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I *1 Office SupplieT] S C H 0 S U P P We have a full and complete as Pencil and Ink Tablets, Ink, I gfieia Dustless Crayons, Dustless Conklin and Waterman Fountain Also a full line of stationery styles and shades just received. KINGSTREl [Magazines and I P/vwin Periodicals | V^OITip Fanners of Witt Dear Sirs: Bring your tob; tree, the best tobs the State, and see Mules, Buggies, Si Harness, Saddles, I Grain Drills, Etc. Yours to ] WilSiamslwra l i iiuuhiuVHw3 ? WATCHES JEWELR I OPTICAL GOODS CUT GLASS ! S. THOMi H QUALITY JEW JL?57 King St., - C |l?SMBB^^BJIIIIIMI II I III I I Scott Dr Come to us for all dr tides. Our selections onrl nAnnlor in nrif?A Jj | anu ... I Bring us your prescri I are all fresh and the u served in the compound scription. A fresh supply of ?N< ways on hand. When j come to us and get Noi ii Scott Dr IN1 THE WAF IBU J. L. STl HAS E Horses an For Sale or 1 J. L. STl Livery, Feed an< Lake City, I QL I ToiletArticIcsl LIES line of School Supplies,such ^ns, Penstrffs, Pencils, HyErasers, Bookstraps, Rulers, Pens. for all uses in the latest Call and see this line. E DRUG _ ? I Kodaks and I any i supplies i iamsburg: acco* to Kingsicco market in nc "Pnv TTnrQPS CiU X v/i JL JL\/X irreys, Wagons, lowers, Rakes, please, ve Stock Co. - s. c. Y DIAMONDS | i SILVERWARE I NOVELTIES ETC J LS cSC CO., I ELERS, I HARLESTON.S.C. S Tig Co. ugs and toilet arfll>n TTA^TT rt/MYinlufo CllC V CI J ipiv/tvj ptions. Our drugs tmost care is preling of every preorris' Candies alyou want Candy, -ris'. ug Co., South Carolina. i IS ?N JCKEY1 ;OTH I \t\ Mules 1 Exchange. 1 uck;e y| i Sale Stable v|j South Carolina j| GAGE Fall Mi Opei / i WorlnoQrtau VVUUIIUUUUV j September; Every Lac S. Mi I THE BIG STORE ( IKingstree When in Tow Store Headqu i 11 n 1 iff . 1 IF I All rresn meats ana vegec THE PEOPLE H. A, MILLER, FC 0b B "PI ! Good Thin i SE LEWIS & Phone No. 143 :1 g= This Coupon doc For Miss P. o A Candidate in the "Beauty Que ! burg County Fair as the most County. All Coupons Must be Neatly*Ti 2 muiouaj 29 and 30 ly Invited ircus IN THE CORNER I , - s. c. n Make Our | arters. i Tin Ynnr Pnttlp I m II Ml is! Market Price Paid ibles on Hand in Season* S MARKET A m , Proprietor, j r j| to Eat :e CARTER 9 )d for 100 Votes - sen" Contest of the Wilfiamsbeautiful young lady in this rimmed Before Being Sent In; e HATS ' llinery i ung i Thiirorlou With kind regards, I am Yours very truly, M R Gass. Biliousness and Constipation. It is certainly surprising that any woman will endure the miserable feeelings caused by biliousness and constipation, when relief is so easily had and at so little expense. Mrs Chas Peck. Gates. N Y, writes: "About a year ago I used two bottles of Chamberlains Tablets and they cured me of biliousness and constipation." Obtainable everywhere. ! Cow Hides! ) I WANTED I JH1SHEST CASH PRICE 4 vV 4 PAID FOR EVERY HIDE J I CAN GET. BEFORE f | YOU SELL BE SURE jt TO SEE ME. 1 I _ ! S F EPPSl I How's This ? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. t\ J. CHKNhiX ? 'JU.. iHieuu, kj. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made hv Ills firm. NATIONAL BANK OF COMMERCE. Toledo, 0. flail's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, ?cting directly upon the blood and mu- ( cutis surfaces of the system. Testimonials : s nt free. I'rice 75 cents per bottle. Sold l* * a!) Piuggists. TaUs Hall'a Family PIUb for constipation. Malaria or Chills & Fever Picscription No. 666 1*3 prepared especial'v for MALARIA or CHILLS <4. 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 Calomel and does not gripe or sicken. 25c 1 ~ REMEMBER / , Pe-^M-ria ( 1 When ! i^ufall ?j|\t At Our | Drug5tore^y j Mr. Robert H. Norris, No. 1333 Hen- ] ry St., North Berkeley, Cal., writes: c "We have never had any other medl- . cine but Peruna in our home since we J have been married. I suffered with ] kidney and bladder trouble, but two ( months treatment with Peruna made me a well and strong man. My wife felt weak and was easily tired and ^ was also troubled with various pains, but since she took Peruna she is well and strong." 1 f Mr. Gass' Letter of Apology. Mr M R Gass writes the following ] letter to Mr J S Terry. The letter ] explains itself: Kingstree.SC, September 14,1915. Mr J S Terry, 1 Greelyville, S C. Dear Sir:? On the 24th day of August, 1915, ; we issued a check for $31.75 at our ! tobacco warehouse to McNeal Green ' or bearer, in settlement of some tobacco sold at our warehouse on that . day. Subsequently during the same day the check was given out to a ( young man and was cashed by some v' one other than the party to whom it was payable. We made an investigation and located your son, R ; D Terry, as being the party who got the check. We spoke to your son about it and at that time I was thoroughly convinced that he got the check. My bookkeeper, with several others who saw him, was also convinced that your son got the check. However, upon later inves titration, I am thoroughly satisned that your son did not get the check and did not cash it and I km writing this letter to you in order that you may understand that I am now satisfied that your son did not get the check. Of course, at the same i time. I do not mean to say that I did not act in good faith in thinking in the first instance that your son did get the check. I am satisfied 1 made a mistake, and I write this letter to you in the shape of an apology for the error that I made and I trust that both you and your son, Mr R D Terry, will accept my apolog> and overlook the matter. You are at* liberty to use this letter in any way you see fit, to show that your son was erroneously charged with taking the check in question. HIS CHANCE EXPERIMENT. Th* Accident That Led Nobel to Discover Blasting Gelatin. When Unit verv dangerous exploiive, nitroglycerin, was lirst invented extraordinary precautions had to )e taken to prevent accidents while ,he substance was being handled; )ut, notwithstanding this, so many lisasters occurred that there seemed to be strong probabilities that ts manufacture and use would have ;o be prohibited. After several governments had actually interdicted .ts use, however, means were discovered by which this powerful explosive could be used with a mininum of danger to those who hanlled it. One of the methods employed vas to convert the nitroglycerin nto dynamite by its absorption in ;he infusorial earth known as kie ?elguhr. This process, however, involved a reduction of the explosive power of the nitroglycerin, and explosives chemists persisted in their researches to find some substance which when added to nitroglycerin svould render it safe for handling ivithout diminishing its explosive force. One of these chemists was Nobel. Tt is on record that one day while Nobel was at work in his laboraLory he cut his finger, and in oriler to stop the bleeding he painted some collodion (a liquid preparation akin to guncotton) over the cut to form a protective artificial skin. Having done this, he poured some of the collodion, by way of an experiment, into a vessel containing nitroglycerin, when he noticed that the two substances mixed and formed a jelly-like mass. Nobel at once set to work to in vestigate this substance, ana tne outcome of these experiments was blasting gelatin, a mixture containing 90 per cent of nitroglycerin and 10 per cent of soluble guncotton. Thus as a result of a very trivial occurrence that violent explosive?blasting gehtin?was discovered.?Pearson's Weekly. Dexterous Eating. In the island of Jamaica, the land of hurricanes and earthquakes, the native women do almost all the work, even to plowing in the fields and working on the government roads, and this keeps them more or less busy. They also have a peculiar custom when eating. In order not to waste valuable time thes'e dark members of the gentler sex have adopted an ingenious method. They place a plate containing their food, be it hot boiled rice or rabbit stew, on their heads, and, thus balancing l K '1 * -b "Trt 1 b rtlvAllf f lin Trie towns back m tlie urates rnai nan tIn? time I couldn't hear what the mide was saying." ? Birmingham Age-Herald. Life Is Too Short. Life if too short. We ought to have one life to love, one life for learning and another to do good deeds. As it is one is almost forced to give up learning if one wants to love, and if you want knowledge you you must give up love. This is cruel.?Ernest Eenan. IIIU U1SI1, IIIUJ ?YUII\ auvut niv, yu.uof their homes, reaching up a hand when they wish to take food from the plate and going about their regular work. Yet they never spill anything. To Tell Train Speed. Count the clicks of the wheels on one rail (because joints alternate) for twenty seconds and the result will be the miles per hour the train is running. Demonstration: There are 17G thirty foot rails in 5,280 feet. The train, we will say, is traveling at forty-five miles per hour. It covers 125.5 rails in one minute, or 2.25 rails in one second, which, multiplied by twenty, equals forty-five rails in twenty seconds, or forty-five miles per hour. If thirty-two foot rails are used the result would be forty rails in twen ty seconds at forty-five miles per hour, but it is fairly accurate and can be done easily with a little practice.?Literary Digest. Turkey's Crescent and Star. The crescent moon and stars adopted by the Turks as their insignia had a romantic origin. When Constantinople was a Byzantian city Philip, the father of Alexander the Great, tried to reduce it by siege. lie was unsuccessful by day, and when he thought to take the city by surprise in the dark the crescent moon and stars appeared and exposed his warriors to the citizens. In honor of her protection of the city the Byzantians built a statue to Diana and made the crescent the symbol of the city. Rampant Civic Pride. "Did you learn much on your last trip abroad ?" "No. I went with a party of tourists." "What did that have to do with it?" "They wrangled so much about the merits of their respective home . . J 1 Al l*