University of South Carolina Libraries
W 1 4 ' M Watch It Grow The growth of this Bank since its organization has been marvelous. This is due to the. conh- . ^ dence it has won in the minds of the people. Help us make this month another record-breaker. One Dollar Opens an Account FIRST NATIONAL^ BANK MISSGUOYSWICIWANENTER-1J|| E IMPERIAL PRINCESS FORME KEN S'WiwJtto AeiyrfiaT NO MORE GOODS I HAVE • i, . • 0 Ihe second meetiutf of the card club recently organised by the young folks in town, was held Thursday evening at jthe home of Miss Gladys Wicbman. This is one of a series of delightful evenings, to be enjoyed by the members. The young ladies will entertain in turn. .Mass Wiohm&n proved herself a charming hostess. Progressive Whist was played. pelightful fruit punch and salads were served during the evening. M G Gruber was the winner of th.c prize. Ihuse prem*nt were: Misses Catherine Howell, Lillian Farmer, F<dna I Jarre, Annie Galloway, Ruth Huntington. Billie Strobel, Gladys Wichman, Kmmie Strobel. Marshall Gruber, Irving Fishhume, W. B. Porcher, F. P. Wichman, Julius I»emacks, Albert Wichman, Daniel ft JVurifoy, and Asher Howell. • ^ SCHOOL ENTERTAINMENT. Quite an interesting program was given at the School Auditorium on last Friday evening. The drilla by the girls and boga of the second and third grades wear welt executed and exhibited carefull training on part of Miss leone Padgett, the teacher of these grades. ‘The Courtship of Miles Standish drew applause from 1 the large audience in attendance. The leading characters were Miss May Price as Priscilla, Roper Lar sen aa Miles Standsih, and Jease DeTreville as John Alden. All per formed their parts creditably. A nice sum was realised for the purchase of much needed window shades. A more extended entertainment will be given at an early date for the piano fund. IF IT ITCHES WILL CURE IT IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE UNITED STATES. For the District of South Carolina, In Bankruptcy. IN l HE MATTEK OF 0 M HODUfcS, U*nkrnpi. To the cmlitot* of 0 M Hot'geii, of Msioskt, in the couu. - (' ilelou «ud iM^tt'Ol n hAptSlmt NOTIOB IH IIKKEBY GIVEN, Thv <ui the hth <tsv oi . T %uu!iry, A I) 1B11 M HcdKot. w a » rtu'v adjudt «ato<; haiibri p'.snd that the tirst m -«( ing of his creditor* will b* iirld a 1 my ot!i. c in Orangt’btrg S «f. on the th’td •'ay <-f March, A 0. 1911, at o'd >ck A M, st which t ni» he raid creditor# may attnit, pruve IS'-ir dairt's, appoint s trir.o-*, examine the Bankrupt srd trsn>sct each other bi«i as-* M mev properly (V>me itefore Mill moeu g. Notice ie farther seven tb«r at this meeting appbestinu wtd be mad* fur aa ordar for sale of both real and aersooal property. JNO d BOWelAN, JB, - Rpadal Referee in Benhraptoy Salad Fabroary, 20, lt)ll. SOME INTE1ESTING FACTS ABOUT THE HANDSOME STEEL RANGE TO BE GIVEN AWAT IN THE. PRESS AND! STANDARD CONTEST. W«b have hoard so many expres sions of praise and approval of the Imperial Princes* $ee! Range offered by The Press and Standard in their great popularity voting con test that we feel sure that the pub- Jiahers could .not have selected a more suitable or a more desirable priz*. These ranges have won for them selves a national reputatioi) and a warm place in the hearts of house wives from Maine to California. They are constructed on scientific principles, in a modern factory em ploying only skilled workmen; and using only the beet materials. There are no gaping joints to cheek the draught or cool the oven. The body and top rim are formed of a single plate of steel without a joint. Air leika in the Are box watte fuel. In the ordinary raage there are many opening* for air to get in. The old way ia to cast the top in separate' pfetea and boltit to the steel body using putty to fill the cracks. A joint is a weak spgt. The putty dries and falls out, the casting warps away from the steel, cold air deaden* the fire, cools the oven and astea the fuel. The Princess range has no joints to open up after a few months usage. It will always wire the same good, satisfactory service it does when new. These ranges have built up an enviable reputation for the Manu facturers Agents. The Brown* Furni ture A Hardware Co., of Walterboro, S.C. These gentlemen justly deserve the high esteem and large patronage whlfeh they hold in this community. Jackson Livery and Transfer Company. Fine Livery, Wagons, and Hacks for hire at all hours. Wal.erboro, S. C. A man ought not to lie shot or put in an asylum just because he orders goods away from home from a catalogue house. He only needs to be taught that he can buy better and CHEAPER at home. Then there’s no freight to pay; he can see what he buys before he pays out his money; he is sure of getting reliable, known brands of goods. - And we are here 365 days a year to make Good on what we sty and sell. A. Wichman & Son, President Taft’s Last Message touched on hygienic conditions and sanitation in the public’s interest, and other elements of safety and safeguards. Just as important in its way is the issue of safe- guirding the banking interests of the people. And the very best safeguard is the bankers reputa tion for probity, and sound business dealing. ^ We are prepired to render you such character- service in banking. “Everything in banking” and every courtesy. COLLETON BANKING COMPANY. J F. LUCAS, President. R. L. FRASER, CASIItEK. WALTERBORO, SOUTH CAROLINA ..W-'W • WOMAN’S DEPARTMENT -BY- M1SS H. E. MALONE c * * THE TEACHER’S CREED. A “teacher’s creed” is. thus stated by Edwin Osgood Grover: “I believe in boys and girls, the men and women of a great to morrow; that whatsoever the boy soweth the man shall reap. I be lieve in the curse of ignorance, the efficacy of schools—in the dignity of teaching, and in . the divine joy of serving aifother. I believe in wisdom as revealed in human lives, aa well aa in the pages of a printed book; in les sons taught, not so much by pre cept as by example; in ability to work with the hands, as well as to think with the head; in every thing that makes life large and lovely. I believe in beauty in the achhoolroom, in the home, in daily life, and the out-of-doors. I believe in laughter, in love, and in all ideals and distant hopes that lure ua on. I believe that every hour of every day we receive a just reward for all we are all we do. 1 believe exgected^to are all we do. 1 Deiieve in tne exquisitely, painstakingly, setf- present and ita opportunities, in denyingly) less for training a will eventually come right—that “we shall find again what we thought we had lost/* apd that has troubled and harassed and hindered will pass away aa the mists of the morning. Members of the teachers’ pro fession, we hear it said some times (and perhaps truly) that that “teaching ia a noble work— but a very poor busineea;” yet it seems to me that (if we must choose) we are more concerned with the first, than the last clauso—the making of a life, than the making of a dollar. If we all see to it that our work ia “noble” (for certain important particulars it has fallen short of that mark) then we can justly demand what perhaps, under such conditions, would come any way—a “noble” salary. For the world is waking up to the im portance of the teacher’s office, and that it is a shame to give a teacher (who ia qualify herself so the future and its promise, and in the divine joy of living.” We are tempted to say, who can express his faith better? It is a living creed, dictated by an optimism in which there ia noth ing unreal. There is nothing unreal—and yet.there is much that is still un realized. It opens a vista to a Kingdom of Light that may be our own—but we can not speak of it with certitude, for its sym- child in intellectual and moral things than to the servant who prepares our meal*. Such a con dition suits ill with a favorite phrase, “the dignity of teach ing!” We Fit the Shoe to Foot, Not the Foot to the SHOE the bol is still x, the unknown uuanti- • l r ty, and we have to both make | Augustus \\ right for Men and take it C W WARREN ILL. Ma*hxwvi!Ie Feb. 20, Special: The mr-Tiy friends of C. W. Warren will regret ta learn that he ia quite ill »t h»s home at Mashawville. He has been juile unwell since his wife died some weeks ago. Two weeks ago pneumonia set in and at this time he ia quite ill. CORN AND FEED MILL-We have opened at Grace A Warren lot a mill for grinding corn, and any kind of read. We are grinding every Saturday. We solicit your busioeas, Blocker ft Jordan. That “wisdom revealed in daily lives,” that “teaching by example rather than by pre cept,” that beauty in . daily life and in th^ home—how far we fall short in these things;—and yet so long as we are blessed with a saving sense of our short comings, we need pot be cut off from the beautiful Hope that, in the end, we shall attain ail that we have striven for. The resolution to w’ork daily for the realization of every article of this teacher’s creed is, I am sure, the prerequksite to the success of the teacher in the completest and fullest sense; r n i she who is embued will) such a spirit, will be a real uplifting power, not only in the school room, but in that larger fife of which the schoolroom is but a put - out of which it came, and into which it* flows. She will know the blessedness of that inner feeling of rightness which is the best guarantee that all outward things $1.75 to $4.00 Ladies . $1.25 to $3.50 Wolfe Bros. Shoes $2.95 to $4.00 NONE BETTER MADE N KXT * time you walk by the store, we wish you’d stop a minute and take a hx)k at Big Ben. He’s the finest sleepme- ter made—-the best looking —the best built — the best running. You needn’t take our word for it, we keep hi*r; in the window; you can see for yourself. $2.50 TMatathccladlrWr are aO***- \ aria* la *r aiaawun 1 S. Film’s Jewelry Store, W \LTERBORO AND ALLENDALE. S. C. J Spring' Clothing I have just received a large shipment of New Spring Clothing for Men, Women and Children. ’ By purchasing in large quanti ties I am able to sell these goods at very low prices. Come and see my display of Men’s Spring Suits, Extra Trousers, Ladies’ Coat Suits, Voile Skirts, Panama Skirts and Children’s Dresses. All new goods. Big Bargain*. It will pay you to see my stock before you buy. FARMERS BARGAIN UNION HOUSE LEARN AUTOMOBILE BUSINESS Take a thirty days’yPracti'al course in our well equipped Machine Shops, and learn Automobile buxines* sad accept good poaitio—; Auto School, Charlotu..N. C. F racagfcaocaicaiaEa x=| D PATAPSCO F'LOUR (Superlative Patent) $6 per bbl JJ SOUTHERN BEAUTY FLOUR (Sold only by bbl.) [| D $6 25 per bbl. M FLOUR IN SACKS (24 s) I... 190c If D FLOUR per lb r 3 I-2C [J Heinz Tomato Soup __A.ioc VI Heinz Preserved Cherries (in jars) 85c U O SEED POTATOES—BLISS and ROSE fi Q D. M. FERRY & CO’S GARDEN SEED. Q D SWEEP EASY BROOMS. H ^ Call or ’phone us. |ft Jj Cash Mercantile Company h