The press and standard. [volume] (Walterboro, S.C.) 1890-current, November 28, 1906, Image 5
Grove’s Tasteless Cbil Tome
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has stood the test 25
bottles
Does this
Enclosed with
*4 »*9 r *' , « W'
Average A^rk^al Sales over One end a Half Million
record of merit appeal to you? * No Cure, No Pay. 50c.
b a Tea Cent* package of Crove*s Block Root* Liver Pills.
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3 2.^09 These rates are net. We have
a S t O figured them carefully and it is no use
lo^g 10 ask for a reduction. Job work of
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‘9061 ‘I *»®0 "otj^naji^ ‘i«uno3
etp at jededsMeu Xpo aij j_ *l)uno^
uo >*ll°D 1° ««*»0 I*P9K) *HJ.
Ladies Jackets, Ladies Cloaks, Ladies Skirts,
o ^
Dress Goods. My Stock is complete. Call
and inspect my goods before buying else-
1 a
where.
TAYLOR’S
Walterboro’s Popular Store.
1
SILVER
WARE. -■ |
If the monarch of the Barnyard must be ^sacrificed,
let it be done with appropriate honors. One way of do
ing this is to grace the table with sorre now Silverware,
•uch as a new Coffee or Tea set or a piece of sterling
idles, . .
and all kinds of fancy serving" pieces.. We have the
reputation of being the lowest-priced Jewelry Store in
town. Every article Guaranteed.
Ht S. FINN’S Jewelry Store.
'Rrofossinal J)[oticos.
JAMES E. PEUilltuI. J.SO. H. PEURIPOY
PIORIFOY BROTHERS.
AttornejH and
Connuellora at Law.
All Etuinen given Prompt Attention,
OVER THE PRESS AND STANDARD.
WALTERBOKO. - - - 8. C.
m s m.
Attorneys at Ajawi
We represent the Amerlcen Surety
Compeov of New York, end ere prepared
to furaieh bonds for guerdlsnf, admin
istrator*, executors, or other* holding
office* of tru*t. *
Walterboro 8. C.
6 W. STOKES,
DENTIST.
JHIID. VIRIIEI
Real Estate, Brokerage and
Insurance.
LOANb NEGOTIATED.
Housfea to H®nt.
Oppoelte the Market,
WALTERBORO, 8. a
H. V. BLACK SR,
DENTAL SURGEON
Office Hours: 8.30 am to
p. m. 3 to 6 p. m.
"Walterboro, 8 C
Dr. H. W. Ackerman,
DENTAL SURGEON.
*• Office near Postoffice.
Office Hours: 8 A. M. to
12 M i P. M. to 6 P. M.
COTTAGEV1LLE, S. C.
Or. A. L. OTT,
CENTAL SURGEON.
GROWN AND BRIDGE WORK
A Specialty.
Office: Courthouse Square.
Walterboro, - - S. C.
J. C. HI OTT,
Attorney at Law,
<• i - °
Money to load on improved
* real estate.
Office next door to J. S. Griffin
WALTERBORO, S. C.
LAND FOR SALE.
If yov have land or timber for tale let
me handle it for yon. Or if you want
to buy any auch property I can supply
you.
For Sale—Tract of 600 acres good
farming land, with fair buildings, good
timber, two mile* from Waltarboro on
8t George row), very cheap and easy
terms.
For Bale—230 acres, 2 1-2 miles from
Walterboro. Good residence, and ex
cellent out buildings, all in good repair.
Fairly well timbered. 100 acres open
land—60 acres clear of stump*. ^ Good
drainage. Terms easy.
J. M. WALKER,
Attokxey At Law And Real
Estate Dealer,
Cvncs Court House Square.
WALTERRORO, S. 0.
—^—
S
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LvVti
Iucuik, tur
; a:id
seatiul r.n
.1 p\>
uaucr the
iu us
,.<4 ( It€!<*•*
ll.iu.x lu'lts J..4 \V«»I1 J’.H
ooaisitl<*r ii just us <V
tituble to'tpst tiiy eprsrs
r.s the iafLuiAtors. says
Kate Thyaou Marr in roultry Success.
The aiivantaycs arc that the be:i is,
v. hen relieved of tlie infertile etr.irs,
less liable to tramp the chicks, since
the nest is not so full. A^aip, if the
e^;s are not valuable and one has sot
three hens, for instance, the jrood ejrqrs
can la most cases be given to two beas
uad the other reset, thus saving two
weeks of the hen’s time.
Itoll a piece of tar pni>er Into funnel
shape, flatten a little at the hip: end
ami cut to tit snugly up to the eye to
exclude the Jiyht, and nt the small end
round and of proper sl7.e to admit the
epg halfway, as In testing. Make
about eighteen inches long.
Clack, and Cackle.
Id the United States corn is a fa
vorite feed for chickens, though, as
Professor Wheeler states, common
grains “seem practically interchange
able and many grain byproducts can
be freely substituted for different
whole grains or for each Qtber and all
combined as desired.”
Linseed meal Is a byproduct of the
manufacture of oil from flaxseed.
“Old process” contains somewhat more
oil than “new process” linseed meal
and Is, perhaps, on that account a little
better to use, but l>oth are excellent.
Experiments have proved that excess
ive feeding of middlings is apt to pro
duce small sized eggs. This, no doubt,
is caused by the fact that middlings
generally increases egg production.
Barley, either whole or ground, is
very good. It has rather too much bull,
but otherwise It Is a satisfactory food.
It Is considered by many to be next to
wheat in point of value.
While it Is a fact that eggs, like beef,
should be sold by the pound it is not
likely that we will reach that custom
for a generation at least.
The spring chicken Is one hatched
not earlier than February nor later
than May. It Is marketed when two
or three pounds In weight.
SURE TO CURE INDIGESTION.
Unless Pepsikola Cures Your Dyspepsia
J M Klein Will Pay Back the Money
It la not often that be backs up a new
remedy with hia twn personal guarantee
but he knows tba* Pepsikola is aura to
help all wbe have chronic dyspepsia and
indigestion the very firat day they begin
to take It
Moreover, he is too bus? and bis repu
tation la worth too much to take chances
in recommending a new remedy to his
customers that wlL not do just as repre
sented.
Pepsikola Is a remarkable preparatho
and baa performed some cures in Walter
boro that border up jo the miraculous. It
is also a grand nerve tonic. It improves
the appetite, gives new strength and new
energy, tones up the stomach and diges
tive organs, and makea you feel better
SHVED PIT LIFE
- That’s what a prominent
druggist said of Scott s
Emulsion a short time
ago. As a rule we don’t
use or refer to testimonials
in addressing the public,
but the above remark and
similar expressions are
made so often in connec
tion with Scott’s Emulsion
that they are worthy of
occasional note. From
infancy to old age Scott’s
Emulsion offers a reliable
means of remedying im
proper and weak develop
ment, restoring lost flesh
and vitality, and repairing
waste. The action of
Scott’s Emulsion is no
...
more of a secret than the
composition of the Emul
sion itself. What it does
it does through nourish
ment—the kind of nourish
ment that cannot be ob
tained in ordinatry food.
No system is too weak or
delicate to retain Scott’s
Emulsion and gather good
from it.
▼e will wnd you a 1
urn pic free*
B* wurt that this picture tn tfc*
form oi a label u un the ernypir
at every buttle etf Bmulaicn ywa.
buy.
SCOn k BOWNE
o Chemists
409 Pearl St., N. T.
5dc. tt- iM drorrMs.
o organa
ht off.
Place property with ua for sals. If
joo wish to boy consult ua. We have
property for sale In every State.
Fire, life and accident insurance.
Ott Real Eatate Co.
10 17 3 m’s Walterboro, 8. C.
hen you buy a package of Pepelkola
you an protected lo every way. If It
ourea you the cost is 35 cent*—If it doe*
not, Mr Kleio will p»y bw.k your money
without the least argument.
0
Homenade Batter Worker.
A very effective butter worker, which
will save a great deal of labor, cau be
made by any man at nil handy with
tools out of some strips of hard woo l,
maple preferred. Fashion the pieces
Into a wide, shallow trough, tapering at
one end to about four Inches. Set thl.r
trough on throe logs, two under the
wide end and one under the narrow
end, strengthened by an extra piece un
derneath to fit them Into.
Make a roller out of a piece of the
wood four Inches square and one foot
longer than the trough or body of work
er. A very good length for a medium
sized dairy would be thirty Inches for
the body part and four Inches for the
roller. Cut with a flue tooth saw one
Inch deep on each side of the stick
at a point twelve inches from one end.
This extra twelve Inches Is for a han
dle and should be dressed down round
and smooth to about two inches, so
that It is easy to grasp by the operator.
The remaining three feet must be made
tapering, the small end (that opisnlte
the handle) being not more than an
inch in diameter. Dress the wood
square, then cut off the four corners to
make It octagon in shape.
In the narrow end of the trough
drive an ordinary iron staple and in
the small end of the roller n short,
heavy cut Iron nail—not a wire nail,
which would be likely to bend. The
nail should project about an inch. This
fits into the staple, holding the roller
In place, and completes about as effec
tive a butter worker as any one need
ask for.
tfm-
t flout 1
71
PARAFFINING OF CHEESE.
It Mar Dr Hone on th<» Farm at Lit*
tie KxpeuMt*.
Nearly all factory cheese i< now par
affined. and the udvnnUgH- obtained
by covering tbt^< hcesc with a thin lay
er of paraffin are:
The loss In wolght during curing fa
, ®uoh less than without the paraffin,
nd the cheese will aland a higher
perature iu the curing room wit
damage.
Mold Is entirely prevented or at least
greatly cheeked.
Flies cannot deposit their
through tlie paraffin, and that prevents
sklppera.
The paraffining of,, factory cheese Is
done by dipping it In melted paraffin,
so that a thin layer adheres to the
cheese, but of course it takes quite n
large k.*tile full to dip even a teu
pound eh-*ese. and this methtsi would
ou that nevounb l»e somewhat expend
slve for eheesfumkera ou the farm.
The paraClaing can. however, be done
at practically no expense and with
very little work by the following meth-
xl:
Melt a pouud or two of paraffin (coat
ing about 1.'. ceuta per jMiundt In a ket
tle until it is quite hot and begins to
smoke a:i«! then cover the surface of
the clie.-sc. u-iug a fairly stiff brush,
say about u:i inch in dl:tni *ter. and ruh
It In good. lie sure to keep the paraf
fin hot and dip the brush frequently.
Do not try to cover too much surface
with one dipping of the brush. The
coating should be about half the thick
ness of a dime and adhere well to the
cheese. It takes less than 1 cent's
worth of paraffin for u ten ixrand
cheese.
*
The cheese should preferably Ir*
from three to ten days old when par
affined. and the surface must be wiped
dry. It Is liest to leave the cheese In
a warm room for some hours lief ore
paraffining; otherwise It is difficult to
get a coating that will stick. As the
farmer generally has no regular curing
room, says a writer iu Hoard's I miry-
roan, It will pay him well to take the
little extra trouble in paraffining all
L bls cheese.
A Bad Complexion
comes from bad blood. Pimples on the
face. Acne, Liver Spots, Sallow Skin,
dark rings about the eyes, sick hesdsebe.
pale, worn-ont look, dfrr.treu will all
disappear if yon take a rrea'mont of
Ramon’s Liver P1»ls and Ton*.- Pellets,
for sale at Walterboro D • g Crr. and put
yonr blood in good con«il»i.*n. This
Treatment does noi foir* ' hingr—the
Pill touches the Liver urg^« U to action;
the Pellet, following (onr»iy vegetable)
strengthens and aid* the bowels and
d.gestlve organs. Beware of violent
purgative*. Ask for Ramon’s—it la the
only combined Treatment pat no !e tb*a
way on the market. Entire Treatment
Nothing has ever equalled it
Nothing can ever surpass it
Dr.King’s
New Discovery
A Perfect For All Throat
. Cure: Lung Troubles.
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