The county record. [volume] (Kingstree, S.C.) 1885-1975, August 24, 1916, Page SIX, Image 6
SOKE people extend invitations 1
They cany on their persons 01
A CHECK BOOK is of no n
check is AS GOOD AS CASH to
household wants. If yon haven't a I
I OPEN ON
BANK OF :
I (fWHOCO^
' ONE
SPECIAL REPRESi
G. L Hall Op
(NorfoIK-Richmor
will be at the Store <
Gamble & Jacob
THURSDAY, A\
All who are in need of I
to call and take advantage of
No charge for the examinatic
glasses. Every pair fitted ab
rect
By taking advantage of t
sendee brought to your town
ited any of tne retail establisr
Lynchburg, which are recogn
You take no chances as 01
you his personal guarantee.
REMEMBEI
Our Glasses Are Handled (
[EAT WELU-]
== DO \
It all depends on what G
buy them, and what you pay
If you buy GOOD grocer
If you eat well you feel i
If you feel well you do v
Can we tell you of a be
buy your groceries from us?
Every one knows of the 1
They all know of the lo\*
Most people trade with u
M. H. J
TWOS
Kingstree,
THE WA
B1
J. L ST
HAS
Hoi sesa
For Sale or
1 J. L. SI
vQ Livery, Feed
j| Lake City,
IT PAYS T8 ADVERT
*
ARTHE'HA.HA!"
ASH WITH US
to the THIEF AND HOLDUP MAN.
in their homes large rams of money,
se to the professional thief. Still, a
the tradesman or for the immediate
>ank account
E TODAY.
KINGSTREE.
COMING!
V ONLY!
- - _
ENTATIVE OF THE
tical Company
id?I*ynchburg? Va.)
>f Authorized Dealer
s, Kingstree, S. C. *
JGUST 31, 1916
Eyeglasses are urgently invited
' this exceptional engagement
n and only regular prices for
solutely guaranteed to be corhis
opportunity, you have the
that you would get if you visnents
in Norfolk, Richmond or
ized as the best obtainable,
ur agent is authorized to give
R "THE DATE
Dnly by Authorized Dealers* |
FEEL WELL?
VELL^=
roceries you buy, where you
for them.
ies you eat well,
ivell.
rell in your business affairs,
tter reason why you should
high standard of our goods
r price we charge.
is, anyway. Why not you?
AOUDO
TORES
South Carolina
w-Ov?57^J2vJ5Ari5v{5v{iv5Mr{5A^{5^CAfCviSw4
lR IS ON
LJT I
UCKEYl
BOTH I
nd Mules 1
nxcnange. |
^UCREYI
and Sale Stable gj
South Carolina 1
ISE IN THE RECORD.
I NOTICE OF PRIMARY
ELECTION
?
TO BE HELD ON AUGUST 29.
I
NAMES OF MANAGERS AT THE
DIFFERENT POLLING PLACES
IN THE COUNTY.
Notice is hereby given that the Democratic
primary election is hereby ordered
to be held on Tuesday, the 29th
day of August, 1916.
The managers at each voting place
shall arrange the table, desk or other
place upon which the ballot boxes shall
be placed so that there shall be no
crowding or confusion immediately
around the boxes, and suitable means
shall be provided to enable each voter
to approach the boxes and deposit his
ballot without interference or hindrance.
The managers shall open the polls at
8 o'clock a. m. and shall close them at 4
o'clock p. m. On closing the polls the
managers shall proceed publicly to count
the votes. After tabulating the result,
the managers shall certify the same and
forward the ballot box, containing the
ballots, poll list and all other papers,ex.
cept the club roll, relating to such election,
by one of their number to the
County Chairman within 36 hours after
close of the polls.
The managers shall use two boxes,
one for State officers and one for county
officers, Congressman and Solicitor.
The managers, before opening the
polls, shall take and sign the oath prescribed
in section 87 of the rules of the
party.
The managers at each box at the pri
mary shall require eyery voter to pledge
himself to abide the results of the primary
an i to support the nominees of
the party, and take the following oath
and pledge, viz: "I do solemnly swear
that I am a resident of this club district
and am duly qualified to vote at this
election, according to the rules of the
Democratic party, and that I have not
voted before at this election,and pledge
myself to support the nominees of the
party, State and national."
The following managers of election
have been appointed by the Executive
Committee, to-wit:
Kingstree?L J Stackley, J F Scott,
B E Clarkson.
Indiantown?P D Snowden, S D Cunningham,
W R Graham.
Rough Branch?S W Jennings,J Walter
McElveen, W H Foxworth.
Trio?J H Rowell, J Leon Register, J
W Moore.
Earles?R B Clemmons.G W Camlin,
J S Wheeler.
Hemingway?S J Haselden.W G Carter,
F E Huggins.
Taft?S J Walters, B A Brown, S E
McCul lough.
Bethel?C L Burgess, Bishop Burgess,
W Ira Epps.
Hebron?S W Baker, B 0 Baker, C A
Buddin.
Central?W G Cantley, W T Phillips.
ST Brown.
Muddy Creek?G W McDaniel, G W
Jove, L L Ard.
Greelyville?C E Register,P R Keels,
J F Montgomery.
Gourdin?H P Brown, J A McClary,
J W Chandler.
Poplar Hill?B J Chandler, C H Gordon,
W C Parsons.
Black River?J Ted Frierson, J E
Duke, W M Frierson.
Cades?R T Grimsley, E H Sauls, J L
McFadden.
Morrisville?J J Tart.G M Thomas,G
D Cooper.
Sandy Bay?J N Coker, W M McKnight,
W E Smith.
Lanes?E O Rodgers, H B Turner, W
B McCullough.
Oak Ridge?R W Blakeley, W N Davis,
J F Cooper.
Johnsonville?J H Chapman, G F
Hanna, W M Venters.
Salters?W S Shaw, V E Lifrage, J
H Covington, Jr.
Bloomingvale?R W Smith,W OCamlin,
W J B Morris.
Cedar Swamp?G 0 Epps, S A Tisdale,
J B Chandler.
Lenud?S B Gordon, B L Gordon, W
. P Johnson
Workman?W G Burton, R E McKnight.
W W Kennedy.
Pergamos?W A Fitch, C F Stuckey,
B W Moore.
Suttons?R E Blakeley, 0 C Hinnant,
S P B Altman.
Nesmith?R J Nesmith, Paul McElveen,
F E Johnson.
Vox?A J Altman, S D Hanna, 0 B
Stone.
Thp Fv^rutive Committee will meet
to tabulate the vote and declare the re|
suits of the primary on Thursday. August
31, 1916, at the court house, Kings,
tree, at 11:30 o'clock a. m.
Philip H Stoll,
8-17-2t County Chairman.
i Registration Notice.
The ofllce of the Supervisor of Re^;
istration will be open on the 1st Monday
in each month for the purpose ol
registering any person who is quilifled
as follows:
Who shall have been a resident o'
the State for two years, and of the
county one year, and of the polling precinct
in which the elector offers to
vote four months before the day of
election, and shall have paid, sis
months before, any poll tax then due
and payable, and who can both read
and write any section of the constitution
of 1895 submitted to him by tbt
r\f Pnmafnot.inn \rh<
JU^Cl \lDWIO XJl A?C^|UViW?.vut If.?v
can show that he owns, ind has paid
all taxes collectible on during the
present year, pioperty in this State
assessed at three hundred dollars or
more. BE Clarkson,
r Icrk of Board.
Receipt Books, Blank Notes, Mortgages ace
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.
Chamberlain's Cough Remedy
Cures Colds, Ci jup and Whooping Cough.
The Wonderful Book.
The Bible is a wonderful book.
It is a hammer that smites the
rock heart of a sinner till it falls in
contrition.
It is milk for the babe in Christ.
It is meat for the strong Christian.
It is medicine for the healing of
soul sickness.
It is bread for the hungry. It is
a signboard to the wayfarer.
it is light in a sin-darkened world.
It is a solid foundation for the
spiritual housebuilder.
It is honey sweet to the pure, but
bitter to the unholy.
If taken whole, it is a sure antidote
to fanaticism.
It is TRUTH, therefore unchangeable.
By faith it becomes the power of
God.
It is a rock in a weary land.
It is a prophet, foretelling things
to come for ages, and all eternity.
It is a true fortune-teller, foretelling
the eternal home of all the
human family.
It is a mirror, into which we can
look and see ourselves as we are.
It is an X-ray that photographs
the diseases of the spirit.
It is life to to those who by faith
receive it.
It is a judge, pronouncing the
sentence of those who look in its
pages.
It is eternal, abiding forever.
It can be handled deceitfully and
corrupt the hearers.
It can be thrown at the hungry,
like a bone at a hungry dog, in such
a way that it will drive the lost
i sheep farther away.
It can be broken in pieces and yet
remain whole.
It is a seed that has been sown in
' a wider field than any other crop.
All its matured crops, are holiness
of heart.
It is leaven that cannot become
i unleavened.
We read it to be wise, obey it to
be holy, follow it to be in peace, and
give it away to have plenty of it.
To scatter it abroad is only to
make it increase on our hands.
It is the marvel of the ages, being
the oldest complete book, having
the widest influence, and the noblest
teachings of any book in the world.
It brings t;he greatest misery the
human heart ever receives, and yet
is the source of the greatest happiness,
and sweetest joy the human
heart can conceive of.
It has been hated as no other book
I has been, and yet has been the most
highly loved, and sometimes by the
same persons.
It has withstood the dynamiting
of all sceptics, and the chiseling of
infidels, and shows not a scar.
Will some one please ask the
"Higher (?) critics" what the trouble
is with the Bible as it now is,
seeing it does the work it sets out
to do, viz: when people take it as it
is, believe it, obey it, reverence it,
honor it, and give it the place in
! their life it demands: it makes, not
Knf rrrkA/i mon
aimyijr uciici iiicii) Lfuv iswu IUVU!
pure men, holy men; lifts them to
the highest plane of morality and
spirituality that can be conceived of.
' If this is true, and it is by a million
of witnesses, then what is wrong
with it? Why pick flaws in it? If
men are able to make a better one,
let them do so in their own name.
Then let them prove it is a better
one, by taking it among the vile, the
impure, the criminal, the outcast,
the drunkard and the harlot, and let
them show us the fruit, in regenerated,
sanctified, holy, upright men and
women, and we will consider their
claims, but until they do, let us
stand by the old Book that has, and
is, standing the test and bringing
forth the fruit. Amen.?Jfef W R
GiUey in Christian Witness.
Columbia has had but 44 cases of
typhoid fever so far this year.
If you would know something of
the inner workings of your neighbor's
home, just note the attitude of
his dog and cat. Their actions tell
the story.
Wflfl!T( Descriptive Fall I
nUUll o Seed Cataog
just issued, tells all about
Crimson Clover,
Alfalfa and all
Grass and Clover
Seeds for Fall Planting.
Wood's Fall Seed Catalog also
| gives full and complete lofor- ,
mation about
i Vegetable Seeds i
I that can be planted to a J vantage '
| and profit in the late Summer and
| Fall. It Is altogether the most use
I ful and valuable Fall Seed CataJ<-g
i issued.
Mailed free to Gardeners, Marked
Growers and Farmers on request.
Write for it.
T.W.WOOD 6 SONS,
i SEEDSMEN, - Richmond, Va. ,
?a| Worn Out? I
No doubt you are, il B
you suffer from any of the |
numerous ailments to g
which an women are sub- J
ject. Headache, back- ^1
ache, sideache, nervous- 1^
ness, weak, tired feeling, V
are some of the symptoms,
and you must rid #1
yourself of <hem in order i 1
to feel well. Thousands g I
of women, who have IB
been benefited by this IB
remedy, urge you to II
_ TAKE. _ II
a |
I The Woman's Tonic II
Mrs. Sylvania Woods, II*
I of Clifton Mills, Ky., says: 11 '
9 "Before taking Car dui, ||
I I was, at times, so weak I II
could hardly walk, and J?
the pain in my back and
head nearly killed me. wW
After taking three bottles Ta
of Cardui, the pains dis- a
appeared. Now 1 feel as I
well as lever did. Every I
suffering woman should I
try Cardui." Get a bottle I
today. E-68 1
Arrival of Passenger Trains at
Klngstree.
The Atlantic Coast Line railroad
has promulgated the following schedule,
which became effective Monday,
May 29, 1915:
North Bound.
No 80 - - - 7:25 a m
No 46 - - 11:33 a m
No 78 - - - 6:13 p m ^
South Bound.
fNo 83 10:40 a m .
No 79 - - 11:03 a m
No 47 - - - - 6:47 p m
No 89 - - - 9:22 p m
Daily exceDt Sunday.
I Stops on signal for Charleston, Savannah
and Jacksonville passengers. t
How's This?
We offer One Hundred Dollars
Reward for any case of Catarrh I
that cannot be cured by Hall's (
Catarrh Cure.
F. J. CHENEY & CO.. Toledo, O.
We, the undersigned, have known F. J.
Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe
him perfectly honorable in all business
transactions and .Inancially able to carry
out any obligations made by his firm.
NATIONAL BANK OF COMMERCE,
Toledo. O. ,
Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally, I
acting directly upon the blood and mucous
surfaces of the system. Testimonials "
sent free. Price 76 cents per bottle. Sold
by all Druggists.
Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation.
I- Si
Insurance! 1
When you want Insurance
of any kind, call on us. We 4
write
Life Fire
lire Stock Plate Glass ,
Accident and Health
Bonding a Specialty
We are the largest and
most experienced agency in I
Williamsburg county, and
are in a position to give you
the best service. I
Kingstree Ins., Real Estate
& Loan Co., Agts? ;
PHONE 85, KINGSTREE, S. C.
Eyes Examined and
Glasses Fitted
I am now equipped f> do this work satisfactorily
and ran >j "rorn $1.50 to ?j.tV.' o?i
each pair of glasses. Lot me fit you out with
8Ke New Kryptok Glasses,
reading and distance vision ground in^each
glass.
If you break your lenses bring them to me.
I will duplicate them on short notice. Save J
the pieces.
T. E. RAGGETT =
Jeweler and Optician - - Kingstree, S. C. j
La*Fosf A MM, EffecttoJjxativw t Uver Ton'c f
uues not enpe nur uisuuu uis aiomaui. r
In addition to other properties, Lax-Fos
contains Cascara in acceptable form, a r
stimulating Laxative andTonic. Lax-Fos C
acts effectively and does not gripe nor ^
disturb stomach. At the same time, it aids
digestion,aronses the liver and secretions
and restores the healthy functions. 50c.
the man
Dfc who is seeking quality
<JBbO ^' will not fail to remember
the two popular brands,
Oeerfoot Rye aJ
U4 Old Kentucky Springs v
WHISKIES W
DEERFOOT RYE is a rich, full
flavored Whiskey; OLD KENTUCKY
SPRINGS is rare, old and mellow.
Both are absolutely pure, and both
the same price, delivered by express 1
charges paid: {
1 Gal. Glass Jug 4 Full Quarts
$3.00 $3.70
8 Pints 16-K Pints
$4.00 $4.00
Money must be sent with order. Cive (fill
name, street, post and express offices. Send
for complete price-list of Wines and Liquors.
You can count on getting a square deal from us.
JAMES OLWELL A CO.
Mall Order Department
Established 1828 181 West St, New Yeek
a c.atun In Business"
>end tor Price List of Other Goods.
All Car 1
Owners
Know This Garage
We do all kinds of repair I
work. !
We overhaul your car when
it gets cranky.
We save you money on
tires, and other supplies by
paying the transportation
charges ourselves.
Kingstree Garage,
1L L T Thompson, M'g'r.
DR. R. CLAUDE McCABE, ?
Dental Surgeon,
Office in Hirsch building, over KingsTee
Drug Co's. 8-28-ti
DOOBERT I MCCABE,
DENTIST,
ONGSTREE, / S. C
)ffiae in Nexsen Building, 3 doors from
Postoffice. Phone 78.
M.D. NESMITH,
DENTIST,
Lake City, S.
W. L. TAYLOR
DENTIST,
Ofllc* ia Ncxavn Building
KINGSTRCE, * - S. C.
>-21-tf.
I860 1916
A. M. SNIDER,
SURGEON DENTIST.
Office at Residence, Railroad Avenue.
I. DeS. Gilland
Attorney-at-Law
Second Floor Hasoolc Temple
Florence, S.-G
General practitioner in all State and
federal Courts.
Ben]. M-'NNES, M. R.C. V. S.
-a ir.a la.fMATCC U H 17 U n 8
5. fwaier mcinnca, JTI. u., . m. u j
VETERINARIANS.
One of us will be at Kingstree the 1
irst Monday in each month, at Heler's
Stables. 9-28-tf
VSw KINGSTREE
'Aefe Lodge, No. 46
A. F.M.:
neets Thursday before full moon each
nonth. Visiting brethren are cordially
:yi ted. R K WALLACE, W M.
J M Ross. Sec. 2-2TSy^ .
Kingstjtem .
ti:i< choppen
iiv.^Ar-Tt 'vfcyy r'taiiy .nvittd toccJI
^ up and sit on aatuxapv
or hang about on the
llmta.
P H Stoll,
M Brown, Clerk. Con. Com., f
v
' ii
*
Ma ?&&&.
This it a prescription prepared raprcia!If
or MALARIA or CH1LI.3 <1 FZVC.P.
'ive or six dosco wt'l fcrcufc \.y race, and >"j
l taken teen oa a tonic t .e Fever Vvill not
eturn. It acta en the liver hotter thanks'
Calomel and dcea not gripe or sicken. 2jc
Chamberlain's Cough Hemedjr
Cores Colds, Croup and Whocpiig Couah,