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^ 1 nii ii will take special care oJ day or night. We use compounding. If It's Toilel wp ha yp the best I Buy an Eastn from u JCingstree 2 k P)A>w w < VjJNi w w J REDUCED ROUNI , > WILL BE MA j, SPECIAL 0< -BY TH AAtla,n.tic Cc ] i the standard railro THE RATES ARE OPEI i ' Note.?The first dates nam tickets may be sold, and upon v ; begun, ana the last date is the f: j i the last date upon which the or be reached. < i Buffalo* j June 27, 28 and | Atlanta Of July 6 and 7; For total rates, schedules,.res< I named and for any desired ii e Holliday , Ticket Agent, Kings T T. C. WHITE, 1 flfxn Aorent. 1 6-4-5t ? W1LMINC [gVIr* ""VU *"Vlr ? VU* m Models and Prices 1 Model 10-A?5-H. P. Single Cylinder "5-35," protected Model 10-B?5-H. P., Single Cylinder "5-35," chain trar MsitfJO-C?5-H. P., Single Cylinder "5-35," chain tran ModeiiO-E-'-ft.H. P., Twin Cylinder, chain transmiasioi Model 10-F?8-H. P., Twin Cylinder, chain transmiasioi H ARLE Y-DA VIDSO Producers of High-Grade Moto 570 C STREET, - - MI nr F. T. Knliev. Kincstree. S, G, ft# I I h. I?r-i? :~v a ?% t Di Cl f I your prescriptions, | only pure drugs in | t Articles j line in town. J nan Kodak I II )ruo Co's. u ?4 ) TRIP RATES |j DEFOR CT rc-^sxonsrs T :E- [ ?sist X-iijae, > IAD OF THE SOUTH. X N TO THE PUBLIC ?> ed are those upon which ??hich the journey must be . inal Return Limit? 5 iginal starting point must [ N. Y. & 29; July 8. I ? Ga? i July 15. X & irvations. etc, to any point X lformation, apply to W W I tree, S C, or address, & IV.?/. CRAIG, Pass Traf Manager, iTON. N. C. | | s . \ O. B. Factory. transmission belt, price $200.00 ?j?j 210.00 imwiwit yim. i amission,equipped with two-speed, price 245.00 l, price 250.00 i, equipped with two-speed, price 285.00 N MOTOR CO., rcycles for over 12 Years. LWAUKEE, WISCONSIN. , Agent for WilliamsbiKg Go tSifiB / Legal Advertisements. | Summons for Relief. (COMPLAINT SERVED). THESTATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA. COUNTY OF WILLIAMSBURG. Court of Common Pleas. N M Venters, Plaintiff, against Thomas Jenerette.Sam JeYierette, Delia Bragg. Agness Grav, Eddie Jenerette, Lena Jenerette, Rosetta Jenerette. William McBride Jenerette. Parvlee Moultrie. Queen Moultrie and George W Ray, Defendants. To Thomas Jenerette, Sam Jenerette and Delia Bragg, Absent Defendants: 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 saidcomplainton the subscribers at their office in Kingstree, S C, within twenty days after the servffe hereof, exclusive of the day of such service; and if you fail to answer the complaint within the time aforesaid, the plaintiff in this action will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the complaint. Kelley & Hinds, Plaintiff's Attorneys. Dated June 4, A D1914. Take Notice: That the complaint in the above entitled action has been filed in the office of the Clerk of Court of Common Pleas for Williamsburg County, and is now on file in said office. Kelley & Hinds, 6-1 l-3t Plaintiff's Attorneys. Final DischargeNotice is hereby given that on the 4th day of July, A D 1914, at 12 o'clock, noon, I will apply to P M Brockinton, Judge of Probate of Williamsburg county, for Letters Dismissory as General Cuardian of S Maud McCutchen (now Hanna). F A Hanna, fi-A-Atn Guardian. v ?r Notice of ElectionA petition, signed by the required number of resident freeholders and resident electors residing within School District No 13 of Williamsburg County, State of South Carolina, having been filed with the Countv Board of Education for Williamsburg County, and said election having been ordered by the County Board of Education, Notice is hereby given that on the 26th day of June, 1914, an election will be held at Muddy Creek Church for the purpose of determining whether or not a special levy of four (4) mills shall be made upon the taxable property of the district for school purposes in District No 13. The polls will open at 8:00 o'clock a. m., and will be closed at 4:00 o'clock p. m. The undersigned, by virtue of their office, will act as managers in this election and will canvass the vote. D C Powell, R K Johnson, U (J Rogers 6-18-2t Trustees School District No 13. Notice of Election. A petition, signed by the required number of resident freeholders and resident qualified electors of Hemingway School District No 12 of Williamsburg county, State of South Carolina, having been filed with the County Board of Education for said County, and having been ordered by the said County Board, Notice is hereoy given that on the 27th day of June, 1914, an election will be held at the store of W C Hemingway & Co. for the purpose of determining whether or nut a levy of eight mills for school purposes shall be made upon the taxable property in School District No 12. Polls will open at 8:00 a m. and close at 4:00 p. ro. JThe undersigned, by virtue of their office, will act as managers in this election and will canvass the vote. J M G Eaddy, F E Huggins, 6-18-2t W G Carter, Trustees School District No 12. Notice of Election. A petition, signed by the required number of qualified electors residing within School District No 14 of Williamsburg county, State of South Carolina, having been filed with the County Board of Education for Williamsburg county, said petition asking for an election for the purpose of voting a special tax of four (4) mills to be used for school purposes in said district, and said election having been ordered by the said County Board of Education, Notice is hereby given that on the 6th day of July, 1914, an election will be held at Workman for the purpose of determining whether or not a special levy of four (4) mills shall be made upon the taxable property in School District No 14. The polls will be opened at 8:00o'clock a.m.and will close at 4:00 o'clock p. m. The undersigned, by virtue of their office, will act as managers in this election and will canvass the vote. J R Barrow. J M WlNGATE, 6-25-2t R C Burgess, Trustees School District No 14. Registration Notice. The otlice oi tne supervisor or registration will be open on the 1st Monday in each month for the purpose of registering any person who is qualified as 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 1896 submitted to him by the Supervisors of Registration, or who can show that he owns, and has paid all taxes collectible on during the present year, property in this State assessed at three hundred dollars or more. HA Meyer, f.lerk of Board Receipt Books, Blank Notes, Mortgages and all Legal Blanks in demand, for sale at The Record office. If we have not the form you wish we can print it cn short notice. NOTED DOCTORS 0. K. DODSON'S LIVER TONE. Best Medical Skill Employed to Insure Correctness of Formula- All Agree Dodson's is Reliable and Safe. Seven of the most successful physicians in the United States, selected for their experience and ability,were paid heavy fees to study and test the formula of Dodson's Liver Tone and all agreed that it was a fine and reliable remedy for family use. Dodson's Liver Tone takes the place of calomel. This is exactly what it was made for and has been made for ever since the first bottle was put up and sold. There are imitations of Dodson's Liver Tone for which extravagant claims are made, but the public knows how to judge between loud boasts and the plain truth. And then the merits of Dodson's Liver Tone are too widely known for anyone to hesitate. Dodson's Liver Tone is sold and guaranteed by Dr W V Brockington, who will refund purchase price(50c) instantly and with a smile if you are in any way dissatisfied with the remedy. Dodson's Liver Tone is a palatable vegetable-liquid and its action is easy and natural, with no gripe, no pain and no bad after-effects. After-effects are often disagreeable after taking calomel. Dodson's Liver Tone does not interfere in any way with your regular duties, habits and diet, and it builds and strengthens you so that you feel brighter, better and happier. If you feel headachy and constipated you will be delighted with Dodson's Liver Tone. Estate Notice. m' - * At - 1X7 T i ne creditors ox me usune ui ? u Carter, deceased, are hereby notified to render to the undersigned, at Hemingway, S C, or to LeRoy Lee, his Attorney, at Kingstree, S C, an account of their demands, duly attested, and all persons indebted to said Estate are notified to make payment likewise. J M G Eaddy, Hemingway, SC. Administrator. June 10, 1914. 6-ll-3t noticeT All persons wishing to enroll as members of the Kingstree Democratic Club will please appear In person and enter names on club roll. This roll can be found each MONDAY and SATURDAY at office of County Superintendent of Education; ALL OTHER DAYS at store of J B Gamble, on Main street. Books Close July 28,14 A C HINDS, J B GAMBLE. RN SPEIQNER. 6-1 l-7t Enrollment Committee. Winthrop College Scholarship and Entrance Examination. % The examination for the award of vacant scholarships in Winthrop College and for the admission of new students will be held at the County Court House on Friday, July 3, at 9 a. m. Applicants must not be less than sixteen years of age. When Scholarships are vacant after July 3 they will be awarded to those making the nighest average at this examination, provided they meet the conditions governing the award. Applicants for Scholarships should write to President Johnson before the examination for Scholarship examination blanks. Scholarships are worth $100 and free tuition. The next session will open September 16, 1914. For further information and catalogue, address Pres. D. B. Johnson, Rock Hill, S. C. 7-2-p 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 dealer, guaranteeing quality and prices, I Solicit Your Patronage. Smmr th? Railroad Station. $100 Reward, $100. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraterni ty. Catarrh, being: a constitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting: directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strengrth by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address: F J CHENEY & CO, Toledo, Ohio. Sold by all Druggists, 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation, adv No. Six-Sixty-Six This is a prescription prepared especially for MALARIA or CHILLS A. FEVER. Five or six doses will break any case, and if taken then as a tonic the Fever will not return. It acts on the liver better than Caiomel and does cot (ripe or sicken. 25c HIS DRAMATIC ALIBI. |t Cleared the Accused, but Furnished an Odd Sequel. A highly respectable gentleman i arrived at York one evening with luggage and dined well, went to bed : early, rose in good time and had a ! substantial breakfast. After this i meal he casually asked the landlord if there was anything of special interest in York. "The assizes are on, but I do not know if there is anything particularly interesting in the J list/' was the response. "Thanks/' drawled the stranger. "I'll look in if I happen to pass the | court and see." He did look in and heard a follower of Dick Turpin in the dock, charged with highway robbery, pleading his innocence vehemently to a stolid judge and jury, who, with firm faces, (lid not iook as 11 tney placed much credence in the prisoner's profession of innocence. Suddenly the prisoner caught sight of the stranger, who had strolled in from the hotel out of curiosity. "Here, thank God, is some one who can prove my innocence!" cried the prisoner, pointing to the stran- i ger, who was aghast at becoming the center of interest so unexpectedly. He seemed astonished and shook his head. "Oh, yes," cried the accused; "just think! You were at Dover?a long way from here. You came out of the Ship hotel, and I took your luggage in a wheelbarrow to the Calais packet at the pier. That was the day I am supposed to have committed the crime ud here." The stranger seemed bewildered. The judge, struck with the tragic earnestness of the prisoner, questioned the 6tranger, but the latter could not assist him much. "Have you any notebooks," asked the judge?"any memorandum of your movements on that day?" "I am a merchant," replied the stranger, "connected with an old established firm of bankers in London. I travel a lot and of course enter everything in my books. Here are my keys if the court cares to send to my hotel and bring here the books out of my case. I can easily settle the point." The bojks were fetched. They showed that the man had been in Dover that day and had left by the Calais packet. This was sufficient for the judge and jury. The prisoner was acquitted. Comic sequel: Both the "banker from London" and the highwayman were placed in the same dock shortly afterward charged with daring burglaries in the neighborhood.? London Standard. A Favor Appreciated. "I have come to inform you," said the young man who thought the firm would have to go out of business if he went away, "that unless my salary is raised I shall have to sever my connection witb this establishment." "Thank you," replied the general manager. "Am I to understand, then," the young man asked, "that you accede to my demand ?" "No. I thanked you because you had relieved me of an unpleasant duty. I always hate to discharge a man who will be unable to hold a job an here else."*?Chicago Record-Herald. Ancient Manufacture of Copper. The ancient Syrians and Phoenicians are well known to have been active traders in copper, and they manufactured this metal into bronze by melting it with tin. Learned antiquaries assure us that the Phoenicians actually came to England and to Ireland in search of the tin for this purpose, and some years ago some curious ui umc ai found in several of the old mine workings in Cornwall, which are believed to have been left there by that ancient people at a time when no bronze was either made or used in. England.?Chambers' Journal. Easy Money. Theodore Hook was one of the Garrick club's most famous members. He generally arrived at the club late in the afternoon and "never went home till morning." He had been told by the doctors, he said, to avoid the night air. A member of the club in Hook's time predicted the advent of the millennium at the end of three years. "All right," cried Hook. "Give me a five pound note now, and I will repay you ?50 at the millennium." Partners In Debts. "My tooth is just killing me," she complained. "Why don't you go to the dentist about it?" asked he. "Because," said she, "I owe him money." "You and I seem to be in hard luck," said he. "Now, look at me. Every time I go out in my automobile it breaks down right in front of some store where I owe a lot of money."?New York Press. ' i 4 COURTSHIP CRISES. When She First Meets His Family and He First Meets Her Folks. There are two events in young courtship that, until a man is well schooled by frequent experience, loom up with horrifying particularity of incident as moments of excruciating agony. The first is when he introduces "her" to his mother; the second is the presentation of himself to "her" family. Xo man likes to appear at even temporary disadvantage, and yet before the scrutiny of a calculating family he is fain to concede that he would not care to be such a complete fool as he appears to be, or at least feels, under the ordeal. So far * as introducing "her" is concerned, there is the miserable feeling that the eye of experience may not view the treasure with such open and generous vision as is befitting; that the hitherto unblemished angel may possibly, under the critical investigation, bear some mortal defect, a scar or two, quite unsuspected and unseen by love's fond glance. The moment is critical. How much more humiliating then is the other event. You have, in the first place, a sneaking idea that she has overdone it with the folks, carried away by a pardonable enthusiasm, , that this excess of adulation may re act under the somewhat caustic and altogether distrustful regard of a devoted family and that pitfalls lurk in father's prosaic, businesslike conversation and-in mother's domestic insinuations. You feel that sister is not so well disposed as might be hoped and that brother has decided against you, unseen and unheard. That the summing up will be something you would really prefer not to hear and that the old legend of two lovers being their whole world is indeed a legend and nothing more. And so the poor fool sneaks away from the front porch with an indestructible conviction that heaven is indeed afar off and love a state that bides many leagues from Paradise valley. ? Seattle Post-Intelligencer. i Tho Yur Without 8ummer. The year 1816 has a remarkable cold weather record and is known as "the year without a summer." In that year there was a sharp frost in every month, and the people all over the world began to be i 3 lieve that some great ana aeiuuvo change in the earth was taking place. Frost, ice and snow were common in June. Almost every green thing was killed, and the fruit was nearly all destroyed. During the month snow fell to the depth of three inches in New York and Massachusetts and ten inches in Maine. There were frost and ice in July in New York, New England and Pennsylvania, and corn was nearly all destroyed in certain sections. Ice half an inch thick formed in August. A cold north wind prevailed all summer. Fruitful Comparison. "That girl is a peach," enthusiastically remarked a spectator. "Yes," said another, "and she is the apple of her father's eye." "She and young Binks would make a fine pair," suggested a third. -? " ' ' 1 J.1 IV* "i5ut," ODjeciea anouier iu mc group, "a fellow like Binks would find her something of a lemon in the garden of love/' The cynical bystander who had been listening butted in at this point. "I don't know the young lady," he said dryly, "but she seems to be very fruitful in her resources."? Baltimore American. ~t*. ? j|f i The Storm Nom at Sea. I The picturesque name of storm nose (gewitternase) is given in Germany to the wave of high barometric pressure which often precedes a storm or a heavy squall. The barometer rises suddenly and then falls more gradually. It is believed that this phenomenon is responsible for sudden changes in the level of the sea. Observations on the seas surrounding Denmark have led to the conclusion that the change of level thus produced sometimes amounts to no less than three feet. ?Youth's Companion. An Appeal For Mercy. "Judge," said the prisoner, "I suppose you're going to soak me." "You are a habitue' oTender," replied the judge; "were caught with the stolen goods, and the court will have to do its painful duty." "I don't want to seem unreasonable/' replied the prisoner. "I don't mind a long sentence. I'm used to it. But say, judge, cut out the lecture that usually goes with it, won't you ?"?Philadelphia Ledger. Goodnesa Nose! When the clerk informed the customer that the handkerchiefs were $7.50 each the latter remarked: "No, sirree! That's too much money to blow inP'?Judge.