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MfHfmsinnal farfc, I ^KaTuMicAB^ I Rental Surgeon. mm ia Hirseh building, o^er KingsH^Eug Co's. 8-28-tf V ROBERT J7HcCA?E, IB DENTIST, I eCTREE, ? S. C n McCa'oe Building, next to House. / D. NESMITH, dentist, city, s. c W. L. TAYLOR dentist, Office oyer Dr W V Brocklngton' a Store, KINGSTRECs - S.C. 6-81-tf. ism i?i? ta- M. SNIDER, JH.HDjP l DUUA VWMI ? . ?. Kingstree Lodge, grag No. 91 JK* Knights of Pythias Regular conventions every second and fourth Tuesday night Our yisiting .brethren always welcome. Castle Hall, ,to? Gonrdin V g c Epps, K of R & s. BMDL4I Wll.ll Th?^ Third Mo?d?y ilally oome . P H STOLL, J M Brown, Clerk. Con.Com NOTICE ! Tobacco will bring best prices at Kingstree and T. J. Pendergrass will give you best values for your money. Nice fresh Fish always on hand. We 1 nlsn reirrv a full and com pjete line of Groceries, C6ld Drinks, Crockeryware and Glassware. If you spend a night in town and miss Pendergrass' Boarding House you will regret it Six bedrooms up stairs and everything complete. Our Restaurant is under the management of Mrs. J. v Hamlet, who will tfive you A-l service. Call *and see her. PendergrasS Brothecs Co. Kin?stre*. - S. C. CHICHESTER S PILLS VTHE DIAMOND BRAND. A /7?d\ LodlesJ Ask your DrtipaUt for A\ C <( Cht<hee.ter Diamond Tlrsnd/aVv IMlle la Bed sad Vold metiUlc\\// ML, ~ boxes, sealed with Line Ribbon. M S&U Take no ether. But o<* your * . n - ? IW?ld._A?kf?CMWire!tTEB8 I U JM DIAMOND HKAni) ?'1LL\ for ?? VP* B years known as Best, Safest. Al?ays Reliable SOLD W DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE fltcaipt Books, Sink Notts, Mortgages tod 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. \ SURGEON DENTIST. Over Gamble & Jacobs' Drag Store. J.DeS. GMand Attorney-at-Law Second Floor lasonlc Temple - Florence^S. G General practicioner iojall State and ?edecal Courts. Benj. M'NNES, M. R.C. V. S. B. Kater McINNES, M. D.. V. M. D VETERINARIANS. One of us will be at Kingstree the fi^st Monday in each month, at Heller's Stables. . 9-28-tf A^KIi Lodge, No. 46 meets Thursday before full moon each " " *?/.nrHiallv month, visiting oremreu on, ? nvited. R K Wallace, W M. *9 M Ross, Sec. * 2-27-ly /^v Kingstree Chapter, No.*33. Order Eastern Star Meets every Thursday nig^t after full moon and two weeks later. Mrs B E Clarkson, W M. t * Pnnv Spet'v. 1-28-tf * & SAFE SIDE? IF NOT, WHY NOT? Whose fault is it? It is nc ours. We offer you the necessar requirements to place you on th safe side.and would be more tha delighted to WRITE YOU A FOLIC! that will protect you from all los by fires at a yery low rate,. W represent the best and most n liable companies on earth. UifStrN ln$irancerfteil Estate fcLoai 6 V. I. watt, Hang*. Epps' Market All meats bought and sold \for cash. Don't ask for credit. ?pps* MarKet ' Cr. Academy flU Mill Sts. H. I*. WHITLOCH | City. S. C?? "^4*^ Special Sales Agen f .. Representing the largest mai ufacturers of all kinds In A v*?- proved Copper and Galvanize Section Rods. (Endorsed fc the Highest Scientific At thorities and Fire Insurant Companies). Pure Copper Wii agpy? Cables, all sizes. Our Full Coi $3Kg^^=> - Guarantee given with each jol RrYritsajL-J I sell on close margin of profi dividing commission with m customers. 8-7-1 WATTS'JEWELRY STORl 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 Snlir.it Ymir Patronajre. N*?r til* Riilroad Station. Registration Notice. Hie office of tbe Supervisor of Rej istration will be open on the 1st Mqi day in each month for the purpose < registering any person who is qual fled as follows: Who shall have been a resident* the State for two years, and of tl oounty one year, and of the polling pr cinct in which the elector offers 1 vote four months before the day < election, and shall * have paid, si months before, any poll tax then dt and payable, and who can both rei and write any section of the constiti tion of 1895 submitted to him by tl Supervisors of Registration, or wt can show that he owns, and has pai all taxes collectible on during tl present year, pioperty in this Stai assessed at three hundred dollars < more. H A Meyer, Clerk of Board. if : CYPRESS . SASH ^ DOORS g | SA\ , Is the Only ? Becoming ALSO IT IS THE Of TTDDTPUT WA UUXIVlUiiX TT-n. ' 'I* y O IT TAKES TIME, BUT e | ' PRINCIPLE. n f IT TAKES PATIENCE, s YOUR NERVE ?jjl LET JfcJS HELP YOU DOUR DEPOS HAVEN'T H] Bank ot Hen >=== SUNDAY E: TO SEAS] I I kuunu iKir I'm) i ! from KINGSTREE' , to CHARLESTON) * , / Tickets sold only for i if * Sundays, limited to date 5 SCHEDUL ; 'Leave Kingstree ? Arrive Charleston v \ SCHEDULE] - Leave Charleston ? Arrive Kingstree For further particulars IW Holliday, Ticket Ag< W. J. CRAIG, Pass. Traf. M WILMING ATLANTIC < 6-1749-9 The Standard c The Meanest >< Miller in Town iis prepared to grind your ?e corn into fine meal, coarse * or medium grits. Bring along your corn. * I am also prepared to !5 grind your wheat into the >- very best grade of flourJo the home ground kind. id Bring us your wheat as soon as it is ready. " EPPS MILLING CO., S. F. EPPS, Proprietor j Greenville | Womans College 1 Greenville, S. C. Affords complete advantages lor Is a broad, liberal education. Trains B j| its students for lives of fullest p I I*, efficiency and responsibility. ] (Equipment, faculty, courses of t| study, and cultural influences are [ entirely in harmony with present- j day requirements. Administration, instruction and dormitory buildings equipped along the g] most modern lines, for convenient, d comfortable life and efficient work. Entrance requirement! upon 14-nnit baiis. ij High standard courses leading to B. A.. fj g B. L. and AL A. degrees. Literature, re ? Languages, Sciences. Practical train- II | i ng in Domestic Science. Bosnew Courte, J , J: leading to diploma. f x| ~ i! . Thouough courses leading to diplo- & ;j mas in Cooiemtorr of Muic, departments I :'j of Art, Expresaon, Pbyjic.l Cnitnre, Kiodenar- $j > ten. Normal Trainiif Cntm. This institution alms to afford the n- if best educational advantages obtainable at | at a minimum cost. For Catalogue addreu r 36 j| DAVID M. RAMSAY. D. D^ Pres. ?r Greeuville. S. C. Ufc ~"""i 1 .9 BLINDS 9% * %*> MOULDINGS ^ AND I? MILLWORK '! * i *T__ Jl J AM undressed iiumuei* I always have on hand a lot of a dressed lumber (board and framing) my mill near Kingstree. for sale at ti lowest price for good material. See < write me for further information, etc F. H. HODGI . aOHBSK TNG | Sure Way of , (Wealthy. | JLY CLEAN, HONEST, I II IT DOESN'T KILL YOUR O | t , BUT IT DOESNT RACK S. SAVE?ASK SOME OP I ITORS IF WE f ELPED THEM. ningway, S. CI XCURSIONSI \ THE HORE! $1.25. trains specified below on of sale. E GOING. Q.OPv n rn - u?\ju c*. 111. 10:30 a. m. \ RETURNING. 8:25 p. m. - 10:52 p. m. , tickets,. etc, apply to W 3nt, Kingstree, S C. gr. T. C. WHITE, G. P. A. TON, N. C. COAST LINE, Railroad of the South. Notice of Election. A petition, signed by the required number of aualified electors and freeholders,residents of Spring Gully School District,No 60, in Williamsburg county, and State of South Carolina, and praying the County Board of Education for said county to grant an election in said district for the purpose of voting a special tax of four (4) mills, to be used tor school purposes in said district, and said petition having .been granted and election ordered, Notice is hereby given that an election for above named purpose will be held at Martin's mill Saturday, August 7,1915. Poll will open at 8:00 a. m. and will close at 4 p. m. The undersigned, by virtue of their office, will act as managers of this election and will canvass the vote. M L Boyd, W T Evans. Capers Boyd, 7-29-2tp Trustees District No 60. Begistration Notice. The 14th of September being election day on State-wide prohibition, the registration books will be opened from the 2nd of August, being the first Monday in the month, until the 14th, every day. That date being thirty days before the election, they will be closed until after the election. Books will be found open at the usual place. H A Meyer, Clerk of Board. Kingstree, S C, July 5,1915. 7-8 Notice. Notice is hereby given, that at 12:00 o'clock, noon, on the 9th day of August, 1915, the undersigned will apply to the Judge of Probate of Williamsburg county for his final discharge as Administrator of the estate of W L Carter, deceased. J M G Eaddy, Administrator. Dated July 6, 1915. 7-8-5t Beware of Ointments tor Catarrh that Contain Mercury gs mercury will surely destroy the sense of smell and completely derange the whole system when entering it through the mucous surfaces. Such articles should never be used except on prescriptions from reputable physicians, as the damage they will do is ten fold to the good you can possibly derive from them. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured* by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo. O., contains no mercury, and is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. In buying Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure you get the genuine It is taken internally and made in Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & Co. Testimonials free. . . , Sold by Druggists. Price 7oc per bottle. Take Hall's Family Pill" for constipation. - I ? i V \ WOMEN RUN STREET CARS. Are Taught in "Schools for Conductoresses" In Germany. Berlin, July 16:?rhe art of "eonducting" a street car through the crowded thoroughfares of Berlin is being taught to women in five "schools for conductoresses," which "graduate" each week a total of between 300 and 400 female con ductors to take the places of men gone to the war. v Not since the earliest days of the electric car in Berlin have pupils who were candidates for positions of the back platform proved as apt as are the women who once were considered as absolutely unfitted for this supposedly masculine work. Between 2,500 and 3,000 women are now employed, and, incidentally, every one who has applied passed the preliminary examination. A large percentage, however, can not stand the strain and have to seek other work. The women are given a theoretical course of three days, eight hours a day, in one of the five schools that are located in Charlottenburg, Treptow, Lichterfelde, Lichterberg and Weissensee, suburbs of Berlin. This is followed by a longer period of practical training, during which they are accompanied on genuine trips by experienced conductors, learn H a package today. Insist on the H BuBBSmDHBI V of kidney trouble. Price 50c, at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy?get Doan's Kidney Pills?the same that Mrs Nettles had. Foster-Milburn Co, Props, Buffalo, N Y. It is easy to sit in your carriage, And counsel the man on foot; But get down and walk, and you'll change your talk, As you feel the peg in your boot. ?Ella Wheeler Wilcox. . ? Musical Not*. "Tommy/' said the teacher, "can you tell me what classical music is?" "Yes, ma'am," replied Tommy. "It's the kind a fellow can't whiii tie."?Chicago New*. Now Well I B "Thedford's Black-Draught N m is the best all-round medicine H lever used," writes J. A. H H Steelman, of Pattonville, Texas. H Hi "I Offered terribly with liver H I troubles, and could get no relief. H The doctors said I had con- H sumption. I could not work at H all. Finally I tried S THEDFORO'S I BLACK-- I DRAUGHT I and to my surprise, I got better, H and am to-day as well as any Rj man." Thedford's Black- H Draught is a general, cathartic, Hj vegetable liver medicine, that H has been regulating irregulari- D ties of the liver, stomach and S3 bowels, for over 70 years. Get H the names or the streets, ana have a chance to put their theoretical training into use. The Berlin public has co-operated heartily with the street car authorities in its introduction of women on the cars. There has as yet been no single case recorded of an insult to one of the female conductors, and it is rare that passengers have not cheerfully been willing to put up with "greenness" and inexperience. OF LOCAL INTEREST. Some People We Know, and We Will Profit by Hearing About Tbem. This is a purely local event. It took place in Kingstree. Not. in aomp farawav nlaop You are asked to investigate it. Asked to believe a citizen's word; To confirm a citizens statement. Any article thatis endorsed at home Is more worthy of confidence Than one you know nothing about, Endorsed by unknown people. Mrs S A Nettles, Mill St, Kingstree, says: "I suffered awfully from disordered kidneys. My back was so sore and lame I could hardly do any sweeping or other housework. The kidney secretions passed irregularly. When I caught cold, it settled on my kidneys and made me worse. Finally I gdt Doan's Kidney Pills at the Kingstree Drug Co, and they relieved me of all signs ANNUAL MEETING OF AMERICAN PLOWMEN \ , National Farmers' Union Rondora Urv eelfleh Service to Agrlaulture. \ j? ~ " ~72 By Peter Radford. The National Farmers' Union will' hold its annual convention in Lincoln Nebraska, on September seventh, and will round out the eleventh year of its activities in the interest of tha American plownian. When that convention is called to order every farmer in America should pause and bow his head in honor of the men gathered there to render a patriotic and unselfish service to agriculture. That organization, born in the cotton field! of Texas, has grown until geographically it covers almost ^ie whole of the United States and economically it deals with every question in which the welfare of the men who bare their backs to the summer sun are involved. It has battled for a better marketing system, rural credits, cheap money, diversification, scientific proHn/itlnn c arinnlturo 1 leirtaloHnn and u uvviv/U) a^iivuituiai ic;gioiouvu uuu has carried on its work of education and cooperation in season and out. I The Farmers' Educational and Cooperative Union of America brings the question of organization squarely before every farmer in this nation. Without organization the farmers can neither help themselves nor be helped by others and through organization and systematic effort all things are possible. V The farmers of the' United States contribute more and get less from government than any other class of business. They have better securities and pay a higher rate of interest than any oth&r line of industry. They marlrpf mnro nrnrinMa nnrt havp Ipsa ? w v ^ r to say in fixing the price than any other btJt^ness and they get more political buncombe and less construotive legislation than any other class of people. The farmers can only acquire such influence in business, in government and in economics as will, enable them to share equitably the. fruits of their labor through organization and every farmer on American soil who desires to help himself and his fellow plowmen should rallyaround the Union. -/ -n' " r POLITICAL GOSSIPS When one class of people has anything to say, it has become largely< the custom to make a political issue out of it instead of a friendly discussion, to print it in a law book instead of a newspaper and to argue it before a jury instead of to settle it in the higher courts of Qommon Sense. As a result, political agitators, polit; ical lawyers, political preachers and masculine women are powerful in politics and dissension, selfishness, in-> tolerance and hysterics run rampant! in public affairs, for when the low,,, dan^p, murky atmosphere of misun-. derstanding envelops public thought it breeds political reptiles, vermin, bugs and lice which the pure air of truth and the sunshine of understanding will choke to death. nr. v ?B UttVW tuu Uiailjr ecil'ttppuiuiou Interpreters of industry who are incapable of grasping the fundamental principles of business and who at best can only translate gossip and add color to sensational stories. No business can stand upon error and might rules?right or wrong. No industry can thrive upon misunderstanding, for public opinion is more powerful than a King's sword. ' When prejudice, suspicion and class hatred prevail, power gravitates into the hands of the weak, for demagogues thrive upon dissension and statesmen sicken upon strife. The remedy lies in eliminating the middleman?the political gossip?and this result can be accomplished by the managers of business sitting around the table of industry and talking it over with the people. Interchange of information between industries and the people is as necessary to success in business as interchange in commodities, for the people can only rule when the public understands. Away with political interpreters who summon evil spirits from their prison cells and loose them to prey upon the welfare of the people in the name of "My Country." PHILIP Philip, the Macedonian king, while drowsy with wine was trying a case and the prisoner after sentence was pronounced, exclaimed, "I appeal.' A * -J Ana to wnom ao you uyyc?i; inquired the astonished monarch. "I appeal from Philip drunk to Philip sober," replied the prisoner, and the king granted the request and at a rehearing gave the prisoner his liberty. The people drowsy with the wine of discord ofttimes pronounce a verdict on public questions which they reverse in their snore calm ahd deliberate moments. The next best thing to make* < ing no mistakes is to correct them. i v