The county record. [volume] (Kingstree, S.C.) 1885-1975, March 20, 1919, Page PAGE 3, Image 3
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Car 1
very best,
3 cars
less on the
sale today
Car 1c
Horse,
l -l 1
woria ana
Rice i
that way.
sack.
' Come to set
S.F.E
HI
? "
EDISON I
I
nil
i MA w|b. Wm
In Wk |
hUh
BaMkiwK Vai
VHBH
The St<
?
v# . #
Man an
ve Adve
oad of Mother's ]
grades made.
; of No. 1 Timothy I
! bale than it can be t
. We must move it;
?ad of the famous Pi
ale and Hog Feed,
guaranteed as repr<
and Grits in ton lo
Can save you m
i os when in need of an
PPSSCO, I
PHONOGRAPHS
wife-LiKe In
Mi
** T
sele Furnitu
i
/
V \ i ..
d Beast I
}
rtise:
Flour?one of the
I
lay going at $1.00
Ui. ^^Vl o 4- tttU a! A ! I
tUUglll 1UI CtL WI1U1C;
we need the room.
irina Poultry, Cow,
The best in the
esented.
ts if you want it
oney on it by the
ly of the above Articles.
JNGSTREE, S. C.
AND RECORDS
Tone
HERE'S WHAT THE
MINNEAPOLIS DAILY.
I NEWS SATS:
"Experts from the laboratory of
Thomas A. Edison, with the aid of
Madam Marie Rappold, of the Metropolitan
Opera Company, demonstrated
Friday night in the Auditorium
that the inventor has attained
such perfection in reproducing the
human voice that it was actually
impossible for a large invited audience
to distinguish between the prima
donna's voice and the Edison ReCreation
of it."
"Those in the audience famrlar
with Madam Rappold's voice were a
trifle astonished?the voice they
heard seemed unquestionably hers,
although they faced the visible evidence
of her dosed lips. Then Madam
Rappold's lips opened, and her
. voice poured out. There were two
voices in the Auditorium now. Here
it became evident that, although
I Madam Rappold was singing, her
voice was matched so perfectly by
the voice in the cabinet that it was
impossible to distinguish between
the two."
o
We have in stock a nice
selection of
rrnmnfl Diniiirnn
f ridmcu nuiuioo
which we are closing out
at cost. If you want a real
work of art come and see
these PICTURES.
re Company
. . i
\ ? , . K- :V
i
Township Board of Assessors 1
1 The Governor has ap;xjintod Town!
ship Hoards of assessors for William-burg
County a.-> follows:
Hope.?W. M. 0'Br van, Hicnnc,
ann: J. F. ?.!->:itgo.::evy, J. 15.
Playor. ,
1 l.a'V.;.?1. E. Davis, Dr. I.N. Boyd.
. . altera: W. X. Clarlcson, Hionneman.
Penn.? .1. B. Clarlcson, J. A. Mc1
Cv.llough, S. K. McCullough, Lane.
Buttons,?S. L. Parsons, O. C. Hinj
nant, Buttons; S. B. Gordon, An'
drews.
! Anderson,?K. R. Rowel 1, J. S.
I Wheeler, W. W. Boyd, Trio.
Sumter.?S. J. Casque, R. B.
] Fiteh, Lake City; B. M. McElveen,
j Cades.
Mouc.on,? J. F. Williamson,
Cades; T. K. Duke J. K. Pendergi-ass,
Kingstree.
King,?.J. P, Shaw, J. F. Rodgers,
T. Tisdale, Kingstree.
| Turkey,?R. D. Gamble, Nesmith;
I T. Armstrong McCrea, VV. Gordon
Cantley. Kingstree.
| Mingo,?R. W. Marshall. R. W.
[ Smith, Kingstree; R. J. Nesmith,
; Nesmith.
Ridge,?W. I. Hodges, W. C. Wilson,
J. E. McFadden, Cades.
Indian.?C. C. Daniel, Cooper; S.
D. Hanna, R. E. Wilson, Hemingway.
Johnson,? E. F. Prosser, Johnsonville;
J. M. G. Eaddy, D. B.
Chandler, Hemingway.
Kingstree,?P. G. Gourdin, P. S.
Courtney, W. C. Claiborne, Kingstree.
Clarendon,?J. R. Barrow, New
Zion; R. E. Burgess. A. L. Burgess,
Kingstree.
o
A shoe does not contain the sole
of honor.
American sou is a pwj p??.c i?
plant t-he bolsheviki.
STOMACH PAINS
DOUBLED HIM UP
f
Hi* Kidneys Caused Pain* in His
Bark Also. Claims Dreco Gave
Relief.
Many letters arc received stating
th4 good Dreco has done. We print
this one coming from Mr. S. G.
Deane of 1012 Main St., Columbia,
S. C., which says:
'I suffered awful pains in my
stomach that would draw me double.
My kidneys were deranged, the urine
being of high color, feverish and
painful. I have taken three bottles of
Dreco and all these troubles are
completely eased. My wife is also
taking Dreco now."
I Dreco acts on the kidneys and
I stops the backache, dull, tired dragging
down pains; relieves constipation;
assists the stomach to digest
, the food; ends gas misery; relieves
dizzv spells; biliousness; coated tongue;
bad taste in the mouth; increases
the appetite and induce,
sound sleep.
Dreco is a combination of many
medicinal plants, which hate a direct
effect on the vital organs. Doing a
natural herb medicine, it acts in :
natural way, .so 'hat the effects u:v
permanent.
Dreco is now sold by all good
' druggists throughout the country
and is highly recommended in
Kingstrec by the Kingstree 1): ug
Company.
HOLDERS OF
UBtKIT BUNU5
are advised to bold them. If you
must sell, deal only with responsible
bankers. We
Buy and Sell
LIBERTY BONDS
{ AH Issues and Denominations.
Write us if interested.
| TRUST COMPANY OF GEORGIA
Captor and Surplus, $2,000,000
ijrmber Federal Reserve System
ATLANTA. OA.
I Seed Corn |
Wood's White and Yellow .H
Dent Seed Corns arc all nubbed
st-leclc'l slock of high gerinijistion.
For the past Ave
years our Bellwuod stain of
Boone County has won first
prize or the Virginia State
i'j.ir for. best ten ears of white
Wood's Virginia Fnsilage
Corn Is one of the best and
large* -yielding varieties fop
I he silo.
|? WOOD'S
SEEDS
h 'J For IV.no and C-rden are of
1 hivh-srncl" quail.;.-?tested for I
both purity and germination. Ill
( 'vy "Write; ror ?";iri-1 - iwooas
; <Jj * t'jv.p .C.'<ucinl," KiVntr prices of
jjj Seed Potatoes, Seed
| A Oats, Grass and Clover
~ Seed-Garden Seeds.
5 T.W. Wood & Sons
J ssrssMBir,
l lUclanocd, Virginia.
ISANCIENTCUSK
Ml One Knows Who Origin:
the "Round Robin."
i Lon9 In en 8hipboard for D
| mining tseh allei's WetcH?Of
Employed In the Form
of a Petition.
That watch kept on board shl
while lying at anchor, la e
the anchor wateh. Generally apee
tt .onelste of one officer and one
tnan, whose duties are to watch 011
the safety of the ship, see that
anchor light is kept bnrnlng brig
and take care that the vessel doe!
drag her anchor. If there are <
hoars of darkness to be covered
eight men constitute the crew, I
men are required to watch one
each, ir mere De more or less
the question arises who Is to g
watch first or last, or, perhaps.
Is to "lay over" until the next d
Tf thus becomes necessary to a
tain who is to go on duty at a
tain hour and each man must I
when his turn comes. Arrange
for this |s made by forming a "r
robin." or pitting it In another
by "chalking for watches," which 1
complislied in such a way that
sailor lias the time for keeping
watch determined by lot, one no
Ing favored more than another,
thing Is decided in this way:
One man draws a farge circl
the lid of a chest, or, if that Is not
venlent. the deck. The circle Is
divided into as many divisions as
are men; and each man makei
mark in one of the spaces. This
be a cross, a circle, a triangle, <01
other sign that will suffice to Id*
hint.
During the time the sailors
placing their mark* within the dh
of the circle, one of their number !
talned ootside on deck and ke|
Ignorance of the Identity of an;
thor of any mark. When all
made their market the round ruh
complete. The man who was on
la now called, someone else hi
made a mark for him. This man
proceeds to erase the marks, or
one. The owners of the mark!
numbered from number one up, It
cession, as he erases them, and
numbers are chalked up on the
of the berths: those above numhe
lying over until the next night. A
roan who erases the marks doe!
know who made this or that, he
not show any partiality.
The round robin Is sometimes p
other use when the crew of a \
at sea wish to present a grlevan
the form of a petition to the raj
I TKaIh /mmnlolnt {? mtlHii Aitf in
I urn (.vuipiuiui v
ln^, and the signature put in the
of h round robin, which prevent
writer of the document from
singled nut Hnd treated, as a rint
er, with undue severity. A fa mom
In example of similar use of the i
robin in the army within recent
was the "Roosevelt Round Robin'
Ing the Spanisli war.
Where the custom originated n
J knows.
Spain Is Buying Pianos.
i The American government is h
1 " 1
mules mikI blankets in Spain and
ing for rltem witb pianos made i
United States, according to Georj
Pound, manager of the National 1
Manufacturers' association. in oi
attention to one of the striking i
opmcnts at the present time In
country's export trade.
"As Is the rase with neutrals
erally," Mr. Pound said, "mui
Spain's population has profited le
by the war, and the demand for p
has persisted In spite of the fact
; the priees of all musical instrm
In Spain hare doubled and ti
' since the war began."
; Mr. Pound said that the Aim
manufacturers were thereby offer
? A. X. ~1 4.W ?
unusuai opportunity u> n?-ip me
ernment pay th*-* war bills as well
meet the foreign demand for our t
In this connection, Mr. Pound sal
! ano manufacturers can only e
their pianos through governme
cense.
New Generator Finds Favoi
An acetylene geuerator supi
fuel for propelling motorbouts i
device of a Norwegian captain e
reported to be in great deman
though the average cost is 21
per horse power honr. The gas
off as water is dropped upon ca
carbide. Is led to the carburetor. *
It Is purified and fed to the 11
Though this apparatus is adapted
for the ordinary gasoline motor a
, Ifieation is being worked out t)
expected to serve for engines des
to burn kerosene.
"Tacking Down Edges of Figl
Things were stirring along the
Miles away we could hear the In
heavies thundering and druinmin;
?tire in a lull we detected the
mering staccato of a machine
tacking down the loose edges
fight that will never he record*
History. wiiii i rauir.'Miicj'n
briskness of a man laying a c
In a hurry.'?Irvin S. Cobb in th
urday Evening Post.
Much Lumber Wasted.
It is estimated that American
berrnen, aeeustonied to a weall
material, waste two-thirds of it
that l>y utilizing all parts of the
the long-leaf pine industry would
O tons of paper, .'1,000 toi
r?sin: IU??.0U0 gallons of lurpe
n??l great ti?rtnrjtles of sthyl pro<
IM USE CREOSOTED
J ' FENCE POSTS.
; Treat Your Own Posts on
The Farm.?Last From
j 15 to 20 Years.
p ! | rieroson College.?With the derelallsd
' opraent of our livestock industry and
iking | the resulting increased need for passea
, tureo, fencing becomes an important
t for problem. A troublesome phase of
the : this d rob lew is Tastine fence nosts.
[htly, i ix>nf-?ired fence poets cm easily be
* not made from most of the common infer*
eight 1 k>r woods by a simple preservative
and ; treatment on the fann. Properly
rheee ; creoeoted. these non-lasting woods
hour make posts good for 15 to 30 years,
men Silys \y. R. Mattoon. Extension Spa*
o on cialists in Forestry.
who j Kinds of Wood to Use.
*y* Most of our common -woods readily
|Rcep" take in creosote, a product of the discer*
lillation of coal which makes wood
know nher very resistant to fungi, or rot. and
ment to practically all forms of Mimal life
ound which injure wood. Sap pine, soft jy*.
way? or red maple, black gum, sweet gum, /
'*ac* beech, red and black oaks, cottoneach
wood, willow, the poplars, are good
' hi? examples of non-lasting woods which
t be- Bre easily treated, the wood becoming
^he the container for the preservative
fluid. Because of cross bands of tise
on sue of the various white oaks, they
t con- j are unactable for treating. The more
s?h~ i lasting woods (black locust, red cedar,
there mulberry, chestnut, black walnut,
' hi* osage orange) do not justify the exmay
pease of treating for the slightly in'
f,*y i creased lasting qualitlee.
>ntlfv I . ti?
| woww araer > cb?ci?k or
. ting when in ordinary u? u fence
Ision p08t** Tbi* since snch
, openings allow the entrance of woodt
|n ! rotting fungi to the inner portions of
7 au the untreated wood. For example,
hare doe to its interlocked.
In is | twisted fiber, has proved an eneeed
ingly satisfactory wood for treatment.
avlng The bav ot tbe southern swamps
now j "checks" badly, firing poor results
|P jjy " even in the first 5 to 8 year* follow,
are ing treatment,
i tuc- | Method of Treating,
their , Posts 3 to 4 inches in diameter are
sides sufficiently strong for Hne poets,
r ten , Small posts require less creosote, and
s the last practically as long as large ones. Tvj ,43
< not Round posts are better for treating
can- than split poets.
It is tery important to bare the
mt to wood thoroughly seasoned. The poets
pxsel should be cat, completely peeied. and i
ce in open piled in a dry situation well explain.
' posed to sua and wind. Peeling is
writ- most easily done in the spring seaform
?am mIwiv* immediately after the tree
x the Is felled, before catting it up into post
being lengths. Patches of the thin inner
dead- berk, if left, retard or prevent locally
?case the desired impregnation of the wood
ound with the preservative liquid. A spade- Pi
times forms one of the beet tools for peel- ' 'v
' dur- jng jn late fall and early winter,
especially in dry situations, it may be '.J
0 one necessary to use an ordinary draw ' >
knife. ^ -.'-iai
Tops of the posts should he beveled '
to shed rain water. Posta should be
uying cut to allow only about 3 inches above
1 pay- the top wire. Posts with long tope
n the are unsightly and more costly in
fc W. . wood used and treatment. A light ,
Piano crosscut saw avoids waste in chopailing
ping, and makes smoother ends,
level- a satisfactory treating equipment
i this for farm use consists of one cyltndri- 3
cal galvanised steel tank 3 feet la
S^n- diameter by 4 feet high, and one hori- v
:li or | xontal rectangular steei uuik a oy 9
irgely fret. The treatment consists of soak*
ilanos I jnfi the butts in hot cruosote (about
that 200 to 215 degrees F.) for one to two
nents hour*, depending upon the density of
ebled the wood and time required to get a
deep penetration of the creosote, and
rican then immersing the whole post in a
edan "ooid" bath, at a temperature of 90
%oy' to 110 degrees F.
as to butts should be treated for *. Si
foods, height of one foot above the ground
Id. pl- i>ng jhe tops t'-us get only a shalxP?rt
low treatment but sufficient to*
Qt make them last as long as the butts. ?
Cost of Treatment.
A gallon of creosote will treat 3
j . posts. 3 to 4 inches across the top. or
s the * l>osts 4 to 5 inches. In ordinary
. . times a high grade of creosote can
ma is . ... .. .
^ be purchased for 15 to 20 cents per" f
cents in barrel lots delivered. War /
I n t'mo made it cost from 30 to 35 cents^ :
Iclum T>*lPeiidil[,S uP?n the 9ize fhe poet ^
.vhere an<i price of creosote, this is a cost
for creosote of from 5 to 15 cents per
notor. -----I
onlv pos1, or avera*e of 10 cents. Other
mod- ?* <,0!:' for fhe peeled post
iat Is s,ii;*tld nu' over ? rents apiece,
{gap,! ami for overhead charge on equipment
about 2 cents, or if labor for "*3
treating the post is included about 3
cents, bringing the .total cost to an
front. avPraK(> of about 20 cents. This
ittery w0"'d fall to about 15 cents under or?
anjj dinarv pre-war prices for material and
ham- laborSIIn
True Cost.
of a But the true cost of fence posts on *
t'd In the farm should be reckoned in terms
and of cost cf the post plus cost of labor
urpet in replacement. If treated posts are
Sat- good for 15 years, at least two sets
of ordinary untreated posts and two
* renewal operations are eliminated.
Three complete settings of untreated
lum- posts would certainly be very considLL
?-?nuntjivo than one noer- ,
uu ui erai/i j u*vic cai/v?.?>v .....
; and ation with treated posts.
: tree The treating of fence posts jointly
yield by several fanners in a community af-08
of fords one of the best forms of oo?
ntlne operative work possible