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'[SUMMER i ? In Our Ladie we are offering tive styles in Vc De Chine, Silks A?nn/liACi r\loiM OH Eaiiuico,piam c*u isle Hosiery, Canvas Slippers mer Millinery ii shapes, Shirtwa In Our Gent you will find e attractive. Pc I Cool Cloth Suit I made in "keep < B xt j /?__n i _ I ma nats, iun 111 | , shapes; Canvas I i of all leathers a: ' tiful Neckwear and full line of derwear. C KJl O. 1V1 THE BIG STORE When in Toi ^^^tor^Fle Wedding M L Let Me Help Yon In Se Silver that resist wear. rv-j. nt r> Voo L/Ul VjiabS DCMjf Lvvvio, t do Burbon Coasters. Many us olate Sets, Sugar and Crearr | Salad Sets. Watches, Clocks and Je ed. Send or bring me your T. E. BAGC Kings! Our S] Clerason Butt* Sliced Har Sliced Goo I R. W. "Good T1 The Baile; Machinery,Mill ai Automobile Supp * 6. & J. Tires and Tnbes Charleston, * T SPECIALS. s' Department some very attrac iles, Batiste,Crepe of all kinds, Orid figured,Silk and all colors, White 1 CI 5, ueauuiui cumn large and small ists, Skirts. ? :s' Department yerything equally ilm Beach Suits, ;s and Serges, all 200I" style; Panale Straw Hats, all Shoes and Oxfords nd shapes; beautiNpclicrpp Shirt's J r^/V>w Hosiery and Unarcus ON THE CORNER vm Make Our adquarters. 1 s Are Ringing! letting A Wedding Present! Also a beautiful line of Rich es, Pitchers, Sugar and Cream, eful articles in Chinaware, Chocis, ' Cake Sets, Cake Plates and welry repaired same day receivrepair work. iETT, Jeweler xee, S. C. It peciais! % D> Bacon, d Cheese, Fresh Eggs, Cake and Bread. LEWIS lings to Eat' y-Lebby Cc id Plumbing Supplie lies and Accessoriei VEEDOL Oils and Greas f South Carolim I I; Legal Advertisements. | I Notice of Application for Final Discharge- 1 I Notice is hereby given that on the 12nd day of September, 1916,at 12 o'clock i noon, we win appiy tor m nrocmnion, I .Judge of Probate of Williamsburg coun- , ty, for Letters Dismissory as Executri- ' ces and Executor of the last will and tes- 1 tament of Edwin Harper, deceased. i Sarah T Harper, 1 Mabel E Harper, . Mattie Belle Harper, Sarah Euzabeth Harper, < 8-3-5t Samuel Paul Harper. f Notice of Final Dis-1 charge. ; Notice ia hereby given that on the 2nd ( day of September, 1916, at 12 o'clock, , noon, I will apply to P M Brockinton, J Judge of Probate of Williamsburg coun- J ty, for Letters Dismissory as General i Guardian of the person and estate of j Pressly Brunson. C W Stoll, 8-8-5t Guardian. ! i ?? ? Corporators' Notice. Pursuant to a commission issued to the undersigned corporators by Hon R 1 MMcCown, Secretary of State for ] South Carolina, dated the 29th day j of July, 1916, books of subscription to the capital stock of The Truluck-Cook Co will be opened at the law office of LeRoy Lee in the town of Kings tree, i Williamsburg county, South Carolina, at ! 19 nVlrtrlf m nn SafinrHav. the rith dav of August, 1916. The capital stock will be $15,000.00,divided into 150 shares of the per value of $100.00 each, and books of subscription will remain open until the entire capital stock is subscribed. J M Truluck, B A Cook, It Board of Corporators. 1 August 1, 1916. Notice to Executive' Committee. The Democratic Executive Committee is hereby called to meet at the court house on Monday, August 7, 1916, at 1*2 \ o'clock noon, for the purpose of correct- i ing the club rolls, under provisions of i Sec 12 of the Rules of the Party. At ] this meeting managers will be appointed for the primary election. ( It is very important that each com- 1 mitteeman be present. ( Philip H Seoll, : July 22, 1916-2t Co Chairman. Administrator's Notice ' All persons having claims against the r estate of A W Chandler, deceased, are , required to present the same to the un- , dersigned for payment, and those indebted to said estate are requsted to t settle the same. 1 J W Chandler, , Jw R Chandler, Aministrators. J ? r ^ r> n .i<7 o?n .LitMJes, o Vy. i-^i-uwp ! Administrator's Notice 1 All persons having claims against the i estate of Mrs Mary Josina Chandler, deceased, are required to present the ( same to the undersigned for payment, t I and those indebted to said estate are | i requested to settle the same. T A McCrea, Administrator. s Kingstree, S C. 7-27-3tD I 1 Notice of Application j for Final Discharge. , Notice is hereby given that the undersigned, as Executor of the last will and 1 testament of Mrs Louisa Snipes. de- j ceased, will apply to the Judge of Pro- , bate of Williamsburg county at his office ' in Kingstree,South Carolina,on the 28th s day of August, 1916, at 12 o'clock noon, i for his final difcharge as Executor of . said last will and testament. i 7-27-6t M A Shuler, 1 , Executor of the Last Will and Testa- s ment of Mrs Louisa Snipes, deceased. ? j Registration Notice. < The office of the Supervisor of Re*- : _ istration will be open on the 1st Mon- 1 day in each month for the purpose of j ^ registering any person who is quali.1 fled at- follows : Who shall have been a resident) of the State for two years, and of the < county one year, and of the polling1 pre- < cinct in which the elector offers to ] vote four months before the day ol i election, and shall have paid, sii . months before, any poll tax then due J and payable, and who can both reaC and write any section of the constitu- i tion of 1S96 submitted to him by the Supervisors of Registration, or who ' can show that he owns, and has paid all taxe:- collectible on during the present year pioperty in this State assessed at three hundred dollars 01 more. B E Clarkson, , f lerk of Board. : Undressed Lumber- , I always have on hand a lot of un dressed lumber (board and framing) at , my mill near Kingstree. for sale at the : lowest price for good material. See or write me for further information, etc. ! F. H. HODGE. Bio ExcursioD to Columbia from Wadesboro and intermediate < , Jj points via Atlantic Coast Line rail- ] road Tuesday, August 15. Train ?" leaves Kingstree 9:53 a. m. Leaves Columbia, returning, 8 p. m. Fare >$1.25 round trip. 7-27-3t W J Craig, T C White, j Pass Traf Mgr. G P A. S - i DIID MV riCKJI s nuD^vii-M^m ; Will cure Rheumatism, Neu- 1 ralgia, Headaches, Cramps, Colic i v Sprains, Bruises, Cuts, Burns, Old i Sores, Tetter, Ring-Worm, Ecx zema, etc. Antiseptic Anodyne, used internally or externally. 25c An Ideal Remed for Ni Compound of Simple Laxative Herbs Safe for Baby and Mother. Constipation is a condition that iffects the young, old and middleaged ,and most people at one time or mother need help in regulating the action of the bowels. Harsh catharl-irta nrir) nnroativM nnt Ko k??VO CU*?V/V4tV* ?1VW wv used to relieve constipation, as their effect is only temporary, while they ?hock the system unnecessarily. A remedy that can be used with perfect safety for the tiniest babe ind that is equally effective for the strongest constitution is found in the i combination of simple laxative herbs I known as Dr Caldwell's Syrup Pep- I sin and sold in drug stores every- 1 where for fifty cents a bottle. This is an ideal household remedy and diould be in eyery family medicine w chest. ir Mrs F I Barsolow, 18 Leslie St, d Holyoke, Mass, wrote to Dr Cald- ^ well:4 'Syrup Pepsin certainly is fine. [ gave it to my baby, Evelyn, and ilso took it myself. It is the only c' medicine I have been able to bike 4. WOULD BUY A DOZEN f BOTTLES IF HE COULD. I Anderson Co. Farmer Tells of Suffering in His Family. E WIFE AND SON WERE ILL. th 111 n l/Uii In Imntlnn 01oAnmnnl Cairo IH n. u. niny, ill HiiKuiuy oiaicuicui, oajo , Tanlac Gave Tbem Wonderful I Relief at Once. el "After making almost every pos- P* ;ihle effort to find relief from their fli lis and failing in every instance,my or ,vife and my son,Charlie,were given really wonderful relief hy just a few loses of Tanlac," declared Mi WO ei King, a farmer living between An- 8( lerson and Pendleton, His address be s Pendleton, R F D. pi Mr King came into Evans' pharnacy, at Anderson, to buy a bottle . ){ Tanlac, and while there told the ran lac representative of the great d? ;alue this wonderful remedy had Oi jeen to his family. "I wish I had lie money to buy a dozen bottles j ;his afternoon," he declared, "for I leed to take Tanlac myself, but this st s the tight money time now for the st armer and I shall have to buy T{in- lei ac now only for those who need it |e vorst-" . . w Continuing, Mr King said: My vife suffered from a generally run 30 lown condition, complicated with iri ither peculiar troubles and a very 9t * ? v * 1 >ad case 01 inaigesiion. one nau 0j jeen in ill health a long time before >he began taking Tanlac, and I once Daid out S7o for medical services for *h ler and she did not get as much I i benefit then as she did from her first ol x>ttle of Tanlac, which cost just one ?e lollar. "She had no energy and felt bad- 11 y all the time. She was not able, '? lardly, to do anything around the M louse, and was under a doctor for a pc solid year but got no better. She has js low taken two(2) bottles of Tanlac, R. ind it has proven in her case the jest medicine in the world. Her th strength has increased a great deal, th md her appetite is better than it has ar seen in.years. Nothing she eats r( iauses her indigestion now. She sure is pleased with the results. It 111 s just wonderful the way she has Y niproved. A "My boy, Charlie, suffered one go whole year with a very peculiar and Jistressing trouble, which about a lozen doses of Tanlac broke up. All w last summer he could not work over half a day. He would get so weak he would have to stop for the day. This summer he was not any better. Charlie's appetite would be good till he got to the table, but then he would become sick. Often at night liis breath would almost leave him. af He lost a lot of weight and strength, is [ had taken him to a dozen doctors, jsj but he got no letter. It was said he had nervous indigestion. "I am certainly glad to tell you ai these things for use in your adver- tfc tising, for it may show some poor m sufferers how to regain their health. I a, hope my words may help some who suffer, and you bet I can't say too much for Tanlac." ^ Tanlac, the master medicine, is ki iold by Kingstree Drug Co., Kings- ai tree; Mallard Lumber Co's store, pj Grreelyyille; R P Hinnant, Suttons; price $1 per bottle, straighyt. g( ? nnptnr'c Bompriv f(lF frtlinh* cf II IIVVIVI U numuwj As a cure for coughs and colds Dr st Bell's Pine-Tar-Honey combines H these remedies in just the right pro- aj portion to do the most good for sum- , mer coughs or colds. A trial will prove the value of this splendid 88 cough medicine. Dr Bell's Pine- sc Tar-Honey soothes the irritation, ai stops your cough, kills the cold g! germs and does you a world of good. , A 25c bottle will more than convince you?it will stop your cough. At druggists. b y . irsing Mothers, s ai Evelyn Bartolow P ithout affecting baby in the nuralg. I have used it for all fo ir chil- jj ren and it is fine; they like it and n sk for it." jc To obtain a trial bottle, free of a large, write to Dr \Y B Caldwell, 3( 54 Washington St, Monticello, 111. w ^ t( Poor Conrad's Reflections f 7 ll ditor Countv Record:? y. This is June 28,the anniversary of ni it battle of Fort Moultrie, fought a( 1776 in Charleston harbor. When n( was a boy the day; was largely eel- y >rated by the military companies, irading, firing cannon and waving o] igs. I will say more about it later m w Dear readers of The Record, my res are growing weak and I am past sc ) years of age. These old eyes have ^ ?heid many scenes,pleasant and un- Qj easant. Think of the ups and J >wns, the narrow escapes from in- ^ ry,often within a hair's breadth of gi >ath, through which I have passed. ^ nee a boy's hand saved me from owning in Charleston harbor. How j it possible that I am still here, anding like an old weather-beaten, ^ orm-tossed pine tree, whose rootai ss trunk may at any moment be veled to the earth by a passing j ind? Sometimes I wonder what sc rt of stuff I am made of. Surely on, brass or steel could not have ai ood the wear and tear that these d limbs of bone and muscle have idergone. How is it that some- ^ ing still holds me here? Sometimes am on the road walking by the tQ d, well remembered places where ^ rtain things happened at various ^ mes. I stop and gaze around. The ^ g that lay across this ditch is gone. . y old friend, Jim Reardon, would S )int to the log and say, "This log ^ where the wildcats cross going to lack river." Poor Jim! He, too,like ai ie wildcat, the log and many other j tings, is gone. Gone! Oh, where ^ e the thousands whose warm hands as so often grasped, now cold and ^ touldering in the grave? Dead? ^ es, dead. Oh, where are the dead? ^ sk of the winds. The answer is the iund thereof?like the dead, we ^ tnnot tell whence it cometh nor hither it goet'n. ... 7 et uur lire s a ciock, And ever}' gasp of breath St Breathes a warning grief w Till time shall strike a death. I am now sojourning in the Mou>n section. [Some days I stroll over ^ rf ? Workman. I have been to see my fed friend. Neighbor Barrow, who quite unwell and very feeble. e( eighbor was a grown man when I ^ as a boy. His son. Mr Jule Bar.ow, . id his estimable wife are nursing 1S le old veteran. Wherever I go I ^ eot some one wh) says, "Give us *c lother letter." It is not so much of ,r task for me to write such a letter ei i they are used to getting. These nd friends have made the request, id I must comply if my arm ex- lli res. I love to talk and think about st ? many dear people. I find so many a >od, kind-hearted mortals that I innot understand why some so often 111 rive against others, like the two ^ ebrews that Moses tried to pacify ^ fter he had murdered an Egyptian ^ le day before and hid him in the ^ ind. Look at the warring nations; ^ ?me of the wisest and most learned 0< :e destroying one another, thouinds, every day. Poor Mexico! see w le terror of terrors, like Banquo's host, will not down. Man's inhumanity to man has often een written about, and at no time as it been so fully demonstrated as ow. May God keep our United tates from these troubles. We shall II die soon enough.and may our rulrs, from President Wilson down, eep our hands from shedding hulan blood. I am sometimes away from Kingsree a week or more and my friends n my return ask me if I had a good me. I have but one answer,"Yes." ! pfttincr And Hrinkinc is- s cnnd me I certainly have it. One day ot long since I visited my friend, ammy Mouzon. He told me about atting a bee tree the day before ad getting three gallons of the finst honey. It was fine; you'd have lought so, too, could you have seen Id Conrad as he sat before a dish of ure strained honey and biscuit! low he did smack his mouth! The ttle ones stood around gazing at le in wonderment. I did not stay >ng,as it was time to go back to the amp at Mr Willie Dennis'. Well, )ldier-like. I carrv mv haversack 'ith me on all these trips, and Samly's good wife and gentle daugh;rs filled it with fine snap beans and mt a pot of beans and bacon selom seen at a camp fire. Well, I must tell more of my good ick. The next day, which was last londay, I started out in the afteroon on another foraging expedition eross Pudding swamp and took diner with my old friend, Dan E Epps. ou may know Dan. He is a brothr of my life-long friend, Pete Epps F Cades. Yes, Pete and I passed tany happy days together, but,now e men totter,Pete. Good old mothAunt Betsy, would say to me imetimes, "Conrad,I think as much F you as any of my sons." Good d soul,may she restin peace. Those 1:1.~ uiua ui iicia wcic jiiwc aypico ui old in pictures of silver" and are rafted deep down in the heart of le writer. God bless the offspring f Uncle Pete and*Aunt Betsy. As think of them the tears freely flow. I also stopped to see Bralie Mcnight. He is a whole-souled fellow id his wife is a fine woman. You don't know me as these peoe do, but if you were with me on me of my trips you would think I as like Sampson's lion and eater id would be fully convinced that I as a Sampson eater if you had seen e with the dish of honey before me le day I was at Sammy's. Now, that is not all about my trip i Workman. I was about to pass r Jim Wingate's place. He was in le yard and waved his hand for me i come in. He gave me some lusous peaches, the first I tasted this ason. I continued on my way and tiled at Bralie's, as I started to tell )u. I sat down on his back Diazza id remembered those juicy peaches, noticed and remarked on some fine rge.ripe tomatoes,and the children jked me if I liked them uncooked, replied that none but an idiot would ty he did not. Then I had another fast all by myself. In about three linutes Mr McKnight's daughter ime in with a good-sized dish of seled.salted. peppered and vinegari tomatoes,while the children gazed eadfastly at the devouring man. It as hard work for me not to swal iw them whole without chewing, hen Mrs McKnight came to the ?scue and asked me if I would like > have some bread. I gladly accepti and out came a piece of hot light read fully ten inches in length and roader than my right hand, which the larger one. I was asked to ave more bread, which I was glad ) do. Tht- second slice was twelve >ches long and that bread wasgocd aough for a king. That night I stopped with my *iend,Robert Reardon.and the next lorning his wife gave us a fine fish ;ew; Robert had taken them out of trap early. Well, I know you will be tired of ly telling you about good eating. I 3 not like people to tell me about le nice things they have had unless jey bring me some, too. I met my iend, J Y McGill, in Kingstree a ay or so ago. ne wanted to see anther letter in The Record. I relember John's father. Dr McGill, hose pleasant face always greeted ae with a smile. Dr McGill wrote le history of the Williamsburg: Continued on page 8. *. J