The county record. [volume] (Kingstree, S.C.) 1885-1975, December 09, 1920, Image 8
(County fororii
W. F. Tolley & L. H. Cromer. Jr.
Publishers.
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1920.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES STRICTLY
IN ADVANCE
Single copy one year. *1.50
Single copy, six months 75
Single copy, three months 50
TELEPHONE NO. 83.
Foreign Adveftieing Representative
THE AMERICAN PRESS ASSOCIATION
I
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1920
IT'S A LAW OF LIFE
* / ______
One of the hardest things for most
of us common folks to understand,
for us to "realize, is that money is
nothing but a symbol. Without goods
money would have no value.
If the workers in our cities understood
and realize the true worth
of money, there wouldn't have been ^
so much loafing on the job as has
been prevalent for some three of four
years. Up to a few months ago, anyway,
under-production has been the '
rule. Some unions limited their
workers to the laying, for instance, of a
certain small number of bricks, and
the workers in many cases <went ^
their unions one better by doing far
less tha* this limit The result was '
that every line of production fell
'below the normal. !
Trade is barter. The man who
dosen't produce has nothing to barter. 1
It is only when he produces to the
best of his ability?for bartering pur- (
poses?that he begins to get comfortably
well off in the world. When
he falls off, the goods he has gained ]
in barter?money, property,, food,
clothing and what-not, begin to de- j
crease; he is less well off. The fact
that there are exceptions?the two or
three per cent of idle rich?prove the
rule. '
This economic law is as fixed
as daylight and darkness. The world
can no more escape it than it can j
escape birth and death. Whether our
political and social systems are Bolshevist,
democratic or autocratic, that 1
law still rules. The Bolshevik!
thought they could overturn it Now 1
they are driving workers to the mill (
at the point of the bayonet and beg
ging
the whole capitalistic world to
trade with them. Meanwhile all Russians
are hungry and cold.
The quicker each individual of us
realize that production counts, and 1
acts on that realization, the less bit*
ter, the less severe, will be our days 1
of toil in the future.
> i
PREMIUM AWARDS
Williamsburg County Fair, Held November
9, 10, 11, 12, 1920.
___?
(Concluded from last,week.)
Swine Department, Poland Chinas
Best Sow over one year old, 1st
prize J. M. Stewart $10. Best x>w
over one year old, 1st prize, J. M.
#1 A Daef oAtir nwrAr ATI r>
OlCWdl V, fiU. UWV cv? UUUVA VMV
year old, 3rd prize, J. M. Stewart,
42.50. '
Best sows over one year old, 2nd 1
prize, Bellwocd Farm, $5. Beet sow '
over one year old, 3rd prize Bellwood '
Farm, $2.50.
Best sow under one year eld, 2nd J
prize, 0. T. Andrews, $5.
Best boar undeer one year eld 2nd 1
prize, W. P. McGill, $5. 1
Best sow^under one year old, 1st
prize, W. M. O'Bryan, $10.
Best sow under one year old, 2nd *
prize, W. M. O'Bryan, $5.
Best sow under one yqar old 1st
prize, W. M. O'Bryan, $10.
Best sow under one year old 2nd '
prize, W. "M. O'Bryan, $5.
Best boar over one year old. 3rd '
prize, T. O. Epps, $2.50. !
Best boar over one year old 1st '
- - - 1
prize, T. M. Cooper, 510.
'third Class, Duroc Jerseys
Best sow under one year old 3rd 1
prize, H. M. Wilcox, $2.50.
Best sow over one year old 2nd !
prize, T. 0. Epps, $5.
Best boar under one year old 3rd
prize, H. M. Wilcox, $2.50. '
? Best sow over one year old 1st '
' prize, H. M. Wilcox, $10.
Best boar one year and over 1st and 1
2nd prizes, .Scott Canty, $5.
Best sow one year and over 3rd
prize, E. C. Epps, $2.50.
4 Fourth Class
Best sow with liter of pigs 1st :
prize, Bellwood Farm, $10.
Best sow with litter of pigs 2nd (
prize, J. J. M. Graham, $5.
Best sow with litter cf pig^ 3rd
prize, H. W. Haselden, $2.50. *
Fifth Class Hampshire*
Best sow over one year old 1st
psize, J. J. M. Graham, Jr. $10.
Best sows over one year old 2nd
prize, J. J. M. Graham, Jr. $5.
Best sows under one year old 1st
prize, J. J. M. Graham, Jr. $10.
Best sows under one year old 2nd
prize, J. J. M. Graham, Jr. $5.
Best boar under one year old 1st
prize, J. J. M. Graham, Jr. $10.
i ' Best boar under one year old 2nh
^ J. M. Graham, Jr.,$5.
Floral Department
1. Best single white chrysanthemums,
blue ribbon, Mrs. k. S. Epps,
$.50.
2. Best single yellow chrysanthemums,
blue ribbon, Mrs. C. C. Burgess:
$.50.
7. Best collection of chrysanthemums
in vases, blue ribbon, Mrs. A.
L. Epps, $1.00.
8. Best single jardinier of roses,
blue ribbon, Mrs. B. G. Blakely, 50c.
9. Best collection of roses, not less
than six, blue ribbon, Mrs. .B. G.
Blakely, $1.00.
11. Best collection of geraniums in
pots, blue ribbon, Mrs. A. M. Snider,
$1.00.
12. Best single geranium, bule ribbon,
Mrs. D. E. McCutchin, 50c.
14. Best single specimen palm, blue
ribbon, Mrs. EL C. Epps, 50c.
16. Best single specimen begonia,
blue ribbon, Mrs. A. M. Snider, 50c.
17. Best collection of ferns, blue
ribbon, Mrs. A. M. Snider, $1.00.
19. Best Boston fern, blue ribbon,
Mrs. Thomas McCutchen, 50c.
20. Best Asparagus fern, blue ribbon,
Mrs. J. R. Barrow, 50c.
25. Best Japponica, blue ribbon,
Miss Jennie Cooper, 50c.
32. Best impatience plant, blue ribbon,
Mrs. A. M. Snider, 50c.
34. Best leopard plant, blue ribbon,
Mrs. T. M. Cooper, 50c.
35. Best hibiscus plant, blue ribbon,
Mrs. Thomas McCutchen, 50c.
36. Best marigold plant, blue rib- j
son, Mrs. J. W. Swittenburg, 5(fc.
37. Best asparagus spengeri, blue
ribbon, Mrs. D. C. Scott, 50c.
38. Best vase of geraniums, bule
ribbon, Mrs. T. M. Cooper, 50c.
Cattle Department
Cattle Department, First Class
Jerseys
Bull two year old or over, 1st prize,
Braily McKnight, $15.00.
Bull two years or over, 2nd prize,
5. C. Montgomery, $7.50.
Second Class Jerseys
IJeifer under two years old, 2nd
?*? tt r> ?7 sn
fjnze, ii. v^. ^i.w.
Bull under two years or over, lsc
prize, H. E. Montgomery, $15.00.
Bull two years old, 1st prize, H. E.
Montgomery, $15.00.
Heifer under two years eld 2nd
prize, D. E. McCutchen, $7.50.
Heifer under two years old, 1st
prize, R. C. Gamble, $15.00.
Bull under two years old, 2nd prize,
G. H. Williamson $7.50.
Fifth Class?Grade Cattle
Cow two years or over, 1st prize
P. O. Arrowsmith, $15.00.
Cow two years old or over, 2nd
prize, Thomas McCutchen, $7.50.
Bull, 1st prize, Guernsey Bull Association
(Indiantown) $15.00.
Bull, 2nd prize, Guernsey Rull Association
(Kingstree) $7.50.
Sixth Class, Holstein
Bull 1st prize, William Scott, $15.00.
Field Crop Department
1. Best 12 stocks sugar cane, 1st
Concluded on page six
o
Along Salters Route One
Salters Depot, Nov. 8.?The road.*
tiere are in iearful condition. There
fias been very good work done on the I
bridges, with Mr. William Boyd as
aver-seer, but owing to the continued !
rains the roads are dreadfully rough
ind muddy, almost impassable in
places.
Mrs. Frank M. Buddin, Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Q. Corker of Lake City, Mr.
ind Mrs. J. B. Player of Kingstree
ivere guests of Mr. and Mrs. G. W.
Scott Sunday.
Mrs. Florence Spivey of near Forneston,
and daughter Miss Minnie of
the Kingstree High School, spent
ast week end with Mesdames Herbert
Carter and G. W. Scott.
Wa recrret to reDort Mrs. R. D.
Bradham still very ill. She will leave
for the Sumter Hospital today. We
hope for her a successful operation
ind a speedy recovery, she having
seen confined to her bed for almost a
^eacr.
We are glad to report the two
months old infant of Mr. and Mrs.
James Mathews much improved after
ei yery severe illness of about three
weeks.
Little Miss Lulu Scott visited the
little Misses Daisy and Helen Scott
last week end.
Mr. Ben Hughes of Greelyvilie wain
our community yesterday.
?"Owl"
Barbecue Supper at Salter**.
There will be a "Barbecue Supper
and Bazaar" at the Town Hall, Salters
Depot, Wednesday night Decemebr
15th, given by the ladies Missionary
Society of Union Presbyterian
Church. Come and buy your -Christmas
presents.?adv.
o
RAISE BIRDS TO FIGHT BOLL
WEEVIL
All persons are forbidden to hunt,
shoot or destroy birds in any wdy on
the lands of the undersigned.
C. H. POWELL
12-9-4tp C. A. THOMPSON
o
Notice to Subscribers
When subscribers send change of
address, please don't fail to give old
address as well as new.
y
Card of Thanks.
We take this method of thanking
our friends for the many acts of kindness
shown and expressions of smypathy
during our recent bereavement,
the death of our dear husband and
farther. Also for the beautiful floral
offerings sent us.
Mrs. D. B. Young and Children,
o
Card of Thanks.
Mr. and Mrs. Earle Cook are grateful
to those who showed such kindness
and smypathy at the time little
Earle, Jr., passed away.
I shall be glad to give any person
who calls at my office a servicable
calendar for 1921. If your name has
honored my books, ask for one of my
own personal calendar^. Wm. V\l.
Boddie, Kingstree, S. C. It
IT ISN'T FAIR,
JTHAT'S ALL!
To Your Family?To Your Friends?
To Yourself?Going Around
Half Sick
TAKE CARE OF YOUR HEALTH
If Your Blood Is Weak and Clogged
With Poisions, Pepto-Mangan Will
Strengthen and Purify It
When you get over-tired day after
day, your system has to get rid of so
much waste it can't create new
energy fast enough. The result is
that your blood is filled with whste
matter. It becomes clogged. You
are trying to get around with a lot of
poison in your system.
You look bad, you feel poorly. You
gtri uut vi pauciiis caonjr.. /uiivivivu
is lost. You just don't care about
anything.
That is no way to live. Your blood
needs help for a time. It is starved.
You will find help in that fine tonic,
Pepto-Mangan. Pepto-Mangan purifies
the blood and fills it with red corpuscles.
In a little while .you'll have
plenty of rich, red blood and you
won't know yourself. It isn't a magic
medicine. It contains iron and other
ingredients that feed starved blood
and make it rich and red. Physician?
have prescribed Pepto-Mangan for
years.
Pepto-Mangan is sold in liquid and
tablet form. Take either kind yoa
prefer. One acts the same as the
other. Both contain the same ingredients.
But be sure to get the
genuine Pepto-Mangan ? "Gudo's."
The full name, "Gudc's Pepto-Mangan,"
Should be on the package. Adv.
o
W. E. Jenkinson's Sale.
w D TV.lrri*. nrVift ic mnnaorintr th?
store of W. E. Jenkinson for the great
reconstruction sale which starts Friday
morning, is thoroughly posted on
the conditions now prevailing in the
wholesale markets, and he had this to
say: "All lines of merchandise have
been greatly reduced. Of course this
reduction has been made to meet the
low cost of cotton, wool and leather
and, in fact, everything that goes infc>
the store will cost less in the future
than in the past few months, which is
a natural consequence of the end of
the war and everything is working
back to normal. His business here is
to adjust the stock of W. E. Jenkin
son, and he has placed a price on every
article of merchandise in the store
to sell it quickly, and those prices are
at wholesale cost of today and in many
instances less. It will pay the people
of Kingstree and Williamsburg
county to visit this sale.
o
Tea Party Tomorrow Afternoon
An Apron Tea Party will be held at
the home of Mrs. T. S. Heminvway,
on Friday afternoon, December 10,
from 4 to 6 p. m. for the benefit of
tvio lns?al it d c! chanter.?Adv.
SAVED HIS HORSE
________ \
Mr. R. L. Mclntyre, cf Altoona,
Ala., says: "Dr. LeGear's Antiseptic
Healing Powder quickly healed some
bad wire cuts on my horse. I defy
any stranger to find the slightest
scar on him."
Dr. LeGear's Advice and Remedy
saved this valuable animal. He
warns you not to leave a wound, sore
or cut exposed, but to dust on Dr.
LeGear's Antiseptic Healing Powder,
which instantly iorms <ui tuiuscpta
protection and promotes healthy healing.
In his 28 years of Veterinary practice
and Expert Poultry breeding, Dr.
LeGear has compounded a remedy
for every curable ailment of stock or
poultry. Whenever they require a
remedy, it will pay you to purchase
from your dealer the proper Dr. LeGear
Remedy, on a satisfaction or
money back guarantee.
12-16-ltp v
Box Party *at Pergamos.
A box party will be given at Pergamos
school house, Friday night,
December 17th, for benefit of school.
Everybody is invited.?'Adv.
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