The press and standard. [volume] (Walterboro, S.C.) 1890-current, June 14, 1911, Image 2
II It
SB
IsUadtoa. Jmmm. ». dfeUI: Edi
tor ProH ud ttfadard. Ac v« so
•d4om cm cojrthtaf i» rot paper
from Iclaadton, tboaght I woe Id
•‘pot opr c few dote.
After come rerjr flee reins, crops
ere looking splendid In this section
i' la not yet con-
We nri sorry to leern of the
illneM of Mrs. Henry> Rents. We
hope for her e speedy recovery.
Robert Slneeth end mother at
tended preaching at Cross Swcmp
last fourth Sunday.
The Rev.. Patrick dellvered^n very
able and Interesting sermon at Ad-
nah, Sunday afternoon.
Mrs. F. F. Caldaell of Orangeburg
Is visiting her parents, Mr. and )frs.
J. F. Rents.
Dr. L. B. Ken Ison < dentist of Var
vllle, was In this community a few
days last week on business.
The Rice Patch Sunday school Is
one worthy of mention as It Is the
moat flourishing Sunday school In
this community.
Miss Lillian Bishop, had special
business at Islandton last Saturday
afternoon. . s
Hurrah, for the liquor question.
We can see that there is a chance
and that it Is going to be abandon
ed soon.
Just here, 1 wish to say that In
some of our letters when printed,
there are often mistakes made, and
causes some folks to wonder how it
esme about, that such persons had
been seen here, when It was only
a mistake made by the printing, as
we suppose. In such cases we are
In loving rememheranee of our
brother,-. Harry W. Harvey who
departed this life Nov. 11, l»ld.
„ He was In his Aweaty-elghth year.
Hast In the bloom of manhood.
He leaves a mother, father four
sisters and two brothers, besides
a host of relatives and friends to
mourn his loss. No brother was
ever more gentle, loving and c sym
pathetic than he was. Dead, add.
so short a time ago he was with
hands ready and willing to aid and
cheer us. Oh, death stay thy hand.
Take not from ns those so young, td
full of charm. Death robbed our
home of the brightest Joy. Death
Is but a path that we must trod. He
was faithful as a son, loving as n
brother, and loya) to his friends.
Sleep on dear Harry and take
thy rest.'
We lofed thee, but God loved you
best.
Farewell Harry, but not forveer.
There will be a glorious dawn.
We shall meet to part, no never,
On that resurection morn.
A loving sister.
There Is one medicine that every
family should be provided with and
especially during the summer,
months; vis, Chamberlain’s Colic
Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. It
la almost certain to be needed. It
costs but a quarter. Can you afford
to be without it? For sale by all
dealers. *
FREE ROUND TRIP TO
CHARLESTON
The Retail Merchants Pay Your Fare.
Out-of-town shoppers may come to Charleston, stay from one to
five days attend the theatres, visit the Island resorts, etc, do their
buying and have their railroad fare paid for the round trip. The
only ronditiosn to be compiled with are: First, that your com!
purchases amount to $SB or more. Mecond, that you come
point twenty-five miles or more distant. Third, that your fare
not exceed 5 per cant of your total purchases. Fourth that you
buy a round trip ticket or get a receipt from y«»ur railrtUd
at vour home station, showing that you purchased a ticket.
The merchants of Chariestoa carry large and well assorted stocks.
The matter of selertloa Is easy; you liave a variety to choose from.
I'heir stocks are kept fresh by being replenished often. Prices
reasonable, considering qnalfty.
If yon cannot find Just what you want lu your home town,
you can always get It lu Charlestou. ' «
The following merchants are members of this reVaad/plaa and
will be very glad to serve yon:
* Art Stores.
Lnnneau’s Art Store
_ 2S8 King Street
Antiqae Furniture. ,
Morgenstern Fnrnlturs Company...
_ 12 Reid Street
Bakers.
Conjon's Bakery
_ ..... 1SS Rutledge Ave.
Book Stores.
Walker. Evans A Cogswell
— ..... .. ^ .... 3 Broad Street.
1’. | M l.cgerton. .IMM King Street
V* Carpets, Mattiaga, etc.
Mutual Carpet Company*
— 247 King Street.
China, Glass and Queen ware.
Charleston Crockery Company
_ 2M King Street.
Cigars and Tobacco.
Fplin Bros C< .... 260 King Street
Cloihlng aad (feats’ Furnishings.
Bentscancr A Vlsanskl
252 King St.
Hirsch-lsrae) Company .. .', ....
.King and Wentworth
Bluesteiu Bros..494-496 King St.
W. S. Cook Company. .332 King St.
M. Brown .‘'•out. .254-356 King St.
Bunov and Volaski... .395 King St.
Department "Stores
M tun bKOU A Sons
... ..... ..240-242 King Street.
l.,oult Cohen A Co
232 234 King St. end 203 Meeting
The Ken Ison Dry Goods Co
. 80-32 Hsael Street.
J. It. Read Co.. .. .£40 King Street.
Druggist.
Faragan Drug Co. 288-288 King St.
Fish and Oysters.
Terry Fish Co......133 Market St.
Florists.
Coanelly-McCarty Co
-. ..296 King Street.
Pkoentx Furniture Co..,
187-191 King Street.
Buell A Roberts..573 King Street.
A. G. Rhoder A Son
X59-S61 King Street.
Furniture and Dry Goods.
Buell A Roberts. .573 King Street.
Grocers.
J. H. Hesse, Montague nod Coming.
The John llurkamp Co
K!n;; and Broad Streets
uns. Bicycles, aad Sporting Goods.
The B. II. Wort hen Arms Co
.. 230 King Street
Hardware.
M. H. I.asarus
King and Haaaell Stree
A. McL Martin..363 King Street.
Strohecher A McDermld
287 King Street.
Ball Supply Cr. ...377 King Street
Jewelers.
Jas Alla'i A Co..285 King StrsaC
Carrington. Ihoxnas A Co
... .. 361 King Stroec.
Optician and Optical Supplies.
Parsons Optical Co... .244 King St.
Plaaos, Organs, Music
Seigllngs’s Music Store, 243 King St
Stoves, Cooking Utensils, Etc.
Mioals Stove Co
...King and Burns Lan
Shoe Stores.
Robert E. M irtln. .. . 256 King St.
II. J. Williams 248 King St.
Robert Martin..... 139 Market
A. A. Hlrscb 291 King
D. O’Brien A Sons..381 King
V.. F. Livingston... .388 King
St.
St.
St.
St.
Jacobs 8h« - Store. .610 King St.
Trunks and Bags.
Charleston Trunk Company...
... *. .... ....270 King Street.
Trunks and Office Supplies.
• #
Edward J. Man hr
•a... «•« —167 Masting Street.
Jasper W. Crosby n prominent
yonag business man of Ruffin,
In town Monday on business.
Rev. B. F. Hmlford^will fill the
regular appointments 'at Pta# Grove
chsrckjiext Satu may and Sunday.
Before taldag LyU* LFtakhm’*
—‘l cannot
through during the change
' hfe before I tried
din E. Pinkham’s
egetnble Com-
1 waalnsuck
nervous condition
ccoid not keep
till. My limbs
cold, I had
could not sleep
hU. 1 was finally
by two phys
icians that I also
a tumor. 1 read
one day of the wonderful cures made
by Lydia E. Finkham’s Vegetable
Compound and deckled to try it,
it has
has made me a well woman.
My neighbors and friends declare it
had worked a miracle for me. Lydia
E Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound la
worth its weight in gold for women
during this period of Ufa. If it will
help others you may publish my
tetten’*—Mrs. Nathan B. (Jreaton,
51 N. Main Street, Natick, Mass.
The Change of Life is the most criti
cal period of n woman’s existence.
Woseeur everywhere should remember
that then is no other remedy known
to ssedieinc that will so successfully
carry women through this trying
period as Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege
table Compound.
If ywnwnaM like special advice
About your cane write n confiden
tial letter ta Mrs. Pinkhana, at
Lynn, linen. Her advice in free*
a am
Under all i nndniaus death la
sad, but possibly net one has ever 1
say sms 3 so than
the uafsrtuaate killing of tho In
telligent, kind, bright and loveable
little Taylor Dnkes by bto first
LeRoy Platt, both neartag
their foarteentb year, which occur
red about n month ago.
It seems the ehUdreu were the
beet friends. The Dukes eKid wts
at Mr. Platt’s on an errand for
kts father uni !f seema ti e Halt
ihi!«l was tf>lng tr be qul‘* I. man
and thus In n “blglty” manner he
committed n dreadful deed, using
the ever ready weapon, a gun.
One bright life has been thus
ruthlessly cut off from all future
earthly pleasure to his loved ones.
His parents hearts are sorrowful.
On the other side of this terri
ble tragedy LeRoy Platt has ruin
ed his Ilfs forever, blighted his
own and his father’s great hopes,
npd cast a gloom of sadness over
his home that will forever haunt
them as a weird ghost, a restless
phantom.
The father’s heart will mean a
cross and his remaining days will
be a burden he will go to the
Great B*’vi nu in deep cci rr.'tion
with a esrt tu m » d as if a 1 eavy
acizht seif rh?Jt Mm.
The community then has lost its
influence: the \ roapects of • wo
boys that should have grown up to
stalwart manhood and have been
a blessing to the vicinity and all
those around.
Both famMes have the heart-felt
sympathy of all who knew them.
A FRIEND.
The lurrciudug Demead Fur H
With < or horse and male popula
tion increasing from 25,000,000 la
IkOo to 31.000.000 in 1910, or a
r. >11 million a year, it does not ap
pear that the horseless age la ma
terialising very fsoL
There are more uses for horses
and more horses to use today than
ever before mad the greater the pro
gress ta mechanical inventions, the
greater will be the .ternand for hors
»
la agriculture the increased use
of the horse for doisg farm work
keeps pace with the increase la
farm machinery. Modena methods
ns a means of economical agricul
tural production call tor more and
larger farm work stock and pros
pects for tho profitable breeding of
those animals especially In tbe Sou 4
are bright.
At present the mine of American
borsas and males exceeds that of
all our cereal crops bp nearly half
a billion dollars and tho combined
valne of cattle, hogs and sheep
by mors than a billion dollars.
Tbe American farmer owes a
great debt to tho farm work horse
and the male but lu the future bis
dependence on the farm machinery
and horse and mule power will be
greatly increased. This must "of
necessity apply with greater force
to tbe Sonthera fanner who has
been slow to profit by modern meth
ods of economical farm production.
Tbe Sooth must have mors *ann
work stock and to get It, mast
breed It. Since we could use three
times tbe horse power now used on
Southern farms, the passing of tho
horse to give way to tbe automobile
or other inveatloas need not trouble
tbe borne and male breeders of
tbe South.—Progressive Farmer.
Wto* PlghTVor Life.
It was a long and bloody battle
for life that was waged by James
h. Mershon, of Newark, N. J. of
which he writes: “1 had lost mach
blood *rom lung hemorrhages, and
was very week and run down. For
eight months I was unable to work.
Death seemed close on my heels,
when 1 began, three weeks ago, to
use Dr. King’s New Discovery. But
It has helped greatly. It Is doing
ag that you claim.” For weak, sore
lungs, obstinate coughs, stubborn
coidn. hoorsness. la grippe, asthma,
bay fever or aay throat or long
tronblo lu supreme. 59c and 1.90.
Trial bottle free. Guaranteed by
Jae. M. Klein.
Whooping cough Is not danger
ous when the cough Is kept loose
and expectoration easy, by giving
Chamberlains cough remedy. It has
been used In many epidemics of
this disease hfth perfect success.
For sale by kll dealers.
(OR REllEf.
It will never be possible for the
South to control the price of cot
ton until tbe Southern farmer
plncee himself la a position that
be can hold his crop production. So
long as the farmers are required
to sell the entire crop of cottba
each fall, so long will its pries be
an unreliable aad unstable one.
The only way by which a farmer
can place himself la position where
he will not have to sell all his cot
ton each fall is to prodace some
thing in addition to cotton; aad
unquestionably one of tbe beat sap-
piemen is to tbe cotton crop wont 1
•*e tbe raising mi bOHS- Tbe bog
business cun. be au —9till that tbg H
owner ran nave mc^ey coming ta
Irfm it ww. « which w»ul1
enable nu’9 n» rr'ina as tong
an bn pise sen Prof. Dab T. Gray.
The State of South Carolina,
County of Colleton.
E. L. Lucas, William Martin, Phil
ip Salley, James Robertson, Mary
Robertson Lcma Robertson, Shelly
Robertson, George Robertson, Hen
ry Williams, Sillie Salley, Curtis
Salley.
Plaintiffs.
againat.
Jaaper Martin, Elija Martin, Em
ma Sanders Lemuel Lewis Bell Lew
is. Pluella Lewis. Julius Lewis P'yn-
sie Lewis. Martin Lewis, Jet /ey
Lewis, Marlon Lewis, Wickey Mid
dleton. Fred Middleton, Christian g.
Middleton, Maggie Middleton, Arch!
Martin, Elizabeth Martin Boots Mar
tin, Emily Chisholm, Mlt Richardson
Dinah Haynes, Pingld Haynes, Web
ster Haynes.
Defendants.
You are hereby) summoned and re
quired to answer the complaint in
this action of which original la filed
in the office of the Clerk of Court
of Colleton county, and to serve a
coy of your answer to the said
complaint on the sald^gubscfibers at
their office Walterboro, S. .. within
twenty days after the service here
of; exclusive of the day of such
service; and if you fail to answer
the complaint within the time afore
said, the plaintiff in thia action will
apply to the Court for the relief
demanded lu the complaint.
F1SHBURNE A PADGETT.
Plaintiff's Attorneys
Walterboro 8. C. May 29 1911. 6t.
Coca-Cola
SODA WATERS
COLD DRINKS
ICE CREAM
Always on hand—Open ’till 10:00
Every Evening. Quick Service.
C L Fishbume
gmeOUHmmmaammmumiWHmmmaaaww
We Stand Back of the Farmer
This bunk believes that much of its success will depend
on ths number of friends that it will have among the
farmers of this Section. Our bank offers exceptional
facilities to the farmer, not alone in safe-guarding his
funds, but in lending him money to tide over the ‘‘tight"
places in the'year’s work.
Agriculture and finance go hand in hand, and neither
one can be without the other. We will try and hold up
our end by standing back of our farmers to the full extent
THE BANK FOR SAVINGS.
The Bank of Smoaks
SMOAKS, ■ • S.C.
J. S. WILLIAMS,
President.
| Pre
mmm
W. H. YARN,
Vice-Prest.
W. C. PA FRICK, JR.,
Cashier.
.J
HUM MON 8 FOR RELIEF.
SUte of South Carolina,
Coutaty of Colleton.
IN THE COMMON PLEAS.
Sarah Croaby, et al.
Plaintiff
againat
J. W. Grant, et al,
Maria Remley, Roaeman Grant,
Grayson Grant, Archie Bunton,
John Grant, James Grant, Edward
Grant, Richard Hubbard Martin Hag
hard. LiXrte Hlott, Rebecca Phiilpa,
Amelia Reynolds, G. M. Johnson,
Henry Hutson.
Defendants.
To the above named Defendants,
Sarah Croaby,
Yon are hereby summoned and
required to answer the complaint
lu this action, which is filed in the
of Gee of the Clerk of the court of
Common Pleas, for the said coun
ty* and to serve a coppy of your
answer to tbe aald> com
plaint on the subscribers at their
offices in Walterboro, Colleton conn
ty. South Carolina, within twenty
days after the service thereof
exclusive of the day of service; and
if yon fall to answer the complaint
within the time aforesaid, the plain
tiffs in this action will apply to
the court for the relief demanded
la the complaint.
D. PADGETT.
Clerk of Circuit Court.
PEUR1POY BROS.
Plaintiffs Attorneys.
Wnltorhoro, & C. May, SOtb, 1911.
0S Mwwtina Strwwi,
CNARLBfTON. A Q ,
UAMLB AND
QRANITI WONKA
and
Send For Prices,
V. Baaeh repress* ta up a*
AuCnblUMod lu 1T04
OMuut Plraa tu A merlon
0. A. WALKER
A Dreadful Wound,
from a knife, gun, tin can, rusty
nail, fireworks, or of an>* other
nature, demands prompt treatment
with Bucklen’s Arnica Salve to
prevent blood poison or gangrene.
Its the quickest, surest healer for
all such wounds as also for burns,
holla, sores, akin eruptions, Ecx#-
ma. Chapped Hands, Corns, or
plleo. 25e at Jno. M. Klein’s.
IKSMUMEMEntUHS BUME
HI RUNNING.
NOTICE.
All persona are forbidden und* i r
penalty of law to hunt fish or other
wise trespass on the following
lands:
Glover, Jessamine Grove. Munster,
formerly owned by Halsey Lumber
Company. Walterboro Live Stock
nad Vehicle Company. 5-31-31.
•• *
o •