The county record. [volume] (Kingstree, S.C.) 1885-1975, November 13, 1913, Page SEVEN, Image 7
f Go To
,. WHEN YOUlfErffi
S A wrtnH nf morp than
II ^ ^ iVVViU VTA. A**V* V "i
U/iiind him. With a bundn
ML lon hgnd, he is always res
Jw \ Also Feed and
JO) J. L. Stuckey,
MMBMBDMinMaawwMMNMiJnHHni.
V
i THE PEOPLE
"V / Fi
gp| pir0\
BURS AN
}'!" H. A. MILLER,
?/ ~
S4. C. HEMIN6WAY, President /
Bank |1
Hemingv
*
| FARMERS! ^Vear
$ T you with your crbps th
V* - . your needs now. Come
over with our Presideni
do for you.
i* ,/
i THERE IS SURE
A /-"i..
)
Without doubt there's n
ment than a Camera. The;
oietures. Your friends i
for you, and besides, it's tl
ing happy times. Why n
be prepared to take a gooc
ana Photographic Supplies
will be surprised to know
,. you can buy for a few doll
Kingstree Dr
^Kingstree,
a jBbS? y
(Laid Right Ova:
I No Dirt, No Bothor?In a very short
I trap covering turned into a modem
I roof at a very moderate coat?a roof I
' I and never need repairs.
^ For Si
For Sale by Williami
. LET US PRINT YOUR y
. i
*
Stuckey ||
i^^MFLESH
twenty years stands be'
of nice horses and mules
idy.for-a sale or a swap.
LiverV Stables.
* Lake Cityrs. C. jj
'S MARKET I
jsh Oysters J
i^id quart sanitary cans, daily. I
TRESH MEATS AND FISH I
ON HAND DAILY 3
ID HIDES I
PROPRIETOR |
J. L. MERRIMAN, Cashier ,
lemingway
.. : .
$15,000
/ay, S. C.
e in a position to assist
is year. Let us know
: in and talk the matter
t and see what we can
s * ' V
f 4 * J.
ENJOYMENT IN ^
mera.
othing affords more enjoyre's
great delight in taking
ire always willing to- pose
he one sure way of recordot
get a Camera now and
i picture? We sell Cameras
. Give us a call and you
what a splendid Camera
arsrf
ug Company,
South Carolina^
JU
r Woo^TShixigles
time any building can have ita Are*
firt-proof. $torm-pwf, lighlnlng-pr?f
bat will last as long as the building I
4
iUbu sburg
Hardware Co*
I ' B
ion NOTE HEADS
Neuralgia
sufferers find instant relief in
Sloan's Liniment. It penetrates
to the painful part?
soothes and quiets the nerves.
No rubbing?merely lay it on.
A W IT'/*
MAJAN5
LINIMENT
Kills Paiti
Tfor Neuralgia/^
"I would not be without your Liniment
and praise it to si who suffer
with neuralgiaor rheumaMBa or pain of
any kind."? *** Henry Buhop, Helena,
Miuouri. ,
rain AQ Cone
" I Buffered with quite a severe neuralgic
headache for 4 months without
any relief. I used your Liniment for
two or three nights and I haven't tuf
fered with my head since."?Mr. J. R.
Seeing* r, LoumitU, Ky.
Treatments for Cold and Creep
'My little girl, twelve years old,
caught a severe cold. And I gave her
three drops of Sloan's Liniment on sugar
on going to bed, and she got up in the
morninir with no siens of a cold. A lit
Itle bay next door bitd croup and I rare
the mother the Liniment She gave him
three drops on going to bed, and he got
np without ^je croup in the morning."
? Mr. W. B. Strang*, Chicago, IU.
AteODsakn. Prim 2J?., 80s. imi SLOt I .
Sbaa'e Book en Hones sent tr*?. |
Addrem &
Low Round-Trip Rates
Open to thr Public Will Be Hide (or the Following
Special Occasions
VIA THE
ATLANTIC COAST LINE
Standard Railroad of the South.
Augusta, Ga.
Georgia-Carolina Fair,November 1-15.
Dates of sale, November 5 to 14, inclusive,
and for trains scheduled to arrive
1 -* ?--* ?: xt ie pi;
Augusta Deiore IIUUI1 nuttruiuci j.u. a ?nal
limit, November 17. 1913. Fares apply
to points in South Carolina.
Augusta, Ga.
Negro Fair Association, November
18-21. Dates of sale, November 17 to
20,inclusive, and for trains scheduled to
arrive Augusta before noon November
21. Final limit, November 23. 1913.
Fares apply from points in South Carolina.
For rates, schedules, reservations and
any further information apply to Ticket
Agents of th?
ATLANTIC COAST LINE
SttBdard Railroad of tbe South
or write the undersigned,
W. J. CRAIG.
Passenger Traffic Manager.
T. C. WHITE,
General Passenger Agent,
WILMINGTON. N. C.
8-80-11-15
Edward A Morris,president of the
packing house of Morris & Co, Chicago,
died at his home.November 3,
. * *'*_ * _ _
I leaving a fortune estimateaoeiween
forty and fifty million dollars. He
was forty-seven years old and is said
to have marie^hjti vast fortune by
his own effortarb<i|F&?Ding life a poor
boy at the age of fourteen. He was
a liberal wentributor to many charities.
LetriE i tot Your Compost |j
I am the champion rotter of the world.
I'll rot leaves, straw, stalks, manure,
sawdust or any other vegetable matter,
Airb into ft rirh_ h crh-r-?ldfc for- 1
tilixer, in less than two mouths.
Just keep me on the job and I will save
i you a big lot of that fertilizer money.
If yen want to know all about this
i c*upost rotting, as well as rprayiug
a:.d preventing hog cholera, write
" Lad Devil," 619 N. Sccon I Street,
St. Louis, tfo., and I'll fin-* you a
little book, free, that tells how.
I am Red Devil Lye I
5c. For BIQ CANS '
Almost as big as those costing 10c.
SATE HT LABELS.
To Prevent Blood Poisoning I
apply at once the wonderful old reliable DR. I
PORTER'S ANTISEPTIC HEALING OIL. a snr
gical dressing that relieves pais and henta at
the same time. Hoe a liniment 29c. 90c. H.oa I
the County Record job office is i
better equipped tbsn ever to do your 1
pcintiBflri ? Send it to us st once. - ]
I
%
\
TILLMAN SAYS McLAU-'
RIN SHOULD MAKE SAGE
FOR SENATE TO FIGHT BLEASE- j
ISM AS PENANCE FOR PAST
POLITICAL SINS.
Washington, November 2:?That
John L McLaurin, as a penance
due the people of South Carolina,
undertake to destroy Bleaseism, is
suggested by Senator Tillman in a
statement which he ^s. issued in reply
to charges made hy Mr McLaurin
in his recent speech'before a gather- ?
ing of Blease followers in Columbia.
Mr Tillman says that if McLaurin
will, he can destroy Bleaseism better
than any man in the State, and that
he (Senator Tillman) will help him.
Mr Tillman's statement is as follows:
I read in the South Carolina papers
John L McLaurin's farewell address,
or statement, withdrawing from the
Governor's race and bidding adieu
to politics forever. It is a pathetic
utterance?pathetic because it is
the swan song of a very brilliant
man^who failed-to be a-very great
man because he lacked the moral
fibre to always be true to himself
and his convictions of right, rather
than allow ambition and selfishness
to warp him. His life, in a way, is
a sermon, which young men everywhere
ought to take to heart. Nothing
in the State's Jnstory is more
lamentable. If he had only -been
true to true Tillmanism, to which
he says he was converted in 1910, he
would be in the United States Senate
now and would be an ornament
to it.
McLaurin says: "It is the irony of
fate that I, who suffered most injustice
from Tillman personally,
should now be the sole defender of
Tillmanism."
There are two things about this
statement upon which I desire to
comment. I never did have any
personal ill-will towards John L McLaurin
and have none now. I denounced
him in the Senate because
I believed he was a traitor to the
rr?L r\ Lorl eonf
jjfupit" UX U1C OIOLC ,vviiu uau JLUU
him there. The people were convinced
that my charge was true and
have sustained it whenever they had
an opportunity.
When he says he is "the sole defender
of Tillmanism," he means
among the Bleaseites to whom he
was speaking. He,of course, knows
there are tens of thousands of Tillmanites,
some of whom voted for
and some against Governor Blease
last year, who have never wavered
in their adherence to Tillmanism as
they understand it, and as he now
understands it.
Mr Charles Can-oil Simms outheroded
Herod in his Bleaseism, proclaiming
that it is higher than Tillmanism.
He illustrates Byron's
couplet:
**He stood a foe with all the zeal
Which youngand fiery converts feel."
He is. no doubt, as sincere in his
Ble&seism now as he was in his Haskellism
in 1890. He never understood
Tillmanism at all. Inheriting
a grand name he thought he was an
aristocrat and has ended by becoming
an anarchist, and wants to run
into the Governor's office on demagogery.
Truly "politics does make
strange bedfellows," and if the
Tillmanites who deserted me last
year on account of Blease vote for
Simms for Governor, it will be a remarkable
transformation. It will
only show how wild men can become
when their political passions are
aroused, and how little wisdom, or
reason, governs their actions.
There are some things about McLaurin's
statement that are very admirable,
and I say now for the first
time since I denounced him on the
floor of the Senate I believe he has at
last become a patriot and wants to
do the State all the service he can
during the balance of his life. Of
course, he has played politics so long
and used diplomacy so much chat
even now he cannot drop the role all
at once. I have felt heretofore that
he was trying to "come back" into
politics under the spur of ambition, i
and I still believe that was his motive.
I have been hoping that Governor
Blease would endorse him as i
a successor in the Governor's office,
faalinor thnf thnf- wnnlri hp pnnilffh tn 1
damn both of them in the eyes of <
the people. But Blease had too <
much political sense to make such a
blunder as that, and McLaurin is i
wise in withdrawing once for all <
into private life. i
Tillmanism is charged with being 1
the father of Bleaseism; Tillman dis- i
owns the paternity, except as a v
bastard. Bleaseism is the incestuous ;
child of unscrupulous ambition on ]
the body of Tillmanism. Blease has i
"stolen the livery of heaven to 1
serve the devil in"?that is all, and i
has done it very adroitly. He has ]
stolen most of his thunder from my i
speeches. I was the originator of i
the phrase, "To hell with the Con- ]
3titution." I used it in Chicago, and 1
have always in season and out of i
Reason, whenever I have spoken on .
the subject, proclaimed that lynch- ]
bag ought to follow rape. Yet this i
j
What So Precic
As a
Every Youngster -ian Have Pine
Digestion if Given a Good
Baby Laxative.
In spite of the greatest personal
care and the most intelligent attention
to diet, babies and children will
become constipated, and it is a fact
that constipation and indigestion
have wrecked many a young life.
io start witn a gooa aigesuve apparatus
is to start life without a
handicap.
But, as we cannot all have perfect
working bowels, we must do
the next best thing and acquire
them, or train them to become
healthy. This can be done by the
use of a laxative-tonic very highly
recommended by a great many
mothers. The remedy is called Dr
Caldwell's Sprup Pepsin and has
been on the market for twenty generations.
It can be bought conveniently
at any drug store for fifty
J _11 J
cents ur une uuuai a uuiutr, auu
those who are already conyinced of
its merit buy the dollar size.
Its mildness makes it the ideal
medicine for children, and it is also
very pleasant to the taste. It is sure
in its effects, and genuinely harmless.
Very little of it is required and its
frequent use does not cause it to
loee its effect, as is the case with so
many other remedies.
Thousands can testify to its merits
in constipation, indigestion, bilious
ness, sick headaches, etc. among
them reliable people like Mrs James
has been Blease's stock in trade. He
has used it whenever opportunity
offered, and the people have such
short memories they have forgotten
that the idea is mine. Blease is a
past master at demagogy. This is
how he has deceived the people so.
What McLaurin says about "fac-1
tionalism making South Carolina a
"little Mexico" is all too true; and I
agree fully with what he says about
the necessity for the good and true
men of both factions getting together
and electing a Governor who
will be Governor of all the people
and not the Governor of "his
fmon/le" nnlt)
McLaurin has always been a
shrewd politician, and he realizes
fully, as all thoughtful men must
realize, that the loud-mouthed shouters
at the Blease banquet are
"office-seekers" and nothing more.
. The statement, "I don't suit them.
They don't suit me, so I had just as
well be a man. That is better than
being Governor", is very, very admirable.
But I would have liked it
better in this form: "I do not suit
them. They do not suit me. So I will
be a man hereafter, and my own
master?not a slave to ambition.
That is better than being Governor."
McLaurin has such great ability
that it is a pity his brains can be of
no service to the people in a public
career, now that he has come to his
senses. I agree with him that his
political career is ended, but he is
still a citizen of South Carolina and
there are many avenues open to him
for doing the people service. He
should seek out the one which he
likes best and work for the betterment
of the State and its citizens.
He has no equal in the State as a
stump speaker. I know, because I
trained him, as he himself will acknowledge.
If McLaurin will run for the
United States Senate in order to be
permitted to speak at the meetings
?the rules of the party would bar
him if were not a candidate?he can
* - ? J xi j?i. r>i
analyze ana tnus uesvruy oieaseism
far better than any other man I
know of. He can do what my
health will no longer permit me to
do, and make amends for past sins
and blunders.
If I had been able to make even
three speeches in South Carolina last
year I do not believe Blease would
ever have been elected Governor,
and if I were able now or dared to
to make speeches he could not be
elected to the Senate. Because I
have faith in my own honesty of
purpose and patriotism and think I
could show beyond possibility of
doubt that he is unfit to come to
Washington as a Senator from South
Carolina and is no more to be trusted
than was McLaurin. I would
undertake to do this anyway had not
the physicians, all of them, warned
me that it would result in my death
while speaking. I am willing to die
for the State, if necessary, but I
realize only too sadly that my
strength now is not equal to the
task and I can no longer play the
role of the gladiator on the hustings,
[t may be that the good God will
restore my strength so that I will be
able to take the risk. But if McLaurin,
as a penance, will undertake
the work, there will be no need
whatever for me to speak a word.
All the moral force 1 possess?knd I
realize I have a great deal of it
among ray fellow citizeas?will be
\.
>us
Healthy Baby?
Howard Rouse.
R Rnnsp nf Marinette. Wis. Her
little son Howard was fiften months
old last April, but he was sick with
bowel trouble from birth and suffered
intensely. Since Mrs Rouse has
been giving bim Dr Caldwell's Syrup
Pepsin all trouble has disappeared
and the boy is becoming robust.
Thousands keep Dr Caldwell's ,
Syrup Pepsin constantly in the house,
for every member of the family can
J use it from infancy to old age. The
users of Syrup Pepsin have learned
| to avoid cathartics, salts, mineral
i waters. Dills and other harsh reme
dies, for they do but temporary
good and are a shock to any delicate
system.
Families wishing to try a free
sample bottle can obtain it postpaid
by addressing Dr W B Caldwell, 419
Washington St, Monticello, 111. A
postal card with your name and ad'
dress on it will do.
I >
HOMICIDE AT MANNING.
John Peter Barfleld Kills Dick
Dukes In Exchange of Shots.
News was received here Thursday
morning of a fatal shooting at Manning
Wednesday night at the grounds
Mficupied by a carnival company now
holding forth in that town. < The re
j. iL.i T ~ 1 D J
port suites mat ounii retei oarneju
shot J B Dukes, better known as
Dick Dukes, killing him almost instantly.
Five shots from Barfield's
pistol took effect in Dukes' body,
while Barfield himself was wounded
twice by bullets from Dukes' gun.
The cause of the shooting has not
been definitely ascertained, but it is
reported that the two men quarreled
over the taking of some one to the
show. Both of them are said to
have been drinking prior to the
shooting. Barfield was arrested.
Both men lived at Alcolu.?tiumtei
Watchman.
? ' . ,
Petit Jurors.
The following named persons were
drawn by the jury commissioners
Monday to serve as petit jurors at
the session of. the court of common
pleas, which begins November 24:
J P Gamble.Heinemann,
I E PoweH^
R H Godwin, Kingstree,
W J Cooper, Morrisville,
W G Stone, Vox,
J J Snow, Rome,
H Foxworth, Cades,
W P Johnson, Suttons,
W B Lawrence, Greelygiile,
J J Epps, Cades,
E I Montgomery, Greelyville,
G D Perry, Venters.
J D Haselden, "
C A Hines, Greelyville,
W E Flowers, Lake City,
L F Tisdale, Benson,
J A Brown. Zeb,
H F Covington. Cooper,
L L Ard, Venters,
Jno T Burrows, Kingstree,
E T Haselden,
J A Cockfield, Venters,
A D Hemingway, Rhems,
E C Pendergrass, Lanes,
C C Burgess, Kingstree,
W W Boyd, Trio,
J T DeBerry, Lake City,
J J Poston, Bloomingvale,
, S W Hogan, Greelyville,
M D Ogburn, Suttons,
W D Byrdic,
J R Moseley, Salters,
J G Altman, Morrisville,
S A Graham, Gourdins,
C H Lesesne, Greelyville,
W T Smith, Bloomingvale.
Nearly Every Child Has Worms.
Paleness, at times a flushed face,
unnatural hunger, picking the nose,
great thirst, etc, are indications of
worms. Kickapoo Worm Killer is a
reliable, thorough medicine for the
removal of all kinds of worms from
children and adults. Kickapoo Worm
Killer in pleasant candy form, aids
digestion, tones system,' overcoming
constipation and increasing the action
of the liver. Is perfectly safe
for even the most delicate children.
Kickapoo Worm Killer makes children
happy and healthy. 25c. Guaranteed.
Try it. Drug stores or by
mail. Kickapoo Indian Medicine Co,
Philadelphia, Pa, and St Louis, Mo.
exerted in this $ght for decency in
Statejolittes. %