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& Storks I e ... (_ U.?The Discounters of J Money j i ! By O. HENRY i i [Copyright by Doubleday, Page & Co.l r umtiil HE spectacle of ' 0?tjje money ca- ( I llplis of the pres- * yfJK. I c?t day going' /rff I . about Bagdnd( T&?11 9f? -jB ? n-t11 ?-Subway lyT I tryiug to relieve I ^x% ^ I ? XL the wnnts of the ^ people Is enough. to make the great A1 RasI ^Pl^hld turn Haroun in his grave, it' not so then the assertion should do so, the real caliph hnvlug been n wit aud a | scholar and therefore a hater of puus. a How properly to alleviate the trou6 bles of the poor is one of the greatest I , troOwtes of the rich. But one thing, * agreed upon by nil professional philau" throplsts is that you must never hand over any cash to your subject. The poor are .notoriously temperamental, and when they get money they exhibit a strong tendency to spend Jt for stuffed olives and enlarged crayon portraits instead of giving it to the installment S- man. And still old Haroun had some advantages as nn eleemosynarlan. Ho took around with him on his rumbles his vizier, Glafar (a vizier is a compoi site of a chauffeur, a secretary of state 1 ' and a night and day bank), and old Uncle Mcsrour, his executioner, who Wk toted a snickersnee. With this cnfl tourage a callphing tour could hardly S fail to be successful. Have you noticed lately any newspaper articles \\ headed "What Shall We Do With Our n Ex-presidents?" Well, now. suppose Mr. Cnrncglo should engage them and Jess Willnrd to go about assisting in the distribution of free libraries? Do you suppose any town would have tho hardihood to refuse one? That caliphnlous combination would cause two libraries to grow where there had been only one set of E. P. Itoe's works before. Hut. as 1 said, the money caliphs Ctre handicapped. They have the idea that earth has no sorrow that dough cannot heal, and they rely upon it solely. A1 Rasehid administered justice, rewarded the deserving and punished whomsoever he disliked on the spot. He was the originator of the short i story contest. Whenever lie succored i any chance pickup in the bazaars lie always made the succoree tell the qjjd story of his life. If the narrative j Incited construction, style and esprit ho commanded his vizier to dole him 1 out a couple of thousand ten dollar notes of the First National Hank of | ttie Bosporus, or else gave him a soft & Job as Keeper of the Bird Seed for the $ Bulhuls in the Imperial Gardens. If the story was a crackerjack he Inpl Mesrour, the executioner, whack olf j his head. The report that Iluroun Al Ilnsc-hid is yet alive and is editing the magazine that your grandmother used ^ to subscribe for lacks continual ion. And now follows the "Story of the Millionaire, l'he Inetlicacious lucre- | ment" and "The Babes Drawn From the Wood." Young Howard Pllkins, the million-j r-, aire. got his money ornithologieully. j lie was a shrewd judge of storks and | got in 011 the ground floor at the resi- ; dence of his immediate ancestors, the I? IMlkins Brewing company. For his mother was a partner in the business. Filially old man IMlkins died from a torpid liver, and then Mrs. IMlkins died from worry on account of torpid de- I livery wagons?and there you have young Howard IMlkins with $-1,000,000. and n good fellow at that. lie was j an agreeable, modestly arrogant young , man, who implicitly believed that j money could buy anything that the world hnd to offer. And Bagdad onthe-Subwny for a long time did every- : thing possible to encourage his belief. But the rat trap caught him at last. ! He heard the spring snap and found Ids heart In a wire cage regarding a piece of cheese whose otli^er name was -Alice von der Buy.sling. j The You der Kuyslings still live in 1 [ that little square aliout which so uiuch I has been said and in which so little has been done. Today you hear of Mr. 1 Tllden's underground nassaceAand vou hear Mr. Gould's elevntwl passage, an<l that nbout ends the noise In the world , mude by Gramerey square. Hut once It was different. The Von dor Ituyallngs live there yet, and they received the tlrst key ever made to Gramerey park. Yon shall have no description of Alice v. d. It. Just call up in your mind the picture of your own Maggie or Vera I or Beatrice, straighten her nose, soften ' her voice, tone her down and then tone | her up, make her beautiful and unattainable, and you have a faint dry point etchiug of Alice. The family L owned a crumbly brick house and a coachman named Joseph in a coat of ^ many colors, and a horse so old that 1 he claimed to belong to the order of ' the Perissodnetyla. and had toes instead of hoofs. In the year 1808 the y family had to buy a new set of harness for the I'erlssodnetyl. Before using it they made Joseph smear it over with a mixture of ushes and soot. It was the Von der Ituysllng family that bought the territory between tlio Bowery and linst river and Ttivington street and the Statue of Liberty, In lbs Is your subs< ? in advance? I at your lab( waitforasta need the dot * A L ' & fear 1649, from an Indian chief f^r a I tuart of passeweuterie and a pair of y l*urkey red portieres designed for a ri inrlem flat I have always admired S hut Indian's ^perspicacity and good f< aste. All this is merely to convince ; f ou thnt the Von der Uuysliugs were v xactly the kind of poor aristocrats ' a liut turn down their noses at people b vho have money?oh, well, I don't 3 noun thnt; I mean people who ha^e g list money. j u Ono evening IMlkins went down to j l\e red brick house in Grnniercy J squire and made w hat he thought was \{ i proposal to Alice v. d. R. Alice, with ? ?er nose turned down and thinking of lis money, considered it a proposition b tnd refused It and him. Pilkins, sum- 3 nonlr.g all his resources as any good v cenorul would have done, made an In- ^ llsereet reference to the advantages j hat his money would provide. That 0 A ( Kj : "My name is Pilkins and I'm worth several million dollars/' settled iu The lady turned so cold that Walter Wellmau himself would have waited until spring to mnko a dash for her in a dog sled. ltut I'ilkins was something of a sport himself. You can't fool all the millionaires every time the bull drops on the Western Union building. "If at any time," he said to A. v. d. It., "you feel that you would like to i reconsider your answer send mo a rose like that." rilkins audaciously touched a jack rose that she wore loosely in her hair. "Very well," said she. "And when I do you will understand by ' It that . either you or 1 have learned something new about the purchasing power of money. You've been spoiled, my ( friend. No: I don't think I could mar- ' . I'ilkins sat on the bench, one seat romovcil from the youth. He glanced cautiously and saw (as men i<> see and women oh. never can!) that they were of t he same order. rilklus leaned over after a short time and spoke to the youth, who answered smilingly and courteously. From general topics the conversation > concentrated to the bedrock of grim. personalities. Hut I'ilkins did it as] delicately and heartily as any caliph , could have done. And when it came to the point the youth turned to him. soft voiced and with his undiminished , smile. "I don't want to scorn unappreclntlve, old man." ho said, with a youth's somewhat too early spontaneity of ad nress, nut, you see, i can i accept Anything from n stranger. I know you're all right nnd I'm tremendously i obliged, but I cotildn'f think of borrow i ing from anybody. You see, I'm i Marcus Clayton - the Claytons of Ron i 2ription paid Please look 3l and don't ternent. We igh. . . 1 riteTii li 'iiii'rf^iifciiTiirtf oke county, Va., you know. The {"" oung lady Is Miss Eva Bedfortl?I ackon you've heard of the Bedfords. he's seventeen aud oue of the Bedjrds of Bedford county. We've eloped rom home to get ninrried und we ant to see New York. We got In this fternoon. Somebody got my pockefcook on the ferryboat and I had only cents In change outside of It. I'll et some work somewhere tomorrow nd we'll got married." "But, I say, old man," said Pllklns 11 confidential low tones, "you can't eep the lady out here In die cold all ight. Now, as for hotels"? "I told you." said the youth with a reader suille. "that I didn't have but cents. Besides, If I had a thousand, re'd have to wait here until morning. Tou can understand that, of course. _ in much obliged, but I can't take any f your money. Miss Bedford and I I ave lived nil outdoor life-find wo don't ; ? olnd a little cold. I'll get work of I oine kind tomorrow. We've got a j is uner bac of cakes and rhoer?ln????i ??>.i re'll get along all right." "Listen," said the millionaire, im- j-(, iressively. "My name la Pilklns and ^ 'in worth several million dollars. I uippen to have In ray pockets about sou or $'.MX) in cash. Don't you think P ou are drawing it rather fine when h ou decline to accept as much of it ^ is will make you and Nie young lady omfortable at least for the niglit?" "I can't say, sir, that I do think so," ^ aid Clayton of Roanoke county. "I've N teen raised to look at such things dif- v\ erently. Rut I'm mightily obliged to Q ou, just the same." "Then you force me to say good tight," said the millionaire. ^ Twice that day had his money been F icomed by simple ones to whom his M lobars had appeared as but tin tobac- -y o tags, lie was no worshiper of the q ictual minted coin or stamped paper, tut ho had always believed in its ulnost unlimited power to purchase. ci l'iikins walked away rapidly and tl hen turned abruptly and returned to g lie bow h where tlie young couple sat. i c? Ie took off Ids hat and began to a tpeuk. The girl looked at him with' n he same sprightly, glowing interest' hat she had been giving to the lights mil statuary and sky reaching build-; c< tigs that made the old square seem so a 'ar away from ltedford count v. ry you. Tomorrow I will so ml you ; buck tlie presents you have given me." j ) "l'reseuts!" said L'llkins In surprise. . j "I never gave you n prosqnt In uiy life. I 1 would like to see u full length portrait of the muu that you would take a ( present from." * I "You've forgotten," said Alice v. d. It., with a little smile. "It was u long ' time ago when our families were < neighbors. You were seven, and I was trundling my doll on the sidewalk. You gave ine a little gray, lialry kit- ' ten with shoebuttony eyes. Its head came off, and it was full of candy. You paid 5 cents for it?you told me so. 1 haven't the candy to return to you. I hadn't developed a conscience at three, so I ate it. But 1 have tho kitten yet. and 1 will wrap it up neatly and seud it to you tomorrow." Beneath the lightness of Alice v. d. lt.'s talk the steadfastness of her rejection showed lirm and plain. So there was nothing left for him but to leave the crumbly red brick house and be off with his abhorred millions. < >n his way back I'ilkius walked through Madison square. The hour hand of the clock hunt; about S. The air was stinghigly cool, but not at the freezing point. The dim little square seemed like a great, cold, unroofed room, with its four walls of houses spangled with thousands of insulllcient ' lights, only a few loiterers were hud- j died hero and there on the benches. Ltut suddenly I'ilkins came upon a' youth sating brave and, as if conflicting with summer sultriness, coutlcss, his while shirt sleeves conspicuous In j tin' light from the globe of an electric, j Close at Ids side was a girl, smiling, i dreamy, happy. Around her shoulders was, palpably, the missing coat of the cold defying youth. It appeared to lie a mode mi panorama of the "Ilabes In the Wood," revised and brought up to date, with the exception that the role ins hadn't turned up yet with the proI.iflvnu card, urn t it.' r Thanks. Well, pood night. I'm n\v- I fully obliged to you for your kindness, j N'o, thanks, 1 don't smoke. Good l night." , p In his room I'ilklns opened the box ^ and took out the staring, funny kit- t ten. long ngo ravaged of his candy and t minus one shoe button eye. Tilkins j looked at it sorrowfully. "After nil," he said, "I don't believe j that just money alone will"? And then lie gave a shout and dug Into the bottom of the box for some- '' thing else that bad been the kitten's r resting place?a crushed but red. fra- j J grant, glorious, promising Jacqueminot j rose. ^ Catarrh Cannot Be Cured ! 1 With LOCAIi APPLICATIONS, as they > cannot reach the seat of the disease. > Catarrh Is a local disease, greatly In- < fluenced by constitutional conditions, i . and in order to euro It you must I 1 take an Internal remedy. Hall's Ca tarrh Cure Is taken Internally and acts thru the blood on the mucous aur- ; " faces of the system Hall's Catarrh : Cure was prescribed oy Sne of the best I I physicians In this countrV'or years. It I . Is composed of some Ot *?-?st tonics i > known, combined wtth^^\ the , best blood purifiers. Th^ML ->mhlnntlnn or the inrrredi^^^B^r J'%, \ Catarrh Cure is what WJ wonderful results in gJ tlons. Si-nd for testtmr^^^^^k F. J. CHENEY & CO., All Druggists. 75c. Hall's Family Pills "Mr.?er? Roanoke." said Pilktns, "1 p idmire your?your lndepeu?your idiocy ;o much that I'm going to appeal to rour chivalry. I believe that's what rou southerners call it when you keep i lady sitting outdoors on^n bench on i cold night just to keep your old. jut of date pride going. Now, I've a friend?a lady?whom I have known ill my life?who lives a few blocks L from here?with her parents and sis- J :ers and aunts and all that kind of in- r lorsonient. of course. I nm sure this ody would be happy and pleased to 1 >ut up?that is. to have Miss?er?'ted- tl ford trive her the pleasure of having , Her as a guest for the night. Don't rou think, Mr. Itonoake of?er?Vir- ? iinia, that you could unbend your prcj- ^ ndlces that far?" I 1 <'layton of Itoanoke rose and held t jut bis hand. 11 "Old man." he said. "Miss lied ford ^ a ill be much pleased to accept the hospitality of the lady you refer to." , I'ilkins conducted tliem to the crumbly rod bj^k house of the Von der Uuysllngs. iiis card brought Alice lowiistuirs wondering. "Of course 1 will take her in." said Alice. "Haven't those southern girls a thoroughbred air? Of course she will stay here. You will look after Mr. Clayton, of course." "Will IV" said I'ilkins delightedly. "Oli, yes, I'll look after IitmI As a | citizen of New York ami therefore u part owner of Its public parks I'm go- r lug to extend to him the hospitality of Madison square tonight. lie's going to sit there on a bench till morning. I There's no use arguing with him. ! Isn't it wonderful? I'm glad you'll e look after the little lady, Alice. I tell n you-those 'Itabes in the Wood' made ii my?that Is?or?made Wall street and ; the Hank of England look like penny arcades." i ' Miss von dor Ituysllng whisked Miss T Radford of I ted ford county up to rest- F ful regions upstairs. \V hen she came f down sho put an ^ said, ' that 11 J \A \ am returning to ^ ^ m,,,n^or?" s a 1 ?1 t fc ^"the woolly |ylj and shook hands i jpj w'hh him lienrt"A f t r I get Ia*"n work." said the youth, "I'll look "Your present, that *0U Y?Ur nd* , I am returning." dros8 ls. ?? I Monroe Doctrine I Harmony With I 1 BStiP Pan-Americanism | - By ROBERT LANSING. Secretary of State # Photo American Press Association. F I have correctly interpreted pan-Americanism from the standpoint of the relations of our government with those beyond the seas it is in entire harmony with the Monroe doctrine. The Monroe doctrine a national,policy of the United States; pan-Americanism is an interna- * onal policy of the Americas. The motives are to an extent different; ic ends sought are th'e same. Both can exist without impairing the tree of cither. And both do exist and, I trust, will ever exist in all icir vigor. BUT PAN-AMERICANISM EXTEND8 BEYOND THE SPHERE OF * OLITICS AND FINDS ITS APPLICATION IN THE VARIED FIELDS OF C UMAN ENTERPRISE. BEARING IN MIND THAT THE ESSENTIAL r 3EA MANIFESTS ITSELF IN CO-OPERATION, IT BECOMES NECES- a ARY FOR EFFECTIVE CO-OPERATION THAT WE SHOULD KNOW ACH OTHER BETTER THAN WE DO NOW. WE MUST NOT ONLY BE . EIGHBORS, BUT FRIENDS; NOT ONLY FRIENDS, BUT INTIMATES. IE MUST UNDERSTAND ONE ANOTHER. WE MUST COMPREHEND un gtvcnnu iNctuo. w c. ivi u ?> I SlUUY THE PHASES OF MATERIAL ND INTELLECTUAL DEVELOPMENTS WHICH ENTER INTO THE ARIED PROBLEMS OF NATIONAL PROGRESS. WE SHOULD, THERE- * ORE, WHEN OPPORTUNITY OFFERS, COME TOGETHER AND FA- Q IILI ARIZE OURSELVES WITH EACH OTHER'S PROCESSES OF HOUGHT IN DEALING WITH LEGAL, ECONOMIC AND EDUCATIONAL 1 UESTIONS. Commerce and industry, science and art, public and private law, govrnmcnt and education, all those great fields which invite the intellectual 1 louglit of man, fall within the province of the deliberations of this con- 11 ress. In the exchange of ideas and comparison of experiences we will 1 mie to know one another and to carry to the nations which we represent better and truer knowledge of our neighbors than we have had in the c ast. I believe that from that wider knowledge a mutual esteem and ? :ust will spring which will unite these republics more closely politically, munereially and intellectually and will give to the pan-American spirit u n impulse and power which it has never known before. ?i ~ ; _ 1 I Instinct of Self Preservation Has Been Aroused In Nations \ By DARWIN P. KINGSLEY, Life Insurance President and Financier rllE year 1910 could be made the first year in an epoch so important c that it would change the calendar. Will that be its history ? Prob- ' ably not. Civilization can go no further under the leadership of . ho doctrine of unconditioned sovereignty. So much r crtain. THE INSTINCT OF SELF PRESERVATION. WHICH IS JUST AS } TRONG IN NATIONS AS IT IS IN MAN AND ANIMALS AND JUST AS IATURAL AND NEC'ESSARY, HAS BEEN AROUSED. THAT IS WHY "HE WORLD IS FIGHTING. FIGHTING IT OUT WILL SETTLE NOTHING INLESS THIS DOCTRINE IS ABANDONED. THERE IS ROOM ENOUGH N THE WORLD FOR ALL NATIONS, BUT UNDER THE COMPULSION >F UNCONDITIONED SOVEREIGNTY THE GREAT POWERS OF THE ' :ARTH WOULD BE CROWDED IF PLACED ON THE PLANET JUPITER. ; - 1 1 ... V. , Everybody Agrees Suffrage Is Bound to O \ / v ?*TT. I ^ome?Year Gpens With Great Promise By Mrs. NORMAN DE R. WH1TEHOUSE, Head of New York State Woman Suffrage Party r rllE year 191G opens with tlie greatest promise for the suffragists. Hitherto in predicting the outcome of the vote upon woman suffrage in this state we had no solid basis upon which to go. It is true that in tho past campaign tlie voters were canvassed with ncournging results. It was, however, impossible to reach all the voters, nd the assurances given by the men who were canvassed were not bind- ' ag upon them. We hud to discount some ot' the favorable signs. THEN WE COULD ONLY HOPE. NOW WE KNOW THE STRENGTH VITH WHICH WE START. OVER FIVE HUNDRED AND FORTY-FOUR "HOUSAND MEN IN NEW YORK STATE B5LIEVE IN WOMAN SUFFRAGE AND HAVE VOTED FOR IT. THIS IS AN EXCELLENT BEGINNING FOR A NEW CAMPAIGN. IT IS A LARGER VOTE THAN THE RE UBLICANS POLLED IN THIS STATE IN THE LAST PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION. Everybody agrees that suffrage is bound to come. It lias been said hat it is coming automation'^'. WE ARE SURE THAT IT IS 10UND TO COME, KIT WE ARE EQUALLY SURE THAT IT S NOT BOUND TO COME AUTOMATICALLY. So my New Tear's wish for the suffragists of the state is: May 191G be a year of lard work for us all; of such work that, building upon tho sure foundaion we can now count upon, will make doubly certain a speedy victory. If War Were Waged on Sea, American Commerce Would Be Paralyzed :?? By Dr. EMORY R. JOHNSON, Professor Transportation, University of Pennsylvania rllE cfTcet of the present war, severe as it is, is slight in comparison with what the result would be were not the seas controlled by one of the belligerents and the theater of war thereby limited to rctrictcd areas of the ocean near the coast of Europe. The flag of the >elligcrent that has thus limited the theater of marine warfare happens o be the flag under which more than two-fifths of the total deep sea onnage of the world is operated, and in spite of the destruction of ship>ing that has occurred during the last year and of the withdrawal of ncrchant vessels for military and naval uses, the commerce of the world s able to employ a large tonnage of vessels under the llag of belligerent lations. If the European war were being waged upon the sea as widely 18 it is being fought upon land AMERICAN FOREIGN COMMERCE VOULD BE PRACTICALLY PARALYZED AT THE PRESENT LTME. NO ONE WILL SERIOUSLY QUESTION THE ECONOMIC NECESSITY DF HAVING A LARGE MERCHANT MARINE UNDER THE NATIONAL pLAG DURING SUCH A WAR AS IS NOW IN PROGRESS, BUT THERE \RE MANY WHO STILL DOUBT THAT THCRF ift a wv cdfp.i a i c c n. DTHER THAN A NAVAL ONE FOR HAVING A LARGE MERCHANT MARINE UNDER THE NATIONAL FLAG. IT IS ARGUED THAT THE MERCHANT VESSELS OF ALL NATIONS COMPETE WITH EACH OTHER 1"0 SECURE THE TRAFFIC OF ALL COUNTRIES, AND THAT OCEAN FREIGHT RATES, BEING CONTROLLED BY THIS COMPETITION, IT MATTERS NOT TO THE PEOPLE OF THE UNITED STATES WHETHER 1"HEIR COMMERCE BE HANDLED IN SHIPS OF AMERICAN OR FOR EIGN REGISTRY. THE ARGUMENT, HOWEVER, IS NOT CONVINCING. LEY KIDNEY PIUS routftMiArac tablets JfcCKACHrKtONiVS ANO BlAUBfcg K?p Stomach Sweet -Lwer Active-Bweb Regular Cabbage Plants For sale in any quantity. ] Two Varieties. j EARLY JERSEY ? /IIARLESTON WAKEFIELD f Uiv? me your order. \ ; s Will ship to any address by 'arcel Post. 1O0 for 15, Cents 200 for 25 Cents 300 for 35 Cents 00 und over 10c per hundred, s Postage prepaid. 8 All orders cash. , ?L 41 Money order will be accepted, j1 Ed. C. Crawford L CHESTERFIELD, S. C. ' ^oute 2 Box 26 C For Quick Sale One five roon; house known s the Dr. McOanlass house loated on South side of C. cV L. ' ailtoad; for prices and terms ? ddress, , J. W. Maynard, Cheraw, ?S. O. or Waiter Douglass, 7p Chesterfield, S O. Land Posted Hauling wood and straw and _ II other trespassing on our nods forbidden under penalty f law. J D. Smith, 0-p D. O Smith. In watch and jewelry repairrig you want the best. You will j' nake no mistake if you carry 1 hem to McCall for repair. t! ! Call o 1 ; When in need of anything tli Grocery Store. Phone us your orders ant to your home. Phone 79. Mr K. T. Red f earn is i pleased to have his friends < : Yours to THE REDE tou Will Leave Thn Your Business, Your F; These three things aie aboni File man who dies without enoug ill of them in a bad lix. These tl struggle and labor their whole livt ix. There is only one way?just tlisolute certainty. Gary J. Hun! Pile, Fire, Accident an rr? f T-% < i ne peoples CHESTERFI C. P. MANGUM, PRESIDENT We solicit your business, a cull on us when you are in on The Peop | Bank of &I 1 Oldest Bank In U'e Solicit Your Eusi "On TIME DEPOSI We Invite Y ot SAFETY DEPC iY fHlV* Patronage wa small Poih rece Our Motto: sir J x K. tL. Kivers, f res. L. 1 M.J. Hough, V. Pro. P. X $ For Snsura & We represent the Strong* y INS U It A A C K Con 1 pan y a' ^ See vis for all ki (1 Chesterfield I ? W. J. Dougla: <3) ?S3>fiS>c?) g?3>?S>C?3> ",.J\ ^ ?*. Cabbage Plants Frost Proof Cabbage Plants? Sarly Jersey, Early Charleston, Sarly Summer and Early Succesion. $1.00 per thousand, 12J4 cts. ?er hundred. Large contracts pecial price. B. J. Douglass, Box 45, Chesterfield, S. C. Full-Bloodcd Jersey Stock Fine, full-blooded Jersey bull, orvices $1.00 cash. l-50p J. M. Red fear n, 1A NNA &> H UNL.E Y ?ATTORNEYS? i. E? i I anna C L Hunlny Chesterfield, S. C. Ulice ir, Peoples Bank Building OK Fit' OF DR. C. A. GLOVER Physician and Sukckon Calls answered day or night, fllco at riie.storllehl Drug Company OFFTOK OF OUXTY SEPERINTKMH" v OK EDUCATION It. A. ItOl-SK H(li><? open I'vcrv Saturday an<l the r.sI Monday of cuch month. 1 >K L 11 TKO'LTI Dental Surgeon Chesterfield, S. C. Office on second floor in Ro.^s >uikling. Ai| w 10 desire toy services v.- ;1 lease see me at Chesterfield, as ' rive discontinued my visits to other )wns >n Us 1 o at is kept in an up-to date J I they will he delivered a? o iow with us and will be JJ ill and let liini serve thejn. J please, % EARN CO. 1 o ame? & ? 11111 se Things Behind 1 111 I I *r V^.. .mil j | uwi i'lciuurv r all 111 st men have to leave, h 'ife insurance leaves one or iree things are what most men js through to leave in a GOUl> one?to accomplish tliis with >. r t Chesterfield South Carolina ui Health Insuiance ID q r? 17* Established 1Q11 JDcZi/iv Capital S25.000 ELD, S. C. MACK DAVIS, CASHIER nd cordially invite yon to ir town. Ses Bank iesterfield | Chesterfield % 8 iness. Pay Interests C TS. | i to V lSlt f )3IT BOXES ? nted. whether large or J we courteous attention. J ength St-curity. ? C. Douglass * ashier J ! Their el, Asst. Cashier. ^ U^SSSS^xtSsKISX^q nee See Us | *st and and He*t Old-ljine ^ in the World. fX iids of Insurance j? ,oaa cV Ii\s Co | ss, Manager. <5?s?3)<2S3><2S> <s^@t?G)M8n HS