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I Professional Cards. Dr. R. C. McCABI Dental Surgeon, Office in Hirsch building, over Kings tree Drug Co's. 8-28-tf DtTR J. MCCABI DENTIST, J KINGSTREE, , S. ( 1 Office in McCabe Building, next t Court House. M.D. NESMITH, DENTIST, i. lake City, S. C I W. L. TAYLOR DENTIST, Office over Dr W V Brockiuffton's Store, KING5TREE, - S. C 5-21-tf. 1866 101' X A. M. SNIDER SURGEON DENTIST. Over Gamble & Jacobs' Drug Stor? jT^DeS.Gillanc Attorney-at-Law Second Floor Masonic Temple Florence, S. G General praciicioner in all State am Federal Courts. ? - saiair^n ftf rfc f* \ 7 CI Benj. m'">rNn3, m. k. v,. . B. Kater MclNNES, M. D.. V. M. D VETERINARIANS. One of us will be atKingstree thi Wf first Monday in each month, at Hel ler's Stables. 9-28-tf KIN6STREE Loi|ge'No< 4f /^i^\ A. F.M I meets Thursday before full moon eacl month. Visiting brethren are cordiail; invited. R K Wallace, W M J M Ross. See. 2-27-ly Kingstree Chapter RBM No.!22, ^3/ Order Eastern Stat Meets every Thursday night after ful moon and two weeks later. Mrs B E Clarkson, W M Mrs Stella Cook, Sect'y. 1-28-tf t Kingstree Lodge No. 91 Knights of Pythiar Regular conventions every second an( fourth Tuesday night. Our visitinj brethren alwavs welcome. Castle Hall 3rd story Goufdin Building. 1-14-lvr \ , BE Clarkson, C C ? E C Epps, K of R & S. Kingstree h/mf uscul hutix.i The Third Mord*: Visiting choppers cot JKLfSf^SsKy ilally invited to con. t fT 't*t np and sit on a stum] \gjE tyy ox hang about on tbi P E Stoll, J M Brown, Clerk. Con. Com. Fish! Fish! Fish! 1 Pendergrass' Fish Market I Now Ready! The best meat to eat is nice, fresh fish, especially for this season. We get fresh fish two to three times a week and from now on will keep them. You can depend on getting nice, fresh stock at any time. We positively guarj antee every string of fish we sell so if they are not entirely satisfactory return them at once and we will cheerfully refund your I money. The famous Red Fin I Croakers are now in season, a fine ? fish and best for this time of year. Special to the readers of this ad: On Fridays only, by mentionI ing this ad, you can buy a 25c j string of Croakers for 20c in I ^ cash. Be sure and call for FISH. Pendergrass Bros. Co. Kingstree, - S. C. k 'Phone 14. | CHICHESTER S PILLS a THE DIAMOND liltA.ND. A Lndlest A?W your l>pujr*l?t for/A ?(\ Mil-chet-U-r 9 l?iamniid Tlrnnil/AX I'lllo in Red and Hold meUWc\V/ boner, sealed *ith C .e KiS'oon. \/ ^ Take no other. Buy of your ? - ? -1* - -* /-iii'j rrroQ I ^ DlA^v iliuVoFIuSif^& \V* B jrearsknownasBest.Safest. Always RcliaM* SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE Receipt Books, Blank Notes, Mortgages ant all Legal Blanks in demand, for sale al The Record office. If we have not th? ^ form you wish we can print it cn shori 1 notice. \ ' . t B Ra^FESIPE? : IF NOT, WHY NOT? 0 Whose fault is it? It is not ~ ours. We offer you the necessary requirements to place you on the safe side,and would be more than delighted to , WRITE YOU A POLICY "* that will protect you from all loss ? Vfc^T fl ?>aci of o ira-fir lrtm rafo Wp I I il/jt in at a y v/i j iv?? amw* ?? w represent the best and most reliable companies on earth. Kiigstree Insurance,Real Estate &Lo?nCo. W. H. WELCH, Manager. ^?m^ | Epps' Market All meats bought and sold for cash. Don't ask for credit. > Epps' MarKet I 3 Cr. Academy (XL Mill Sts. jg LIGHTNING RODS. H. L. WHITLOCK, Lake City, S. C?, I Special Sales Agent ? .. Representing the largest manufacturers of all kinds Im* Proved Copper and Galvanized section rtoas. <r.,naorseu uy tl SKSIp? the Highest Scientific Authorities and Fire Insurance ^ Companies). Pure Copper Wire X'S$j?V*- ' Cables, all sizes. Our Full Cost ?-^7y*?^-7- - Guarantee given with each job. Trn.it 1 I sell on close margin of profit, dividing commission with mv 1 customers. 8-7-tf ' WATTS'JEWELRY STORE f KINGSTREE, S. C. 1 I keep on hand everything to be found in an up-to-date jewelry house Repairing and engraving done with neatness and P despatch. :: As a home dealer, guaranteeing t quality and prices, ' , I Solicit Your Patronage. j Near the Railroad Statioxa. r " Registration Notice. The olfice of the Supervisor of Regmill ho nnon nn t.ho let \fnn. IOUOVIVU nil! MV VJ/V41 vu <r?^ ?? - day 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 t county one year, and of the polling precinct in which the elector offers to vote four months before the day of e election, and shall have paid, six i months before, any poll tax then due E and payable, and who can both read and write any section of the constitution of 1895 submitted to him by the Supervisors of Registration, or wh( - can show that he owns, and has paid all taxes collectible on during the present year, pioperty in this State assessed at three hundred dollars or more. H A Meyer, rIerk of Board THE THRICE-A-WEEK EDITION OF THE New York World. Practically a Daily at the Price | of a Weekly. I No Other Newspaper in the World Gives | So Much at So Low a Price. The year 1914 has been the most extraordinary in the history of modern times. It has witnessed the outbreak of the great European war, a struggle so titanic that it makes all others look small. You live in momentous times, and you should not miss any of the tremendous events that are occurring. No other newspaper will inform you with the promptness and cheapness of the Thricea-Week edition of the New York World. Moreover, a year's subscription to it _ will take you far into our next Presi- dential campaign. The Thrice-a-Week World's regular a ' subscription price is only $1.00 per year, and this pays for 156 papers. We offer this unequaled newspaper and The i County Record together for one year for $1.75. The regular subscription of the two papers is $2.00. Undressed Lumber? I always have on hand a lot of un| dressed lumber (board and framing) at t my mill near Kingstree. for sale at the I [ lowest price for good material. See or : write me for further information, etc. ' F. H. HODGE. I } / r ( FIRST k r i Timn WILMING ATLANTIC C 6-17-t9 9 The Standard 1 Die Record - Si Only $1J \LL THE NEWS OF < / ? 1 . . Mental Worry; long hours c A Cold Bottle of fres Relieves Fatigue. < Avoid Substitut ceived. The Get The Public j [Inspection Premise LAKE CITY BOTTLING SUNDAY E] TO SEAS] ROUND TRIP FARE) from KINGSTREE , to CHARLESTON! Tickets sold only for 1 Sundays, limited to date Mi SCHEDUL T TV : ? !. ijeave xvinghuet; Arrive Charleston SCHEDULE 1 Leave Charleston Arrive Kingstree For further particulars, W Holliday, Ticket Age W. J. CRAIG. Pass. Traf. Mi SAFETY IN YOUF IDiin^ing", 3 Courtney's Ice is open throughout the year, in Pure Drinks. Pure Creams We use no substiture for Coce solutely Pure Juices used in Pure Cream sold in our place. Vegetables, Meats, Milk, Cre from the farm. Everything agency for a modern Bakery 1 and digestible roods. 13est, ZESead. ; in an up-to-date Ice Cream P* us. We'll be glad to see you i glad you came. Easy to com< Rates very reasonable. Courtney's Ice Cream FATIC m m i 11r a I LrtimU testing", Etc. ! Cream Parlor Plenty of good things to enjoy 5, Pure Candies, Cigars, Etc. i Cola?only the genuine. Aball other Drinks- Nothing but The tables are furnished with ?am, Butter, Fruits, Etc., fresh else in season. We have the that furnishes most appetizing and. Kecreate irlor and Cafe. Come to see and will undertake to make you i here, but hard to go away. Parlor. Kingstree, S. C. iUED? Brain Fagged from >f over-work? Delicious and Rehing Km.M m -all for it by Name, es. Don't be de- | re is only one I VICIIU1I1C Of Our Plant and s Invited. COCA COLA G WORKS XCURSIONSI THE HO RE! $L25! trains specified below on | of sale. | E GOING, I 8:05 a. m. I 10:30 a. m. | RETURNING. I 8:25 p. m. 1 - 10:52 p. m. J tickets, etc, apply to W I jnt, Kingstree, SC. g ?r. T. C. WHITE, G. P. A. f tON.N.C. & :OAST LINE, I Railroad of the South. | imi-Wiekly Stale 85 a year COUNTY AND STATE | ? What Can Italygflto? Whatwil] be the effect of Italy'sentrance? First of all, it will bring to the Allies a million of trained soldiers. It will relieve the pressure now exerted on the rc uted Russians in Galicia and call for new contributions of German troops to defend Austria. In moral effect it will be even more impressive than in its immediate military influence. In the tenth month of a war that hss become, at iL - I i. _ J 31 1_ iL. A 11: ine least, a ueauiuca, uie Ames gttiu i a new army, a new nation. Nor is it at all improbable that Italy will j be promptly followed by Rumania, ' or that the appearance of Italian troops at the Dardanelles will enlist Greece. Even Bulgaria may now find the time come to consult future interests rather than past grievances. That Italy can hope to force her way far into Austria now is unlikely. The nature of her frontier, the tremendous Austrian redoubt of the Trentine Tyrol, rising out of the Po Valley, precludes the hope of immediate advance on Vienna, perhaps even on Trieste, defended against her fleet by the submarines which accounted for the Gambetta. Not impossibly the actual entrance of Italy will be followed by a tremendous Austro-German offensive aimed at Verona and Milan,?an effort to . seize Verona, *eoccupy the old A liftA*?n 1 IiaM f Ua Konl/e A f f V-IO V^uauiliaiciai, IIUIU lUC uaimo ui nix. Adige and the Mincio. German "terribleness" may hope to strike terror into the hearts of Italians by a successful campaign in the Po Valley, made possible by recalling the victorious corps from Galicia. Two months earlier, on the morning of the fall of Przemysl, the entrance of Italy would have had disastrous results for Austria. For her own sake, for the cause of her new allies, Italy, if she now enters, will come too late. Russia has been defeated, has suffered the most ter- _ rible disaster of the war. The fighting in the west has adjourned the hopes of a "Spring drive." The Dardanelles campaign is approach- gf ing a deadlock. Italy will not "rush w to the succor of the victor," she will w enter a perilous -path, driven by ^ popular demand and secular griev- j, ances. She brings new hope to the g allies, but her share of the burden ^ is bound to be considerable. Venice V( and Milan may know the destruction w of Rheims and Louvain. ? From f, "Germany's New Offensive in May," p by Frank H Simonds, in the Ameri- p can Review of Reviews for June. p Charlestonlan in Trouble. v Venice, June 14:?The Duke and t Duchess of Litta have been arrested g on a charge of espionage. They are 0 well known in America, where the c Duke often lectured. The Duchess p was Miss Perry of Charleston, SC. v On the night of one of the aerial ? bombardments of Venice the Duke j, and Duchess had retired. It is a t strict rule in Venice that one must 2 not burn lights with the windows or p shutters open, and either the Duke b or Duchess or a servant forgot to tl close the shutters. The light was e taken by the police as a signal to g the Austrians. } n Up went half a dozen policemen j r< to arrest the Duchess and Duke. n, The policemen would not allow the p, maid in the room, but helped the ^ ducal pair put on their clothes. They a? were carried off to the central police 1T1 station, where they had to spend ^ the rest of the night. n( The Duchess complained she had been taken away without her hair. p, A policeman was sent to fetch it, ce and it was used as evidence against q her as extra proof that she was an Austrian spy in disguise. When the ducal pair had sent for influential jn Venetians, who swore to their ident- cc ity, they were allowed to go on bail. ev be Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and pj Diarrhoea Remedy. hi This is a remedy that every family should be provided with, and especially during the summer months. Think of the pain and suffering that must be ^ndured when medicine af must be sent for,or before relief can be obtained. This remedy is thoroughly reliable. Ask any one who has used it. Obtainable everywhere Ti ^. - Ti Why send Christian missionaries w to the Dark Continent? Europe of- jl1 fers a more pressing and inviting xi field. iT A Lesson from the Bible. ii A nd there came a griev11 ous swarm of flies into the house of Pharoah, and into the land of Egypt: the land was corrupted by reason of the swarm of flies."?Exodus 8:24. And behold,when many thouaunHa nf vpara hnH nnaaprl tViP - land was again disturbed. And there were many wars and battles and great slaughter. And there were again grievous swarms of flies into all the lands; and there was great sickness into all the lands; and thereat the people were exceeding sore in mind. v And they came to the elders and the wise men crying: "Help us, or we perish." The elders asked them, saying: "Wherefore are you so troubled?" ' Then the people answered the wise men, saying: "There is sickness on our ? f,, land; and on our people; and 9 on our children; and we have \ grievous fear that all shall perish." * i And the elders drew apart for counsel; and they returned, -saying: "Are there not swarms of flies into your lands?" . ... , . , ~ And tne people cried out: (. "Yea, there are flies and in great number." And the elder spoke saying: "Go thou forth, then, and destroy them that there may be no more sickness on your lands." ? A Very Serious Mistake. Bennettsville, June 11:? A very >rious mistake has been made somehere in regard to the sentence hich was imposed by Judge D E iydrick on Ed Ingram. At the ; une term of the court of Marlboro d Ingram was tried on an indictlent charging him with murder. A erdict of "guilty of manslaughter" ras returned, J J Lane being the ->rpmnn nf the iurv. and Judere [ydrick, on June 28,1906, sentenced ? j im to serve at hard labor in the eoitentiary for a period of 15 years. >n February 17, 1914, Ed Ingram ,?as brought back to Marlboro couny to serve on the county chaining. There was filed in the office f the Clerk of the Court here a ommutation of sentence, and this aper states that Ingram was conicted of murder with recommendaion to mercy, was sentenced to life nprisonment in the State peniteniary and the sentence commuted to 0 years' imprisonment upon the ublic works of the county of Marloro. The record in the office of tie Clerk of Court here is correct in f very particular, and shows that Inram was given fifteen years. It is ot known where the mistake oecursd. When Ingram arrived in Benettsville, the attorney, who was apointed to represent him on the trial y Judge Hydrick, saw Ingram and scertained that a mistake had been lade. The matter was calied to le attention of the Governor, but d action has ever been taken. The entire question it now being .v resented to Gov Manning, and a rtificate from the office of the 'erk of Court is being furnished or f Un nvanf xirAr^inrr rtf -> UJ, dllUWlil& U1C tAo^v vvv/iuuig u. le sentence. Ingram is under the ipression that his sentence was immuted to ten years. In that rent, if he is given credit for good jhavior, his time'would have exred and he would be entitled to s discharge. m ^ The advertising columns of this iper are the arrows that point the ay to better buying. Follow the rows. A 3 Drive Out Malaria And Build Up The System alee the Old Standard GROVE'S \STELESS chill TONIC. You know hat you are taking, as the formula is inted on every label, showing it is uinine and Iron in a tasteless form, he Quinine drives out malaria, the on builds up the system. 50 cents I - S -J