The press and standard. [volume] (Walterboro, S.C.) 1890-current, December 16, 1908, Image 7
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JONES SWAMP DOTS.
Dec; 1.—Special. Kditcr
Press and Standard, will you
allow me space in your paper
to drop in a few dots.
The Farmers of this section
are about through harvesting
and cain grindings are ragin
(gee whiz) they are fine. Mr.
Editor don’t you enjoy sipping
the juice?
A cane grinding was very
much enjoyed at Mr. and Mrs.
L. A. Linders the past week
by old and young.
Among the guests was
Misses Amanda Prine and
Alice Sickes and brother,
Misses Della Langdale and
Lilia Beacji and brothers, Fur
man and Floyd, Mr. Lee Hut
son. Mrs. L. H. Beach, Mr.
and Mrs. J. K. Linder and
children, Mr. and Mrs. L. W.
Beach, Masters Ralph and
Walter Linder.
Mrs. J. K. Linder and Miss
Della Langdale were in town
shopping Saturday.
The Tiger Creek school No.
2. is progressing, under the
direction of the prominent and
efficient Teacher Miss Della
Langdale. She is one oi the
finest teachers Colleton afilords.
Among the guest who at
tended the Thanksgiving din
ner at Mr. • L. A. Linder’s
Thursday in honor of the
Bride and Groom was; Mrs.
J. K. Linder and children, Mr.
W. F. Copeland, English
Beach, L. W. Beach, Miss
Della Langdale, Mr. Lee Hut
son, Miss Eulah Hickman
Miss Aarabell Gatch Miss
Hattie Carter Halsie and
Bamie Langdale.
A few from Mt Carmel,
was Misses Eather Linder
Della Langdale, Mr. Tom
Linder and his bride, Furman
and Floyd Beach, Mrs. J. K.
Linder and daughter Doralee.
Well Mr. Editor we are
enjoying some fine weather
now.
A number of friends cele
brated Mr. Lee Hutson’s 15th
birthday last Fr day the 27th
of Nov.
Well Mr. Editor if this es
capes the waste basket I will
call again, I am,
“Kerchunkerwhy”
State of Ohio, t'itr of Toledo,
Lacas County.
Frank J Cheney makes oath that he
Is senior partner of the tirm of F J
Cheney & Co., doing business in the
City of Toledo, County and State
aforesaid, and that said firm vviU pay the
sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS
for each amt every case ot Ca arrh th*t
cannot be cure*! by the use of Hall's
Catarrh Cure. Frank J Cheney.
Sworn to before me and 8nb.eribetl in
tny presence, this G h day of December,
A D1886.
(Seal ) A W Gleason,
Notary Public.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken intern
ally, and acts directly on the blood and
muc jus surfaces of the system. Send
for testimonials free
F J Cheiey & Co., Toledo, O.
Sold by all Drugists, 75c.
Take Hall’s Family Pills for ocustipa-
tiou.
say take Cod Liver Oil—they
undoubtedly mean Scott’s
Emulsion.
It would he just as sensible
for them to prescribe Quinine
in its crude form as to pre
scribe Cod Liver Oil in its
natural state. In
Scott’s
Emulsion
the oil isjamilsified and made
easy to Ctke—easy to digest
and easy to be absorbed in to
the body—and is the most
natural and useful fatty food to
feed and nourish the wasted
body that is known in medicine
today.
Nothing can be found to take
its place. If you are run-down
you should take it.
P?5 t0 . r ? ) LOUIS COHEN AND COMPANY
Send this advertisement, together with name
of p^cr hi which It appears, your address and
four cents to cower postage, and we will send
you a “Complete Handy Atlas of the World."
SCOTT A BOWNE. 409 Peart St. New York
Chancellor Von Huelow seems to
have succeeded in silencing the
German Emperor. The Ananias
Club must "regret that vou Buelow
could not have been employed in thii
Country.
MARKED FOR DEATH.
“Three years a^o I was marked for
death. A grave-yard cough was tearing
my lungs to peces. Doctors failed to
help me, and hope had fled, wheu my
huabaud got Dr King’s New D •corery.
■ays Mm A O Williams, of Bac, Ky
•“The flrat dose helped me and improve
ment kept on until I ha J gained 58
pounds in weight and my health was
Folly restored ” This u.edt me holds
the world’s healing record tor cough*
and oolds and lung and throat diseases.
It prevents pneumonia Sold under
guarantee at J no M Kleins drug store.
50c and $1.00 Trial bottle free.
The more we understati.! life,
the better we comprehend death.
More than 1.000 persons ar«
employed in the manafacture of
Artificial pearls in the gulf of
lower California by a company
working under a conceasion from
the Mexican government.
Men who complain about the cost
of their wire* hat* this year must at
admit there i* something to
mw tor the money.
According to the proverb, trouble*
^almdy. Now that th*
i. m th*r* i* *tiU fth*
RAVENEL RIPPLES.
Ravenel, Dec. 5. Special:—
Mrs John Cordry and daugh
ter Miss Mamie, spent Mon
day with Mrs Bessie Chinnis.
Miss Bertha Beach is the
charming guest of her aunt
Mrs Fannie Beach.
Mr. Julius Anderson spent
Monday in Charleston.
Mr. Me Ruffin Barbie, an
efficient agent of Florence
spent Sunday in town with his
brother Mr. Fulton Barbie.
Miss Annubell Chaplin
spent the week’s end in Adam’s
Run with her pare its
F. C. Baldwin spent Thurs
day in Charleston,
Mrs Rosa Mack and her
cousin Miss Jody Cam of
Ofangeburg visited Mr and
Mrs F. C. Baldwin last week.
Misses Mamie Kennedy and
Gertie Rodgers spent Sunday
with friends near Meggetts. "
Mr. Steadman Hughes of
Charleston was the guest of
Messrs Brooks and Barbie on
last Sunday.
Miss Ida Seimers who
teaches the Matin school near
Adam s Run spent the week’s
end wiih Mrs Fannie Beach.
T. 1. Carter, of Savannah
Ga, who is interested in the
Oyster industry at Young’s
Island was the guest ot L, R.
Brooks this week.
Judge D. H. T owles spent
last week at Green Fond.
Mrs J. R. Rodgers and her
charming daughter Miss Ger
trude, spent a few days in
Charleston last week.
“Cherie”,
Medicine That Is Medicine.
“I have suffered a iro -l deal with me
lam and stoin*cb coumlainU, bat I
have uow found a re.no I v that keeps me
well, and that remedy Ms Electric Bit
ters: a medicine that is medicine for
stomach and liver tr mb’es, and for ran
down condition-,'' sivsvv-U Kleetler,
of Halliday, Ark. Electric Bitten parify
and enrich the bloo<i, tone up the nerree,
and impart vlg >r aud energy to the
weak. Your monev will be reloaded if
it fails to help you 50c at John M Klein
drag store. r
i
Full line Ladies and Gentle
men’s fine and heavy shoes
Cheap for cash. A beautiful
line calicoes, all fast colors.
38 inch Brilliantine only 40c
per yard.
42 inch Panama ofl’y 40 cents
per yard.'
W. B. CALDWELL
. Stephens X Roads.
a-
Good Cough Medicine for Children.
The season for coogba and colds it
now at hand and too much care cannot
be nted to protect the children. A
child ia ranch more likely to contract
diphtheria or scarlet fever whan he has
a cold The quicker voa onra his cold
the less tbs risk Chambertain’s Cough
Remedy is the sole reliance of many
mothers, and few of thoes who haeo
tried it are willing t« nsa any
Mrs F F tttarcber, of Rlpl*y, W V. says,
“I have never used anything other
Chamberlain’s Ooagh Remedy for my
children and it has always fHan good
1 This
THE-H8USE THAT WYES :you satisfaction: OR VOIR MONEY
232 &
e
The Largest Wholesale and Retail Mail Order House In The South
*, * v.
.V 4
< O
• ^ T
We cut fine piece goods for merchants in any length at wholesale prices.
WARM WINTER UNDERWEAR.
Wool
Value
Gents Heavy Cotton and
Mixed vests and Drawers.
$1.25. Special, each 98c.
Ladies Lace waists, trimmed with
Afedalines and Valedgings. Price
$2.50, 3.00, 3.75. up to $25.00.
Gents all wool vests and drawers,
(natural color). Fach $1.48.
Ladies Cotton and Wool Mixed vests,
Ribbed. Medium and Heavy weights.
Each 75c.
Ladies Cotton Ribbed vests and
drawers, light, medium and heavy
weights, each 49c.
Ladies light weight silk and wool
vests and drawers, each $1.00.
NLW WAIST STYLES.
Style, yes, all that it is possible to
put into a correctly made waist, but,
there’s service too, and lowness of
price, that quality considered, is little
short or astonishing and most pleas
in' 11 ' as well.
New T.ttteta Silk waists, in black and
Ladies White Linen Waists, some
plain tucked, others trimmed-with
colored embroidery 2.50 to $10.00.
FASCINATING FALL AND WIN
TER FABRICS.
44 inch Satin, striped Poplin black
and all colors, yard 1 •39-
45 inch Imported F'illet Voiley
blue, grey and brown, yard 1.25.
in
46 inch Satin Viola, black and alljthe
new colors. Yard 1.75.
We carry a large sssortment of Dress
Goods in plain weaves and fancy
mixtures in all the newest colors
12 i-2C, 15c, 25c, 29c, 39c, 48c, up to
3.50 yard.
SPECIAL.
Ladies Taffeta silk waists, black and
colors. Value 4.00. Special, each
FINEST DISPLAY OF LADIES
AND MISSES SUITS IN THE
STATE.
Ladies strictly Tailored suits in
Fancy mixtures. Would sell easily
at 12.00. Our price, suit 10.00.
I-adies and Misses Tailor-made suits
in plain Broad Cloth and Mansuit
r* ixtures. Suits that would retail
easily at 20.00. Our price
SU
my
JIT
15.00
AT $25.00.
We have an assortment of Ladies
and Misses suits in plain and fancy
striped Broad Cloths, plain ana fancy
Panamas and Herringbone stripes in
all the staple and fancy shades. The
largest assortment, and the greatest
takers in the South at the price.
Suit $25 00.
Every Month
I writes Mrs. E. Fournier of Lake Charles, La., “I
used to suffer from headache, backache, side ache,
pressing-down pains, and could hardhr walk. At
llast I took Caroui, and now I feel good all the time.
wCARDUl
It Will Help You
Cardui is a medicine that has boon found to act
. .1 ?«nr: roariu«>iiius,fL
Upon the cause of most womens pams, strengthen-* MI|NN t CO 86t
ing the weakened womanly organs, that suffer bc-M »r*«i3»o«c«.J»r
cause their work is too hard for them.
It is not a pain “killer,” but a true female
remedy, composed of purely vegetable ingredients,
perfectly harmless and recommended for all sick \yo-
|men, old or young. Try Cardui. Women’s Relief.
AT ALL DRUG STORES
The reason a man can ex
cuse his own extravagance is
he can’t forgive his family’s.
No infidel ever recanted on
his death bed; people who re
ran! are* convalescent.
60 YKAR6*
KXFKIKI6NCK
Patents
TRADC MARKS
CORVNMHTS AC.
AnrMMMnrttnf * skMrh and d.wriirtlnn ma?
— — *-— whctlior an
'nnimuntca-
ou I’atMiU
nutcklr aanartain our opinion free
IllTMItU
5i»n I. probably pnlenlabl
lion, tirieilyroiiDiteiitbtl. HANOI
Milt free. Oble.t nireiirjr fori
Vatenta taki-n tlirouirh Minin
rpreial notUt, without ebanre, lu
BOON
Ninriji patent..
A Co. receive
the
Scientific American.
A handunmely llln.trated weekly- I-anreet rtr-
rulatbm of any x-ieiitiao Journal. Teruia, 13 a
ear: four moiitba, |L bold by aU newadealerm
aeteroadw.,. New York
Dtftoti. D.C.
BU Waablnstoa. I
[Muscular Fairs Cured.
Any fool can tickle the soil
and something will grow, hut
the Intel)ttreii. fanner is blessed
with an abundance.
A D-muerou* Operation
ia the removal of ths appendix bv a sur
geon. Noons who tali**s Dr Kinif’s
New Life Pill* is ever subjected to this
frightful onWal They work so quietly
you ddh’t feel them. They cure c m-
stipatioa. headache, ht'lousness aud
malaria. 25c at Jno M Kein drug store.
The farmer who pays more for
a thing than it will cost him to
raise it on the farm is allowing
his profit to leak away .
. ‘ During the summer of 190JI I was
troubled with muscular pains in the
instep of my foot,” say* Mr 8 Pedlar, of
Toronto. Ont “At times It was bo
painful I could hardly walk. Chamher-
iaiu’s Pain Balm was recommended to
me, so I tiled it and was completely
cured by one small bottle. I have since
recommended It to several or my friends,
oil cf whom speak high’y of it.” For
sale by Jno M Klein.
Don’t strike out blindly; have
an object in view and try to
attain it.
You ahonld always remember that most
cough and cold cures are constipating
Yet the n»o*t important thing to do
when you have a cold is to move the
bowels You cannot promptlv cure a
cold until you do this. Kennedy’*
Laxative Coueh Syrup stops the cough
by allayi ig Inflammation of the throat
and lungs, and it drives the cold’ from
the system by gently moving the bowels.
Children like It for it tataes nearly as
good as maple sugar. Sold by W alter-
boro Drug Co
The intense Itching characteristic of
these ailments Is almost instantly allay
ed by Chamberlain’s Salve Many
severe canes have been cu r ed by it.
For tale by Jno M Kl* in.
Every miniBter hap hie favorite
hymn and every other man hap
his favorite her.
>
Hewaie o! Frequent Colds.
Give ue time aud
beoome virtuous.
we will all
Nearly everybody knows Du Witt’s t»U-
tit Early Risers are tbs bust pills mads.
Thsjars small, pisasaat surs LUUa
livsr pills. Sold by Waltsrboro Dm*
Oo..
Don’t shoot in the air; it's
For that Dull Feeling After Eating.
liuve nsed Chamberlain’s B.omach
and Liver Tablets for some lime, aud
can testify that they have done me
more good than any tablets I have
ever used. My trouble was a heavy
dull fueling after eating.—David Free-
man. Kempt, Nova ^cotta. Tbee^ablets
strengthen the stomach and improve
the digestion. They are far snpePor to
pills but cost no more Get a free sam-
pto at Jno M Klein’s drug store end are
what a splendid medicine It is
For Ecaema, Tetter and Balt Rheum.
If vs •hall always stop to
think before we speak -we will
discover that most of what we
were going to say is not worth
the breath it takaa to say it.
sals by Jno M Klein.
A succession of colds or a protracted
cold ts almost certain to end iu chronic
catarrh, from which few persons ever
wholly recover. Give every cold the
attention it deserves and you mav avoid
lhis disairreeable disease. How can
vou cure a cold? Why not try cham
berlain's Coi.gh Itemed vr It is highly
recommended. Mr* M White, of Butler,
Tenu , say*: “Several years ago I was
bothered with my throat sad longs
Someone told me of ChamberlstD’s
Cough Remedy. I began using it and it
relieved me at once Now my tlroat
anil lungs are *oand and well.” For
sale by J no M Klein
To know % hat to grow and hon
to grow it, is one of the most im
portant things to learn, and the
anion should be the active
promoter of this intelligence.
Every esse of bsekaebs, week beck,
Madder Inflammation and rheumatic
pales ledanaeroee If neglected, for each
troubles are nenriv alwnjre dne to weak
ike DeWlU r a
now ONE MAN MADE CHRISTMAS
HAPPIER
The suburbanites, riding back
and forth on a certain car line
that ran from a south end snbnrb
to the center of oar city, always
met a cheery smile and hearty
word from the motormen and
conductors of the line. Particu
larly would the “regulars’* won
der at the welcome given to a
dignified businees man who en
tered the car daily at a atop
made near his home. The secret
of the unusual deference paid
him baffled us. And only acci
dentally did I stumble upon the
answer.
*>
Coming up one Christmas day,
just at one o’clock, when moat
of the suburbanites, were seated
at tables that groaned with good
things, I saw this gentleman hail
the car at his step, hand the
motorman a big waiter, and with
a hearty “Merry Christmas”
turn back up the walk at his
home.
The conductor moved forward,
relieving the motorman, who sat
down on the step and poshed
aside a snowy napkin. Beneath
this I saw, as I peered through
the window, a large plate heaped
with every imaginable Christmas
goody—turkey and cranberries,
vegetables and salad. Beside
the plate stood a steaming cup
of coffee and a smoking piece of
plum pudding. It was all so
appetizing that 1 grew hungry
myself, and sympathized when
the conductor, standing at' the
crank, whistled’and saidi—
“Hurry, up, Bill. Iget mine
next trip. And Sleeks and Jim
said we were to get this car back
on the dot. They want their
dinners, too,” v . -
Here was the a-iswlr. Every
day, throngh cold and rain, aa
well as fsir weather, these men
served the banker.' On Christ
mas Day it was his tarn. And
they never forgot—all throngh
the long year.
—From thj December Ontou
Magazine.
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