The press and standard. [volume] (Walterboro, S.C.) 1890-current, June 06, 1906, Image 7
To Oire a Cold In One Day
Take L>3KatiV6 BrcmO ^uipice Tcilets. /£ pwjfy
Seven fctlon tciee told in past i2 months. 1*1* Signature,
C*r*« Cri?
ia Two Days.
on every
box. 25c.
«K *
MILLINERY! MILUN ER Y!
-O-
-O-
- I have moved into the store next door to Mrs G. A.
Sauls’ residence. Will be glad to serve my friends.
I carry a fine line of Millinery Goods. I make a
SPECIALTY of WHITE HATS. While in towrr
call on me ami let me show them to you. My goods
are the cheapest in town. It will pay you to see me
before buying elsewhere.
MRS. A. M. HIOTT.
THE JOY OF LIVING
CAN BB FCX.LT REALIZED WHEN TOC
ENJOY GOOD HEALTH
erbinE
The Popular Liver Medicine
Will Keep You Well
A GUARANTEED CURE for all disease* produced by TOR-
RID LIVER and IMPURE BLOOD. Do notufUl your system
with Arsenic. Calomel and Quinine. They act as rank poisons
which vitiate the-blood. debilitate the system, and leave a trail
of bad symptoms which require years to obliterate. HERB-
INE is purely vegetable and contains no mineral or narcotic
poisons, is absolutely harmless and is the simple remedy of
nature. It carries off all poison in the system and leaves no
injurious effects.
CURED BT HERBINE AFTER OTHER
REMEDIES FAILED ;
Yfr. L. A. Hicks, Iredell, Taxes, eeys: *' I wet
eick in bed for eight months with liver trouble, the
doctor seernrd to ao me no good. I was told to try
Her bine, and it cured me in a short time. I cannot
recommend thie wonderful medicine too highly."
TAKE IT NOW I
LARGE BOTTLE. 50c GET TBE GENUINE
Ballard Snow Liniment Co.
ST. LOUIS* U. S. A.
BOLD AND RECOMMENDED BY
SIOHN M. KLEIN.
The New Idea.
BIG STORE.
o o • v .
But Tinv Prices.
W. Buford Sanders.
WALTERBORO and
JACKSONBORO, S. C
Jit
»>-* vd?
IS
POULTRY IN FLORIDA.
A Proml.tuK I*ro«i»ect—Pro*
pttioui*—Food Kamil? <,ro«rn.
I Ik-1:«*v** Florida' Svill IkT*»r** n:my
years !>*• ;is famous for her firM* isnil-
try products as for h.T oni uea. T!n*re
Is no reason why she *h«uM not. and
Floridian: are 4 » realize this
fact. Nature' her* drives greatest aid
to this euterpr.' •. aa.l poultry raislm;
can so easily Co hand in band with or
an^'e culture, This wurin clltnate all
the year uitls greatly la k.H 1 !)!! 1 ." the
liens layiUe’> They med hut projier
feeding, shelter and care to ^ larsre
;
returns in a daily well lilhsl ejra has
l^t. says a writer In American Ajrrlcul-
turlst. In which he submits tile follow
ing details of the huMuess.
Reruiuda Gramm and Feed.
-ItiJlL: runs notliing could h - Im-tter
than Bermuda grass, almost the only
kind cultivated in tilts papt of the
country. If the yards arc made large
enough—25 by 100 feet—ve tlnd by
esi>erlment that a flock of twenty five
hens will not kill this grass out, hut
the sod will improve all the time mid
furnish green food^lnhltt of the year.
It Is killed down by frosts, but cold
leather comes late and warm rains
early lu the spring. 1 Hiring the winter
green food can la* supplied from the
garden. We believe much of the feed
for chickens could l*e raised here, t'ow-
|K*ns "with proper working will yield
a large crop and when dried i ad crack
ed give an extkdleut food for this pur-
post*. Experiments with other foods
are being made.
Hoamlasr and Inmrctm. "
The housing can lie accomplished at
small cost Shed colony houses, board
ed on three sides, with the south side,
covered with wire only as protection
against powders, with clay or matched
lioard floors only are necessary. Roosts
and nests can be built with little ex
pense, especially if. the poultry man
knows, as be should, something of
simple carpentry. Jigger-fleas, lice and
mites can easily lie kept under control
by using weekly a spray made of kero
sene. soap emulsion and a good lice
killer, by having all floors clayed or
modt of matched boards and by white
washing occasionally.
Winter and Snmater Markets.
Florida offers n good market for poul
try products during the winter months,
for the great nuralier of northerners
wintering there want and will pay for
the best of everything In this line.
Southerners are notably fond of poul
try, but will not pay such good prices,
so that while the poultryman can dis
pose of his fowls during the summer
he must take less or hts customers will
go back to eating pork and hominy.
A Clever Feaee Armagemeat.
To arrange a fence so that the stock
In four yards or fields can reach one
trough without interfering with each
other is a problem that seems hard to
solve. Prairie Farmer, however, sug-
\
HANDY FENCE DEVICE.
gests a clever solution (sge cut). This
picture plainly gives tlie Idea, and de
tailed explanations are'’ unnecessary.
Any farmer, at slight expence, can
easily construct such an arrangement.
Improved I pland Cotton.
It Is now' reported that the bureau of
plant Industry has developed several
new varieties of cotton that promise
almost double the value of the cotton
crop w here they are used. Th *se were
bred from ordinary short rtajd;* upland
cotton. Fiber half to three-fotmtl s of
an inch longer than that of the native
short staple has Immui 8**curett, and it is
said to almost approach the sea is
land product In '•ftahty.
i
NEWS NOTES
TTON fields need never “wear out.”
A complete fertilizer, with the right*,
amount of Potash, feeds to the soil the^
•nourishment that cotton must have, and
lx ’* 0 r
"which the cotton removes from year to year.
“Cotton Culture,” our interesting tje-page
book, contains valuable pointers on cotton-
raising, and shows, fiom comparative photo
graphs, what enormous cotton yields Potash
has produced in different states. This book
w ill be sent you tree of any cost or obligation
if you will just write us for it.
tit* York—VJ N.%
Address. GERMAN KALI WORKS.
II Stroot. or AtUata. U«.-22<* So. Brood Street,
£ Great Reduction Sale S
^ In my entire stock of goods for the next 50 days. .
M Call and get the benefit of the cut price. *
Lawn, was 15c now 10c. '
^ Lawn, was 12c now 10c.
VL w
Colored lawn was 10c, now 8c. " ^
^ W. f. Corsets were $1.00 now 90c. ^
^ R. & C. Corsets were $1.00 now 80c. ^
ladies hose were 15c, now 10c f ^
V Ladies hose were 25c, now 19c.
Laces and embroidries going at and below cost.
Corset covers and ready made shirt waists going at
^ and below cost.
5 Miss Lizzie Trowell $
%**%*%%*%**%*%»*
tion the Kys.em of nnatiou ou each
farm, character of cultivation, cleanll-
nei«s of farm, crop yield, number and
quality of live stock kept In proportion
to area.
The “head farmer" is a new railroad
official. One of the western roads
sends a practical farmer from place to
place on Its Hues In a special car.
delivering lectures and giving advice
to new settlers ou the crops and meth
ods best suited to their lands, thus
saving them many costly and disheart
ening mistakes. _
One of the lessons that latter day
scientists In the plant breeding Hue
have learned Is, according to a recent
writer, that plants to be a commercial
success must be bred on the ground
where they are to be produced—that la
to say. with conditions of aoll and cli
mate approximately the same as they
will find In the field where they are ex*
pected to flourish.
Deadly Serpent Bites
are as common In India as are stomach
and liver disorders with us. Fo* the
latter however there is a sure remedy:
Electric Bitter; the great restorative
medicine, of which S A Brown of Ben-
nettsville, 8 C, say«: ‘‘They restored my
wife to perfect health, after years of suf
fering with dyspepsia and a chrdnicaily
torpid liver.” Electric Bitters cure
chills and lever, malaria, hlHonsness,
lame back, kidney trouble and bladder
disorders. Sold on Guarantee by John
M Klein, druggist. Price 50c.
EatablUhed in 1704.
Oldest Firm In Americ
D. A. WALKER & CO.
\m FENCE CHEAPER THAN m.
)
Thousands aunu'alv bear witness t > the
efficiency of Early Risers. These pleas
ant, relist ifttle pills have long borne a
reputation treon t to none as a laxative
and cthartic. They are as staple as
bread 111 milPniin ot homes. PTeisant
but effective. Q Will promptly relieve con-
stipaiiou without griping. Sold by John
M Klein.
A PECULIAR FISH.
Snirar Bert# In Arirnna.
Winter pl:i*(!r'<‘!. ku.t:r 1. at the
Arizona station nro If: lu sted fr >m April
to June, the total quantity of. water
varying from 3.5 to H aero-foot. Hoots
pini 't-I in flic ; 'liji^ 1' rtro : ,i - i: : M ireh
and .then readily produo»* seed stalks.
The \v»n* *r pi.antimrs are roa«l|- for
liarvesting in July. After tlioy hsve
rcmdied Ah^h* maximum size t!i(*y boi
gin to lose in anger rr,<! purity ami sogt
decay.
General—oxoidlenco in farming is. to
have a chance to bring a prize in clear
cash lu Minnesota. 7. J. Hill, of the
Great Northern railway, is offering
three prizes--$200, $150 and $75 -111 j
each congressional district of the state. I
The itjdges. wiU take into. waftlUe?*-
21'
^ 52 Meetina Street,
C l-LA « L L S T O-N, S B C
MARBLE AWD d
GRANITE WORKS.
»
HTi'Qi'i and . '
, * v?' 1 * -N-
Send For Prices,
Mr A. K. Beach represents us at
Walter boro
A D WALKER. J. D. SCOTT
When the boss is away the steno
grapher will get gay.
Tk« Turbot'a Dnll and Socket ByW
of Block and Gold.
Lying limp and slimy on a fishmon
ger's slal), or try and sandy lu the ti#h-
wIvys' baskets, the turbot Is. perhaps,
the least iuterestiug of flsh. When
swimming in an artificial sea or lying
on the sandy i>ottoiu it is the most at
tractive of all of the denizens of this
1
mock ocean and whether at rest or In
motion has an air of vigilance, vivacity,
and intelligence greater than that of
any of the normally shaped flsh. This
IS lu part due to its habits and in part
to the expression of the flat fish’s eye.
This, which is sunk and invisible in the
dead flsh. Is raised on a kind ot turret
In the living turbot, or sole, and set
there in a half revolving apparatus,
working almost as independently as
the “ball and socket" eyes of the eltu-
Djeleoti. There is this difference, how
ever. in the eye of (be lizard and of the
fish—the iris of the chameleon is a mere
pinhole at the top of the eyeball, which
is thus absolutely without expression.
The turbot’s, or ‘•butt's.” eyes are
black and gold and Intensely bright.
With none of the fixed, staring stupid
appearance of ordinary fishes’ eyes. It
lies upon the sand and Jerks its eyes
Independently into iMjsdtion to survey
any part of the ground surface, the
water alnive, or that on either side at
any angle.
If it had light rays to project from
Its eyes instead of tj receive, the effect
would Is* precisely that made by the
sudden shifting of the Jointed appa
ratus which eas»s the electric iitlht
from a' warship at any angle on to sea,
sky or horizon. The turlsds, though
ready, graceful sv/innm rs. tnoviiTg in
wavelike undulations across the water
or dashing off like n flash' when so dirf- T
I>OHod. usually He p rf«*ctly si ill upou
the iKdtorn. They do not, like the dalm
and the flounders, cover tluunsoives
with s'ind. for thcy nnlmic the color of
the ground with such nl^olute fidelity
A that except for tlTe shhdng eye U is
alifiost impossible to ul 1 irruish them.
It would appear tl»:t volitioj (*!ays
son ■ i> rt in this so ;1«* i »ril'o - . :nity to
environment, for one twt'ot. which is
bllyd. has chauge<l to n tint too H'fltt
d all in y ''Hit ’hat of
the sauE. London Spccbtlor
»>
A - •
» *"
*1
The sincerest tribute tbst can be paid to
MtperioTity is imitation. The many
imitations of PeWitt’s Wilch Hsztl
8alve that are new befote the oublic
prove it tbe best. Ask foi DeWItt’s.
Good for bums, scalds, chaffed skin, ecz
ema, tetter, cuts, bruises, boils and piles.
Highly recommended and reliable. Sold
by John M Klein,
»*» ,
I
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>S
7, f & "]
.fl
Good*
it our
ty and
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