University of South Carolina Libraries
Prompt I Its beneficial ef ct ae Usuay * felt very qicklY P. Makes rich, red, pure system - clears the brain - strel A positive specific for Bool Drives out Rheumatism and - is a wonderful tonic and body-t F. V. LIPPMAN, PICKENS I Can You Te the Veterin If you could telephc this Farmer in case of sick live stock, you could pro valuable animal. Every. pared for such emergenci - The telephone costs put one on your Farm? Our free booklet give for it today. Address Farmers Line Depart SOUTHERN BELL TE3 & TELEGRAPH CO Soutb P,- St.. AW 4 E Roofs Pi R~ili26 Year are as good as never needed need attention C cept an occasiOl Stiorm-.proof Fire-pre Dontbuy that roof for the ne . Unpt you haveezraminedthe CC IIEATII, BRUCE,; M0RI 1785 COLLEGE OF 127th YEAR BEGII Eatrance examinatlions at all .the conn It offers courses in Ancient and Moderi tical Science, Debating, Chemnistry, Paiy Courses for B. A., B. S. anu B. S. degi A free tuition scholairship to each cou scholarshipu' giving $100 a yeatr and free 1 in September. Expenses reasonable. Terms and catal HARRISON RAN] - Charlesi Doctors Use TI m's4Tere is almos norelatio be Tagerms must be washed out, and so e.r he most advaned hyicians of aepecribin 8. washo wnterreen. mndalln otesi aie s comm ound is kcnown as D.D.D. Prescription Dr omes, the wel kn ski nate fresuaas quinine for alaria.W have been prescribing the D.D.D. remedy V.ze, l17S vouCli for the DJ.D. PICKENS : BURRIS GAIA It is niot and the set r Iowingz for e eMM EMERitot Theref use our goxx Patent Lock -V" crimp a w rite~ or * JOHI anufactur J. T.BU] MSINKING OF THE T SOLD A. 1M ATBHY AT THS( Poke Root and Potassium) owerful Permanent Stubborn cases Good results are yield to P. P. P. lasting-it cures when other mnedi- you to stay cured cines are useless P. P. blood-cleanses the entire igthens digestion and nerve. I PoLson and skin diseases. tops the Pain; ends Malaria; uilder. Thousands endorse it. SAVANNAH, GA. )RUG CO. lephone ary? ne your veterinary like ness or accident to your bably save the life of a Farmer should be pre Is. very little. Why not s all the details. Write neat EPHONE MPANY mta, Ga. it on s Ago g ew, and have epas-never any kind, ex al coat of paint. of Lightning-proof buikling, or re-roof the okd, itright Metal Shingles. ~OW 00., Pickens,US- C. : "1912 CHA4RLESTON S SEPTEMBER 27' Ly-saats on Friday July 5, at 9 a. mn. Lauuages, Mathemastics. History, Pol ios Biology, and Engineering. e with Engineering. aty of South Carolina. Vacant Boyce ~uiion. open to competitive examination gue on application. Writeto )0LPH, President on, S. . PICKENS BANK PICKENS, S. C CAPITAL-- M 8ND SURPLUS I4S~ V NTEREST PAID ON DEPOSITS . McD Bruce, President. [.M. Mauldin. Cashier. tfor Eczema escition for ezema and absolutely tch the instant you apply it. If you are suftering from any form of kin trouble we would like to have you ome to our store, for we have had the agency of this remedy for so many years that we can tell you all about D.D.D. Frescription and how it cures eczema. In fact, we are so sure of what D.D.D. will do for you that we will be glad to let you have a $1 bottle on our guarantee that it will cost you nothing unless you fmnd that it does the work. For that matter a trial bottle for 25c ought to be enough to absolutely prove the merits of the remedy. Drop into our store anyway and we will tell you all about this great remedy. )RUG CO. i METAL SHINGLES AND ANIZED BARN ROOFING ~eesary for us" to say m in-h aIhoult our Tint h section. for we have mn oe hous.e' covered r goods than any other sh it'le on the mnarke'. t is that we have a h'ck supetrior to any, al m.traction and expansio nt. which oth'ers have re, ou never have a 1 e ky h1.1:t whn vo attached. andl it is fast t tt~h: the pineec of the t corragated: Roofing. call ol tue - I a ' I M i L. TH()RNLE V, Salesman .RISS & SON, Anderson, S. C TA NIC" FFICE )RINKING AMONG THE WOMEN ot Only ignorant and Criminal Who Give Way to Appetite, but Many of Superior intelligence. This is, of course, a very important iubjict. I have worked a good deal tmong women; and you have only to work among women to feel what this ubject means. When the wife is a runkard, the home is truly miserable :>r the husband, the children, and the oman herself. The woman will do inything to get. money for drink, writes Mr& Guy- Saint in Temperance. But it is not only women in that class. t is not oily the ignoraat and the criminal wo give way to this; it Is Dften the most intelligent who have fallen the victims to it. Now, how Is t that this takes place? What Is the reason of this extraordinary power that drink has over people? 'If we are going to work amongst women, we must realize what this extraor dinary power of alcohol is. Alcohol has a great effect upon the liver and other organs of the body, but I want to speak especially of the effect on the controlling part of the mind. When any thought comes Into yQUT mind, that thought tries to express it self in action, and it does not do so because you have the controlling pow er, which says, "No, that is not a thing for me to do." Your power of saying "No!" your power ofexpres sion or remaining silent, your power to make you speak when speaging is a great effort-all that is the con trolling power of your mind; and It Is extremely Important, because it helps to make or mar your character. After all, our character is the thing that we are makipg ip this wqrld-the ono thng that we are carrying beyond I. Therefore our character Is extremely' mportant; and alcohol tps an influ ence over that character; it can in jure It, and therefore it Is an extreme ly dangerous thing. How is It that. alcohol has this power over people? How is it that they can so easily takp It to excess? Now, I think there are three points we might take up. The first is that alcohol is always so handy. It is so handy, too, 'in large houses, for the servants can easily get it in many cases. Then, people can now order. it from their grocers, and la41qs can get It at railway refreshment rooms, and so on; you have no Idea of the harm it does. It Is so handy that the temptation Is always there. Then, secondly, there are so many oc casions for taking It. People are so ready to suggest, "Have a little wine, or spIrits." You know, it is the rush of today. We allow no time for any thing; and among the poor people, too, there is a continuous rush. A reat many of the women in our large cities have to be up early to go and clean offices, and they go back again In the evening. It Is always a rush to and fro, and during' these rushes they think they will have just a little of this and that, instead of taking food, which is what they want. All these women want teaching, and that is what we have to do-try to educate the women. We' do want these women to realize that alcohol is not a thing to fall back upon. .They use it for an emergency, and once you begin to make emergencIes, they come one after another. Alcohol is not the best thing to nurse u'pon. You want plenty of fluid, that is true; only a good nursing mother wants to be as placid and as calm as possible, and alcohol Is not conducive to placidity and calmness. Nursing mothers are much better by taking plenty of milk, even weak tea, or pure water. The third reason is: How do we know in taking aleohol when we have had suf Sicient? "Oh,' you say, "any one with a little common sense knows that." Now, this is a very Important point. You say you know. It is your judg ment or discretion that teaches you when you have had enough. We find that alcohol, even in small doses, in fluences your judgment; your, judg ment Is not so good after you have taken alcohol as it was before you did, so. It is this judgment on which you are depending as to whether you have had enough. Your judgment that you were going by has been altered. I think that, if you consider these points you will partly understand the reason why so many take to drink to excess. Lasty, alcohol is absolutely unneces sary to health. Is It safe to deal with a beverage which has such very real botential dangers? Poverty by Alcohol. General Booth, in his book, "Dark es~t England and the Way Out," In speaking of the drink traffic, says: "Nine-tenths of our poverty, squalor, vice and crime spring from this poi sonous tap-root. Society, by its hab its, customs and laws, has greased the slope down which these poor creatures slide to perdition. "No one fact, other than the hard ract of poverty itself, confronts social workers, in whatever field they may be engaged, so constantly as alcohol Scotland's Drink Bill. When we compare Scotland's drink bill for 1902 with 1910 we are sur prised at the enormous reduction with in the period. In 1902 Scotland was spending on liquor 23 12s 2d per head, but in 1910 it had fallen to ?2 l 2d-19s less per head than in 1902. That is to say, Glasgow saved over ?800,000, and Edinburgh over ?300, 000. None of that mpney went into the drink trade.-Everybody's Month HOME-MADE PHILOSOPHY Fun is not all foolishness. We need sunshine in our hearts as well as sun shine in ot~r homes. The world is a big book. Schools ca only give us the key to solving many of its problems. Men who ask God for a boost should earn to boost themselves with the boosting .forces already here. t takes so long to gain recognition from the world that thousands of the Impatient become discouraged. So many women delight in a sis ter's fall, and I fear that sometimes they feel themselves slipping too. Whitewashing dirty walls only cov ers up the dirt. It's just so with white washed politicians and statesmen. I The man who is mean to boys should teer run for offie. The boys will grow up and be the voters later on, jI ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT AYegetaNrpansionids~ simiab odanc es tngtIhes~MaImois mPronetesDigestionfie nessandRest.Contalns nekr Opiun.Morphine nar miraL NOTNARCOTIC. tion solUr s o r wrms,conlsiosfeveriki nessandLOSS OFSL MP FacS'une Sioann Or NEW YORK. S e Exat copy of Wrappe., n the beginning was the Word, and the Word w :t breathed in the primal chaos,i :t pulsed in the glowing ether or and through all the empty eons : swept in eternal grandeur acr< he hour that the first sky glorie :t rose in the marve-horus-the remendous and deep and might ~re brother made war on brothel ~or far in the outer splendor, wh< ~nd orbs that we never dream ol Jhe Word is the law forever, and :lived in the light eternal throu; a.d we with our books and lettern Tdim it in clumsy language, w ull fat with the pride of being 'w he truth as we fain would spell a.d how may we read or hier it? ad how may we sense its formi le babble of plan and purpose,v~ ~or read in the apple blossom, nc (Copyright, 1912. bI When the world gives an honesi kan credit for knowing much, he him elt feels that the world has made Sgreat mistake. If you try to look up to God withoul >oking through the rights and wrongi f your fellow men, you will never see im. God is not saving the favored Idividuals alone. Human progress does not mean big avies and great armies, great men ~nd oppressed laboring people-it only oeans making the world a better place >r everybody to live in. So 3ong as men get drunk there will eo men who willingly lose their rea ;en. Lo~st reason is another name for isanity. A mnillion ipsane men au omen at large is a dangerque .corn ~iton for society to be in. ABOUJT TRUTli Most fanatics, cranks and madmen r's those who are unable to under :and a parador. Workable, everyday truth is made p of two or more contradictions. he true doctrine is always a bal Lnce. Every truth has its opposite, which also true. Sanity consists in under anding this; insanity is failing to e it. "Mystery," writes Chesterton, "keeps nn sane. As long as you have mys ry you have health; when you do roy mystery you create morbidity." Man is not a spirit..por a brute; he CASTORIA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always'Bought Bears the Signature of In * Use For Over Thirty Years OA STURIA ever a ol asdn ds with odv and h od criso-Son bars, tsone in the mornistearsun everh aWorld was doe solo- tig whe flne o stae ad kings. reit sives anderimseo bas, go spinning their nights and days, was ere the birth of time; ~h centuries all sublime. ,and we with our codes and creeds, ehush it with barren deeds: e read with our narrowed eyes it- we puny ones, overwise. -We quibblers of things and deeds. g forever to fit our needs? e qgustionl oi What and Why, r see in the sar:-stre~vn sky! W. G. Chapnanf.) one or the other from his idea or mar i~s not so much untrue as he is crazy "There is a large number of truths,' says Pascal, "that seem repu:gnan1 and contrary, yet which subsis: toget.h er in an admirable order. The source of all religious error Is the exclu slon of one or the other of these truths." So the religious fanatics, on the one hand, and the atheists, on the othi er; the temperance wild men and the drunkards; an<! all those who swirq to extremes, are illustrations of the rule that sanity is a balance, and noi a hard certainty. TARIFF AND THE TRUST! High Authority Gives Voice to Opin~ .Ions That the Country Will I Do Well to Heed. .Tohn H. Davis, head of the bank Ing house of John H. Davis & Co. beieyes that thec long session of con gress that will convene soon need nol be looked forward to with appreheg slon, for he believes that It will takI rational action upon big public ques tions, including a consideration of legislation to regulate "trust" activt ties and probably a reduction of the tariff. In the November circular o: his house he says: "What the country seems to be los ing sight of Is the obvious truth that the root of the American trust evil is the protective tariff law. Our trusts are effects and not causes. They are the direct outcome of the tariff. The high prices by which they profit and for which they are blamed are the re uts e prohibitive duties upon imports, without which such prices could- not be maintained no matter to tided. It is most unIfortunate that this basic fact is not kept more prom inent before the American people. whose anti-t'rust sentknent is only the expression of a revolt against high costs. "It Is relief from the high cost of living that the country demands, and the agitation should be, first of all, for tariff reduction. With that accom-, plished, the trust question will take care of itself. Without it, neither prices nor monopoly will be con trolled. It may be doubted * that cheaper tobacco will result fram the . disintegration of the tobacco trust, but It is certain that it would follow the lowering of tobacco duties. It is unlikely that steel products will fall much in price if the steel trust is dis solved, but no one will question that they would be materially lower if the duties on imported steel were re duced. Indeed, the proposition is so obvious that It admits of no argu ment. Lower the tariff and inflation will cease. Monopoly extortion, ex- th cessive capitalization and high costs at will disappear. Competition of the tr proper sort-that of America with the si: whole world-will be restored and the hi natural development of our superior tv resources and of our oommercial W ability will follow."-New York Times. P< JO An esteemed contemporary starts ez out to prove that Taft Is a greater foe tc of the trusts than Roosevelt. Mr. fr Taft is surely entitled to any comfort ul that can fairly be extracted out of so d] modest a distinction. in ti tt CURRENT VERSE. W Environment. th kh! all his soul in music he doth sink. And in sweet sounds he finds a rautUie is rare. . And long before his breakfast time. I t think. re His "Part siamo" rings out on the air ta And though "Il balen" does not him dis- i grace. c And "Di Provenza" does not him con- m demn. ot [ think he ought to find some other place at To do his practicing at 6 a. m. n [ have important duties of my own. n( And I want quiet when at my affairs; When at them I don't want a barytone Repeating "Eri tu" ten times upstairs. And when I'm bent on my postprandial nap se And seek some rest from labors of the p, pen, si [ do not want to listen to a chap A-wrestlipg hard with "Caro mio ben." f af and when about the reading lamp at eve in All hubbub and all noise I fain would tr bar. ro say the very least he makes me T grieve yC With variations on the "Evening Star." rt I try to keep hard thoughts from out my I brain, Though woes sufficient come to make T me weep, in But though my wrath I always do re- a1 strain.B I wonder much if singers ever sleep! -Nathan M. Levy in the New York Sun. S( ti Life. fE Life is too briefj Between the budding and the falling leaf, It Between the seed time and the golden c sheaf. For hate and spite. a We have no time for malice and for a] greed; - j Therefore, with love make beautiful the 11 deed: Fast speeds the night. Life is too swift - I Between the blossom and the white b snow's drift, - Between the silence and the lark's uplift, ' For bitter words, fr Must carry messages of hope, and reach The sweetest chords. -t Life is too greatw Between the infant's and the man's es'-C tate,.t Betwe'en the clashing of earth's strife and fate, For petty things, bi Lo! we shall yet who creep with cum bered feet. Walk glorious over heaven's golden street. ~ Or soar on wings! se -Margaret E. Sangster. Tj Mr. aft's Confession. c Explanation and apologies ar de feeble planks for a platform on which G a president must stand for re-election,c and Mr. Taft's confession shows that c he realizes his mistakes. This Is tr; creditable to the man, but does not ce justify the president. ti Why should the people re-elect to H{ t1a uAasta office of Dresident a man lWant to a C ~Fly Tr1aps, Ja rs, Jetlly K Jar Rmii". 4Power. W.L.D4 The best r Coi bas not he R sti SS di'"I 'To kill thc. 0 Boy's 8 131 We wanut I P chickens, dry hides, ble herbs, N ~Come to si L4L U_ UR nowledge That Has Brought Man Nearer to God THINKING IN MIIONS ET us think a little in mlJlioDS not, my spleculative friend, mil lions of dollars. but, to begin with. In millions of miles. Where were you last year at is time? "Just where you are now d sighing for some experience of avel," do you say? Why, my dear r, or madam, you have traveled some indreds of millions of miles In this elvemonth and still are traveling. 'hat is Panama or Constantinople or skin in comparison with this great urney of the sun and its attendant rth! While you have been longing go from Boston to Lynn to visit tends, you have in fact traversed an Aimaginable breadth of space. The ficulty of getting started is in your iagination. The veriest Lob-lie-by *e-fire, in the remotest hamlet-even tat woman who lived for sixty years thin sight of the passing trains and ver stepped on board of one of em-Is a far traveler. Yes, but you say, that cosmic tiavel both unimaginable and unsatisfac ry. Lynn and Boston are at least a] places where houses stand and xes are collected. One gets the ex tement of the crowded station and ay look out of the car window. But Lr world-spiral round the hastening [n is like going from nowhither to )where. There are neither stations >r stops nor scenery. Two Views of Life's Journey. It is quite true, of course, In one nse. that the pleasures of this -odigious journey are largely out of ght. But do not the world and your How travelers take on a different ipect because you are not marooned some corner of the universe, but avel in the midst of stars and suns? hese thoughts may not appeal to >u. Perhaps your Imagination is so sty from disuse that you cannot ake It work at all in this direction. en you are like the fly that buzzes a moving railroad car. It Is un are that its car ha. moved from aston and will arrive In Montreal. >long as It finds food and occupa n, the journey Is a matter of indfV rence. The fly Is happy-let It buzz, Ld ind no fault with Its limitations. will be quite as much at home in mada as Massachusetts. And s0 -e we, except that age draws on, in I the stages of our unimaginable urney. The vividest Imagination. ce the exactest research, cannot asp and picture the facts and im Ications of this planetary and solar ght-a journey where to stop would annihilation, and in which we have >hint of destination. Did we start om anywhere? We can only guess. re we bound for anywhere? We n never know. Some of our friends, e astronomers, have reasoned that e are bound from a collision and tastrophe to a collision and catas ophe. Others incline to guess that barring accidents-our journey may Sendless. The first effect of this thinking in illions of miles was to make man em Insignificant and God remote. e poet Young, who told us that "An devout astronomer is mad," might me back to find astronomers of this gree of madness not uncommon. >d, regarded as the artificer, must *rtainly seem far away when we nsider the unthinkable distances we avel and the greater spaces we dis n. Man seems puny in the limita mns of his being and his knowledge. a slow our steps beside the silent See You Fly Paper, Fruit Tumblers, Fruit iuglas Shoes ake in .Amrerica ftien Hoes 0our cot tonl that en planted yet. aw Hats Vomlenl a111 (JCiul SPowder IiC 0c1o the Ili le 'minor Pamnte o buy your eggs lucks, bees wax, corn, peas, etc. 3e us---a square ta fast travelng for train or mi But the sun fies, they estimate, some sixteen miles a second-well toward a thousand miles while our Chicago limited passes from mi4dost to mUe post on its journey. And the speed of light from star to star Is much more 'han a hundred thousand times as great as that of the rolling train. How slow is man in the midst of the swift movements of the universe. How little is man, who thinks the little earth so large. Good In the New Knowledge. Yet the second and the real effect of this new knowledge was different. It helped displace the thought of Go' as the artifcer. It gave man real dig nity and close relations in a larger universe. How little and cramped tfle ancient maps of the earth In space! In fact. space, as we think of it, had no real existence for the ancients. They did not get outside the closed box in which sun, -planets and stars went circling round the earth. In all good faith many of them believed that Jerusalem was the physical center of all things. In place of that conceit of our human Importance, we have gained the thought of God as the soul of the universe and made the old doctrine of his presence everywhere something more than a cold dogma. If we can no longer localize the New Jerusalem (there was a man, I re member, who wrote a book to prove that the globe within the sun was our heaven), we are learning to think that this earth Is given us to make as much like heaven as we can. And all these things the Good Book told us centuries ago.-Boston TranscripL NATIONAL MENACE IN FRANCE Country Is In Danger of Death from Drink-Army Corps Is Lost Each Year Through Alcohol. The French National league against alcoholism declares that France is in danger of death from drink: "Alcohol desolates our most beautiful prov inces. Normandy, Brittany, the Vosges, Picardy, Maine. In Orne the decrease of population has been 80,000 In twenty-five years. in Manche 75,000, In Normandy 200,000. Infant mortal it Is appalling, and conscripts by scores are found unfit for service." In Orn one report states, 57 Der cent. of those summoned to the col prs were rejected, In March, 50 per cent., in the Vallee des Vosges, 60 per cent., and the drink evil is large ly responsible. The military authori ties calculate that France loses an army corps each year through alcohol. Dr. Jaques Bertillon, the famous criminologist, who has made astonish ing researches Into the relation of al cohol to tuberculosis, estimates, In the Revue de Tuberculosis, that a suc cessful fight against alcohol in France would reduce th'e number of deaths from consumption yearly by some 16, 000 more. What steps can. be taken are being discussed by the authori ties in some localities, but widespread scientific education on the subject of the baneful effects of alcohol 4nust be promoted before a radical change for the better can be looked.for In France. But It Pays. Bcause It pays, the social cesspool Is kept open. It pollutes' the people, but It pays. It burns out human life, but It pays. It turns energy and Intelligence Into worthlessness and vice, but It pays. It forces children into the factorics, but it pays. It forces women Into the sweat shop and the brothels, but It pays. It beclouds the brains of mien, and makes them easy prey for Industrial oppression, but It pays. It blinds and cripples and dements the second and third generation, but It pays. It makes justice a joke, gowerment a farce, civilIsatIon a mockery, but It pays. -e The Democrats' Job. Ia 1906 Taft got 1,270,000 more votes than Bryan. 'To wIn next year the Democratic party must capture nore than si hundred thounanda of these hostile votas. Take an I HC Engine Home with You A TALK with your local dealer may open your eyes to gasoline engine possibilities you never thought of. For your own information drop in and see him the next time you are in town and talk it over with him frankly. He'll tell you the truth about I H C engines-and the chances are, he'll show you how you can't afford to run your farm any longer without one. Gasoline Engines are among the best labor-savers and money-makers a farmer can buy. The local dealer will tell o-why and give you facts and gures to prove-it. He will tell o jtwht anIHC engine 1i dodfor N and why it is he best 'ed ide for gou to buys eri froliim what it eari' o lifye (IS oughjy t~ .~ C8 gne and take dneh.orie vithyou. Afade in sizes 1 ig IteraalnaIlHamster Company f Asidq free of hre toal.sth bes informatit obtainable on better farming. If you have ros. land drains tIrrigaion frtilisors, tc.. make your inquiries speciAc and send hmto Ii CService Bureau. Harvester