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. P. A. MURRAY, Jr. Attorney and Counsellor At Law , Office in Courthouse HANNA & HUNLBY ?ATTOKNEYS? ' R. K, Hanna C L Hunlev Chesterfield, S. C. Office in Peoples Bank Building COUNTY SU PERI NT EN D B' 'J 1 OF EDUCATION R. . KorSK Offlee open i'v.t.v Saturday ami the firat Monday of ?,uch month. t __ _ flank of % Oldest Bank In We solicit your business. We | XOe Jnvite X(oi Your Patronage wanted. it will receive cour SAFETY DEP( OUR MOTTO: "STRENGT1 R. E. Rivera, President. M. J. Hough, Vice-President. CI | 9he 9eopL ESTABLISH! Capital Stoc 1 R. B. LANKY, Pres. G. K. LANEY, Vice Pres. Osc Atty. 2 We want your business f When you come to Chestertiel 2 pay intei jst on saving deposil 2 per anuni. s 'Chesterfield, > Young Man, Scatter Y< YOUTH TS FR0D1C-AL. Freqi KNOW THE VALUE OF A DOLLA YOUTH IS NOT EVERLASTING the foundation for tlieir success by o were young. If You Hope to Amoi Delay Starting a Bank A Start It Today. The f ARME Florida, C Mardi Personally Con* To the Following Popular NEW ORLEANS CUBA KEY WEST | MIAMI PALM BEACH (JACKSONVILLE Operated During the Heij '1 ourist Season, these of Sunshine ari will ho personally conducte sentatives, who will look a rangeni ;nts, leaving patrons and int< resting sights. Make reservations now, : which are of the Highest CI Write for Booklet a GATTIS Tourist Agents, Seaboarc DR. R. K MeMANUB uentist Office over B; nk of Chesterfield. (Vill visit Pageiand every Tuesday; Other days ir Chesterfield. Prices reasonable. All work guarinteed. DR. L. H. TROTTI, Dental Surgeon Chesterfield, S. C. Office on second floor in Ross Building. All who desire my services wil\ >lease see me at Chesterfield, as 1 iave discontinued my visits to other owns. ? ? PI hesterfield Chesterfield 1 pay interest on time deposits i to Visit lis Whether large or small teous attention 3SIT BOXES H AND SECURITY." C. C. Douglass, Cashier. D. L. Smith, Assist. Cashier. n ? i'd iftank 1 ?1) IN 1911 k $25,000 J i C. P. MAN GUM, Cashier. I J.A.CAMPBELL, I Assistant Casheir md will treat you right. * d, como in to see us. We * ;s at the rate of 1$ per cent * douth Carolina : *> Don't >ur Dollars! lently the > ing man DOESN'T R. The big m- a of the country laid pening a ban account when they I int to Aiything Don 7 xcount. :k$-bank i ? i i, uba and Gras ???? ducted Tours i Winter Tourist Resorts ST. AUGUSTINE TA1V.PA ST. PETERSBURG HAVANA MATANZAS MARDI GRAS II I I Air Lii?^ Railway. U NORTH CAROLINA g 4 ?? The Chesterfield Advertise PUBL18HKD EVERY THURSDAY Subscription. 11.00 a year. Advertising rates furnished on appl cation. Entered as second-class matter at tl post office at Chesterfield, South Can Una. PAUL, II. IICAltN Editor and Publisher. NO TIME FOR DIVISION In a recent address Vice-Presider Thomas R. Marshall emphasized th importance at this critical time of th spirit of unity among the people. 1 is no time for division of sentimer or action, but now if ever, the Amer i.. _u I,i i... ?-a.j Tr LetII JJL'UfJIC SUUUIU UU UIUtLU. VJ mtv States should have a stronger mear ing ever before. Mr. Marshall said: "Our country i facing critical times. We are on th very verge of war. And unless w prove by our lives and actions tha we are worthy of being a self-govern ing people there is great doubt o the outcome. It is necessary that w prove to the world that we are i united people, with one thought, on ?im and one principle." It is to be regretted that a fc\ United States Senators took it upoi hemselves to give aid and encourage uent to Germany by opposing th President's plan to arm our ships fo Jefence against submarines. As President Wilson said, their ac tion made our government con temptible in the eyes of the world Instead of presenting a united fron to Germany's attacks upon the live ind property of our people, Congre^ ?nd the President had their hand tied by a few men who arrogated t themselves the right to carry th white llag of surrender to Germany invulntit (li.mnriilii siml mnrilorni' policy. There is an old saying that it tak< a great many kinds of people to mak a world. It also seems to take a fe abnormal statesmen (?) to make u the United States Congress. SPRING THOUGHTS FOR OU BOYS AND GIRLS A philosopher, not Socrates?he dead?but an American philosoph ?says that the obstacles to succe usually are not big things but litt things, so little that we do not noti them. The Panama canal was dug shovel full at a time and it is tl greatest work of civil engineering the world. While not quoting the exact wor of this philosopher the idea advanc< by him is worthy of consideration ai is an incentive and should be inspir tion to our scchool boys and scho girls to apply themselves so that em day they may gat some valuab knowledge that will be useful the years before them. Patience and perseverance a qualities that the young should pra tice, for oniy through these qua ties of mind and heart can succe be won in the pursuit of educath or any other aim in lite. This paper has so many reado anion); the bright young people Chesterfield county that we consid it our duty and it is a pleasure too, direct their minds in those lines < ' iFort that will bring to them succe 1.1 all of their endeavors. The beautiful poem of "The Ta estry Weavers" should be an inspir tion to the young 'n all walks of lif these patient workers weave tl tapestry on the reverse side of tl cloth and do not see the result < their work until it is completed. "It is only when the weaving stops And the web is loosed and turned That he sees the real handiwork, That his marvelous skill is learner "Oh, the sight of its delicate beaut; How it pays him for all it cost! For rarer, daintier work than his Was never done by the frost. "The years of a man are the looms ( God Let down from the place of the sui Wherein we are weaving ever, Till the mystic web is done. 'Weaving blindly, but weaving surel; Each for himself his fate, We may not know how the right si< looks; We can only weave and wait." GROUND PEANUT HULLS VS COTTON SEED HULLS f'..,.....,! ^..l V...11.. 1 1.,.. wi wuiiu |H-(Uiui iiuiin iwivr uri used for adulterating mixed feed and are also being sold separate as a dairy feed. In feed value the rank a little higher than cottonse< hulls. A number of farmers wl have used the peanut hulls, repo that they like it better than the co tonseed hulls. When the grour peanut hulls can be secured at reasonable cost there is no objectic to using them in dairy cow ratioi in place of the cottonseed hulls. MARY PICKFORD TELLS HOW Have you ever wanted to go in tl movies?as one of the world-famoi stars, whose salaries are absolute enormous? Let Mary I'ickford tell you how do it. We have just found an artic from her pen in Harper's Bazar f< April. She tells briefly, but co vincingly, just what to do; and doesn't sound quite so easy as v all imagined! If you have even tl least, wee ambition to shine on tl screen, don't miss Mary Pickford advice.. t ''Methodists S Iie Jm r -^7?T-r? ? ,>-?yv - ? 1 it Vie : . it j | 1^"' A Christian College for the '* min Wofford, and chartered Dece ' thousand have graduated with de| t "Wofford has furnished hundi s men to the State. is An Educational Campaign to rais s three hundred thousand dollars fo ? Wofford, Lander and Columbia Co e > leges will actively begin on the Frs ls day of April and continue throug the month. 58 These colleges are owned and cor 'e trolled by the South Carolina and th w ip Upper Couth Carolina Conferences. These institutions are pre-em nently Christian institutions. They have rendered efficient sen R s MCnmAI ADMV IQ cr nikuiuni. mini i iu 5 BEING MOBILIZED s FOR WAR SERVICI (Is : (Mj Washington.?Modern warfare, I j well * us the warfure of the futur demands the service of specialists, m <l~ only along the tiring line to opera the greut guns, but back of It, step I step, In the opinion of Dr. F. F. Sim '1? son, chief of the medical section < in the Council of JN'ntlonul Defense. T1 medical section, under the dlrectlc re of Doctor Simpson, Is engaged on tl c. gigantic work of orguni/.lng the met] jj_ cal resources of the country Into a ss efficient working unit, us one of tl most importuut feutures of mllltai preparedness. Broadly, the scheme contemplutt rs the creution of a medical reserve con ?i of 20,000 surgeons, physicians and sp cr* clalists In nil lines, who will be avul to able for service in the army and nut of and civilian population In time of nee a.s In uddltion to this, tlie organizatic will conduct a mobilization of the coui p. try's civilian medical resources, fu lories making medical supplies, ho pitals for the care of the 111 and wouni e. "j , ... .... cu tuiu scuoms ror me re-education < those whose Injuries on the hattlefle! 1(> make them unfit for tho life work tin J' hud undertaken. Tiie mobilization of the piedlcnl r , sources of the country Is only a pa , of tiie great work which is being ui dertaken by the Council of Nutlom (j Defense, working in connection wll the advisory commission to the Coui y: cil of National Defense. The count proper is cotnpc sed of members of tl cubinet; the advisory commission composed of civilians who are reeoi nlzed leaders In certain lines, and tl chairman Is Daniel Wlllard, presldei of tho Italtlmore & Ohio Railroad con pujiy, whose special attention is d voted to tho transportation probleii that would face the United States 1 time of war. I)r. Frnnklin Martin < 'J' Chicago is the chairman of the advisoi commission which is dealing direct! le with the question of medicine as r luted to war. Began Organizing a Year Ago. Each of the divisions represented 1 tho members of the advisory comml slon has a specific section, a sort < department, directed to carry out 1 :r | particular work. Doctor Simpson Is I the chief of the medical section and i\ woratng with what la known hh tl m medical advisory committee of the u< }( vlsory commission. The members art 1(i Doctor Martin, chairman; Surged r, General William C. Gorges of tl: ( army, Surgeon General William ( Itraistod of the navy. Surgeon Generi " Itupert Illuo of the United States pul ; lie health service, Col. Jefferson I " Kean, director general of military r< a.1 lief of the American Had Cross; D William II. Welch of Johns Ilopklc university, I>r. W. J. Mayo of Itochei tor, Minn., and Doctor Simpson. f This organisation Is co-operatln 1L.iwlth the committee of American pbj slclans for American prepareduess, c . which Doctor Mayo Is chairman an v | Doctor Simpson Is secretary. Thl committee represents, directly or Ind ; rectly, approximately 90,000 mernhei i of Hie medical profession of the Unite or States and wus organized more than n-' year ugo as a great putrlotlc movi it ment for the conservation of life 1 /e time of war. ie Doctor Simpson, with a staff In h: 1C office In Washington, Just now Is ei i?_ gaged In organizing,a medical resen 81 corps, which will nitmhga 00000 of U fofem^a. jygaiT tart Education WOFFORD higher education of young men, located mber 6, 1851. Approximately six thou* ;rcei. _ red* of preachers, missionaries and Chrii e ice to the Methodist Church and tho r Commonwealth of South Carolina j and have established their places in the educational work of the State. To pay their indebteness, add to h their endowment and better equip them for the great work of Christian education it is necessary to raise, at once, three hundred thousand dollars. In order to raise this needed sum an educational campaign has been i- planned for the entire month of April, i Rev. F. II. Shuler, commissioner of education, will be in charge. He . other specialists in the country. This Is being accomplished through the creation of a committee of nine medical leaders in every state, who will have 1 direct charge of forinulutlng country organizations. All physicians are being classified according to the work that they do E. best. Surgeons who are especially pro' flclcnt in abdominal operations are j listed as such; ear, eye, nose and I thrniit (ino/>tu1luta oil *? '? ?? *?-** - . ?...vmv uii ftu 4li uuu uni | 13 , dentists?In fact, every branch of the e. : medical profession Is dissected and ?t classified, so as to be on hand for part? tlcular, special work when the time >y of need arrives. P- Proper Sanitation Important. It Is the object of the commission to le get the best men possible In the lines 'n In which they are best. The group lu will be "hand-picked." When It Is completed the medical men who agree lQ to become members will receive a ratle lag In the army or navy and will have T any special Instruction us to military work that Is necessary. 13 One of the Importunt questions being 13 considered Is that of sanitation, and all e* medical men who ure students of this work will be listed as such. Proper T sanitation In the mobilization of any J* army will save thousands of lives, as ,n Is demonstrated by a very recent exII" ample. c* In 1808, at the outbreak of the Span s* Ibli-Americun war, when upproxiinutely 10.r?,000 troops were mobilized for >f service, there developed In the various Id camps 20,700 cases of typhoid fever, re y suiting in many deaths. Last summer, i when 110,000?almost twice as many? e* troops were mobilized for service along ft the Mexican border, only 1-1 cnses of o- typhoid fever developed. The clrcutn* itl stances, In a general way, were similar, h Men were taken from a temperate cllo mate to a warmer climate and were as 11 semhlcd In large camps. The remurkuble decrease In the num- J s ber of cases of typhoid fever was duo l>- to nothing more nor less than the ?? adoption of proper methods of sunltait tlon. The medical eori>s of the army saw the mistakes of the Spanlsh-Amer? lean war aud profited by them. It Is >8 for the further development of such Improved methods that the medicul section Is now striving. *y Lessons F.rom European War. ly In this connection object lessons are 0- being derived dally from the war In Europe. Hundreds of reports nre being received from medical officers, >y mostly Americans, who are at the bats' tie fronts and in hospitals, us memif hers of the American umbulance corps ts and with vurlous Red Cross units. | Is These refer to the new ways of handIs ling the HI and wounded, the treatment ie of wounds on the battle fields and In 1- hospitals. All of these suggestions are : being tabulated for use in the future, in Out of them the committee hopes to deie velop a thoroughly up-to-date system J. for the United States. ll For example, one of the suggestions >- which Is regarded us highly practical is t. that for conveying wounded soldiers e- back from the battle lines to far dis- J r. tant hospitals without removing them | in 1 mm him streicncrs on wmcn iney nrsi s- ure placed. This is accomplished by an Interchange of stretchers, a very g simple method which never had been ir- put in operation before. In this way >t the strength of the patient, an impord tant factor for the assistance of his is recovery, is conserved. 1- When a soldier Is placed on a I s stretcher at the battle line he Is card ried to a waiting ambulance. The aina bulance, In turn, receiving the patient,' e- does not place him on one of Its own 1 n stretchers, but gives a stretcher to the ' men who have carried the man. If tbe . Is ambulance drives to a hospital train,' a- which Is the general custom where the re I railroad lines are Intact almost to the I trenches, the train gives the ambulance . fed | a stratetytr. accepting at the same Uw> j tal Campaign; s $300,000 In . " -Ttry-T? ' ?7-^ '*"& . > . ''.. ;"5 *'S$\ '',. *vt ' ;>j3 *;' >*"v . . 7 T~ ..; A ;' ? .: ? "l? ?- . > [/ ' v i COLLEGE at Spartanburg, S. C., wai founded b and students have attended the Colleg itian workers to the Churches, and hui will be assisted by several Bishops, 1 the presiding elders, preachers and 1 gifted laymen. i Ameeting will be held in every I Methodist church in the State, and every Methodist will be asked to make < a contribution, and opportunity to i contribute will be given any others i who are in sympathy with the move- < ment. I Lander College, located at Greenwood, S. C., was founded February 12, 1872, by Dr. Samuel Lander, a distinguished scholar and educator. the man and the stretcher on which | he Is being carried. This system works throughout the system of transportation, so that a British soldier arriving In London, perhups on the snrne day he Is wounded, arrives on the same stretcher that was at the battle front. It also is the aim of the commission to work out a system of modern hospital trains, carrying wounded soldiers as fur from the buttle front as possible, out of the way of the operations and to a pluce where his recovery Is most likely. Delicnte operations cannot always be conducted on these trains, hut It Is possible to do certuln things which are important In suving a man's life, nuv.li un niO|>|UHK (no HOW OI 0100(1 from h broken artery, the amputation of an arm or leg or the like. To Learn Full Medical Resources. When the commission obtains a full list of medical officers throughout the country they will be asked to supply elaborate statistics on the medicul resources of the various states, hospitals, schools for the re-education of wounded soldiers, and factories equipped to manufacture medical supplies. The question of fludlug schools is one of the great considerations. Men who have been blinded will be taught to become 1 self-sustaining at some new line of work; men without arms will bo Instructed in some line of endeavor which requires no arms; each case will he taken up and worked out In Itself, I In a general effort to reduce to a mini- I mum the number of hopelessly cripplod men as the result of war. Arrangements also are being made to effect a standardization of medical supplies. Companies manufacturing certain types of medicines, surgical Instruments, splints, bandages and similar things used in medical work will be invited to send samples to the commission, to be placed on exhibition In Washington. From these will be developed the best practical appliances, and the various companies will be informed on what will be the needs In time of wur. POULTRY WANTED WILL BUY Chickens, Hens, Geese, Ducks or Guineas. W. J. HANNA. PERUNA in A housewife must give other ailments. Her promptiu saves a serious illness. Her e: her to know that PERUNA is have it on hand for the imm c+lds, and that it is always to uf/ *runs In our fatal IISIl'' It aoon rids the aji \3&!gLJ lfm ?\*Dy <Jr,iC vent* serious CO \l i uniiiv for catarrh, whii I suffered with good many yeai but bud not been very eerloue until recent I Since I have taken Peruna the dropping in n throat has discontinued, and ray head and no * are not so stopped up in the morning. I a pleased with the results, and shall continue use it until I am entirely rid of catarrh. I heartily recommend it as an bonest|medlcln< What It dees for her It Is ready to do for you. Colds and ( The great weight of test lated in the 44 years that PE market proves it. beyond question. I edy. ever ready to taks, preventing coughs, grip snd derangements of proof is publisiu^dkom time to tit profited by it J '* ^ sjMI *5 4 ^ /J.TS ^a^s ' M >y a gift of $100,000 from Benjae since its opening and over ona idreds of business and professional Lander College ia a Christian college Tor the higher education of women, ?nd has made a worthy contribution to the Church and State. Mmk Columbia College is situated in the capital city of the State. Recognizing the imperative need for the higher education of women, th& South Carolina Conference, in 1854 founded this Institution. Through an honorable past and in x vigorous present it has earned and is maintaining a place in the prog- ^ ress of education. FAMILY AVOIDS SERIOUS SICKNESS Bj Being Constantly Supplied With Thedford's Black-Draught. McDuff, Va.?"I suffered for several years," says Mrs. J. B. Whiltaker, ol this place, "with sick headache, and stomach trouble. Ten years ago a friend told me to try Thedford's Black-Draught, which I did, and 1 found it to be the best family medicine fur young and old. 1 keep Black-Draught on hand all the time now, and when my children feel a * little kid, they ask rnc for a dose, and it does them more good than any medicine they ever tried. We never have a long spell of sickness in our family, since we commenced using Black-Draught." Thedford's Black-Draught la purely vegetable, and has been found to regulate weak stomachs, aid digestion, relicve indigestion, colic, wind, nausea, headache, sick stomach, and similar symptoms. It has been in constant use for more than 70 years, and has benefited wore than a million people. Your druggist sells and recommends Black-Draught. Price only 2hc. Get a Qackage to-day. KG Oft Catarrh Cannot Be Cured with LOCAL. APPLICATIONS, as thsy cannot reach the scat of the disoaae. Catarrh is a local rilaease, greatly Influenced hy constitutional conditions, and in order to cure It you must . take an internal remedy. Hall's Ca- ^ turrh Cur* is taken internally and acts thru the blood on the mucous aur- ^^B faces of the system. Hall's Catarrh MM Cure was prescribed by one of the best ^^B physicians in this country for years. It is composed of some of the best tonics known, combined with some of tbs W hist blood purifiers. The perfect comblnntion of the Imcrcdlenta In Hall's T . -" Catarrh Cure Is what produces such wonderful results In catarrhal conditions. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. CHKNEY A CO., Props., Toledo, O. All DruRKlsts. 75c. Hall's Family Pills for constipation, i Your Home the first aid in colds, coughs and ;ss in applying the remedy often ' cperience with remedies has led always reliable, that she should ediate treatment of coughs and her ; The Family \ Safeguard 't- The experience of one ' ? woman, given herewith, is a* typical oi tnousands of letit ters that reach the Peruna Company from grateful rj. friends who have found their ny homes incomes plete, and their u> family safety in f/t>\ u t." danger without rljv\ flfl _ PERUNA. h 'JVV| ~ Catarrh f ' timony that has accumu-1 V RUNA has been on the I >jQ| X) be the reliable family rem- I 1 the serious effects of colds, the digestive organs. This til ne and many families have