The times and democrat. (Orangeburg, S.C.) 1881-current, July 20, 1911, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3
GRAND EXCURSION
from:
Columbia S. C. to Savannah, Ga,
and Jacksonville, Fla.
_.?via==
Southern Railway
july 19, 1911.
Tickets going good only on .xcurs
"honored returning on any regular tra
l&ll. Following schedule and low
points named.
Columbia 8:30 A. M.
Edmunds ? 8:56 A.M.
Pellon : 9:10 A. M.
Perry 9:27 A. M.
Sally 9:36 A. M.
Springeld 9:46 A. M.
Blavkville 10:10 A. M.
Barnwell 10:28 A. M.
Yenome i 1 . 10:36 A. M.
Kline 10:45 A. M.
Allendale 11:04 A. M.
?3iarton ; 11:16 A. M.
Lena 11:38 A. M.
Furman 11:49 A. M.
Pineland 12:00 Noon.
Tarboro 12:09 P. M.
Tillman - 12:19 P. M.
Hardeeville \ ? 12:45 P. M.
Ar. Savannah 12:30 P. M.
Ar. Jackonville 4:40 P. M.
A first class train. Plenty of room
and colored. Connection made with
for all Forida poits.
Appy to Ticketagents for further
W. E. McGEE, D. P. A.,
Charleston, S C.
J. M. iMEE
Atlan
ion train of July 19th, hut will be
in up to and including July 23rd,
round trip rates will apply from the
Jacksonville
$4.00
4.00
4.00
4.00
4.00
4.00
4.00
3.50
3.50
3.50
, 5.50
3.00
3.00
3.00
3.00
3.00
3.00
Savannah.
$2.50
2.50
2.50
2.b0
2.50
2.50
2.50
2.00
2.00
2.00
2.00
1.50
1.50
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
(C. T.)
(C. T.)
for all. Separate coaches for white
all evening trains out of Jacksonvile
information, or write to
S. H. McLEAN, P. & T. A.,
Columbia, S. C.
?K, A. G. P. A.,
ta, Ga. - : " V"
WHE'RE rOV CAN]
W IT f PUTfYOUR:
\mONEY\IN A BANK.
{SO Ypv\w.lLL^9Bt
.ABLE TO PAY*YOUR(
'BILLS^ANV^MAKE^
^PWRCHASES BY fA{
ICH ECK IT*ClfES>
'rot/ A 'good
'CREDtT^%ATINC\
EDfSTG SAYINGS BANK
TOTAL 8ES08BCES ?S2S7S0JS.
i%.IHKBESIl?lfi?iJ .SAfiasa
Practical Demonstrations
in Loose Leaf Bookkeeping
Today
and
Tomorrow
we will give free of charge
instructions in
MOORE'S
DERN METHODS
of Accounting and Record-Keeping
Also a copy of Moore's Modern Methods, a 160 page book Hlustrat
ipn 40 different ledger and record forms and explaining how they are iu?L
Call at our Store?Phone for the Book, anyway
SIMS' BOOK STORE
Thon? 59
49 EAST RUSSELL ST. ORANGEBURG, S. C
The Best Buggy on Earth.
is what we claim ours is. TT*? don't
care what you pay you cannot get a
handsomer, easier riding, better built
carriage.. Take a look at it.. The
more you know about buggies and
their values, the more you will ad
mire ours and the more you will ap
preciate the moderation of our prices.
We have just rocieved a car load of
Buggies.. Also another lot of Batter
ies. . Call and get your supply before
ilhey are gone.
L. E. RILEY.
If You Want the Best Stationery
?go to?
Sims Book Store Orangeburg, S. C.
Tvrf
The Wrong Way.
A GODLY YOUNG KING
II ChronioloD 34:1-13?July 23
"Remember now thy Creator In the daye of thy
youth "*-Ecclet. it:L
KING MANASSEH of oar last
lesson bad a bad son, Amon,
who reigned but two years,
and was murdered by bis
courtiers in his own palace. His son,
Josiah, the central figure of today's
study, became king in his eighth year.
By the time he was sixteen his heart
had begun to seek after and to desire
to serve the Almighty God. By the
time he was twenty his religious con
victions were so deep and fixed, and
bis authority as a king so in his own
bands that he dared to begin tbe work
of reformation. The idols and their
temples and groves for idolatrous
worship were destroyed. The valley
of HInnom, as already suggested, was
desecrated and made a dumping-place
for the offal of Je
rusalem. ') C f^i1") s
The temple of
the .Lord was .re
paired and cleans
ed of all Its idola
trous defilements
and worship and
praise therein to
the Almighty was
restored. More
than this, the
king extended bis
influence for the
destruction of idolatry into what was
once the territory of the ten tribes,
north of his kingdom.
Mistake to Assume That Wild Oats
Must First 8* Sown
What a force there is in our text.
Remember now thy Creator in the
duys of thy youth!" What a great
mistake some parents make In assum
ing that their children must have an
experience in "sowing wild oats" be
fore they will be prepared to appreci
ate righteousness and become its serv
ants! This thought Is reflected upon
the minds of the young, both male
and female: rarely do they seek to live
by a higher standard than that ex
pected of them by their parents or
guardians. We have known saintly
mothers to unintentionally lay snares
for the feet of their children by in
troducing them to ways of the world
In which they themselves would not
walk. Their expressed Bentiment was,
"I must not put upon these children
the weight of the cross, nor expect of
them salntshlp; if ever they become
truly consecrated saints of God they
will then know the trials of the mar
row way* and have plenty of them."
Alas! such Christian mothers have
failed to grasp the situation properly.
They have failed to realize that, at
the present time, there Is no real hap
piness in the world except In the "car
row way."
A Certain Simplicity and Honesty In
the Mind of Ever> Child
Of the few who do find the narrow
way after having walked in the broad
road their plaint is, "Oh, why did I
not earlier find the way of the Lord,
the way of Truth, Joy, peace and hap
piness!"
Notwithstanding the depravity with
which all are born, there appears to
be a certain simplicity and honesty in
nut niAsuKs/aW the mlna of ever7
|C0NSECRAT(0NT0(
The Right Way.
child. It is that
principle which
must be used by
teachers and help
ers in general, if
the child is led in
the right way by
which he would
most quickly ^at
tain a relation
ship and harmony
with his Creator;
nor is it necessary always that there
shall be a preceptor. At times, under
God's providence, the message from
on High reaches the heart and draws
It with seemingly little resbtance. The
hollowness of life is perceived, the
need of wisdom from on High Is recog
nized, and perhaps by the servant,
perhaps through parental instruction,
perhaps through the counsels of a
friend, perhaps by a tract or a book,
tbe young heart is shown the way of
wisdom and is pointed to the Lord.
We nre to remember that the will is
the real director of our destiny, under
Divine providence, and that it is all
important to have the will rightly di
rected and established. Many a one
is In the broad road of sin and selfish
ness?away from God today?who has
in his makeup many good qualities en
tirely out of sympathy with his posi
tion and course in life. But without
tbe will to gnlde, to lend, be goes
downward. Similarly, there are some
on the narrow way who have many
physical, mental and moral blemishes
of heredity continually drawing them
toward the broad road, but who are
kept In the narrow way of the Lord,
not by the self-will of the flesh, but by
the power of a renewed will. How im
portant, then, the proper directing and
fixing of our wills in youth! How
much greater blessings we may enjoy
in the present life, and how much
more adequate preparation we may
thereby have for the future life!
King Josiah of today's study is an
example of tbe proper course for every
young person to take. First of all. the
heart should be given to the Lord in
the days of youth. l>efore the evil days
and evil experiences have come; be
fore one shall have learned so much of
evil tint the remainder of life would
not suffice to c -.diente it.
Cokesbury Conference School.
Cokesbury, S. C.
High grade prepatory school. Courses
in college preparatory. Music. Ex
pression and business. Excellent en
vironment. Health record unexcell
ed. $120 pays board and tuition.
Session opens Sept 21, 1911. Write:
L E. HINKLE, B. A.
Headmaster.
Are
You
Reading?
North Carolina's Foremost News
paper?
The Charlotte
Observer,
Every day in the year. One
year $8., 3 mos. $2. It costs more
but you get a real live newspaper.
The Evening
Chronicle.
Every afternoon except Sunday.
$3 per year. 75c 3 mos. Pay
able strictly in advance.
The Semi-Weekly
Observer.
Every Tuesday and Thursday.
$1 per year. Send for sample
copies.
The Observer Co.,
Observer Bldg., CHARLOTTE, N. 0.
What a Bank Account Does
at The People's Bank
It helps your credit.
It stimulates your courage.
It guards you against extrava
gance.
It gives you confidence in your
judgment.
It helps you hold up while you
are out of work.
It furnishes the best receipt for
all money you pay out.
It creates business habits that
will increase your savings.
It protects against loss by rob
bery and personal injury by rob
bers.
It enables you to pass over per
iods of sickness without embarrass
ment.
It makes you able to run your
business, instead of your business
running you.
It teaches economy, which is the
first round in the ladder to success
and prosperity. Your business wel
come,
The People's Bank
ELLOREE, S. O.
my
"Flinch!"
For sale price 50c. Postage 1 Oc.
Book Store
John H. Schacte
Dealer in
Groceries of
All Kinds
Fruits and Vegeta
bles in Season.
i
GIVE HIM A CALL
Russell St. Orangeburg, S. C.
Are Your Bose Insured?
A new shipment of the celebrat
ed "Holeproof Hosiery." Guar
anteed for six months. Are ready
for your inspection.
Holeproof Silk Stockings.
Holeproof Silk Sox.
These are guaranteed for three
months. If a hole appears in that I
time you get a new pair.
Holeproof Lisle and Cotton)
Stockings.
Holeproof Lisle and Cotton Sox.
Are guaranteed for six months.
Sold only by
E. N. Scoville,
44 W. Russell St.'Phone 18.
Five or six doses "G66" will cure
any case of Chills and Fever. Price
twenty-five cents.
232 and 234 King, and 203 Meeting Streets, Charleston, S. C.
The Arcade Department Store.
The Largest Wholesale and Retail Mail Order
House in the South.
^Pp5(Pf k f\ c _We are members of the Charleston
ul 3L VlrlLr? "Refund Association, and will pay
your Railroad fare to Charleston if you shop here. In
addition we guarantee you better values and greater
varieties to choose from than you will find outside of
the Great Market Centres.
CLOSING OUT SUMMER STOCKS
We are overstocked with Spring and Summer
Merchandise of every kind: Tailor-Made Suits, Silk
and Lingerie Dresses, Children's Dresses, Ladies
Waists, Walking Skirts, Dry Goods and Notions,
Floor Coverings, Lace Curtains, Shoes, Millinery,
Gents Furnishings, Etc.
fie 1
TO ACCOMPLISH frl IS E H AVE PLACED THE ENTIRE STOCK ON SALE
I From a Quarter to a Half Less Than Original Price,
Pay us a visit. Write for Samples or send us an open
order. We will attend to it as carefully as if you
I were here in person.
OUTSIDE JOYS.
Oliver Moore.
EMBARRASSING.
"Daisy gave herself away awfully yes
terday."
"How?"
"One of the boys Insisted she had A
fiery temper, because her hair was au
burn, and to win the argument she had
to admit It was dyed."
"Isnt she ?limT _ _
?Bilm? I should say she la. "Why, Bhs
could actually do a high Wok daoou in ft
hobble skirt"
ONE EXPERIENCE ENOUGH. Q
"Not going on the straw ridoT**
"No."
??Why vwtJ"
"I went on a straw rtdu ooce." ^??S
MIDSUMMER BARGAINS.
"What are your wife's worst extrava
gances?"
"Cheap midsummer bargains."
DIFFERENT LINE
Mr. De Wealth?I am leaving town for
my health.
Miss Seeker?Do you always take your
doctor's advice T
Mr. De Wealth?This was my lawyer's
advlco.
EVIDENTLY NOT.
"Does he think much of her?"
"I don't think so. I saw him change
places with her In s. canoe this morning
on the lake."
AFTER THE BEACH THOUGHTS.
"Homeward bound, eh?"
"Yes."
"You seem thoughtful. Thinking about
the Kirl you left at the beach V
"No; I was thinking about those 200
plunks."
"I am going to ask you the old, old
question."
"Oh I you needn't bother?yes, It's hot
enough for me."
RIGHT AWAY.
"I understand Mrs. Bangs knows at
the details of that latest divorce scan*
dal."
"Is that so? I shall call on her torno?
row," .