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S F. W. Truluck fpARTN 4 1?? i 4 * 4 4 t NOTICE IS HE HH 3 3 Truluck, L. R. Truluc * X ? nership under the fn * "I COMPANY, of Kings J J stock and fixtures of 3^ and will conduct and t? building in which the J0 and carried on its bi -g? in the hands of W. 2 Estate of J. M. Truluc 1 | I ? Kingstree, S. G., Apri ?a?ERWH??3ffBli?i?i? i , LET Build J * J Lumber, Framin If Weatherboa! Ceiling, I M?' Beaver-board an< Congo Neve Slate S Florid i D Blue Print S< 'k " Buildi II Hampton Avenue, B i I !+!+H-!+!+I+!+5+!+!+!+!4-!+^!+ L. R. Truluck ERSHIP N 0 ^ , REBY GIVEN, That the ui k and W. W. King, have forn ? ? ? nvi/J n+rrl a ftf tttuTt [HI LLctlllC Clliu ObjriQ VJk AUU 4 i ;tree, S. C. The said Ann 1 I i the Estate of J. M. Truluck < . carry on its said business ! Estate of J. M. Truluck fo usiness. The management c 7. King, who was formerly c ;k. \ ? * / P. w 1 L. R. il 16,1920. W.V/ US HELP Y< I A H< / ' t% g, Sheathing, rding, Flooring, Finish Lumber, . Hidings, Sash, Doors, 1 i Beavertone, ir-Leak Roofing, urfaced Shingles, n? % la (Jypress amngies, trick Orders are Solici / jrvice. i f ers Suppl; I , r _ _ | W; W.King ? OTICE! I ' 4' #e ndersigned, F. W. Efc fcf led ^general part- jg rRULUCK-KING | ? i )f Kingstree, S. C., ? i at the stable and ? I V rmerly conducted S r f if this firm will be jfc i :onnected with the ? i . ! r. rt ? i - : I ? f . TRULUCK, $3 33 TRULUCK, g r. KING. I Qj ? XJ # we; / / Laths, | t I ' ? ted. \ y Co. Kingstree, S. C. =1 K \ ?.; ' . > /' ' it i SCHEME WQRKED TOO WELL Teacher Should Have Remembered That Old Proverb Concerning Things Heard by Listeners. A new high-school teacher had come to the local high school and was anxious to kno\^ how she Impressed the faculty members and students. But she was new and of course would not ask any of them the others' opinion of herself. So she began to watch for a chance to use her own ingenuity in malting the discovery. And one day her chance came. She was in the principal's df| flee filling out an identification card when she saw him and one of the | other teachers coming down the hall. Quickly she slipped Just outside the back door and stood there to listen a wee bit. Just as she had hoped they would, ' they noticed the card she had Just j filled out, "Oh. she's the new teach i er, spoKe up ice principal. uv jou ; know by any chance what history j she teaches?" The other teacher answered, "An1 dent." The principal grinned. * "Why, of j course." he returned. "I should hare known 'that from her looks." ? Exchange. . # Curious Fatigue Test A unique method has been dlscoTered to measure Just how tired one's body becomes after hours of work. A line is drawn across the forearm wtth j a sharp point, not sharp enough to break the skin, but only to drive out the blood and leave a straight white line on the skin. An observer holding a stop watch measures the time it takes for the blood to rush back into the skin and the white line to fade. The exact number of seconds and fraction of a second is recorded. This test is repeated say at Intervals of one | hour all day until the working hours are over. When these readings are plotted on paper a curye is drawn which tells at a glance Just how one's energy ebbs throughout the day. There i is always a marked Jump in the line after lunch hour.?Boys' Life. The Emu. "The emu Isva large bird, half the aize of an ostrich." says Lee S. Crandall, curator of birds In the New York Zoological park, writing* of "The Troubles. of Father Emu" In Boys' I Life. "It is found only in Australia, where there is also a alosely related bird, the. cassowary. The wings are i rudimentary, so that the bird is unable to fly. But it does not suffer from i this lack, for Its strong legs enable ! it to run with, great speed and agHity. j In fact, the emu is hard to catch and j a dangerous opponent when cornered, for it is as elusive as an eel and can | kick with tremendous force. WhA engaged in combat it leaps high in the air, and launches a trip-hammei j blow strong enough to send a heavy man head over heels. Attainable Goal. 80 what is your star to be like? It ! It worth going after good and bardl j You don't want a star of a job or lift i work that is so tenuous the points wil roll up and refuse to be pasted dowi aa a sensible and effective decoratioi and insignia of what you represent You don't want It to be so "fat" ant material that ail spiritual and eftiica manifestations are lacking, and yot don't want it to be so far away thai i??o Ant ?f toHch?In facL vou wan' just a good, sizable star that la attain | able by Wrong, steady determinatloi 1 and <-e that will shine brightlj : through every setback and discourage ment.?Pittsburgh Leader. , I\ I The next time you buy calomel ask for I 0 v. The purified and refined cajomel tablets, that aie 1 ?? J nauseaiess, sate ancourc. Medicinal virtues retained and improved. Sold only in sealed packages. Price 35c. NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR FINAL DISCHARGE. | Notice is hereby give that on the 24th day of May, A. D. 1920, we will apply to P. M. Brockinton, Probate Judge of Williamsburg county, for Letters Dismiseory as. Administratrix and Administrator of the Estate of B. N. Stuckey, deceased. BESSIE V. STUCKEY, T. H. STUCKEY, I Administratrix and Administrator of i the Estate of'B. N. Stuckey, deceased * 4-22-5tc. / v,, 'r '/ GREAT TRUTH SIMPLY TOLD Warning Hera to Thoaa Who Naglaet to Set Down Their Priceless Discoveries. A noted author in the Satevpost writes: "The commonest sign of fatigue is found In feeling of weariness." There are times when we are almost led Into believing that this Is tree. Equivocal and ambiguous as the statement may seem, at the first reading, It becomes clearer when read over four or five times. In fact, we don't know when, the proposition has been stated with more clarity, after one masters the language in which it la 1 pmirhoH Have yau not often read things and { said to yourself: "How often I have ! thought that very thing. Why did I ! not put It down In Imperishable words?" It Is so with this. Doubtless, In your bumble way you have often , thought that your weariness was a sign of fatigue. At those times you thought a living truth, but did you write and tell some magazine of your j priceless discovery? No. You al11 lowed somebod^ to come along, perhaps years after, and do It The moral Is that when you think a great thought, put It down on paper at once. Even If you do put It away i somewhere and forget It posterity ,1 may find It. Now, many times In our career we have had feelings of weariness. Some , of our friends have been misguided enough to attribute It to laziness?an , awful word, particularly among friends. But when we were weary, it was not laziness that ailed us. It i was fatigue. And we never knew the truth until we read the magazine article men! tloned. We have been slandered for 11 years by a wrong Idea.?Exchange. ' HIGH HONOR FOR SMALL GIRL rice ox I en-tear-Via nu n^pc?r?u on Millions of Coins of the United States. The government of the United States Jn 1835 made an offer of $1,000 for the most acceptable design to be placed ppon the new cent coin soon to be Issued. Some Indian chiefs traveled from the northwest to Washington to flsft the Oreat Father and then Journeyed to Philadelphia to see the i pint, whose chief engraver was James parton Longacre, who Invited them to his home. The engraver's daughter, Sarah, gged 10, greatly enjoyed the visit of her father's guests and during the eveI ning, to please her. one of the chiefs j took off his feathered helmet and war j bonnet and placed It on her head. In the company was an artist, who lm| piedlately sketched her and handed the i picture to her father. Mr. Longacre, knowing of the competition for a likeness to go upon the cent projected, nnder the inspiration of the hour, resolved to contend for the prize offered j by the government. To his delight the i officials accepted It and the face of bis daughter appeared upon the coin. I which was circulated about the nation for negrly a century. There were more t^an a hundred competitions. The cent hearing the face of Sarah Longacre has gone into more ' hands j than any other American coin. now c.ngiana urvws. > A great deal of interest is taken j fn England in the question of coast ' protection. The ocean, assailing the cliffs, gradually tears \hera away, but 1 this very process furnishes a defense for the land by building up long beaches of sand and shingle which arrest the waves before tfiey can attack the cliffs. An effort is making to prevent, or better regulate, the removal of this material for construction and road building, because In marry places Its removal has permitted the sea freely to exert Its power of erosion. ' The ordnance survey has ascertained that In the last half century England has lost 6.640 acres by sea erosion %ad gained 48.000 acres through- re claiming land the existence of which la mainly due to material brought i down by the rivers. Growth of the Cities. A Cleveland editor once said that Cincinnati's chief business was "pork ! and politics," observes Glrard In the Philadelphia Press. You have been told In advertise ments a million times that a certain beer "made Milwaukee famous." Everybody knows that Washington. D. C.. has one big industry?holding down govern men t Jobs. ^he new census figures from these cities, all above 400.000. are slgnlfl1 cant. Pork population Increased only 10 j per cent In a decade, while beer popu! lation expanded 22 per cent. Both look small compared with the growth j In government Job population of 32 ' per cent. Two Via It. I . "A feller 'way down there en Fiddle Creek found a bottle floating In the j water tuther day." related an nequalnt' ance. "In It was a note front a lady, i saying she wa? being held for ransom by a band of brigadiers, or whatever you call 'em." "Humph." replied Heck Tarpy ol Straddle Ridge^ "Tohe Swoller found a bottle in the road, whnr It had prob'ly struggled loose from some feller, and it was haJf full of bone-dry ticker that made Tobe'hoMer that be was so tnash be eould<oJimh'a honey loctA tree. Iirchwanty with a wildcat under each arm'and uever get a scratck."? i Kansas Qtty Star. t a * ait if utr-fc WHEN WMME DOWN She took STELLA-VITAE and got well. If she had taken STELLA-VITAE sooner, she needn't have broken down. Many women in the prime or life have made this mistake. , Many young girls have started ! into womanhood handicapped for life because their mothers neglected them at tne critical period. , For more than half a century ; f STELLA-VITAE has helped suffering women; helped them back to health and vigor, helped them to keep well and happy. STELLA-VITAE is sold by your druggist on agreement that if the first bottle does not help you. he will refund the , money you paid for it * l~ Thacher Medicine Co. Chattanooga, Tun., TX. M. A. Had Nervous Headache Ha Deters found STELLA VITAE the very medicine she needed. She tells her experience in the letter following: "1 feel that I should tell you and those who suffer from female trouble what your wonderful STELLA-VITAE has done for me. I suffered from nervous headaches and was all ran down in health when s friend of mine advised me to try STELLAVITAE. "Nothing else seeming to do me any good, I concluded to try it, and after taking it a short time, I found, to my great Joy, that it was the very medicine 1 needed. I am now so much better that I gladly recommend it to every woman who has I female troubles. STELLA-VITAE will do for women all that you claim." , < , Mr*. T. T. Devera, Term. For Sale By Kingstree Drag Co, Kings tree, S. C Tim Blanks Explained. A strange phenomenon was observed wbeD taking some exceptionally rapid pictures in New Jersey recently; every third film was found to be blank and on Inquiring into the cause it was dis* covered that Alternating current bad been used for illumination and tbat the ?nfsm 11 rr nhntnOTflnhpfl UUVa?la|>ll uau uuuan; ? the alternations of the current, which are too rapid to be perceived by the eye. / . [TO | The Universal Gar 1 I | Sales f; Service | Insist on Genuine Ford 1 . Parts. " | I I D.W.SMITH! | KINGSTREE, - S. C. 8 ; ?' NOTICE TO CREDITORS * All parties having claims against the Estate and effects of Sylvester Gamble, deceased, are directed to present same to the undersigned for settlement, and all parties indebted to ? said Estate will make settlement with the undersigned administrator. LAWRENCE GAMBLE, i Administrator of the Estate of Sylvester Gamble, deceased. 4-22-3t .. - If you need Glasses, , come to me. Single and double lenses fitted correctly at lowect prices. Broken lenses duplicated. T. E, BAGGETT, Jeweler ' M.D. NESMITH, DENTIST, Lake City, S. C. KINGSTREE lodge, No. 46 A. F.M. Meets the second Thursday night in each month. Visiting brethren cordially invited. E. L. IHrsch, W. M., H. L. Presser, Sec. l- -ly.