The press and standard. [volume] (Walterboro, S.C.) 1890-current, January 08, 1919, Image 6

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PAGE FOUR V' ' r' ^*j . Li- tSHMCED Of WIUIC Of 1 tNEII Iff HVftBAXD HAYS HHK ADDRD FIF- ntn pounds on koch bot The Press and Standard, Walterboro, S. C. DOUBLE ENDORSMENT « i- ; - * 1 , mtm Tftalac W«tU h Whim He IkCan . It - Aad He Telb Detail* \- V 1 St / : A- Cases in which two or more-peo ple' ia the same family have been so greatly benefited by Tanlar that they have offered a double endorse, meat of this famous Master Medi cine are common. When you see a person relieved of suffering and made strong again. It Is the most natural thing in the world for you to want the aam? benefits. This is bow Charles E. Whitmore, of 103 Bradford St.. Albany. N| Y., hap pened to take Taalkc. "M> wife, who had been all run d&wo and nervous And getting weaker right along, began to take Tanlar,” Mr. Whitmore • explained. “Well, of course?-1 watched the re. f-ults and it was wonderful to see the way it built her up. ' On four tattles she gained fifteen pounds. I 'had been doubtfij about ^Tanlac, but that aettled me. When I start, •d Tanlae I could 'hardly ea| on > ».-ood meal In a whole week. .From suffering with a had stomach I had become nervous and restless at night aad all run. down. Instead of di gesting. my food would lie like lead, vn my stomach and sour end fer- .'«*nt and form gas. Because I had tour atomaeb -acid stomach—so )oag. my mouth had gotten sore. I could not aleep restfully but would wake up every hour or t'vo . and would roll and toss. I was tired in <b* morning and by mid-afternoon I was so tired out It seemed T couldn’t get through the day. . I had lout all ambition and I did no t care •>cinK what Tanlae had done for my wife encouraged me to take it. and 1 wa« not surprised when It began o brace me up right away. It did mi much for me as it did forher. I sJep rkht through the night, wok* •..p rested, with a good appetite anl “our stomach dkanpeared. I felt ke a new man. nnfl the old. tired, worn pat leeWng, went with the rest f my troubles." Tanlae. the “Master Medici ie,” • soi l it Colleton n miy by Joh»i <4. Klein. Walterboro; The Colle < n Cypress Co.. Colleton; Cottage. lie Mercantile Co./ Cotiay.ev Me; -landion Mercantile Co., lalnndton; V. C tilover,. Creen I'end and Jack. * nlM.ro, lv It. Bishop a Co.. Lo-l*;e. fum mospnin M tMVF MNGER * ' » ' -a-satings Declares Greater Food Pro- Suction Essential To Tha Main tenance Of Agricultural Prosperity , Ki / A VOTE FOR %. -P I/'. J* *r • ~> A .. ?S <- ' X 7 A Interest; ., 7' v . •N Wednesday, January 8, 1919. cm from where I wrote last to a let’s* town, where we stayed two days. There we entrained for a point SI kilometers from here. First * however. 1 had the honor of furnish ing the antiaircraft details to guard all trains from onri station; so Is was op mi 5 o'clock two nights get ting thorn off. Then we came up ourselves, detrained at 1-30 a. m an4 unloaded our train. * It was raining like the deuce and sold. [ sent Harry Seybt np to tad a place for tho company and incidentally myself to sleep till morning. Ha came back in, a fe* in indies' and said he had * fine place; so we went* on up and sent the men into a lot of. f^iostly looking 'houses that t could see were very much shell shocked and then we went into one ourselves and I curled up on my bedding roll and went to sleep, in the morning very early I was awa kened by a rat running around mv head and looking up and saw that Harry had us in a building that was entirely without a roof and only two walls. ; H e thought that it was a real house in the dark and decided to use It. W T e had a good laugh over it when we realited that w. had come about one.half mile to ge» what we already had—the sky over us. “Well, we pulled out from Him place about 2 o’clock that day and came 35 kilometers (about 2 miles■ by 9r30 that night, heavy packs'and. nothing to eat, muddy reads filled with troops and truck trains. 0h» ’ it was a joyful occasion! However, I am glad to say that not a man feli out of the whole battalion, and I am ’ proud of them.. We have a great outfit, and I really believe ’B’ Com pany is responding to treatment and is going to fight for me all right. “We are a few kilometers from the line for a few days and then in we go. “The first night I was so tired I didn’t know anything at all. but some of the raej. said'they had heard shells falling. I didn’t b?Il a vo.it. Late in the afternoon th *e I2.tnch guns near us opened up on the Huns and every shot would shaae the walls. My first aergean and a few others went up to the gun positions to see the firing and I was rtaut ready to go to bed when one of them rushed in and said that several shells ba<l fallen near the guns. Fo I went up with Lieutenant Watson and several men about 4 91 yards from my billet to see If the.’-y weie really any shells falling or not. Wo were going along the road and all ' of a sudden’ I heard a whoopee! and It has been proven that he makes a good Representative. / “ / s aiiama. C.s -irt|M*ciHl » That there N a large rl*Mni-m of dsnaer for Heulbern farm |iro*i»eiit> in the prea eat altuaiton la the firm belief of H. 6 Haelinge. President of both the Oeergla State ritambei of Commerce aad the Southeastern Pair Aaaocia- lien Mr Itaating* repeated substantially hia statement of a rear ago when he mi4: “rethinking people ere apt to •ttribnie the prescut men sure of farm -praeperity In the South to the high arite af i-altna rather than to Ita real ' “last as soon as peace began to ap- yaat pvehabie last fall, there was a dtatiart let up in the planting of wheat, •ata and ether' small grains. One «^nr0a eotion farmer said to me. ‘|f w# are going to hare peace, we are not going to plant ant mhent In my vsighhothood ’ Of couree the high price of col 'i** has helie-d. but if i' had n«jft been t. r the ieer»-a*cd suppl' of bread, me«r. vegetable-, grain ami forage n hde on'ihe faints. Iheie would have Veen til tie (•roeperity for any one hut tfcr suppl> merchant Cotton was aud Is reUltrely lover in price than food etuffe. and will eontimie to he for wears to come . . ‘An etna Ivo or three million bales III the Ikl? cotton crop will smash present attractive prices, while •he world wide Vieiiiand for liread and uvear and the di>organi«itti<>n «»f foml productHHi in Europe incident to the war. means lush food pYices every wjierc for years tb mime ‘High food prite- are a certainty and low cotton prices hip an • :ual certainty if the finul «nd grain aotH-s r.f Ulv 1M7 and 191't'are thrown back into cotton in 1919 Herein lies Hie oaager to our present farm prosper. u>v B we go back to our old before the wh*^ system of grovVing ail cottdn and bmfh^ all foml and grain, we will get ant>th*7«4olt hkc 1914 with rea sonable certalnhtL * “Present BoutheN^ fnrni prospertty mn be mamtalniMl uKime way only Produce on home acres, so-^far as ih»s nble. cvi'ry pound of food, vhgetables. grain. ha> and forage needed b>viani ily and liyestorV. then put even/oihvf^, availabli acre in cotton or .other rash rrop This method means cprsh .crops ^ cnaae''with little or’ho debt/-the crop • wned by the producer at the end of tho season instead of ‘dwefF’ to tha supply merchant “EOcd and grain production suffl cient for home needs, insures contin sec faros prosperity. Dropping back U> fbn oM way moans debt like a ■111- Vices around tho fnmsr’t nock.” , “You made an exceedingly able Representative. What pleased me most was ■ that you were always on the side of right.”—Speaker Cochran. * > I regarded you as one of the most serviceable members of the House. I hope that you will again represent your county. ”—Lieut. Governor Liles. “i- / / These men have seen W. W. Smoak in Service. Do von . • / . - ♦ . ■ / . 7 think they are competent judges? ■ 7 bang! and one hit the road about 100 yards away and exploded. We stopped to see if anybody was hurt, found every one o. k. and walking on towards a dugout where w* could be safe and see what was going on. “We had gone about 20 yards when there wa sa wild Whoopee! warn- and a big one went right over our heads and exploded about 50 yards away. Yon ought to have- seen me going into the ditch. It was practically instantaneotir, and an that I lit on top of Preston Wat son, who was already there. We decided that was as good a daee as any to stay, so we sat there and watched about 15 more hit and burst all around. Sijice then I have seen and heard a great number of shells and am learning to distinguish the sizes and whether thhy^are Aunt rain or German, as there is a distinct dif. ference in sound. “Tho real reason I went to where the shells were falling was not Just foolhardiness, as might seem, but in a day or two I have got to take my men through worse than that, and I wanted to go through it first and see how it felt myaelf.. I di not think it la as bad as most peo ple think; It certainly is not pleas ant. but I really waa not as worried by It as I expected. It Is very ex. citing, of course, but I have often been more excited and many times more afraid than' I was then. Do not worry about my standing the test, my dear, I’ll be able to say ’Follow me,’ to my men and lead them out without any trouble when the time comes. ”1 shot *t a German plane which came after my train. He turned and left and I do not know whc'hcr I hit him or not. There nr,., hund reds of airplans here and we se u air fights all the time. Sometimes as many a« 50 planes in squadron formation go over at one time. “I long to be back, but this job has got to be done, and when if D over I’ll never leave you again. Kis.i my darling children for me and tell them daddy thinks of them- con stantly. Love to mother and fathei and Bill and Clara. - Tell them this will hav e to be a family letter as I haven’t time to write individual ones. “Ah 1 write 1 can hear the guns .roaring without ceasing. The Hun is getting paid now for all his dirty work. Only a few months and Piev \jill he entirely defeated.” Without Fear He Stood the Test 7 Last Letter by Captain Theodore Ravenel, Jr., Written / Four Days Before Fie Was Killed—De scribes Going Into Action. November 1U„ th«| e\* of the singing of the armistic. C^ipt Theo. dote- |) t',«\enel. Jr., a member of tho American^ expeditionary force* in Fiance, met death in bAttlo some where in the neighborhood of Vc»- rdun . *• \ When the Fnited States declared wj»r. Captain Bavenel believing ar dently in the righteousness of his country’s cause, volunteered im mediately for service in the army He was commissioned as second lieutenant and later attended the first officers’ training camp at Foil Oglethorpe, where he received a‘ 1!»13. he married Miss .Mice Fish- “My promotion came along last burne Childs of this city. nighty and was an agreeably sut- Captain Uaveoel is survived bv prise, as 1 had given up thinkim; his widow and two small children; | a,H,n t it; 11 was so lopg in coming, also by his father, mother and fix**' However, {have won it in active se* . firbthets and one sister. ' j vice and not tn training camp. The follow ing is a letter trt hi> , “1 wrote you in my last letter wife, dated November ft. four days that we were on our way again, and before he was killed: I that 1 thought we were in for the ’ Well. I haven’t had a chance 'o real stuff this time, and believe me. write you in over a week now | 1 was jr true prophet They must have been ou one of those personallv hav e 'simply looked all over the conducted trips tor which the Eigh. j map eff'Trance and said: Herd’s ty-flrsf Div-jston is so just'y celo. where those damned wild cats get brated. and sure have covered som. theirs’ and told us to go to it. See » « .v, i®?- France this lime I have lo*s~bbre we are* We are in a sector \ •> l>.«t t n't til* Fight’ 1 .. i , Piles Cured in 6 to 14 Days Druggist* refund money if PAZO OINTMENT C*il» to cure Itching, Blind, Bl* cdimt or Protruding PUe* luMsntly telieves Itching Pile*, and you can Kid restful sleep*o»r the hr.-t cppilcatian. Pric.-W- Cured a< a Co s t of Cent / “Kight years ago when tfo firs moved to Mattoon. I was a great sufferer from indigestion and con stipation,” writes Mrs. /ftobert Al lison, Mattoon, 111. /l had fre quent headaches and/dizzy spells, and there was a feeling like a heavy weight pressing onyiny stomach an ! chest all the time/ I felt misera- ablo. y FVefy, morsel of food dfs tressed me. I rOuld not heat at night and felt tired and worn om all the time. One bottle of Cham berlain’s Tablets mire ( r me and I have since felt like a different |b*r son.” Colds Causa Grip aad Inflneaza LAXATIVE BR0M0 QUININE Tablet* remore the cane*. There la owfy ewe “Brono Quinine ’ E.W. GROVE'S efcMtwe oo box. 30c. promotion to first lieutenant. From Oglethorpe he was sent to ('amp Jackson and' assigned to the Three Hundred and Sixteenth Machine Gun ‘„f. Fiance "this litire Battalion Vs u part ot the Kightv.' n r vn ^ ,.\p,.| j,»jices and sensations to first Division this organization 1o f f for oVerscas in- July and until onlv recently has been in training behind the line* in France October I Captain Ravenel received his pro. motion to the grade of captain. Captain Ravenel was born in Charleston. S C . November 30. 1H90 He attended the University of the South. Sewanee. artd at once upon leaving college entered busi ness in Sumter. In December, tell you yf; so you may well>ut down and be prepared for a long letteV. - “First, I am now ('apt Theodore D. Havuief, Jr * “Second. I have had an eight.incl.. high explosivofshell go about 3;| feet ov <r m: - head and burst about 50 yatds away, covering me with dust and cqtsternation. ’ Third.' I have shot at the Dutch. where the best of, all the ariniei have done thetr damndest, so - 1 guess It’s up to us to do the same, and you may rest assured that wt will carry on ’ I sent you two tioxe- yesterday. I sent wretched photo.; man wih my little old black beauty"* got it today i Results not known.) and also. Look at them closely you may get some ideas. “1 am also inclosing a souvenir you may like to show your friends. Do not destroy jj, as 1 value it. 1 7 / “We marched about 15 kilomet. L? » ■es’ .