The press and standard. [volume] (Walterboro, S.C.) 1890-current, February 13, 1918, Image 6
yl
THE PRESS ANOr STANDARD
the p»tnleM. olf-Uk«-»-b»
nan»>p««l corn r«mor*r I tried
ways galore, until I wao blue
bWeuM*
in the face and red la the toea Me
more for m*. Use "Oete-It" It
never faila Touch any corn or oel-
lua with two drop# of •Oeto-IC*
and “Oete-It- doe* the rest. Its a
relief to be able to stop cuttlnc
corns, aiaklnc them bleed, wrapping
them up like nackaces and usl-'u
sticky tape and salves. It removes
any corn clear and clean, leaving
the toe as smooth as your pahn Ton
can wear those new shoes without
pain, dance and be frisky on your
feet. Its trreat to use •*Oets-It
-Oetsm" A sold at all drugs
T»an *S cents
sold at all drutralsts
fyou need pay no more th«
a bottle . or sent On receipt of price
by E. I— w re nee ft Co , Chicago. Ill
L'MMHORH&SON
CHARLESTON, S:C.
Half Your Living
Without Money Cost
We are all at a danyer point. On
tbc uso of noo 1 rorr.inon noyso in our
ISIS fam and i?:»ni<'n oprration.i d«-
pends prosperity or our “going broke."
• I>cn at present high prioen no one
ran plant all or nt.'.rly all cotton, buy
food and grain at pre^-:t prices from
supply men luof on credit and make
moqey. Food ‘au<l grain is higher in
proportion than tro present cotton
prices.
It’s a tlriK above all othon to play
safe; to praHucr all possible food,
grain nrd forago^nppllcs on your own
acres; to cut down vlio store bill.
A good ple^o ^riier. ground,
•rightly planted, nthtlyXtendcd and
'kept planted tin y ar round, can be
madeto pay nearly half your INln*. It
will save you more money than you
made on the host three acres of cotton
you ever grow!
Hastings’ 1015 Coed Book tclh all
about the right kind of a money sav
ing garden and the vegetables to put
in It It teiis about the urm crops as
well and *hnv/!-, yoij the clear road to
real and regular farm prosperity. It's
Frea. Send ffir It today to Hr 0.
HASTINGS CO., Atlanta, Ga.—Advt.
she
Darling, when I am far away.
From you. somewhere In France,.
I ask you to always think
, And pray that I have a
To leave you dear, was
The hardest thing, of all
But I am no slacker. ,
When I hear my country call.
To be at home with you. little girl, <
Is happiness that ia true.
But I cannot see the enemy.
Dowd the red. wtfite and . blue. .
I used to be with you often.
Those beautiful, happy days.
But It makes me blue to think
That we are so far away.
SomeAlay In the near future.
This great conflict will end.
And the' sololer boy who Ic^-ea you*
Will come back to you a*kin.
It I* the duty of evdry girl.
Who is left behind.
To always remember the boy
loves.
Who Is on the firing line. .
He did not want to leave you.
For h¥ is gone to risk his life.
He is a true American, -
And upholds the stars and stripes.
The girls here ar*‘ beautiful.
Most everywhere you roam.
But are nothing to compare
With the ones at home.
When the boys go marching by.
In step with some National hymn.
It thrills nty heart to know.-
That I am one of them. ’
I tdld you when I kissed
Those lips of yours so sweet. ,
That f was going to leave you. •
And again, we may never meet.
Don’t| give up kny darling.
If you love me you will wait.
If we don’t meet ok earth again.
, We. will meet •♦''The Golden Gate.
Some girls aif not so patient.
Who will Wot wait ,so long.
But will go and love a slacker
Wheh their soldier boy has gone.
When he gov's to fight^he battle.
For his country and for you.
His thoughts are always resting.
On the one he thinks is trije*
When he returns in years to come,
And finds you false.
His whole life will be ruined.
And his. happiness lost.
Don’t bear ‘this strain, little girl.
Make your love he'true.
Greet the boy in khaki.
When he comes niarchine^ bark to
you.
Throw your afms about him.
Let hitv-kiss your sweet little lips.
Then he will fully tell you.
All gbout his wonderful trip.
Don’t respect a slacker.
They desert e not a chance.
The boys you should honor.
Are the boys who go to France.
I will close this letter, hoping
^ You w ill be mine some day.
As I bid you gbodbye tor this 4 hou r .
And goodbye for this day.
If it is goodbye for a month.
She loves yon true as etier.
Goodbye for a year.
And perhaps, goodbye forever.
C. M. S.
Co M 11k. Inf.
Camp Set ier v Greenville. S. C.- /
" jw /
I
i 1
.• < A
Catarrh
Ask You r Grocer
cheek-neacs
COFFEES
Best By [very Test
MONUMENTSr
Miss Civile Saunders, who is at
tending Stokes Business College at
harlbston. has returned to her du
ties after having been''called hotur
to the bedside of her mother. w.io
was very 111..'
* ^ x.
UOMAAVS STATKMKNT
WILL MKI.I* WAkTKKIKWO
I AM AGENT FOR CHEROKEE
MARBLE WORKS SEE ME FOR
ESTIMATES AND SECURE MY
FIGURES BEFORE BUYING.
C. C. HIOTT
ROUND, S. C.
Cannot Ba Cured
vdh LOCAL APPLICATIONS, as *h«y
cannot ranch tha a*-at of the uiaaase.
Catarrh la n local Utaeasa. greatly in
fluenced by consrhutional conditions, and
In order to cura it you must take an
Internal retnsdy.- Hall’* Catarrh Medi
cine la taken internally and acta thru
the blood on the mucous-eurfaraa of the
ayatem Haifa Catarrh Medicine was
prafcrlbed by one of the beat physiciana
in thla country for veara It la' com-
poaed of aomc of the beat tonic* known,
combined with aome pf the beat blood
purlflera. The perfect combination of
the ingredimts In Haifa Catarrh Medi
cine is what produces such wonderful
reaulta In catarrhal condUiona Send for
testimonial* free.
F J. CHENEY A CO.. Props. Toledo. O.
All Druggists. 7Sc
Haifa Family Pills for constipation.
“I hated rooklig becauy what
ever I ate gave me soup stomach-
and a Idorted feeling I drank h »t
water olive oil li\ th* gftllon. Noth
ing hflped until I tried simpb*
buckthorn bark, jilveerine. etc., a?
mixed in Adier-l-ka " Beeflu^e :t
flushes the ENTIIIT bowel tract
completely Adler-i-ka reliexes ANi*
CASE sour rtomarh. gas or constipa
tion r.nd prevents appendtcitis Tf: >
INSTANT action is eurpr.sing Sold
bv Jr.o M Klein.
A POWERFUL AID
When you feel shraish and
nervous, tired and indifferent.
you have the first symptoms
your
ympt
of declining strength and 3
system positively needs the
special nutritive food-tonic in
per acre. The southern fanner will
act most unwisely if he fles tc culti
vate too much land with the present
supply of labor. A better plan would
be not to increase the acreage devoted
to cultivated crops, but to produce
more pen acre, by the us* of fenlllz-
ev, manure, good seed and itfiproved
machinary, all of which will save la
bor * •
One ion of good fertlliier will do
more work in growing crops than will
1
jierbaps half the labor ordinarily em
ployed, and cultivate it better, should
be looked to at this time as a source
of help in facing the labor shortage
Good seed of a strain known to do
well in a community will do mnch to
ward increasing yiolds, without an In
crease of acreage.
Is thin not a time when the fatmer
should be sure to use these three crop
makers, to the fullest extent, to off
set the labor shortage?
MAKES DISCOVERY
DIGGING A DITCH
«>\\ %i:i; OK LAM) MADE BU M.
” ., / V* N ^
MW IHMilVG DlTt’H IT BED
OK TEN At Tot'S DISEASE
STORY A ROMANCE
l*er»|»|«- With SfomiM li. Kidney
BIoimI. BheHmntic m Sk'n (
Affections Belieteil
er gathered and he noticed that tpis
water turned a reddish color caused
by- mixing water with the vein 'of
peculiar looking mineral, almost lik->
powder, which had apparently laid
for centuries encased in a marble
like casing of rock and clay. y
The sore on his lee began to heal
and by the time his work was con-,,
pieted his leg .aias sound anjl wejl.
This was considered f*n very remarka
ble by the. people of that section that
an investigation was made and it was
found to be like radium, told, plat-
nupi and other wotujf'roiis-secrets of
nature, a natural Qdmnound contain
ing inimitable properties in propor-
, , . , , . ,tions no chemist has attempted t.
n .,^t ° thoUKh a sum was
n.. ii.il ion* is taken from theh P W ho could accomplish thiv
great tfipavl found i.aon a poorj To , lay> likp radilim> * hirbMsi
ar...er« place near Hickory. Missis*. j n riIr ( ni - rancetw. x-rav work
’ * s
Wednesday, Febnwr. 13, 1918.
*!\
We are offering a meal mixture,
guaranteed analysis 8-2 1*2 1 at
PER TON
THREE HUSKY FELLOWS READY TO
HELP OUT IN THE LABOR SHORTAGE
Common labor is, six times this amount of money ex-
today the most pended in labor. For example, one
sought after com- ton of good fertiliser will now cost
modity in America, about $46.00 The plant food ip this
It is very scarce quantity when applied to three acres
throughout the en- of land w’ill give an increase of about
tire country. Farm- 750 i>ounds o^lint cotton and 1,500
«r» of the South pounds of seed. The lint at 30c per
are especially wor- pound amounts to $225.00, and the
ried over the situ- seed at $80.00 per too amounts to
ation. During war $60 00. making a total of $2S5.<M.
times the farmer Few business concerns net 50 per
should Tje^doubiy cent increase on. money invested in
economical of ao labor, but. granting that the fanner
J. N. HARPER valuable a com- will net 100 j>er cent cn his invest-
modity as lat>or. ,Jt must not be wast- ment In labor, and supposing that he
ed. Now is not the time to employ pays $100 per day for labor, tho
labor to'clean out fence comers, and $40'>0 invested in fertilizer, when in
to do other kinds of the less produc- vested in labor, would net him $46.00;
live work There must be no lost mo- whereas, when invested in fertilizer, it
tion. Every lick must be made to gives him a net increase of $239.00.
count in answering the call of our na- Thus it can be seen the tremendous
tion and her allies, who are calling out advantage of supplementing labor
to the farmer "Give us bread! Give us with liberal application^ of plant food
clothing!" / - Likewise an improved piece of ma-
The best way to economize labor chlnery that makes it possible to cul-
on the farm today is to produce more tlvate an acre of cotton or corn with
Less 5 per cent for Cash, freight
paid to local station.
\ 0 ,
Manufacturing Co.
Ritter, S. C.
Appi. and the story of thi* ‘great
of mtuie’s. whicH mhcle th-
faruiec rich and the medical world
richer.^^nd makes it possible for
peopb- to VMiirkly treat stomach, di
gestion. kidney, blood'and rheumat
ic. complaints at home, makes inter
esting reading.
An ojd'man while digging, a mill
race on the Hern Farm, ran across
it He was,afflicted with an old
f e ' vr sor*- and blood troubles whioo
w»' r **. f-ensidcred incurable. During
:s My« r il‘ weeks dlgglni h,s ieet tr ,. r;
and leg* were wet each day as wat-rlron pronaration. Acid Iron Mineral
oney] i tKat
r w
vi
. Coffee sure smells,
jood' Yes,fresti-roasted au„ ,
resh-ground Coffee I bought U
DIRECT. No mom stale- stock coffee for us
ilkforSQlWmMsito y 0U FREE
XT .. ..... "" 1
No middlemarisprcfiis.V^sel! direct {oyouVi^Dav
the Parcel Post. Place your order to-day
Glol>e Tea G. Savanndh,Ga.Brand-.vg
vacntiemen / PO Bnv 5 !? 9
Piff irad Pound. Gifoo
to tie foHowiseAddross
GLOBE TEAC°
branch N ? 6
Savannah Ga.
P.0.Box ^ 2
and
illnn;ip iting watrh dials :s Acid Iron'
Mineral has Its man* uses being a
remnrkahli remedy used- •etentrlh
or - internally and anyone t rouhjest
with blood diseases, eruptions rheii-
matisnu kidney. bln<lder or stomach
disorders of a ay-sort may wisely vis «
the nearest store and prorure a bot
tle. A twelve ounce bottle pert
prepaid on receipt of H bv the F»r-
rodine Chetnlcal CoYp , Roanoke. Va ,
or -end stamped envelop with le’-
ter telling what your trouble is for
folder telling more about this greet
Castor Beans Not
nifficulKtr, Grow
mutoN
N. ' **—*
to replenitk your blood power,
enliven its circulation and bring
back the snap and elasticity of
good health. Scoff's Emulsion
supplies Nature with the correct
building-food which is better
Hamlet. N C . Feh 2 it is h 0 -
l-e\♦•d that Pro-Germans are endrav.
onng to interfere with the conduct
of the war and are spreading the
ered. if put into a barn in a dry
place, will thrash themselves, just
as a cotton boll will open; and an
ordinary velvet bean or pea huller
with a few minor mUnstmentn. will
thrash, them. The government neer»s ;
these* beans, and is going to sur
mount anv dirficHtrfep met with bv
the farniBS*.
-Mr: T. S. Evans. As«t: Develop
ment Acent of the Seahorrd Air
following rumors w ith the respect I L,np . Ra,,w,|jr .. w,, »L offices at Ham
let. N. C.. who has undertaken the
plartinc of 10.000 ceres in this ter
ritory for the government, says that
he believes that when the farmers
found out that these rumors were
the result of Pro-German ptopauan-
dn they would come to the support
of the government and wonld take
these contracts in a short time.
to the growing of castor beans In
vestigations ape being carried on
now to trace these rumors to their
source.
Those Pro-Germans are teRinc it
that The castor bean is a difficult
crop jo raise, and that it is impossi
ble to harvest and thrash them, anil
nainuating that these beans are not
heme grown for the Government
- ... rumors no attention
than any drugs, pub or * l ouW be paid, because th is gov-
ak oho lie mixtures. ' ‘rmreot would not ask the farmers
TV Norwcrun cod ii«rr ad ia ’° hme that was impossible.
to saw isiaatf ta ear * n ‘ I government has fixed * lib-
whlcfc price so thnl it will he "very
_ profitable for the farmers, to grow
atotta vwai stnnalaMJiJ »ws these beans. The beans, when gath-
t
i ItamhcrLUn’s Tablet*
These Tablets are Intended espec
ially for disorders of the stomach,
liver and bowels. If you are troubl
ed with heartburn, indigestion or
constipation they will do you good.
MORE
Horses and Mules
F. L. KINSEY
Has returned from the west
where he purchased another car
load of fine horses and mules. If
you need a good work animal we
can please you.
YOUR BUSINESS IS SOLICITED
WILTEIMO LIVE STOCK 0 VEHICLE CO.
H. W. Black, Jr., Mgr.
Subscribe for The Press and Stand-
ard and get all the news of interest that
happens in your county.
Q
-