University of South Carolina Libraries
^ i v : S;- 4 PROHIBITION DEPARTMENT. Edited by jas.e. peurifoy and w. w. smoak, jr. EDUCATING FOREIGNERS ON TEMPERANCE BY REV. 0. R. MIILER. A uumT pilu** itional t«*mi ^r-1 tori.ey or as ju<i«:o, during th^ The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of and has been made under ids per sonal superv ision bince its infancy. Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and ** Ju*t-a.s-go<Ml” are but Ex peri men ts that trifle with and endanger the health of luluuU and Children—Experience gainst Experiment. What Is CASTORIA Castoria 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 and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cured Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving health v and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea—The Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bean the Signature el :imc^ «•.tiu>!»lf.*M should be n • !e anioy^ the foreigners in our couei ry, particulary among the (•< nuaiirf and tli^se coming from beer-drinking countries. We h*\e i e* n altogether too in Silf- pas f nineteen years. I have kept a careful record of each case, and 1 have to say that in seventy-tlve out of the seventy- six whiskey was the excitiug cause.''—Mr. E. W.Chatiu. - eri'nt in this matter. We liavel^ Mr. John Bnrns, the British The Kind Yea Hare Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. NEWS FROM SNIDERS SCHOOL. Editor Press and Standard: Miss Ethel Odum visited her aunt, Mrs J B Padgett, Satur day and Sunday. We have quite a number of new pupils on roll now. Dr J B Padgett left yester day for Charleston. Miss I’annie Benton was the guest of Miss Maud Pad gett Sunday afternoon. Rev J I< Smith preached a very interesting sermon Sun day at Pine Grove. M iss Lizcic Herndon spent Friday night last with little Ethel Breland. M iss Sara Getsinger spent last Saturday with Nora Hern don. Eugene Kinard spent Sun day last with H O Herndon. Mrs G J Yarn and daughter, Miss Carrie, spent Sunday with Mrs G B Breland. P C Crosby paid Savannah a flying visit last week. . Cor. Ruffin, Nov 21. ATTENTION! Right About, Face Then forward, march to J M Witsell Supply Co. and get prices before you buy. We carry a very complete stock and will save you money on your purchases. We have 48 ladies black peticoats, value $1.25, will sell at 98 cents. Best apron gingham 7c. 20c oil cloth 15c. Rugs running from 50c to $1.75. Look at them, they are good values. Red Rust Proof Oats 82 l-2c. Appier Oats $1, something line. We have a large stock of underwear, which must move, come and see us, >ve will do the rest We are always on top in paying the highest prices for produce. J. M. Witsell Supply Co. ’Phone No. Gj Orangeburg Business College, Orangeburg, S. C. Grand fall opening Sept 21st to October 1st Thorough courses in book-keeping, penmanship, typewriting and short hand. Courses- completed in from three to five months. Write today for catalogue and terms. as-umed that “the German will have hi-j>cfer,’" but the German is jmt 1 reasonable a* other j>eo pie an l when shown the person al injury to him of beer drink ing, will siive it up. Many Ger mans have given up beer drink* ing af;er being in t! is country a few years. A special campaign should also he made among the Italians, the Jews, the Hungari ans ami other classes of foreign ers that might be mentioned. WHY XKKDKD. More direct and pos'tive tem- p?rance worn among foreigners, on a large scale, is urgent! j need ed, for th» y are coming to ocr country a million a year, with all their foreign ideas about li quor drinking, and we simply must reach them with temper ance ideas and facts, or all (em- perauce laws in this country will be jeopardized. They are not slow to learn the value of Amer ican citizenship, and an increaa- ing proportion of them every year are taking out citizenship papers and becoming eligible to vote. They have no idea of oar labor member of the Liberal cabinent, said uot^ long ago: “The fault 1 have to find with the working classes is the mean ness of their wants, Gie misery of their desires, the poverty of their aims, tastes, and ideals, fh-y could make a new heaven and earth for themselves with the $15,000,000 a week they waste on drink and various forms of gambling.” YOUR BOY V8. LICENSE. If you vote for license in order to get the saloon’s revenue to re duce your taxes, then you should be willing for your boy to pat ronize the saloon, for the saloons cannot ran without boys any more than a saw mill can ran without logs. If to get the sa loon’s revenue, yon vote for license, will yon contribute a boy to keep them running? Would you rather pay your tax es with yonr money or with your boy? Which?—National Advo cate . CONSUMPTIOH AHD ALCOHOL. From personal experience in handling pulmonary tuberculo- past history and traditions orjgjK, lam more than convinced the moral responsibility of citizenship. They vote as the demagogue tells them, or as the politician pays them. In many cities an 1 some States they easily hold ihe balance of power. that whiskey and liquor, in any form, are absolutely poisonous to the consumptive. Trying to cure consumption with whiskey is like trying to put ou' tire with kerosene.—John E. White, M. D., They are a dangerous class when i Colorado Springs, Col. sober; but they are much more dangerous when under the influ ence of liquor. They are the Ministers and other intelligent citizens when told that we have an anti cigarette law say. Why inflammable material that feeds uo t publish it in the papers as the flame of the serious riots so often occuring in all our large cities. MlCIUOAX “u” AOAIN8T DR1XKIXC. CLUBS. The faculty of th* University many do not know we have such a law? So please once more give space for this. LAW PROHIBITING THE SALE OE CI- C.ARKTTKS TO MINORS. Sec . 329 It shall not be law of Michigan has adopted strong^ for any pfer80n of per90Ilgi resolutions condf inning theprac. e qi, er hii nge |f or themselves, tice on the part of students meet- j () ge j|^ f uru j R |^ give, or provide ing in balls attached to or c° n * | aU y m j nor or i n j uorg? under the nected with saloons or drinking-r a g e 0 f e jgqj een y earg ^ w i(^ c j. places. Student clubs which are g . ire t t8j TOBACCO, or CIGAU- organized for the purpose °f fcTTE paper, or any substitute caid parties, drinking, and high t |, ere f or . tf life, have been absolutely con*. Any person or persons violat- detnned. One of the a PP er jug the provisions of the pre classmen’s clubs has been dissolv-1 ceedlng section, either in person, ed by order of the faculty, and | ^ or j n any other" way, the members have beeu forbid den to join any other organiza tion. A'stroug fightis to be de terminedly waged against drink ing among A mf Arbor students. SEVENTY-FIVE OUT OF SEVENTY-SIX. On December 12, 1905, 1 was at Mound City, Pulaski County, 111. There was a murder case on trial before Circuit Judge Bntler, of Cairo. At the close of the trial tho ju Ige in icndoring his decision s«i l: “The case at bar is tho soviMiiy-sixth murder case I have trie i, either as State’s ai- sbali be held aud deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon in dictment aud conviction there for shall be punished by a tine net exceeding one hundred -.dol lars, nor less than tweuty-five dollars, or by imprisonment fora term of not mere than one year, not less nhan two months, or both in the discretion of the court; one-half of the tine im posed to be paid to the informer of the otfViiee. and the other half to be paid 10 tho treasurer of the county iu which such conviction shall be had. TO MEET IN COLUMBIA. Spartanburg,Nov. 23 Eiitor; Instead of writing each minister of the dilFerent denominations in S »uth Gar dim « personal letter, p’eafe Allow me through your paper to give thnni notice con cerning our Prohibition Conven tion soon to be held in Columbia. First of all, we want the minis ters of every Christian church in the State to l>e present, and help us to mike this the greatest meeting «.f the kind ever held iu South Carolina. Brethren, get a few good men iu your commu nity together, and arrange, not only to oome yourself, bat to bring others ^witb yoa to repre ss t the ooanty in which, joa live. Several noted Speaker* will be on hand, end a public mass meeting will be htld Thurs day evening begining at 7:30 o’oiock in the Hall of the House of Representatives December the 3rd. We hope for a full attend ance at this meeting. We will meet again iu the same Hall Friday morning December the 4ttiq>t niue o’clock to attend to the important busiuess coming berore tue bedy. Let every man interested iu the cause of State wide Prohibition think about it, talk about it, pray about it, and see to it, that several good men ere sent to this Convention as delegates from the county in which he resides. J. L. Harley, State Supt., Anti-Saloon League of S. G. Fall Announcement. I beg to announce to my friends and patrons that I have one of the most o complete and fashionable lines of Men’s and Boy’s Clothing ever offered in Wal- terboro. Men’s Suits - ' - $4 to $18. Boy’s Suits' - - $1.50 to $6 Children and Ladies Cloaks. Especial bargains in men’s hats. We will take pleasure in showing you our stock. Colne to see us. A suspicious parent makes artful child.—Haliburton. The New Clothing Store. ABOUT ADVERTISING—NO. 2 The Dollar That Can’t Be Spent By Herbert Kaufman Every dollar spent in advertising is not only a seed dollar which growj a profit for the merchant but is actually retained by him even after he has paid it to the publisher. Advertising creates a good will worth the cost of the publicity. It actually costs nothing. While it uses funds it does not use them up. It helps the founder of a business to grow rich and at the same time keeps his business from not dying when he does. It eliminates the personal equation. It per petuates confidence in the store and makes it possible for a merchant to withdraw from busi ness without having the profits of the business withdrawn from him. It changes a name to an institution—an institution that will survive after the death of its builder. It is really an insurance policy which costs nothing—pays a premium each year instead of calling for one, and renders it possible to change the entire personnel of a business without disturbing its prosperity. Advertising renders the business stronger than the man—independent of his presence. It permanentizes systems of merchandising, the track of which is left for others to follow. A business which is not advertised must rely upon the personality of its proprietor, and personality in business is a decreasing factor. .The public does not want to know the man who owns the store—it isn't interested in him, but in his goods. When an unadvertised business is sold it is only worth as much as its stock of goods and fixtures. There is no good will to be paid for—it does not exist—it has not been created. The name over the door means noth ing except to the limited stream ot people from the immediate neighborhood, any of whom could tell you more about some store ten miles away which has regularly delivered its shop news to their breakfast tables. It is as jhortsighted for a man to build a business which dies with his death ot ceases with his inaction as it is unfair for him not to provide for the continuance of its income to his family. (Copyright, ms. by Triban* Company. Cfclaag*)