The press and standard. [volume] (Walterboro, S.C.) 1890-current, March 27, 1912, Image 2
*fe r «^4»3
. A-
-',n
w la
As «• took afoa |ksso
a»4 jo«a«
of tko
dtoor tkoai. Amo
liar wo aoo fatkoro of oar i
«a of tottorraw.
tok tko sctoII of Ilfs, so U
kjr wo would oos oar fatkoro h
waM ooo la tko faooo of tkoai
^ftHoa of toior* wHIi' *
9 tko oooitar if tko rooaff w*
oa of oar kojro okoat ao
lowor do I took lato tko loco
roaag bor.or joaaf aioa
■at kalflat lato «aoakooo t
lot-I tktofc; **OOD; Wkot
ispoaolkllltr lojro .boforo
rtkoro of todojr, tko oiotboro
liar, aai tko frloaio of tkooo
ai jroaar aioa! M Vt aiottoro
ow tow a boy may otoop, H
ara aot kow kooaiirekoA a
Sots wKk tklo worlds
sr
to koaoatk that all a.
yoaas koart la wklek
H romaloo tko oood for oomo*
lias Boro aad aomtklag kottor.
t aoodo kat tko toodor word at
bo rtskt old propor tmo to kilas
bat ooodMas lato rapid aad lax*
rtaaf srowtk. Lot a boy, la tkts
ar sad rpo eoiaiBoaeo to sow hto
>ild oats (which orory boy dooo
soarr or Istsr), aad Immadlatoly
boao aboat klai eoatmoaeo to csa-
btw him, to ckldo him, to scold
sd mock.
It l« a coaeodsd fact that boys
Mr tholr wild oats; some sow «aor«
Nsa lass. fTboy sow oomo that to
ot doaiod. It Is so aataral for
boy to sow wild oats as It la for
wtor to run dowa kill. Try to pro-
sat tko sowing of wild oato, aad
la tko water It will flow arowad,
r sink from sight. That water
lows downward, at oaa time or
aether. Jsat ao the hoy sows hto
rOd oato at oaa tlma or aaotkor.
Then to It aot far kottor to
fttpstfctoe with a boy at this tlma
i llfof Watck bit eowtag m
bat ho a rot harmed beyond the
otaral eonsoqnoncoo of tko sowlag,
seist him If need bo? Bator in*
» his frolics, bis fur, but or«y bo
tort for tho finish of the sowlag.
For it is at tbst time in Hfo
f s boy, when bo sows hid last
rain of wild oats, that ho com*
koaess to look aboat him for soms-
blag higher, something brooder,
r it Is met with a censure, s
emark. a chiding or a slight! My
tod! Ton hare crashed tho in-
ora nature ir» him to onlt his sow-
>g. be gives np hope, he goea and
Ills his ssch again, to his min,
gtosi oomo one broader aad more
rsctooe minded than you should
led him by the wsyaide where
oa hare left him bleeding,
blow big) rad injects into
Ml that Inert longing which
rooked by year curt word
llghtfal manner.
Wa hare (be making of
sat goaoratloa boforo as. Are wo
mdtag a belplrg hand to tkooo
•aag hoys aad men, or wo loading
kick downward? Reflect. Ton
tea wha eome la contact with oar
sung hoys aad men, let ha hare
tore friendship between yon; ahake
ist frown, off your face. Thrt
oy may hare done wronir—that’s
<oo. wiold yon not ham dons the
tme were yoa that boy? If so, in
Mr ease weald yoa rather hare
■toned to • friend who would tym*
bthlso with you la your wrongdo-
ig and endeavor to help you out.
r a friend who la harshness tamed
wm yoa as ho would a canker-
ts core? Think. These boys
ied oar help.
Look about you sad see, bow
nay boys about you today aaad
ir friendly help and guidance. The
ora laying of our haed oa oomo
Bwafr’lea lad’s shoulder and
making of a kind word will make
lm feel better aad make him want
» strtva tha harder to overcome.
Irotead of frowna lot na hava
laaaaat amilaa; toalaad of aeold-
ig lat no hava sympathy; instead
! hate lat as hava lovs.
At tha door of tho men of to*
ty lays the responsibility which
aot mot will leave scars apes
t# future generations yet unborn
s men today. Help our boys. >t
that time In a boys life, dnr-
g the sowing of hto every aide,
> stifle and dwarf that aaad with*
i him which lays slombering ia
Is young herT-t. it m during the
•wing and the flr.sl planting of
>ththe man acd woman about
that It will
that
ahuaa tho totting.
ihs tbc
tier cyrnp*-
friend, ho#
thy of a
ana he find?
Mia BOdfeaaloaa mors often are of
dash a Batata that ho dree do totf.
lag "#roa hto fitoad, how shall bo
mm thto okoam? 8kaU hd aa#ai
3mm or will eomwoae of aa moot
him lialf way, aad lay aside all
rais mOdaoty to kelp thin hoy? Lto>
I. a kora Hto to at staka. K
hangs o# a word from yoa. hto «•■
re la kaagJag oa tha thrsad of.
year datyf Lot no
Rake op all the common aeaeo are
ea» find to oar anatomy aa# aoo
K aa#. yo« kat haw# to roach
oat aad toaeh tho hoy that is
ysaratag for tho aympathetic hand
of a friend wbo will give Mm the
word kto heart ao longs tor. |n this
day of hto soaring, la IMs day of
hto maklag.
D. J. K.
Walterboro, March 2t.
Tea Judge a man not by wbat he
proa toss to do, bat by what he has
dOM. That la tha only tme teat.
Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy Judge
by this standard has no superior.
People everywhere sperk of it in
tho highest terms of phrase. For
sale by all dealers.
g#7,0#T MORE FOR SCHOOLS.
Ov«
Colombia, March 21. — Special:
The Blease dispensary commission
todrg tamed over to the State
Treasurer 927,627, funds from the
old State dispensary in their hands.
This money will be apportioned to
tho various counties for use in the
oehoole under Act of the Legisla
ture. The Blesse commission will
go oat of office on March, 29, ac
cording to the Croason* Act, and
they will flla tholr report wRh the
Oororaor.
The commission to composed of
Wade Stackhouse, chairman; Fred
H. Dominick, J. V. Wallace, T. F.
Brantley and B. M. Thompson.
hto
was
or
tha
At tha doors of our mothers and
itbers lays an immense responel-
Uty.« This 1 do not deny. The
isstlon Is. do them mothers and
isae frthers enter the boys fun
■d hto froltcd and help hHn
irough the treacherous path by
isir friendship and their eympa-
•y? Do you make a confidants of
>ur boy. Does he chum wt h “dr-l-
r". and does he love the oompau-
aahlp of his mother, because she
Jolly aid good compary f Whan
» flings from bis sack of wild
ito a seed dose be get a smile
! sympathy and a word of encour-
lament or dose ho get % frown
id n word of contempt.
Hut at the door ol tho father
id the motber is left only a
irt of this boys life to mould
ad you thought and figured Just
>w many of the wakitg hours of
boys life (after be prases ftom
dldhood) is spent la the presence
1 his mother sad hts father (evon
they be chums of that boy!)
list boy is in school or at work,
be young man or boy probably
sves horns to go to college or
svee home to seek work! He sow,
a wild oats awry from horns, if
i Uvea with bis parei-ts and goao
aatossl or works la tho
•'tott
ing tko day. Thto to tho only op
portunity tho BMriher aad father
hava la coming Into toaeh with
then# hoys, after they have loft
tho gates of ehlMbeod aad entered
the gates of budding manhood.
At tho.door of those men and
women with whom they daily eome
In contact lays tho responsibility
of tho future of these boys They
each aad severally hare a responsi
bility! Would to Ood they might
me It. And In the mysterious
mystic, If aa account he aakedl of
tha todlvidnal of his works during
his Lifetime here, I believe this
very question will be seen in
words of liring firs.
It to ut thto point in Ilfs
whea a boys whola being to mads
of previous energy, to thto time
of planting wild oato whoa ho
aoodo our friendship. Does ha got
frtoadabjfp or coatemptful man
nortoms from uo? Stop. Linger
■while on thto momentous question
Which of tho two usages are you
handing out to the boy with whom
you come gs contact?
Then there to ia the average
boys heart a tendency to Man the
tolling of hto misdeeds and sow-
!nrs to his mother and father, It
matters not how much they all seesd
“pato.” He In om tafSance shunt
the telling for fetr that K may
wosad tho tender parental love. In
arother he shuns the telling for
fear of parental objection.
It is human nature to wtoh to
tell troubles to »omaou» sis*.
Especially so wKh a young boy or
man. like a smouldering fire In
the bosom of a boy toys ths secret
of hto troubles. There is nothing
that cools thrt burctsg trouble
(although it may seem to us of
more mature years but slight.)
like tho tolling to a sympathetic
friend. ■) *
If for more reasons than one,
ho will not toll hto father or moths
hto brother or his sister, ho seeks
tho friend somwhere else If that
friend can ha found. If that eou-
fideKlal friend, that sy.npe<thetlr
hec-rt, that arm 'bf help and assist
ance can not bo found, ho gives up
hope; that fire within his brevet
Dames up Into those things which
go to damn n boys soul and ruin
his life. From thin point he goes
downward, kicked on every side
a little further down without eym-
P f, ’by without hope, hto heart bleed
within him and he keeps the down
ward path unto destruction, unless
by some turn or rircuunstance he
perchance may find such s friend
on the roadway nerr who letsda a
helping and sympathetic touch. Men
and women, hesr me: Do you real
toe the responsibility? It to ours.
Are we carrying tt? Did you evet
atop to sper-k to the lltrie “newsv ’
on the street? Did you ever (a
pausing a sad-faced boy. give hlir
a p.-nlle, a good-morning und a re-
cogrttibn? Oh how much that goes
with a boy, and a'ter you have
apokso to him did you ever see
him pull hto cost lapels together
and slyly look Into ths show-
glqss window and aeem to ‘'eatl-
»Mo'* hto sisof I have. Try It
Watch them. It will do your soul
good. It’s tbaoe little things that
count with a boy.
There are times and Instances
where a boy naturally turns ard
f. frV.pfl 0 f * own ^ x If
he finds him not he Ungers Just ■
little while on the brink of furth
er dissipation, ard then sinks deep
er, when Just a word of encourage
ment s«nd sympathy from a mascu
line hand would have kept him “©•r
top.” Then there are times and
more often when a boy seeko the
tender love aad sympathy of wo
man. If he has a mother near he
dmada to bleed her heart with hto
eotrfeeeleue of the nowtng of hto
Gtoctows Hems.
comes from Dr. J. T. Curtiss,
Dwight, Kat\, He writes: ”1 not
only have cured bad cases of ec-
sema In my patients with Electric
Bitters, but also cured myself by
them cf the same disease. I fee!
sure they, will benefit any case of
eesema.” Thto shows what thous
ands have proved, that Electric Bit
ters is a most effective blood puri
fier. Its sa excellent remedy for
ecsama. tetter, salt rheum ulcers,
bolls sad running sores. It stimu
lates liver, kidneys and bowels, ex
pels poisons, helps digestion, builds
up the strength. Pries 60 eta.
Satisfaction, guaranteed by Jno. M.
Kliou.
IICIEI lANUFAUUHNI
COIPANY,
8U00KS80B8 TO
GEO. S. HACKER ft SON.
WE MANUFACTURE
km Stsl tal Hafe
Columns and Balusters; Grilles
and Ornaments; Screen Doors
Windows.
WE DEAL IN
Glass, Sash Cord and Weight
CHARLESTON, S C
V4 " J
>*•
t,uit
01M—ting Street,
CHARLESTON, S §
QRANITl WORKS.
and
It is so FRESH and PURE that
YOU USE ONE-FOURTH LESS
than with other brands. You save
money. You get better results.
SODA
r
is packed right where it is made (the only
soda factory in the South), and comes to
you in sealed, air-tight, strength-keeping
cartons—fresh and pure.
16 Full Ounces to the Pound.
And no higher in price.
SPECIAL
For a Limited Time Only*
Cut put the top from six Eagle-Thistle
packages and enclose with coupon
shown below and 58c to partially cover
expense, and we will send you promptly,
all charges prepaid, one set (6) Rogers’
Guaranteed Silver
Plated Teaspoons.
These spoons are beau
tiful in design and bear no
advertising. Retail value
$2.00 per dozen.
THE MATHIESON ALKALI WORKS,
Saltvilk, Vs.
I enclose tho tops cut from 6 Eagle-Thistle
packages, also Money Order (or stamps) for 58c.
rlease send me, off dtorgse one eet (6)
Rogers' Guaranteed Genuine Silver Plated Tea
spoons.
Sieging Ibac Boise
“THE BEST OF EVERY
THING IN MUSIC"
Write tor price list and cata-
jlogue. It will be a pleasure
for us to correspond with you.
No. 2^43 King Street,
CHARLESTON, S. C.
Send For Price*,
v.
to as e*
hut a low hourt dufrjxtld oato for ho faaiu oho may aot
MnMIaMln 1T04.
OAAaol Rina la A mark a
D. H. WALKER
Xlmrterw Miles S Second,
without s Jar, shock or disturbance,
is the awful apeed of our earth
through space. We wonder at such
ease of nature's movement, and
| so do those who take Dr. King's
New Life Pllto. No grlptog, no die-
; trees Just thorough work that
I bring* good health sad fian feel
ings tie at luo. M. Kiefer*.
NEW STORE at SMOAKS, S. C.
I have opened an UP-TO-THE-MINUTE
MILUNERY AND GENERAL MERCHANDISE
BUSINESS
Miss Florence Jones of Ashton, an expert
% M • %9 • • *
— .w*w*s, mi C T L
Milliner, who has charge of the Millinery
Department, has just returned from Atlanta,
where she purchased an immense stock of
Millinery Goods, Embroideries, Et<
Our Hats are the latest styles and shapes
and we cordially invite the ladies of Smoaks
andQsurrounding community to call and in
spect our goods before purchasing elsewhere.
General Merchandise, Department
Our General Merchandise Department is
complete: Gents' Furnishings, Hats, Shoes,
Dry Goods, Notions, Fancy and Staple Gro-
cerieW-A. M. Padgett in charge.
MRS. M. M. PADGETT
SMOAKS, S. C. MASON-HODGE PLACE
XOT1CB HORSE BREEDERS.
Tho French Percberon Stallion.
“Lord Rosberry,” will bo at the
, following named al*eos each week
'oa tha kotow uomod days.
( B. O. Hiott’a, Monday aad Tuee-
jday. "
1 If,“!*"!"*•
Thu "d*y.
Walterboro, Friday.*
^Dr. J. b. Padgett's store, fialur-
n5r.il* o “ r “'
*-
\