University of South Carolina Libraries
? Go To II ^Id^F WHEN YOU NEED IS A record of more thar hind him. With a bunc] on hand, he is always re Also Feed anc J. L. Stuckey, IL I THE PEOPLI I F EjP In pint FURS AIV H. A. Mil I PR - W. C. HEMINGWAY, President Bank of I Capita Heming^ FARMERS! We ai you with your crops tl your needs now. Conn over with our Presider do for you. f THERE IS SUM I a r1^ Without doubt there's i men! than a Camera. The pictures. Your friends for you, and besides, it's I ing nappy times. Why i be prepared to take a goo ana Photographic Supplie will be surprised to know you can buy for a few dol Kingstree Di ^Kmgstree, i uz Ratal Slat* Victoria Mafa H.M.dUr Hie four derfpns of Cortright M made in any of the following way i 1. Stamped from Tin-plate and pi 2. Stamped from Tm-plate and pi 3. Stamped from Tin-plate and Ga 4. Stamped from special tight-coat Each and every genuine Cortright Trade-mark, " Cortright Reg. U. i ForS For Sale by William LET US PRINT YOUR L Stuckey j FTHING IN HORSEFLESH II i twenty years stands be- 11 n of nice horses and mules | \ ady for a sale or a swap, j I I Livery Stables. I Lake City, S. C. S :'s market] resh Oysters I and quart sanitary cans, daily. : FRESH MEATS AND FISH ON HAND DAILY JD HIDES , PROPRIETOR J. A. DOYLE, Cashier i Hemingway I $15,000 vay, S. C. ? x. f ^ re in a position to assist liis year. Let us know e in and talk the matter it and see what we can F i ENJOYMENT IN 1 mera, lothing affords more enjoyjre's great delight in taking are always willing to pose ;he one sure way of record lot get a Camera now and d picture? We sell Cameras i! s. Give us a call and you j what a splendid Camera lars. < rug Company, South Carolinaj V>?jW Oriental ShinfU eta! Shingles as shown above are s: tinted Red. tinted Green. | Jvanized by a hand-dipping process, ed Galvanized Sheets. Metal Shingle is embossed with this S.Pat. Off." . ? | alt by " sburg Hardware CoETTER OR NOTE HEADS 3 /"X i bjbhhhhhhhibhhh Lameness g! _ I Sloan's Liniment is a speedy, reliable remedy for lameness in horses ana farm stock. Here's proof. Lameitu Gone "I had a horse sprain his thonlder by pulling, and he was so lame he could not carry foot at all. I got a bottle of your Liniment and put it on four times, and in three days he showed no lameness at all, and made a thirty mile trip besidea."-iraJMr B. Alortford, La Saiis, U For Splint and Thrush g 1 nave usea jiosn a Laiuuicni uii ? fine mare for splint and cured her. This makes the third horse I've cured. Hare recommended it to my neighbors for thrush and they say it is fine. I find it the best Liniment I ever used. I keep on hand your Sure Colic Cure for mrself and neighbors, and I can certainly recommend it for Colic."?& ? Smith, McDonough, Go. SLOANS LINIMENT is a quick, safe remedy for poultry roup, canker and bumble-foot Try it For Reap sad Caakat "Slorn's liniment is the speed!est and surest remedy for poultry roup and canker in all its forms, especially for canker in the srtDdpipo/^3TP. $ioM. Imffjaffrmy. N. IL At all Dealer*. tfs? 80s.' A $L09 Road S loan's Bosk on Horses. Crttfa, Hogs sad Poekryi soot Croo. DB.tAKLS.SKUN.ftc, tetn,Rm. I n.... J TaiM Raia* LOW iMU-mii nates Open to Ihr Public Will Be Hide for the Following Special Occasions VIA THE ATLANTIC COAST LINE Standard Railroad of tbe South. New Orleans, La. United Daughters of the Confederacy. November 11-15. Dates of sale, November 8,9, 10, 11. Final limit, November 19. 1913, except that by deposit of ticket and payment of $1.00 an extension until December 6 may be obtained. Fares apply from all stations. Augusta, Ga.. Georgia-Carolina Fair, Nov-mber 1-15. Dates of sale, November 5 to 14 inclusive, and for trains scheduled to arrive Augusta before noon November 15. Final limit, November 17. 1913. Fares apply to points in South CaroQna. Augusta, Ga. Negro Fair Association, November 18-21. Dates of sale, November 17 to 20,inclusive, and for trains scheduled to rriv? Animate before noon November 21. Finaf limit, November 28. 1913. Farls apply from points in South Carolina. For rates, schedules, reservations and any further information apply to Ticket Agents of the ATLANTIC COAST LINE Standard Railroad of the South or write the undersigned, W. J. CRAIG. Passenger Traffic Manager. T. t. WHITE, General Passenger Agent, WILMINGTON. N. C. 8-30-11-15 If you owe us on subscription don't put us to the trouble and expense of mailing you a statement. Look at the label on your paper and see. It costs us about $25 to mail out 1,000 statements and at the low price of $1.00 a year for the paper we can't afford this extra expense. RED DEVIL^klMM^ ^ f i hat gets the gcnrs NP^yrosj?)>^?| ' I r fere the tfcrrm get ^ ]w nn-i tablespoocfu! of Hcd Deri] Lt* i reived in & pint of wai..r, tL c iUu td to the slop or roft feed for tin F i egS 'ed fo k?E" night and momir.g iLronghont tho year, wiU PREVENT :.o Ura aad worms. Orms becoma worms, and wormn n:k.? hogj rick. Give me a chance % ;.t the?o germs and worms and I'll SAVE YOt'R HOGS Red Devil Lye. j I?f BTG CANS mm r Ffc cort yon only *^ (. I 't ,'Mi Btii the Losi Pries !* To Prevent Blood Poisoning apply at once the wonderful old reliable P&. PORTER'S ANTISEPTIC HEALING OII<4 "orgies) dressing that relieves pain lo^bnll at Um same time. Not a liniment 23c. 30c. P .00. f * I . k. BENDING FORWARD. I Why It la an Eaaier Operation Than Bending Backward. Can you stoop and touch the floor with your lingers without bending your knees? Any child can do it, and any man or woman who has not grown stiff through lack of exercise ought to be able to do it. But no one except a contortionist can bend a3 far beckward as he ?an forward. The reason for this is threefold. The human body is so designed that bending is easiest in the direction in which it is most useful. We can see on the ground in front of us; we cannot see behind us. Our arms are placed so as to work in harmony with our eyes, ahead of us, ? * 1*3 TTT i 1. ?:.t. nox Denina us. vve want to uy things we can see. Therefore it is a wise provision that enables us to keep our balance when leaning forward more easily than when leaning backward. The weight of our bodies rests normally upon our heels, and our feet extend forward to take up our weight when we stoop. Again, the muscles of our bodies are massed where they will give us most power. The biggest and strongest groups of muscles are on our backs and the backs of our legs. When we lift any weight it is this great chain of muscles that extends from the heel in successive links to the base of the skull that gives us the power. These muscles, when relaxed, are capable of great extension, in order that we may be able to bend far forward. In tension they hold us erect. The muscles on the front of our body, with the exception of that tremendously powerful ligament in front of the hip joint, are comparatively thin and weak. If we bend far backward they are not strong enough to pull us up again. The only parts of the spine that are capable of much backward bending are at the neck and waist. But at the waist the spines on the back of the vertebrae are so large and thick that when we bend backward they comfr together and prevent us from going any further. Then that powerful ligament in front of the hip joint is there for the express purpose of preventing us from falling backward, and it is not capable of much stretdning. All these structural and mechanical details explain why we cannot bend nearly so far backward as forward. Onr bodies are designed for stooping forward and were never meant for backward bending, which would, anyway, be of no use. ?New York Press. Gratitud* Bahind a Nam*. During 1608 Sir Christopher Newport while cruising off the coast of North Carolina ran into a very severe storm. After being tossed about on the ocean for several days his ship was driven by the wind into Chesapeake bay and landed at a certain "point." Exhausted by his ? i .V L - t A struggle wim me ocean ue iuuuu "comfort at last within this harbor" and he gave it the name of "Point Comfort." After some years other places along the Atlantic seaboard were given the same name, and as the Virginia point was the oldest the word "Old" was added to distinguish it from the others.?Ladies' Home Journal. Jumped a Thousand Hurdles. The craze for strange records began a great many years ago. There was an elderly London omnibus driver Darned Priestly, who at Hull, in 1863, jumped 1,000 hurdles each three feet six inches high in sixtyone and a half minutes. It is said that this record nas never since been equaled. Priestly began omnibus driving in the same year, 1863, and during his forty-air years in the service of the London General Omnibus company he drove busses a distance of about 850,000 miles.? Strand Magazine. Discouraging. Mr. Jordan was touring by motorcar and arrived at a crowded village inn quite late in the evening. There was no spare bed to be had, which was a great disappointment, as he was tired and very much disliked the thought of driving farther that night. "Haven't you at least a bundle of hay you can give me ?" he demanded of the landlady. "There isn't a thing left," she answered, "except a bit of cold roast beef."?Lippincottfs. Gladstone's Apology. Mr. Gladstone once denounced certain members of the opposition as "a lot of truckling attorneys," a phrase which caused some indignation. On the following day he Mid: "I recently described same members as truckling attorney*' I now wish to apologize"?some applause from the aggrieved parties interrupted him?"I now wish to apologize?to the attorneys.* Old People Nee AB The Ideal One is a Mild Laxative Tonic that Will Keep the Bowels Gently Active Healthy old age is so absolutely dependent upon the condition of the bowels that great care should be taken to see that they act regularly, The fact is that as age advances the stomach muscles become weak and inactive and the liver does not store up the juices that are necessary to prompt digestion. Some help can be obtained by eating easily digested foods and by plenty of exercise, but this latter is irksome to most elderly people. One thiru' is certain, that a state of constip*ion should always be avoided, as it is dangerous Id life and health. The best plan is to take a mild laxative as often as is deemed necessary. But with equal certainty it is suggested that cathartics, purgatives, physics, salts and pills be avoided, as they do but temporary good and are so harsh as to be a shock to a delicate system. A much better plan and one that thousands of elderly people are following, is to take a gentle laxativetonic like Dr Caldwell's Syrup PepAS HAAwltf lil/A naiiivn 9iu, wuiv^ii acvo oo ucaiijr imc uctotuv, as is possible. In fact the tendency of this remedy is to strengthen the stomach and bowel muscles and so train them to act naturally again, when medicines of all kinds can usually be dispensed with. This is the opinion of many people of different ages, among them Mrs Mary A P Davidson, of University Mound 1 J0HNS8NV1LLE HIGS SCHOOL j (Received too late for last week's issue). Johnsonville, October 30: ? We have| begun our routine of school work again and the whole school is progressing nicely. All in general seem to be in a school spirit and we are looking forward to the most successful year's work that has ever been accomplished at old John sonville. The school has the largest enrollment that has ever been known, there- being two hundred pupils upon the roll, forty-two of whom are in the high school. We have been hard at work for three weeks. No time was delayed, because the former teachers returned and know how things run and just where the children stood in their work. Teachers and pupils are mutually interested in the work and where the majority pulls together there is bound to be success. Every class's motto seems to be: "Press upward and onward; 'tis the only road to success." There is a large - ' ? ? J mA /J r?rvV Class 10 gruuuaic BUU IVC u\j uui lu" tend to fall below the standard of the preceding graduates if hard work and perseverance can prevent it. We hope, if anything, to raise it. In proportion to the large number of pupils there is a good-sized, progressing music class, the largest since the school was established. The number is thirty-seven, three of whom are boys. Miss Hutson is planning to have three recitals, which are going to be excellent and are being looked forward to with pleasant anticipation not only by the music pupils and school children, but the public in general. Elocution has been added to the course and is taught by Miss Willie Elom of Virginia. She is doing nicely and every one is looking forward to good results. This branch is going to add much to the school. The Excelsior literary society met Friday afternoon of the first week ^ a At. _ i? A and elected omcers ior me nrsi three months of school as follows: Davis Newell, president; Christine Newell, secretary and treasurer; Elizabeth Cannon, corresponding secretary; Roena Eaddy, first censor, Eunice Venters, second censor; Thora Davis, first critic; Leah Eaddy, second critic. After some good advice by the principal and a beneficial talk by the president the society adjourned. Interesting programmes have been carried out at every meeting, which I one Friday comprises essays, declamation, readings, current events and music, and next, debates, current events and music. The society is expecting to accomplish much, because we have a president that every member of the society feels will do a good part. Then, too, every member seems to be working for the good of the society. When different members are put on duty they always try to do their best to make the programmes as interesting as possible. The patrons and friends of the school seem to be very much interested in the society and what we are doing, for they frequently pay us visits, which are appreciated very much by every member. Because of the large enrollment another society has been added and jfeL. itt :d x owel Stimulant . v Mrs Mary A P Davidson. ? Hpme, San Francisco, Cal. She is 71 and because of her sedentary habits had continual bowel trouble. From the day she began taking Dr Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin she has had no further inconvenience and naturally she is glad to say kind things of this remedy. A bottle can be bought of any druggist at fifty cents or one dollar. People usually buy the fifty cent size first, and then, having convinced themselves of its merits, they buy the dollar size, which is more economical. Results are always guaranteed or money will be refunded. Elderly people of both sexes can fo4 low tnese suggesuuua wiua c*w| assurance of good results. Families wishing to try a free sample bottle can obtain it postpaid by addressing Dr W B Caldwell, 41$ Washington St, Monticello, 111. A postal card with your name and address on it will do. AN AUSPICIOUS OCCASION. Family Re-unlon to Celebrate Mr J A Bradham's 77th Birthday. Greelyville, October 30:?Mr J A Bradhani celebrated his 77th birth- Jk day at his home six miles from a Kingstree Saturday, October 18. a It was one of the happiest anniver- B sary occasions in which the writer i B has ever participated, there beipg 1 no element lacking to make the day I one of unalloyed pleasure and enjoy- " ment. There were more good thing* to eat and the best served dinner that I have ever witnessed at a fam- p ily re-union, the guests present com- n prising the children and grand-children of the head of the family whose })* birthday was being <celebrated. *4 Every one present enjoyed the day to the fullest extent Mr Bradham was born in Sumter county in 1886. He was a faithful and gallant soldier in the Civil war, his empty sleeve bearing mute testimony to valor and patriotism in the service of his country. His healtfc has been feeble for some time, but am glad to say that he is now able to be up. The remains of Mr R F Lewis, an aged and respected citizen of Greelyville, who died Thursday, October 23, were interred last Saturday in the presence of a number of sympathizing relatives and friends. Although he had been ill for some time his death was a shock to his loved ones. He leaves his wife, two daughters, four sisters and four brothers and a grief-stricken moth- ^ er to mourn their loss. The whole community sincerely sympathize with the bereaved family. Her many friends are glad to know that Miss Edith McElveen,who has been confined to her home for some time, is able to ride out.* Miss Fannie M Bradham Is assistant postmistress here now. If this escapes the waste basket. will write again. Kittiev Saved Hit tot H D Ely. of Bantam, 0, suffered from horrible ulcer on his foot for four years. Doctor advised ampjtation, but he refused and reluctantly tried Bucklen's Arnica Salve as a J last resort. He then wrote: "I used Jj your salve and my foot was soon raj completely cured." Best remedy for fl burns, cuts,bruises and eczema. Get 3 a box today. Only 25c. All drug- 39 gists or by mail. H E Bucklen & 9 Co, Philadelphia, Pa,,or St Louis, Mo. n I there are now three?one for the primary grades, one for the gram- ? mar grades, and another for the high school. r The school has a fine lyceura * course this year. Two attractions have already been presented, the t first, Dana Walden, Friday evening, \ October 17, and the second, The Al- t kahest Artists, consisting of Miss \ Chambers, violinist, Miss Dennis, -V soprano, and Miss McHenry, reader, ? Ik Wednesday evening last. Both num- B bers were greeted by large audiences.The next number will be on the B evening of December 2. These at- W tractions are beneficial and add much | to the school and community. | Corresponding Sec. $ ? v j