The press and standard. [volume] (Walterboro, S.C.) 1890-current, April 10, 1918, Image 7
“Do-your-bit”
Biscuits
1 Ut*1 tablet poon •COTTOI t EN*
\\ cupt pastry flour
X jdutt corn meal *
‘ 4 level teaspoons baking powder
X teaspoon salt
% cup milk or half mi!^ and half
water.
• / * ,
> Sift togetlKr flour, corn meal, baking
powder and salt. Rub in chilled 'COT-
TOLENE with fingertips, wry lightly.
Add i^tlk and water and mix to soft
dough with knife. Roil and cut. Bake
in hot over, for 15 minutes.
*•.
Uncle Sam says “Save
animal fats.”
,c
*COTTOLENE saves
your money too.
Cottolene
'Jim Natural Shortaml*
♦ >• ,
‘ .—>cera in tins
nient i
'4-
DOlMii. [.MRS
COMMERCIAL CAR
Gasoline consumption is unus
ually low. Tire mileage is •
unusually high.
STOP IX AND EXAMINE
THIS BUSINESS DELIVERY
ARMY CYClf MFC. CO.
130 Meeting St. Phone Jfil
FOR BETTER SERYH'B
“Gflb TO THE ARMY’ V
C'harlewton, •:* S. t?.
. ' / .
Portstipation ntitf |iHlig«*'tioii.
These are twin evils. Persons
suffering from indigestion are often
troubled with constipation. Mrs.
Robert Allison. Mattoon. 111., writes
that tit her she fiCst moved to Mat-
toon she was a great sufferer from
indigestion and constipation. Fool
distressed her tnd there vis a feel
ing like a heavy weight pressing on
her stomach and chest. She did not
rest well at night, and felt worn out
a good part of the time. One bot
tle of Chamberlain’s Tablets correct
ed this trouble so that she has since
felt like a different person.
Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Welch and
children passed through St. GeOra •
Monday afternoon en route to
Stokes, Colleton countv. where Mr.
Welch- is encaged in the mercantile
business. They had been on a Nislt
to relative^ at Hidgeville, their
former, home, making < the trip in
their car.—Dorchester Eagle.
"See ‘Gats-if Pool
Off This
Lmvm The Toe ae Smooth os the
Palm of Tour Hoad.
_ Th* corn n*v*r now that “doto*
IV will not got It never Irritates
the flesh, never makes your, toe sore.
Just two drops of ^Gete-It” and
presto! the corn-pain vanishes,
shortly you oaa pool the corn ri*ht
off with year finger and there you
are—pain-free and happy, with the
toe as smooth and corn-free as your
palm. “Oete-lf is tbs only safe
wav in the world to treat a corn or
callus It’s ths sure way—the way
that never fails It is trisd and trus
—need by milltone every year. It
‘ “ “ * ee cut-
always works •’Gets-It" mak
ting and digging at a corn and fuss
ing with bandages, salves or any
thing else entirely unnecessary-
# “Oete-If is sold by ail druggists
(yon need pay no more than z»
coots), or It will be sent direct by
& Lawrence A Co.. Chicago. lit .
Som !u Wwuerboru a~d rocom-
tuended ax tho world’s beat com
remedy by Fire HU1 More. Co.
NEW ARISTOCRACY
IN THE IX)W COUNTRY
(Continued From First Page.)
and a'dreamer of the possibilities
of the low country-
Agent Risher had pJlhted won
derful wofd pictures of the fine
'dinner which would be awaiting u*
at Grove Stock Farm; the name
Ernest A. Marvin has given his plan
tation two miles below White Hall.
Reaching this farm about 1 o'clock,
tfew time, we had plenty 'of time to
go see his prixe winning Durocs and
the ideal arrangement of his hog
lot. and houses, before the midday
meal was announced. Now. it will
do apy farmer or lover of fine hogs
good to see the evidences of wis**
selection and careful breeding, as
well as the many fine hogs on ex
hibit there. They are on exhibit,
for Mr. Marvin says all-his visitors
are entertained in his hog lot. th'
fame of his D.urocs having spread
abroad. And no better* entertain-
ment cap. be* had. To the lover of
oerfection no prettier picture can •>
show’n than to see, these beautie. .
such numbers and in such excelle -'
Hoes from day old pics to the f * ’
er of his herd.— an unending nm
her it seems to one who has the
idea that a half dozen hogs r.r *
enough for any farm.
Mr. Marvin has nineteen brood
sows besides several young ones he
is saving. These are of his raising
and selection from the finest Duroc
herds in the South. The last pur
chase he made was several bred
sows from Peacock Bros., of Coch
ran. Gr... one of which cost *$3.’
All these are registered, and > -
Marvtj is as careful to record the
ace. and pedigree of his pigs as hi*
wif(- is to record the birthdtys of
the children.
A bit of the historv of Mr. Mar
vin's stock farm would not he un
interesting. He began his present
herd about fixe years ago. by pur
chasing a pig for fl ( t. Not long af
terwards he bought another for $25,
and soon he became reckless. Mrs.
Marvin told him; and spent for
g sow. He said he was actually
ashamed to let anyone know the
rr’ce he paid for that sow,.,for lie
felt that h’e had exceeded the liiuit%
of good business judgment at that
time. But this was only the begin
ning. and today he thinks nothin'
of paying *250 to $310 for a fine
snecimen of the breed, and ho says
it is good business to do this. For
instance a few months aco he pur
chased a bred sow for $lfi3 at an
auction sale. She soon farrowed a
litter of nine pigs, seven of which
he sold at $20 each, leaving him
two pigs and the mother represent
ing an investment of only $23.
Mr. Marvin has a succession >f
small fields which he plants to dif
ferent crops for grazing. Just now
he has several plots of rye, vetch
and oats. The hogs graze these and
require but a small amount of oth
er food. The crops are kept rotat
ing so as to have something for the
bogs to greze at almost all seasons
of the vear. The Duroc is a thrifty
hoc and requires but little attention,
excent to keep his quarters clean,
which Mr. Marvin does, everything
about the premises being spotless
As a business proposition, Mr.
M-’.rvin is making good money on
his Du foes. He cannot keep up
vitb his orders for pigs. Ho has
over a hundred orders now which ho
cannot fi'i. afid he is getting from
'to to $20 for pics eicht weeks
old Just now he is trying to catch
•-n with his orders booked at the
1;. t countx fair. He is: losing money
nr. these, as h° booked them r.t $ l
«n'*h. when he can cet $15 for everv
•v- r^cht weeks old he can rn se.
b"» he savs h" intends to fill ever**
order taken then just as fast ?s
possible.
When the historv of loxv countrv
farms are written by the future his
torian of Colleton countv. Omve
Stock Farm will hold an import."nt
r *sition ns one of the nioneer de-
xelopments of this really wonder
ful low country. Yet in its infanev.
it will in a few years present n much
Sieger aspect, and we do not hesi
tate to predict it, will soon be one
of the finest hoc ranches in this
part of the codntrv.
Following the dinner, and Risher
did not exaggerate one 4bit. we went
nv^r Mr. Marvin’s rice farm, and
watched him thresh some velxft
beans for a neighbor, before leaving
'or our next stop, the new stock
farm of G H. Guess at White Hall,
also a breeder of fine Durocs.
Here in the White Hall Duroc
Farm of G. H. Guess is a marvelous
development, which has sprung no
as if bx macic. January 1. 1318,
not a lick had been struck. Mr
Guess stated. Now there is a hoc
ranch of large proportions, and
stocked with some of the South’s
best in the Duroc line. Mr. Guess
has 500 acres which he proposes to
devote to building up an ideal hog
and cattle farm, and he has begun
with a determination to make it
second to none in the country
When we reached there Mr. Guess
was at work getting some work
dene, with his coat off and at it him-
*" J-* r ♦ fAW»rxor^ P d rfl*-
- si.' we 1 »r* It •" a*-* 1
tl e manv pre’tv hor* ’ £ has. He
1 < Iso start-d his h«*d with some
{of the best bleed obtainable, and is
•i-v.- nc po pains to build up a fine
; trfrk : of the best in the Sauth. If?
is already marketing many pics,
hi x inc fourteen fnc registered
i ,,vt --ows. His mipn 1 ' is also
shi.rt of the demand and he cunnot
Hocin to fill his orders.
One fine sow there has a litter of
t? fine pigs, not a sorry one in the
lifter. This is rifle of the prettiest
pictures we have seen in a long
< nn ! Mr. Guess is colrr % hav«»
a picture made of th'"- sow and her
, nic- e . which we hope to get to print
in The Pro?* and Standard. Tho
foundations for a fine herd is here,
and Mr. Guess has the ene-gy and
I enthusiasm to make it better. His
I plans are well laid, and one can see
‘what a beautiful development will
be the result in the near future.
Situated on the public road la aiffht
of the station, this will soon be one
of the show places in that sedtloo
of the country. In fact we caaaot
Imagine a trip which will be worth
more to any farmer In this county
than to. visit these two' progressive
farms, especially if the farmer is
interested in raising better hogs.
And, these are not the only raft
ers of fine hogs in the low country.
W. R. Marvin, on his late flther’s
homestead, is raising sohie equally
fine Durocs an<| also Rerkshires.
The Boyntons, C. H., Sr E. and T.
S., "lire also building up fine hog
and cattle farms, to say nothing of
Haskell Moore, and several others
whose places In this vicinity we
have not yet seen. On«* cannot see
them all in one day, but there are
other days, end this editor will ac
company County Affcnt Risher
acain on one pf his trips.
There is a rew arisiocracy bein^
founded in the lower part of Colle
ton county. This time it is not one of
lineage, but one of aceomplfshment.
While the Old South eannot be re
stored there will come a New South
to take it" place, more grand and
more povetful. perhaps,, than the
* ’Buil* upen *ie .flu^idatfonz
1 then, it may bo, but with a
■ ;o*>rr. s-^err-trooture, and people.'!
by men xvnb do things, not dream
them aM day long. .We hesitate to
xvrite the prophecy which we feel
will lie the fruits of their labors.
We take off our bats-tp these young
non who are rolling up their sleeves
and giving a new dignity to labor,
and nr’ unfolding the -wonderful
possri ' s of the soil and climate
wit’ ' a wise Creator endowed
p •;' r: :: t'">rollna, and particularly
C< ..vton!
„ W. W\ SMOAK.
Middle Aged
Women
Are Here ToM the Best Remedy
'for Their Troubles.
. Frcetofont, O.—“I was passing through the critical
period of life, being forty-six yean of age and had all
the symptoms incident to that change — heat flashes,.
nervousness, and was in a genenl ran down condition, J
so it was hard for me to do my work. Lydia EL Pink-'
ham's Vegetable Compound was recommended to me aa
the beat remedy for my troubles,which it surely proved
to be. I feel better and stronger in everv way since
taking it, and the annoying symptoms nave disap*
S Fared.”—Mrs. M. UoDPKS, U25 Napoleon 8L, Fremont,
hio.
North Haven, Conn.—"Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegete-
‘ Compound restored my health after everyth!] '
l failed when passing through change of life.
as • %
T5- t
ble
had
thing else
_ . „ „ ife. There
is nothing like it to overcome tho trying symptoms.”
;b Isxu.A, Box 107, North Haven, Conn.
—Mrs. FuiliKScs
M Ssadk Cases
STRIM evidence
Is t ie Statement of This Walterbokn
Wonsan.
LYDIA £. PINKHAMS
VEGETABLE COMPOUND
Dias tke greatest record lor the greatest goad
PTCTA t. WHICH AM MUMCINC CO.* LYNN. MASS.
MONUMENTS!
Backache is often kidney ache;
A, common warning of serious]
kidney ills.
"A Stitch in Time Saves Nine.”-
Don’t delay—use Doan’s Kidney]
Pills.
Profit by the experience of Mrs.
E. C. Glover, 27 Cam St. She says:
"About five years ago I suffered a
great deal wzth a backache caused
by my kidneys being in a disorder-]
ed condition- My bark ached all the
time and my kidneys acted irregu-j
larly, causing me much annoyance.
As Doan’s Kidney Pills had been
highly recommended for trouble I
lUce mine, I gave them a trial. The]
first box brought me great relief.
The backaches completely left me
and my kidneys acted regularly.
Two boxes of Doan’s made me en-1
tirely well. Doan’s Kidney Pills]
hax'e effected a complete cure foil
me and I recommend them to oth-j
ers who are affected this way.”
-4
FI'
*v>
TOMORROW
re affec
Jcv'ht i
Price fiOtv'Yt all dealers. 'Don't
simply ask for a kidney remedy—
get Doan’s Kidney Pills -the same
that Mrs. Glover had. Fpster-Mil-
burn Co., Mfgrs., Buffalo, N. Y.
TO BE MARRIED APRIL 14th.
The following invitations haxo
been received:
Mr. and Mrs. P. M. Yarn
request the honor of your presence
at the marriage of their daughter
Erma Frel.
to
Mr. John David Shuler. Jr.
on Sunday, April fourteenth, nine
teen hundred and eighteen, at
fixe o’clock p. m.. at the
First Baptist Church
Walterboro, South Carolina.
STOIMCH ACTS FINE!
NO INDI6ES1N, NAS
HEANDBN, ACM
•rope's Blnpeiwdn” Fixes Sick, Sour,
Upoct Stomach** In Five
Mlnntes.
You don’t want a slow remedy
when your stomach is bad—or an
uncertain one—or a harmful one
your stomach is too valuable: you
mustn’t injure it with drastic drugs.
Pape’s Diapepsin is noted for it.i
speed in giving relief; its harmless
ness; its certain, unfailing action in
regulating sick, sour, gassy stom
achs. Its quick relief in indiges
tion, dyspepsia and gastritis, when
caused by acidity, has made it fa-
mhtis the world over.
Keep this wonderful stomach
sweetener in your home—keep it
handy—get a large flfty-cent case
from any drug store and then if any
one should eat something which
doesn’t agree with themj if what
they eat lays like lead, ferments and
sours and forms gas; causes head
ache, dizziness and nausea; eructa
tions of acid and undigested food
— , ^ ~ TTo rk*n r
* t toniact w ih
stomach II help:; to neutralize th"
e\re ■'Fixe acidity, then all the storr-
ncl, distress caused by it disappear*
Hs promptness, certainty and ea<e
It ove-coming such stomach disor-
s is a revelation to tho; e who
try it.
Nature t’uiea. The D**clor lakes the
Fee.
There is an old saving that "Na
ture cures, the doctor takes the fee,"
b\:t*as everyone knows you can help
Nature xery much and thereby en
able it to off«*ct a cure In much less
time than Is usually required. This
is particularly true of colds. Cham
berlain's Cough Remedy relieves
the lungs, liquifies the touch mucus
and aids in its expectoration, allays
the cough and aids Nature in restor
ing thd system to a healthy condi
tion. &
I AM AGENT FOR CHEROKEE
MARBLE WORKS. SEE ME FOR
ESTIMATES AND SECURE MV
FIGURES BEFORE BUYING.
C. C. HIOTT
ROUND, S. C.
Ask Your Grocer
CiiEEK ! N[A[S
COFFEES
Best By Every Test
« • « • • ««*»*»••«
* CARDS.
• ••••«»«*****4
R. M. JEFFERIES
Attorney and Counsellor at Lav.
WALTERBORO, M. C.
' s
Practice In nil Courts except Equity,
loniu Negotiated on Improved
Farming Lands.
Dr. A. J. Anderson.
Dental Surgeon
ornca Hours, k a. m. U* ^ p. «*.
Jp. ca. to 9 p. m* Pbon«
Walterboro, 8. C.
It for you.
STOP, LOOK AND READ Tills
if a man lovm a gin, tus* u<«
If a gin lavas a man that’s bar - ti**
U thar g«i mam. 1
business.
So, If yeu want your at t " otd’- » .•
covereda and clothe# le ned *«
The New York presclii* ( '-’i v
that’s thslr business.
New York Pressing
Club
J. H. DAVENPORT. Manager.
I have noticed that most
J V,, - .. ,
folk* who buy a car are sorry
they didn’t buy one sooner.
- JOHN N. WILLYS
\. V*
W alterboro Garage
Ltd.
. T *
x
V
r'
LOOK
V
V
For the Colleton Garage.^ There
You have Attention and. Service
Standardized the County Over
The Colleton Garage
RAILROAD AVENUE, WALTERBORO. S. C.
•V
Whenever You Need a General Toole
Take Grove’a.
The Old Standard Grove’s Tasteless
chill Tonic is equally valuable as a
General Tomic because It contains the
well known tor.ic properties fri < )1 ’I SINK
and IRON. It acts on Uic Uv«r, Duxes
out Malaria, Eniichea tLe Blo«iu cnO
Builds up the Whoie System. 60 C«nu.
MONEY TO LOA xl
On Real Estate
*'*" *
L. B. HOUCK
WALTERBORO, S. C
Ths Quintas That Dsss Kit Affect ths Hssi ms oumus That Does Not Altsct Ths Hose
tonic and lazatlve aflect. LAXA- ‘V!
tTvK i.K*)M < l 0, 'tNlNm*t*tter*h#»c»r«M»arT TIVhBsoWO.Qt ,X,NI * Urtttltaanoruinarj
0’ m,M •« 1 ^ CSM^: Derwoao*aa nor ^
Xof-W ol K 'V. i.KOX t.. 26c.
O'-iotne a»l doea aot capae
i ranging in bead. Remember the fun name atrS
lock tJt the nguaiuie of B. W. C20V3. 9c.
.,o