The county record. [volume] (Kingstree, S.C.) 1885-1975, April 08, 1915, Page SIX, Image 6
The Easter Spirit.
The following beautiful poem b)
the principal of Kingstree High anc
Graded school appeared in the las
issue of the Charleston Sunday News
It is the old, old story
Of suffering, death and life,
Of love o'ercoming hatred.
And perseverance, strife.
The world's great sin of doubting,
The Saviour's agony.
To us each day are given,
In everything we see.
The planting of the flower?
'Tis such a simple thing;
Yet to each one a semblance
Of Easter it must bring.
The 8injnng of the birdhngs
Recalls the burs ted shells;
The budding of the oak tree
Alone the story tells.
Bright sunshine after shadow,
A rainbow in the sky,
Reminds us of God's promise:
"Alan shall not surely die."
The waning moon assures us
There follows close a new;
And after night's brief darkness
A glorious mom we view.
The balmy breath of springtime
Dispels the winter's gloom;
We know 'twas then our Savior
Arose from out the tomb.
'Tis then our hearts are fullest
With love for all mankind;
Somehow it seems more easy
True happiness to find.
It is the old, old story
Of love so great and true
Impressed upon us daily
As only God can do.
?Miss Laura Cramer
SOUTH CAROLINA GOVERNORS
list of Chief Executives of Pal
metto State from 1670 to 1915.
Following: is a list of the Gover
nors of South Carolina in the orde:
of their service:
William Sayie (1670); Josepl
West; Sir John Yeamans; Josepl
West; Joseph Morton; Sir Richan
Kyrie; Robert Quay; Joseph West
Joseph Morton; James Colleton
Sothell; Phillip Ludwell; Thoma
Smith; Joseph Blake; John Archdale
Joseph Blake; James Moore; Si
Nathaniel Johnson; Edward Tynte
- Robert Gibbes; Charles Craven; Rob
ert Daniel; Robert Johnson; Jame
Moore; Sir Francis Nicholson; Rober
Johnson; Thomas Brooghton; Wil
liom Dull Taimao ^1.1 a*in W lllior
uaiu J-JUii, uoiuco uicuu, v? iiiiau
Henry Lyttleton; William Bull
Thomas Boone; William Bull; Lor<
Charles Grenville Montague; Williar
Bull; Lord William Campbell; Henr;
Laurens; John Rutledge; Rawlin
Lowndes; John Rutledge; Johi
Mathewes; Benjamin Guerard; Wil
liam Moultrie; Thomas Pinckney
Charles Pinckney; William Moultrie
Arnoldus VanderhorstjCharles Pinck
ney; Edward Rutledge; John Dray
ton; James Burchell Richardson; Pau
Hamilton; Charles Pinckney. Johi
Drayton;"Henry Middleton; Josepl
Alston; David R Williams; Andrev
Pickens; John Geddes; Thomas Ben
nett; John Lyde Wilson; Richar<
IrvinglManning; John Taylor; Steph
en D Miller; James Hamilton, Jr
Robert Y Hayne: George McDuffie
Pierce M Butler; Patrick Noble; 1
K Henegan;'John Peter Richardson
James H Hammond; William Aiken
David Jonnson; Whitemarsh B Sea
brook; John Hugh Means; Joh Law
irence Manning; James Hopkin
Adams; Robert F W Alston; Willian
H Gist; Francis Wilkinson Pickens
Milledge L Bonham; Andrew (
Magrath; Benjamin Franklin Perry
James Lawrence Orr, Robert I
Scott; Franklin J Moses, Jr; Danie
H Chamberlain; Wade Hampton
William Dunlap Simpson; Thomas I
Jeter; Johnson Hagood; Hugh Smitl
Thompson; John C Sheppard; Johi
Peter Richardson; Benjamin R Till
man; John Gary Evans; William ?
Ellerbe; Miles B McSweeney; Dun
tan C Heyward; Martin F Ansel; (
L Blease; C A Smith, (January 14
lyibj; Kicnara irvine canning.?
Edgefield Chronicle.
Charleston Ship Lost.
Bremen, April 3 (via Amsterdan
and London):?A telegram tolthe
Weser Zeitung says the jAmericai
steamer Greenbrier,from Charleston,
S C,for Bremen,has foundered in the
North sea. Her crew was landed at
Wyk in Schleswig. The Greenbriei
was detained at Kirkwall, Orkney
Islands, March 13, for investigation
by the British authorities and sailed
frtr Rremeri after a delav of three
days. According to maritime records,
she arrived in Bremen March
22. In that event she probably was
on the return trip instead of being
on the wa/ to Bremen.
Send us the news.
jr
; . . ,v?
* j J
/ 9 .
_ "Parana Cured Ms
ROBERT FOWLE!?^
Of Okarche, Oklahoma.
Mr. Robert Fowler. Okarche, Oklahoma.
writes:
"To any sufferer of catarrh of tin.
stomach. I am glad to tell my friend.,
or sufferers of catarrh that seventeen
years ago I was past work of any
kind, due to stomach troubles. I tried
almost every known remedy without
any results.
"Finally I tried Peruna, and an:
happy to say I was benefited by th<
first bottle, and after using a ful
treatment I was entirely cured.
"I am now seventy years old. and
am In good health, due to alwtys
having Peruna at my command,
would not think of going away j'r <;
home for any length of time V retaking
a bottle cf Peruna alon^, fin
emergency.
"You are at liberty to use my i
' ture and testimony If you think it vV.
help any one who has sronuM.h
trouble."
The Cost of Saving a Dollar.
There is a fellow in this counts
. (you all know him well) who doei
r not take his home paper.
He saves a dollar a year, in c
1 way, but this is what it costs him:
, He gets his news second, third, oi
I even fourth hand, often weeks aftei
. it has occurred, always stale, anc
. usually garbled beyond recognition
8 He knows little of the mercantilf
. opportunities that are offered in the
r local paper each week, and because
. of the absence of this informatior
_ he often pays more than is neces
g sary for what he buys,
t He knows nothing of many of the
. important events that are to occui
n until they have passed?and it ii
i. too late.
j He is never posted on city, town
q ship or county affairs, his knowledge
y being limited to what others in theii
? man nknnco tf\ fpll him.
g KCUCIU31LJT UIOJ vuvvuv W -?
n He is hovering on the ragged edg<
|. of everything that concerns hi,
- home community, while his neigh
bors who take the paper are wid<
awake and thoroughly conversan
r. with local conditions,
j He sees others leading the intel
Q lectual van, while he trails along ii
their dust.
y He is really a bright fellow, bu
. because of his lack of knowledg<
j concerning current events he i,
. generally regarded as "slow."
. Does it pay him to hold onto tha
dollar that would pay for his horo<
3 paper a year?
Apparently he thinks it does.
But what do YOU think?
9
Large San Spot Discovered.
s Washington,April 4:?A large sui
3 spot has been discovered by the Na
'? val Observatory. The disturbance
' showed on a photograph taken al
'? noon March 29, and probably will be
^ visible until about April 10. It maj
1 be observed by using one side of ar
I ordinary opera glass with a piece ol
3 smoked glass.
i
1 German Ship Blown Up In Baltic
j London, April 5:?A Reuter's dispatch
from Stockholm says the
German steamer Grete HemsotI
struck a mine in the Baltic and sanb
and that twenty-five members of hei
crew were drowned. The Grete
Hemsoth was a vessel of 1,554 tons.
She was engaged in traffic between
i Sweden and Germany.
? 1 1
i Splendid lor Rheumatism.
. "I think Chamberlain's Liniment
* is just splendid for rheumatism,"
; writes Mrs Dunburgh, Eldridge, N
' Y. "It has been used by myself and
also nther members of mv familv
time and time again during the past
i six years and has always given the
I best of satisfaction." The quick
, relief from pain which Chamberlain's
Liniment affords is alone worth
many times the cost. Obtainable
everywere.
Invigorating to tbo Palo and Sickly
Tbc Old SUedard ftatral ?trc agtbealaf teak,
OSLOVK-8 Tumstl cfcltt TO&IC, drfrti Ml
liaUria.tarUkta the blood,tadboildaactbtmturn.
A trac toaic. For tdulU tad cUldrm. m
J|||U 'The true
1. .Wjpl' mark5 of
||p[ nit$ tlio
'i ?T\ ^atuetri
hLwa
TjhKP*^
v*"V&ur
j?, ^ patienl
a* "scs?
On the Trot.
This world is on a trot, and it is
some trot.
We have the fox trot, the turkey
trot, the dog trot, the gold trot and
the silly trot.
And everybooy's trotting.
If we don't trot for one thing, we
trot for another.
The young man trots along in the
wake of the dainty maid.
The bald head trots around hunting
around for any kind of a skirt.
The millionaire trots in harness
: with his affinity.
The dude trots in the halo of his
r own silliness.
i The miser trots after his gold,and
the grafter trots the road to h?.
? Thp nnlitiwan trots in the lime
light of publicity.and the voter trots
r at his beck and call,
r The hypocrite trots around in the
I cloak of religion, and the godly man
. trots after the souls of men.
i Death trots in the trenches of Eu?
rope, while misery and starvation
i trot over the heartstrings of the
i women and children left at home.
Everybody's on the trot, and it is
a fast and furious trot, with every
? man for himself and Satan take the
L _ J .1
r ninumusi uuturi.
3 If you would succeed in this life
you must trot, for only the trotters
. reach the goals of today.
? It is the day of the trot, and we
r are essentially a people of today.
For we trot.
2 ? ' <
9 A Negro's Picturesque Prayer.
The story is told of a white mins
ister who, after conducting services
1 in a colored church, asked an old
deacon to lead the congregation in
prayer. In great fervor and pro3
found sincerity the brother in black
thus prayed for the brother in white;
"0 Lord, gib him de eye of de eagle,
? dat he may spy sin afar off. Put
3 his hands to the gospel plow. Tie
his tongue to de line ob truth. Nail
^ his ear to de gospel pole. Bow his
- head way down, twixt his knees in
some lonesome, dark and narrow
alley, where prayer is much wanted
to be made. 'Noint him wid kero
sene ile of salvation and den sot him
on fire!"
j ?
: Sjjl Baekaehe?
1 llll Miss Myrtle Cothrum, II ||
f IIJI of RusseDville, Ala., ?ayt: l|l |
(JN "For nearly a year, I suf- 1XJ
Mi fered with terrible back- J( X
11 ache, pains in my limbs, 11
|| and my head ached nearly ||
It all the time. Our family 11
|| doctor treated me, but ||
11 only gave me temporary 11
i 11 relief. 1 was certainly in 11
|| bad health. My school ||
11 teacher advised me to 11
II TAKE II
Cardui
. II The Woman's Tonic ||
|| I took two bottles, in all, 11
11 and was cured. I shall 11
11 always praise Cardui to 111
111 sick and suffering wo- 1111
HI men.," If you suffer from 1111
|S| pains peculiar to weak ||11
I If women, such as head- If If
III ache, backache, or other f%r|
||| symptoms of womanly |f|l
HI trouble, or if you merely 1111
U| need a tonic for that tired, IUI
1 nervous, worn-out feel- lXf
f| A ing, try Cardui. e~U flll
n jj y [ I
m-r&4r*m< &.
coin cfaccomplishmeni beans the
^trtt and honest labor. Thecuprou0ibved
hadfo pass through
atnttift as eoery ofeerycarlit? i
t. Otneritfise he u)oulh hai)ebfl
toruna^oodrace:'^^
<j)ank (Account u)itt Arou> on!
; 'pfinsctkrin^-pcrsistoit .saitf
/EE NEE BAN
KINCSTREE, 8. C.
(Jse the Newspapers. W1
Don't advertise on trees or tpcks
Afar from the haunts of men.
You cannot sell the woodchuck clocks ^ 1
Or pictures for his den. j
The squirrel may observe your sign. He
About your cure for chills, W
And on it he may try to dine, , apj
But that won't pay your bills.
nm
The possum buys no breakfast foods, 0f
We may as well confess. pa]
So if you want to sell your goods
You'd better use the press. ml
?New York Mail. {
. foi
Austrian Steamer Blown Up. 0D<
ed,
Paris, April 4:?Thirty-five of the an(
crew were drowned by the destruc- pa
tion of the unidentified Austrian i
steamer which blew up in the Dan- ^C(
ube the night of March 80, after
striking a mine near Ritopek, ac- me
cording to a Havas dispatch from _
Nish. It is believed the steamer was
loaded with a large quantity of munitions
and artillery supplies for
Turkey. The wreck was carried by
the current within range of the Servian
artillery at Ritopek. Another
explosion followed the bombardment
of the hulk and the wrecked vessel
sank.
DECLAIMERS* CONTEST
To Be Held at Presbyterian College
April 15.
Editor County Record:?
It has been a custom at the Presbyterian
college for the past few
vears to n )ld an annual high school
I
declaimers' contest under tne auspicies
of the college, to which every
high school in the State is entitled
to send a representative. There were
about forty represented last year
and this year individual invitations]
have been sent to quite a number of
schools, but not near so many have
been thus invited as we desire to
have present.
Previous to this year there has
been only one schoc; represented
from Williamsburg, but it is the
hope of the boys who are here from
the home county to have several
others represented this year.
The contest this spring will be
held April 16. Each speaker may
use either a speech written by himself,
or that of another person, the
object of the contest being the encouragement
of correct delivery
rather than the composition of an
oration. Three medals are offered
by the faculty and students jointly, =
first prize being worth $15, second
$10 and third $5. As guests of the B
college the representatives are ac- |
corded free entertainment, and everyone
tries to make their visit an (
enjoyable occasion for all, 1
On account of the number of
representatives usually present a 1
preliminary contest is held the even- ||
ing before, at which time ten are J ^
chosen to enter the finals the next |
evening. The preliminary contest |
will therefore be held this year |
Thursday evening before the finals [11
Friday evening. 1
We might mention here that the I ^
only representative from Williams- I
burg last year won first place in the 11
preliminary, although he did not do I
so well in the finals. However, we IS
want to see someone do better this afl
year, and carry off first, honor at W
the finals.
Thanking you for your 1 kindness, M
we are, m.
W E Davis, fj
M F Montgomery, fj
W C Smith, a
The Williamsburg Club. F'
ti?i?i o n ^
rreaDyufrian ui o kj, m
Clinton, March 26. |C
. ?U;'. l. V.
ICJjurd)! I
1 ihm 11
The public is cordially invited
to attend any of the services of tbt
various churches of Kingstree.
Baptist Church. I
Rev W E Hurt, Pastor.
Services every Sunday morning at iHH
I 1 1 'Ofi 'I'nlnnL' on/-} oronin cr at 1' M
I
bwitowwh JII iiiwiwMPina
K- Iflflf
I en ?* ?i enf 15 >.
Hi" 'n* ? '
[LUAMSBURG MAN HONORED.
E Jenklnson Named as Member
State Board of Pardons.
David G Ellison of Columbia,
nry C Tillman of Greenwood and
E Jenkinson of Kin^stree were
pointed yesterday by Gov Manig
as members of the State board
prrdons. All petitions for parole,
rdon or commutation will be subtted
to this board by the Governor.
Grov Manning has been in office
more than two months and not
e pardon or parole has been grantHe
has received many petitions
i these will be sent to the new
rdon board.
It was said at the Governor's of?
that the old board was autoitically
removed by the appointmt
of a new board.
Sprains,Bruises
Stiff Muscles
Sloan's Liniment will save
hours of suffering. For bruise
or sprain it jpves instant relief.
it arrests inflammation ana tnus
S re vents more serious troubles
eveloping. No need to rub it
in?it acts at once, instantly
4 relieving the pain, however
severe it may be.
Here's Proof
Charles Johmon, P. 0. Box 108, Lawton's
Station, AT. Y., wriUs: "I sprained
my ankle and dislocated my left hip by
falling out of a third story window six
months ago. I went on crutches for four
months, then I started to use some of
your Liniment, according to your directions,
and I must say that it is helping
me wonderfully. I threw my crutches
away. Only used two bottles of your
Liniment and now I am walking quite
well with one cane. I newer will be without
Sloan's Liniment."
AO Dealers, 25c.
Send four cents in stamp* for a
TRIAL BOTTLE
Dr. Earl S. Sloan, Inc.
Dept. B. Philadelphia, Pa.
SLOANS
IINIMF.NT
Bli
KI'P j ^^Sii
%Mr^ ^^ IV 4iH
I AtetewjH*
WEBSTER'S < I
NEW
INTERNATIONAL
DICTIONARY
rHE MERRIAM WEBSTER
?he Only New unabridged die- \
tionary in many years.
Contains the pith and essence
of an authoritative library. ,i
Covers every field of knowl- |i
edge. An Encyclopedia in a 1
single book. j
.'he Only Dictionary with the
New Divided Page,
00,000 Words. 2700 Pages. ;
6000 Illustrations. Cost nearly I
half a million dollars,
jet us tell you about this most
remarkable single volume.
Write for sample
pages, full parI
ticulars, etc.
Name this
iWBpBSi^SL i paper and
we w:ll
wl send free
1A a set of
Haps
a/* it ?t r.
\
i xi.u\' v viwn cuiu vwuiu5 mv ?<vwy
o'clock. H
Sunday-school at 10.00 a. m.
Prayer-meeting Wednesdays
Episcopal Church, H
Rev H D Bull, Minister.
Services for first Sunday after
Easter, April 11: Sunday-school, 10
1 a. m.; evening prayer and sermon, j^H
Wednesday: Evening service, 8
Thursday: Holy communion. 11:80 .
a. m.; meeting, 4 p. m.; meeting, 8
Friday: Morning service, 11:30 \ IH
a. m.; meeting, 4 p. m.; evening
service, 8 p. m. j
Methodist Church. I H
Rev D A Phillips, Pastor.
Preaching every Sunday morning
nt 11 *3ft anH pvpninc at 7:20
o'clock. H
Sunday-school at 10:30 a. m.
Mid-week prayer meeting every
Wednesday afternoon at 4:00 o'clock. BB
Presbyterian Church. H
Rev P S McChesney, Pastor.
Preaching every Sunday at 11 a. ^B
m. and 7:30 p. m. Sunday-school
4:00 p. m. ^B
Prayer meeting Wednesday, 7:8# ^B
p. m. H
Arrival of Passenger Trains iW ^B
Klngstree. \ H
The Atlantic Coast Line railroad H
has promulgated the following schesl- H
ule, which became effective Sunday^
June 1, 1914:
North Bound. H
No 80 7:28 am
*No 46 11:35
No 78 6:02 p m
South Bound.
? -- ? /. -
no vy - - - n:uy a m &
No 47 - - 6:38 pm M
No 89 ... 9:18 p m; H
Daily except Sunday. [
I Legal Advertisements. j * J
Notice of Final Dis- ?
charge- "
Notice is hereby given that on th? MB
17th day of April, 1915, at 12 o'clock, WM
noon, I will apply to P M Brockinton,
Judge of Probate of Williamsburg Coonty,
for Letters Dismissory as Gnardiaa |H
of the person and estate oi D T Floyd.
J L Gowdy, Guardian.
March 11, 1915. 3-18-4t
Notice to Creditors. H
All persons indebted to the estate of t
J A Bradham, deceased, will please J Ml
make payment to the undersigned, and v |H
all persons to whom the said estate is
indebted will render an account of their
demands, duly attested. H|
Frances Allicenia Bradham,
3-18-4t Executrix.
Notice of Final Sis- I
charge.
Notice is hereby given that on the 24th
day of April, A D 1916, at 12 o'elock
noon, I will apply to P M Brockinton,
Judge of Probate of Williamsburg connty,
for Letters Dismissory as General
Guardian of the persons and estates of
Bettie Register, Theresa Register and
John Franklin Register.
Mrs May G Register, h
3-18-4tp. Guardian. L H
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The County Record and the Semi- 1 B
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Tnn PATTMrnv D n/wnrv
| xna vuuiui XVC<WAU? <