The press and standard. [volume] (Walterboro, S.C.) 1890-current, April 17, 1918, Image 12

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1 •c •/ \USBk TWBLVS V ',.' . r ■ ■ HID VZAKKUtD April 17, 1918. fc SI'M; 'V By DARWIN P. KINGSLEY, *ii >i } pi IK-' iv % • \ v \ * \ * do you mvo to bpfld a home? It ta us ually cheaper to pay rant •. o ? ’ j ’ ' ‘ ‘ * * ■ * \ w Why do you plan to give your children a good education? Will you get any money- dividends from that? Why do you pay fire insurance premiums and life insurance premiums? You per sonally will get little if anything firom that Why do you call the doctor quicKly if the children are ailing? You don't 'stop to thinK whether you can afford it Do you? n V % i None of these expenditures are what we call good investments. They don't pay in money, yet all pay the finest of dividends. % • . Liberty Bonds represent the home, the school, the children; they represent all the great deeds of our fathers and- grandfathers; they represent Bunker Hill and Yorktown and Gettysburg; they represent the blessed freedom under which tee all live and they also represent the ORDER that makes freedom Messed, They represent the boys “over there T they repre sent devastated Belgium and homeless Serbia and murdered Armenia* t . , % They are the defense that shall Keep from our shores the monster criminals who outraged the women of Belgium and Northern France and made the men slaves; They represent the strength that shall restore Bel gium and rebuild France and avenge Serbia* i , * They are the voice of those who are too young or too old or too weah to fight* they are the sword of the women and the cannon of the children; they are the voice of a free people calling to cruelly wronger freedom-loving men and bringing them succor t *'■.•/, ... * v , • • . - * • • • ; • / ** • Buy them? Of course you will buy them. You’ll borrow to buy them, ' You don’t need to be urged You would be ashamed te go home to your children if you did not buy them. the rate of interest is important but not of first im portance. They would pay, they would appeal to you, if they bore no interest whatever. ' • ‘ * / Add to the rate of interest the dividends they pay in sell interest in safety, in public order, in liberty and law and you have a larger return than you re receive from any other thing that you own. - • • / / They will never become “scraps of paper,** They are the best secured investment In the world. You Stand Behind Them You Should Buy Them THIS SPACE PAID FOR AND CONTRIBUTED BY KUNE CAR SALES COMPANY / KINSBY—FOTVrUN ST. 4I IIK. S KI’lM OrM. 4 HI K'Tt TaUnc P*w, Ind.—“ I with Uckactw / from • di*- nd dragging down Daiaa ao badly that at times I coaid aot b# on ray foot and It did not aoam aa though ggtl eoold atand it I ’'“triad ditfarant j medicine# without any benafit and .aeveral doctors .told ma nothing bat an operation would do ma any {good. My dreg- gist told mo of Lydia E. Pink, ham's Vegetable Compound. I took it trfth the remit that I am now wall and strong, hgat SaFOCkgr* i • op in the morning atfouro’cloot, do my botMawork, than go toa factory and work all day, coma home and get rapper and feel good. 1 don’t know how many of my frienda I have told what Lydia E. Pmkham’a Vegetable Compound baa done for me. '’—Mrs. Anna Meteriano, 36 Weat 10th St, Peru, Ind. Women who suffer from any such ali ments should not fail to try this famous root and herb -omedv, Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vegetable Compound. * ASHTON Lod»ce. It. F. *D., April 15.—We lia'en’t written lately, but we are still living. Kir. and Mrs. J. X. Jonesfc Mm.; Steel, Miss Dultant, P. F. Sense. Miss Aletha Sease and MPa. \V. D. Uerty look in the rhautauqua’ at W’alterboro last week and report a fine entertainment. Claude Sense is at home for a few days. Judging by his looks and hish spirits, one would think Camp Sevier treats her soldiers royally. K. \V. Jones paid Ashton a flying visit Sunday. Miss Olive Jones has just return ed from C.reen\ ille, where site vis ited her sister, Mrs. Roy Simpson. Miss Kula Jones and .Miss Steele spent last weeJc-end .with Mrs. Wil lie Sauls, of Brunson. > Ashton w»re sad faces when Prof. Garris was called away to other fields of labor. Vlthonsrh we hated to give him up, we have learned that ladies can do equal work with men (in some lines), for Miss DuRah* not only keeps up the work in the school rooVn, but she Is carrying on the clearing of th* school grounds which Prof. Garris began. Mrs. Lonnie Padgett and Mrs. Lonnie Strickland visited their fath er. J. s. Jones, Sunday. Prof. Kd Garris visited Ashton Saturday and Sunday. lie "was quite «f welcome*) visitor. We hii-e just organized an Kp- wot-fh League. W«y hope to do good work. At our afternoon service Sunday Rev. Hedenhangh received three lit tle hoys into the church. It was an impressive service. Especially so at this time when so many of our old er boys are leaving us. We wel come these bova, Frankie June;. Heyward and Johnio Bishop. ' Mrs. W. O. Jones and children visited Smoaks Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Cummings and Mr. and Mrs. Ed Bishop visited Mrs Willard- Jones Sunday. Although we have continued col i weather we have pretty gardens in this community, and we are plan ning quite a bit of canning. Mrs. Leon Murdaugh has been quite sick the past week, but we were glad to see her out Sunday. We were sorry to hear that Mls-j Eltae Berry, of Confederate College has been quite aick. The Bible class of Ashton M. E. Church will give a reception to- ! night in honor of Mr. Claude Sense and his bride. Wish yon could h> with us, Mr. Editor. ft GOLD MEADAL FOR THIS Cincinnati Authority Tells How to Dry up any Corn or Callous no It l.ifta Bight off. Adolph tin lledon : ■” j Now •» Sergeant. Fishhume St., ooinn Wichman Si. I The people of Walterhoro will ho Sunday morning it was quite a Kev, Win. B Guion, A M.. Rector, ph-awed to learn that Adolphus R e - anrprise to their many friends when Service and sermon on Sunday at doq. a negro soldier who left here Miss Ethel Kinsey and Mr. F. O. 11:30 a. m. and at 8:30 p. in. Sun** few months avo for training at Fountain were married at the home day school at 10:30 a. m. Wedsss- one of the camps, has been in of the bride's parents. Mr and Mrs da> evening praver meeting at 5::to Fiance for several week*, and that L. I. Kinsey, near Stokes. Rev. J. P- m. Everybody is most cordinllx he is now a sergeant. - A letter ie- P. Graham officiating. The bride mxited to come. ( ceived by his mother states that h- sras very popular in her community » — well, and g-ettinu on all right. .nd will he greatly missed. The rroom is a prosperous young busi ness man of Walterhoro, the son of and Mr. and Mrs. Irving M Fish. Mr. and Mrs. A, R. Fountain, of The editor was given one of the burne went to Savannah Aiken. This y'oung couple will first frutts from the war garden of returning Monday Yoi* corn-pestered men and wm- men need BiifTer no longer. Wear the shoes that nearly killed you be fore. savs this Cincinnati authority, because a few drops of freezone ap plied directly on a tender, achfnr corn Mops soreness at once an i soon the corn loosens, so it ra*i he lifted out. root end all, jgfCio.it .i hit of pain. A quarter of an ounce of free fone costs ver\ little at any, drug store, but is sufficient to take off ♦ very hard or soft corn or callous. Tills should be tried, as it is inex pensive end said not to inflame or even irritate the surrounding tissue or akin. If your wife wear* hieb heels siu* will bo* glad to know of th.s . J. Perkins (•rows IkMMt CahtMge. Mr Heard Secretary Mc.Ad4Mt Speak. J. C. N'ettles, who hail business in Columbia last week, was In the city when Secretary of the Treas ury, Mr. McAdoo. delivered h s fa- anil Mta M. Cam Fishhume mous speech there. Mr. N'ettles heard him and said he wished it had Sunday, been possible ,fqr every citizen of The trip wa.V the county td have heard that ad- o> X 7 ^ F Him Home in Safety The supreme tragedies of war are not enacted on the battlefield, but in the home. Above the shouts of command and encourage ment, the roar and shock of the great guns, and all the swelling tumult of battle which bear the husband and father to a hero’s grave and a martyr’s glory, there rise the weeping of the bereaved wife and the cries of little children deprived of a father’s love and care. American fathers are now on the battlefronts of France. Many must fall; how many de- , pends upon us wljo remain safely at home. * - ** A single Liberty Bond will help to save a soldier’s life, your sokfiers Hfe, and bring him home in safety to those who hold his life far more predous than their own. THIS SPACE PAID FOR AND CONTRIBUTED BY B. LEVY Dry Goods, Shoes, Clothing, Ladies’ and Gent’s Furnishings, Millinery a specialty FEATHER YOUR NEST WI*F you L*b«rty Bonds you are not f money to your country. You making the safest investment world, and your money will back to you, with interest, at a the when you may need it Car i you do now. And E*>*ry Mt*on Sn M+y Saif a SoldUr'* TbJa make their home in Walterhoro. C. J. Perkins, a prominent negro made m Hr .. .. , They have many friend* who will farmer of the Round section, in the Wyllia-Overland and was .niovlu **'* Mr. McAdoo is a »l.h them .,11 .,<1 much h.ppl.«.. o( . h..d,d c.bb„r. | v,Tym"ch * ,,<1 a splendid rets and BEACH BROS. Dry Goods, Sh< es and Notions