University of South Carolina Libraries
iHBHMHBHflHHHBHKSBBBfl Professional Cards. ] I ?1 I 111 I Willi WIBMI1I ; John de Saussure Gilland Attorney/at/Law Second Floor Masonic Temple Florence, S. C. 1866 1914 A. M. SNIDER. SURGEON DENTIST. Over Gamble & Jacobs' Drug Store, DR. R. C. McCABE, Dental Surgeon. Office in Hirsch building, over Kings- j i tree Drug Co's. 8-28-tf DR. R. J, MLCABE~| Dentist. KINGSTREE, - S. C Office in McCabe Building, next to Court House. W. Leland Taylor, DENTIST, OKte over Or W V Broekiugton's Store, KING STRIDE, - S.C. 5-21?tf. \M.D. Nesmith DENTIST. LAKE CITY, - - - S. C I Benj. MclNNES, M. R.C. V. S. B. Kater MclNNES, M. D.. V. M. D VETERINARIANS. One of us will be at Kingstree the first Monday in each month, at Heller's Stables. 9-28-tf gSr KINGSTREE Lodge, No, 46 - a. f.m. \ meets Thursday before fuil moon each month. Visiting brethren are cordially invited. R W Fulton, W M. M B Thomas. Sec. 2-27-ly ?mcu? aurima R W Fulton, 97 12m. Con Com % __ 06HTNIII6 RODS. 11 PS?}?\i/" H. L. WHITLOCK, I Lfeks City. S. C.. | |v-<p^; Special Sales Agent KSii-v J,.- Representing the largest manr^^#4=?v tltctareri of all kind* Im? proved Copper and Galvanised Section Rods. < Endorsed by the Highest SetestJtVc Autboritie* and Fire Insurance Companies). Pure Copper Wire Cables, all sizes. Our Full Cost ^RgpL* Guarantee (riven with each job. y* - ? ? I sell on dose martin of profit. dividing commission with mv customers. * S-7-tf ^.WATTS'JEWELRY STORE ^ KINGSTREE, S. C. I keep on hand everything to be found in an up-to-date jewelry house Repairing and engraving done with neatness and despatch. :: As a home dealers, guaranteeing quality and prices, I Solicit Your Patronage. Near tfao Railroad Station. , I Sprir I A splendid she 1 prices. Just rece I SUI IS. M ! i lg8?S8888@?m???8 5XXXXX50000000 ? JUST RE Q One car of Buggies x cars of Wagons, 01 Q Rakes, Reapers ai X Harrows, iVc. We o ble Rowland, J. x & Parker Buggies,! ~ and Thornliill Wi O Mowers,Rakes,Reap X rows, <fcc. We also O of Harness, Saddles. 8 Whips, <fec. Q Come to see us and bily X Williamsburg Liv< X KINOSTRJ X THOS. McCUTCHEN, M< KXX xxxxxxxxxx> I J. L SI 1W< 1 Is selling lot i and Mules 1 I Always a drc I fully selecte< I hand. Aiwa; i a sale or swa; | J. L. ST pb Livery, Feed ar W. Lake City, Also Highest Cash Pr THE PEOPLE' H. A. MILLER, 1 * W. J. Rt fc Groc All kinds?P U n.la.aaama OAI!AUA|L | lour raiiunagt; oununcu IT PAYS TO ADVERTi: lg'sNe rving of all that is new ived, a frill line of MMER ^RCU! mmammBsmm A CiXXXXXXXXXXXTI CEIVED g and Surreys, two o le car of Mowers, x id Binders, Disc O i handle the relia- x . Smith, Guilford O Steel King,Weber x iigons, McConnick >< iers&Binders,Har- 0 carry a full stock X .Summer Dusters, 0 right. Yours to please, Q r?. i r* rS 5 otocK company x EE. S.jIC. X &nager. ^ OOOCXXXXXXXXN rSS|; s of Horses- i this season. |: >ve of care- | i stock on sf ys ready for 1 ucreyI id Sale Stable aj South Carolina || AM PAYING I Gross Weight I Good Cattle, ices for Cow Hides. \ s market! .'ROPR1ETOR ?i ;uuntv >r eries rices lowest and will be Appreciated. iE IN THE RECORD! tC wesir est and best for Spi SILKS YOURS FOR 5, ? wj BackacheHH | ||i Miss Myrtle Cothrum, IIII IIII ofRussellville,Ala.,says: III UU "For nearly a year, I suf- 1X1 JKI fered with terrible back- I 11 ache, pains in my limbs, 11 and my head ached nearly ' VI all the time. Our family II doctor treated me, but 9 I only gave me temporary II relief. 1 was certainly in || bad health. My school | 11 teacher advised me to If TAKE 1 Cardui I The Woman's Tonic |||| I took two bottles, in all, 111 ? and was cured. 1 shall 19 11 always praise Cardui to 1111 sick and suffering wo- 11 I 9 men." If you suffer from IIII pains peculiar to weak 1111 women, such as head- If II ache, backache, or other |\rl vmntnmc nf wnmanlv Ill I mi /...p.w J- j/ || | | Look! Listen!-' Something New?Kingstree T.J. Pendergrass has just opened up a new 5c and lOc DEPARTMENT STORE Don't fail to call and see them when you come to town. We have the greatest values at 5c and 10c that ever struck Kingstree. NET CASH our only terms in this department. Pendergrass Bros. Co. ICuimliM. . S. C. Undressed LumberI 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. L_1_LUJL JLl? RHEUM AT IO SUFFERER* MOULD USB KUgAp^y^ai|(fiy^r . ^ J Tirr Tho Boat R&motfy IK foe mil tgnm of H Rheumatism 4? MB AG a* . 5QAT1CA, UUUI. NtUKAUtlAu^^^^n I SAM PIS *B^5T^f*ei ON MQUOT Swanson Rheumatic Cure C*. 1M-1U W. Lafc* St^ CHICAGO When you want us to change the address of your paper it will save lots of trouble to name the old as well as the new postoffice. Please bear this in mind. tf ammmssmmsm 'ashioi *iu&: and Summer is n o IN ALL I BUSINESS, ! ANNOUNCEMENT OF PRIZES Offered by the South Carolina School Improvement Assn. Through the support of the State Department of Education the South Carolina School Improvement association is able to offer $1,250.00 in prizes to be awarded in 1914. This amount has been divided into 40 prizes and will be given to the schools showing the greatest improvement during the given length of time. There will be 10 first prizes of $50.00 each and SO second prizes of $25.00 each. Regulations concerning the award of these prizes are as follows: 1. Improvements must be made between October l,1913,and Decern ber 1, 1914. 2. Only rural schools can compete for these prizes. Districts barred bj the State High School act or the State Rural Graded School act are ineligible to enter the competition. 3. Prizes will be awarded by the State executive committee of the School Improvement association immediately after the entries close. 4. All applications must be sent through your county Superintendent of Education,Rural School Supervisor or county Organizer of School Improvement associations. 5. Prizes will be awarded in checks sent from the office of the State Superintendent of Education to the county Superintendent of Education. The money will be deposited to the credit of the district in which the prize-winning school is located. This money must be used for the further improvement of the school winning it. 6. All reports must be made on the printed blanks sent by the asso ciation. 7. In making application for a prize, the Clean-Up Day score card, a brief description,a photograph and any evidences of improvements should accompany the regular prize score card. Respectfully submitted, Mary Eva Hite, Pres S C School Imp Assn. Essay on an Editor. The following is an essay on an editor: We look into a cradle ana behold a 1- _1?1 J A i. A. 1 - ? A. 1 A mate cnua. m me age ox tea ue i? a noisy kid, with half the buttons off his pants and a sure eye for meanness. At fifteen he is a devil in a print shop; at thirty-three the publisher of a country newspaper?at the head of every enterprise calculated to improve the town or enrich the business thereof; at fifty he is an emaciated and worn-out man with holes in his pockets and a gray head; at the age of sixty he is a corpse in a cheap coffin and his only resources left behind are two cases of long primer type, an old Taylor hand press and a subscription book with 500 delinquent subscribers, who line ?n nnH mnrcK naof thp r>nffin savincr "He was a public-spirited fellow, but he couldn't save anything."? Rock Hill Record. Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera anc Diarrhoea Remedy. Every family without exceptior should keep this preparation at hand during the hot weather of the summer months. Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy is worth many times its cost wher needed and is almost certain to be needed before the summer is over. It has no superior for the purpose for which it is intended. Buy il now. For sale by all dealers. Send us an order for stationery is Are ow here iu a wide vai . COLO Kingstre ? BLEASE ON HIS NATIVE HEATH. Abuses His Enemies With Characteristic Virulence. Whitmire, May 20: ? Governor Blease arrived here about 1 o'clock from Newberry, and after considerable hand-shaking addressed the crowd which had assembled in the public square to hear him. He be' gan his talk about 2:30 o'clock. His speech touched on many subjects, ( and it was to a large extent of a ( personal nature. Shortly after he began to speak of matters particularly of interest to Whitmire, Mr William Coleman, president of the Glenn Lowry Manufacturing com pany, rode up, and in a tew minutes after his arrival Governor Blease, singling Mr Coleman out, stated to the audience that he wanted to explain why Mr Coleman hated him. Mr Coleman immediately stood up in his buggy and, interrupting the Governor, told him that he did not hate him, and that he wanted an explanation as to why he accused him of hatred. Governor Blease said that any man who would oppose a motion in his behalf at a club meeting wa3 I his enemy,and that Mr Coleman had done this. Mr Coleman stated that such was not the case, as this could i be easily proved, for a great many present were members of the club, and he was sure no one would state to the contrary. Governor Blease then brought up another matter, which Mr Colemandenied,and begged to be heard. The Governor refused absolutely to entertain any explanation whatever,v whereupon Mr Coleman told him to go to hell and drove away. After the above incident the speech was mainly a criticism of individuals who were not after the Governor's liking. The Governor and his friends who accompanied him here left in automobiles about 7 o'clock for Newberry. i , JUDGE ERNEST GARY STRICKEN Eminent Jurist Critically 111 at His Home In Columbia. The many friends of Judge Ernest Gary, of the Fifth circuit, regret to learn that he is critically ill at his home in the city of Columbia, Judge ; Gary, who has been on the bench for more than twenty years, is well known and much admired in Florence. It was in 1888, that as a member of the South Carolina Legislature, - * ^ ? ' J iL. fka Judge <jr&ry tea uic u^uv mi creation of Florence county and won over the combined opposition of the delegations from older surrounding counties from which the baby cq*nty was carved. Coming to Florence 1 after the county was formed, Judge Gary and his distinguished cousin, young John Gary Evans, were the guests of honor at the great banquet given in honor of the event. Since that time Ernest Gary has ' numbered the people of Florence among his staunchest friends.? Florence Times, May 30. 1 Shake Off Your Rheumatism. Now is the time to get rid of your i rheumatism. Try a twenty-five cent bottle of Chamberlain's Liniment and see how quickly your rheumatic | pains disappear. Sold by all dealers. i ! The price of subscription for The Record is $1 25 a year; we allow 25 ! cents discount when a whole year is ; paid in advance. If you are six months or a year behind don't expect a receipt for a whole year for . one dollar. This applies to all. tf Here I riety of styles and 1 >RS. I ;e, S. C. 1 nod