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k3f Wholesfte Cabbage, Beets and Lettuce Plants HF Main Qtwn Seed Ptoatoes?Irish Cobblers, Houlton Rose Mr VlBieties a Specialty, Selected by an Expert. f Sweet Potato Plants All Varieties i /something for nothing To gat started with you we make you the following offer: & Send us 51.50 for 1,000 Frost Proof Cabbage Plants, grown in the open air and will stand freezing, grown from the celebrated seed of/Bolgina & Son and Thorbom & Co., and I will send vou 1,000 Cabbage Plants additional Free, and you can repeat the order many times as you like. 1 will give you special prices on Potato Seed and Patato plants later. We want the accounts of close buyers, large and small. We can supply all. ATLANTIC COAST PLANT Co.. Yoncs UbmH S r. r . i . -- -----=================s===^^ r , Sfyank cf "Cheraiv I CHE RAW, S. C. Designated As I United States S)epcsitcri( / Oldest, Largest and Strongest / Bank in the County / A PERCENT COMPOUNDED QUARTERLY PAID ON f 4 -SAVINGS DEPOSITS. $1 00 STARTS / AN ACCOUNT.. / Our Greatest Offer J 4 A YEAR'S READING FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY T,le Pr?*resslve Farmer is made to cover ' ^^^HUUKCagllVE conditions as they are in the South. Yes. c't ^CaHm sir?made for you?and if you will read Tnmi iieed Its teachings you will raise more i hv I' rum Cat err i: ? .. ;} - cotton per acre, more corn per acre, more %'lityrs. ~ --- '. nnd better livestock, and make a money 8 i producing factory out of your farm. The Progressive Farmer has the strong''*BPx.v."est. most practical iiouseiudd department ^Seinf - v? of *"y agricultural paper In the South. Its C,'?S25~^'tnary features make a special appeal to *' is&3p? ' *??-:V J? our women readers and he 1 ** them as it I \'j - does the men. - MADE FOR YOUR CHILDREN The Progressive Farmer has a regular BBWiM^yiff*cB|^Wslk?|piT^H^M department for farm hoys and girls, and a ? serial story for both young and old. In ,, / -- ?? fact It is a paper for every member of the MBBfci i ?'i?fantlly. The Best Two for All the Family?Both Leaders in Their Line THE HOUSEWIFE 1 ^ . j jr^g i We are happy Indeed to Introduce and to In- I HF.- HOlISKwIFF/ able to make a clubbing arrangement that will .*- _ enable our readers to have The Home-wife the ' coming year. <2^ __ :'' /'.} The stories ore high-class In every way? stories that will aopeal to and please you, - -X\ fly Ssl'' \ v.' I many with gripping excitement and Interest- ^'' VxvT " 'V?* ^ holding qualities. fV vSv f'artlcular attention Is given by The House- i' -/VsIVtT/ '* wife to seasonable, sensible cooking, household >_/ ^ Vwffl Jy hints, and matters of particular Interest to . ,// -tevVi mother and child. f'P ' vr The Housewife is a large, welt printed maga- '' zlne; subscription price, 50 cents per year. It 7 v\ ""'Sis only because the publishers are anxious to ' \ ^ develop their subscription list In the South that c N >yslxv^i. I we hav.;. been able to secure a rate on these . \ v subscriptions that enable us to include It In this *-' '4, year's clubbing offers with The Progressive .- ' M. r 'V^1 I Parmer. We know you will be highly pleased 'M If you decide to take the club, including The ^ ^ Housewife. I This great combination of farm sense, farm help, fiction, fashion, fancy work and good cheer for the entire family at BARGAIN PRICES in connection with your subscription to THE CHESTERFIELD ADVERTISER V' You know our paper. It is a clean-cut, live, up-to-date county . - weekly?your county paper. lt?gives you all the local news and the important news of the world and the great war. You cannot afford to miss this great bargain. The Chesterfield Advertiser 1 year $1.00 The Progressive Farmer?weekly?S2 big issues 1.00 The Housewife?monthlv 50 Regular price $2.50 OUR SPECIAL BARGAIN OFFER All three one year each for only Of OA (only 3 cents a week for all three). Mail or bring your subsciptions at once to THE CHESTERFIELD ADVERTISER CHESTERFIELD. S. C. I1 ==J1 Tke Beit Is Yet to Gome k The Advertiser will have some m interesting* announcements to | njake in the near future ion PU FLUSHED EVjERY THURSDAY I Subscription, $1.00 a year. \dvertlsing rates furnished on appllcation. Entered as second-class matter at the postothce at Chesterileld, South Carolina. PAUL H. HEARN Editor : ad Publisher, f. W. Hanna. authorised representative A press despatch says shad and lobsters are rapidly disappearing from America. Guess we cau spare a few lobsters without any serious loss. Henry Ford has abandoned his peace mission and come home When he s'arted on that absurd trip we were about t? quote the ditty: 'Three wise men of Gotham Went to sea in a bowl If the bowl had been stronger My story had been longer." Henry has finished tfle story. BILLY BRYAN'S BEE Brother Billy Bryan is a good mau in some ways but in other ways he is peculiar. He seems to be trying as hard to get up an issue with President Wilson as the llepublcans are and with as little success. He attacks the President because of his preparedness aod objects to his plans for raising revenue. He says the money should come from the income tax: that it should be raised and the rich made to pay more. He does not agree that the income tax should be widened so as to take in incomes that are not now taxed. That might interfere with Brother Bryan's income which is said to be by no means small. I If Brother Bryan would get rid of that presidential bee in his bonnet he would be mo?'e useful to his country in this crisis Be sides, that bee is getting old and , ought to be out of its misery. | In Defense of the English Sparrow Editor Advertiser: ! I noticed in The Advertiser a few weeks ago where pome one writing in the Wadesb:ro Mes senger aud Intelligencer had said the so called "pesty" English sparrow was a good means J of destroying a certaiu detrimen ' i tal forest insect. We were further advised by our t'hestertiplrl pHit/^r flint, tliiu iron "P."..' i ?~ vxmw vuio t*uo auuui ! the only compliment ever bestowed on this familiar bird in regard to his industry. I would like to say that if our Editor will lay aside all other duties some time and prove himself an ornithologist for a few hours, he will readily find that the little English sparrow is tilled with a most industrious disposition,! especially in spring time. He is! a very busy worker among garden plants?and delights in re-1 moving many a harmful insect \ that serves to destroy young plant life. The writer has watched for, hours, the real good of this little bird that is so much hated by the average, because they have never consumed time enough to turn the bright side of the little fellow their way. When you are prone to dislike the cheerful English sparrow, just devote a few spare hours to his study and you will no longer abhor the presence of our little "feathered friend." M. V. S. The little visitor chanced to alf. imo a nl b f n r*r\ n f a t 1 ? OMV IIVMI w yt i?tv/ \j\M in a i ii i ii K nppie I paring. After a long wait, dm ing which no offer was made ( f hospitality, the child finally blurted out." "I smell apples." "Yes," said the lady of the house, "you smell those parings." "Paring*, nothing," exclaimed the kiddie, "I smell whole apples." "My husband," remarked a Philadelphia matron to a group of friends, "was a confirmed smoker with a tobacco heart when I married him a year ago, but today he never touches the weed." "Gt>od," said one of the group. "To break off a lifetime habit requires a strong will." "Well, that's what I've got," laid the wife. In watch and jewelry repair^J ng you want th^e^^||Mj^HB nakenQ^^j^fifiSflH9S9S9H mrsa Extremely Contagious Disease of Fowls Can Cause 8erlous Loss Unless Promptly Checked. Sorehead, a disease of chickens caused by spores of a common mold, appears when fowls come In contact with moldy litter or moldy grain. It seems not to be a constitutional disease. It Is usually confined to the face, comb, wattles and ear-lobes, eyes, nostrils, and mouth, but Is occasionally found under the wings In advanced or neglected cases. It Is extremely contagious and may spread through a flock in two or three days. Sorehead is of two kinds, dry and moist, according to the surface attacked by the spores. If it is on the mucous membrane of the eye. mouth, or nostrils, the moist type develops; if on the skin of the face or adjacent parts, it will be the dry or warty variety. The moist type is a most serious disease, growing rapidly. It soon , closes tho eyelids, which swell to an ' enormous size, blinds the fowl, and causes it to waste away and die. When sorehead annears. it is not necessary to isolate the diseased fowls from the flock. Look for moldy litter . or food and If It 1h found replace It with fresh. Check the disease by coloring the drinking water pink with a few crystals of permanganate of pot- ' ash, and paint the face and comb of the apparently well chickens with equal parts of creolln and water, or a j strong purple solution of pormangan- ' ate of potash. Give appetizing food. It Is advisable to mix the egg mash j with buttermilk or sour skim milk and feed sprouted oats daily. Cook cheap meat, cut it up, and throw to the chickens. The fowls that have the warts should be caught and the crust of each wart removed. The tissue underneath is red. Dip a clonn feather in one of the remedies named below and touch the red tissues with the liquid. Next morning the treated wart will have a black scab over it, which dries and falls off in three or four days. A week later one cannot detect where the wart was. In treating the moist variety, it Is necessary to drop the remedy into the eye. nostrils, or whatever organ is attacked. This seems cruel, but it saves the fowl. The remedy the writer prefers is pure, undiluted creoltn. We have not lost a chicken from sorehead since using this remedy. It will eradicate the disease from the eye and, if used in time, will save the sight. Other good remedies are iodine, cresol or similar disinfectant, zenoleum, all ?1. - uacu uuuiiuieu, i?iu pie noiuiion or permanganate of potash, liquid shoe polish (black), and solution of copperas (as much as will lie on a 2f>-cent piece, dissolved in a cup of water). A clean feather is best for applying the remedy. FRANK C. IIARE. Extension Poultry Husbandman, Clemson Agricultural College. CONTROL SAN JOSE SCALE Do Not Let Winter Pass Without Making Effort to Get Rid of This Fruit Pest by Spraying. The time to spray San Jose scale Is in winter when the trees are leafless and dormant, because the materials that have to be used are so severe that they would destroy the foliage if applied when the leuves are onThe most satisfactory spray is limo- ; sulfur wash. When purchased from a reputable house it is more uniformly effective than when boiled according to the old method. Directions for preparing the home-made wash, however, will be furnished on request. To prepare the spray from commercial waBh, dilute one gallon of the wash with eight and one-half gallons ' of cold water. Ordinarily, one spray is enough. In bad cases, spray as soon as the leaves are off and repeat in February. We do not recommend spraying with this material after the buds have started. ( Lime-sulfur wash will not success fully control the gloomy and cottony maple scales so common to maple trees, nor will it successfully control oyster shell scale of the orchard. For j these we recommend heavy oil emul- | slons at the rate of one part of the oil to twenty parts of water. Owing to the variety of oils now being tried . out, any one wishing definite Informs-' tlon about oils for these pests should write us. Oils bought from standard houses are generally well emulsified but it is always well to make a separa tlon test as follows: After making up the spray ,set one-half tumbler of the mixture in a tfblet place for an hour If no separation shows in the form ot light oils coming to the top. the oil is safe to spray according to direc tions. When a separation takes place the manufacturers are always willing to adjust the matter. A. P. CONRADI, Professor of Entomology, Clemson Agricultural College. Rubbing Eases Pain Rubbing sends the liniment tingling through the flesh and quickly tftops pain. Demand a liniment that you can rub with. The berft rubbing liniment is MUSTANG LINIMENTi I C\ Good for the Ailments of \ Horses, Mules, Cattle, Etc. | a ^Afioodfor your own Aches, Mw, Rheumatism, Sprains, Cuts, Burns, Etc. $1. At all Dealer*. i Suggestions fo> Husbands, Wives and All Lovers, Married or Single, That Are Timely. If yov haven't thought up any, here are a few timely suggestions: For hubby: Never again to spend a moment out of the presence of the wife unaccompanied by a trustworthy guardian appointed by her, who will report faithfully all of your doings, even to the Irregular quiver of an eye- , lush, or the drinking of soda Instead t of buttermilk. Never again to be such a brute as to want to stay at home when the wife wlBhos to go out, or to wish to go out?by yourself?when wifle de- g sires you to stay at home in the bosom of your fatuily. Never again to growl, grumble or V. swear, or pretend to be asleep when the wife pokes you in the back and j asks you to walk with the baby in * tllA mlHHlo r*f fhn r? i r*V?f Never again to threaten to forbid 3 tradespeople to allow the wife credit if she and the girls do not cease their extravagance?when the monthly bills Q come in. Never again to forget to peck wifle ^ on the check upon leaving her in the morning and coming home at night, to tell her that her frightful new bom net is a perfect gem, and that her "fourteen-year-old" short dress is altogether too old-looking for her youthful figure. .. For wifle: Never again to make < biscuit for breakfast until you have . tried them on your own digestion for . a few weeks in the absence of tho a rest of the family. ^ Never again to notice pa exchang- I ing glances with the pretty girl across ^ the aisle all the way downtown. H Never again to keep the lights J turned on when pa has been detained | downtown "on business," in order to j see what time he gets home, or to 1 Insist on his kissing you that you may 1 smell his breath. ^ Never again to come to the tablo I with hair in crimpers and wearing a 4 soiled kimono. I Never again to subject pa to spells f of lachrymose reproaches, telling him a that he doesn't love you any more. 2 For lovers, married or single: Never ( X to miss an opportunity to tell tho dear , X old story over and over again. i Never to lose tho coquettish elu- f siveneBs that makes loverB so delight- 0 ful to each other. I 4 Never again to spend the sweets of ^ young lover souls in cheap flirtations Q when thero is such a world of real fl happiness at your command. ^ Never to become insensible to the n delicious tremblings and ilutterlngs of ^ your own heart, or to become lax in ? all of those lovely attentions and giv- u ings that help to koep a keen response ^ a-thrill in the heart of the beloved. * Citation. Ti?e State of South Carolina, County of Chesterfield. By M. J. Hough, Probate Judge: Whereas, II. L. Blackwell, made suit to me to grant him Letters of Administration (de bonis noo) of the Estate and efets of Angus McDonald, deceased. The<e are, therefore, to cite and admonish all and singular the kindred ami creditors of the said Angus McDonald, deceased, tha they be and appear beforme, in the Court of Probate, ?o be held at Chesterfield, S. C., o i January 7th, next after publication hereof, at 11 o'clock in the forenoon, to show cause, if any they have why the said Adini" istration should not be granted Given under my Kami this 21st days of December, Anno Domini 1915 M. J. Hough, Probate Judge. Citation. The State of South Carolina, County of Chesterfield. By M. J. Ilough, Probate Judge: Whereas, H. L. Bluckweh made suit to me to grant him Letters of Administration of the Estate and ellVcts of Lydia M McDonald, deceased. These are, therefore, to cite and admonish a'l and singular the kindred and creditors of the said Lydia M McDonald deceased, that they be and appear before me, in the Court of Probate, to be held at Chesterfield, 8- C , oa.7th January, next, after publication hereof, at 11 o'clock in the forenoon, to show cause, if ai.y they have, why the said Ad ministration should not be granted. Given under my hand this 21st day of December, Anno ri,.mi c ijvf\ 11 1 11 I ! U(l. M. J. Hough, ' Probate Judge. ?* i Stat* of Ohio, City of Toledo. Lucas County, as. Prank J. Cheney makes oath that he Is senlor/partner of the Arm of P. J. S Cheney A Co., doing business In the City of Toledo. County and State afore- ') said, and that said Arm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for n each and every case of Catarrh that 7 cannot be cured by the use of HALL'S CATARRH CURB. FRANK I. CHENEY Sworn to before me and subscribed In my presence, this 6th day of December, A. D. 1886. A. W. OLE A HON, (Seal) Notary Public. S< Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally and acta through the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces or the 8ystem. Send ? for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY A CO.. Toledo, O. Sold by all druggists, 75c. 1*1 Hall's Family Pill* for constipation. liurst-Strcatcr Co. Before you sell your r.nttnn nr SppH They will give you top prices and will ippreciate your trade in Dry Goods, Shoes, xrocvries, Wagons, Buggies, Wire Fencng, Cyprus Shingles, and in fact most mything you wish to buy at as close prices, [uality -considered, as you can get any* hereHURST-STREATER COMPANY I Reliability i _ Is the chief feature X ! o, a Bank's success. j t UiW fntrw rk Ji? - - * f _o^, /J ?(??n lycjjUBllorB Will put j WWIC Of* their money where i they know it will be 4 | safe, 60 the number j MSB| rx I? I^ttASW}. ot depositors?und the quality if them I oTeu 'determines 6 I the standing of a | Bank. Our depositors are very numerous and they * I include the best people in the vicinity, men of intelli- X geYiee who know our absolute reliability. ? ! The Farmers Bank j r'^ Tax Notice The Tax Books will be open for the collection of taxes from loth October until 31st day of December, 1915 Tax levy for State 7 mills Ordinary County 7J4 mills Constitutional school 11 mills County itoad- *A tmltB Total levy 18 nulla Special Local Bonds Cheraw Graded School 3 mills 4 mills Marburg 3 44 Orange Hill 8 44 Pat's Binpeh 4 44 Bee Dee 3 Stafford 4 44 2J4 Chtraw (Outside) 2 44 Bethel 4 44 Center Point 4 44 Chesterfield 4 44 8 Parker 4 44 Pine Grove 8 44 Shiloh 8 44 5 Snow Hill 4 Ituby 5 44 414 Vaughan 3 44 2 V\ arnble Hill 4 White Oak 4 1> I L /I I- " uiauK vjreen O Cross Roads 6 u Center 4 " Mt. Croghan 8 44 4 New llope 7 44 /a Wexford 4 44 5 1 Winzo 2 44 ^ Zion 2 44 I Mfc. Oroghan (Outside) 2 44 ' Buffalo 2 44 Dudley 8 Five Fork9 2 44 Mangum 8 44 Pagt land 0 44 B Piains 4 44 < 'enter Grove 5 44 Friendship 8 44 .1. fferM.n 5 44 4 Long Branch -4 44 i Jefferson (Outside) 2 44 J (ireen Hill 4 44 I Middendorf 8 4 4 5 I McB.e 8 44 4S I Sandy Bun 4 44 U Union 8 M Aligator (Outside) 2 m Buy Springs 4 44 Bear Cheek 2 4* A Bethesda 2 44 Juniper 8 44 Patrick 8 44 4 I Cat Bond 2 Lewis 8 Ousley 7 Palmetto 8 u I Wallace 8 Steer Pen 5 " For Back Indebtedness and Extending School Terms, Special fl A chool: rhestertteld School District, 2J$ mills; lit. Oroghan 5 p AE i 11k, and Ruby, 6 mill?. MM Ch*raw Town*hio, epfcial levy of 2 mills for Roads; Alligator. IH mills for Road Bonds. H W. A, DOUGLASS H County Treasurer. 19 ?pfc. 15, 1915 ffln MMSBK tsM&MK tas? I / v H