University of South Carolina Libraries
F • . "Hr ► - 5 11 Fancl33, F;.!:aci?s* rn l F;. X • ^ S ■» } i ; ^ r •* if! ' " ■» U. w CnM '! r until It ii Iia/l removl'i^ u-..v c.irtti tiiat th5 fixt V? jn-.'n 1 y '■ r \. f»*!l t!jo nnl>?rade aiid vsnooth, carefully t^poujfy or vegetable n>!!!nu may disclose; :r l ..ttoai course ev<jn- v/n. «M> * --•• • I so FO’ *n i Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been m use for over 80 years, has borne tho signature of and has been made under his per* ■onal supervision since itsjnfancy. Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and “ Just-os-good” are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger tho liAnitti of Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment. i What Is CASTORIA ©astorla Is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms •ad allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind -Cotie. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates tho Food, regulates tho Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. Tho Children's Panacea—The Mother's Friend. oiNuiNE CASTORIA ALWAYS Signature of ■ik - In Use For Over 30 Y< Little Swsa* Dots. Written for last week. Editor Press and Standard.— The good farmer* have finished i laying by their crops and are now i flxed to enjoy the meetings '#bleh are going around her j. We hope they will accomplish much good from them. » llr and Mrs B R Griffin . of Doctors Orook, attended the aeetiig at Little Swatnp last eseday. ( Mias Georgia Sanders has been, •pending sometime with (be lO-er Goodwin. Mr and Mrs M H Carter are sometime with rel ive* here. jMia* Julia Shaw of Augnta, 0a. it •pending sometime with Ml* VT|A Smith. irrio Carter of Ritter is JAMESTOWN -EXPOSITION Rates from Walterboro, S. 6., as follows: ^ \ ' Season Ticket $22.15 sold daily April 19th to November 80th. €0 day ticket $18.80 sold daily April 19th to November 80th. ^ 115 day ticket $16.15sold daily April 19th to November 90th. Coach excursion $10.90 sold each Tuesday and Friday; limit 7 days Endorsed “Not good in parlor or sleeping cars/' ' ‘ OOAST LINK “NOBFOL^FLYERS” „ Lv. Walterboro 714 an. Lv Norfolk 610 p m. ' Ar. Norfolk 7 89a. n. Ar. Walterboro 9 56 a. m. i Phllman sleeping cars, from Port Tampa and Jack- i.. i tlarta and Augusta, Ga. Wilmington, N. C., via ilUNTil < 4 T UNE RAILROAD COMPANY Write for a bea. i J . ’ . 'rated folder containing maps, des- ‘ ■* matter, list » • ric.„ t or a..^ UiXonnatkm, address W. J. CRAIG, T. 0. WHITE, FMMagur Traffic Famenger, General Passenger Agent WILMINGTON, N. . 1 . mb 4r . H a T " 5 yV & S w V r '~_ai :_-rai VJ'r.y New Jcrst>‘s S'-r'« rv i-® r Rcrtls Prefars a Lighter Mse-idcm to • -Tv'.fora R:ac;—How to Dui.d & Good 8tons Highway. Fr i:n t!*(* tiuu* of Hip to tho pn’s'-ut Dion ti:ivo had Hieir Idoas of o poi.V- t hijliw.'y. Th.* of ro :d o?i5f!iiooi*s < fit! • ort as r..*\vf;Vii-lod, whi!o t’loy wore only aiinlns ut J1*o r.>:ul that Inaiah saw with |iroj»hotlc ojo wlien ho “MaLc Iti tho desort a hifb d way for our tlod. Kvory valloy shall j ly, then r dl au-I avid a Httlo hinder fiBu c.Ki im* iho riiifus until tho stonos* «-v.i*'e t»> sink <>r on‘oi» In front of tho ri>l.<»r; so von! h, t:proad yonr hoc- oml ot'um* mil r>M it-with iho nddh tkui cf hlndor and w.itor. until the' whole .! '.*rf:u-e li hard and smooth, carefully ftl’.ln;; with stoue any dopros- skois that may npjioar. then fiuUh the whole with a course of throe-fourths Inch -tone and soroenluTs. This must | l*o soaked with water and foiled until n wave of mud Is formed In front of the rol!<*r. I ein-r particularly careful to commence the ndlln* at tho aides and ! (mnlually w^ toward the center. II.r so dcl*>k you will preserve the crown of your. roa*L-/If this work Is well orledni nU( l Ikoroiurhly done, you will have a road that Is smooth, hard and conven ient for travel at all seasons of the •pending a few dsys with Miss Harnson Miss Annie ^Beacb of Stokes spent a few days with friends here. She returned to her home today, and was accompanied by Mias laabal Goodwin. Bob Strickland* and Miss Mindell Smith ware happily mar ried last Sunday afternoon by J W Miley. Mrs Strickland is the beautiful daughter of Mr and Mrs JH Smith, and Mr Strickland is the ron of Mr and Mrs J M Strickland. Their many friends will be furpriaed to hear of their marriage; at it was quito a quiet affair. We wish for them a long and happy life. 8. M. Read tfce advertisement this week in The Press and Standard, and rote to day. lie exalted, and ever)' momifainnnd hill ahull he made low, and the crooked ahull he mude straight and the rough places plain.” Thus the fancy that « straight road with ojsy grades Is a new Idea i* swept away hy the woi>ls of Isnluh uttered over 7uo years before the Christian era, writoa U. A. Meeker, state supervisor of roads. New Jersey, in the Good Komis Magaslue. Later Claudius Applus had his vision of a road that would perpetuate hi* name, and his dream has been real ised. But beyond that be gave—what? The monument of a tyrant who com pelled thousands to work t)T naught and a lasting example of how not to build a road. The Appiau Way, fa mous In picture and story. Is avoided over a greater portion of Its length by every traveler who Is In a hurry to reach his Journey's end. „ This old Roman'* idea of a deep foundation has lived after him, but no experienced road builder adopts It. The old Hainan's fancy tbat-tt la neces sary to bnild a deep foundation for m road crops out here and there, even at tho present time, and la exploited aa the beet and. in feet Ike only true way to build a med. It was not until road builders lean ed that thoroughly drain ed earth was the only sure foundation for any kind of rood covering that a great advance was made In rood con struction. That road Improvement la an expen sive luxury, something nice to have, bat too costly Tpr those who have to work for a living, la the fancy of some, bat It Is not borne oat by experience. In New Jersey every dollar expended for road Improvement has added tens and hundreds of dollar* to our state's wealth. The first roads I built were sixteen Inches deep, composed of ton Inches of telford bottom and six inches of com pacted two and one-half Inch and one and one-half Inch crushed stone and finished with coarse sfone screenings. That the foundation of this klud of road lasts Is true, but the top wears off much more quickly, and when that Is gone every driver avoids the telford road In good weather. d| well remember the first sixteen Inch telford I ever saw. It was In J9TC) at my home city of Tl tlnfield, N. J. We boys were dis cussing It very learnedly, ns we thought. In fact, we were merely ro- hearsing what we had beard onr eiders say, wlicu an old Scotchman passed by. and. catching the drift of our remarks, said: “Boys, it Is wring. It Is a’ wrahg. It Is wrtus In prencepll. Hero ye hae the onveel, an* on It ye put the sm.V stone. Along cornea the horse and wagon. The horse’s hoofs pound the stna* stono an’ the wagon wheels grind It till. *twixt the hammer and the anveel, the sma’ stones are ground to powder.” We laughed at the old Scoh bat my experience has since taught mo that he was right. Not only is a deep telford more expensive to bntkl. bnt the road wears rough much sooner than a lighter macadam and is conse quently much more expensive to main tain. It is also much harder on Igirses’ feet, as It has no elasticity. It has lieen argued that a deep tel ford road will not he heaved by frost. Thls jg. not so. I have pceh fourteen Iridh telford turn oil upside down by frost so that the large Imttom atones were on top of the road, while six inch macadam built over the same soil and same conditions of travel remained un moved. the only other difference In construction being that underdrains were placed outside of the macadam, while none was used beside the tel ford. To build a good atone road, first grade your hUI down to 5 per cent or leas If possible; fill up your flats so yon have a minimum grade of at least age- half per cent; second, by underdrains cut off all water that may threaten the toad; third, give yonr road a crown of three-quarters inch per foot; fourth, cot out your subgrade, being careful ^>_£lvq if. the 69me curvature as the lA-siuon . Attack.” SymptOIM. Sour stomach, scat* taste in month, sick headache, sallow complex- lea, tha world your enemy. Ctuto. Constipation, Inact ive liver, overflow of bile into tne system* Raflsf. Treatment for two nights before retiring with One a night, don't worry, sleep weH anaNatorell do the rest. yeur. . “Ws never repent of eating too HUle,’’ was one of the ten rules of life of Tho mas Jefferson, president the Unitsd I States, and the role applies to every one without exception outing this hot i weather, because it Is hard for frod. even In small qna'itles, to be digested when the blood is at high temperature. At this season we should eat a psringty and properly. We should also help the stomach as mnch aa possible by tbs use of a little Kodol For Indigestion and Dyspepsia, which will rest the stomaoh hy digesting the food Itself. Sol by Joo M Klein. T he Oman Csr'j-i. "lEcredlb'.t .:*« it in:y on Id the detective, ••then* a.v r;;:!.y shjplifterr. who atenl by the n^i*u v of the union. These men. before *'i*tt!iis: ont upon their contemplated erhne-;. oil of raw onion.* abundantly. Then they stroll Into the sKvoratnltti'a or the haberdash er's or the Jeweler's that tl 'y propose to rob. M ‘Show me those large /olltalivs sur rounded , with pigeon blood rubles, tdmme,’ says tbs Jewel thief. "Tb» clerk brings forth the tray ef gems and, bending over It, tbe thief •Ifhs with admiration. His face doss to the dark's, be stabs again. And th* clack's Mstflls quiver, and ha tarns •way his head. Tha Inapactton of tha cootlnoca for n It tbe thief I toff hard, tha clerk kaepi haaff away, and hence It Is at the day's end. that a couple ef eoatly rings era missing.”-New York Press, HAP AN AWFUL TIME. Bat Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera tad Dianhoaa Remedy Cared Him. It Is wHh plsasars that I gtrsyoa this nsoUcitad tmttmoalal. A boat a year •go whan I had a severs cam of awastos I gotoaught out In a hard rain and tha *1* 1 had aa awfaMtme aad had It not bsea for tha use of Chaarber.ala's Colic, Cholera aad Diarrhoea Remedy I could not have possibly lived bat a few hoars longer, bat thanks to this now stroaff aad well. I ha above through ample gratitude aad I shall always speak a good word for this remedy —8am H Gwut, Concord. Ga Per sale by Jao If Kleta. A Telltale Nail. Or. John Doans, tha famous English divine and i»oet, who lived In the rsign of James I., was a veritable 8 her lock Holmes In bent of mind. He was walking In the churchyard while a grave was being dng when the •exton cast up a molderlng skull. The doctor idly took It up, and. In handling It, found a beadless nail driven Into K. this be managed to take ont and con ceal In his handkerchief. It wo srW dent to him that murder had been dona, He questioned the sexton and learned that the skull wo probably that of a certain man who was the proprietor of • brandy shop knd was a drunkard, be ing found dead In bed one morning after a night In which he had drunk two quarts of brandy. * "Had be a wife?” asked the doctor. “Yes." . “What character does she bear?” “8he bare a very good character, only the neighbors gossiped because she married tbe day after to.* h isbatk"* funeral. She still lives bore.** Tbe doctor soon called on the woman. Ho asked for and received the particu lars of the death of her flnf'husband. Suddenly opening his handkerchief, he showed Iter the telltale nail, asking to a loud voice: “Madam, do you know this nail?” ^ The woman was so surprised that she'confessed and was tried and exe cuted. ' Chamber Ian’s OeHe, Cholera and Diar rhoea Remedy. Bettor Than Three Doctors. “Thru years ago we had three doefors with our mile boy and evemhtaff that they could do seemed to vein. At tost when aH hope seamed to be gene we te- _ m using Onamherlutu's Colic, Cholera and DUtihoea Remedy aad la a tow hears he begae to Improve. Today he to as healthy a child «e paresUseoeld wtoh for."—Rr»*B J Johnston, Linton, Him, FOr sals by Jao M Kkta None to SJ**- “Any intereetlag legend* about hersr asked tbe tourist : , “No,’' returned tbs aattvs slowly: "ain't never seen any, though yen may find-’em If yon boat In the woodA” . Why? Johnny—Isn’t s tin ♦in^ mamma? hear to to Isn't made ef faff? The beginning ef wisdom Is net in th* mind, but la th* heart—Abbott , DOES... ... PAY? x This question is left exclusively’ to the ones who indulge in adver tising for decision, vertiae? If not, just step across the street to your neighbor who does and ask his opinion of it. If you think because your bu sineti is so small you cant afford it, you ’ ■ are simply mistaken. “Seein’is Believin.” If you have never tried it, suppose you do it for just a short while and you will always use PAlters Ink. Hie Press . t Walterboro . ' S.C V/ m** . "H* K* .‘V V i. \* \- S ',