The Chesterfield advertiser. [volume] (Chesterfield C.H., S.C.) 1884-1978, September 14, 1916, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

Y, Jr. ! DR. R. h MANTIS Attogniey a Ad Counsellor I A t Law Office ?ver Bank of Cheat Office Ia Cmrthouse 5,eld- WilJ Tit Pageland ey< Tuesday; Jefferson Wedneedi I fcdUVJVA * HUNL.EY 0tSe.r day" 0h?!:terfl!11<?' __ Prices reasonable. All ?ATTORNEY 8? guaranteed. I I Oh~t.rfi.ld. 8. 0HUO'eV _ UK " TKO'rrl MB1 Peoples Bank UrnMing (jherSel Office on second floor R DR.,0. A. GLOVER ,A? who desire my services ' ? please see me at Chesterfield, " H FHY8ICLAN AND SURGBON have discontinued ray vi stta to ot H B^^alls answered day or nigbt. towns J op?ck oT No o@6 mf i)UNTY SUPERINTENDED This ,r prescription prepared e?pect B*B I OF EDUCATION mai .v.ia or chills <* fevi m ih, i'. . coses wilt break any ca.c. ^M R. A, ROt'^E '-? i\ ?' cn as a tonic the Fever will Office open overy Snlnr'ny and the r*. -a It ucts on the liver b'-ttor t firm Monday of each month. Calomc. and does not gripe or sicken. II [ * Forewarned? THC ARM g?k\ " df)It " s4f~mf>/ I Of "W MO ORMR*^!. \ \JUll ~*JLr fflCL Read the newspapers if you doubt that the should be adequate means of protection in the hands of yo wife and family when you are away from home. Read history if you do not already feel certain that tl "Colt" is the one firearm for you to buy. > Absolute freedom from accidental These two features make t discharge and positive, instant action "Colt" ideal as a weapon for hoi when the trigger is purposely protection, especially in the hands a pressed. a woman. Catalogue E and '' How to Shoot'' booklet mailed free *i) If your dealer doe* uot sell "Colt'*," send your order to u* COLT'S PATENT FIRE ARMS MANUFACTURING C< HARTFORD, CONN. A CRISP DOLLAR BILL When my baby boy was born bit aunt gave him a crisp dollar bill with which to start his Bank Account. I sent it to the Bank to be put in his Bank Account. Many dollars have since been added to it. We want the Babies! Open a bank account for your baby. By the time he conies of ajye he wiM have a lot of money here for him. Only takes $1.00 to start him here. We want the Babies! BANK. OF RUBY AND MT. CROGHAN ^ Mt. CROGHAN, 8. C. Branch at RUBY, 8. 0. R. E. Rivers, Pres.. P. M. Therrell. Cashier [; t | Bank of Gthesterfie/d 1 Oldest Bank In Chesterfield 1\A/e Solicit Your Eusiness. Pay Interests On TIME DEPOSITS. We Invite You to Visit Vs I SAFETY DEPOSIT BOXES Y Patronage wanted, whether large or ? -* small Both receive courteous attention. I Our MaHa. cv? ? 1 o 2 v/ui i ivri i\/. oncij^in security. IR. ?. Rivers, Pres. C. C. Douglass l ashier M.J. Hough, V. Pres. 1). L. Smith, Asst. Cashier. f I Is the Gibraltar of the Home! If yon are a man of famiiv von m? * Vioo? ? 1- ??* * " * j j ? ...-?v a umiA ticcuani. A AiLNJ ACCOUNT IS THE BULWARK. THE GIBRALTAR, OF YOUR HOMI It protects you in time of need. ? It gives you a feeling of independence. It strengthens you. I.. It Is a Consolation to Your Wife, 1'' to Your Children L The FARMERS' BANK The Chesterfield Advertiser PUBLISHED KVKRV THURSDAY ft- . >fy Subscription, 11.00 a year. HY, Advertising rates furnished on application. >rk Entered as second-class matter at the postotYlce at Chesterfield, South Caro Una. PAt'L. li. HHARN Kditor and Publisher. SENATOR TILLMAN'S FAREWELL iOSS Senator Tillman's farewell speech in the Senate has been highly com1 ' plimented by the papers both North and South. A Washington correspondent says it brought tears in the Senate. Although the aged Senator spoke only five minutes there were expressions of emotion that are very ally rare in that grave and dignified body. iR. Describing the scene in the Senute, B ( a correspondent says: l1(1 j "In the center aisle of the Senate, 2i>.r stood a man whose name in American history will be linked some day with "?" Calhoun, or Sumner, or Hayne, as the fiery symbol of militancy?Ben Tillman, of South Carolina, the "Pitchfork Ben" of other days, when M the vigor of life coursed through his | veins. i "it was doubtless as unique a /| speech as has been heard in Congress ] I since the Civil War was fought. "He stood quietly, his hands trembling as he lifted a printed pa- * FC per, therefrom to read to the Senate < IIf what may prove to be his farewell 1 speech. The Senator is nearly 70 j years old, and is declining rapidly. , lie 'By the mercy of God," as he phrased it, he hopes to be in the Senate when it reconvenes in December, but the * he thought of a permanent adjournment s lie of his career is constantly with him." j Oi HARDWICK OF GEORGIA Although one of the youngest Sen- \ ators, Hon. T. W. Hardwick, of ( Georgia, in the very brief period that O, he has' been in the Senate has made a remarkable record. He has not hesitated to follow his convictions, i even when not in accord with other t more experienced Senators. In the | I" " recent discussion of the strike situation Senator Hardwick spoke of the proposed legislation as a makeshift, * oviiacbitmg nun wouiu noi, except s temporarily, avert the threatened i trouble. As to adopting legislation t that would be right to one party in the controversy and not to the other " Senator Hardwick said if he should * be compelled to vote in face of t threats for the proposed plan, "my j head will be bowed with impotent j shame to think that there are any interests in this country outside of the public interests, outside of all the ^ people, outside of the will and inter- ' est and wishes of a majority of the t American people that can force the American Congress to legislate on any subject or any line." One cannot help admiring the bravery and the devotion to conscien- J tious discharge of duty that characterizes so strongly the able young *' Senator from (Jeorgia. It may be added that Senator Hardwick all ^ through the session has held his own in the debates upon the most im___ portant legislation and was in many ^ cases deferred to by some of the ___ older Senators. With Senators Hoke Smith and Tom Hardwick, our neighboring State is represented with abil- . g ity of the highest stamp. * ? 1 a Senator Oscar Underwood, of Ala- n m bama, has a way of putting things ( ? that makes Republicans s<iuirm. He n said in the Senate in a recent speech X addressing the Republicans: "We in- e M herited industrial depression from b your party." And they couldn't de- o 1 ny it. <1 b ) And now France has come out for h prohibition. The government has is- ti sued an appeal for temperance that Cl closes with these words: y "Mothers, young men, wives! Up >r and act against drink, in memory of 1 those who have gloriously died for si the fatherland. Thus you will nc- w complish a mission as great as that (;l B of our heroic soldiers." G X Next we shall probably hear that P g the Kaiser will not drink beer. And ^ then the millenium. d EDISON IS FOR WILSON Saratoga, N. Y.?Thomas A. Edi* son, the electrical wizard, Republioi can and supporter of Theodore Roosevelt for the presidential nomination, T to-day announced that he would work and vote for Woodrow Wilson. He ' said: ? "Not since 1800 has any campaign made such a direct call on Simon Pure Americanism. The times are too I serious to think or talk in terms of I Republicanism and Democracy. Real w I Americans must drop parties and get K down to big fundamental principles. J[ "More than any other president in my memory, Woodrow Wilson, has been faced by a succession of tre' mendous problems, any of which dej cided wrong would have had disastrous consequences. Wilson's decis- ^ ions, so far, have not got us into any J serious trouble, nor are they likely to. I "He has given us peace with honor, j 1 This talk about the United States i being despised is nonsense. Neutrality is a mighty trying policy but back T' of it are international law, the rights j of humanity and the future of civilization. I "Roosevelt was my choice. He had had experience and is one of the I best Americans, but the machine conI trolled Republican party would not J have him. Therefore I am for Wood- I row Wilson." 1 < I 1 THE THREE Scfailk THERE are three lessor Three words as with ? In tracings of eternal lij Upon the hearts of ni Have Hope. Though cl And gladness hides h Put thou the shadow fr No night but hath its Have Faith. Where'er fhe calm's disport, tl Know this: God rules th The inhabitants of ei Have Love. Not love i But man as man thy And scatter like the circ Thy chanties on all. Thus grave these lesson Faith, Hope, and Lov Strength when life's sui ; Light when thou else THE COUNTRY EDITOR. 1 7rom The Oakley (Kan.) Graphic: I "This newspaper business is a ;reat game. Just in the midst of an j )bituary of a dear friend and when lot tears threaten to flow down and j dot out the words you write, there I ireaks through the office door the 1 adiant face of the daddy of a new J ioy. Tears and joy mingle in the j same breath, and the giving and tak- j ng away of life are recorded on I he same page. * "Before you have finished the obit- j lary the breezy advance man for a j omedy show pops in and asks you to i vrite a scream for his Forty Fat ? frolicsome Fairies and how joyous hey are. Before you have done with he kind words about your departed j, 'riend, the joy over the new baby and 'n inished the showman's ad., a fellow 1 sneaks in to ask you to suppress the ^ story of the light that he was mixed 1 v ip in. men, putting an me lace ana rimniings on the? bride's wedding s ;own, dressing th< groom in conven- iional black and starting them olf vith congratulations and best wishes, rou turn again "to the tear side of ife and write: "But the stately ship c noves on to the haven under the ' I till, and oh, for the touch of a van- ! * shed hand and the sound of a voice ' ^ hat is still.' h "Then comes a lull and the old ypewritcr is content to record the ommonplace facts, knowing that t ust around the corner, and each J waiting his turn, stand .loy. Grief, t iorrow. Mirth, Sarcasm, Wit and i aiughter." VF.R SALIVATED BY CALOMEL? HORRIBLE. \ ialomel I* Quicksilver and Acts Like [ Dynamite on Your Liver. ' Calomel loses you a day! You t now what calomel is. It's mercury; uicksilver. Calomel is dangerous, t crashes into sour bile like dyna- 1 lite, cramping ami sickening you. lalomel attacks the hones and should ever be put into your system. When you feel bilious, sluggish, onstipated and all knocked out and elieve you need a dose of danger- | us calomel just remember that your ruggist sells for 50 cents a large ottle of Dodson's Liver Tone, which ? i entirely vegetable and pleasant to ike and is a perfect substitute for alomel. It is guaranteed to start our liver without stirring you up t iside, and can not salivate! ( Don't take calomel! It makes you j ck the next day; it loses you a day's ork. Dodson's Liver Tone straightas you right up and you feel great. | ive it to the children because it is ( erfectly harmless and doesn't gripe. c Something for All. ] Wills: "How do you stand on Sun- J ay baseball?" Gillis: "I'm against it." Willis: "Don't you think the people L lould be allowed to enjoy themselves a Sunday?" Gillis: "Aren't they doing it now? he rich have their golf clubs and j io poor have their automobiles."? ]| uck. 0 i f r I "Primo" s >eanot Meal A Sirai^ht, Natural FEED i^ith a Sweet, Natural Flavor % Made Entirely From lire and Wholesome Peanuts No Mixture or Adulteration lorses, Cows, Hogs All Li ke It :iiwi Thrive on It ^ A Money-Saver i " J I tei J.S.BURCH t Mtf Croatian, S. C. v LESSONS : : is I would write, ? i burning pen, ?ht, I en. * ouds environ now, , w er free in scorn, !* om thy brow? mom. thy barque is driven? le tempest's mirth? ie host of heaven, ? arth. nlone for one, ? brother calL 2 linR sun A s on thy soul? . e?and thou shalt find ^ ( Res rudest roll, wert blind. KiBE A BOOSTER loost your neighbor, boost your ( a friend; w' loost the church that you attend; Fr loost the farm on which you're ja dwelling; pr loost the goods that you are selling; j)a loost the people around about you; hey can got along without you; j0i lut success will quicker find them, f they know you are behind them ; ^(, ioost for every forward movement j.-r ioost for every new improvement; a ioost the stranger and the neighbor; 5^1 loost the man for whom you labor; an lease to be a chronic knocl:?i*; wj icasc to be a progress-blocker; h0 f you'd make your township better, ot. ioost it to the final letter. fr itop your knocking! Boost! a, w< W*Y SHOULD HE HURRY. w, The visitor to a country farm was an eing shown round the premises by qq lis host, says the New York Times. |C) 'hey inspected the hennery, the pij.*- ]a| ;cry, the cowery, the horsery and all he other "cries," and the city man ,|r ms very much interested. w, Presently, as they walked along the j10 ide of a field, he touched his com- ch anion on the arm. hil "There!" he exclaimed quickly. "Is |,i, hat a scarecrow?" an "Where?" asked the farmer. sn "That shabby thing in the middle f the field. It must be a scarecrow. olJ t hasn't moved all the time I've jn lOOil " Ur "That's no scarecrow," replied the tj, 'armor sadly. "That's a man I've trot s^; lired working by the day." Catarrhal Deafness Cannot Be Cured 11' >y local applications. as tiny cannot reach he diseased portion of tho cor. Theic s only one way to cure catarrhal deafness, tnd that Is by a constitutional remedy. A! 'atarrhal 1> af.eoj Is cuus. 1 by an 1?'.arned condition of the mucous llnlnir of he Eustachian Tube. When this tube Is nllam. d you havu a rumollni; sound or mpcrfcct hearing. ar.d when It Is entirely looed. D<afn<so Is tho result. Unless the nllamination can he reduced and this tube eiitored to Its normal condition, hearing ' ulll he distroyed forever. Many cases of leafnejs uro caused by catarrh, which lj m In.'bmi d condition of the mucous (uracils. Hall's Catarrh dure acts thru the HV dood on tho mucous surfaces of the sysem. tO Wo wit! Rive Ono Hundred Dollars for iny case of Catarrhal Deafness that cannot dc ie cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Circulars rce. All Druggists. 7uc. Iq F. J. CHKNET A CO.. Toledo. O. mi Get Rid of Tan, Sunburn end Freckles tir by using HAGAN'S in Magnolia \7 Balm. inilarillii C* .1? I * ? uiu)J3 me ourning. "" iiears youv complexion of Tan and xV' Blemishes. You cannot know how in> ?ood it is until you try it. Thous- ^n vnds of women say it is be^tof all fel icautitiers and heals Sunburn ^ juickest. Don't be without it a & lay longer. Get a bottle now. At > 'our Druygist or by mail diretft. ?5 cents for either color. White, 'ink, Rose-Red. SAMPLE FREE. YON MFG. CO.. SO So. Sit. St.. Brooklyn. N.Y ii. ^ j.iiiis & ^ever re?< r;;>:io.i Nc..Ctii is prepared especially >r MAi^ rtiA or CHILLS A. FEVER, ivc or si* doaea will hrenk any ciuc and taken then i?s a tonic the Fever will not turn. It acta on the liver heller than alomci and doca not gripe or ticktn. 25c I ASHCRAFTS ^ ondition Powders * A high-class remedy for horses d mules in poor condition and l^| nred of a tonic. Build3 solid iscle and fat; cleanses the svs n, thereby producing a smooth p[v issy coat of hair. Packed iq if (a ns. 25c. bos. Sold b? t r?tu D.H.LaNEY I0*" ! She Secoh m. ESTAJBLISHE Capital Stocl li. P LANKY, Ftps < G K. LANEY, Vice Pres. & Atty. We want your business a When you c ine to C heaiei tield pay inteiest on -saving deposit: per unuui. 'Chesterfield, - . > ? Tray dy Across i The State Line om The Wadesboro Messenger and > Intelligencer: A horrible tragedy occurred yestery afternoon in Morven township, ?en T. C., the three-year-old son of ed Pratt, colored, killed Frnnkie " mes, the two-year-old daughter of ank Bennett, also colored. All the rties live on Miss Johnsie Dunlap's ice. The particulars are as fol .v?: i The mother of Frankie James went j the fields to pick cotton, leaving ankie James and a smaller baby in room of the house with the door ' rred. A short while later T. C. J d Odessa, his four-year-old sister, l to live nearby, went over to the , use. Nothing is known of what i curred except what was learned i om the stories of T. C. and Odessa, 1 'cording to them Frankie James ! >uld not play with them and T. C. 1 >nt out into the yard, got an axe 1 id proceeded to massacre Frankie. | ic child was hit in ihe head, and its : ' i?s and arms and body badly muti- j 1 ted. Then T. C. and Odessa tied i | rings to the body and attempted to ag it over to their own home. They \ re unable to do this, and started j me, On the way they met the dead ! ild's mother and told her T. C. had L the child on the head and it was i ceding. The woman went home 1 d found the dead body. The i Killer baby was not harmed. i Coroner Jones and Dr. Ashe went it and held an inquest this morng. The mother of the dead child j id T. C. and Odessa were put on e stand and the facts as above ated were elicited. On account of eir tender age, four and three, they ?re not arrested, and it seems that ere is not.hini' to ,lo ?K<?ni 11?.. utter. NOTHER GRUESOME STORY FROM WADESBORO I A blood-curdling tale is going ' ound among the colored penile, I id is causing considerable exciteent. It seems that Emaline Covingsi, the negro woman who was inur- t red in her home in White Store 1 wnship sevral months ago, of which ' ime Will Crowder is accused, had . me small hogs at the time of the | urder. The hogs were killed re- ] ntly, and it is being circulated that ' e or more of the hams bled con- j uiously for some time and that the >od ran into the shape of a man's ad. It is a horendous tale, as told, d the minds of some of the colored ople who hear it are much agitated, has been suggested that one of the I time trials by blood be instituted d that the man accused of the ( imc be made to touch the ham. It ly be that if he is guilty the ham II start bleeding again, thus prov- j t his guilt, but if he is innocent the ( m will not bleed.?Wfldeshoro Mao. iger and Intelligencer. DRIVING OUT CATARRH ' If people knew how the presenco ( of catarrh la a constant menace, they would have nono of it. It ? Infests mims part of the delicately adjusted body and makes It useless, thus throwing on the other organs ( more than their share of work. It uffordB a carefully prepared seedbed for the germs of colds, grip, tuberculosa and pneumonia. It so disarranges Nature's delicate plans {, as to make possible asthma, hay fever and other respiratory disorders. it spreads until it becomes systemic, thus involving many or- c [Tans and debilitating the entire r system with serloua results. Catarrh Is easily neglected, and / It rarely gets well of itself. It r.eeds proper medicinal correction. 1 For almost half a century many thousands have fotind help In I'cruna. u valuable tonic wltn special n fflcacy In catnrrhnl conditions. The aim Is to clean out waste matter, to dispel tho catarrhal Intlam- ,i nation, and tone up tho whole ays- * lorn. Its users willingly testify jj that It has dono all this ami even nore for catarrhal sufferers. What 11 t has dono Is tho best proof of that It will do. You may rely on ~>t* rnnn In tablet form It Is pleasnnt to ake and e?;.y iu administer. I< o; Six-Sixty-Six ii* it a prescription prepared especially MALARIA or CHILLS A FEVER. liJ e or six doses will break any case, and ken then as a tonic the Fever will not r ra. m It acts on the liver better# than I mom and does not gripe or sicken. 25# " i'* Sfank ! w i ' a ID IN 1911 j k $25,000 C. P. MANOUM, Cashier I J A CAMPBELL, A > Assistant Casheir nd will treat >ou right. * I, come iu to see us. We ? ? at the rate of per eet>t ? dcuth Carolina s '*!!***!!***!!* '* | Sains Ihirty Pounds While Taking Tanlac VIFE SAW HUSBAND HARDLY ABLE TO TURN IN BED FOR SIX MONTHS JHE HAD LOST ALL HOPE Three Bottles of Tanlac "Worked Miracle for Hi:n, Almost:" Made Able to Go to Town. After he hud been eiven un fcn .Ho uid his children had been callled to lis bedside from their homes in several States, Mr. J. A. Busbee, of Clifton, S. C., a suburban town near Spartanburg, followed the advice of lis son and others and took Tanlac. \s a result he gained thirty pounds n weight and was strengthened so much that he was able to walk around .he farm and drive seven miles to Spartanburg in a buggy, according to the statement given on August 5th by liis wife. Mr. Busbee took three bottles of Tanlac, she said, and during the six months immediately before he began to take Tanlac he had been so weak and ill with stomach trouble that he frequently required his wife's assistance when turning in bed. Her statement follows: d "My husband suffered from a very M much run down and weakened condi Lion, and from a severe form of stomach trouble. He had no appetite at all, and he wasted away until he was just skin and bones. It seemed that we could get no treatment that would permanently improve him. He had been sick and unable to do anything for about three years. "We had to turn him in bed, he was so weak. He ate only a few bites a day. Once, before he began 'n?i? ' liinmc, ne Became so low that we telegraphed for the children to come at once. One son, who lives at Birmingham, had heard of the groat results that Tunlac had given sufferers with stomach trouble and he insisted that his father take Tanlac as a last resort. And he began to piek up right away after he began taking it. "He has taken three bottles. It changed him from a man on the verge of the grave to a much stronger und happier man. It just worked a miracle almost for him. He gained in every way, and when the third bottle was gone he had gained thirty pounds in weight. When he began taking Tanlac he could not walk at ill, but when he had taken three bottles he was able to drive seven miles to Spartanburg in a buggy and A'alk over his farm. / "Tanlac gave him a good appetite j 1 mil improved his stomach so much ' I .hat he began to eat almost anything md a lot of it. Tanlac is due the redit for this great improvement. "I am glad to recommend it and 10 is Mr. Busbee." Mrs. Busbee gave this statement jecause thev mrroo/t -> ?' 1 * " ? ? ?. kuuiu leu i he better just how much improve- :JH nent Tunlac had made in his condiion. Sold by Chesterfield Drug Co., Chesterfield, S. C.; T. E. Wannamak r & Son, Cheraw; Mt. Croghan Drug Co., Mt. Croghan, S. C.; McBee Drug Co., McBeo, S. C.; Pageland Drug Co., Pageland, S. C.; J. T. Jowers & Jons, Jefferson, S. C. CARRIED AWAY A TRAINLOAD OF NEGROES. ''rom The Pee Dee Advocate: I^'ist Saturday night two ugents of ontractors who are building a raiload in Pennsylvania left bennettsillu with neariy a hundred negroes ^ rom this county. Promises of big . ages and good treatment hud teen lade to the negroes, and they were iven free transportation to Philaclphia. Six speciul cars were rought to take the trair.-lond of egroes.ar.d more were expected than tennettsville were Hezekiah Mclnyre, Willie Patterson, Nat Munner/n, George Stubbs, Bossy Moore, Artiur Hnrly, Aug Fuirley. Will Grace nd Jule King. ii is expected that of them ill be bock in a few weeks or months ' they can Ret the money to come uck. The agents could have been, and till can be, prosecuted for violating le South Carolina law uguinst imligr&tion agents, for enticing labor ut of the State. Nobody made it icir business, hov/evcr, to begin the 4 . c\)tion> It may ba la:,en up A iter by the grand jury or solicitor. "OLEY KIDNEY PHIS ja BACKACM* KIONITS AM3 lAODHIt , _ > A.