The county record. [volume] (Kingstree, S.C.) 1885-1975, October 08, 1914, Page THREE, Image 3
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'This istl
what he wi
r'The nee<
poor, ispior
" It wasn't
athon. Le^fi
The feL
failures pW
ofIheworld|| I
have been11 I
Quillera 11 |
pr
v Also Highest C
THE PEO
| H. A. M
I THE E/
| ALETHEA 1
| are guaranteed agains
| coloring. Call and se(
% with handsome Gold a:
X| La Vallieres a
t All of the above will
f fashion this Fall.
I S. THC
QUAL1
I 257 King St.,
I Headquarters for Standard
I REPAIR WORK I
j Mail Orders Recei?
]| $5.70
I ROUND
AUGUS"
V
ATLANTI
^ The Standarc
OCTOBER 1
On account cf th<
Georgia
the Atlantic Coi
dard Railroad of th
this very low round
ODDortunitv is thus
rons to visft the bes
participate in this r
event. 1
Tickets on sale 0<
returning, to reach <
than midnight of 0
Children betweer
half fare.
W. ,/. CRAIG, P. 1
l0-8-3t
J ~MEYE
Now O]
This "ad" is to
that we have opene(
1 1 J X
ue pieaseu iu serve,
consistent with tigh
Oysters in Any Styl
H. A. IV
Phone No. 138
~xl??
aw W 4iwn?u in jfaSati!
and ihi&nfc to toy
ie da of equal chance ? when
lis if he possesses the strengil
d of hu.ng*er and want of things
ant boys into Lincoln.Field and]
the fastest beginner that won t
s didrit produce the victor?? 1
*i?R
WEE NEE BA
KINCSTREE. S. C.
I AM PAYING
3lc Gross Weight
for Good Cattle,
? m m m m c'.'r
lash Prices for Cow Hides.
PLE'S MARKET
ILLER, PROPRIETOR
LTEST CREATION f
PEARL NECKLACES |
t Breakage, Cracking, Peeling or Dis- \;
i them. Black Silk and Velvet Bands, ; j
ad Pearl Pendants. < i
rid Gold Bead Ball Necklaces. jj
I be the rage, and in the height of the |
' -?k. S d! C O., 4
TY JEWELERS, j
CHARLESTON, S. C. |
Jewelry, Clocks, Watches, Wedding Presents t
)ONE BY EXPERT WORKMEN, i
_ m
e Careful and Intelligent Attention. VIA
LANES!]]
Tnin n a TP TA
1 Kir K/\ 1L IU
!"A,GEORGIA J
IATHE
C COAST LINE
1 Railroad of the South
7 TO 24,INCLUSIVE
e
-Carolina Fair
ist Line Railroad,the Stan- j?
e Sonth, has placed into effect f
trip rate to Augusta. A rare
" ^J J a r\nf_ ?
aiiurueu uux menus cuiu. jjauiutiful
city of Augusta and to
nost interesting and instructive
etober 17-24, inclusive, limited,
original starting point not later
etober 27, 1914.
[ the ages of 5 and 12 years,
r. 31., T. C. WHITE, G. r. A.,
WILMINGTON. N. C.
r^sTcafe I
pen to the Public
announce to all who eat to live
i our cafe for the winter and will |
you with good meals at a price
it finances.
e - Fresh Bread Daily
IEYER & SON
f
k iljf
p eu ScmtijW ?
any man may have ??|
i to reach it p
? seasoned three j
Edison [
he Olympian Mar* I
GRIT'' |
B?KT KAUFMAN
JJ If you i
= 9 want to
I WIN
III! save and
NK, llli^iHM
I The Printer Man's Plea.
Tell me, ye winged winds,
That round my pathway lay,
Is there no place on earth
Where printers get their pay?
The whispering breeze went by?
With accents filled with woe,
A voice borne on the sorrowing air,
In sadness answered, "No."
Tell me, ye flowing streams,
That smoothly glide along,
Is there one cherished place.
Where printers meet no wrong?
The gentle brook replied,
In murmurs soft and low,
And winding on its verdant way,
It meekly answered, "No."
Tell me, hard-hearted man,
Withholding day by day,
Is there no honor in thy breast
The printer's bill to pay?
Unanswering,turns he 'round?
How plain his actions show;
An uttered, oath-eapp'd sound is
heard,
His actions answer, "No."
Tell me, ye gentle nymphs,
Who bless life's hours through,
Is there one sacred shrine
Where printers get their due?
A mantlinc blush her cheek suffused,
! Did tenfold grace impart,
I A soft responsive sigh replied,
f * 'Tis found in woman's heart."
| Tell me, angelic hosts.
$ Ye messengers of love,
> Shall suffering printers here below
> Have no redress above?
I The angel band replied:
I "To us is knowledge given?
> Delinquents on the printer's books
I Can never, never, never enter
[ heaven!"
?Sahula Standard.
Chronic Dyspepsia.
The following unsolicited testimonial
should certainly be sufficient to
give nope ana courage lu persuua
afflicted with chronic dyspepsia: "I
have been a chronic dyspeptic for
years, and of all the medicine I have
taken, Chamberlain's Tablets have
done me more good than anything
else," says W G Mattison," No 7
Sherman St, Hornellsville, N\. For
sale by all dealers.
|i^JctnE.NT 1;
PATCHES
for inner tubes, especially adapted
for quick repairing. They are
made from regular air tube stock
and are made with edges tapered
very thin, so that when cemented
to the tube they act in perfect
harmony with the tube and do
not have a tendency to come loose
in use. FULL line of cement,
| tape, soapstone, pumps, etc.
Hamer-Thompson Co.
1 ? i
I
Have You Visited the
White Barber i
Shop ?
IfNot.Why?
Polite and prompt atten- s
tion by competent artists j
The Sanitary Barber Shop (
9-24-3m Kingitree, S. C.
V
S
. . - V
commenced using it Soon got bette
like a new woman. Peruna Is my com
Thomas M. Morgan, R. F. D. 2, Wat
ANNUAL MEETING
Woman's Missionary Union, S.E.
Ass'n, Baptist Church Here.
FIRST SESSION ?2 P. M. OCTOBER 15.
Devotional Service and Address of
Welcome?Mrs \V E Hurt.
Response?Mrs E P Easterling.
Reports of Societies by Delegates.
Report of Associational Superintendent?Mrs
Edwin Carpenter.
Report of Divisional Vice President?Miss
Mary Adams.
Report of Sunbeam Bands by Associate
Superintendent of Bands?
Mrs H B Jones.
Reports of Standing Committees.
Business.
Address, "The Call of the Girl",
Miss?Barton of Kentucky.
"rru. TIT >? "
dinging? ine vYoiimu o iijtuju,
THURSDAY NIGHT SESSION.
Praise Service Led by Rev W E
Hurt and Kingstree Choir.
Address,"History of W M Union"
?Mrs J R Fizer of Columbia.
Solo.
Address?Rev Mr Eutzminger, of
Brazil.
Collection for Training School Enlargement
Fund.
Song?"The Son of God."
Benediction.
FRIDAY, 10 A. M.
Devotional Service?Rev Mr Eutzminger.
Paper, "Personal Service", Mrs J
A Brown, D D.
a j j td
Aauress?.uiss doi IUU.
Music.
Address, "Responsibility for Y P
S", Miss Adams.,
Message from WM U?MrsFizer.
Music and Benediction.
Luncheon Served at Church by
Kingstree Society.
FRIDAY, 2 P. M.
Devotional Service?Miss Barton.
Reports of Committees and Business.
Address, "Teaching the Bible"?
Miss Adams.
Music.
Address, "Efficiency", Mrs Fizer.
A Forward Look?Led by Miss
A
nuauis.
Adjournment.
All meetings open to the public
and a cordial invitation to the Thursday
night session especially extended.
Mrs Edwin Carpenter, Sup't,
Georgetown, S C.
. t ? . ? .
WHEN HER BACK ACHES
A Woman Finds All Her Energy and
Ambition Slipping Away.
Kingstree women know how the
aches and pain that often come
when the kidneys fail make life a
burden. Backaches, hip pains, headaches,
dizzy spells, distressing urinary
troubles, are frequent indications
of weak kidneys and should be
checked in time. Doan's Kidney
Pnia are fnr the kidnevs only. They
attack kidney diseases by striking at
the cause.
Can Kingstree sufferers desire
stronger proof than this woman's
word?
Mrs J Q James, E Broad St, Darlington,
S C, says: "For a long time
[ suffered from severe backaches,
headaches, dizzy spells and other
symptoms of kidney complaint. I
used two boxes of Doan's Kidney
Pills as directed and they not only
relieved the aches and pains, but removed
the trouble with the kidney
secretions. I shall never forget the
uenefit I had."
Price 50c, at all dealers. Don't
simply ask for a kidney remedy?get
Doan's Kidney Pills?the same that
Mrs James had. Foster-Milburn
2o, Props, Buffalo. N Y.
The fool exceeds the speed limit,
;ven going down hill.
Aches or Pains j
Peruna Did It for Me.
"I find Peruna an excellent spring and
summer medicine and am glad to call
the attention of my friends to it. I
know* by experience that Peruna is a
good medicine, and always recommend i
it whenever I have an opportunity. I
can truthfully say that I have no traces
of my old complaint, and have neither j
ache nor pain, and enjoy life. Words '
cannot express my appreciation for the '
good Peruna has done me."
PERUNA THE SPRING ]
eiiuucD tirrM/tfuie
Mil gwmmtn mc.wivuib?
"I used to get cramps in my stomach. ^
[ had sick headaches. My stomach
nearly killed me. My family physician
only gave me temporary relief. I got
out of patience and had given up all
hopes of recovery. I then wrote to Dr. 1
Hart man and he advised me to take (
Peruna. I got a bottle of Peruna and
r and am now entirely cured and feel 1
fort. I will never be without it" Mrs.
Isworth. Ohio.
?. 1
Frank Stanton's Jingles.
]
THE EDITOR'S FAIR NOTICE.
'Savs the editor of The Hazel Green (
Herald: !
"In moving we missed several \
articles of more or less value, and ,
i the party who got them ought to t
know that we know and have one
witness besides. A small imitation ,
leather grip, a hair brush, a tooth (
brush, penknife, pair of suspenders j
and two rolls of wall paper were j
seen put into a basket, If they are \
returned that will end it, but if an
officer has to hunt them it will bring (
on more talk." ,
* * * j
THE BRIGHT SIDE. ,
. ? .... 3
| i recKon we n Keep a-livin' ,
With the light of life in view, !
Thank God that He's forgivin'
Under a sky of blue.
H. <
Not vain is each endeavor, <
Life still will life renew i
Forever and forever
Under a sky of blue. \ .
* *
THE MUSKET RIDGE MAN.
I
These items gathered by the Musket
Ridge Philosopher:
"Luke Perkins says, after looking
at the women folk on a warm day,
'It's no wonder a great dry goods
company of New York failed.'
"A notice in The Musket Ridge Hot
Box reads thusly: 'If it rains this
evening, the social will be hell on
next Thursday evening.' Just a slip
of the type, I guess.
"Mrs Caleb Sank asked her hired
girl the other day to see how high
the thermometer was. She returned
in about three minutes and told
her it was five feet and six inches.
"I saw a country couple (fresh
married) coming down the street
*i j-.. ti?
uic* utiici uay. i ncjr wcic uuiuiux i
hands and chewing gum. The war
in Europe or the price of sugar
didn't worry them a hit. They were
thinking of other things."
* * *
last call 1 or summer.
This last word for summer from
"The Bentztown Bard:"
"Sing, Sally Summer,
Like a spirit in the land;
The last rose, darling,
Is a shadow in your hand!
The mists have the hills, dear,
The haze has the night;
Sine, Sally Summer,
With your soul full of light!
"Sing, Sally Summer,
Though the bells ring low;
The spell of your song
Has a far way to flow;
But deep down the autumn,
Where the wild grapes swing,
It's still Sally Summer <
That my heart hears sing!" j
* * * j
"when fall time comes along."
This, on the alleged "-Melancholy (
Season," by Winfield Dudley, in i
The Griffin News: t
"Our melancholy is not of the
sour kind that kicks against the i
world?we are only melancholy be- i
cause we have to keep on working s
and can't get out into the happy
world and hear our pigs' sweet i
carols as they gambol on the sue- S
culent Bermuda grass and fight each I
I - - A . 1 1 Al _1 fl
[otner tor nrst piace at tne pieniuui a
trough. There is no such thing as '
melancholia when the fall time comes
along. Cheer up and pick the nuts
that fall time ripens and drops into p
your lap. All's well with the world f
and there's no war in America."
* * * n
ALWAYS HERE. 0
Sorrow comes in life's despair. ?
Single file and double, But
still there is a sky that's fair?
Look at a sweet child's golden hair a
And then forget life's trouble. I
Atlanta Constitution,
GRIM-VISAGED WAR
As Viewed by Master Minds of
Two Centuries.
War is the foulest fiend that ever
vomited forth from the mouth of
hell.?Jean Jacques.
I abhor war and view it as the
greatest scourge of mankind.?
rhomas Jefferson.
There never was a good war or a
bad peace.?Benjamin Franklin.
My country is the world; my coun
trymen are all mankind.?William
Lloyd Garrison.
The more I study the world, the
more am I convinced of the inability
of force to create anything durable.?Napoleon
Bonaparte.
God hath made of one blood all
aations of men for to dwell on all
the face of the earth.?Paul on I
Mars Hill.
We have abolished slavery from
:ivilized countries, the owning of
man by man. The next great step Jj
:hat the world can take is to abolish
var, the killing of man by man.?
\ndrew Carnegie.
My first wish is to see the whole
world at peace, and the inhabitants
)f it as one band of brothers, strivng
which should most contribute to
:he happiness of mankind.?George
Washington.
With malice toward none, with
:harity for all, with firmness in the
right as God gives us to see the
right, let us strive .... to do all
which may achieve and cherish a
just and lasting peace among ourselves
and with all nations.?Abraham
Lincoln.
The method by which States prosecute
their rights cannot under present
conditions be a process of law,
aince no court exists having jurisdiction
over them, but only war.
But through war, even if it result
in victory, the question of right is
not decided. ? Emanuel Kant.
The doctrine that violence, oppression,
inhumanity, is an essential
element of society, is so revolting ,
that, did I believe it, I would say,
let society perish, let man and his
work be swept away and the earth
be abandoned to the brutes. Better
that the globe should be tenanted
by brutes than by brutalized men.?
William Ellery Channing.
But wljat a cruel thing is war, to
separate and destroy families and
friends, and mar the purest joy and
happiness God has granted us in this . . 5 ?
world; to fill our hearts with hatred
instead of love for our neighbors
and to devastate the fair face of the
beautiful world.?Robert E. Lee.
There will be the full complement
of backs broken in two, of arms
twisted wholly off, of men impaled
upon their bayonets, of legs smashed
up like bits of firewood, of heads
sliced open like apples, of other
head3 crunched into soft jelly by the
iron hcofs of horses, of faces trampled
out of all likeness to anything
human. This is what skulks behind
"a splendid charge." This is what
follows, as a matter of course, when
our fellows rode at them ^n style
and cut them up famously.?Charles
Dickens.
South Carolina Farms.
(From Last Federal Census Reports)..
South Carolina has 176,434 farms;
of this number 65.213 are operated
t>y owners and managers and 111,221
jy tenants.
Thirty-seven per cent, of the farms
)f this State are operated by owners
ind managers and 63 per cent by
;enants.
The farm home owners and manners
of South Carolina cultivate
1,943,000 acres of land and the tenints
till 3,155,000acres in this State.
The value of the land and buildngs
of the tenant farms of this
>tate is $135,899,000; that of the
lome owners and managers is $196, 89,000.-*-Union
News
Service.
A Marvelous Escape.
"My little boy had a marvelous
scape," writes P F Bastiams of
'rince Albert, Cape of Good Hope.
'It occurred in the middle of the
ight. He got a very severe attack
f croup. As luck would have it, I
ad a large bottle of Chamberlain's
lough Remedy in the house. After
ollowing the directions for an hour
nd twenty minutes he was through
11 danger." Sold by all dealers.
The County Record SI a year.