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SpREC V In Compound Every druggist of ijji deeply impressed with gg his line are fatal, gg - We never permit 2 |g fill even the simplest p gg As far as human p w you, you are protected gg is our life work. We gg with the accuracy of 01 ?3 We want to fill yo F>- |g Best line of Toilet IS town. Eastman Koda I Kingstree I | New i < Fall and V Although o ening is ov for these g (begun. Tr ; season are jj tive indeed I our line of Hats is one New Goods We are rep with new and, if you lected your already, yo * us a call, ir and let us g Our goods v ks. E THE BIG STORI I Kingstree, New J< We are eceivi ng dai] Brooches, Cameos, 14k Necklaces and Bracelet ^ in the latest patterns. Wedding Presents Glass in the newest cuts, Bring me your Brok i Repairs made same day ] T. E BAGC ? Kingst Real Estate Country Farms an If You Wan If You Wan We can place you in anj you want. Address all Gourdin & Harj 4 :isi6n| & ing Prescriptions S i character and standing is -J the fact that mistakes in ? ? < & i careless prescriptions 10 ** rescription sent to us. g rudence and skill can protect % here. Filling prescriptions ? allow nothing to interfere & lr work. ur prescriptions. ? y Articles and Stationery in ? ks and Kodak Supplies. S )rug Company i \rrivals OF finter Goods >ur formal oper, the season oods has just le styles this yery attracand, as usual, f Gage Bros.' of the leaders. Aiming Wfc leting our line daily arrivals have not se fall apparel u should give ispect our line ive you prices, vill please you. arcus ! ON THE CORNER - - - s. c. j ewelry! [y new goods in La Vallieres, Woven Wire Bracelets, also iVatches. All of these goods in Sterling Silver and Cut en Jewelry, Watches, Clocks, eceived. iETT, Jeweler ree, S. C. j ?Farm Lands. d Town Lots For Sale! it to Buy, See Us it to Sell, See Us j section of the County that correspondence to per, Kingstree, S. C. III Legal Advertisements, j i: < f! - ;! Summons for Relief. * 5 1 j (COMPLAINT SERVED) i' STATE OF SOUTH CA ROLINA, COUNTY OF WILLIAMSBURG, 1 Court of Common Pleas. i, A H Silcox and H W Silcox.co-partners ' i doing business under the firm name of ? Silcox &. Co. Plaintiff, vs. : Samuel Bennett, J A Bennett." Stephen ? 1 Bennett.James Bennett. Martha Royt ' all, Halicue Johnson and Josephene S ! Bennett, Defendants. > To the absent Defendants,Martha Roy7 i all. Halicue Johnson,J A Bennett and 1 Stephen Bennett: I You are hereby summoned and rej quired to answer the complaint in this I action,of which a copy is herewith served I upon you, and to serve a copy of your * answer to said complaint on the sub* scrioers at their office in Kingstree, S J C, within twenty days after the servf ice hereof, exclusive of the day of S such service; and if you fail to answer [ the complaint within the time aforesaid, ? the plaintiff in this action will apply to t the Court for the relief demanded in tne complaint. Dated September 15, 1915. Kelley & Hinds, Plaintiff's Attorneys. Take notice, that the complaint in the above stated case has been filed in the office of the Clerk of Court for Williamsburg county. Kelley & Hinds, Plaintiff's Attorneys. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, county of williamsburg, Court of (Common Pleas. A H Silcox and H W Silcox,co-partners doing business under the firm name of Sflcox& Co, Plaintiffs, a Samuel Bennett, J A Bennett, Stephen Bennett,James Bennett, Martha Royall, Halicia Johnson and Josepnene Bennett, Defendants. order. On rea Jing and filing the attached affidavit of A C Hinds, a member of the firm of Kelley & Hinds, attorneys for the above named plaintiffs and on motion of said attorneys, Ordered, that John M Ross be and he | is hereby appointed Guardian ad Litem I of the said infant Stephen Bennett for the purposes of this action, unless the said infant defendant or some one in his behalf,within twenty days after service of a copy of this order in the manner herein directed, procure a guardian ad litem to be appointed for said infant and give notice thereof to plaintiffs' attorneys. It is further ordered, that this order and the summons herein be served on said Stephen Bennett, infant defendant, by publication of the same in The County Record,a weekly newspaper published in Kingstree, South Carolina, once in each week for three successive weeks. H 0 Britton, Clerk of Court for Williamsburg county. Kingstree. S C, September 20. 1916. 9-28-3t 4 Tax Notice. The tax books will be open for collection of taxes for year 1916 on the loth day of October, prox. Tax levy as follows: For State 6'^' mills Ordinary County A " Roads 3 " Constitutional School 3 44 A tax of 50c on dogs. For High School at K'gstree..2 44 44 retiring bds 44 44 .2 44 " * ' U'Iyville..4 ' " sch bds at Cades .3 ' " " bds at Hemingway 6 " " " " " Johnsonville..7 " " " " annexed territory Clarendon county, Court House and Jail 1,'a " All parties between the ages of 21 and 60 years.inclusiye, are liable, unless exempted by law, to a poll tax of $1.00, also to a commutation tax of $2.00. Special levy on all cows, hogs, goats and sheep in parts of Penn, Anderson and all of Suttons townships for fence ?50 mills. Levy for special school disficts is as follows: j Nos 2, 32, 34, 40 and 47?2 mills. No 31?3 mills. Nos 22, 46. 48. 50, 58,4.59,5,41,52,60,6, I 17,19.29, 43,53,55,56.14, 18. 57, 28. 8. 38, 51, 61, 37, 45, 11. 42. 13 and 25?4 mills. Nos 36 and 49?6 mills. Nos 12, 15, 16, 26. 39 and 54-8 mills. No 23?12 mills. Upon all unpaid taxes after December 31 a penalty of \% will be added for January, 1% for February and 5% to 15th day of March next, after which the books will be closed and executions issued upon all unpaid taxes. Those who desire to pay their taxes through the mail may expedite matters by dropping the Treasurer a card asking for the amount of their taxes, so as to avoid sending the wrong amount, also statin? the townshiD or townships (if property is owned in more than one) and if possible give school district where property is located. After paying taxes examine your receipts and see if all your property ia covered; if not, see about it at once By following the above suggestions complications and additional cost may be avoided. J Wesley Cook, i 9-28-tl2-31-10 County Treasurer. Notice of Application for Final Discharge. Notice is hereby given that on the 28th day of October, 1916, at 12 o'clock noon, I will apply to P M Brockinton, Judge of Probate of Williamsburg county, for Letters Dismissory as AdminI istrator of the estate of Carolina McFadden, deceased. R Barrow, 9-28 5t Administrator. Trespass Notice. All norcnna nro horphv warnpd not. t.n in any wise trespass upon the lands of the estate of C S Dukes, deceased, and all persons are especially forbidden to fish or in any wise trespass upon or about the lake upon said lands known as "Dukes' lake". Robert Dukes, Heir-at-law of C S Dukes and Manager of Said Property. K&H y-2l-4t Report of the Treasurer j Of the Town of Kingstree, S C, Showing Receipts and Disburse* ments for the Quarter Ending September 30, 1916. RECEIPTS. Balance July 1 $1,577.25 j Taxes 367.65 i Fines and Forfeits 251.251 Licenses 206.431 V/ee Nee Bank, loan l,0:K).<M)i Dt D C Scott, for old building. 76.00 | Southern Cotton Oil Co.. 6.JO | Presbyterian Church, for labor, 2.45 [ H A Kennedav, for sewer pipe, 8.65 J Subscribtions to Bridge:? Williamsburg Live Stock Co 25.00 W R Scott 25.00 H A Miller 5.00 L J Brockington 2.00 Total $3,552.68 DISBURSEMENTS. Street Labor $565.44 Kingstree Electric Light& Ice Co 647.50 B E Granby 400.00 J II Epps 340.00 J A Scott 180.00 L C Mcintosh 180.00 Walter Steele 165.00 W R Scott 75.00 W W Dennis 33.00 Wee Nee Bank, interest, 40.20 Bank of Williamsburg, interest,.. 60.20 West Disinfecting Co 74.91 The King Hardware Co 33.60 Fire Department 15.00 Pyrene Manufacturing Co.. 15.00 Gulf Refining Co .. 31.05 County Record 87.50 L S Dennis 12.09 rrr ?r ir o ci oi cr yv m v ause ot oons 01 vo Kingstree Hardware Co 17.30 Truluck-Cook Co 48.25 James Epps 13.13 J A Scott ? 16.00 S C Anderson 10.68 Mary Fulton 11.10 R C Burgess 3.00 Scott-Logan Co 3.80 Kingstree Drug Co 1.85 T W Epps 4.00 Dr S T Hemingway .... 2.00 Peoples Mercantile Co i 7.10 J T Nelson 5.25 A C L R R Co 6.40 P O Arrowsmith 3.00 Williamsburg Hardware Co 6.25 A O Matthews 3.50 C D Dixson 4.50 Sundry Items .. 13.85 Balance October 1 384.58 Total $3,552.78 Walter Steele, October 9, 1916. Treasurer. Copy Summons for Belief. (complaint served.) THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLIA, county of williamsburg, Court of Common Pleas. R F Cox, Plaintiff, against John Barr, Toney Barr, Mike Barr, Jack Barr, Satira Hannah, Mary Barr, Josie Barr, Hippus Barr, Nettie Barr, J E Hemingway, W C Hemingway, George S Hemingway, and W U Koilins, copartners trading under the firm name of W C Hemingway & Company, Smith-Williams Company, a corporation duly chartered and existing under the laws of South Carolina, Defendant. To the absent defendent, John Barr: You are hereby summoned and required to answer the complaint in this action, of which a copy is herewith served upon you, and to serve a copy of your answer to the said complaint on the subscriber at their office in Kingstree, S C, within twenty days after the service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service; and if you fail to answer the complaint within the time aforesaid. the plaintiff in this action will apply to the court for the relief demanded in the complaint. Dated September 26, A D 1916. Kelley & Hinds, Plaintiff's Attorney. Take Notice: That the complaint herein is on file in the office of the Clerk of Court of Common Pleas for the county of Williamsburg. Kelley & Hinds, 10-12-'lt Plaintiff's Attorneys. Administratrix' Notice Notice is hereby given that all persons having claims against the estate of J M Cook, deceased, will present the same, auiy attestea, to tne unaersignea for allowance, and all persons indebted to said estate are requested to settle the same. Mrs E J Cook, Administratrix Est J M Cook, dec'd, 10-12-3tp Salters Depot, S C Summons for Relief(complaint served) STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, county of williamsburg, Court of Common Pleas. Wilson Staggers, Plaintiff, against Harry Staggers, Eva Chandler, Clara Wheeler, Matthew Staggers, Peter Staggers, Mollie McDonald and B H Guess, Defendants. To the absent Defendant, Harry Staggers: You are hereby summoned and required to answer the complaint in this action,of which a copy is herewith served upon you,and to serve a copy of your answer to the said complaint on the subscribers at their office in Kingstree, South Carolina, within twenty days after the service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service; and if you fail to answer the complaint within the time aforesaid, the plaintiff in this action will apply to ihe Court for the relief demanded in the complaint. Kelley & Hinds. Plaintiff's Attorneys. Take Notice, that the complaint in the above entitled action is now on file in the office of the Clerk of Court for the county of Williamsburg. Kelley & Hinds, 9-28-3t Plaintiffs' Attorneys. Notice of Application for Final Discharge. Notice is hereby given that on the 14th day of October. 1916, at 12 o'clock noon, I will apply to P M Brockington, Judge of Probate of Williamsburg county, for Letters Dismissory as Executor of the estate of Bertha Chandler.deceased. J Herbert Chandler. 9-14-5tp Executor. A Sprig of Rosemary Which Is For Remembrance By MARION TRAVER3 A man and a inaid stood ou the porch of a little New England farmhouse. The man had barely passed his majority, and the years of the girl numbered less than his by three. The man was going- hundreds of miles to the westward, there to find a competence. When he had succeeded the girl was to come to him for the rest of the happy years. In his hands were two sprigs of rosemary, one of which he gave to the maid. ''it's for remembrance, Betty. Not that we will either of us need it, dear, but I shall carry it with me wherever I go." "You know you'll always be in my thoughts, Tom. I'll put it under my pillow at night that I may droara of you and wear it next my heart in waking hours that every beat may be for you. Good by, Tom, and God bless you and send you nw* irul 4-Ko irl tnTnwl laj urc. auu buv her lips upward for her lover's kisB. "Good by, Betty. It won't bs for long, and then we will be together for the rest of our livee." And he gave her one last caress before be tnrned and started down the graveled path bound 00 the outtrafl. Betty had been motherless since her sixth year, and at the cloee of a winter's day tho soul of her father left ita gaunt frame, and she was alone. Tom wrote a letter full of tender consolation, and it was on the absent sweetheart she leaned during the days and nights of her affliction. Betty's father had been frugal and shrewd, and there was enough to provide for the remainder of her days. She had no relatives in the home of her father, and when legal matters were finally adjusted she left for a big western city to live with an aunt while she was waiting for Tom. It was then the first blowfell. >T /% 1/v^a* nnm A IrAm C *1U ItniCl LQUi^; X1V1U iivi WW vwv heart in the far west. At first she did not worn% for he had written that he was going on a long prospecting trip and might be weeks, even months, from civilization. But when spring came and in turn gave way to summer and summer fled before tlve chilling blasts of autumn and the weeks dragged drearily by until a year had passed Betty abandoned hope. She wrote to the authorities of the frontier town where he usually outfitted, but they could tell her nothing. Tom had left in April. He had not returned. They knew nothing of his fate. In the passing of the years her grief was softened, hut the agony of her loss was there, locked with her love in the innermost recesses of her heart. Suitors came, but were sent away, not hurt, but firmly, gently denied. Her cousins married, little ones came to bless them, and to all she was Aunt Bettv. There was another Betty now, a pretty, graceful maid of seventeen, joying in her first glimpses of social life and rapturously happy because she was just living. They were great cronies, these two Bettys, and it was often remarked that their resemblance extended away and beyond the name. "Aunt Betty, why didn't you mar rv?" asked the little Betty one afternoon when the two were having a long, confidential chat. Then faded old letters were brought out and read, the dimmed tintype of a country bov with a fine featured face was cried over and the withered sprig of rosemary lifted gently from the jewel case, where it had reposed so many years in state. "And the rosemary, auntie queried little Betty. "Rosemary is for remembrance, dearie. We each had a sprig and were to keep it always, so that whenever we 9aw it the other's face would appear in our dreams," said auntie. "And do you dream of him yet?" pursued the younger. "Bless you, Betty, I'll always dream of him, and I pray now that after death here I may see him." "And so that's the reason you didn't let Dr. Thornton and the others marry you when they asked ?" "Betty, how did you know?" "Oh, I heard mamma talking about it! But I won't tell, auntie," she promised penitently. "But it's lovely, Aunt Betty. It's perfectly splendid to love so long and so hard when you know he's dead. Would he care, do you think, if you married some one else?" "lie knew I never would," and the older Betty sighed. , After that the little Betty had to o go awaj to sehool. She was gent to | a distant city to be taught all raan: ner of things embraced in that vrord i "finished/' To her romantic soul came many I experiences, many temptations to j surrender to what she thought was love, but always she measured the depths of her emotions by Aunt Hetty's loyalty of a score*?>f years. "Would I love him like that?" | she would ask of herself, and all ways the suitoY failed in the test. One afternoon she went to a mutii nee at a downtown theater. As she was leaving the playhouse she was j confronted by a stalwart man whose ; agitation was greater than her own. "Betty Randall!" he all but shouted in his excitement. "Auntie!" gasped Betty. "Are you Betty Randall ?" queried the stranger. "Of course not. You're just a child, and Betty would have been more than twice your age if she were alive," and he -i?-'-- i Ka. j iljJ'Mojiiii'u iui ma luuruusj ao uc j turned to go. It flashed over Betty in an instant. Could it be true? She decided to risk it. ''Tom!" she called softly. The man wheeled at the word and stood staring at the girl. "Are you Total Wilson?" she asked. "And did you leave over twenty years ago to go out weet, and"? she continued. "Yes, yes! Why?how?who are you?" he demanded. "Betty Randall is my aunt," said Betty, "and she has your sprig of rosemary." "Here's mine!" he cried, and he plunged into his pocket and brought forth a worn wallet. That night Mr. Wilson had a long talk with Betty at the school. She arranged to go home the next raarninc. and Tom was to follow the day o; after. He explained bow he had been sick for a year from eiposure while lost in the mountains, how he wrote to the old address, but got no reply. He had gone back to the New Hampshire town, but no one could give him Betty's address. So, with fortune beyond his boyhood dreams, he had rambled up and down the world, hoping, hunting and miserable. "Aunt Betty," said little Betty % two days later, "suppose Tom is alive. Suppose he didn't die, but couldn't find out where you were. Wouldn't that be fine?" And her eyes danced with what the elder took to be girlish enthusiasm for a romance so near to her. There was a knock at the door, and a maid entered with a card tray. "There's a gentleman downstairs to see you, Miss Randall. He nwililn'f <rivo mo liis pard. but said . V ...? , you'd understand by this." And she held out the tray so that there was disclosed thereon a sprig of rosemary. <rBettv, it's true! He's alive! It's Tom!" And the speed with which she descended played havoc with orthodox ideas of dignity. She fell rather than ran into the sitting room, there to be clasped in two arms, while a man's voice came softly to her: "At last! Thank God, at last!" Boys and Business. "We are a business race, we Americans," says a writer in the Woman's Home Companion. "Xine tenths of our boys are destined for business, and the other tenth, who enter professions, need a knowledge of how business is transacted even more. Parents who covet a clean eiit. successful business career for their boy can do him a tremendous service by laying the foundation of that career while they have him still in their own hands. It was Cardinal Xewman who said, 'Give me a child until he is seven years old, and I care not who has him afterward.' And psychologists are proving to us more conclusively every day that the years we once considered wasti > 1: 1 ea, irom au cuutauuaai Yicnjjuiui, .are the years in which most of our habits, including business habits, have their root." Four Kindt of Liars. The late Sir Frederick Bramwoll was famous both as a witness and arbitrator in engineering disputes. It is recalled that his brother, the late Lord Justice Bramwell, on giving advice to a young barrister told him to be careful of four kinds of witnesses?first, of the liar; second, of the liar who could only be adequately described by the aid of a powerful adjective; third, of the expert witness, and, finally, of "my brother Fred." i Squarely Caught. "What a pretty hat Mrs. Pinkey wore this evening." "Did you like it, dear?" "Yes; it was verv becoming. Why don't you get hats like that ?" "You mustn't blame me if I laugh, John. The hat you like is my hat. Mrs. Pinkey borrowed it this evening. It's the thirty dollar hat you called a fright."?Cleve| land Plain Dealer. .