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* t. •*' TIE WALTERBORO HKH SCHOOL (M4m KathleMi DeTrcrllle.) Osfe of th« most Important facta testified to by human experience to hide hte shaaae: Too vtt —cceeafolly prove the heoor of toil by llluatratine ta poor ewo mavitt tw xjamntt • • .. • ^persona its alliance with n eeheo THK D,OI<ITT ° F LABOR t*»k. How honorable there rl«bteo«u and Godly life eo after street .weeping would be Mr€ of ^ |h# ^ ^ ^ among the children of men. i work , |B a . pirlt of ton- The life of the tlluetrou. clergy- lllf homace to Ood. doe. no koo man. John Weelep. .ft or d. a atrlk- thaa cherubim and Seraphim la la an clrlllaed lands Is this—that ing example of the dignity of labor. th€lr night, and hoHent It hi disgraceful not to work. Men ’‘Qe stands out In the history of gongs. in every age of the world have the world unquestionably pre-emi-1 Y ou have been given your work t greened the Idler. They have sought n «ot in religious labors above that g 0 j t ^ lonely It may ho to Instruct him by example of In- | of any other man since the Apostol-, uncoQ^o^i 5ut lf u li for yoo bo dustry; tfcey have admonished him 1 1** His greatness was the re- go go u jj w i tk .j^onr might, by'the proverbs of the wise; they j “Ult of his incessant diligence. The | t ||, e y OU know how. * pave railed at him in song; sought world honors honest labor but de- wbb ’laa that the tint cry wag what yon • eded. — -*-■ - woman—| w ^ Bancroft, the great historian ban gajplto mar ntt ooiaetde^with yoara. ^^^ 1 *?^^, *<. ared that tho hleeelnga of oar And than, my Moods, your Idea Jfcio ^JggdonSi Union are dee to the warm heart- aad my Ideal may aaither ho District No. |d no tfto odaeee of South Carolina. Now Is high enough. There mar .'b%. this all when the clash of srms abstract perfection to which the bed ceased, aad men returned to conception of none of us has climb- , - r ^ # t^Tthlrd their .vocation of peace. South ed. jfUd eleetore in said ' ^ " Carol ins through her statesmen and 1 eages contributed largely to the founding of the Constitutional Gov*' This Is true of all Ideals, a men's reach must exceed he District No. M no tho gasotimi \0f an : voting for tho eotohMohmont of a tka i High School aad a petition ptooooi- ed elgned by ono-thtad of tho id of tho for log sold election hi Pi S ■ It to ordered eadeo geptten lltg tf to (wfotm him by law, and yet, like tho poor he is ever with them Indeed, the poor is mainly his splhej the idler. Singer,‘sing, The hoary world There is a dignity in toil—In toil Needs remtuder of its Jrouth; of the hand as well'ws toll of the Prophet, tell The darkness lies offspring. .imI but for him, they head —in toil to provide for the labyrinths of truth; would almost disappear from the bodily wants of an individual life. Builder, build, l*et rocks uprise eartp, . as well as in toll to promote some Into cities 'neath the land; The drones in the hive of human j enterprise of world-wide fame. All,*' ar,n * r . till. The aun and rain Industry must nfeds eat, and so 1 l#bor that lends to supply man's Hearken for the seed s demand, the toilers must produce not alone wants, to Increase man's happiness, : Xr " ! ' i . P«'in«. • “> <auvasses for themselves but for these cum- to elevate man's nature—In a word Patiently convey thy soul; berers of tho ground. If labor was ; 'l| Hnor that is honest is honor- write. With pen blood-iHp- not bounteously rewarded the world aM**. :.»o Labor Hears the forest. P ed: would starve for there Is at no tint I drains the crorass. and makes “the Trace no segment, but the whole; of the Code of Clvlf Lows. lift, gvesi yet. In ike very practical aa eleetloo be held Thuraday, ernment. but Its principles were every day life, all of us con oh- June fl, Itil, at Lodgo school - trampled upon by the enemies of («in somewhat toward this measure house or othor convenient plugs state sovereignity guaranteed to paths of life we can be true to wltllln district, end that only .V.O ...» ». ( OD..Uu.1on, of - F»>uht Carolina was the first state t» our lives He along the hidden who exhibit their tax receipts* aad In the great South Load that dar-* the little every day duties, as ad- registration cortlficatos as raqulrad to strike the hand that would mlrebly as when called upon to euf- _ general ^elections be allowod to take away her Constitutional rights. True to her convictions of right eousness and justice she did not withhold front I «-r country’s serHce property nor life. That the spirit of true patriotism and devotion to truth and juatice should not pass fiom among men, and should cease enough food stored within the houses of the earth to support its people for two years without a '\iM.*rtiess rejoice and blossom as T>eaoher teach. Thyself the creed .. „ , vote nt enld election, each elector ler .*r sacrifice gloriously. favoring the proposed tax shall cast If yon find this ideal womah In a ballot containing tho words "Fpr the shop In the office. In the High School” printed or written * classroom, or by the bedside of •* c * 1 eleeetor opposed .h. .he .. .tfh.rln. Hhorou., iy, and accurately to the demands High School” printed or written of her position, her work as well thereon. d he, and If the la In the home i W, H *>• °P*«> *t • o'clock. tu move the splrita of men unborn, it the capacity of sister wife, or *' * t . 4 ® m - South Carolina with her sister not her she Is discharging the Frank Stanley, rruateee of anld die- state* entered the struggle for dii;'es of these respective relations trict are hereby appointed manag- siates rights and though she lost with consummate tact, with long su t° conduct said election. r»n the field of battle the principles fering devotion, and with enduring . *1!!® TOt • ,, CMt * in sara school District for which she successfully the rose.” l>abor drives the plow, I On'V ,h ‘ s » rhtld may know; and scatters the seeds, and reaps Brea met, dream, nor hide thy fnco harvest. Hence the toilers must j the harvest, and grinds the corn, rhrouglt thy • is*;ea crumble It a not onl> delve, and plant, and reapji'nd converts it into bread, the staff "here ^he toiler turns the sod {emerged from the conflict her man-> has come Into her own and asaum* I " ten days after the elee- . . . , . (l f ijf., 1 Man beholds the living God. L . . . , _ . . • . tlon, the above "fismed manal.era year after year, whereby to feed | 0 ' ''fc- 4 hood uni tit pa red. and her honor ; the natural queenshlp for which shall renort to this HonrH th» •.•- Labor, tending the pastures and Itin'-ullied * ‘ . . . I- . „„„ . .- shall be con- love. | . Por Hlgh scoo,- and Dot felted with the forum with the! It is here that we love beet to {"Against High School” the High greatest minds of America, yet she find our ideal woman for here she 1 School shall be established. and clothe themselves but they are obliged also to provide for these parasites on the body politic. In sweeping the waters as well as cul- WILTH CAKOI.IN.VS ('ONTRIBT- 0 f (he civilized world, rivaling the soil, provides with dal- TIOX TO THK AMKKIl'AX ITUON. the wonder and adtuira- God first designed her. this age people, whether clothed I *y substance the nine hundred mil- in purple and fine linen, or decor- Hons of the family of man. (Mr. t'hariie KaMterlia.) ated with rags are fond of saying 1 Labor gathers the gossamer web' 8ta t e i n the I'nion has left that ‘‘the world owes them a llv- of the caterpillar, the cotton from j( g impress more srtongly upon Ing”.—an assertion utterly absurd, | the field tlie flv^ce from the flock, American life and civilization than V oivanhood extensively, 1 should and wholly untrue. It is bad an( l weaves it into raiment, soft bas South Carolina, through the e\Vt *1 y >ur patience and should enough to be a "do-nothing", but an< i warm and beautiful, the pur- Revolutionary ,»eriod as well as the do meagre justice io this most ex- THK IDKAL WOMAN. (MIhs Ruth HUher.) To ili-«iiss the. subject Of suit of the electloQ.... and furnish Ide tl them with th«tp6)l Hat and ballot OKtaAMZK CHAKLKWON CTH’NTY box and all papers appertaining thereto. Kanners* I'nlon to Make a Canvass . H. W. BLACK, 8R., N* W. W. 8M0AK. of Kleven Day*. j. R | rB OODLEY, 1 B. F. Keller of Calhoun County ' Co Bd. Education Colleton Co. , . „ jWalterboro, 8. C. June 10, 1011. deputy organizer of the South ( aro- why add falsehood to shame by pic robe of the prince anil the gray , i’onstitutonal period of our hls- clatming assets never possessed? U gown of the peasant being alike t >ry. is a law of nature that "if any Hs handiwork. Labor molds the, department of our National Creative Hand; and, in song man will not work neither shall brick and splits the slate, and quar- ||f e but felt the touch of South sto,r> from cottage to court quisite theme. In the beginning, she was the final product of the and she he eat " Paul the apostle did not the stone, and shapes the rol- (» aro |j na whether in the halls of has ever been accorded the first originate that law. It Is imbedded umn . an d rears not only the hum- Congress, or within walls of acience place by chivalry and Chritsylanlt. in the very structure of the world. ble cottage but the georgeous pal- aIld literature, or upon battle fields- And yet (pinions concerning tbit How wonderfully rich our country ace an d the tapering spire and the 0 j t |, w earliest Colonies ideal have always differed widely Ij In Its material resources. You stately home. 'planted in America having woven among individuals, clime, and na- might put the entire population of Labor, diving deep into the solid j n ^ 0 j,er fibers the sturdy man-j lions and have also been vastly In- the world within the boundaries earth, bringing np Its long-hidden hood of the English colonies, the fluenced and modified, oven by the of our ow n fair land, and easily sup stores of coal to feed ten thous-| re f| nement an( j culture of the same nation at different periods of port them all, so bountifully has and furnaces, and in millions ( I rench Huguenots bruaqueneee of* Its civilization. The ideal woman from a heathen standpoint Is verjz different from civilization's con- ception of her. But in discussing the ideal wo- 1. aareus ^ , . s*v* God provided for America. Yet for homes to dely the winters cold. 1 Hie Germans, the wit Of the Irish hundreds of years a few; thousand Labor explores the rich veins of ami the learning of the Scots Indians owned it all, and well-nigh deeply buried rocks, extracting the fcb* developed into a body politic, starved to death in It In fact, they gold and silver, the copper and tin exemplifying the virtues of these would have starved, but for the Labor smelts the Iron and molds, ( . u | tured nationalities the fore- man tonight, are must look upon wild beasts and birds they killed. It into a thousand shapes for use | niOMt factor In moulding modern d\« the Ideal Woman of America of the 'Why? They were Idlers and shirk- a ®d ornament^ from the massive utiation the peer of any state la twentieth century, and must look ed honest work. How rich this pillar to the tiniest needle, from tite Union. I at her from a fourfold viewpoint, world might be If there were no the ponderous anchor to the wire > Faithful to the principles of her fh the first place, our ideal wo ld ler s in It. "In 1892 the cash gauze, from the mighty fly-wheel ancestors, in Colonial times when man must be physical^ perfect. In value of the work produced by the °f the steam-engine to the polished | cauaeil were fast developing Into a form and feature, toilers in the country alone in that purse-ring or glittering bead. La* a pirit Q f determined resistance, the Venus de Milo, which was acoept- one year was seven and one-haJf bor hews down the gnarled oak, resistance, and the criais came, it ed as the physical model, by the billions of dollars, If now the mil- a nd shapes the timber and builds was South Carolina that kept the Greeks, those masters of beauty, Hons of soldiers policemen, keepers the ships, end guides it over the fires of liberty and Independence la restrained by us ns to form, throughout all lands, who hav^, to «le«*o, plunging through the billows | UK | ow 0 „ tke a n Hra 0 f our toU ni rv but In feature, much more nearly lina State Farmers' union, will mal I NOTICE OF ADDITIONAL TAX a canvass of Charleston county lu 1 KLBCTION. the Interest of th* union beginning Where., application ha. been ,, lkl _ , ^ made to the County Board of Edu- at Met lellanvtlle on I uesday. June (atlon for Co „ aton County to or . 2b, and ending at Charleston on , der an election In Lodge School Friday June 3b. On this last date • District No. 30 on the question of a meeting will be held and the or- ' voting an additional tax levy of 4 . , . . mills in said District, and a petition ganizatlon of a county union perfect preaented a , Kned by one . thlrd of ed. Representatives are expected U», u,* f rw holders and one-third of he prese.it from every section of the the qualified electors In said Dl»- U>l ‘ county. Meetings have been arranged at every place to be visited by Mr. Keller by local committeemen ap* pointed for that duty. The following Is the schedule of appointments giving the name of the committeemen In charge of ar rangements at each point. Tuesday, June 20, McClellanvllle, J. Y. Dul’re; Wednesday, June 21, Awendaw, H. W. Leland; Wednea- trlct, praying said election be or dered. It la ordered under Seectlon 1201, of tVi Codo of Civil Law\ 1'J that an election be held Thuraday, June 22, 1911 at Lodge School House or other convenient place within said district, and that only those persons who return real or personal property for taxation, and who exhibit their tax receipts and registration certificates as required In general elections be allowed to vote at said election, each elector favoring the proposed tax shall east depend upon the tollers for their and wrestling with the tempest to bread while they are taking care of bear to our shores the produce of the mischievous and vicious idlers, every clime. and when the embers were smolder- approaches the women of Harrison ing amid the hills and valleys of Fischer and Ohristy's pens, than the Atlantic It was she who by she does the classic contour ot day June 21' Mt. Pleasant T. J. a ballot eontatning the words "For of prisons and reformatories Labor* laughing at difficulties, her Hamptons, her Pickens, her the Trojan Helen, could be released to do honest span* .majestic rivers, carries vie- Marions, her Sumters and her Lees To be ideal physically she would work, and together with the idlers ducts over marshy swamps, sub- w jj 0 snatched victory from defeat be fundamentally healiu> os well each earned his own livlnv;, this pends bridges over deep ravines. and possible the triumph of as beautiful. We love much more would be a world of wealth and pierces the solid mountains with ^ the American flag at Lexington. .than the little hot house variety, comfort. ^' ,H 'h't'k tunnels, blasting rocks and g 0 long as there shall be ton- the bouyam out-door athletic girl. Ood designed that men slionkl be filling hollows, and, while linking 10 jue „ to re i ate and earg to hoajv the Intellectually, let her be inately rich. So he stored the world un- gather with Its Iron bit, having S |vr\ of the struggle for in<i L.vinlin, Ihursday June 22, James Island, St. John A. Lawton; Fri day June 23, Meggetts, S. J. Humph; Saturday June 24, Adams Kun, Dr. T. Taylor; Monday, June 26 Wadmalaw, J. Swlnton Whaley, Tuesday* Jyne 27, John's Island, J. Swlnton Whaley; Thursday, June 29, St. Andrews, W. M. Frampton; Friday, June 30 Charleston, orgsn- igatlon of county union. The announcement of this sched ule is made by J. Whltner Held, State secretary. Little Negro Killed. Hendersonville, June 12—Special: . ■ ’ .;' V ^ (Saturday while monkejtng with an refined end well educated. Against ... .. .. . derneath with uncountable treasures -’rasp a'! nations of the earth, ve- pendence, so long will hearts re- this Idee for ypaN (so history fee-!^***|®* ^ 0 B^°® * 0 ®* d * , *| of gold, silver iron, lead, and gems rifying. In A literal sense, the an- member and emulate the virtue* of ordsi womankind was in mental ** 10 * * nd *® T * _ an • and vast resources of fuel and clent prophecy; Every stocked the soil with great wealth Hiall he brought low. a thra' year old negro boy. This valley | .vi ar i r(a Sumter and Lee. South bondage but the day of her Hb-. . ... . | Carolinians whose fame la immor- eration Is quite past even in orl-| * "^vhT* n* 5 * Th i* ^t —producing power, and crowded th Labor draws for thee Its delicate tal. « ental conservative China, she has b M IstraT^R "ll seas and air with immense mater- | ro n thread, and, stretching it from Again in 1812, wheB eur claim to'admiasion not onl to the literary * un gy y ag s e W. Bryan, of Hendersonville, and a verdict according to the above facts was brought. isl for making it. Yes, the Al- c jtj to city, from province to pro- ' recognition amon'. the nations of universities, birt to the medical and mighty is Immensely wealthy him- vince through mountains and be- tl.» earth was « it regarded and de-Hegal schools as well. And in our self and he would have his chll- neath the sea realizes more than • nied. when the C. S. waa contempt- occidental civilization there Is no y | ; dren *0. Sin -the sin of idleness fancy ever fabled; It constructs a uously .gnored and maltreated wh< t phase of Intellectual life denied her. make* them poor. If Mother Eve chariot on which speech may out- our commerce wa-. <!••»• led the high- She may equally cope with men at had been busily at work so that , strip the wind and compete with 1 * ay of the sea, when our vessels Clynlc or Bar through press or j and 'Vipectoratlon easj- by giving she had no time to gosaip with the lightening .for the telegraph vo.e -earrhed ard i^r sailors im pnlpit; it is only for her to ^ Td^cmlc* 1 ^of the serpent, she and her husband flics as rapidly as thought itself. pressed our rights a* beiligrants the limitations of her mental at- n use* n ina y *p m cs Whooping cough is not danger ous when the cough Is ^ept loose might have stayed in Eden, and liv ed in luxury* but as It was in the beginning, so now, "Satan finds some mischief still foy Idle hands to do" and If you neglect work In Eden ; you may have to do a porse and harder kind outside There Is one thing which men I^nbor. a mighty magician walks w#te denied i*ii<! 01 r very indep« n- rainments. forth into a region uninhabited and(dcn*e was jeopardy when our prop- Socially, this Ideal American waste; he looks earnestly nt the erty w^s coiifK / atcd and the star> Woman, may Individually take a p«* this disease wJth perfect For sile by all dealers. success. KNDORSKD AT HOME. scene so quiet in Its desolation, th© and stripes were insulted, espoused sltlon which Is never accorded her ' waving his wonderful wand, those ti e cause of Atucilca against her- In monarchical countries where' I'nm^aa^thU^muhl (jHiriare dreary valleys smile with golden enemies? It was Vr. Calhoun of hlrth Is the measure of the Indi- ‘ harvest; those barren mountain-: Sojith t'aroloij assisted by Cbevi s vdluals social status. The public endorsement of a lo- slopes are clothed with foliage; the and Lowndes, also *? South Car >- Socially in all parts of America cal citizen t* ♦he ties* proof that and women have inherited. an<f it I furnace blazes; the anvil rings; the li.ia who in burtii.g words of patrl- save g'conservative portion of our ran produced. None better, n<' ... ... . .. , myoiim-. tail ne had. «lien a man b^sy wheel whirls round; the town otism aroused the country to Eng- seaboard, any. woman who is l comes forward and testifies to hla aeems to have been deeply imbed ded- It Is laziness. Surely, if you judge by the fruits of idleness. It must be a sin not to be doing some kind of honest work. . What stores of wisdom, what Mobility of knowledge, labor brings, ppsentative* of far-off regions makf ' isrolina, it.reduced and ha i of ancestresses which runs hack io ; appreciated. The followjug xtate- And veru cannot have It without | R their resort. Science enlists the't 1 in Congress the bill which the tnigrim Mothers of New Eng-, Klveti by a re.-i«l<-nt of Walter- labor and hard labor too. Learning elementa of earth and Heaven in dec.a-ed to England, 'Thus far land, and to the persecuted Hugue- of ||pni#i Kndorsemcnt which Its service. Art awakening, clothes ( sha'l thou go. but no farther", an I not women of South Carolina, (who j „ rt . published a»H»ut Doan's Its strength with beauty. Civlllza- j when N> . England was issuinx for religion's sake, left their na- j Kidney IMIls. Head It. tion smiles; Liberty is glad; Hu- I er proclamation condemning the ii\e lands* should at least measure •* A. Westerberg, Jeweler, Wash- inanity rejoices; Piety exults; for war against England and refusing up to the fullness of her opp«> r tun- appears; the mart of commerce, the bind s proporal *o drive our fla_ ted by nature, may take and hold fellow citizens, adil/esse* his friends hall of science the temple of rellg- from the sea. and reduce us to 'he leadership of our greatest cities ' and neighbors, you may be sure be ion rear high their lofty fronts; . vassalage. :t \ at Mr. Calhoun wh' for the ke&son of her lifetime. thoroughly * on\ in< «d or be a foreat of masts, gay with varied assnued by *Ue senators from Geor- Spiritually, this .Ideal American whof| |f , K for the puh |, r a ood pennons rises from the harbor; rep- gia Ken.ufky Tennessee, and North' Woman having such a glorious line 1 ih H( , „ f klmlness that should be ,»kJ is not an instinct, but an acquisi tion, and we shall never get be yond the need of having more and more knowledge. "Knowledge, like the Creator’s works., is boundless ; the voice of industry and gladness in extent, and will continue while they endure." "Knowledge is is heard on every- side. Working men walk worthy of power.” Labor alone secures it. your vocation, you have a noble es- He would ej;cel must work (or j cutoheon; disgrace it not. There It, and by his labor he becomes j is nothing really mean and low but dignified. If Michael th© Archangel ; ain. Stoop not from your loft^ should be sent from Heaven to sweep the muddy streets of earth. Ah© lowly work would not lower him, but how mightly he woulS ele- throne to defile yourselves by It, Labor, allied with virtue, may look up to Heaven and not blush, while all worldly? dignities, prostituted to tc furnish her quota of soldiers. Hies. • ; outh ,Carolina sent to the front She must be simple in her faith, »T out of every? 42 citizens capab'e pure tn thought and loving In of bearing arms and Massachusetts deed to all with whom she comes with but .;2, Cornecticutt, but ?.•*, m contact. ' ^ Mid New Hampshire but 18. She will strive for the betterment It would not detract one lota fror- -f her freinds. and try to lns|ire ♦lie honor due Massachusetts, for hem fo accept h* r ideal of the splr her part In the great struggle for | itual woman. independence, if Indeed to her be- J She must be modest and tender loage the honor of the first ^ry ( hearted,' But yout ideal and my wiib good results ai.d rhei rfully r commend them us ;* remedy of merit. They have lited up to a'l the Halms made for them In my case For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Fowter-Mllbur:* Co., Buffalo New York, sole agents for the Uni ted States. Remember the name-- Doan's— and take no other. A I-A RLE CONTRACT. Additional Tax” printed or written thereon, and each elector opposed to said additional tax ahall rote n bal lot containing the words "Against Additional Tax” printed or written thereon. Polls will be opeened at t o'clock a. m., and closed at 4 o'clock p. m. B. G. Thompson, L. J. Jones and Frank Stanley, trustees of said District ar,e u appointed managers to conduct said election. It the majority of the rotes cast In said School District shell be “For Additional Tax” and not. "Against Additional Tax.” the ad ditional tax shall he levied. _ Within tea days after the ele£ Hon, the above named managers shall report to (his Board the re sult of the election and furnish them with the poll list, tbs ballot box and ell papers appertaining thereto. . % H. W. BLACK. SR., W. W. 8MOAK J. RICE OODLEY, Co. Bd. Educatlo# Colleton Co. •Walterboro, 8. C. June 10, 1911. THK ' CLKMBON AGRICULTURAL OOLLBGK Enrollment Over 700—Valne of Property Over a Mlllioa aad a Onset er—N laety Teachers aad Officers. , Seven full four^y*ira courses. In Agriculture, KngTneerink, etc. Cos! per session of nine months. Including all fees, board, heat, light, .aundry?, and necessary uniform— 8121.87. Students who Hr© financially able pay 440.00 tuition additional, t ilOLAKMHIP AND ENIIJANCK EXAMINATIONS The College maintains 124 Agricul tural S'-holsrshlps, and 43 Textile Scholarships worth each $400 and free tuition. , * Students who have attendee. Clemson College 01 any other Col lege or 1 nherslty, are not eligible for the *•« hobirshlps umeo: 'here are no oth»r ellgide applb.iVH Krii<•lurshlp and entrance examina tion* will he held at tho County Kent* July 14th, 9 A. 0 M. m Next Session Open*. KEPT. IS. IHII. Write AT ONCE to W. M. Riggs, President Clemson College, 8. C., for catalogue, scholarship blanks, etc. If you delay you may be crowd ed out. A-14-St. The woman of today who has good health, good temper good sense. brl D ht eyes and a lovely com plexion, the result of correct living and good digestion, wins the ad miration of the world. If your dl- P sUon is faulty ChamberlMn's Atom.-ch and Liver Tablets will cor rect It. For sals by all dealers. W. W. Hudson, of Ruffl^may be mentioned amoug those in town Sat urday.