The press and standard. [volume] (Walterboro, S.C.) 1890-current, May 10, 1911, Image 3

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a / • o Never before have we been able to <rive the values in Cloth ing that we are offering this season Never before have we been able to enjoy selling the Clothes that we are handling this season — Never before have we been able to please so many customers so early in the season Frankly speaking, we have the gre atest line of Clothing that has ever been in thissec- tion of the country - They are right in every respect (Quality, Style, Workmanship and better still, the price is right. You know we stand hack of every garment we sell caiyitford to do so, as we sell only the right kind - ran no risk when you select your Spring Suit here, them to suit everybody — — Young, Middle.aged^uid Old Beautiful Display . * of Millinery All the latest Stjles and Patterns. Prices to suit everybody. Our Milliner, who is an artistic trimmer, will be pleased t<» assist you in making your selec tion. H. ZAUN WALTER STREET WALTERBORO, S. C. We So you We have TWO CARS FURNITURE just arrived Two Car Loads of Furniture of all kinds. Call on us before buying. Can save you money Trunks, Suit Cases and Hand Satchels a Specialty. COLLETON CYPRESS COMPANY o . J. B. GLOVER, Manager. COLLETON, - SOUTH CAROLINA Ik (t Cohen Store L - • WOMAN’S DEPARTMENT by- MISS H. E. MALONE 0 0 HRADY’H PHOTOGRAPHS OF THK in this country, having studied PIVIL WAR. A discovery rich in value been recently made, of the greatest la France. He used to receive as much as one hundred dollars for a hm, single photograph When the war iroke out. fell uu the last afternoon of the battle of Gettysburg; and there lie the faces upturned as in a last ap peal to Heaven, the stark bodies, stripped of shoes and knapsacks, exposed unburied to the pitiless ele ments. it is a sight to make one realize the Christlessiiess of war. 1 One of the most striking pictures of the collection, and be It remem- brd that every picture is a por trait, is that of a young Confederate sharp-shooter who lies dead in ‘‘Iievil’s Den," a rooky hollow near Little Hound Top. Gettysburg A bullet from this place had killed General Weed, a Federal officer, when, like a flush, the guns of the whole battery were turned on | "Devil's Den"—and the picture shows .Ihe result. The. wasted form these are some of the most striking tographs. The class was Intensely of the young soldier lies among the and characteristic of the collee- interested, for all boys and girls like hollow of the rocks as If the frosts lion. Those confederate photos of- tlie kind of facts that they can see. of death had petrified It Into their ten and over nearly cost me my There was handsome picture of likeness. His gun leans at his side life, said Brady. jGeneral I^e, with his son General just where the right hand let go At the close of the war. Brady.'Cuatis I.«e on his right, and his when he fell. A stern smile over- who had put every cent of his for-'aide. Colonel Walter Taylor, on the shodows the face, as he rejoices thu tune into the venture, offered this left. In curious, yet lifelike, con- he has sent his foe before him; and inestimable collection to the Cnl- trast to the graceful and high-bred from beneath the frozen eyelids dar ted States government. But with i.ee. is the print of General U. 8. ness seems to steal. For him the so many overwhelming matter* Grant, a small, quiet looking, squar war is over. I clamoring for Immediate attention, shaped man, who sits apparent^ A Among other prints of interest when the government “THE STORE THAT MAKES GOOD.” J Rtul French Drip Coffee can not be made unless the cof fee itself is pre- j>ared, blended and roasted ac cording to the famous Trench, 'method. Use It Hurtled The World. the astounding claims were , gave—perhaps absorbed in his own thoughts, with!) saw less than twenty of the 3500. first made for Bucklina Arnica aalve * in e **’ er ^. *' 1 j could give —email heed; and Brady his patient wife and cheerful little I might mention the portrait of the but forty years of wonderful curea interest to the historian and to the not * 1 s»or , nit wit t &n> WJIH suffered a ! I* 18 * *° die in pov- boy. Who could realize that this Confederate spy. Mrs. Greenhow, an have proved them true, and every- r.. in ti.iu^ H« realized t at t an( j disappointment i' 1 modest man was the real center of her ilttel daughter, who were cast t where it is now known aa tha best gether ino a federal prison; and the salve on earth for Burns, Boils, teacher. « | icrty This was the unearthing of 350b bl* camera stc.s all things, a j n , gwaP d 0 f a New York hewipit (the mighty storm that convulsed ou original photographs of soldiers and in<1 fannot teI! ,1U ►■ h, but ihe trut j . The individual perisheg, | )U t the country nearly fifty years ago’ battelfields of the Civil War. which «nd the desire burned in him "to work |i vwa . and t h e memory of. There are scenes of prison, of biv had been buried away from the hand down to posterity the most knowledge of men for wellnigh half tcrurate story of the war in exlst- a century in an old garret in New ence" Brady never counted the York City. They were the work of cost either in money or danger He Mathew B. Brady, an artist whose md his camera penetrated every- powers with the camera amounted where; himself a Unionist, he yet to genius. He knew more about pho- took rearly as many pictures of Mathew Brady will be kept green by this priceless photographic his tory of the Groat War. against whose truth not one word can be said. A few days ago I examined, with my class in history, some large en- ambulance In which Jefferson Davis Scalds. Sores. Cuts, Bruises, sprains was conveyed as a prisoner through Swellings, Kcxeraa, Chapped hands ouae. of muster, of hospital, among the crowded streets of Macon by Fever Sores and Piles. OAly 25c. these prints; there la the picture bis Federal captors. at JoLn M. Klein’s. tography than any man of his time Confederates as of Yankees; at> d g ra ved prints taken from these pho- cf Powell would-be assassin of Sec retary Seward, and fellow-conspira tor with Booth, for whom the guard has come, to lead him to death; there Is a gruesome corner of the fatal wheat-field where so manyjbeen a secret. If these pictures are fair samples of the whole collection, it must in- "How to Look Young and Winsome’ deed be an invaluable addition to P a n*pblet One postal a ill bring it Inner hl.lor, o, Aoui the Great War which has heretofore H a i r Co, Savannah, Qa. 2 1 12t I • .1 hi f I li i I: 1 ■ : r AN IN VITA TION We cordiaTly invite you to come out and see us in our new quarters. We are well equipped to do a general banking business, having experienced men, capital and resources to back us up in accommodating the people. For our depositors, we have every protection that can be given by even the largest banks in the way of insurance and bonded officials. We pay a liberal rate of interest on balances left with us and you will profit by seeing us about your surplus money. Give as a Trial and Be Satisfied as to ihe Safety of Your Money BANK OF SMOAKS SMOAKS, S. C J. S. WILLIAMS, President; W. H. YARN, Vice-President; W. C PATRICK, JR.. Cashier. 1