolina Libraries
P | Professional Cards. | I DR. A. a EADDY, S JOHNSONVILLE, S. C. M Office hours: 8 to 10 a. m., 2 to3p. m. xgj and by appointment. : j o i O Ivmce at residence. o-io-vm DR. R. J, MLCABE, ' Dentist. KINGSTREE, . S. C Office Next to Court House Square. PHILIP H. ARROWSMITH ATTORNEY-AT-LAW LAKE CITY, - - S. C. W. Leland Taylor, DENTIST, Office over Dr W V Brockingtou's Store, KINGSTREE, - S. C. |21-tf. fd. D. Nesmith IBS DUN I I5? I ? Iake city. - - - s. c. Benj. McINNES, M. R.C. V. S. B. Kater McINNES. M. D.. V. M. D. VETERINARIANS. One of us will be at Kingstree the first Monday in each month, at Heller's StableB. 9-28-tf E. n. BEATY L. H. SIAU Georgetown, S. C. Beaty & Siau (Over Bank of Georgetown) Civil Engineering, j n ; ILana aurveying Farm Drainage Levels General Contracting Concrete Walks a Specialty 3-13-4m KINGSTREE Lodge, No. 46 A. F.M. meets Thursday before full moon each nj&nth. Visiting brethren are cordially invited. M H Jacobs, W M. E L Montgomery, Sec. 2-27-ly ^ -e^- -i?i IV Kingstree Lodge M Knights of Pythias r T Regular Conventions Every 2nd and 4th Wednesday nights Visiting brethren always welcome, Castle Hall 3rd story Gourd in Building. P. Stoll U. C. R. N. Speigner, K of R & S. Kingstree 'j^jaWjEs^ CAMP NO-27. I/jiwrui Tnr? 2S/ Visiting choppers nor. il*lly invited to conv. ?&F" np and sit on a stomp Vyy or hang about on tbs B. E. Clarkson, 9HB 87 12m. Con. Com. LIGHTNING RODS. H. L. WhitlocK, LsHe City. S.C. ffi&fi Spscial Salts Atfsnt. H Representing the Largest Manufacturers of All HHb Kinds BBBjwcd Copper and Galvanized Section Rods ^^^^^^Bdorsed by the Highest Scientific Authorities Iand Fire Insurance Companies). E COPPER WIRE CABLES. ALL SIZES. Hfi^QB^Ptur Full Cost Guarantee Given'with Each Job. HB^riselloo does margin of profit, dividing comH^^^^Biissiou with mv customers. S-7-tf I Roughs, Colds, Watery Eyes mr*** Cured to a Day by taking Cheeney's Expectorant? also cures consumption, whooping I cough, droppings from the nose, and throat, bronchitis, and all throat and lung troubles. Cheeney's Expec torant a liquid preparation, tested ?for 50 years. Try it. Safe, sure I and satisfactory. Druggists 25c and 50c. ll-7-7mp-adv. ILjJfJd iriai ivgi Altf meats bought and sold jr cash. Don't ask for .-editCpps' MarKet I Ac?d.my ? MilliSt., j onHnHM - a I Legal Advertisements, fi ?*<; *$ $ *$ *<? <$> j Foreclosure Sale. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, COUNTY ( F WILLIAMSBURG. Court of Common Pleas. W M Brockinton and W B Brockinton, ! Trustees, Plaintiffs, against Peter PendergTass Lela Smith. Lila Pendergrtss and Arthur Pendergrass, ; defendants. Notice is hereby given, that, under and by virtue of an order issued out of ! the Court of Common Pleas of theconnty of Williamsburg, in the above enti-1 tlei action, bearing date the 7th day of : May.iypi, to me directed. I will sell to , the highest bidder for cash, before the ' court house door in the town of Kingstree, county of Williamsburg and State of South Carolina, on the first Monday , in June, 191:5, the same being the 2nd day of said month, during the legal j hours of sale, the following described | tract of land: All the right, title i^nd interest of * j Henry Pendergrass, it b^ng the one fourth thereof, in and t(Tall that certain piece, parcel or tract of land meas-1 uring and containing sixty-two (62) acres, more or less, and bounded as fol-; lows: North by lands of Elsie Fulton; j , South by lands of July Patterson; East i i by lands of Mrs V T Scott and West by lands of the estate of J S Hrockinton i and McClary's land. The above described tract of land being same purchased by the late Sharper Pendergrass from the late S F Pendergrass. Purchaser to pay for papers, and if bid is not complied with on day of sale, said lands will be resold on the same or some subsequent salesday.at the risk of the purchaser. H O Britton, Clerk of Court, C P and G S, Williamsburg county. I Dated May 8, 1913. o-lo-3t Summons for Belief. (COMPLAINT SERVED). THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, ' COUNTY OF WILLIAMSBURG. Court of Common Pleas. Georgianna McGill, Cloe McCollough James Boyd. Emma Frazier, Amireta Singletary, Sarah Boyd, Leonard Boyd, Serena M Boyd, Mary Ella Singletary, Mary Ann Boyd, Sam McFadden, Jr, Mary Robinson, Rhoda Jackson, John McFadden, Jane Grant, Rosa McFadden, James Perkins, Eliza Brown. Glover McCollough, Mary McColloueh, Miner McCollough, Sarah McCollough. Henry Nesmith, Julian Nesmith. Judy Moore, Lawrence Tisdale. Siller Tisdale, and Archie Boyd, Carolina Boyd. Alma McFadden,Viola Perkins and Ella Williams, by their Guardian ad Litem,C E Saint-Amand. Plaintiffs, against Raisbell McCollough, James Wesley McFadden and Paro Tisdale,Cloe Tisdale Jarrott Tisdale, and others, unknown heirs-at-law of Nancy Tisdale, deceased, Defendants. To the Defendants Raisbell McCollough, James Wesley MFadden and Paro Tisdale, Cloe Tisdale. Jarrott Tisdale, and others, unknown heirs-at-law of Nancy Tisdale. deceased: You are hereby summoned and required to answer the complaint in this action, 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 Kingstree 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. LeRoy Lee, Plaintiffs' Attorney. Dated May 9, A D 1913. To the absent Defendants, James Weslev Mr Fa/Men and Paro Tisdale. Cloe Tisdale and Jarrott Tisdale, and the other heirs at-law of Nancy Tisdale, deceased: Take Notice?That the original summons in this action, of which the foregoing is a copy, together with the complaint, was filed in the office of the Cleric of the Court of Common Pleas of Williamsburg County, State of Souto Carolina,on the 9th day of May, A D 1913. LeRoy Lee, Plaintiffs' Attorney. Dated May 9, 1913. 5-15-6t Final DischargeNotice is hereby given that on the 7th day of June, 1913, at 11 o'clock in the forenoon, I will apply to P M Brockinton. Judge of Probate Williamsburg county, for Letters Dismissory as General Guardian of the persons and es? ?? ! ? * J T TT7 tates oi ai v? niieneaa.juanna wnivehead, Robt P Whitehead and Benjamin C Whitehead. I M Whitehead, 5-15-4t Guardian. Trespass Notice. We forbid all persons from trespassing, hunting or nsliing on lands of the undersigned. Willis Read. 5-15-3tp. Amelia Read. Notice to Creditors. Notice is hereby given that letters of administration on the estate of J T Gaster, deceased, have been granted me, and all creditors are hereby directed to present statements, duly attested, and all persons indebted to said estate are requested to make payment to the undersigned. Mrs Frances T Gaster, Administratrix of the estate of J T Gaster, deceased, 5-'-?2-3tp FOR SALEBrick In any quantity to suit purchas er. The Best Dry Press Machine-made vTa-oTmr ^ Special shapes made to order. Correpondenee solicited betore placing you? orders. w. R. FUNK * Undressed LumberI always have on hand a lot of undressed lumber (board and framing) at my mil? near Kingstree. for sale at the lowest price for good material. See or write me for further information, etc. F. H. HODGE. If you have anything for sale try an ad in our "special" column. Foreclosure Sale. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, COUNTY OF WILLIAMSBURG. Court cf Common Pleas. S A Riser. Plaintiff, against M W Brown, Defendant. Notice is hereby given that, under and by virtue of an order issued out <>f the Court of Common Pleas of the county of Williamsburg, bearing date the 7th day of May, 19P>. to me direct ed, I will sell to the highest bidder, for cash, before the court house door in the town of Kingstree. county of Williamsburg and State of South Carolina, on (he first Monday in June, 1913, the same being the 2nd day of said month.during the legal hours of sale, the following described tracts of land: All that certain piece, parcel or tract of land lying, situate and being in Suttons township, county of Williamsburg and State o' South Carolina, knrfwn as the Bob Green tract, and i>ounded and described as follows, to wit: On the North by lands of J T Cooper; West by lands of estate of Klackwell Gordon; South by lands of R P Hinnant and estate of Gordon, and East by lands of A B Cooper, and said to contain fifty (5<>) acres, more or less, the said tract of land having been conveyed to me, the said M W Brown, by Blakeley-McCollough Corporation and conveyed to it by E F and Reecy McAllister; Also, all that certain piece, parcel or tract of land situate, lying and being in Snttons township, county of Williamsburg, State of South Carolina, adjoining the fifty-acre tract hereinbefore described, and containing ten (10) acres, more or less, and bounded and described as follows, to wit: On the North by lands of A B Cooper; South by lands of R P Hinnant; East by S D G Lowery and West by lands of R P Hmnanr; the said tract was conveyed to me by W G Ogburn on the 26th day of December, 1905, and is recorded in the office of the Clerk of the Court of Williamsburg county in Book .page . and is the land upon which M W Brown now resides. Purchaser to pay for papers, and if bid is not complied with on day of sale, said lands will be resold on the same or sAme enhsAnnpnt salesdav. at the risk of the purchaser. II O Britton, Clerk of Court of C P and G S, Williamsburg county. 5-15-3t Dated the 8th day of May, 1913. ? - 1 1H I MM ?> ,>! 111 Wl?M?? ? 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 a* 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 election, and shall have paid, six 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 who 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, Clerk of Board ^ THI BEST ^ / .IS!!?* A ( rwr ?' ivnm ?i lSSSSSSX |b,KldneyTroublM, Catarrh and 1 ins H "6-DROPS" I STOP THE PAIN W Gives Quick Relief k It stops the aohes and pains, re- f lleres swollen Joints and muscles M ?acts almost like magio. Destroys flr the excess urlo acid and Is Quick. Mf safe and sure In its results. No W other remedy like it. 8ample Kg free on request. 80LD BY DRUGGISTS JjP w una uuuar per ootue, or sent pre- HI tfi paid upon receipt of price if not v; n obtainable in your locality. jw m SWANSON RHEUMATIC CURE CO. /J? 1W LekeJEtreet 3^ ^^p^^^Reat Remedy V Coeatlpetlon.SickHeadeohe H Seer Stomach. Belehlag end JRj B Liver Troubles. 15c Per M?j Im rt Preni?U? Vw 1 KZOU.ACtlC.nUS. PIMPLES, SCALDS, ? J wms. WOUNDS, SALT RHEUM, RfflS A H WORM. Eta. quickly huM by listen the S I "5- DROPS" SALVE f J >80 fw Bex at Prutflctq A "For sale," "For rent," "Lost," "Wanted"?makes no difference what it is, let it be known through our "special" ad column. Results will surely follow. RUB-MY-TISM Will cure your Rheumatism Neuralgia, Headaches, Cramps, 3olic, Sprains, Bruises, Cuts and Sums, Old Sores, Stings of Insects Btc. Antiseptic Anodyne, used in:erpally and externally. Price 25c. THE "SUPERIOR" SEX Ey ERNEST W0LLE7T. Miss Belinda, at her summer home, was setting out a bed of vegetables with the help of the man she em, ploys by the day when she can entico him from his old flat-bottomed fishing ; boat. :i was reai Binari wi juu <.u j ! them there little plants in the city J and bring them out here." he said. , ' "You'll have tomatoes and eggp'ant before any one else. I don't see how y'ou ever come to think of them things, j It beats ail how some women can plan ahead more'n men folks. No.-.', that patch of onions and lettuce you i put In last fall before you.went, away ! has turned out fine, ain't it?" "I'm glad. Cassfus. to hear you sneak highly of women's ability," sriid j Miss Belinda. "I think we women | will have to get you to work for r.s | this summer." "Ain't I worktn* for you now?" ask- j J e<J Cassius, m>stifled. "Some o' them | j fillers that go by to the creamery , j mornin's before you get down to the j garden run me 'bout workin' so much | for a woman. But I always say that j T Hnn't sen whv vrrnr mnnev atn't. I pood as anybody's. And I will say this. Miss Relinda, it's a sight surer : than some folks' money." "Thank you. Cassius. "I'm happy to j know that you're satisfied and that you i believe in women. I hope you'll help women get the ballot this fall. "Get the ballot? How are the wom?n expectin' to get the ballot?" Cassius laughed. "They're expecting to get it in this j state through the referendum." Miss Relinda paused, but as Cassius did not appear much enlightened she continued: "You see, the question of worn- 1 an suffrage is to be voted upon next November in Wisconsin." "I ain't heard nothin' about it." Cassius thrust a little seedling into the ground with masculine roughness that ended its young life. "What do women folks know about politics, anyway?" "Even you don't appear to be fully \ informed on all the present issues," de- 1 clared Miss Belinda, laughing. "Well, I ain't never been one to believe in women gettin* out o' their ! place." "Just what is a woman's place, I'd really like to know." "Well, I think a woman's place is at i home. I don't never want to see my wife gallivantin' round to the polls. Her place is at home." "That reminds me," said Miss Be- j linda pleasantly. "I need some one to- i morrow to help my maid wash the curtains. Can your wife come as usual?" "Well, I ain't sure 'bout it. She's scrubbin' the postofflce and hardware store floors and woodwork this week. I does beat all how busy she is. She j ain't hardly been home a hull day j since the spring house cleanin* be- I 99 gun. "Oh, then she doesn't stay in her place all the time," Miss Belinda remarked sweetly. Cassius wiped his hand across his : perspiring forehead and left a trail of I garden soil on his perplexed brow. | 'Well, anyway, she ain't mlxln' up with man's business," he answered, doggedly. "Oh, have we a woman postmaster this year, and Isn't Mr. Beasley running the hardware store now? Is there a woman doing that? I must be quite behind the times if there are so many changes here." "Everything's just the same as it always was. Even if you be kind o' iaughin' at me, Miss Belinda, you know mighty well that scrubbin' floors ain't men's business." "No, I know it's not considered man's work. It's a little too strenuous for. most of the men in this neighborhood. It would be a rather pitiful sight to see men, whose hands aren't used to holding much except a jackknife or a Ashing pole on their knees all day, pushing a scrubbing brush across the floor, wouldn't it?" Casslus' only reply to this question was a grunt as he rose to bring a pall of water for the plants. On his return he stood with a rather majestic poise over Miss Belinda's kneeling figure and said: "The polls ain't decent for women. I've said it before, and I say it again, women folks ain't got no business In such a dirty place." "Where is the voting place in this town?" asked Miss Belinda. "Well, since the old town hall burned down we've been votin' in the Oakland district school." "Oh, that's where your daughter teaches. Dear me, you must hate to have Amanda in such a dirty place so rrmnVi nf th# time." Casslus did not deign to reply. He gave Miss Belinda a scornful look and continued his york in his customary leisurely style. But at noon, having announced that he could not come back after dinner, because he had promised his wife to try to catch a flsh for supper, he said: "Well, Miss Belinda, I guess there ain't no way you can deny that God made man before he made woman and gave him the first place to the hull of creation." Miss Belinda laughed. Then as she watched Cassius slouch away she said to herself: "And our destiny Is left to the lords of creation!" Then There's No Row. "Gracious! That noise across the street sounded like a pistol shot." "Don't be alarmed. That was Mr. Gribber slamming the door of his residence as he left for town." "Does he always slam the door so bard?" "Not every morning. There are some mornings when he and Mrs. Gribber don't meet at the breakfast table." Scrap Book Hit Test of the Antique. John B. Herreshoff, the blind yacht builder of Bristol. R. I., was a guest at a large party in Bristol when the moo Hlonlnrinc a f*nhi. livoICOO ?* t*o piuuuij UiOptUJUid u VMW* net just received from au antique shop In New York and bought for $700 as a product of the year 1710. It was observed by one of the other guests that Herreshoff alone refrained from favorable comment, although the old man had examined the cabinet by his delicate touch. Finding an opportunity, the man approached IlerreshofT and asked liira the reason for his silence. Herreshoff chuckled. "I'll let you into a secret if you don't breathe a word of it to the good Mrs. B.," he said. The promise having been given. Herreshoff led the way with his unerring directness to the cabinet and. extracting a drawer, he ran the tips of*bis fingers lightly over the bottom and chuckled again: "Circular saws in 1710? Poor yirs. B.!" "Goodby." We say It for an hour or for years; We say It smiling, say it choked with tears; We say it coldly, say it with a kiss. And yet we have no other wort than this? wwuv/ * We have no dearer word for our heart's friend, * For him who Journeys to the world's far end And scars our soul with going. Thus we say, As unto him who steps but o'er the way, "Goodby!" Alike to those we love and those we hate We say no more at parting. At life's gate To him who passes out beyond earth's sight We cry, as to the wanderer for a night, "Goodby!" ?Grace Denio Litchfield. Hard to Catch Up. Two Silesians seated in a music hall began to argue about the music of Wagner. The argument as It progressed grew heated. The upshot was that the younger challenged the older Silesian to a duel. But the older Silesia a declined to fight "No, no," he said. "I refuse to meet you. The risks are not equal. You. you see. are a bachelor, whereas I am a married man with three children. I'll tell you what to do. Go get married and wait till you've a family as large as mine. Then when our risks are alike come and challenge me again." The younger man complied. He married. Three years passed, and one day three years later he went, accompanied by a nursemaid, to his opponent's home. "Here I am," he said fiercely. "My wife is at home. In this coach are my three children. Now for the duel." But the older man shook his head. "Not yet awhile," he said. "I have five now." Shut Her Up. In every large hotel the chambermaids are always ready and willing to perform a personal service for the sake of the customary tip that accompanies It Remembering this, the woman tourist who was stopping at a famous hotel In Cairo rang at last for assistance after vainly struggling for fifteen minutes with the Intricacies of the rear fastenings of her gown. To her dismay, one of the Arab porters responded to her ring. "Madame requires something?" His voice was soft and sweetly modulated. "Yes. Please send up one of the maids to hook my dress." "Ah, If that Is alL" He bowed and waved a deprecating hand. "Madame desires to be shut up? I can shut her up." Which he did. Why He Didn't Like Pistole. Discussing pistols as dueling weap ons, a Paris paper sought the views of a man who had the reputation of au expert on the held of honor. He at once began to rail at duels with pistols. He could not bear even to speak of them. The fact was that he had once himself at an encounter of that kind received a ball in the shoulder. "Then you disapprove of them simply because you were defeated?" "Why, I was not defeated." "What!" "No; I was a second. You may well believe that I promised myself never to mix again In affairs or uiai son. However, one day I had to accompany a friend on the field. He had asked it of me as a personal favor. I could not refuse. But I insisted upon one condition." "What was that?' "That I should climb a tree during the firing." "A good scheme." "You think so? Well, I was wounded again. My friend fired in the air!" Real Kind of Her. ?- K A/1 ??ln? " OQ XT a Toflr "1 reiueujutrr ucanu6, Dorothy NeviU in her reminiscences, "of a very good natured lady who was always helping a relative of hers who was very extravagant Having one summer lent this feather brained creatnre a considerable sum of money, what was her surprise at the end of the season to be applied to again in order that what were described as some pressing debts might be settled. "V am very sorry,' said the kind hearted lady, 'but I can't possibly help you again just now. In order to lend you that money some time ago I was forced to go without a motor this season.' "'Dear mer was the ply. 'If I had only known that I should bare been dellgbtend to lend yon miner " / THE DOCTOR ' II IN CAMP I By M. QUAD I Copyright, 1913. by Associated Lit- 9| erary Press. SB - - ? 1 mlnAM emit xou may wuuutr uu? iuc wiuu^ , , along without a doctor in camp, and there are indeed times enough when the services of a skillful physician were in demand. That winter we put in at Calico Flats there was somebody on the sick list a." the time, and there ! were da^s when we had three or four I patients in the hospital at ouce. As to medicines, our mainstay was a , : hot sweat. When a man began to: dump around we didn't lose time by feeling his pulse or looking at his ! tongue. Three or four stones were put into the fire to heat, blankets borrowed i for the occasion, and when we got * 1 steam on the knots and twists and i kinks in that chap's case had to un| ravel. He'd come out as long and fiat| and thin and white as you please, and if any one pointed a finger at him for the next week he'd cry like a baby. Next to the sweat we had decoctions of herbs, barks and roots. H But, as I said at the start, sickness became so prevalent and our plain / v? remedies had so little effect that it C was finally decided to send up to Sac- 1 ramento for a doctor. The idea was fl to have him come down and brace us jfl all up and leave medicines and reme- 1 dies, and the expense was to be borne I by a shake purse. I "You see." said Judge Perdue as we I j talked the matter over, "we don't want | a doctor that we may brag over the 1 other camps. We want one because I we are sick in the old fashioned way." I "That's it!" chorused half a dozen I voices. "We want the old fashioned sickness that we used to enjoy so much at home. We want a doctor that will * ^ come in and say we are goin' to die for sure and then turn to and cure us. We are jest fairly cryln' for doses of : them drugs that used to lift a feller outer bed and make him think he'd' bit into moldy pumpkin! Lord, how I would like to come down with a case of old fashioned bilious fever!" A letter was sent to a dealer In the j town asking him to forward a doctor, and In about five days along be came. He was a young man of twenty-four. i JUSt out ui cvuege 111 tue euat auu juoi> j landed on the slope without a dollar in his pocket, and all he brought to camp with him was a lancet, some prescrip! tlon blanks and a stick of salve for ! making sticking plasters. | There were four men In hospital that day, and after a bit the doctor entered to take a look at them. It happened that he came to big Jim Smith first. Smith was threatened with inflammatory rheumatism and was in no mood to take nonsense "Run out your tongue," said the doctor as he bent over the man. Big Jim displayed it. but in such a begrudging way that it was plain to see that he thought It all bosh. ^ 4 "Your pulse," said the doctor, as be reached over for Jim's great paw. "Pulse? I ain't got any!" growled Jim. "Oh, yes. you have. Here it is In your wrist Keep stUl for a moment" "Stranger," said Jim, after the doctor had dropped his hand, "d'ye mean to tell me that ye kin feel a man's wrist and tell what ails his insldes?" "Yea, In a measure." "Excuse my not callin' you a liar, but some of the boys will do it tor me afore you are an hour olderf' "What are your symptoms?" asked the doctor. "Never had any." "But how do you feel?" "Sick." "How were you taken?' "Stranger, what are you drlvln' at?" demanded Jim as he sat up In bed. "Have you got pains?' "In course I have. D'ye s'pose I'd be lyin' flat on my back here If anything less'n a ton was holdln' me down?' "Do you ache?' "Rayther." "Any fever?" "Waal, I git away with a quart of cold water at a gulp." The doctor sat and studied the case for a few minutes, and then he came oVionfTT nrhan th<? rnmmlt VYCl IU tuo o uuuwj "?v.v tee had assembled and said: "Gentlemen, the case of Big Jim Is a serious one. He needs a change of diet scenery and air. My advice Is that you brace blm up as well as you can on chicken soup and beef tea and then send him oft for a trip to Cuba." When he was going out he said he would drop In next morning and have a look at the other cases, but he never had the chance. When the boys found that he had come without even a dose of quinine and they heard him talk about chicken soup and trips to Cuba for a man who hadn't $5 to his name they waited upon him in a sort of hilarious body, and at midnight he went up the trail a* rqf? nt twelve miles an hour. with a crowd behind him aching for his ears as relics. Next day we heated half a ton of rocks, took six or eight blankets and gave Big Jim such a sweat that all his toe nails shed off. and rather than be cured the same way the other men got well. "I did have some faith in the chaj," exclaimed Jim, "jest a lttle bit until he axed my symptoms. That floored me. The idea of sendin' 200 miles for a doctor to walk In on ye and not be able to tell symptoms from the all firedest backache a man ever had, topped off with chills gallopln' up and down the spine wall! I'm only sorry that you moved the procession on bins afore 1 was able to head it"