The county record. [volume] (Kingstree, S.C.) 1885-1975, June 08, 1922, Image 5

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? mmmammmmm MenWhoBeco ,, Prosperous And win success ke< They do not hoard t work, knowing that it wil the farmers, merchants ai portion as it stimulates I with interest. No better medium fo function for which it wai Farmers & Mer Lake City, - wKmmmmmmammmmmm Items of Local Interest THURSDAY, JUNE 8. 1922 Dr. L. Roy Cates spent Tuesday in Florence. * * * * Dr. F. 0. Lentz spent the week-end j in Orangeburg. Mr. Jack Meadors is at home from Wofford College, Spartanburg. * * Mr. and Mrs. David Silverman spent Sunday in Sumter with friends. * ? * Miss Lavinia Kinard returned to her home in Rock Hill Saturday mornl ing* * * * Miss Edith Weinberg was the guest of Mrs. Charles Tucker here last week. * * * Misf Jennie MeCutchen visited her aunt, Mrs. Thomas MeCutchen last j week. ? * * * I Mr. George S. Hemingway of Hemingway was in Kingstree on business today. * * * * I Miss Lilla Babb left Saturday for her home in Fountain Inn, for the summer. * * * # Miss Florence Hemingway of Rome, is the cuest of Miss Marian McFad-1 den this week. * * * * Miss Madge Blakley of St. Mary's | School in Raleigh, N. C., has return-! ed to Kingstree. * * * * Rev. C. C. Derrick spent Sunday in Olanta where he preached the com- j mencement sermon. * * * The Williamsburg Chapter U. D.; C. will be entertained' Friday, June ( 9, at 4:30 by Miss Beulah Nelson. 1 * * ? 1 Mr George Hemingway of Hemingway, spent yesterday here with her sister, Mrs. Thomas McCutchen.' * * * * A bouncing boy was born to Mr. and Mrs, H. A. Camlin, at Trio April 20, 1921!. Mother and babe doing,' nicely. * * * 1 Miss Velma Thomas of Cades and ; Miss Esielle Shuler of St. Stephens, are the guest of Miss Hattie Thomas this week. Misses Isabelle Montgomery, Lizzie | Gordon, Bertie Wilson of Winthrop College, Rock Hill, are at home for \ the summer. * Mrs. Tom Gilland returned here i Sunday after spending some time in Florence as the guest of her son, Mr. j J. D. Gilland. * * Hon. P. H. Stoll has returned from > Spartanburg, where he delivered an | address to the graduating class at Wofford College. ! * * * Dr. J. S. Potts of Lynchburg, has accepted a position as assistant physician at the Kelley Sanatorium' during the summer months. ! ? Mrs. Thornwell McGill, her littleson and little sister, Dorothy Mc-' Cants, ai-e spending the week in ^Charleston with their sister, Mrs. W. Miles. * ?? Dr. and Mrs. E. T. Kelley left Monday afternoon for New York City, N. Y., where Dr. Kelley expects to spend three weeks in special study in one of the city hospitals. * l "Miss Carrie Lancaster left Kings-1 tree Saturday afternoon for Orangeburg' where she will spend a week i ^ with her sister, before returning to 1/ her home in Spartanburg. * * * * Miss Lilla Babb and Mrs. Bettie Gwin expect to leave about the 19th of June for California, where they will attend a summer school at the University of California. They will be absent about two months and will visit points of interest in the West en route. me i >p their monev circulating. 1 | heir funds but keep their cash at j| I 1 be employed by the bank to help B id manufacturers, and that in pro- g 3 trade, it will be returned to them p I r having your money perform the j made could be desired than the a -I x- ILiI^JD 1. I cuauu mauuuai duuk | ? ? South Carolina I m Mr. and Mrs. T. B. Shackelford and their two sons, Frederick and 1 James, of Columbia, spent the past week-end with Mrs. Shackelford's father, Mr. S. M. McClary near town. ? * Mr. B. E. Clarkson returned home yesterday from Spartanburg where he ' attended the commencement exercises 1 of Wofford College and witnessed 1 the graduation of his nephew, J. M. < Clarkson of Heinemann. i ? * * * i A new candidate for the legislature ] this week is Mr. H. D. Ferrell of ] Greelyville. Mr. Ferrell made the ( race two years ago and while he made . a strong run he was defeated by a < small number of ballots. ] * * * On Sunday night Mr. David Silver- s man, formerly a member of the Rus- * sian Symphony orchestra, dengntea the congregation of Trinity Methodist 1 church with several beautiful violin selections.?Sumter Daily Item. * * * Miss Agnes Erckmann left Friday for her home in Charleston, where \ she will spend the summer vacation. < Her host of friends are pleased to < know that she will return here in < September to continue her good work 1 in the public school. 1 * * * - , Mrs. 0. W. Cottle returned to her J home in Hamlet, N. C., yesterday. ^ after a stay of a week here with her father, Mr. L. Stackley. Mrs. Cottle j was accompanied by her sister, Miss Elizabeth Stackley, who will spend sometime with her in Hamlet, N. C. , * * * * * Mr. J. E. Porter, the well known * West Main street merchant, was over- < come with something like a stroke of * paralysis about 6 o'clock yesterday < afternoon at his store. He was taken ( to his home and is reported to be * getting along favorably this morning. * * * * t Mrs. John Kershaw, of Charleston, ] came to Florence to attend the Choral t society concerts and remained for a t visit to her niece, Mrs. J. G. McMaster, has gone to Kingstree for a visit to another niece, Mrs. W. G. Gamble. Before returning to her home Mrs. Kershaw will visit with relatives in Camden, Sumter and Columbia. She is accompanied by her grandson, Dick Grant.?Florence Times. ? * The Kingstree district conference convened here yesterday morning at 10 o'clock and will remain in session through today. The conference is composed of representatives, pastors and laymen from each of the twenty-two charges in the district. The session is being held in the Methodist church and is presided over by the Rev. C. C. Derrick, presiding elder. The district is composed of charges in Georgetown, Berkeley, Clarendon, Florence and Williamsburg counties. o Cotton Takes Jump. Cotton went up yesterday on the New York market 82 to 99 points, July closing at 21.20. The market was practically the same at New Orleans. In Charleston it was quoted at 20% basis middling. Bishop Kilgo Critically 111. Bishop John C. Kilgo of the Southern Methodist church, is critically ill in a hospital in Memphis, Tenn. His condition was pronounced critical this morning. New Candidates Out. Ji Mr. James P. Adams announc? ' himself a candidate for the legiam- 1 ture in this issue of The Courtfji^ec-- 1 ord. Mr. Adams wa^p^Rs race 1 two years ago and Jraae a very credjitable run but ws defeated. It is 1 to be presumedfthat he will poll a ' erood vote this vear. j Send us your order for Job Print- i ins. We only do the best work. I I f Items From Indiaptown. Indiantown, June 6.?The followin college students have returned t their respective homes during th past week: Misses Margaret an Dorothy Daniel, Sallie Bartell, Lande College; Alberta Stuckey and Alic Rollins, Winthrop College; Jenni McCutchen, Flora McDonald Colleg* Red Springs, N. C.; and James Mc Cutchen and William Cooper c Davidson College; La Rue Hinson, c Wake Forest College. Dodd Danie Jr., of Georgia Tech, and Derrill Dan iel of Clemson are expected home i a few days. Miss Bessie McCutchen was electe president of the Christian Endeavo society at its quarterly election Sun day. The hour for services wa changed at this meeting from 10 : m. to 6 p. m. This society is doin, well now and it is hoped that is wil continue to thrive. Mrs. Sallie Snowoen is spending some time in Kingstree with he friend, Mrs. H. 0. Britton. Mrs. Glaze of Orangeburg, is her on a visit to her daughter, Mrs. I R. Rollins. Miss Pauline Snowden has gone t Savannah, Ga., where she has accept ed a position. Misses LiOttie snowaen ann t,mmi Wilson are spending the week a Salters. Bethea Out for Congress. Columbia, June 7.?Andrew J Bethea of Columbia, who announce some time ago that he would be i the race for governor, formally with irew tonight and filed his pledges fo congress from the seventh congress ional district in opposition to Rep resentative Hampton P. Fulmer, o North. The withdrawal of Mi Bethea leaves six announced candi iates in the race for the governorshi] ?former Governor Cole L. Blease, o Columbia; State Superintendent o Education John E. Swearingen; Sen it or George K. Laney, of Chester ield; Thomas G. McLeod, of Bish jpville; William Coleman, of Union ind John T. Duncan, of Columbia. American Legion Notes. July 1 has been designated by Na ;ional Commander Hanford MacNide >f the American Legion as "Member ship Day." To cany on the Legion' x>mDi*ehensive program for the re ief of service-men during the sum ner, Commander MacNider has urge< 1 united front and an all-inclusivi nembership. By midnight of July 1 :he Legion chief has requested, eacl jost shall have increased its mem >ership by at least 25 per cent. The absence of the old pre-Volstea* :orkscrew is not noted in Frisco Timmie Flexner of the American Le jion of San Francisco couldn't fin< >ne of them when he wanted to opei i bottle. He took a rifle and at i iistance of 1,000 feet, shot out th< :ork in one try. He now challenge: he Pacific coast. The War Department has just writ en former Sergeant Jesse Kanady Falls City, Neb., that he owes hi: incle two dollars. The W. D. allege,' hat somebody overpaid Kanady >n some payday some time in th< irmy. In appealing to the Americai stannrt for nHvirp tho s^rireaiit de ilares his usual good memory fail: lim as he cannot recall ever having >een overpaid while in the army. All nuts are not to be fostered, bu n order that the pecan nut may con inue to be one of Texas' foremos >roducts, the American Legion of thi itate has pledged itself to plant grove: if nut trees, see that they are proper y transplanted and care for then vhen they are developed, While waiting with his outfit U >e called up to the front in 1918, i Peabody, Mass., soldier fell out of : lay-loft and suffered permanent in juries to his back. He has just nov ibtained government compensation lowever, following the American Le jion's direct appeal to President Hard ng. Despite the fact that New Orleans La., has been chosen as its 1922 con mention city, the American Legion ha received a $200,000 offer from Kansa ZJity, Mo., which would be host to thi jx-soldiers this year as it was in 1921 rhe offer followed questions by th< Mew Orleans chamber of commerce nquiring of Kansas City if the serv ce men's gathering was a commercia isset. Fifteen ex-soldiers have formed : post of the American Legion exactl; >n a spot in Harpoot Asia Mino they say, where Adam and Eve firs cept house. The unit is called thi Garden of Eden post Americn Le gionaires in Turkey now number 216 When Stilwell, Okla, was strucl by a black smallpox epidemic, a guar jf 185 American Legion men kept th town quarantined by guarding al - i- ? J ?;i 1- j _J roaas ana rauruaus uay aim uigiu. iu three weeks. With the Bahamas and Bermud; not too far away, the Tampa, Fla American Legion has placed its entir membership at the disposal of th prohibition enforcement officer of tha district. x The first building built by Unci Sam at Fort Wrangell, Alaska, when that country was first occupied by the ? United States in 1867, has been re0 modelled and presented to the Alaska e American Legion as a clubhouse, d ir 0 e McKenzie-Johnson. e i, Mr. J. B. Johnson, formerly opera> tor at the office of the Western Union >f Telegraph Company here was mar'f riad Monday evening to Miss Nettie 1., McKenzie, the cei-emony being peri j formed by the Rev. C. C. Derrick, n Immediately following the ceremony the young couple left for Blackville d where Mr. Johnson is employed. r 0 is ; Poultry Notes. i. g If you have not cleaned up the [j poultry house and yards, do so without further delay. The house should be g white washed inside and out at least r once a year. One pint of crude carbolic acid to one gallon of white wash e will make a better disinfectant. Spray mites with kerosene; this can also be made a very good disinfectant o by adding the crude carbolic acid in the proportion as above. Such a spray may be used every two weeks n ITpon tV>P hntlSA t clean, cool and free from germs. If a bird shows signs of disease do not leave her with other birdS, but immediately kill and burn her. If she is too valuable for such treatment put her in a place removed from the ^ flock and treat her. Use Sodium n floride on your birds whenever necessary. This will not only kill the r lice, but will also kill eggs deposited by the lice, and no other preparation will do so well. Be careful of its f use on baby chicks?one pinch on back of neck is sufficient for them. Bet" ter still, dust the mother 'well and P this is sufficient for chicks also. * Scald and sun the drinking vessels * often. It is well to have two sets, " sun one while the other is in use. ~ It will be necessary to change the * water often these hot days. Provide l> shade for your birds as the days get warm, this is necessary. Do not allow any moldy or musty feed to accumulate on the yard. Rinds and vegetables may mold and cause * trcuble. Any dead animal on the l" yard may decay and if eaten by your ~ birds cause limber-neck. Go over s your yard often and see that no dead w chickens, snakes, or toads are allowin rom oin 1 Kill, confine or sell the male birds, e this month and produce infertile eggs > for market. When egg prices fall - a ! | Prompt payi ' | bills hel I ' 1 BUIL1 t i - i s ? Lur 5 T ! | DEVC > ? Kingstree, ' if __ ? ? 11 1N: IWm. "Thi Kingstrec too low for profit, preserve the eggs in water glass. | Talk over your problems with your county agent. See her as soon as ; you can after the problems arise. Card of Thanks. i j I wish to thank the people of Kingsj tree and community for the many kindnesses and courtesies shown Mrs. i Burgess and myself during her recent* illness. J. V. BURGESS. How about your tobacco flues? Better place your order before it*S too late. Kingstree Hardware Co. ?Adv. 6-l-2t. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS j WANTED?Pupils in l>iano music, beginning June 15. For further particulars see or write Miss Helen Kennedy, Kingstree, S. C. 6-l-2tp.FOR SALE?One hundred bushels good clean peas; in new bags, at $2.50 per bushel f. o. b. Cades. H. J. McFadden, Cades, S. C. 6-8-2tp. FOR SALE?Millions Porto Rico, Nancy Hall and Early Triumph potato plants, 75c per 1,000 f. o. b. Valdosta. Dorris Plant Co., Valdosta, Ga. 6-8-2tp. WANTED?A settled lady as companion in home of lady who is alone. Apply by letter to Box 49, Route No. 1, Kingstree, S. C. ltp. BE Many Larro-Fe Bj why their cows give eo i HH Feed then on any other |H - &MJLAUDT KATIO Composed of choicest Jug portions of protein and ca in clean modem plant; el Get mora milk, bigger pi C/mer your Ina* supply to-ua; -^!4-!4-!4-!4I4-:4!-i-[4!-! merit of materis p us to give yo service at 1< )ERS SUPPLY COB BEST PLACE TO BUT aber and Building Mater )E PAINTS and VARN ^SS(8SSSBSSSSSfESSlSSSSSSBSBSSBSSS3fS3SSS(^ 5URAN( W. BOI e Best Insurance Ser i, - - South # f 1" * { Insure your bam and tobacco against Are with a set of close fitting tobacco bam flues made and sold by Kingstree Hardware Co.?Adv 6-1-2L ?? Are you advertising your goods to | the public? If not, try a Record i advertisement ar.d see the result. I _ -;H TAKE NOTICE. Owing to the very unsatisfactory experience The County Record has had in the past in collecting its bills, for the publication of Summonses for Relief, Citation Notices, Notices to Creditors and applications by administrators for Final Discharge, we have determined that such notices must hereafter be paid for in advance. The three last nam- , ed notices pertain strictly to the affairs of dead men and women . and in many instances the living doesn't seem to care whether they are ever settled for or not?judging from the length of time many of them remain unpaid on our books. These notices are charged for at a fixed rate, aa follows: Citation Notices $4.50 Notices Final Discharges _ 4.50 Notice to Creditors 8.00 - . . moch moce raffle oa Lnoo* ration. fwiM*lC9wi mm its math good. ' roouyuTEtes, roanrrfacttired ways the nme high quality. m Larro-Fead ssa^ftteteStesa H tG DISTRIBUTING CO. South Carolina. ^I4:4!4!4-!4:4!4!4!4!4^ % ?3?: m t D3 M u better | | m .U )wer prices! | ^ ?PANY . - . If ?? \ -i I? A A 9 "-5 J if = "F I I ^ I )DIF.. I ^ce" I i Carolina 1 . ji'i ? ? v-<