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(Ihe (Comity tSrrnrii W. F. Tolley & L. H. Cromer. Jr. Publishers. SUBSCRIPTION RATES STRICTLY IN ADVANCE Single copy, one year $1.50 Single copy, six months 75 Single copy, three months 50 TELEPHONE NO. 83 THE COUNTY RECORD Foreign Advertising Representative THE AMERICAN PRESS ASSOCIATION ' 1 THURSDAY. OCTOBER 26. 1922 j Aaron Sapiro. The Charlotte (N. C.) Observer j speaks editorially of the gieat organ-j ization genius: it nas Deen ooserveu oy leaders of ^he paper that Mr. Aaron Sapiro, one of the men who has put business into farming, is circulating about the state assisting in the opening of county fairs and attending cooperative; marketing meetings. It is understood that Mr. Sapiro will to some exten' back the cooperative associations in' the undertaking to keep the member-! ship strictly within the bounds of contract. Succeeding in that, he: will have rendered a great service to the pocketbook of the contracting farmer. If cooperative marketing is to succeed, all farmers who have signed up with the association must 1 stand by their bargain, for, in plac- < ing their cotton or tobacco on the market independently of the plans of ~ 1...4 me organization, mej are uui nullifying to that extent the good that might have been expected to accrue from organized marketing. This system was originated in California, where it has made the fruit growers rich. It could have never succeeded if the fruit growers had not stood as a man to their bargain?and it was Sapiro who formed the fruit growers into the strongest business organization of farmers in the world., What has been done in the case of J the fruit growers can be done in the j case of the tobacco and cotton grow- j ers, and for success to the movement 1 in North Carolina, Sapiro is the main hope. The commercial and industrial world has conceded to the agricul-: tural world that in Sapiro it has "the most inspiring organizer of coopera- J tive farm enterprises and the best- j informed man on both their legal powers and their economic possibilities," for Sapiro is a lawyer and a Jew. He has organized 30 associations in various branches of agriculture?and all of his organizations are operating successfully. "It might be noted in passing that. the three strongest allies developed J for the farmers in recent years are Jews. They are Bernard M. Baruch, Eugene P. Meyer, Jr., and Aaron Sapiro. Perhaps Sapiro would not have been particularly known outside the bounds of California if he had not been 'discovered' by Judge Robert Worth Bingham, the distinguished owner and editor of The Louisville Courier Journal, who brought Sapiro to Kentucky and placed a million dollars back of him in the work of organizing the Burley tobacco growers into a cooperative selling association. The tobacco growers in Kentucky are now fixing the price their product must go at. They are in control of the market, and only this week the1 R. J. Reynolds Company, of Winston-Salem, made a bulk purchase of 4,000,000 pounds from the Burley ' Tobacco Growers' Association, at a price fixed by the association. It was the largest sale of burley tobac co to a single manufacturer in the | history of the industry, and it cleaned out the stocks in the hands of the producers within the organization. They have disposed of their crops at from 10 to 15 cents a pound more than they could have got if there had been no cooperative marketing association! |: "We were starting out, however, | to speak in detail of Sapiro, and w# ( inf ltvtnfa t?f 1 <tlC VJUUblUg 1IUH1 All IJlvlIllclvC owi ? |; contributed to The World's Work, for1; October, by John K. Barnes. Sapiro^ is a gratoate of the University Law ( School of California, class of 1911. 1 "When he and his brother startet the j praitice of law in San Francisco, they decided that they would take no criminal cases for money and no divorce or personal cases or bankruptcies. ] They sought some field in which they , could do constructive law work. | Knowing that law follows organiza- i tion and that all industries are well : organized except the farming indus- , try, they took up farming law. To- i day at the age of 38 Mr. Sapiro is attorney for more than 60 cooperative ' marketing associations, and some of ( the dairy and fruit and vegetable groups handling in totals uore than j $400,000,000 worth of products annually. While his brother keeps office in San Francisco, he travels about the country serving these various associations and helping other farmers establish or perfect cooperative mar- j 1 ?ting organizations. He has offices i ii ?"ew York and Dallas, Texas. At pres. * he is assisting the milk pro. riucer- of the Chicago district, the broom-corn raisers of Oklahoma, cotton glowers of Mississippi and Louisianna, rice growers of Texas ami Louisianna, tobacco glowers of Connecticut and Massachusetts, dark tobacco growers of Tennessee and Kentucky, and wheat growers in the middle west in organizing cooperative marketing associations. He has been asked by the potato growers of Aroostook county, Maine, the largest po- j tato section in America, to help them improve their organizations, and yet he finds time to go up to Canada to assist Hon. Manning Doherty, Min-! ister of Agriculture for Ontario, spread the gospel of cooperative mar- j keting among the farmers of that j Province. "It is to be supposed that Sapiro j is doing all this work at his own expense. While he is showing the farm-: ers how to eet rich, si owl v but sure-! !y, he may be at the same time advancing his private fortune. I5ut Mr. Karnes makes the point that if this' were all?the gain he gets out of it i ?Sapiro could not go before audiences in every part of the world, and by his sincerity, his enthusiasm and his! dear, forceful arguments, convince i them that the plan he proposes is i a way to their esonomic salvation.1 If iie did not belive he is performing as great a public service as any man in the United States today, he conn: not keep on as one inspired and make ; his enthusiasm contagious among | j slow-moving sons of the soil. Possessing a fascinating personality that binds to him all with whom he works, he has that common touch that is necessary for an understanding of the farmer's mind. It is not to get more money for the framer that he is laboring, it is to put shoes on the feet of those boys and girls in the cotton and tobacco fields, to take 4-V.sv.*.*. /??tf on/1 nut kllCIII UUb VI IUC IIV^IVIO UIIM |/UV VilVlIt in good school.*?to better living conditions for the farmer everywhere. 'Who will say.' asks Mr. Barnes, "that he is not doing as constructive a work in the public service as any man in the United States today?' "And let us put in evidence a closing incident that should warm the hearts of the people toward Sapiro ?he was raised in an orphan asylum." Let J. Z. McConnell furnish your winter wood, phone 125?adv. Rub-My-Tism for Rheumatism. NOTICE OF ELECTION. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of Williamsburg. Notice is hereby given that the General Election for State and County Officers will be held at the voting precincts prescribed by law in said county, on Tuesday, November 7,1922. said day being Tuesday following the first Monday in November, as prescribed by the State Constitution. The qualifications for suffrage: Managers of election require of every elector offering to vote at any election, before allowing him to vote, the production of his registration certificate and proof of the payment of all taxes, including poll tax, assessed against him and collectable during the previous year, me proauction of a certificate or of the receipt of the offices authorized to collect such taxes, shall be conclusive proof of the payment thereof. Section 237, Code of 1912, as amended by Act No. 6, special session of 1914. Section 237. There shall be three seperate and distinct ballots, as follows: One ballot for Representatives in Congress; and one ballot for Governor, Lieutenant Governor, State officers, Circuit Solicitors, members of the House of Representatives, State Senator, county officers, and one ballot for all Constitutional amendments and special questions, each of three said boxes to be appropriately labelled; which ballots shall be of plain white paper and of such width and length as to contain the names of the officer or officers and question or questions to be voted for or upon, clear and even cut, without ornament, designation, mutilation, symbol or mark of any kind whatsoever, except the name or names of the person or persons voted for and the office to which such person or persons are intended to be chosen, and all special questions which name or names, office or offices, question or qoestions shall be written or printed or partly written or partly printed thereon in black ink; and such ballot shall be so folded as to conceal the name or names, question or quesi? j /-! J. l t_ ? [ions mereon, anu so ioiueu, snau uc deposited in a box to be constructed, kept and disposed of as herein provided by law, and no ballot of any other description found in either of said boxes shall be counted. On all special questions the ballot shall state the question, or questions, and shall thereafter have the words "Yes" and "No" inserted so that the voter may indicate his vote by striking out one or the other of such wordis on said ballot, the word not so stricken out to be counted. Before the hour fixed for opening the polls, Managers and Clerks must take and subscribe the Constitutional oath. The Chairman of the Board of Managers can administer the oath to the other members and to the Clerk; a Notary Public must admin ister the oath to the Chairman, ine Managers elect their Chairman and Clerk. Polls at each voting place must be opened at 7 o'clock a. m., and closed at 4 p. m., except in the City of Charleston, where they shall be opened at 7 a. m., and closed at 6 p. m. The Managers have the power to fill a vacancy, and if none of the Managers attend, the citizens can appoint from among the qualified voters, the Managers, who, after being sworn, cr.n conduct the election. At the close of the election, the Managers and Clerk must proceed publicly to open the ballot boxes and count the ballots therein, and continue without adjournment until the same is completed, and make a statement of the result for each office and sign the same. Within three days thereafter, the Chairman of the Hoard, or some one designated by the Hoard, must deliver to the Commissioners of election the poll list, the boxes containing the ballots and written statements of the results of the [ election. At the said election qualii. .u electors will vote upon the adoption 01 rejection of amendments to the State Constitution, as provided in the following Joint Resolotions: A Joint Resolution to Amend Article X of the Constitution so as to Authorize the Town of Greer to Assess Abutting Property for permanent Improvements. A Joint Resolution to Amenu' Section b of Article XVII of the Constitution empowering the General Assembly to Regulate the Printing for the State. A Joint Resolution to Amend Section 5. Article X, of the Constitution Relating to the Limit of the Bonded Debt of School District, by Adding a Proviso Thereto as to the Due West School District No. "J8, Abbeville County. A Joint Resolution to Amend Section 7. of Article VIII and Section 5. of Article X of the Constitution , so as to Exempt the City of Beaufort from the Provision Thereof. A Joint Resolution to Amend Paragraph .0, Article X of the Constitution Relating to Bonded Indebtedness of Counties, Townships, School Districts, Etc.. by Adding a Proviso ato the County of Beaufort. A Joint Resolution to Propose an Amendment to Article X of the Constitution by Adding Thereto a Section to be Known as Section 13-A, Empowering County Authorities to Assess Abutting Property for Permanent Improvement of Highways. The Provisions of said Section shall apply only to Beaufort County. A Joint Resolution to Amend Section 5 and 6, Article X, of the constitution, Relating to the Limit of the Bonded Debt of Township, by Adding a Proviso Thereto as to the Township of Christ Church Parish, Charleston County, S. C., as now Constituted Embracing >n Area of said Township the Town of Mount Pleasant. S. C. A Joint Resolution to Amend Section 5, Article 10. of the Constitution Relating to Limit of the Bonded Debt of School Districts by Adding a Proviso Thereto, as to School District Xo. 10, Cherokee County. A Joint Resolution to Amend Section 5. Article X of the Constitution Relating to the Limit of the Bonded Debt of School Districts by Adding a Proviso Thereto as to the School District ol the <Jity 01 norence in Florence County, South Carolina. A Joint Resolution to Amend Section 7, Article VIII of the Constitution, Relating to Municipal Bonded Indebtedness, by Adding a Proviso Thereto as to the City of Georgetown. A Joint Resolution to Amend Section 5 of Article XI of the Constitution Relating to the Formation of School District, Etc., by Adding a Provisco as to Certain School Districts in Pickens County. A Joint Resolution to Amend Section VII of Article VIII, and Section V of Article X of the Constitution so as to Exempt the City of Spartanburg from the Provisions Thereof. A Joint Resolution to Amend Section 7, Article VIII, and Section 5, Article X, of the Constitution, so as" to Exempt the City of Union from the Provisions Thereof. Election Managers. The following Managers of Election have been appointed to hold the election at the various precincts in the said County: BLOOMINGVALE?J. W. Cook, R. W. Smith, W. B. Anderson. CADES?W. J. Smiley. V. G. Arnette, W. D. Epps. CEDAR SWAMP-^T. B. Chandler, T. A. McCrea. S. A. Tisdale. EARLES?L. D. Taylor. W. D. Crooks, L. A. Parsons. GOURDINS?J. C. Graham, A. C. Brown, J. W. Chandler. nom WTT T P T W Timmnnc VJAVJJiJiJ i f AUUU V> ?? * C. R. Boyle, J. H. Oliver. HEMINGWAY?F. E. Huggins, Albert Taylor, J. T. DuRant. HEBRON?Bartow Smith, R. C. McElveen, John F. Williamson. INDANTOWN?S. D. Snowden, W. R. Graham, J. B. Lovett. KINGSTREE?M. H. Plowden, T. D. Gamble, S. W. Mcintosh. MOUZONS?J. T. Frierson, L. M. McClam, R. S. Burgess. MORRISVILLE?J. J. Tart, J. M. Godwin, H. A. Altman. MUDDY CREEK?0. G. Huggins, j R. E. L. Hughes, B. A. Joy. PERGAMOS?W. A. Fitch, C. F. Stuckey, S. G. Moore. POPULAR HILL?W. T. Turbeville, J. 0. Carroway, J. J. Snow, Sr. SALTERS?T. E. Salters, W. S. Shaw, J. W. Whitfield. WORKMAN?W. W. Kennedy, J. R. Barrow, E. R. Evans. SUTTONS?S. P. Cooper, L. G. Wiggins, S. L. Parsons. TAFT?J. L. Foxworth. J. H. Burkette, S. B. Timmons. TRIO?W. N. Register, A. B. Cooper, W. T. Rowell. The managers at each precinct above named are requested to delegate one of their number to secure the boxes and ballots from D. A. Montgomery, uounty secretary democratic Executive Committee, Kingstree, S. C. H. 0. BRITTON. L. R. McINTOSH, T. OLIN EPPS. Commissioners of State and County Elections for Williamsburg County, S C. October 20th. 1922. l0-26-2t 10-26-2t Get your milk twice daily, including Sundays. Kellahan Dairy, phone 79.?Adv. Phone 125 for your winter wood, ?adv. The County Record is mailed to subscribers at $1.50 the year, invariably payable in advance. #tfAn ugly cut ? ^ ( MENTHOLATUM J ^is antiseptic and M HHOHOH Cheer Up! Here's One GOOD LowPriced Battery Sim Heckle says his wife ought to be saving money. Bobbed hair?less grief with the hairdresser! short skirts?less cloth to pay for! But where Siip gets bumped is in the extra bills for silk stockings and little hats! Some c f the short-skirt, bobbedhair batteries we've met up with are just about as saving as Sim's wife! Big economy on the surface ?big expense in the long run. The CW Battery (Wood j Separator) is a battery that wears a calico dress and old fashioned . otton stockings. But you can take our word for it? the value's there! Sizes for all cars; and we stand back of every one we sell. Price: for 6-volt, 11-plate, ?16.15 Kingstree Battery Co R. E. Donnelly, Mgr. at W. M. Vause & Sons Shop. Representing Willard Batteries (THREADED RUBBER INSUIATION) and % Ei tteries (WOOD SEPARATORS! I KINGSTREE Lodge Nu 4b A. F.M. Meets the second Thursday night in each nonth. Visiting bretheren cordially invited. H. U. Kinder, W. M, Donald Montgomery, Secretary. Rnb-My-TUm, an antiseptic. tT?TiTiTtTtTtTiTtTtTtTi 3d S NO! S SO FAR, IT HAf S CERN TO PUT ON f g COMPETITION. B | POLICY OF THIS S' ? SUCH PRICES AS 1 g THE PRICES OFFE gj ANYONE ENGAGE] pa H OUR CUSTOME 3 ARE IN THE MARE B RONIZE OUR STOE jg ARE HONEST; THI sj BEST QUALITY ( j| PROFIT REASONA] m ITS MERIT. M OUR LINES OP LADIES' READY-T* g ERY ARE MOST CC g CEPTTONALLY NIC g OF* CLOTHING, SHI l? ARE PREPARED A a WANTS IN A MOST B OUR DRY GOO a ARE REPLETE WT 33 TO BE FOUND. IF m HAVE NOT BEEN F ffl INTEREST TO SEE < | Kingstte g KINGSTREE, K-KKKKKI HOW TO CET BACK THE "JOT OF LIFE" LIFE isn't worth living if you're so weak and run down >ou can hardly dr.;4 your*-.-If around. If the rich red h! /od, full of health and vigor, were pumping through jour veins, the joy of life would come back soon enough! < ?ude's Pepto-Mangan has worked this magic for thousands? it will do the same for you. Take it for a short time and see how your health and strength improve. Your druggist has it?liquid or tablets, as vou prefer. Gude's Pepto-Jtangan Tonic ahcl Blood Enricher DR. FRANK 0. LENTZ DENTIST Office Over Baggett's Jewelry Store. Main Street OFFICE HOURS: 9 a. m. to 1 p. m. and 2 to 5 p. m. 666 cures Dengue Fever. To prevent a cold, take 666 I1 < ! > 'I1 'H1 !' I1 1 'I1 'I11 'Kl 'I1 '11 11 11 1 1111 IANNOL i $50 Reduction in I ii Ford Cars : I and Ann ii New ModelL ;; Prices Effective Tuesi :: The following are Kingstree, S. C., inclr ;; Coupelet, Demountable Ri Touring, Demountable R ;: Touring, Self Starter ;: Roadster, Self Starter ;; Touring, Plain Roadster, Plain - ;: Chasis, Plain Sedan?Self Starter and Rims?New Four Door :: MnTMTHQH MfV 1T1V111 A VW1A XT*V . AUTHORIZED F !! Kingstree, ? ? nil ii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiMini NOT Al 3 NOT BEEN THE POL SPECIAL SALES IN [OWEVER, IT HAS AL rORE TO OFFER SUC] WILL COMPETE FA' !RED ON ANY STOCK D IN CONSERVATIVE IRS REALIZE THIS, [ET FOR MERCHANDI IE, KNOWING THE Vi 5 MERCHANDISE BEI TRTATNABLE AND ' BLE. WE SELL EVi LADIES' FALL SUITS 3-WEAK, FURNISHIN( IMPLETE. YOU WILL. IE LINE OF MEN'S WI 3ES, HATS AND FU lLSO TO CAKE FOR 1 SATISFACTORY WA1 DS AND DRESS GOOI TH THE NEWEST AN YOUR NEEDS IN TH ULLY SUPPLIED, IT I OUR GOODS AND GET ^Dry Gc "The Store of Quality" Q( !a talk with a kingstree man i MR. LOUIS STACKLEY, POSTMASTER, OF 204 ACADEMY STREET, TELLS OF HIS EXPERIENCE. ^ H There is nothing like a talk with : cne of our own citizens for giving ! hope and encouragement to the anxI ious sufferer from the dread kidney 1 disease. We, therefore, give here an interview with a Kingstrec man: I "I was annoyed with kidney trou; ble and it made me rather uncom T'w+oKIa w coito \Tt? QfQ/*lrlor wMv xwivavi^ ot*jr c aia* ^vuvaiv; ; kidneys acted too freely and there was a numb feeling across the small of my back. Reading about Doan's Kidney Pills and believing they would ' help me I gave them a trial. In all 11 took three boxes of Doan's and ; my expectations were fulfilled. This , medicine was quite beneficial to me | and I gladly endorse it." Price 60c, at all dealers. Don't ! simply ask for a kidney remedy?get5" . Doan's Kidney Pills?the same that 1 Mr. Stackley had. Foster-Milburn i Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y. I unmi n innui n hhhi rNCINGl j >rice of All Models and Trucks ;; touncing :: j * /->i i !! i-JJoor Sedan | 1 day, October 17, 1922. ;; the new prices F. 0. B. :: iding War Tax: ims, Self Starter $611.29 ;; ims, Self Starter 468.81 ;: 442.81 :: . 412.65 :: 370.01 :: j - - - - 339.85 :: - - - - 300.73 :: I Demountable ;: Model 814.09 I! roR company i: ORD DEALERS ;; - . ? Soath Carol hu ! > Tnv AT? TTTTft AANT- ?0 IJLV JL V/X X XXJ.K7 m ORDER TO MEET g WAYS BEEN THE ? K GOODS AND AT Eg ^ORABLY WITH ffl AS A WHOLE BY H , BUSINESS. ra j ^.ND WHEN THEY E 1 SE THEY PAT- ? \LT~ES WE OFFER [? NG OF THE VERY E? ESE MARGIN OF ffl 1 1RY ARTICLE ON |j ,, LADIES' SHOES, g as AM) MILLIN- ffl ALSO FIND AN EX- | DAE CONSISTING g RNISHINGS. WE g CHE CHILDREN'S g M )S DEPARTMENTS 1 D BEST FABRICS g 1 IS DEPARTMENT S ] WILL BE TO YOUR i j ' OUR PRICES. g | >ods Co. jjh DUTH CAROLINA S i