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Itoba II Tliic ic nrn JL 111U 1U ^Vl Tobaco rais a letting you ! save you 11 twine you n f you buy. i . Flour, 1 Hay Ej V L I Come to see us w IS.F.EPK HE SEASON HAS ARR FARM JMI Ve have them? ^ Garden Plow IMoline Fie E HAVE the most ware and Buildinj part of the Stat ou. ace your order now sure that you will j jstree Hard (We Lead: Oil i Protect your Automobile F FREEZE flROO : _ _ ? COFFINS AIM g 7 7 A large and varied asso Automobile Hearse Horse-Draw Experienced Ser m Day 01 Kingstree H Phones 35. 4 We Lead; CM <*e is yoor order for I I ?C0 T ling to be quite ers this season * A . , know in time t loney on any < lay need. See \ * lice, Meal Stock Pou ed bought Car lots ipply Just F hen in need of any of i i&CO, HNG I IVED WHEN TOU NEED ELEMENTS ______ everything from to the famous id Tractor. complete line of Hardy Material in the eastern e. Call and let us con for TOBACCO FLUES, *et them. Iware Company hers Follow.) Radiator with JOHNSON'S F. Guaranteed! D CASKETS. \ * rtment to select from, and Robber-Tired' m Hears? U AiVIM w? vices Rendered * NifgHt. ardware Co. A, 59 or 122 hers Follow. Engraved Visting Cards WINE I an item to and we are hat we can quantity of us before , Grits, iltry in larpivpfl the above Articles. SmJ M. D. NESMU H, DENTIST, Lake City, S. C? BENJ. McINNES, M. R. C. V. S. B.Kater MclNNES,M.D.,V.M. D VETERINARIANS. One of ua will be at Kingstree the tirst Monday in each month, at Heller's Stables. 9-28-tf SEE John M. Eaddy FOR Surveying and Platting. Notary Public with Seal. 5-9-lyp JOHNSONVUXE. S, C. AM. SNIDER Surgeon Dentist Office at Residence Railroad Ave.. K1NGSTREE If you need Glasses, come to me. Single and double lenses fitted correctly at lowest prices. Broken lenses duplicated. T. ?. BACDETT, Jeweler Shingles! For Sale I have received a car-load of all-heart TITEHOLD Red - Cedar - Shingles. Per Thousand, $7.25. W.J.HODGES, 2-27-tf Cades, S. G. We are proud of the confidence doctors, druggists and the public have in 666 Chill and Fever Tonic.?adv. S I t t i HEALTHFUL ADVICE! I During the aftermath of in- ' fluenza or any other prostrating illness, the logical tonic is SCOTT'S !' EMULSION which enriches the blood arid | strengthens the whole body, via I nourishment. If you would re! new your strength- -try Scott's. Scott Si Bowse, BloomficlU. 2*. J. 19-1 ^ ??r?tt?r?? j NOTICE OF SALE UNDER FORE- , CLOSURE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA County Of Williamsburg Court Of Common Pleas. S. V. Taylor. Plaintiff, Against Elijah Witherspoon, Emanuel Witherspoon, Ida Capers, Mellie Morgan, Hattie July, Chanie Rolleson. heirs at law of Rosa Rolleson, deceased Essie Keels, Levi Keels, Easter Keels, Pleasure Keels, Golden Keels, Eddie Keels, and Anderson Keels, heirs at law of Louise Keels, deceased and Alex Alston. Defendents. Notice is hereby given that under and by virtue of a Decree issued' out of the Court of Common Pleas for Williamsburg County, South Carolina, signed by His Honor. Judge W. H. Townsend, dated April 29th, 1919, to me directed, I will . sell at public auction before the Court House at Kingstree, South Carolina, on Monday the 2nd day of June 1919; the same being sales' day, between the legal hours of sale, the following described real estate, to-wit: All that certain piece, parcel, or tract of land, lying, being, and situate in the town of Greelyville, in the County of Williamsburg, State of South Carolina, containing two and % (2%) acres, more or less and known as the undivided estate of Rosa Rolleson and bounded as follows, to-wit: On the North by Central railroad, (A. C. L.) on the East by lots of E. J. McCullum and Alex Alston, on the South by public road leading from Oeelyville to Foreston and lot of Alex Alston, and on the West by lot of Ida Capers. Terms of sale cash; purchaser to pay for' papers. H. 0. BRITTON, . Clerk of Court for Williamsburg County. 5-8-3t NOTICE OF ELECTION Notice is hereby given, that pursuant to an order of the County Board of Education of the County of Williamsburg, State tof South Carolina, dated the dajy of April, 1919, the undersigned as Trustees of Cades School District Number 25, of said County and i State, will hold and conduct an election at the Cades School building, in said District, County, and State, on the 22nd day of May, 1 1919, for the purpose of submitting < to the qualified voters and electors of said School District residing ( therein the question of levying and . collecting an annual tax of four (4) mills on the property in said 1 School District, which tax shall l>e used to supplement the taxes now4 j collected in said School District for , school purposes; that for the purpose of said election the polls will 1 be opened at eight o'clock in the I forenoon and closed at four o'clock i in the afternoon; that at said elec- ( tion only qualified electors who re- . turn real or personal property for taxation and who exhibit their tax' receipts and registration certili- I cates as required in general elec- i tions shall be allowed to vote, and | ecfch elector favoring the proposed , levy shall cast a ballot containing the word "YES" printed or written thereon, and each elector opk- I posed to said levy shall cast abal- ] lot containing the word "NO" written e: printed thereon, and the undersigned shall act as managers of .-<aid election, and the same will be held and conducted in the manner presciibed by Section 1742 ol\ ( the Code of Laws of South car? v lina. Volume 1, 1912. W. J. SMILEY, j w. J. HASELDEN, , . R. F. EPPS, 1 Trustees of Cades School Dis- ] trict Number 25, Williamsburg ' County, South Carolina, and Managers of Election. ^ 1 ? * e Registration Notice ' The office of the Supervisor of l<efc. * i<cratit?n will he open on the lei Moo- c !*y in each month for the purpose of resriat-ering any person who i* qualified a? follows : Who shall have been a resident o' tfie State for two years, and of the I ounty one year, and of the polling pre-met in which the elector offers to ?.ite four months before the day of -,<-r.ti<>n. and shall have paid, iux n >nth* before, any poll tax then due 1 u.d payable, and who can both read f and write any section of .the constitution of 1*96 submitted to him by the . MipiTVHor# oi registration, or wut ? ra? thai he owns, and has pail 1 til u*<^ collectible on during tb? s pr-?em >?-ar ptoperty in this Stat* *! three hundred dollars o? c fi-if# . B E Clarkson, C 4 iHrk*?>? Knar ^ in HOUR KODAK FINISHING \ / All rolls developed 10c; pacta 1 20s ap; prints 2 l-2c-4c- r 5c enlarging 35c up. Specialists?we a do nothing but kodak finishing. All t work guaranteed to please. Eastman Kodaks, Films, Supplies. COLUMBIA PHOTO FINISHING CO, 1111 Taylor Street. Columbia, S. C. 3-27tf. t ?. ... 5=?s ( Ever notice the consolation the * boob seems to get out of the fact ? that everybody makes mistakes. J \ HISS SOOTI!, IN rags, AIDES LONDON POOR Salvation Army Commander, Ois- : guised. Roamed Through Slums to Study Intimate Problems of! East End Unfortunates. Miss Kvangenne Kootn, aaugnter 01 :he late (lenera! William Booth, founder of the Salvation Army, has fiven her life to the service of the >oor and the unfortunate. Few pertona, If any. know she went about ia Hp r . , IMA St'-. I ?131 .' : " v ' Evangeline Booth, Commander of the Salvation Army in the United States. the East End of I.ondou disguised in rags that she might help the unfortunate. When her father stood erect amid a storm of abuse and even physical violence she stood beside him. She knows how the poor suffer hecause she has suffered with them. She knows there still remains in the wreck of a dissolute man a spark of manhood that will kindle a redeeming dame, because she has fanned many flickering sparks until her patient har regained his feet. She now heads the Salvation Array in the United States it the great moment of its career. The Did time slurs and doubts have been banished. During the week of May 19-26 the Salvation Army will appeal to the people of the United States for thirteen million dollars to carry out Its after-tbe-war program. Contribute to the Salvation Army Home Service Fund Campaign. Remember, to the Salvation Army "A Man May Be Down, hat He's Never Oat" o INCREASE VALUE Or CROP Mt. Tabor. N*. C. Jentlemen T made a test with your Beetle fWij v vio a?i fftitr oi*roc sprayed three times at a cost of 16.00 an acre. It increased my sales 1150.00 an acre. I would not consider throwing Tobacco again without using it, rven if it cost $100 a pound. It conroLs the fleas and worms and stimilates the plants generally. I tmade he best Tobacco I ever grew. I reeived $2,300.00 from the four acres. Very truly yours. C. R. Spivey. Beetle Mort Powdeer for sale by Jeople's Mercantile Co. Kingstree. o Corp. Samuel L. Casque, a Fior nce boy, has been awarded the >ench war cross for conspicuous iravery under fire. He was in charge if an ammunition train when it was ittacked by enemy airplanes and lis unusual coolness and courage md care of the material under his :ommand won for him the French , lecoration. He is at present station d at Boston. Chicago brewers will continue to, nake beer containing 2\ per cent ilcohol despite government prohibiion legislation. o MEAT PRICES REDUCED From this date my prices on fresh >eef will be reduced as follows: Jhoice steak 35c per pound toast beef 30c per pound stew beef 25c per pound ?oup meet 10c oer pound Ft A. MILLER. J ''"I |j INITIATIVE 1 = By LOUISE PERKINS. j j ^mmittniuwiMniniUHntiianHM (Copyright, 1518. by McClsre MuiiMf Syndicat*.) For the first time since Lurine WB Hams had left her home to make hei way in the business world, she was ool of a job. She looked at the matt* sensibly, too, remarkably sensibly fa so young a girl, for In spite of the fail that she had been a successful aal very businesslike stenographer to at important and well-known man for on " past five years, she was barely twenty* two. She had worked hard to con plete her business course before tk? email pittance she had saved was ea hausted. And it was by sheer perse verance and hard work that she ha4 gained and held her first position. Now, just as she was becoming sur* of herself and her Job, her employei had sold out his business interests an! had gone West to avoid the breakdewa which his physician had said was In evl table. For the past week Lurine had searched the want "ads" eagerly, bnl in vain. Today there was one. Mc Hill, of Loring, Hill & Judson, was Is need of a private secretary. It was I nositinn that amv Rtennffrnnher In thl city would have been glad to accept; but Lurine knew only too well, as did no doubt a' score of other woold-b? secretaries, that being the best last firm In the city it was the very hardest to gain access to, and Mr. Hilli so rumor said, was the most exacting of tfcs trio. But once a girl was admitted t? those sacred precincts her success waa assured. Certainly It was worth trying, and Lurine was experienced. Fin years should count for something. An hour later Lurine arrived at the * office, very nervous and somewhat breathless, only to be told by a stonyfaced middle-aged woman, evldenfly one of the clerks, that Mr. Hill wan busy and if she was an applicant thai he wasn't interviewing anyone undes twenty-five. As she was whirred down In til swift elevator a glance into the merciless mirror showed her how hopeles* ly young ana smau sue looneu. n?w ever, the luxurious and dignified at mosphere of the office she had Jast left made her dissatisfied with any other possibilities. "Besides," she told her self as she walked back to her dingy little apartment in the cool spring air, "anything worth having is worth worth ing for." Early that afternoon Lnrlne again visited the beautifully famished office that had become ideal with her. TM same clerk admitted her a second timet but surely she saw no resemblance In the cool, self-possessed little gmy? haired woman to the extremely young and very nervous girl she had so recently refused admittance to. This time, to Lurine's surprise, she ushered Uf/v VfM XT 111*o net IUIW mi. mil a piivavr aau^iuiu. Mr. Hill's trained eye appraised Iter swiftly and she felt from the first that she was making a favorable impression. He asked her a few perfunctory questions, dictated a letter or two and then informed her in his calm, even voice, which she soon learned was habitual with him! that she would do. Through the hot summer months that followed the little gray-haired, spectacled lady worked diligently In Mr. Hill's employ, always carrying out his wishes, often anticipating them. Suddenly one day early in the fall Mr. Hill announced that he was to he one of the participants in the Liberty loan campaign, and that he would he obliged to leave her in sole charge ef his personal affairs during that time. It was then that her characteristic honesty compelled her to tell him of her ruse and that he was leaving hie business in the hands of a girl of tww ty-two and not a middle-aged woman. There was a gleam of amusement la bis eyes as he replied: uDtd you tthrik so shallow a disguise as yours cfafll deceive as keen a lawyer as yhor ployer has the reputation of being? 1 knew it from the first. Two of ye?f wrinkles disappeared during your trial dictation. It was your Ingenuity and 'initiative that got yea the poeidon.1 my dear young lady, and It ts tfcfe'aam* two qualities that assure the safety at my business in your hands," *; (t is a well-known fact In the hadneaa circles of that dty thst Mr. $111*8 secretary Is a treasure, bet nevertheless It Is still something of a mystery ts tfiem that he ever came to latnut his affairs to so young a girt. First Airplane Fatality. The first man to lose his life In as airplane accident was Lieut Thomas k H. Selfridge of the United States sig-, nal corps, who was killed in September. 1908, while flying as a passenger with Orvtlle Wright at Ft. Myer, Vs. The next ratal airplane accident occurred a year later in France, when Eugene Lefebvre was enrolled as one of the martyrs to the conquest of the air. Since the outbreak of the war, of course, brave iyers without number hare given their lives to their respective countries, and a list of them would All pages. The first woman to be killed in an airplane accident wan Mme. D. Mooro. who lost her life at Etamps, France, In 1911. Have Always Carried Mirrors. Woman's up-to-date fashion of carrying around a mirror in her handbag is by no means so modern as might be supposed. In the middle ages, from the twelfth to the end of tho fifteenth century, every lady carried around with her a tiny mirror in her reticulo or hanging from her girdle, mirrors being considered a necessary ' , pert of every lady's toilette. % , * ? ' -1 ' 1'?A. *%