University of South Carolina Libraries
^ ^ ^ Attorney and Counsellor every Office in Courthouse Wednesaay* i / Dental ^ ~ ojj fJTTJMT. R V Office on second floor in Rose IaNIW ^ 'tr ~ Building. P' J^PTUi^-KYS? All who desire my services will -jf C L Hunle' pleasc see me at Chesterfield, as 1 1|H? f S f1 have discontinued my visits to other j^Feopl*s Bank Building ,own* |h)vll? ~ ~ i W tm Jm ? county superintended bgF. o. / glover education wgfx*y8icl\nand surgeon k_ a- rqusk A"s ans WO ed day or niglit. OtHro open nvory Saturday and the at Chost^'fleld Drug Company flrxt Monday of each month. H We are selling s Studcbakcr I Wagons Cheap HE And PVPrvthino* aloo I- ?- v w v l J V.I I 1 I I \_y 1 O V?? n our complete and up-to-date line of merchandise at Live and Let Live Prices HURST-STREATER COMPANY THE SMALL ACCOUNT Many people hesitate about opening a Hank Account, because they have not much money with which to make the start. They seem to think a small sum is too trivial. Thev overlook the fact that the greatest fortunes in tlie world began with small sums?are composed of single dollars? made up of single dollars. This Bank has never put a limit upon the amount with which you can open an account with us. We welcome tne small thrifty depositor. Some dav snob a dpnncifrw m I BOUND to become a big depositor. May we WM welcome you here?never mind how small an amount you may bring? I BANK OF RUBY AND MT. ROGHAN 1 M. CROHAN, S. C. Branch at RUBY, S. C. I R. E. Rivers, Pres., P. M. Therrell, Treas. IBank of Ghesterfield I Oldest Bank In Chesterfield ? i We Solicit Your Business. Pay Interests J I ** On TIME DEPOSITS. I } We Invite You to Visit Vs (SAFETY DEPOSIT BOXES 1 1 nilf Patrona&e wanted, whether large or ? J small Both receive courteous attention. ; , { Our Motto: Strength Security. ^ !R. E. Rivers, Pres. C. C. Douglass Cashier ft M. J. Hough, V. Pres. [). L. Smith, Asst. Cashier. m s asusr Sentinels of the Home! There is a deal of talk on preparedness. ARE YOU PREPARED? This world is full of vicissitudes. You may be in the best of health today, with fine prospect* in business. There may L come a siege of illness. There may come a loss of position. Be prepared. [ V I Start a bank account. |l i Open Your Account With Us Vhe FARMERS' BANK Jti'n 4. IhhmI inTiia ' The Chesterfield Advertiser PUBL.lSHBt) ICVERY THURSDAY Subscription, $1.00 a year. Advertising rates furnished on application. Entered as second-class matter at the postotHce at Cliesterlleld. South Carolina. PAUL H. HKAHN Kdltor : <id Publisher. SHALL WE GO FORWARD? There are periods in the life of every individual, every business and every town wheu this question must be faced. It seems that such a time has arrived for Chesterfield. This town has apparently reached a sta^e in its develop nieni wnen it must take a step forward or must stagnate, which shall it be? First and most important of all, we need a live board of trade. This we must have and now is the time to put such an organization on footWe suggest that a mass meeting be called in the near future and a board of trade be organized and set to work. It is doubtful if any town can accomplish anything noteworthy for itself without a board of trade. Second- We are ideally situated for the installation of water works at a minimum cost Nobody needs to be told that we need it. There are sickening stenches wafted on every breeze; there are myriads of llies laden with filth that ought to be carried off by sewers. Undoubted ly the present conditions are fraught with danger to the health of our entire population. Then there is the terrible fire risk. A big tire started on Main street, and the business section of Chesterfield will be quickly in ashes. This towu has no bonded debt. It has money in the treasury and taxes are light. Water works would be self-sustaining through water rents. The reduction in fire insurance rates would be considerable. We cannot afford to be longer without water works and sewers! PAYING TRIBUTE The good State of South Carolina pays an annual tribute to other states in the union of $13,900,000 for the privilege of eating their inferior canned goods So far as this State is concerned here is a clean waste of $ IB,900,000. It is a safe assertion that every penny of this vast sum could be kept within our bordrs?if we only cared for the money. The shelves of every grocery store in South Carolina are loaded with this inferior foreign, factory-canned stuff when they ought to be loaded with our own products, clean and wholesome, canned by 1.000 canning clubs throughout the State. het the girls of Chesterfield County see that they get their share of this pile of money. THE BALANCE OF TRADE Here is something for the calamity howlers to put in their pipes and smoke?that is, if they can stop howling long enough. The month of March was the greatest month for foreign trade that the United Mates has ever seen, not only as to value of export but imports. I?\>r the fiscal year ending April 1st there was an increase of imports of *24 per cent over last year and exports were 50 per cent increase in same ] Ci iod And the New York Independent asks: ''Are there to be any limits to our prosperity?" The Independent, established in 1M48, has swallowed Harpers Weekly, establised in 1H57. The Independent has been a great and useful weekly Now that it has absorbed "The Journal of Civilation," as Harper's was won't to call itself, its usefulness will be much enlarged by the addition of so many new readers It is said that Villa, who is very much alive, has changed his name. Now if he would only change his nature Mexico would fare better. Mrs. Goode, a Kentucky lady who swallowed a needle twenty years age, had it removed from her side. Mrs. Goode is now better. The ladder of success in politics has many rounds of applause.?The Mute. Keg pardon, but can those .":'i; ''*T THE JOKER IN POLITICS The practical joker is usually a man of good intentions who often has cause to lament the harm done by his apparently inuocent J prank. 1 There is a joke goiug the) rouuds in Chesterfield county' and being fostered from a sense; of fun that may possibly result1 in great harm to this county and i the Fifth Congressional District. The Hon. W. F. Stevenson is Chesterfield's logical candidate for Congress from this district. To all appearances he has an excellsnt opportunity of winning. | But his chances ought not to be ( in/\r\o ??/! I " jr;u|JU.l VlWiCU I LI UilC HI 1^ II UC" gree by the entrance into the1 race of an other Chesterfield, county man. It is reported to this office that! in a spirit of levity many citizens . have encouraged one of Chester-1 field county's pereuial Candida-! dates to enter the race against, Mr. Stevensou. If this county had nothing at stake the joke might be allowed to pass unchallenged but for all we know, this race may possibly be a close one and a very few votes sacrificed to fun may deprive Chesterfield county of a representative in Washington. HELPING THE FARMERS When the bill to increase the efficiency of the military establishments of the United States? the proposition for the government to mauufacuture nitrate's advocated by Senator Smith?of South Carolina, was opposed by Senator Hardwieh of Georgia. His opposition was based up ?n the fact that the plants when not manufacturing nitrates for the army could be used for makiug nitrates for fertilizers. It is almost inconceivable that a Democrat, and a Southern Democrat at that, would oppose the government aiding the farmers by making fertilizers. Sentor Hardwick's opposition to Senator Smith's amendment was that it was a Socialistic measure?that the government should not en gage in manufacturing nitrates for fertilizers for that reason. Senator Owen replied that the measure had the very spirit of Democracy: "Democracy means the rule of the people for the people -for all the people?for their happiness, health and efficiency." Senator Underwood of Alabama, discussing the conference report said : une ol the things we are driving at is to make fertilizers. I think that is a most important tiling, a thing that is close to my heart and close to my people?a thing I want to see accomplished. The primary pur pose of this hill now and in t he future, is to supply the nitrates to protect the government in time of war." But as shown by Senator I Smith, Senator Underwcod and : others the plant when not mak ing nitrates for the army, could i cheapen the prices of fertilizers. , If that be treason make the j best of it. It is good Democratic i doctrine to help the the people when and where they need help We suppose half the enmities in this old vale of tears are born of mutual misunderstanding, and the leason that fellow thinks you are a pin headed little ass is because he suspects you thiol? him a piuheaded little ass And the chances are that you are both right.?The State. This appears to be oue of those half truths we used to hear about A Merciless Judge One Who Shows No F vor. A merciless judge in Father Time. Before Itihi tli?t weak >iml the wanting go to tlin wall. Only tin* truth ran stand, For \ I'lli*.h tin.* following statement from a Iainriimtit resiednt Iiuh witliHtood the sternest of all tests. I.. P. Plybnrit. French 8t.. I.niicsHter. 8. hiivb: "My kidneys were inactive mid I It ml backache*. I uni1*] Dona's Kidney Pills with resnln." (Statement given March 25th. 10111. NO KIDNKY TIlOl'lthK HI.NI'K. MOItK THAN TIIKFK YKAItS LATFilt; Mr. t'lyhnrn Kiiid: "'I have had no further trim bin with my kidneys or buck wince Dime's Kidney Pills no grently benefited me." Price 50e, at all ilea I ere. Don't simpIv ask for a kidney remedy?get Dohii'n Kidney Pill*?the Hnrne that Mr. Cl.vImrn hae twice pnbliclv recommended. Foster-Mlburn Props,, Buffalo, N. Y. FOLEY KIDNEY PILLS fO? B AC K AC MI KIDNKYS ANO BlAODtR Balanced Diet Stops Disease "Our unanimous opinion is that there is no pellagra at the Kpworth orphange at the present time," said .Joseph Goldberger, M D., surgeon. United States public health service, who has been in charge of the dieting of the 225 children in the orphanage since the government took charge last September. The statement was made in the presence of () II. I.nvinilpr M H surgeon, ami It. M. Grimm, M. D., past assistant surgeon, United States public health st?rvice, vim were sent to Columbia by the surgeon general to inspect the conditions at the orphanage, j When Dr. Goldberger and W. F. Tanner, M. D , surgeon, began their supervision of food giv| en the children there were more I than 80 eases of pellagra at the | orphanage, some advanced and others incipient. I "It is not." said Dr. Goldberger, "that, the children do not. get | enough to eat or that the food is not wholesome; it- is merely ; that the diet was not balanced. There is no medication, whatever. We have fed them principally on milk, lean meat and cowpeas, and given them less starchy, cereal and sweet foods "It should be clearly under stood that the children are nol cured for the rest, of their lives foi an unbalanced diet wil brim ' the pellagra back."?The State Oldest Living Thing. One of the wonders of the an cient world and probably tlx greatest of them, was the pyra mids of Egypt. And yet sonx of the giant sequoias of Califor nia that are now thrifty treei 1 had bark on them a f< ot thicl when Cheops began building tlx great pyramid that bears hi name. Beneath the shadow o the pyramids Napoleon said t< his troops: "F >rty centures lool down upon you." In the shadov of the big trees of California oix might say: "Eighty centurie look down upon yon." Then are trees in the grove estimatec by scientists, among them .Johi Muir, the eminent nat iralist, tr he 8,000 and even 10,000 years old. The oldest living things in the world today are these giant trees Also the species of vegetation tc ( which thov belong is the oldest in the world. The sequoia trees, I i [exactly like that <.f California, Hourished several millions ?>t years ago. We know that because we tind the.r fossil remains i ,i i .i ? . ^ iiuneu ueiieain n.ousmics <! leer of rock and geologists a~e able, by reading the eaves of those rocks as an ordinary man would read a book, to tell win 11 the sequoias beneath tliern lived. "I've got a job. I'm barber .t a soda fountain." "A barber at a soda fountain?" "Yes; I shave the ice."? Washington Post. '"Tom when you proposed to 1 her I suppose she said: 'This is so sudden." Dick?" No; she was honest and said. "I'his suspense hatbeen terrible,."?Boston Transcript. FOLEY CAIH&KKC TABLET K?l> Stomach Sweet - Liver Active -Bowels Ret?SEVERE PUNISHMENT Of Mr*. Diiinnell nf Fi*? Y??r.1 w. VI IV V * V?I? Standing, Relieved by Cardui. Mt. Airy, N. C.?Mrs. Sarah M. Chanpell of this town, says: "I sutiercd loi live years with womanly troubles, nlsc stomach troubles, and my punishment was more than any one coulcl tell. I triefl n ost every kind of medicine, but none did me any good. I read one day about Cardui, the woman's tonic, and 1 decided to try it. I [ had not taken but about six bottles until I was almost cured. It did me more good than all the other medicines I had tried, put together. My friends began asking me why I looked so well, and 1 tola them about Cardui. Several are now taking it.** Do you, lady reader, suffer from any of the ailments due to womanly trouble, such as headache, backache, sideache, sleeplessness, and that everlastingly tired feeling? If so. let us urge you to give Cardui a trial. We feel confident it will help you, just as it lias a million other women in the past half century. Begin taking Cardui to-day. You won't regret it. All druggists. H'r/tf tj Chattanoora Madlclna Co., LadlM Advisory Dept . Chattanooga. Tann., for Imitru. tiom on your cata and 64-paga book. "Home Traaxmaot (or woman," in plain wrapper. M.C. ltd Dangerous to Allies x Home?Orders have been issued to Italian soldiers not to eat any Am.-rioan frozen beef or cauned meat unions it is shredded. Recent consigcmonts to Italy from Chicago were said to contain small hooks and prongs which, it is suspected, were purposely hidden in the frozen and potted meats with the object of disabling the soldiers, causing an ulceration of the intestines. An investigat ion has been ordered with a view to ascertaining the responsibility of the packers, who, it is feared, have Austrian and German workmen in their employ. An Honrabie Desertion Home?An Alpine soldier named Finimondo, who in the Tripoli war single handed killed seven Arabs, using the bayonet, was sent to the Italian front Hiiuri>iy alter the outbreak of war. Recently growing disgusted and tired of trench warfare, he had deserted. Since apparant proof of his desertion was avail' able he was court-martaled in his absence and condemned to die as a traitor. Finimondo has ' now unexpectedly retuned, 1 wearing the uniform of an Aus' trian ollicer. He reported that he purposely deserted with the k object of securing valuable in? formation from the enemy and * thus earn another medal similar * to that, which he wa- awarded in the Tripoli war. The "den r er" explained that he used stones to * kill Austriaiis guarding him, in8 eluding an ollicer, whose uniform " he was now wearing. He then 8 collected such valuable informa* tion with regard to the Austrian * positions, strength, location and c their guns that tie sentence of 8 death was revoked. It is ex 8 pected that Finimondo will be f decorated instead of punished. i Do You Know Thatv The United States Public 8 Health Service man.tains a loan S ' k : ? ? i / a jr t.i sieri'iipiii'i u sillies r 'I he typhoid riOe measures ac* curately community ii.telli1 pence? Whooping congh annually hills over ten tnousand Amerieans? > Bad housing produces bad health? ) KocPy Mountains spot ted fev | er is spread l?v a wood-tich? ;i yl Determined i. ; 11^oman and j "Colt!" i ! This Combination is a Solution | of the Home Protection Problem | '. ' VHE fear engendered in the mind of a degenerate 1 The Peoples CHESTERF i C. P. MANGUM. PRESIDENT I j We Holieit your h.iainpss, i call on us when yot? are in o The Peop V _ l^P boyudriSin ?m. ^ JESff opjportunit^ |^io \t aiudy eaay and ? ihr"W effective? Give J\ t"em *b? flan1? ' *"jjr chances to win pro^iem^ motion and success 11 as the lad having the | ^WOi. Bi advantage of wjk~S~+ WEBSTER'S NEW INTERNATIONAL Dictionary in his home. This new creation answers with final author* ity all kinds of puzzling questions in history, geography, Diography, (spelling, pronunciation, sports, arts, and sciences. 400,000 Vocabulary Term*. 27NPi|M> Over 60001 Uuatrationa. Colored Platea. Th. only <lls tl onary with th. DlTldad Fm*The type matter is equivalent to that oi a 15-volume encyclopedia. I More Scholarly, Accurate. Convenient. S and Autboritatire than iiny other Kn|> StaSSh ,*| . SfflSjilP^jeoinienpace*. egffi *2 dip'' illustration., etc. S3fi9 "I kSN jr FREE, a set of Pocket oak A Bj W Map# if you name thie SeN" oJKf o!* C. MERR1AM COL, jjgy SnUNaniLD. MAM. No. @66 Thi* ii n prescription prepared especially for MALAF.IA or CHILLS A FEVER. Five or aix doaea will break any caae, and if taken then aa a tonic the Fever will not return. It acta on the liver bctterathan Calomel and doea not gripe or aicken. 25c MADE A RECORD RUN. And at That He Only Made Hla Team, mates Furious. Two small college teams played a footbnll game In New York state. "The winning team ran up something like 108 points to flie other's nothing, yet the most sensational run of the game was made by a member of the defeated team. Toward the end of the game the ball was fumbled by one of the backs on the winning team. The ball rolled out toward an opposing player, who Immediately swooped down upon It. gathered it under his arm and tied down the field like the wind. At tills a howl went up from the - - * spectators that might be heard for miles. That shout gladdcued the heart of the runner, for he realized thut he was at last doing what he had ulways r*v < ,? C= ___ by the display of this recognized leader in the held of small arms is usually sufficient ? if not, the absolute certainty of results when the trigger of a "Colt" is purposely pulled puts danger in the discard, law j and order in full command. ! Be prepared, it may happen I to-morrow. Take a "Colt" j home with you to-day. Catalog E and 'How to Shoot" booklet ' mailed free If year dealer doa. not tall " Colt**." aoad your ordar to u* i Colt's Patent Fire Arms Mfg. Co. HARTFORD. CONN. ! UK FATKLiT FLBW. J loused to do. lie wob about to make football history. lie had about a hundred yards to 1 run, and he determined to reach that soul or die. One of hla teammate* ran toward him and shrieked. The runner put on an exiru burst of speed. It waa very eucouraglng to l>e applauded by { players and spectators alike. ' Presently he heurd feet pounding I heavily behind him. Hut he felt conll* ^ A j dent he could never he caught. The i ground sped by under his feet, and the ten yard marks were passed as though k they were hut a few inches apart, j Only a few tnoro yards, and then? | fame! Iiuttfoi all the runner's speed the | jKuindlng feet behind him drew steadI fly closer The man carrying the ball | heard them with dismay. He lea|H>d. he Imunded, he fabtg flew, he was there! j When both runners were but one ! yard from the goal posts the panose hurled himself forward, clutched ibm runner viciously about the knees, stod both crashed heavily to the ground. Too late, however, for the}- had fallea over the goal line. The runner picked himself up. aching In every llmh. turned proudly toward the stands to receive the piaudita o4 ^ the spectators?and looked into tha snarling fnce of n furious teainmat*. Ills own tenrnmnte had tackled him, for the runner had run In the wrong direction un<! had scored two point*fee the other aide!?New York World. Donfr Established 1911 DcllltS. Capital 125,000 ' IELD, S. C. MACK DAVIS. CASHIER jfi Mid cordially invite you to ur town. >les Bank *