The Chesterfield advertiser. [volume] (Chesterfield C.H., S.C.) 1884-1978, June 15, 1916, Image 3
r Presidential Pointers |
In the first four elections for
president each elector voted for
two candidates, the one receiving
the largest number of votes *
was declared president and the
one who received the next larg- y
est number of votes was de? 1
/ clared vice president. At the ?
/ election of 1804 a president and J
vice president were voted for ^
separately and an amendment .
to the Constitution provided
that the presidect.and vice pres g
ident could not be elected from
I ? the same state- To insure an
election a candidate for presi- a
dent or vice president must have
a majority of all the electorial
votes cast, otherwise the elec- a
tion for president would be 81
thrown into the house of repre- w
sentatives by state, each stat9 J*
having one vote, and for vice ^
president into the senate.
Ugh! Calomel Makes
You Deathly Sick
J g(
Stop Using Dangerous Drug Be- tc
fore it Salivates You! b<
It's Horrible! ci
You're bilious, sluggish, con- jj!
? stipated and believe you need ^
vile, dangerous calomel to start ^
^ your liver and clean your bowels.
Here's my guarantee! Ask
your druggist for a 50 cent bot ^
tie of Dodson's Liver Tone and ^
take a spoonful tc?night. It' it ea
doesn't start your liver and
strengthen you right up better
than calomel and without grip- j.
ing or making you sick I want
you to go back to the store and
get your money.
Take calomel to day-and tomor- C1
row you will feel weak and sick V
La and nauseated. Don't lose a 811
day's work. Take a spoonful of
"harmless vegetable Dodson's Liv- C1
of 1
er Tone tonight and wake up
feeling great. It's perfectly
harmless, so give it to your chil- *?
dren any time. It can't salivate,
so let them eat anything after- bi
wards. Adv. ve
The President's Salary
The salary of the president of, th
tne United States was the cause th
of discussion in the first con- j iti
gross, in view of the fact that 90
the Constitution declared that.Ni
the president should receive &a
compensation for his service. 19
Washington had notified his t'el- an
low citizens that he desired no su
salary. The limit suggested in fa
congress ranged from $15,000 to is
$70,000. The salary was finally w<
placed at $25,000 and this re- sii
1 J 1.1 r * a
HiiiiiuHi me compensation until
President Grant's second term yy
(March 8, 1878), when it was in- jg
creased to $50,(500. Chapter 2918 fj,
y*" of the laws of the second session
of the fifty ninth congress,
approved March 4, 1817, appropriated
"for traveling expenses
of the president of the United
States, to be expended at his
discretion and accounted for by
his certificate solely, $25,000 " In
the second session of the sixieth
congress the matter of insreas||
ing the president's salary was
again considered, and it was de
cided that the president's salary
be fixed at $75,000 a year.
Bids Received
Notice is hereby given that
bids will be received up to June
17th for the erection of a twostory
school building at Cedar
Creek; a one-story two-room
building at each of the following
places: Cross Koads, Harris
Creek, Mangum, Ousleydale,
and the remodelling of White
Plains School building. Plans
can be had from the County
Superintendent of Education.
It. A. Rouse, Co. Supt.
Wanted?500 Hens and 1(HM)
Fryers and Broilers. Best
prices paid.
J. W. Hasina.
Caskets of all kinds and sixes
and courteous and prompt service
at W. M, Redfearn's.
There Is more Catarrh In this section
Of the country than all other diseases
put together, and for years It was supposed
to be Incurable. Doctors prescribed
local remedies, and by constantly
falling to cure with local treatment,
pronounced It Incurable. Catarrh Is a
local disease, greatly Influenced by constitutional
conditions and. therefore requires
constitutional treatment. Hall's
Catarrh Cure, manufactured by P. J.
Cheney A Co.. Toledo, Ohio, Is a constitutional
remedy. Is taken Internally
and acts thru the Blood on the Mucous
Surfaces of the System. One Hundred
K Dollars reward Is offered for any ease
r that Hall's Catarrh Cure falls to euro.
Send for circulars and testimonials.
F. J. CHEN JOY A CO.. Toledo. Ohio.
Sold by Df ugglst s 7lc.
Hall's Family Fills lor eoastlpaUoa>
By A Chesterfield C
Editor The Advertiser: di
I was sorry to note that in m
our article favoring woman sufrage
you failed to reply to some
f the assertions made in t he leter
contributed on May 25 which
^ j
thought deserved some attenion.
As a woman I am not will- m
ig that such assertions should
o unchallenged. ' '
, ini
JPirst, there is the statement
hat men have improved in inor- ^
Is and the strong intimation ^
hat women have deteriorated,
k l'o 1 - -1 iU-l. tn
V . o fs1 cwiiueuou Ullll/ .
len have improved in this re
oect, but this is the first time ge
116
e have seen it intimated that ^
ion have lifted themselves up
y their own boot straps. We
vi<
lought it was just ag usually } ^
Emitted that woman has had ^
o 6inall part in this moral im- ^
rovement of her mate.
me
then St. Paul is quoted and ,
oes unchallenged. All I have
> say to this is that St. Paul ga'
An
eing a bachelor could not be .
lag
tnsidered good authority on
jestions roluiing to women. If .
18 (
is teachings had been taken
sriously by the early Christians
le church would have died in ^Ut
fancy from rac? suicide for he
ys: "I would that all men 8^r
ere even as I " Where would ne
le Church now be if all the wo
krly christians had followed his
Ivice? It is significant that on
> such words ever fell from the
08 of our Savior
As to race suicide in relation ? ?U,
this movement, it is suffi
ent to quote some figures from
11 suffrage states. Let us con- .
tier Oalfornia, perhaps the
ate most typical of American ^
vilization in its most advanced
age.
wil
"In the United States Cali- wo
rnia has become the banner- ug
kby state. It has the highest
rth rate in the union, and a
iry low death rate. In Lor An- ca?
les the infant death rate is 87
ir 1,000 births; in Oakland 87.2. ma
le lowest infant death rate in
e United State, 82, is inSeat- Cftl]
3, Wash. Kansas nas reduced cor
i infant death rate from 120 to an(
since it adopted a Uublic wo
ursing Association in 1015,"
ys The Woman Voter for May, j j
1(5. California, Washington W0
id Kansas are all of them equal ^
ITrage states. The lowest innt
death rate in the world, 51, my
in New Zealand where grfl
imen have had full sull'rage p
nee 189: J. hi8
The great motive back of the me
Oman's Equal SullVage League ex(
to improve the conditions in
e home by educating the chil- cor
Nmi
in goodness and
in pipe satisfaction
is all we or its enthusiastic
friends ever clairr
for it!
It answers every sm<
or any other man ev
cool and fragrant ai
smokeappetite that yc
it in a mighty short ti
Will you invest 5c or
so on the national joy
R. J. REYNOLDS TOBA<
, v . /
I '
lounty Woman '
ren to become better homeakers
and better citizens.
This movement does not now ,
id never has appealed to either j
e doll baby or the butterlly ,
pe of woman who is satisfied (
ith a useless existence. The ]
ore substantial class of wo- (
en and men alike are losing j
tience with this kind of hu- j
an barnacle.
When the assertion is made v
at "Women have deterior j
ed" care should be taken that ^
e application is nlaced whurp
?- 2
belongs and not on womeD in <;
ueral. The Rev. Percy Stick- c
y Grant, D. D., rector of the
lurch of the Ascension, N. Y., ]
ty, who spoke at a vesper ser- c
;e attended by more than
)00 delegates and alternates to ^
a 13th biennial convention of ^
a General Federation of Wojn's
Olubp said : ^
'In the face of yonr great or C
nization, I see no place left in S
nerican life for the 'society /
,der' or the woman of only so- I
1 influence. Your leadership S
)t the brains and the heart /
ited for humane and patriotic S
rposes. J
'The woman's club is the in- c
ument and symbol of woman's h
w place. In her new place ^
man must face the problems 11
home cleaning and of house ^
largement. If 1 may be al- (1
zed to exhort the members of
3 federate clubs, I would cry
0 'Glean up America!. t
'Preventable diseases and a w
;h death rate are your enees.
Clean up not only the de
tive and destructive human | ^
terial but defective and de-1
uctive ideas.'' ; ,
\s to 4 thinking men agreeing
th the article referred to, we ^
uld.cite several whom most of ^
at least consider not only
nking men, but right thinkj
men. President Wilson in 1
81
ting liis ballot for Woman's
ual {Suffrage in Now Jersey n
de this declaration: "I intend
vote for woman suffrage beise
1 believe the time lias ^
tie to extend that privilege ^
1 responsibility to the
men of the state." Though n
speaks as a private citizen, b1
.opinion cannot fail to carry
ight. st
rVilliam Jennings Bryan says: J
shall ask no polical rights for
self that 1 am not willing to b
mt my wife." I n
ilr. Roosevelt has announced n
endorsement to an amend- t
nt tc the Federal Constitution
bending suffrage to women. 1
says: "I believe the time has I t
ne for a greater and truer a
V Prince
s m o
\ delig
jL ?its flav<
J ? delightful!
^ 1 | ? it can't
1 ?it can't
'Wr'"' | ft ?you ca
fek \ * as hard a
yu?yt 1 a comeback
Jjffi'f.: 1 ff piness!
gjfwgf' J jS On the re^
Albert pack
That means
[ JlI joyment. P
7?^*-^^ sold w't^,ou
WtigE&tiBLl prefer to gn
acF ALBF
the national joy smoke
y'OU'LL. find a cheery howdy-do on ta
matter how much of a stranger you are h
As, nark of the woods you drop into. For, P
Albert is tiftht there ? at the first place
pass that sells tobacco The topp
baft sells for a nickel and the tidm
tin for a dime: then there's the i
some pound and fialfpoun
* humidors and the p
ijfcc cry atal-g/ass humidor
aponge-moistens
that keeps th>
bacco in
bang-up
Dke desire you
er had! It is so
nd appealing to your
>u will get chummy with
me!
10c to prove out, our saysmoke?
XO CO., Winston-Salem, N. C
IP
laTionalismnl Thiecanntry. I
belive in the nationalisation of
Ihe issues which affects not only
men, but women also. The
great problems of our country
ire national. In the matter of
railroads, for example, forty-six
Liferent sets of laws for their
regulation merely check and
iiaudicap their development and
management. A universal Fedaral
law is essential for railroads.
In the same way, the question
)f enfranchisemet of women has
income national and demands
federal action."
Last, but by no means least,
ve note that the Methodist
ipiscopal Church was commited
to woman suffrage on May
;ou at its national convention in
Saratoga, N. Y., through the aceptance
of a resolution introluced
by Judge Henry Wade
Rogers, of the United States
ircuit court at New York City.
In addition to Judge Rogers,
he resolution was signed by exJovernor
James F. Hanly of Inliana,
Lieutenant-Governor Al
>ert J. Wallace of California,
Jhaneellor James R. Day of
yracuse University, i'resident
l. W. Harris of Northwestern
Iniversit.y, Chicago; I'resident
ftmuel Dickie of Albion College,
ilbion, Mich.; Judge George M.
purlock of Y'ork, Neb., Justice
ohn Marshall of the supreme
ourt of Kansas; I'resident Samel
i'lantz of Lawrence Colleee,
ippleton, Wis.; Dean L. J. Birey
of tne Boston University
School of Theology and other1
elegates of prominence.
The resolution foil ?ws;
"Whereas, in the history of
he Methodist Episcopal Church
ronien have always been loyal
nd faithful workers, and
"Whereas, we recognize that
Christian wives and mothers
hould be given an opportunity
o assist in the groat work of in-1
roducing into politics mere of
he true spirit of practical Chrisianity,
and
''Whereas, the Methodist
Ipiscopal Church has always
?ood for justice and righteousess
in social and political life; j
"Resolved, therefore, That we
lie delegates to the General
onference of the Methodist
piscopal Church, assert our beef
iu tlie justice and righteousess
of granting to women the
olitical franchise.
"The act proposed in this re
ilution is an act of justice,"
udge Rogers told the delegatesIn
my opinion women need the
allot for the same reason as
len. Women should share in
laking the laws that regulate
heir lives."
When South Carolina contains
7,599 illiterate males and someliing
like 14,000 of these men
re voting in the Democratic
Albert gives '
kers such
ht, because
Dr is so different and so
ly good;
bite your tongue;
parch your throat;
n smoke it as long and
is you like without any
; but real tobacco hapirerse
side of every Prince
age you will read :
ROCESS PATENTED
JULY 30th, 1907"
i to you a lot of tobacco enrince
Albert has always been
,t coupons or premiums. We
/e quality I
PIT
I I OwIKM lllf
by K I Reynold*
_ ^1 H Tobacco Co.
rim 1
fSiSm
TOBACCO IS PREPARED I
d"t"n ! FOR SMOKERSUHDERTHE ij
ounrf I PROCESS DISCOVERED IM
rtop MAKING EXPERIMENTS TO
'Jch PRODUCE THE MOST DEtrtm
LIGHTFUL AND WHOLE- J
\ SOM E TOBACCO FOR CIJ-;
/^PROCESS PATEJJ?l||;j
DOES HOT BITE THE TONGUE
' '
TtiU U the rttwM aide oI A*
Prince Albert tidy red tin. Reed
thie " Patented Preceee" meeeageto-you
end realise what it meane
In malt ins Prince Albert so neth
>n y?r Mbhns.
t .
primaries tou<^
as sign their names t^^ieir ballots,
and when the polls are admitted
to be so corrupt and indecent
a place that women
could not go near them without
becoming contaminated, then
it seems to me that the slogan of
the State Federation of Womens'Clubs
which is: "No illitaracy
in South Carolina in
1920 should arouse not only the
good women but the good men
also, of this state to maKe some
definite move to wipe out illiteracy
and start South Carolina
on the road of progress.
Signed : A Chesterfield
County Woman.
Notice of Discharge
On the 10th day of June 1910, 1 I
will ?nnl? fn tlio I
f aat ttppij VV# VIIV1 A. I'lVWIC VU LI I I;
for Chesterfield County, South
Carolina, for a discharge as Administratrix
of the Estate of
Jchn it. Parker, deceased.
Annie J. Parker,
Adimistratrix.
June 5th , 101 (>
isPW
OF LAW AND ORDERV
yl Determined
Woman and
a "Colt!"
This Combination is a Solution
of the Ilomc Protection
Problem
'"pll E fear engendered in J
the mind of a degenerate
by the display of this recognized
leader in the field 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
and order in full command, a
Be prepared, it may happen
to-morrow. Take a "Colt" ;j
home with you to-day.
Catalog E and 'Ho w to Shoot " booklet
mailed free
If your dealer doe. not sell "Colt'.." .end
your order to u. j
Coil's Patent Fire Arms Mfg. Co.
HARTFORD. CONN. 1
__
Geese and Hens Wanted.
f)00 hens, 100 geese wanted
Highest market prices paid.
.1. W. IIanna.
When the services of an undertaker
are required, remem
her W. M. ltedfearn is ready to
serve you.
I P_: P . 1UI?_ I I
i initio leanui nr;n
Thc IDEAL Fccd
F() It
HORSES, HOGS and CATTLE
Ask Your Grocer For It
For Sain Bv
J. S. BURGH, Ml! C >^han t
CITY MARKET, Chesterfield
Manufactured by Sea Island
Cotton Oil Co., Charleston.
ASHCRAFT'S
Condition Powders
A high-class remedy for horses
and mules in noor condition and I
in need of a tonic. Builds solid
muscle and fat; cleanses the sys
tern, thereby producing a smooth,
: glossy coat of hair. Packed in
doMK. 25c. box. Sold by
D. H. LANEY
? . i
When you think ol
IQB
Remember
T. E. Davis
Prompt Delivery
Good Weights I
Seashore ^
jRouhd Trip Fares 1
From CHERAW To I
Week-End Excursion Fares I
Wilmington .... ?4.30
Isle of Palms .... 4.80 1
Sullivan's Island .... 4.80 l
Tickets on sale for all trains on each Saturday and 1
for forenoon trains on each Sunday from May 27 to 1
Sept. 11, inclusive, limited returning to original
staging point prior to midnight of Tuesdav next, fnl.
lowing date of sale.
Summer Excursion Fares
Wriglitsville Beach , . $0.45
Isle of Palms .... 0.80
Sullivan's Island .... 0.80
Myrtle Beach .... 0.75
Norfolk .... 13.40
Tickets on sale from May 15 to October 15, inclusive,
limited returning until October 31. Liberal stopover
privileges
Schedules and further particulars cheerfully furnished
upon application to
H. L. POWE, TICKET AGENT
Atlantic Coas- Line
The Standard Railroad of the South
SEABOARD AIRLINE R'WY
"The Progressive Railway of the South"
Very Low Round Trip Rates to
BVFFALO, N. Y.
Account Ancient Arabic Order, Nobles
Mystic Shrine?
IMPERIAL COUNCIL
July 11 to 13, 1916
All steel equipment; electrically lighted entire
Free Reclining Chadrs
Dining Car Service Unequalled
Full Information From Nearest Seaboard Age 11
or write
C. W. Small, 1). P. P., Savannah, Georgia
!
Attractive Summer
Trips 1916
TOURS FROM 10 TO 40 DAYS
INCLUDING
New York Alaska
Boston Pacific Coast
White Mountains Yosemite Valley
The Sapupnm; ?
1-, -'J ICAV-Ildi 1
Quebec Lake Louise
Montreal Vancouver
Lake Champlain Glacier National Park
Lake George Yellowstone Nat'l Park
Ausabel Chasm Grand Canyon, Arizona
St. Lawrence Salt Lake City
The Thousand Islands Colorado Rockies
Niagara Falls Los Angeles
cAnd the
Panama-California International
Exposition
- A
oauuicxf^Uy IlliA
Personally Conducted and Chaperoned
The very highest class of service, which makes travel
for pleasure comfortable and en joyable.
The Tours cover the most attractive routes and the
principal places of Scenic anrl Historic Interest throughout
the Greatest Country in the world.
Write for booklet and descriptive literature.
GATTIS TOURS
Tourist Agents, Seaboard Air Line Railway,
Raleigh, North Carolina July 1st