The press and standard. [volume] (Walterboro, S.C.) 1890-current, January 17, 1917, Image 3
/f
Wednesday, January 17, 1917.
BM
THE PRESS AND STANDARD
PAGE THREE
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LETTKItS FROM ' *
THK PEOPLE «
********* *******|
Power of the Song-
Editor The Press and Stananl:
Please allow me spac^ for
few r worda. ' * - i
For almost every purpose ‘here j
•la a power—power to move all man-1
ner of machinery; power to shake
the-trees; power to move houses, to
bring the nourishing showetw. to
cause the eairth to tremble and to
shake the heavens. IlutAhe great
est power we have'is the power that
*turns the heart of man from wpo**-
to right. That power is the Gospel
—the song is the Gospel. Of course
-we all understand that the Gospel
song is meant when we '‘sing th>‘
Through hearing and believing
the son K many souls have turned
to God. Not all songs pass their
tutrning power, but those that do
not, contain admonition, instruc
tion or some good doctrine that is
strengthening ’to Chris'tians. All
good folks like good songs, because
of the power contained in them.
And the nearer correctly the song
is sung the more force it has on
the hearer. The song has power to
make man love God more. Singing
of the death of Christ it brings
afresh to our minds the agony and
awful death endured “for ns and
causes us td live better lives.
We sing of God's wondrou, love,
then we love Him better b-'-iuso
He first loved us. Then in singing
of heaven we get a foretaste ef.t’i
joys that await the faithful. Then
we sing of the pang* of he!| an l
this brings severely upon cor ; lin 1-
the awful punishment >tlmt awaits
the lost and causes him to repent,
pong possesses a power tha* <nu*o*
us to love each other more. The.
sum of the whole is that song-tde*-
e-- the world wherever it goes
The gospel in the song i. the e!
ment that reaches the heart, hut
.w-Hcu: accompanied by music hn>
PVuch ‘more /force. ‘‘Music hatt
charms to soothe the savage breast.”
Jp shown in the evil passions of man
retreating before song Then,
when the heart and mind is freed
from Immoral that's the gospel of-
the song has free access. k
Some believe that there is power
in song to banish the terrors of
death. Then if this he true it mav.
with more ease, banish all other
evils
The power of the song is God's
power. The song is the gospel set
to music and the gospel is the word
of God and God’s word is His pow-‘
?r. ' 7 y/
We are taught in God’s word that
there is in every man’s path an
unseen time beyond whichLlh-fs too
late to accept Christ; therefore,
when we sine. u To© Hate.” 4 show*
the lost son) the awfulnes* of be
ing too late and many a time causes
Turn to turn before he passes beyofid
thiV unseen line
HMEDS OF DOLIMIS
. WERE; SPENT IN 111
Tells of “Fetfhig Better’
- t
She Ever Remembers
Feeling Before.”
Thun
of
A B G l T LOST HOF £
Advice Given by Her Pastor's Wii
> Let! to a Wooderfuf Change in
— 'toc -of- Mrs.—Mv-Maou*.
I, a Southern
Gentleman,
What
a joy
it is
to know that just
bevontf
the ri
ver
o*' death there is
a happ>
•\^nd
peat
oful shore. And
the moi
sing of it ‘he more
■mhers
a ill X
alizt
* t Tie happtnes*
thr t a .w
:itt s th
K fa
Ithfn)
Last.
the orrXl
lias power'f. he’o
iu all.
.So let
ns
Nil sine an ! glori
f*- God
v hiTe
. Tift
1'iY^cr tu:Tr o’' 1ii :
V. 7’ V t o
heaven
\
tf
MOIHERI RIVE MED
"SIRUP OF FIGS” IF
I0NGUE IS COATED
%
If t h-oss. Feverish, Si« k llilious.
Clean Little Liver and
1 towels.
V
Childivn love this "f uit l. \ i-
tive.” and nothing ejne cleanses tlu-
Kinder stomach, liver and l)<)\vels so
nicely.
A child simply will not stop play
ing to empty the bowels, and the re
sult is. tney become fTghtly clogged
with wast^. liver gtts sluggish,
stomach sours, then your little one
becomes noss. half-sick, feverish,
don't eat. sleep or art naturally, j
breath Is had. system full of cold. •
has sore throat, stomach-ache or
diarrhoea. Listen, Mother! Rec if
tottgue is coated, then give a tea
snoonfHj of '‘California Sy^up of
^ igs." and in a few hours all ti e
constipated waste, sour bile and tin-
dlgested food uvlscs out of t
^tem, and 'ou h.. v e
child again.
“The reason l put so much faith
iu Tan lac is because 1 had taken so
many medic hies and they helped me
only while 1 was taking them, but
Tanlac not only helped me when I
was taking it, but its benefits have
proved lasting,” said Mrs. S. A.
McManus, of 1*07 Second St.. Olym
pia. a suburb of Columbia, in a
statement she ga\e in endorsement
of Tanlac.
‘When 1 quit taking Tanlac, 1
really felt better than I ever remem
ber of feeling before Tanlac is the
only medicine I e\er took that help
ed my indigestion anil nervous
troubles.
”1 suffered particularly from
nervous indigestion, and my system
was badl\y>run down. 1 had wor
ried myself almost to dertlt o\er my
troubles, and that mad* nn condi
tion all the‘worse. I suffered _a lot
with headaches and 1 could not^e.'i
anything. 1 suffered so much wit:,
my head that I was almost nazjvht
times with the pain. My nerve*
were in such had shape that if any
ore knocked unexpectedly at the
door, it would fly all over me and
f would tremble all over and foel
like I was freezing, for my ne.rv* *
were a comph/c wreck.
‘ My hush; -* ’ lost, a lot of time
from woik 1 use he had to s'tav
at home and v o:k around the hoy*-*
when I was 1 k in bed. I never
felt well, but ! just dragged around
•he house - >rd did my work the be*t'
1 could wh’e v 1 w \« not in b«*d. 1
never wa*. really able to do my
housework, though.
‘‘I never have been healthy and
I have been doctored all my life,
but I continued to suffer and grad
ually grew worse, until I had about
lost hope of ever feeling well again.
“Then one day my pastor’s wife
came to visit me, for I was on the
"Sick list.” and she urged me to try
Tanlac. I knew it would be well
to do so if my pastor’s wife told me
to. so hiy husband bought me a bot
tle And now I can truthfully say
that Tanlaty is the only medicine I
have ever/taken that has helped
me, and Tanlac broke up my
troubled, even if I had suffered bad
ly for three years and had suffered
less severely for five or six mote
years. Tanlac, too. is the only med
icine that ever helped my indiges
tion and nervous troubles, jtndAhese
troubles, the doctors told tliX were
the cause of all my bntKnealth
‘The Taniae gave me a tine Np
petite. in< ten ;rd .my strength a:t\
made me tihie to do my housework
I feel fine row and am net bothere-i
with my nerve- 1 do r.ot hav-
headaches and my 'stomach is in
fine shape. Tanlac is the best Hied
icine I have ever taken, and hun
dreds of dollars have been spett’
trying to break up my troubles.”
Tanlac. ”Th« Master Medit itu\” ,i*
sold by:
Jno. M Klein. Walterbam.
TlUi- (Ndleton rypress Co., CoiJe-
ton.
Cottagevill
ville/
Isiandton Mrnvrtilo t
ton
X
Well, way back in 1901, after I had been
in this bright, happy world for several
days, I began to get worried like. I didn’t
have any name.
*
Folks were calling me “it” and “the new
one” and “whatdya-call-it.” I didn’t like
it a bit. Then one day I heard the Big
Chief telephoning all his department heads
to meet in his office.
Pretty soon they all came filing in. Tall
chaps, short chaps, fat chaps and skinny
chaps. “Now that he is here,” said the
Big Chief, “what will you name him?”
and wrangled. You know, you have heard
them argue whether He’d be called Jack
or John or Jim before. Finally, one fellow
spoke up and said:
“Why not'call him ’SOVEREIGN’? . His
mother was a Virginian, his father an
aristocrat of the Carolinas. He comes
from the very best stock. He comes from
the very sweetest, ripest, mellowest Vir
ginia and Carolina tobacco. He is being
raised right in one of the cleanest, whitest,
healthiest homes on earth. He is a South
erner born, a Southerner bred, a Southern
gentleman—the king of them all—a real
/
V
I'.tig Co. Cottog-- 1
y
W. C. Glover. G:
.nrboro.i
l.iand
X 1 ]
THICK. GLOSSY
FREE F
i-ff.T .1 <’;•
\
\
My! how they wrangled and wrangled SOVEREIGN. x>*
The Folks of the South KNOW good blood.
The Folks of the South KNOW good tobacco/
SOVEREIGN — the best —is none, too good a name.” So I was named, friend,
for I want you as one of my friends, and it means a whole heap when I say—'
X
• \
1 am guaranteed by
'' k • Px
a/ '/v (>ac.i v
3
-Buy me.
x
If you don’t. like me return me to your dealer and get
your money back. 1 have said it. A Southern gentleman is known
the world over for keeping his word, and 1 have given you mine.
FOR THE GENTLEMAN OF THE
SOUTH
otf Vfc&nt/ (166
\A O-O- -
Saxo Vi •nr Hail’? Iloiiblo it*. Ik‘aut\
In a ’l eu Aininciit*—
Try Ttvi*!
Million
s. Of mo the!
s t-ive "<
foi nia
Sv
run of Pie*”
P.f' .. U-e i
perfect
iv
harmle**: <
Midi on 1
it,.'' and it
never fail*
to a 1 or.
f-tonuii
h.
M ve” ■ j»nd * o
'tejs/
Ask
voiye itrugr ist
ft»V ;i * () •
t of t b*
of
Vfi|n r\ r t"
P •
"ell. nTnyC'! 1 j. you cTf^ foi li« v :Ky> ban. tha*
* ;.J.>t» u* with bounty aiV<l i* taiiian'
vMth life; ha* an iiuonip.Viabie soft
s ness and is Huffy and InsY^ou*. ti>
" v «‘ piiandcrino.
tbo
Just otic applicallo,! iloublc.* . tit •
beauty of your hair, be.*id**s it itu-
fff ' tncdiatelv dissolves every pat Urb*
XTt’ch has fait diierti .n : foi l.-iiio.-. j fcfuvy. healthy
oJiiMren of all apoc and fn r p ro*dandruff,
ros XHalnie printed on the hot»'e l,„hs the
TXwnn* of counterfetts sold t'ei^ i strength
Get the frontline, made bv ‘ C.illfdr-
hia Fie S^tfcin Compnnv ” T?efus>.
nny other kind with contempt
hiUr if .you have
This desTMKfive sc it if
hair ofjdfs lusUe. it.v
and its. very Ivfe. and »f
not overcome 4 produces a fever
ishness and inching oC the scalp, the
hair rnot>K famish, loosen and die;
— then the hair.falls out fast.
If" you hair has bmp neglected
nt eic’t and is thin, faded, dry, scraggy or
oily, get a 25-cent bottle of
ILid Habits.
* , Those who • breakfast
.o'clock or later, lunch at twelve and too
- 1 ;*ve dinner a* six are almost cer- Knowlton’s Danderine at any drug
• in to be troubled with indigestion, store or toilet counter, apply a lit-
Thev do not allow time for one tie as directed and ten minutes af-
mea] to digest before taking anot’i- ter you will say this was the best
e". Not less than five hours should investment you ever made.
“’apse between meals. If you are We sincerely believe, regardless
troubled with indigestion correct °f everything else advertised, that
• 014*- byl»its and fake rhanib«rlain’r. if you desire sofe, lustrous, beauti-
T aTrlets.'*srd vou nitty reasonably ful hair and lots of it^ no dandruff
rore for a n*rUk recovery. These —no itching scalp ahd no mote
tablets strengthen the stomach and falling hair 1 —you must use Knowl-
enahle It to perform Its functions ton’s Danderine. If eventually—
naturaliy. Obtainable everywhere, why not now? ^
FAMILY AVOIDS
SERIOUS SICKNESS
67 Being Conatantlj Supplied Wild
Thtdford’s Black-Draught.
McDuff, Va —“I suifered for seven 1 ,
gears,” says Mrs. J U. Whittaker, o
(his place, “with sick headache, ant
stomach trouble.
Ten years aqo a friend told me to trx
Thedlord s Black-Draught, winch I dm,
and I found it to be the best lamily medi
cine for young and old.
I keep BlacK-Dmught on hand all the
time now, and w hen my children feel a
little bad, they ask me for a dose, and n
does them more good than any medicine
they ever tried.
We never have a lorg sped of sick
ness in our family, since we commenced
using Black-Draught.”
Thedford's Black-Draught is purely
vegetable, and has been found to regu
late weak stomachs, aid digestion, re
lieve indigestion, colic, wind, nausea,
headache, sick stomach, and similai
symptoms.
It has been in constant use for more
than 70 years, and has benefited more
than a million people.
Your druggist sells and recommends
Black-Draught. Price only 23c. Get a
Blckage to-day. N. C m
MONUMENTS!
1 have fifcuri'd th<‘ .ig* n. > f<»i tb«*
r* lebratvd ( linn kr-i- Mai bh ^
• 1 am prepared to furnrb < oiiMi ic -
. Till i-tar.r- ahd tnonumorit work
W
alTno pb 1 :!*'d to fi/il v.Itb ar.v
1 ■ in Horn! of atrything in thi • lin
\<> or»l< r too.’stnall and noiii t ,0
LX?' 1 for this (omp.iriy to fill.
C. C. HIOTT
Round, S. C.
t
**************
CARDS.
************
R. M JEFFERIES
Attorney and ( ounsellor at Law
W W.TFltlMHto, s. <’.
>■ ,. . 'll.*
Fractirp in all ( 01111^ f\«i j*t l.ouity
STOP. N.nok AND Ki: VD Til!-
If a man tow.- a girl, that his bust-
ness;
t' : t'* b<T *■ ns'-
\
•*t n.trr! d tL.-ut's' tb**b’
If a gir| b \ . * a v:.r.
n
; t‘
N.
a tb*
t ;f >n>o‘ la R“«t
( !:, . b' lm d. sen
. |‘r. :: n ( itb. r
Be a Railway Mail Clerk
Oc« • trav.ltftg job at good’pof wllb rofultr pro-
mo>Mo.. plrnly of tlmo off, on<f rapon.r. paid
whllo away from bcadqusrtrra If you aro an
Amrrlran, ovor 17 yoara old. in (oo.l pkyair.lron
dtiloo, you con toady iraia your ..If lo qualify for
one of thrae attract)*#, lif.ilmr loba. the Infer-
nattonal Correapondcnrr Hchooli art r«p»ri» at
training mtfj to |M»* Civil Service t aaminallona.
Vou l anyrvporo your.rtf rlgbl at humr. In yuur
•par* limo Send a poatal rard today fur frrt 4«
pod* book Irljing all about hundred, who hava
bvrn auccraarul. Slop drudCU'l' Uvrido lo moko
aomrlhlnf of your«-lf: Vou ran do if by uainf tbo
aamo method# that hava •nadr other# aucevod!
INTUNATIONAL COtRCSPONDENCI SCHOOLS
•o> 1(1. Scraatoa. Po
t,<*nn* N'egotialetl <>fi lni|ifti\f'«I
>
I'nnniiig La ml*.
Dr. A. J. Anderson,
Dental Surgeon
Office Hours: 9 a. m. to 2 p. m.;
3p. in. to 6 p. m. Phono 10«»-X.
Walter boro, 8. C.
New York Pressing'
Club
LOPER & RIVERS
Plumbers and (ias Fitters.
( INFAN* WOKK I OK < tsfl
and satisfaction guaiant**i*d
AH work inspectod and passctl upon
by City Engineer, Cozart Itinns.
“KYK AND IIAIII FIXINGS”
Spetk, eye glasses. eye shades,
toupees, wigs, transformations, curls,
mustaches, whiskers, rombings-mak-
ing. For attractive prices address
Acme Hair and Optical Co., near
post offic\ Savannah, Ga.
f. \SPAKILL \ < \KM\ M
Y a m pa. kl a.
Koiinrt Trip Pan Prom
Wallei boi<>. S. •? 11 .
Por Dus occasion wtiiqb «ill b
Riled wiOi fun’and frolic. :tnd Iasi
mg trom Pehpnniy “nd to Ivtli,
tbkf ts will be .-old to Tampa and
return as shown abov't 1 L> lb* -
ATLANTH' tOAST LINK
The Stamhitd Itilroad of tlie Soutli
.IANPARV -1st to PP.HKPAKV ath
Inclusive.
Limited returning until midnight o'
Febtuarv 2oih. but may be extend
ed to March :»rd by tlepositing with
Pity Ticket Agent at Tampa, unde
prescribed rules, and upon paytm«*‘
of $1.00.
Proportionate far** from inter
mediate stations. Children half
fares. Liberal Stop Over Privileges.
For further particulars, schedules,
sleeping car reservations, etc , call
on D. E. MARTIN.
Ticket Agent.