The county record. [volume] (Kingstree, S.C.) 1885-1975, July 17, 1913, Page FOUR, Image 4
1
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I Is about cor
I Our store is
I ever. COM I
I King's!
SEGREGATING THE RACES. j
A Problem to Be Considered by
National Farmers' Union.
Raleigh, N C.July 14:?Chairman
Clarence Poe annouuces that the
programme committee of the National
Farmers' union has asked lo
cal unions at their next meetings to
discuss the problem of segregating
the races in the South's rural districts,
as is already the policy in the
towns. It is asserted that thousands
of white farmers are being driven
from their homes by the growing
number of negro farmers around
them and the consequent lack of adequate
white social life. The hope
is to develop a public sentiment which
will require negroes to buy land in
communities to themselves instead
of breaking up white communities b>
indiscriminately sandwiching white
1 " foi-morc tncrpfVipr Tn His
auu ucjjiu ioiuibiB ? ?
cussing the matter further, Mr Poe
said:
"For the good of both races, the
negroes should buy land and settle
as largely as possibly in neighborhoods
of their own. For example,
fifty negro families and fifty white
families together in a district can
have only half as good schools for
either race, and with regard to
churches, libraries, co-operative somotioa
cnr?inl mpptincand nearlv
all other agencies of vital civilization
I 0. J. Epps, General Manager
| J. M. Valentine, Auctions
Sell Yc
NELSON
Kl
Once more w(
our thanks for th(
us during the yeai
iness at Kinerstree
iness you gave us
We have mad
- and are now bette
than ever before.
So, when reac
place is Nelson's 1
iently located in
UinnV?Anl- TV?nV?l/n
I lilt; mgiicoi/ iiiciixx^
Epps & Me
ft L
UR N1
npleted, and i
^ ^ ca 1 * /V?t? 4- /\/4
uciicr ugiiLcu,
E AND SEE I
pee Dry
the same thing is true. To have j
half the community composed of a j
separate race cuts in half all the social
power for progress.
"The big fact we have to face is;
that in thousands and thousands of
communities in the South, the negro
farmers are not only subjecting the
white fanners to more or less disastrous
economic competition by their
lower standards of living, but in
many sections the growing number
of negroes is driving the white people
to the towns for social reasons.
When the white population in a community
becomes too small or too
scattered, when the white farmer's
wife and children find more negro
neighbors than white neighbors
around them, a tremendous motive
is given for moving away?and if
the farmer moves some negro will
probably buy his land at a sacrifice
because other white farmers have the
same feeling and do not care to buy
land in a predominantly negro community.
Such is the negro's flagrantly
unfair advantage for driving white
people off the farms and taking the
rural South for himself. Public sen
umeru must unu us a remeuj.
Bitter experiences are just underscored
life sermons, delivered without
invitation. But they are as
valuable as quinine to the .'sufferer
from malaria.
W. K. M
er E. J.
T~1?
IUI 1 uuo
I'S WAR
NGSTREE. S.
-w,w 7
3 make our bow to
3 generous patronai
rs we have been in tl
, and more especially
i j
last season.
ie a large addition 1
r prepared to ham
ly to sell your tobac
Warehouse, which is
Kingstree. We gus
t price at all times.
ilnlosh, -
EW S
makes a big
, and our facili
TC Vr?,, a ft* t
J 4-7 1 U U UI v t
Goods <
HELP 1HE KIDNEYS.
Kihqstree Readers are Learnioy the
Hay.
It's the little kidney ills?
The lime, weak or aching back? j
Tue unnoticed urinary disorders ?
That may lead to dropsy and
Bright's disease.
When the kidneys are weak,
Help them with Doan's Kidney)
Pills, I
A remedy especially for weak kid- ^
neys.
Doan's have been used in kidney
troubles for 50 years.
Endorsed by 30,000 people?endorsed
by citizens of this locality.
George June, Manning, S C, says:
"**- mo anil thp
illy MUUCJfO IIVUUICU HIV ?
kidney secretions were unnatural
and filled with sediment. My back
was lame and I didn't get much rest
at night. Doan's Kidney Pills removed
the lameness and soreness
and after taking this remedy, 1 felt
much better in eyery way."
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.
If you can learn to meet today's
trouble with a placid soul, tomorrow's
problems will come to you
with their answers in their hands.
"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.
Iclntosh, Floor Manager 8
Hester, Ass't Floor Manager |
lcco at j
niniiorf
tnuudt
r
i you in token of
you have given 8
le warehouse bus-1
^ . i 1 'j
r for the nice husto
our warehouse,
die your tobacco
r*r\ wymomVuay* fVio
'Wj X V^llIVIIlMV-/i. Uliv
the most convenirantee
to get you
Proprietors j
TORE
improvement
i / ? _ i
ties ior display
ilways welcorr
Co., SILAGE
FOR BEEF
CATTLE FEEDING
Attention lias frequently been culled
to the fuct that the cattle feeder pets
his Imprest profit not directly from
feedinp operations, but rather from the
increased productiveness of his land,
says the Iowa Homestead. But the
averape man likes to see a profit on
every branch of his operations. I'nless
live stock farming can be casried
on so that by and for itself it pays
well for the time occupied in carrying
it on, then no amount of screaming
from the house top will ever make the
live stock industry take permanent
root on the farms of the corn belt. ,
One of the experiment stations recently
finished up a bunch of steers
that were fed shelled corn, cottonseed
Admirers of Hereford cattle affirm
that as rustlers they are unequaled.
They will go farther for
a bite to eat or a drink of water
than any other breed. Herefords
will find and consume more waste
fer>d on a farm than any of the
thin sKinnoa oreeas. ueremruB arc
the bt-st feeders and will make
j more pounds of gain for feed consumed
than other cattle. They are
unexcelled In beef type and have
plenty of scale, good bone, a blocky
conformation, good ribs, heavy
quarters and thick loins. The HereI
ford cow pictured was a prize win- g
ner at Chicago last fall.
meul and clover hay. These steers
were purchased at $5.55 per
pounds, and they were sold for fB.2&
but In spite of this good sprMo itt
value the net profit per steer, 'was
$3.37. It cost $14.23 to make a hundred
pounds of gain.on these steers, computing
the feed at regular market
prices. In' an adjoining feed lot a
similar number of steers were fed the
same length of time, but in this case
corn silage was used in place of clover
hay. These steers were bought at the
same price?namely. $5.55 per hundred
pounds?and tbey sold 10 cents per
pound higher than the steers fed on
hay, or for $8.35 per hundred pounds.
Their gains were made at a cost of
$9.88 per hundred pounds, and the net
profit i>er steer in this case was $20.96.
These results are worth pondering
over by those who propose to follow
along the same old fashioned route in
feeding cattle. The cheap gains in this
case were due to the fact that a given
^acreage produces a larger amount of
good fattening food in the form of ensilage
than can be produced in any
other way. The man who tries to finish
cattle on dry feed alone must in the
future compete with those who take
this short cut to cheap gains. There
can be only one outcome of a situation
like thie?namely, that the practice of
those who use the cheapest meat making
foods will be the basis of cost In
the future. Those who cannot bring
the coet down to this minimum point
by the use of this comparatively Inexpensive
food will be eliminated from
the business or they must continue to
carry it on at a loss, relying wholly for
their profit upon the effect of feeding
operations on the productiveness of
their land. As said before, this profit
will not suffice in the case of the average
man. If dry feed cannot be fed at
a profit then quit feeding dry feed. If
anoiigiro roriimps the cost of making
gains anywhere from 2 to 4 cents a
pound, then how is this competition to
be met by those who do not feed ensilage?
The Best Hot Weather Tonic
GROVB'S TASTELESS chill TONIC enriches the
blood, builds up the whole system and will wonderfully
strengthen and fortify you to withstand
the depressing effect of the hot summer. 50c.
FRON
to our place
ying goods ar
le.
KINGST1
w
Tooth
We sell Tooth Brushes th
Every brush bearing our
to shed its bristles. The b
best quality; securely fixed
conform to. the natural cont
Cleaning the teeth becoir
you use one of our good bn
to scratch the enamel or
enough to remove all forei*
| We import all brushes be
most reliable foreign brush
hind the goods.
Kingstree ?
Kingstree,
I Go To
WHEN yoiPNEED A
A record of more thj
hind him. With a bur
on hand, he is always:
Also Feed ai
J. L. Stuckey,
[the wood everlastn
C SASH, DOOR
I Lengthen the Lif
< Jg&\ ASK YOL
1 4. Wether]
1 LARGEST MFRS. SOUTH,
| ?
{90000000000c
I Tobacco Planters o
Dear sirs:-Brin?
and get the high dolk
make our stable your
number of hitch stalls,
they last, and while h<
you our line of
Buggies, Sur
Mower
Harness,Rol
We will swap dolla
/-mv linn -frkY* nocVi ar
I VUI llltv IV/i VUUXi VI V
I* YOURS'
0 Williamsburg Li
Q Thos. McCutchen, Mgr.
I
Wi
: of business. I
* j J j 1 %
e oeiier man f
JEE, S. C. |
D 1 1/
urusues
I
iat give greatest use. I
name is strictly guaranteed not ^
ristles in our brushes are of the '
in place and trimmed so that they
;our of the teeth. If
les an anticipated pleasure when I
ishes. They are not hard enough
hurt the gums, but just pliable
rn substances from the teeth. j
aring our name from one of the
i iiiancx o, nui/oc ^uaiauicc is
?
)rug Company,
South Carolina
==^V
Stuckey
? R
NYTHIN6 IN HORSEFLESH ^
an twenty years stands be- 'H
ich of nice horses and mules ' K9
ready for a sale or a swap.
ad Livery Stables.
Lake City, S. C. 1^
LOVMCQ<n
S AND BLINDS |
e of Your Buildings. (
JR DEALER OR
horn & Son, I
CHARLESTON, S. C. #
f Wilta^^Cciui^g
r vonr tnhaccn to Kinerstree *
ir for same, and while here X
headquarters. We have a A J
which are yours as long as 8 ?
>re we will be glad to show 0 H
reys, Wagons, QM
s, Rakes, Xl
aes, Whips,&c. < H
rs with you on anything in f |H
wed paper. Come to see us. C HI
ro PLEASE, S H|
ve Stock Company, vflj
KINGSTREE, S. C. X J
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