University of South Carolina Libraries
|Vl)lt.K. 1, McMANUS P. A. M&RRAY, ff. ' boutwt. Attorney and Counsellor \f Office over Bank of Cheater- At Law field. Will visit Pageland every otltce ln Courthouse V Tuesday ; Jefferson Wednesday. . If in ?he.terlield. ~ 1)R L H TBOTTX i no's reasonable. All work guaranteed. Dental Surgeon H ' ~ ? Chesterfield, 8. 0. n HANNA & HUNLE\ BuiuuT..'?n S""M"' iu Row I ?-ATTOHNEY8 A11 who desire my services wil IF R. EkHauna CLHuule-. please see me at Chesterfield, as V _ .. , ,, have discontinued my visits to othe I Ohesterheld, 8. 0. F Office ic Peoples Hank Building towns opfiok of lc county 8uperinten 1>e"j dr- c- a- glover education Physician and Sukgeon 1{ a> u0usk Calls answered day or night. open wry Saturday ami tli Office at Chesterfield Drug Compimv first Monday of each month. y We are selling Studcbakcr Wagons Cheap Anrl P\/Pr\/thinnr eo a. a a vi V ? 1 Jf (.1 i I I I J?, V_>> 1 O In our complete and up-to-datt line of merchandise at Live and Let Live Prices HURST-STREAffR COMPANY * HAVE YOU SAID THE WORD? Hundreds of people may rea l this who have no Hank Account. Some time or other they are go ing to have one?going to start their account here. Vet out of all those hundreds not one of them has said I WILL. If you will make up your miud at once?if you will say I WILL?if you will tiring or mail to us uny sum you can pu* your hands up ?u you will never regret having tirade the start. If a mm but say lie WILL, and follow it up, t lie!'" is 11.1t 11i11s: in r-'asttii In; may not expee* to aeeompiisli. There i> no niaeie, no miruelc. i o secret to him who i-- hrnvo in In art and determined in spirit.? London .Journal. BANK OF R[ BY AND MT. ROGHAN M. ( KOllAN, 8. l\ Lranch at KUliY, 8. ('. R. t. Rivers, Pres., P. \1. Tltcrreil, I reas. y t in+umw. mm*** jg IBank at' &foes?erne/d f Oldest Bank In Chesterfield ? \kJc Solicit Your Pniinpcc Pqu ^ _ ? L.010 | *' On TIME DEPOSITS. # f We Invite You to Visit Vs 1 1 SAFETY DEPOSIT BOXES | K P?-tronaRe wanted, whether large or 3 1Xv^lll.srnajj ^oth receive courteous attention, i Our Motto: Strength Security. * IK. E. Rivers, Pres. C. C. Douglass * ashier ft M. .1. Hough, V. Pres. I). L. Smith, Asst. Cashier. * HSiP 11 I .-tfSK IfS! Apply Business Methods In Your Home! A bank account makes for HOUSEHOLD EFFICIENCY AND ECONOMY. When you pay the bills of the grocer, the butcher, the baker by check you know just how much it costs to run your home. BESIDES, A CHECK IS A RECEIPT. If You Haven't a Bank Account Start One Today The FARMERS' BANK / \ f 9 '* " 1 1 I The Chesterfield Advertiser Pt!BLlSHED EVERY THURSDAY Subscription, 91.00 n year. Advertising rates furnished on application. Entered us second-class matter at the postofflce at Chesterlleld, South Carolina. PAUL 11. IIEARN ' Editor : ad Publisher. J The Advertiser devotes a great , deal of editorial space to Congress because we won't have Con gress with us much longer and then we will write about someI thing else. Congress is a live issue just now. ANOTHER IRISH PATRIOT Hon. Geo P. O'Shaunessy. Congressman from Rhode Is land, comes from a little old State, but he talks sensibly as if he came from TexasSpeaking of the Republican party. recently, he said: "In its quest for a candidate it would violate the sanctity of the Supreme Court and remove from that august tribunal a distinguished jurist and embroil him in the mulestorm of politics. No greater compliment was ever paid vVoodn-w Wilson thau the mad quest of his opponents for a competitor worthy of him." 3 Referring to Roosevelt he said: "Had tie been President instead of Wilson we would loug ago have been iuvolved in war." And then this genial Irishman added "Wilson has done more for preparedness in one year than the Republican party did in halt a century." Mr. O'Shaune?sy has an Irish name but he is not a hyphenated citizen. He is ^ a thorobred American. THE SHIPPING BILL ! Hon. Dudley Doolittle, of Kan| sas, belies his name. lie recent I lv inarip n v?ru vimM-mu ..l ? w M&KTM. \S\mc* r?pr;c^iJ in favor of the administration shipping bill, lie said we have not one-fourth enough American ships to carry our goods t< market. He showed that since the war began freight rates have increased enormously -in some cases lOoO per cent. That's going some and shows that coinpetition by American otyned ships is needed and needed j badly. { Advocating the shipping bill, llou. .1 li. Aswell, of Louisiana, said "An adequate merchant marine is a question of commercial necessity, of national honor, and of American right. 1 a in for a merchant marine owned by Americana, built by Americans ? in American yards and sailing under the American Hag." SOUTH CAROLINA STATESMEN Congressman Whalev, of South Carolina, in an able speech in Congress upon the Rural Credit and other legislation favorable to farmers said that more important legislation has been enacted during the past three years in the interest of agriculture than during any fifty years combined in the history of the country. Referring to Hon. Asbury F. Lever's cotton future bill he said when the act went into ef feet it resulted in the raising of the pri<-e of cotton nearly $2.00 a bale, hut recently a New York judge declared the act unconsti tuliona) upon technical grounds. The agricultural bill this.year re enacts the cotton future bill so as to meet the objection of this decision. The chairman of the Federal Reserve Board. Hon. VV. (i P. Harding, the only Southern member of tin; board, declares that the acf was one of the means of saving the cotton situation during the critical period of the pas' two years \ 1111 f'A t\ uluMMJu rlnnAW/1 . v.w V/..H 111 TT(?,T n ur liCllU U|M;ii {rood old South Carolina's Statesmen to bring us through dangers, se< n and unseen. An editorial in the Atlanta Constitution is headed "The An ti-Khingle Ordinance." Guess the small boy would favor that ordinance. When you complain of the price of gasolene at 30 cents a gallon think of the Englishman who has to pay 30 cents a quart and he quiet. George ''itch, writing about Patrick Henry, Imads his article "Pat Henry." That is taking too much liberty with the man who said "Give ine liberty or ] give me death." j eaaaasaMaa^^ $ IT ISN'T YC | ITS ^ If you want to live in tl Like the kind of a tov You needn't slip your cl 1 A nd start on a long, 1 W !(, You'll only find what \( i! For there is nothing t It's & knock at yourself w It isn't your town?it fl} Real towns are not mad 1 ' Ijest somebody else g l;;| When everyone works t j? You can raise a town And if, while you niakt [q Your neighbor can m Your town will be what i$9 It isn't your town?it I How To Boc Talk about it. Write about it. Elect good men tooflice. Be friendly to everybody. Keep your sidewalks in goo condition. Keep your houses we'l pain , ed. If a poor man starts a projec iieip him. i If a rich man starts a projec > encourage him. Buying in other towns till which you can buy as well 1 your own, makes your town thi much poorer. Don't. vnnr fnuni <!<>? i to strangers. i If you are rich, invest in sonv i tiling; employ somebody. 1 If a project to improve th 1 town conies up, don't hoot?ii ' vestigate. Don't let youi personal ant pathies get away with your bus ueas judgment. Follow the men who have th vim and energy to go aheadatid "saw wood." Be courteous to strangers w 1 e-une among you so they will ; away with a good impression < your town. If vou don't like your honi town well enough to speak we of it, get out of it and mat; room for better men. Always cheer on the man wli goes for improvements. You portion of the cost wj 11 be not! ing but that which is right. uo noc kick at any propose i improvement s because they tr not at your door, or for fe.r tha your tax will be raised fift cents. Don't'be afraid To stick you hand down in your pocket fo mor.ey to help a Dublic enter prise. You owe something t the community for being a kind as to patronize you. Don't! Don't!! Don't'! For heaven's sake, don't thinl YOUK ideas are the only "orrec ones as to what iniprovemets an needed, and how they should bi obtained. A town whose citizens have n< public, spirit or civic pride is ci the way to the cemetery. Th< citizen who will do nothing tt boost bis town is helping to dij his grave. The citizen who growls ahou his tow n being "the worst ever' is assisting m its burial. The business man who wil not advertise is driving th< U/\U nrai or, The small town business 01 professional man who given hii printing to the "high llier'* rep resentative of the. city priuiint house does not deserve the pa tronag" of his town people. Point to a town whose cit.izeni count every dollar gotten Iron: their neighbor as gain; and every dollor given to a school 01 college or church or librar> 01 Chautauqua or lecture course af loss, and you point to a town on which there rests a business and social bl ight, winch will bt known throughout your State as "a good town to move from.*' l)o your part, then, as a citizen! Count for something in the affairs of your town or city. Pled<e your word and honor f >UR TOWN- | ong hike. jjij r )u left, behind, e hat's really new, S r when you knock your town, [l I 's YOU! j e by men afraid I t efcs ahead. I I tnd nobody shirks, &j ' from the dead. > your perBonal stake ? i ake one, too, ( ; you want to see, K) :.'s YOU ! |j . X7 m >st lour lown that so long as you reside in a community it shall be your constant aim to "boost" it in every way you can. That you will not "knock," but will do all vou can d for every public enterprise that has for its object the best intert est* of the community. That you will submit to the rule of ^ the majority, And not growl if things are not always as you t think they should he That, you will keep in mind thai if a town is good enough for you to make 11 your money in, it is the legiti11 mute place for you to spend it, and w?ll buy everything you can of your home-town merchants. " That you will always t>ay something good of your town and peoe pie, or keep silent except in case of a public nuisance. That you ie, will not encourage nor conttib ute to injurious reports about our neighbors or business ei 111j p titers, but will u^e the scales .j. of charity in weigning the shortIcoinings of your fellows. ;e I 1'raotice this teaching and! your town will be one into which j the best families will corneas the ciiildren gath.er lound the (ire on a winter'-* night. Be! ? cheerfully optimistic and feel t that the best is yet, to come. ie. 1'lie Kooxville Sentinel says' H "the Tennessee Republicans! e have buried the hatchet hut have left the handle sticking out." 10 That indicates the fighting will j ir be resumed after the November' i- election. The Tennessee Bull' ' Mooses and standpatters tight (j i among themselves like killing* e eats wnen mere is no national t election on hand. * The U. 8. Public Health Scr vice issues free hulletin8 on rur r ai sanitation. - Registration Books Open 1 ? Registration books will be | ? open every first Monday at the Auditor'55 office until 510 days be fore the general election. k 8. B. Tiniinons, Chm. t E. T. White, Clerk, ' p W. M. Belk. '! SAVES DAUGHTER t> j > Advice of Mother no Doobt Pre:> vents Daughter's Untimely End. s * Perdy, Ky.?" I was not able to do N anything for nearly six months," writes ' Mrs. Laura Brntciier, of this place, "and was down in bed for three months. ? I Ch n oof foil I ?J . u...i.vt ibu jou nuw i Miiicrcu wun j | my head, and with nervousness and womanly troubles. . Our family doctor told my husband he I c could not do me any good, and he had * to give it up. We tried another doctor, p r but he did not help me. s At last, my mother advised me to take Cardui, the woman's tonic. 1 thought it was no use for I was nearly dead and f nothing seemed to do me any good. But 5 I took eleven bottles, and now 1 am able ( to do all of my work and my own washing. I think Cardui is the best medicine io _ , the world. My weight has increased, and i look the picture of health." 1 if you suffer from any of the ailments 1 peculiar to women, get a bottle of Cardui , today. Delay is dangerous. We know it will help you, (or it has helped so many thousands of other weak women in the past 50 years. At all drug^sts. WrHt to: Chattanooga Medicine Co.. Ladies' / Advisory Dept., Cnuuanooga. Tenn., for Sfnial \ iHit'Hfiiont on your cam and 64-page book. ' Home i Treatment (or woman." in plain wrapper. M.C. 1S9 No. Six-Sixty.-Six This ia a prescription prepared eapec i. ly for MALARIA or CHILLS * FEVER. Five or tlx donee will break any caer, ?nd # if taken then a* a tonic the Paver wilt not return. * It acta on the liver better* than Caiotncl and doaa not grips or itckan. ilSe Business ThriVt s Beit * * . ( Now and then, and quitq freuently, in noli complaint is teard about mail order houses aking Out* money. There will .lways be some mail order business, for in the great field of nerchandise there are many artoles which may not be found in >very community. There are so nany hundreds of things that leople will buy when their at.ention is called to them that no ocal merchant can anticipate he fact and have the goods on nand. It would not pay him to tiave them for the irregular demand. But the great m<;rchan[lise staples in every line can iiways ue supplied by local merchants and the people will buy from them in preference to mail order houses if the local merchants do their part. Merely cussing the mail order houses gets nowhere. Any town which has a bunch of live merchants who are atert to attruct. their natural trade will not be troubled much by mail order houses. Mr. Ropenfield of Sears boebuck & Oo. is said to have stated at a recent meeting of the American Ad. Club that his company makes a careful survey of fcl.e counly to ascertain what communities are dead on the advertising proposition and that where local merchants are not advertising in their town paperB. Right there is sent a Hood of Sears-Koe^uck catalogues. He said,,llt alwayp brings results far in excess of the same efforts put forth in territory where the local merchants use their newspapers."? Monroe Journal. Ever Salivated By Calomel? Horrible! Calomel is quicksilver and acts like dynamite on your liver, Oolomel loses you a day ! You know what calomel is. It's mer cury; quicksilver. Calomel ie dangerous. It crashes into sour bile like dynamite, cramping and sickening'you. Ca'.omel tacks the bones and should nev-' er be put. into yonr system. When you feel hiliou*, sluggish, constipated and all knocked out and believe you need a dose of dangerous calomel just remember ihat your druggist sells for 50 cents a largo bottle of Hudson's Liver T??ne, which is entirely vegetable a id pleas ant to take and is a perfect sub. stitute for calomel. It is guaranteed to start your liver with out stirring you up inside, and can not salivate. Don't take calomel! It makes you sick the next. du\ ; it loses you a day's work. Dodson's Liv-1 3r Tone straightens you right up Mid you feel great. Give it to the children because it is perfectv harmless and dospn't. gripe. ' Caskets of all kinds and si/.^s md courteous and prompt servce at W. M, Redfearn's. Read the newspapers i houlcl he adequate means of pi ?.:r? ir? ? - ? 'vnc ana iainny wncn you arc Read history if you do not 'Colt" is the one firearm for Absolute freedom from accidental lischarRe and positive, instant action vhen the triuKcr is purposely tressed. Catalogue E and "How to II your Iraltr <lou* nut sell "I BOLT'S PATENT FIRE AR\ HARTFOai The Peoples CHESTERFI P. MANGUM. PRESIDENT We solicit youi business, n call on us when yon are inoi The Peop ropDfti Admittedly illiteracy is an. It is a detect of circumstance, nut of character or moral worth Of white literate make in South ^ Carolina there were 17i599. aocording -to the census Of 1910. Ten and eight-tenths per cebt.. of the voters in the Democratic primary in 1914 were unable to sign their names on the iolls, or approximately 14,000. The State Federation of Women's Clubs has for its slogan : "No illiteracy in South Carolina in 192*0.'' In the State, 5,072 white teachers are employed in tne public schools. If, therefore, each teacher will redeem from illiteracy one white man and one white woman each summer, uii- A til the end of the period this would account for over 40,000. The problem white of illiteracy at least would be solved. During the winter the teachers could see to it that no illiterate chil dren remained in ignorance in th? district. Night schools have already done much good. The same sort of effort, organized or uiiorgaiiiz* ed, throughout, all the counties would wipe out illiteracy and make life pleasanter for thousands of our citizens. Those who can not read and write would doubtless be willing to le am. That has been demonstrated. They cannot however'read this proposal for their benefit. A discussion along these lines, then, at county political gatherings would probably be heard and listened to by the ones to be reached. Nothing that really will benefit people should bo politically sacrosanct or kept in the background like the family skeleton. A health of pure water to the toast: "No illiteracy in 1020."?The State. Wanted?500 Hens and 1000^ Fryers and Broilers. Best prices paid. .1 W. Hanna Get Rid of Tan, Sunburn and Freckles by using HAGAN'S Magnolia Balm. Acts instantly. Stops the burning. Clears your complexion of Tan and Blemishes. You cannot know how good it is until you try it. Thousands of women say it is be?t of all beautihers and heals Sunburn quickest. Don't be without it a day longer. Get a bottle now. At your Druggist or by mail diredt. 75 cents for either color* White. Pink. Rose-Red. SAMPLE FREE. LYON MFC. CO.. 40 So. Sth St.. Brooklyn. N.Y. Do you know that, tuberculosis is contagious, preventable, curable? KiUMY-TISM Will ':ure your Rheumatism 4 Neuralgia. Headache*, rramn* _ , I Colic, Sprains, Bruises, Cuts and Burns, Old Sores, Stings of Insects Etc. Antiseptic Anodyne, used internally and externally. Price 25c. dU Forewarned? "Co//" firmed if you doubt that there -otection in the hands of your away from home. already feel certain that the you to buy. These two features make the "Coit" ideal as a weapon for home M protection, especially in the hands o; B a woman. fl Shoot'' booklet mailed freet H Cell's." seed yoar order to IS MANUFACTURING CO* >. CONN.Bank ? vd|Miai ?Z3,UUU IELD, S. C. MACK DAVIS, CASHIER ind cordially invite you to it town. les Bank ' ito'in f iiTtiii