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. Tr ■ < * the press and stands tALTKRBORO, B. C. 3fnl Cbrieston Surprise . Bargain House. j;u KING STREET CHARLESTON, S. C. AND WALTERBORO BRANCH WALTERBORO, •SOUTH CAROLINA Attraction for This Week Only Special cut prices ori I^adiefi Shirt Waists, Corsets, and Corset Covers. Umierwjar, Ha’s, Hosery, Misses and Childrens’ Dresses, Etc. s> Gentlemen: You all are invited to come and see our Gents Depa tment of Clothing, Single Trousers, Straw Hats, Etc. I. S0BEL, Manager Walterboro Hranch WALTEKBOR^ • . . S. V\E BUY CHICKENS AND ECUS. 0 FP m yi \3j nSKOIXO TOT MO PIGS. ' At this Mason of yoar moat of. the sows have farrowed their «P#M Utters and it is very iinporumt tluA the little piles be kept in a thrifty Krowing condition and develosfi^ t* maturity at a minimum coat, fender around the farrowing pea made of poles or scantling about ten inches from the wall and eight inches from the floor will save the I lives of many little pigp and pre* I vent the how from crushing or In* 1 juring them. I Cniil the pigs are a month old I the only way of feeding them in -through the mother and the amount of milk given by the sow j has a decided effect on the future I development of the younj. i Our plan of handling hogs &: j (Memnon college in to keep the sow ! with young pigH in the farrowing pen which has a small lot adjoining for three or four weeks after far rowing. then turn them out on green rye, «1over. a:id bermttua grass pasture or rape, which are the only gr«*eti cn ps we ha\e at present Separate small movable house s are prov| !«d for each how and in 'Addition to the feed given the sow, which loiisists of a lit tle corn and win at middlings, the pigs are fed in separate pens on Why are emr * it is a strango thing to me that no many town folkn think country people are not mad* of qnlt* ns goeni clay as they nr*. It la n fact about it. Why, I cannot say. When I was a little girl about thirteen years old my two sisters, - my oldest brother and I used to go to the city to stud)* music. 1 rb- niemWr very distinctly three little girls who studied piano under the same teacher. Quite well I re member the superior air those lit tle girls wore when around thip Mil !e country girl. I was very shy end timid, sensitive as most little country girls are I shall never forget one little conversation we huo They asked me why 1 did not com to their graded school. I re- ■ | pii* <1 ih.tt I hoped to enter their, school the next session. Thej* srnil- cd knowingly at each other and tlo t. a Led what grade did I aup- p v | would enter, i told them D 1 I v in;*' d to make the^ seventh. (Th> wire in the sixth, but I tin! noi k.ii.w it.t A anile rf scorn spii. d o\er their faces, but their onv\ r« ply w as "Tniph". How all tin -e suntlie smiles pierced my WE CAkRY A COMPLETE LINE OF GENERAL MERCHANDISE,, FARMING IMPLEMENTS, WIRE FENCING, BUGGIES, WAGONS, ETC. MANUFACTURERS AGENTS FOR Peering Mower*, Hay Rake*. Reaping attachments. Binders, Shredders, Hay Presses, (irits Mills, Planing Machines, Boilers, Steam and Gasoline Engines, Gin nery Outfits. A FULL.LINE OF PEERING REPAIRS AND BINDER TWINE (Ve respectfully solicit your patronage ami assure you the beat of treatment Yours Faithfully, YARN BROS.ie©. MOSELLE. S. C. SMOAKS. s. C. The Motive Th^t Gives the Same Cioods tor L< ss Money—Mor** f»«x*ds for Same Money m sic I! $3.50 Value for Only $1.50 Xevt'i* bufort* Imyo you lintl the op- portmiity to buy 4.-tour-4 hijrh ptpfivs tor. ihe price ot one. Think of it, four papers for the price of one, with a dandy premium thrown in extra. This is positively the best clubbing offer that you have ever seen. The Progressive Farmer v $1 'Hi Every Womans Magazine .? The National Poultry Journal ‘ oo The Press and Stand aril 1 'j 0 One Ppir 8inch “Ever Sharp Shears,” •'** 3 skim milk and middlings made j chiMi, h heart. 1 look hack at it into a thin slop, and if no milk iaiall nnw, and smile at the bigness available use mdidlings and ground of it then. y 1 or six parts ground coyn The next session I entered the j and c>tie pari tankage. The little At • >il!e tiraded school, 1 stood t pigs also learn to eat tlo* tjreen feed the . .amimkiions but 1 never made , the seventh grade, for lo, tliey put J no* Hi i lo* tig ih. My little friends (?i of tlo* previous year, and I still had the same music teacher but i| ey said nothing further about m> grade. The second year while then* two of these little friends You May Have Them Total, ALL FOR $1.50 The Progressive Fanner & Gazette of Raleisb. N. C. The Progressive Farmer is made in the South, by Southern men, and deals with Southern conditions— the conditions you are inter- esud in. The j o icy 6f The Progressive Farmer is to give to the farmers of the South a paper that will help them in every branch of work. It is then one com plete Southern farm paper - the paper made for you. Regular price $1.00. This offer good for new hubcenp- tions only. Cotton Seed Meal and Hulls for ' * r . ._ ; Horses and Moles. fc-' . .. ' I* • # . Cotton seed meal as used for ail kinds of cattle hogs, sheep, „ „ , and eoats, is already so well established as to need no com- (?t were expelled. j ^ / i Nimii never forget my first day men:. But it is not so well known thal cotton seed meal is of course, curious. The ciiiid-; ^q uall V vnluahle as a food for horses and mules. 1 he eminent >iiij.rUd and stood off Dr. Tail Butler, of the North Carolina Experimental Station, a recognized authority on animal feeding, says in speaking of i - a proper ration for work horses and mules, wou.d rather any of the standard coal tar pro- fy*o,u the country, and therefore, ducts used for the purpose. Farm ers must not forget that size is largely the result of feed as well time iliat Leonid run heck to the as Inheritance, and while the pig •’country, lay my head in mother na- 1 pounds cf Oats. Com is a gOO(T Horse feed, but we art; wasting tun s lap and cry myself to sleep. pyllion dol : ars per year in North Carolina in feeding an and when two months ofd are wean ed. Haring learne.j to eat well they will feel the loss of their mothers very little nor are their digestive organs deranged by ;*ny sudden change «»f feed. , Tills system of feeding is rbntin- I u« d until the early sorghum. Span- i ish peanuts, and later soy bean j lots are ready and the corn and peas. It is important that cow and, ret* a lid ! one r the pigs be given plenty of clean water and shade and kept free from lice by using any* fheap heavy oil or a five per Cent, solution of i t»r friendship and welcome. 1 was a lad rt me from afnr. Not mie up to offer me the hand ins*.inted. oh. the agony of those j hive two pounds of cotton seedjmeal than four pounds ol corn; first few da>«. i wished many a j wou | ( j rat her have two pounds of cotton seed meal than four may inherit large size. It renuir** constant, liberal feeding to deviMop it. In our experiments this y n ar we 1 this aloofness were inaiciuK j r a » r* t* • • u j are ,rra„ c .n R .. ...ermine me nm» ,rr«n,er be,ter „rl. Prom Ib.l Hon. H. C. Hammond, of Au«U»ta. Ga.. the d,n,n K u, S hed ber of p«»unds of pork per pore j ,i ft y to this i have espoused the I breeder of fine horses, says, “Cotton seed meal mikes the dry crops •easily grown in thi. state. tia ve given my life to uplift them | ration of the horse go down, and wha( is more important, go Wo would also be gtad to get in to broaden their horizon, to wid*n through; so I have come to the belief that aside from its won* touch with farmers who are feed- their vision, and remove their ob- ing pigs this summer. Istacles. PROF. A. SMITH. Put every cloud has its silvery lining. All these sinister smiles and all com ration.’' making me a MKS. KI.KIN KNTKKTAINS. Ibdiglitful “At llonH*’* in •H«**««r of Mrs. K. T. H. Shaffer. A very enjoyable afternoon in a social way, was spent Wednesday at the home of Mrs. Jno. M. Klien National Poultry Journal r Published in “Old Virginia,” the bar ner poultry state, a recognized author p wa )i I y»J 0W | M J ^ , ity on poultry raising. There is hi) 1 — • money in poultry, when moderr 1“^ I methods are used. Give vour boys ant I firls a hance to do something foi I themselves .and they wilt be bettei I boys and girls. One woman made J $500.00 from her chickens last year. * REGULAR PRICE .50 A YEAR. Every Womans Magazine. i These f**w days hud their effect on my whole school career. I determiu- Ud to show these children that the heart and brain of even a counl ry girl could cope with theirs, and, when I graduated from Abbeville ('•raded school I believe I had prov en this. Some of my dearest treas ures today are recommendations from every teacher of those days. The occasion being a reception giv- j llB t the other day I had a letter derful nutritive value, cotton seed meal, with the aid it gives to the peristaltic movement in the horse, is worth, its cofct many times over,’ 1 * # FOR SALE AT THE Walterboro Oil Mill ' THE YEAR. from one of my beloved old prof- fi ssors telling me that he had read religiously all that was said about me in the papers. Oh, the joy of knowing that after all these years I am still remembered b>->r en in honor of Mrs. E. T. H. Shaff er, the accomplished bride of Mr E. T I/. Shaffer, on© of Walter boro's prominent buslneflk men. a y luv tatlons were issued to about ion ladies. Delightful fruit punch, ! t,.jic|) e rg Q f those days. vUkc end eon feet lonery were di*-- One of the little girls of those I eused dying the afternoon. sehobl days was at *he convention Those teceivlng in the parlor 0 f the 8. C. Federation of Women’s were Mrs. E. T. H. Shaffer. Mrs. Clubs recently In Columbia. I had 1.. \V. .dcTetr, Mrs. A. H. Wlchma*i. given n»y> addreus and several of Mrs. A. J. Anderson, Mias Annie | the ^tlub women were around me. K. Savage. Mrs. M. P. Howell, Jr. i inviting me to come to their citlea presided at the put.cn howl, b^lflu to give this same address and say- assisted l*y the following ladies Misses Katherine Howetl. Mattie V.li'.re vm-.ieehe, > elite McTeer. Gladys Wtchman. and in the dining ' gushingly told me that she Ing some extraordinary things, when this little girl of the by gone days, a woman now, came up and very waa Legal Blanks, School Books, Ink, Writing Tablets for Sale Here ' .# THE PRESS AND STANDARD mltmm 4>jM • i , ' > 'J Uei ’ \ f/k | d J • * I One of the best woman's and home publi cations of the whole country. Every ismie is chuck full of good things. The depart ment of fashions not only furnishes the latest styles, but suggests how best to make over jour old dresg for little money; shows you how to dress your children cheaply and well. It has a department of cooking, a department for boys and girls, and each issue also con tains several short stories in addition to the feature aerial stories.... REGULAR PRICE 50 CENTS. This astonishing oftcr will be kept Open only a short time. Take advantage of it and send your order *> • Q today. The Press and Sandard, w«iterbofo. s. c. IOI room Mrs H. Puerifoy, Mrs, J. M. leiliwf" Mrs. A. C. vonLehe. This ropm was beautifully decorated J*we«*t pens being the flowers used, whJIe pihns and ferns were much !n evidence. Those present were: fra. K. T. H. Shaffer. Mrs. E. M. Speights of Greenville. Mrs. M.« F Howell, Mrs M H. Howell. Mrs. W. p. Murphy, Mrs. B. M. Jones. Mrs. J. B. Liles, Mrs. C. G Hen- derson, Mrs.L v W. McTeer, Mrs. A. H. Wlchman, Mrs. A. C. vonI>*he, Mrs. C. d. Anderson, Mrs. C. H. KsDorn, Mrs. T. P. Baker, Mrs. J. ' E. Puerifoy, Mrs. W. E. Fraser. Mrs W. C. Glover, Mrs. V. W. Davis. Mrs. A. J. Anderson, -Mrs. E. I,. Halsey. Mrs. H. H. McKeithan, Mrs. M. C. Flsfcburne. Mrs. J. L. Farm- jer.. Mrs. W. J. Flshhorne, Mrs. Jno. H. Peurifoy, Mrs. o Ilt'iwn, Mrs. 0. D. C. Adams. Mrs. D. B Black Mrm. tt P. M. Murray. Mrs. N. G. Mor- Hplland. Misses Belle and May rail, Mrs. W. B. Ackerman. Mrs. Neyle. Grace Brown, Leonie Padgett Lillian Farmer. Ruth Harrington, j Edna Barr*. Annie Galloway, Kath arine Howell, Nellie and Edna Mc- | Teer Gladys Wichnaa Mattie Vance vonLehe, Anal* flax Oh, of t A veteran newspaper man one* said that he never read a copy of ...*r? She'a not In your set". P’o.d ot m, U..! l h.d pulho , 0 . «ll* l.Tm, h,,rt* *Ah. lltlle «lrl. jfllntl I »ond,r who In Ihl. world . hi* pnprr ntUr-U lind b«,n prlnUd, I don't need you now. I needed >tju in those trying days of Why ‘’hlldren. l looked at her straight didn't you shake hands with me replied, “I spoke to her be- Isn’t It strange that when . ^t* 1 '** * Know her. There t not a then?" we need help no one is willing to give It? And when we are beyond need the world Is willing to help. I wish people could be bigger and not so plg-hesded and narrow. I wish people copld learn that cost ly Clothes and gracefulness do not always cover a pure soul or com- laon sense, that a man is a man no matter where he comes from, that there are both great and small peo ple In the city as well aa in the country, and that after . all. true 'is too good to speak to one bf God's; and we are Inclined to believe that*' It Is a pretty good rule to follow,, Nothing is more distressing to' A newspaper man than to pick up a copy of his paper after th«f entire edition has been printed, and find Itjull of errors. It is a record pass Ing Into history and the fact that t% cannot be recalled or corrected la both humiliating apd distressing to the ‘ man who takes a pride In ' ■*" his handiwork.' The ambitious publisher wants to issue his paper on time and there are days In the newspaper office when the hours ar* man woman or child in Aiken Coun ty too poor for me to speak to. Now, it} you don't like my policies, you can get anotker friend." And she knew that 1 meant just what • ■*« id. If there Is one -thing In creation that wakes my very sofil sick It,, is the fcirl or boy. the man or woman, mno is forrirer conscious that he o* she i. s« much better Ihdn some body else i always analyze such people anil find that they are al- character, no matter where It is. Is w ays suffering from one or both of i too short to crowd lo all the dutie* the only thing that counts In the I,,< * l**tl'**lng diseases: brainless-.,^ pence something mvust end. ; ht'ss or t-a-lal Insecurity. . neglected, and if it sho.uUl hap- 1 believe that 1 will live to see j I hop* the day will come when pen to be the proofs the issue I* the dny when the man on the farm we will all know that. [likely to contain embarcassing er- wlll be the prince of the South. JK:nd hearts are more than corc$- rors which never escape the atten- There are so many queer no- nets, and simple faith than Norman Mon of the hypercritical reader. If tlons about things. I remember jb <d And that when the rich 1 the reading public had a better not long ago, I was on the streets and poor, the city gnd country folks knowledge of the manifold duUe* ot talllag to a young lady when a poo meet together we realize that the the average newspaper warker they girl passed by I said "good morn- ’ dear God made us all. , would be Isas inclined to critic!** lag" In my cheeriest way. My friend * Marfe Ramuella Cromer. ^ him for his apparent shortcoming* Why are you speaking to —Aiken Sentinel. i—Dillon, Herald. ’I ; II ft