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^KT/t. DH- H. Attorney and Counsellor At Law Office over Office in Courthouse field. Will vtfit Pagelaf^QI^M Toesdav; Jefferson Wednesaa^1 BANNA &* HUN LEY Other day8 in Chesterfield. ?ATTOllNEYS? gu?S'.T*1?'b1'' A" W?rk R. K, Hanna C L, Hunley * ___ Chesterfield, S. C. DR L H TROTTI Office in Peonies Batik Bmlding Dental Surgeon ~ ~ Chesterfield, S. C. ovftcoi* Office on second floor in Ross DR. 0. A. GLOVER Building. n . c. . _ All who desire my services will PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON please see me at Chesterfield, as 1 Calls answered day or night. have discontinued my visits to other Office at Chesterfield Drug Company towns ofkick ok Wanted?A Broker in each town COUNTY SUPERINTENDE"1 in Cheterfield Co., to sell Primo OF EDUCATION Peanut Meal and Cottonseed it. A. KoUSK Feed Meal to the merchants. Office open every Nutnrday and the See or write J. S. Burch, Mt. first Monday of euch month. Croghan, S. 0. 2t We are selling Studcbakcr Wagons Cheap And. everything else In our complete and up-to-date line of merchandise at Live and Let Live Prices HURST-STREATER COMPANY GOOD INTENTIONS NO. 1 Intentions never made any one rich. You opened an account here some time ago?didn't you? You are one of our depositors. Perhaps you live right here in town. Perhaps you are a depositor living at some one of the Post Otlices from which we receive deposits. Then you stopped. You intended to keep it up?you intended to do so in the future. If you are going to pin your faith on that word INTEND you will live a life that will liave'nothing to show for it at the end?except bitter regrets. It is noc yet too late to blot that word INTEND from the dictionary of your Life and to write over it the word N()VV. "Say well and do well end with one letter; Say well is good, but do well is better." Proverb. BANK OF RUBY AND MT. CROGHAN M. OROHAN, S. C. Branch at RUBY, S. O. R. E. Rivers, Pres., P. M. Therrcll, Treas. I Bank of I j Oldest Bank In Chesterfield ? J \A/e Solicit Your Business. Pay Interests JL I **On TIME DEPOSITS. I We Invite You to Visit Vs I 1 ' SAFETY DEPOSIT BOXES | OlII* Patronage wanted, whether large or I * 11111 small Both receive courteous attention, i i OUT liOttO: Strength Security. 1 1 R. E. Rivers, Pres. C. C. Douglass ( ashier ) X M. J. Hough, V. Prop. D. L Smith, Asst. Cashier. m ; '-1 )) J wEBBM j^pa HH VH ^AAr "A wKs'jtj Jw vll ?m y^Hiu^iu|KSuHH|^ When You Grow Old! ^ A goodly sum of money in bank is a source of comfort in one's declining years. ( Ton are young and vigorous and full of energy today. You are mak- ' ing good money. i Things may not always be so rosy. PLAH TO DEPOSIT A CERTAIN SUM EVERY WEEK IN THE f BANK i ( |?|H j t ? . K - ? . v n - , - t I l^tokjBciokls Yoi?r Best Friend < rnF irij. A fl|| flttf M > VM a V% ^^^^^BKdvertiser ^^^^ ^^ tiiursday Bj^^^^^^PTte^^imished on appllEntered as second-class matter at the Jj postofllce at Chesterfield, South Carolina. PAUL. II. HBARM C Kdttor and Publisher. _ GOOD BYE, BROTHER HUGHES! * Guess the New York Tribune ^ wishes now it had not said it. a Hut it is too late, Old Trib, its a down in black and white and t very black for Hughes. r Just before the meeting of the c Republican Convention the Tribf une printed an editorial from ^ which we extract these para- ? graphs: % 1 "Mr. Hughes has been desig- \ uated by the hyphens as their agent to punish Mr. Wilson for * his partial refusal to comply J with Potsdam orders. No German - American has made 1 the smallest concealment of the ' purpose of the hyphens to use Mr. Hughes to euforco German ; wishes at Washington. "Such being the case there are 1 thousands and thousands of 1 Americans who will see no greater duty than to stand by the president of the United States, 1 assailed by alien influence be- I cause of his defense of American 1 rights. 1 "No words of Mr.Hughes after nomination can in the .smallest degree remove the impression that will prevail that he was willing to win the nomination by hyphen aid, and that his silence, his retreat behind the supreme court bench, was a deliberate attempt to tret for hi m aul f vr?t.??? and support that might be repulsed if he said before nomination what he will have to say after it. "The Tribune does not believe that the people of the United States will turn from Mr. Wilson to a republican candidate who has not only followed the course which has earned Mr. Wilson just censure among patriotic Americans, but has also permitted himself to be used as the club of disloyal and treasonable citizens." The hyphens referred to by the Tribune are those Germans in America who want to see their: native country succeed in the? great contest and are willing to sacrifice America to insure success to the Kaiser. The Tribune closed the editorial in this prophetic, and positive language: j "If the republican national* A A , ^ I j tun vtrnuoii <iccepis uie lierman-f American candidate and Mr.J Hughes consents to be the Ger-| man-American candidate evenfor purposes of obtaining the republican nomination, Woodrow Wilson will be re elected." FACTIONALISM DEAD The opening meetings of the Democratic campaign lead one to believe that the voters of this 1 State have passed the stage when they can be swayed solely by 1 their passions. This new and desirable state ( of affairs may be accounted for ( to some extent, at least, by the \ great advancement in education- 1 al advantages now being attained j by the State. However, we believe that be- 1 neath the calm demeanor of the crowds who ponder quietly upon the words of the various candidates, is the same spirit that in ' 1776 hurled defiance in the face of a puppet King George III? ' the same spirit that in 1861 caus- * ed our brave people to protest in ' no uncertain terms against what * was considered a violation of our 1 rights as a soveriegn State. t It is a safe assertion that reasDn will rule in this contest and 0 that the spirit of justice and lib- e erty that actuated the South Ca- 0 rolina patriots of old is burning 8 Hlill to day and no puppet poli- 11 tician will be able, by an appeal e to passion, conquer or subvert a this spirit. v An enlightened patriotic spirit, ? controlled by reason, will control 11 ihe destinies of South Carolina n this election. The Atlanta Constitution has a in editorial advising its readers p ,o learn to swim but it neglects n o add Uw? advice of the old lady 'p o ber Aighter: j h ilauflR i.ui' clot ox unt l|fck<>ry By P. A. M '.ditor The Advertiser: ]1 In view of the letter of 4'A Ihesterfield County Woman", 1 ' rould like to add a few words to 1 'hat I've already said.* 1 The advocate ??f Woman's Sufrage discreetly dodges the issue, ? ? 1 i?: "Mi? i o iiu vncic u?iug any oiuncai uthority for equal suffrage. In he earlier history of the movenentl some said : "Oh that part if the Bible does not apply to louditions today. It is to oklashioned." Some of the lead?rs realized the folly of such itatemeuts, and those thoughtess ones were quickly hushed ip. They would make much of the !aict that St . Paul was a bacheor, (>ou see how hard they try ;o get around his utterance), but [.here is one fact they can't lodge, no matter how hard they try, and that is even though St. Baul was a bachelor, he was an inspired (bold face mine) man, ind for this reason alone, is entitled to more weight, than any )l the authorities yet cited. I here re-iterate the statement that while men have progressed morally in the past few decades, women have deteriorated. 1 again assert that a man has to be a much better man today in every respect, than ever before in history, before he can be classed as a gentleman, while the girls of today say things and do things their good mothers would never have dreamed of doing. One illustration, why do so many women of today, (reputed good, and supposedly above reproach), deliberately dress in such a way as to arouse the worst in man? Il6V. Hilly Sunday, preaching to a Philadelphia congregation, among other things said, (substantially), "The way some of you women dress, a man can't look at you without having evil thoughts.'' There are many other illustrations but space is limited. As to there being no plane in the Woman's Kqual Suffrage League for the social butterfly, etc., 1 wish to say that 1 was much amused in reading the New York papers in reference to the "Suffrage Hike" from New York to Washington. In that "hike", (a lot of them wearing bloomers) were some of the most prominent social leaders and social butterflies in the Country, and they stand Ace high in the suffrage movement. Women who have drunk the cup pleasure to its bitter dregs, and tirii.g of cards and poodle dogs, have taken on a new hobby. How many real wives and mothers do you find among the leaders of the movement? (1 do not refer to the woman who has merely borne children, but the real ideal mother). Take the list in hlllkl pAlinf fTT Ck /I 1/ rv/1 - - - d VIMO V7V/U uvijr ?IIU I'vllf^iailU, read it, investigate and see for yourBelt. Yon will find that the large majority either have no children, neglect their children, >r else are so old that their children have grown up, and there is nothing to interest them at lioine. The true mother is too interested and busy looking af er the welfare of her home, the levelopment and rearing of her children, (And it is a labot of ove), to hike to Wasnington in bloomers. As to the banner Baby States inder Woman's Suffrage, do not/ sxult yet, give them a chance J it might not 8howupin a generaion, but look to the next, for it night take a generation or two o undo God's handiwork. nu ' i e i~n i. -? 1 lit* IIU-?C>III?ie , OX 11 eessiiy crush her womanly modsiy, the finer and more delicate f her womanly feeling, when he lowers herself to the plane of 1 nan, and puts herself upon an quality with him in political lid business affairs, and this j /ill of necessity crush the moth-1 r instinct, and will if you give | t time. Quoting from "A Chesterfield lounty Woman's" latter: "The 'Oman's club is the instrument, nd symbol of woman's new < lace. In her New place (bold face line), woman must face trie/ rohlems of home cleaning amy ouse enlargement-" I wonjM that if she was the ric^fc iad of gjte would iuflL men Vote? 1 array, Jr. faced these problems long since, before the "woman's club" same into existence. I here re iterate, that if the men of today are not all that they should be, then if the mothers of today will take mere interest in the proper rearing and development of their children, then the next generation will be men indeed, and woman will have no caupe to kick. Again quoting from the letter: "The great motive back of the Womans Suffrage League is to improve the conditions in the home by educating the children fn Kntfa- ? ' vv ?vwi*iv IIUUIC IIlllKCrB and better citizens." Why that is already woman's duty. If she is shirking that duty, then she is not a good wife and mother. In other words as I see it, it is already the duty of the mother to educate the children to become better home makers and better citizens, but the Womans Sufi rage League, recognizing this, demand the ball??t before they will perform an existing duty. Queer doctrine that. As to Woman's "new place", I wonder what that is? I knew that she was, or was supposed tc be, the Qeon of the Home, the inspiration and help-meet of hei mate, and the mother of hischil dren, but was not aware of hei "new place". As to Roosevelt as an authori ty, 1 will merely call attentior to the fact that Teddy's mind changes with the wind. As t< President Wilson, I dont know but he is only human, and at th< time the Presidency was loom ing up before him, (And then were a good many women voter: in the Roosevelt States wht were not deeply attached to th< wielder of the "Big Stick"), anc it might have been that his ey< was upon the future, and his ea upon the groundAs to Bryan, take from hin the gift of gab, and his self advertisement, and there will b< nothing left. (This is the con sensus of opinion of some of th< best newspaper men in the coun try and is entitled to weight.) "A Chesterfield County Wo man" cite6 a long list of others none of whom are especially brilliant, and who have occupiec but small places in the destiny of the nation. Teddv and Wnmlrnw. loivncni ing Woman's Suffrage, would b< offset by Ilenry Cabot Lodg< and Elihu Knot, two of the great est minds, and ablest states men of the day, and of man] Jays in fact, who both bitterl] oppose it. As to the Methodist Episcopa Church at its, (I believe it ii conference, instead of coven tion), going on record as favoring "Woman's Suffrage", I hard ly know what to say. Some times politics will creep int< church matters in spite of every thing. Anyway it was the Northern branch of the Methodist Church, and a number of itf leaders, and most able men, (s< I am informed), advocated divorce, while the majority of the people of this State are against it, so that I do not see that this conference's advocacy of either divorce or suffrage for women, would have any influence here. If we could weigh and determine the motive moving those men to 8ign the declaration, we would indeed he enlightened. You see some m>?n are horn "Suffragette", (I hate to say this, but it is true); Others acquire "suffregettism", from many different motives; while others have Woman's Suffrage thrust upon them, by a better half who wears the pants. Now as to the primalies being so wicked and corrupt, etc., how in the name of goodness will woman improve it? . That reminds me of a poem I've read about an angel who looked down out of Heaven upon the Devil. She saw that he was fair, and attractive, and felt it a pity that such /a one shonld remain in heliy Thereupon she called to the/ Devil, and asked nim to came up into heaven. The wily lj>evil told the angel that he was unable to climb up to heaven by his own efforts, but that he would go to heaven if she would tlt-scQtid uito he 1 land help| ec^^^^^^^^P^^hell, the cl arms around m h?r, and Pff her that when a fa woman once entered hell, she di belonged to the Devil always. N 80, when woman enters poli- w tics, thinking to rid it of corrup- s* tion, etc., sho is putting herself 01 in the place of the angel, that is, 4,< instead of raising the thing to 8' her levt 1, she will be carried ^1 down to its level. The good wo- *>1 men will vote with the good ^ rner., the had women with the oaa men, and the proportion of e' the vote is not changed. r] As to South Carolina's illiteracy I think it unfair to refer to ^ that. It id deplorable, of course, 11 but I cant help but dislike hav- ? ing it referred to in this way, or 11 in comparison to some of the * rich Northern or Western States, I * who have never gone through 8 the hell of re-construction. lsle there any wonder that there is } some llleracy in this State in 1 this generation, when it has N been but a few years since the 6 South was devastated by one of ( i the most cruel conflicts in his- 1 ; tory; when its riches were 8 i ruthlessly torn from its grasp, ' /and without compensation; when a number of its cities and vil- ' lages were sacked and burned; 1 , when the State was left in pov- 1 , erty and ruins, and I he negro 1 , and carpet-bagger were placed ' . in power; and when the most of 1 our people, were forced to take r up the most humble and hurculean tasks to secure the bare necessities of life? Each year since that conflict, the State has \ 1 I marched upward and onward, in ^ literacy among other t hings, in spite of the handicaps under ^ which she labored. There will be no illiteracy in the coming generation for compulsory edus caiion is coming in spite of ^ everything. If you would speak of che illiteracy of vonr State in j tones of horror or mortification, 5 look back over the record, com" pare the literacy of this generation with the past, and with the i generation before that, and you will be proud of the progress South Carolina has made. Is "m this generation of men responsible for the illiteracy that exists? [ No, then what are the women kicking about, for the men are u juifc everytmiig under neaven to rid us of this evil, and how in the name of goodness can woj j man do it? One more question here, who is responsible lor the progress South Carolina has made? ^ 1 understand that the woman's s Suffrage League has adopted the . slogan: "Give woman a man's . rights." Very good, let us study 7 that for a moment, using Engj land, at present at war, as an illustration. So many men have j been lost, that when the w?r is i over, England will confront a . serious problem, in that the wo. men will greatly out-number tin . men. Regardless of what may ; SAVES DAUGHTER . Advice of Mother no Doubt Prevents Daughter's Untimely End. > i Ready, Ky.?" I was not able to do 1 anything for nearly six months," writes ' Mrs. Laura Bratcher, of this place, "and i was down hi bed for three months. I cannot tell you how I suffered with ' my head, and with nervousness and womanly troubles. Our family doctor told my husband he , could not do me any good, and he had to give it up. We tried another doctor, but he did not help me. ' At last, my mother advised me to take ] Cardui, the woman's tonic. 1 thought t it was no use for 1 was nearly dead and ( nothing seemed to do me any good. But I took eleven bottles, and now 1 am able 1 to do all of my work and my own I washing. , i I think Cardui is the best medicine io i the world. My weight has increased, nil i ia>i. lb* -ul " / ?? mm i ivun. me picture oi neaun. " . If you suffer from any of the ailments peculiar to women, get a bottle of Cardui ' today. Delay is dangerous. We know ? it will help you, for it lias helped so many thousands of other weak women in the past pO years. \ > At all druggists. / Writ* f: Chattanooga Medicine Co.. Lad lea' 'Advisory Dept.. Chattanooga, Tenn , for Sfm.il C Intt'xdiont on your case and 84 page book. "Home -i Treatment for Woman." in plain wrappar. N.C.I Ut ? The Peoples CHESTERFI! C. P. MANGUM, PRESIDENT We solicit your business, ai call on us when you are in ou The Peop ^ 'J5 about man, in hin treatent of woman, he ha* stead- >? stly exempted her from horrors, mgers and privations of war. ow women claim equal rights ith men, equal privileges, I wouldn't she share equal burd- ^^1 as, equal dangers, equal priva- * di\s? In England the ^ufl'rastts have had many a fight with le police. They are crying for , le same rights that men have, >r equal participation in governlental matters?in other words quality. Then if given equal J ights, why shouldn't England B ather up a lot of her sufFraget- wA as, give them a rifle, put them jfiBB a the trenches, and save some jflfl f her men? If this move were tndertaken, you can imagine he howl the women would raise- Vj I t would be fair though, for if ,ivcu cquai ngnis, ana privilges. then doesn't share in the * .urdens and dangers, then there ll 8 no equality. When woman voluntarily puts herself upon an 'quality with man, and claims f ?qual rights, she is no longer enutled to any consideration on iccount c?f her sex. and should *5 je treated accordingly. Picture for a moment, the woman of the future, under Wo- t man's Suffrage?the womanly modesty is gone. Where is the ideal, the shy, the tender, the j lovine, the sympathizing waman? Where, Oh, Where is the tendei passion, the charm, the 41 allurement, the entrHncingly de- oB lightful mystery of t tie ideal ^"*1 woman, so tiue/so loyal, so good; 1 the woman who delighted in a charming, in inspiring, in yielding; woo delighted in being lov- J ed, and petted and won? She is i gone?out of history forever, and 1 in her place we have a new ape- I cies?a caricature of a woman, 1 cold, hard, self-opinionated, talk- ji ative on polical subjects and who , A -B loves to argue. She turns her. . children (if she has any) over to ,1 a nnrso o"""'1- L _ unu ojjcimn mucil ()L I her time at the club. On elec- I tion days, she puts in a strenu- I ous day at the polls, chasing I voters up and down the streefc, B haranguing voters to vote for or B against a candidate. Perhaps fl she runs for office, and on the fl stump she bitterly assails her '^B opponent, and enters into heated fll personalities. She has no time, ami noplace, and no inclination for love, to her it is but vulgar ^fl sentimentality. She boasts that she is practical, and that she has crushed out of her existence the silly sentimentality called '^fl love, of the past generations. fl Look for this alter a generation or two of Woman's Suff rage. |H Woman's Suffrage, I believe '^fl will eventually come, but for woman's sake 1 hope it never will. Immediately preceding the down-fall of Kotne,the wo- JHB men roamed the streets at night, dressed in men's clothing. I had great hopes of this nation, rising jHfl above any and al! other nations the world has ever known?in tame unci glory and greatness, /^^^B hut deep down in my heart, I / can't help believing, that Wo- ? man's SulTrage, a petticoat gov- I ernment, will be but the fore* / runner of the decay and down- .^B fall of this govermAnt. 4V VVinthrop College '"4BB I SCHOLARSHIP and ENTRANCE I EXAMINATION Mmt The exaniation for the award I >f vacation scholarships in Win- Bf ^BB rhrop Oil lege an 1 for the admit-* sion of new students will beheld ;K^B^9| it the County Court House on flBR Kriday, July 7, 9a.m. Applicants jHBH must not be less than sixteen &fl^BB| ptars of age. When scholar* fl^^B diips are vacant after July 7, they will be awarded to those linking the highest average at gflBB Ins examination, provided tlcy^^^HH^H neet the conditions governing he award. Applicants for 'cholarships should write to Hfl^BB <1 At?t lAl\i.o/vt? K~ * Us* ww.-.v ? tMriinnwn nrnu f llir , xammation for scholarship > x- ^Hn9Bfl limitation blanks. H t-'cholarships are worth fHH) md free tuition. The next H^r n lion will open September '20, ID lib '^^RHRH For further information ami atalogue, address l'res. 1). H. fohnflon, Hock Hill, 8. C. ^ D o n Is Established <911 ^HBEm JDclJ IJ\ Capital 125,000 HB^hH MACK DAViaJHHI CASHIER HH id cordially invite yon t#? r town. . i fl I