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i Bring Your FUI I the Highest C I We are in the fur-buyi have anything in the fur 1 a bear pelt, we'll take it al C. TUC Prices Down 1 We ought to be raising ou rest of the people, but WE nt fVio trarr r?lnco m?JT< seiung at tut v ox j wwuv uwij since we opened up. It is tl to buy here, where prices a k down. A Remember our stock of Sti A is always complete and we of is possible to give. H We have recently unloaded V , of Hay, a car of Horse t quantities of other provision} f THE CAS1 ODOM A DENNI Phone 120. Aca Kingstree, Soi * np WVC JLr. a. i/bxmjid ' GAR] There Is Only 0 Seec nmOTWITHSTANDING IO J Seed, we want to ad JQBB the forelock and exe ting one of the largest and people. We have made the see last fall we contracted for o there were some popular va and we were forced to s< shall be prepared to f urn is up. Below we list some o: BEANS Black Valentine Red Valentine Burpee's Stringless . Extra Early Refugee Golden Wax, Dwarf Kentucky Wonder Lazy Wife Henderson's Bush Lima Henderson's Large White Ford's Mammoth Pod Lin CUCUMBERS Improved White Spine Long Green Extra Early Green Cluste CANTALOUPES Wood's Netted Gem Wood's Large Hackensacl Rocky Ford Emerald Gem Hughes' Early WATERMELON Cleckley's Sweet Tom Watson Rattlesnake Florida Favorite SQUASH ^ Extra Early White Bush Golden Crook Neck PEAS Wood's Pedigree Wood's First and Best Nott's Excelsior McLean's Little Gem Champion of England, ' unampion or jsngiana I Blackeye Marrowfat I Bliss' Everbearing I Early Amber (or Ameer) I Crosbey's Egyptian I tM~We invite you to j I King'st i I: RS to ME for I ASH PRICES. ng business, and if you ? * * j ine, from a moiesKin 10 t the highest price. 1-3-41 : K E R. | Cash Store. r prices, along with the ARE NOT. We are still Bfins we have been making lerefore to YOUR interest re down and always stay iple and Fancy Groceries fer you the best seryice it I a car of Ricev a car ind Mule Feed and 5. Ei STORE S, Proprietors demy and Mill Sts. ith Carolina i, Manager PEN S ne BEST Place t Is; this Is THE P r the extreme scarcity of n< vise our friends and custom ircising our usual foresight, best assortments of seed e\ d business a separate depai ur 1918 supply so far as it w trieties that we could not ge 3ek these elsewhere. We h our customers when the f the varieties we shall hav Adam's Golden 1 Stovall's Country Truckers Popcorn Ponderos " WnnH '<5 1 roie Lima * .a Stone Early Ju Calk's E Early Ec r Blood R? Bull No: Ruby Ki Cayenne Giant Ct S Georgia Silverski Red Wes Irish Col Red Blis Sugar Di Rape Radish 1 ,-arf Sweet Pe Nasturtii A full as Complete r^tVi'c at get our prices before you b :ree Dn UpM?y^Wfnilh El It Helps! U 5? There can be no doubt F lj as to the merit of Cardui, I the woman's tonic, in R r the treatment of many M troubles peculiar to vtt women. The thousands of women who have been KJj helped by Cardui in the |1 past 40 years, is condu- I E sive proof that it is a H E good medicine for women E who suffer. It should ??] help you, too. BS Take PADnin UHflUUI ra The Woman's Tonic ra BE Mrs. N. E. Varner, of Eg B E Hixson, Tern., writes: B ? S B "1 was passing through I f IB the ... My back and B I II sides were terrible, and EE fll my suffering indescriba- Fll ble. I can't tell just how VI and where 1 hurt, about VB I I all over, I think ... I I I I fl began Cardui, and my B t R g pains grew less and less, B I Rlfl until 1 was cured. Iam Bf ) Pro remarkably strong for a BE I tfrfj woman 64 years of age. ?4^ EdB 1 do all my housework." Ell | I Flag* In England. The early inhabitants of England, like those of other countries, used emblematic devices of one kind or another. That of the Saxons was a white horse. The introduction of flags into England i9 ascribed to St. Augustine, the missionary, and his followers, who, after the convention : of King Ethelbert, entered Canterbury in procession, chanting and j bearing small banners eedti o Buy the BEST lace. 3arly all kinds of Garden ters that by taking time by we have succeeded in getter offered to Williamsburg tment of our business, and as possible to do. However, it from our regular dealers have at last succeeded and season tor pianung opens e on hand in bulk: CORN Extra Early Dent Evergreen Gentleman >' Favorite TOMATOES >a Brimmer. ne Pink arliana BEETS lipse ,'d Turnip PEPPERS ?e ng MUSTARD lrled COLLARDS Creole ONIONS ns iterfield POTATOES jblers s 1ISCELLANEOUS rip Sorghum FLOWER SEED ;as, Assorted ims, Assorted sortment of package seed i assortment of Wood's, Landid Fairey's Package Seeds uy your seed. lfi' Co. I " GREAT OCEAN BILLOWS. i Atlantic 8torm Waves Are Less Thar Fifty Feet In Height. Twenty feet in height, from crest to bottom, is a big sea?even for ; sailors. Captain Scoresby's observa| tions on the height of waves long 1 ago proved that in the heaviest Ati lantic storms the waves very rarely . J ? i... i.1 j exceeu iorijfimec icci xium uunun to crest, the distance between creste being 500 feet and their speed thirI ty-three miles an hour. More re| cent observations have shown that ! Atlantic waves may reach forty1 eight feet. } At Kurrachee, in India, waves i were measured on the breakwater which were about forty feet above the sea level. In Wick bay, in Scotland, celebrated for heavy seas, some have been observed of forty feet in height, but this is uncommon. It was estimated that one of the great rollers, which came about every ten minutes, poured over the breakwater at Wick with a mass of 40,000 tons of water. Blocks of concrete weighing more than two tons were carried completely away. Great waves have often carried away the most solidly built lighthouse, and there is, perhaps, no more triumphant work of engineer ing than when a lighthouse is made to stand in a particularly difficult and dangerous place against the incessant efforts of the sea roused to all its fury. As to the depth to which wave action extends the knowledge is uncertain. Shell fish, which are known to live at depths of 50 or 60 to 150 feet, are thrown upon the shore by heavy stonns, and the bottom is often much disturbed at the depth of fifty feet. But concrete and granite blocks, used in the construction of breakwaters and immensely heavy, are seldom disturbed at a depth of twenty feet. To "have the decks swept" by a great wave is common at sea, even when the vessel is in good hands. Often this accident has proved fatal I to vessel and crew, but generally rej suits in the loss of boats, galleys and ! too often of some of the men.?Sr. | Louis Globe-Democrat. Would Look Lazy. I A traveling man was eating in a I stuffy lit lie restaurant one very hot ! summer dav. There were no screens at the windows or the door. The proprietress herself waited on her customers and shooed flies from the table at the same time. Her energetic bnt vain efforts attracted the attention and roused the sympathy of the traveling man, who said: "Would it not be better to have vour windows and doors screened V* Well, yes, I s'pose that would help some," replied. the woman, after thinking a moment, "but 'twould look mighty lazy like."-1?Chicago Herald. ' Bright Boholar*. Examination "howlers" are by no means confined to schoolboys, as an "information test" of freshmen at New York university showed. The definitions of "hypothecate" as "a druggist" and "esophagus" as "a tomb in which dead kings were placed" were worthy of lineal descendants of Mra. Malaprop, while the statement that "Beowrdf was a character in Shakespeare's 'Ivanhoe'" rivals the classic account of Aesop as "a man who wrote fables and traded the copyright for a bot? -aw xr ?1_ m_:i_ tie ot potasn."?isew lors xnuune. Highly Temperamental. "It makes me uneasy for Mrs. Dubwaite to go to town," said Mr. Dubwaite. "Are you afraid she'll get run over by a motorcar?" "No. She either sees so many things in department stores she can't afford to buy she comes home quite upset or she attends a theater and gets so wrought up ovei the trials and tribulations of a movie heroine she can't enjoy hei dinner."?Birmingham Age-Herald, An Indispenaabla. Some years ago, in a certain flagship, the commander had occasion to find fault with the admiral's cook, and awarded him three days' close confinement. The admiral heard of the affair and sent for the commander on the quarter deck. "What do you mean by it?" stormed the incensed admiral. "Please to understand that I can get a hundred commanders like you, but only one cook like him!"?London Globe. Strange Ways of 8almon. The Chinook salmon as they ascend the streams to the spawning grounds fight and starve themselves, not eating from the time they leave the salt water, so that only the hardiest survive, and these, when i the spawning season is over, die. 1 Tin* young swiin to the salt water, where thev live four years, when they in turn destroy themselves to nroserve the species. See Us for1 M. F. Heller exp Mules this week. are three big Bro< and see them. He t) and will sell them i Yours for Mul< M. F. HI 40 Years at ; KINGSTR] MMb.U7A 1 XI "Xfc v^tiip J 9.20-17 Think ab< 1918 Su] FERT11 TTk I 2 X J 1 lint don t Duy a sac hare ; Geo. A. A Kingstre 12-27-tf OAK BEDS, DRESSf A carload just received solid oak, clean-cut and si kind that lasts and looks before the last advance ii on the freight, and they -A ?35 rull | at our prices, yau anu oc . I good values m Iron Mattresses, Kitchen I and Window Shades. ; I Remember, too, that v, Profit-Sharini with all Cash purchases. Steele Furijiti; KINGSTREE, ; |l I 2Ws/ Sell | 12Jc lb. Paid I Choice Beef, 1 Mutton a vi Highest Prices Paii THE PEOPLE K. A. MILLER 1 four Mules ects three cars of In the shipment )d Mares. Come iought them right right. ss or Horses, RLLER Same Place. EE, S. C. Every WeeK. out Your pply of LIZER k of it until you seen \ flcElveen ie, S. C, f !RS, WASHSTANDS . These pieces are all ubstantially made?the well. We bought them 1 prices; saved money are exceptional values e our stock. flWe have Beds, Springs and e-i? nnM 90ies( Jinan nu)|9 ^ _ I * " re give 9 Certificates * " ii*n r Ainnanv II V V/V1A1|/U1?J ' , - - S. C. Us Your Cattle lest Market Price Paid or Cow Hides. Pork, Sausage 1 XT 1 .na veai. d for Hides ? Furs 'S MARKET !, Proprietor.