The Chesterfield advertiser. [volume] (Chesterfield C.H., S.C.) 1884-1978, April 19, 1917, Image 2
r
The Chesterfield Advertise! I;
PUBL.I8HKD EVERT THURSDAY ,
Subscription, <1.00 a year. 1
Advertising rates furnished on appll- I
i-atlon. |
Kntered as second-class matter at the 1
postoftlce at Chesterfield, South Carolina.
PAUL H. HEARN
Kdltor and Publisher.
CONGRESS AND THE WAR
The temper o." the American people
with reference to the war is reflected
by their representatives in Congress.
Thousands of petitions, letters and
telegrams are pouring into Washington
and in most cases urging Congressmen
to stand by the President in
this great crisis. America seems to
be united as never before. Partisanship
is sent to the rear and patriotism
is in th" ascendency.
There have 1 een so many expressions
of loyalty to the President and
to the flag that The Advertiser wishes
to place upoi record many of these
noble sentimencs. The message of
President Wilson enthused the nation.
It was calm and convincing,
was an appeal co reason and not to
passion and as t le Columbia State has
so pertinently ?aid, "Is a document
worthy of taking its place along with
the best uttera ices of American patriotism."
The message was endorsed by Col
onel Roosevelt in the most enthusiastic
ami complimentary terms and he
offered the services of himself and
his four sons to enlist in the army.
The first blow to be struck in the
war was given by Senator Lodge, of
Massachusetts, when he knocked a
man down who dared to tell him hi
was a coward because he supported
the President. Senator Lodge is one
of the ablest Republicans but in this
crisis he is demonstrating his loyal
ty to the President not only by his
words but with his fist. Incidentally
Senator Lodge made a convert of the
man he knocked down. The Boston
pacifist later urged his fellow pacifists
to support the President.
The speeches made in Congress
generally were devoid of excitement
or hysteria. We present some paragraphs
taken from the remarks of a
few members of Congress, of both
parties.
Hon. G. E. Foss, of Illinois, said:
"This is a solemn and momentous occasion,
when tnis great nation, with
the greatest reluctance and deepest
regret, is about to enter this horrible
and unnecessary war, which has now
engaged nearly half of the world. We
are forced into it by repeated acts of
inhumanity and the- violation of outmost
sacred rights."
Hon. W. L. I .joe, of Missouri, said:
"The President in his message deliv
...nun, nir me glory of the flag, for i
the triumph of aw and humanity, for l
the vindication of the right of every
citizen of the Republic. The Presi- '
dent who has kept us out of war for i
more than two years now sounds the i
tocsin of war." i
Hon. John A. Sterling, of Illinois,
said: "I still cling to the faith which I
was given me when a child, that 1
America is strong enough and proud \
enough to assert its rights against !
every enemy who dares dispute them.
Let us say by the passage of this res
olution the plain and simple truth t
that Germany has made war on Ante- I
rica and that America will resist." <
Hon. Clyde Kelly, of Pennsylvania,
said: "President Wilson has done all i
that mortal could do to hold to an- t
cient landmarks of peace and righ- \
teousness. As the embodiment of i
the great Republic of the West, he |
held out both hands to the warring
world in a plea for peace. He ha ?
been calm and serene and unhurried
by any false cries of hurrah patriot i
ism. With malice for none and charity
for all he has followed the right
as God gave him to see it and as the >
great heart of America desired."
Senator Jfitilman, of South Caro
lina, "We lo not go to war in
any jf/pirii ?f hatred toward the Ger- 1
Tvxjtt pcop\- M people of Ger- a
*ny cnnfjpllcd their Jtovernment tl
no war. Th^Nhction u
*
>f the American Congress to-day
rings the bell for the falling of the
rurtain on the ht use of Hohenzollern.
Germany as a republic, freed of this
bloody dynasty, will know no limitation
in the progress and development
of her peoples."
Senator Hardwick, of Georgia,
said: "When the battle hymn of the
Republic rises until its swell shall
arise from every nook and corner of
our land, until its swelling chorus
shall sweep from ocean to ocean and
then across the broad seas, summoning
to the star: and stripes the nation's
best and the nation's bravest.
Senators, you v ill find that the sons
of Dixie will occupy once more their
old proud plac >, the post alike of
honor and of da.iger, the first rank in
the republic's far-flung battle line."
EVERY ONE MUST NOW DO HIS
SHARE OR BE A MORAL OR
PHYSICAL * SLACKER."
i
From Manufacturer's Recrd:
For the protection of its own life
and in order to help save civilization
from destruction by barbarism, this
country is at w: r with Germany. The
cost in suffering, in privation, in lives
and in treasure may be greater than
we can at present forecast, but the
sacrifice is dem inded of ur? It was
not of our choosing. It was forced
upon us agaim our will. President
Wilson strugglid as probably no other
man in human history ever struggled
to save the nat on from war.
Now that we have entered the contest,
a weigh r responsibility rests
upon every n in and woman. All
must do their p..rt. No one can shirk
the duty of the hour without being a
"slacker," and the "slackers" will be
those who, in tne factory or in their
homes, fail to measure up to the responsibilities
ol' the hour.
The war ma .* bu long and desperate.
It may tax our strength physically
and financially. It may call
forth sacrifices such as none in oui
country have known except the wo
men of the South who lived throuirli
the privations and terrors of the Civil
T7? * r.
ered to us on Monday night brought
against the Ge "man government the
most sweeping indictment that has
been brought against a government
since the dawn of civilization. Every
count in the indictment is true
and furnishes abundant justification
for war."
Hon. J. C. I.i ithicum, of Maryland
said: "Let us invest our President
with every pov. er in arms, in munitoins.
in shins a id men I et <>n- ft
wave but never waver until red Mar.sets
and the su 1 <>f international liberty
rises on a free and peaceful
world."
Hon. (1. H. 1 rancis, of New York,
said: "My eons itueney is to a large
extent of German descent. I can testify
with pride and confidence that
they are to a man loyal Americans.
I know they w II loyally support the
decision <?f th s congress. I trust
their patriotism absolutely."
Hon. R. \V. lustin, of Tennessee,
said: "The time for talking, for discission,
for argument, for differences
of opinion as to war or peace are 1
passed. The ii iperative duty of the
hour is for ev ry true American to <
do a man's par for the honor of the
upon minions will tall the task of
fighting the battle of civilization on
and and water. Upon other millions
vill rest the task of carrying forward
ill business activities, without which
he nation could not stand the strain
>f war, while millions of others, by
he most intensive work, must per'orm
the patriotic task of feeding
?ur country and our Allies.
The man, woman or child who in reases
the supply of foodstuffs will
>c doing a patriotic service without
vhieh our nation would be destroyed.
Overy acre of ground that can be
danted and cultivated strengthens
he nation's army and helps to insure
ts life.
While production must be increased
inneeessary consumption and waste
oust be decreased. In this country
ve waste enough to feed millions
vhile our larger hotels operating on
he European plan and fashionable
lubs are wilfull/ wasteful in supplying
food to their guests. This must
e changed. Waste in the kitchen
nd on the table of larger hotels and
he fashionable clubs as well as in
^rate faraUss nust be cut out. In
rur xour years soutnern wo
men fought a greater fight even than
ihe heroic men who, under Lee and
Jackson, footsore and weary and hungry,
maintained that mighty contest,
i This war may not be fought on our
own soil, but no one dare say that is
impossible. We are fighting the most
terrific war machine, the most ruth
less power the world has ever known,
and no man can say where its blows
.nay strike us.
Our country has summoned its people
to arms to save ourselves and ouv
nation ere it 1 e too late. We hesitated
long. W waited with patience
that seemed er. Hess as ignominy was
heaped upon us and as our people
were murdered, hilling as we were,
behind the English fleet, which was
our only safety. Indeed, as a nation
we were "slackers," sulking behind
hat fleet whic.. alone saved us from
Belgium's fate. VVe covered our eyes
to shut out the light and stopped our
ars, refusing to see the inevitable
ind unwilling to hear the insistent
call of duty.
To many of >ur people all this has
been as plain . s the midday sun for
more than two years, but the vast
majority refus d to see or hear, and
preferred to se:k peace and prosperity
rather than duty and national
salvation. It is never pleasant to look
a desperate situation squarely in thi
face. Every man believes every
other man but himself to be mortal
and subject to the call of death, ra.her
than sternly face the fact that
he, too, may at any moment have to
face death and should be prepared
for it. We believe that in some way
ve were not subject to dangers which
other countries faced, and that we
ould put the thought of national
sickness and death far from us.
At last, howver, through force of
circumstances and the power and
strength of President Wilson's address
to Congress, the nation has been
aroused and 01 - people compelled to
>ee the deadly danger that confronts
us, and the ishonoraable position
in which as a tation we have lived,
willing to he saved hy others without
putting forth any effort to save our
selves. We a e awake now, thank
God, and the r :hty spirit of the nation
thrills wi i new life and a new
sense of resp- nsibility to ourselves
and to the Allies who have saved us
and civilization itself from destruction.
Embarked at last upon the contest
which will settle the destiny of all
mankind for centuries to come, we
must by energy that knows no haling
prepare for the struggle.
these larger hotels and private clubs
an order for meat, for instance, is ]
far more than anyone can eat, and
the balanco is wasted. Every pound
of meat and flour and vegetables 1
must be made to yield the largest re- '
suits. Even if some recklessly ex- <
travagant people should demand for
themselves a continuation of present
wasteful methods, a change must be
nillHp Mn man lt*rr?fV% mmIa
Iany more, and the man or woman
who, merely to notify the appetite
I for super-abundance, continues to
waste at a private table or at a fashionable
hotel or club will be directly
robbing our country and the Allies of
food needed to save Europe and
America from being overrun by the
Huns and barbarians of Germany and
her allies.
We must speed up mentally and
physically all the activities of the nation.
The street corner loafer will be
on a par with the millionaire loafer.
Neither should be permitted. We are
calling to the colors a half million or
more men, to be followed by others
until we have created an ariny of
some millions. These men will be
under the control and restraint of the
Government, compelled to follow the
most rigid discipline and to g-?
through a hardening process which
will tax all of their strength. When |
ney are ready for the contest they
may have to enter into the actual
iighting. Why should the people behind
the lines who are protected by
these men behind the guns live their
accustomed lives without any change
or even control by the Government to
compel them to work in order to pro
duce?
The fighting strength of the nation
is not simply the men who are sent
?ut to battle; it is the coordinated
development and control of the potentiality
of all the people, rich and
poor, young and old.
If all of the people do not willingly
lo their share, it will become incumbent
upon the National Government
to compel them to do it. It is quite
possible to double the effective working
power of the nation if this spirit
>f universal service and determination
to accomplish the largest possible
results shall inspire men and
women of all sections and of all
classes to vie with each other as to
who shall achieve the largest results,
whether it be in pushing forward
foodstuffs or in developing an economic
system in the use of food, or
whether it be in bushing forward
manufacturing and commercial activities,
in creating new industries,
:n developing the latent possibilities
inchemistry and in carrying forward
vigorously and aggressively everyhing
which make for the broadest
levelopment of the agricultural and
, ndustrial interests of the country
md for the rounding out of all national
life in such a way as to I
strengthen the nation for war rather
han to weaken it by war.
Patriotism as expressed in streamnjr
flags from homes and from business
places and in enthusiastic talk
about the country and in encouraging
(thers to enlist for war or to engage
in business pursuits will not be
enough. Every man mutt bear hi*
ihare of the burden and do hi* part
sf the work or be a moral or a physical
"slacker," or both.
TWO THINGS ESSENTIAL
FOR NATIONAL SAFETY
(1) The opposition to conscription
for the army amounts in reality
i.o opposition to our success in war
vvith Germany. It is, moreover,
giving strength to the efforts of the
coward and the slaker to hide behind
the men whose high sense of patriotiim
calls them to the colors.
The only fair and honest stand for
ihe country is to place an equal burden
upon all. To depend upon volunteers
would be to put premium upon
dackers anil throw the whole burden
of the Hrmv'? *1? 1
j w n vl l\ U}J\SII CUV UI UVU
for the benefit of the cowards and
slackers.
(2) For nearly three years we have
} dden behind the British fleet and enjoyed
boundless properity and kept
n safety because that fleet made it
impossible for Germany to invade
ind overrun our country. We have
made billions out of the struggle of
'.he Allies, and as a nation we have
been slackers, letting others protect
us. Common decency and our own
safety alike demand that we give to
the Allies immediately the aid of our
inancial strength by furnishing them
with at least a few billions of money
to help them maintain the fight.
Their defeat would mean our destruction.
Manufactory Keocrd.
$66,500 FROM OLD STOCK
Wisconsin Woman Realizes on Stock
Bought 25 Years Ago and Long
Forgotten.
Milwaukee, Wis.?Twenty-five years
ago Miss M. L. Martin paid 10 cents u
share for f>,000 shares of Heela mining
stock. She forgot the Investment,
changed her name to Mrs. Mary
Humes, and recently, after a search
of years, the company located her under
her new name, paid her $00,500 in
hack dividends, and Informed her that
her stock was worth $8 a share. In '
the early days of the company, when 1
assessments were being levied, John 1
A. Finch, one of the officers, paid the 1
$400 assessments.
i
Fortune to Delivery Boy. ]
Tiffin, O.?The lute Wlllluin Van (
Nest, a retired currlage manufacturer, t
who was found dead recently, by his .
will gives the bulk of his $25,000 es- :
tnte to Lelloy Cadwallader, twenty |
years old, a poor delivery boy. The ' H
ooy had been the favorite companion fl
of the o'.d man and It was he who t
discovered Van Nest's body after Uf? 1
had been extinct several ^ A
' V
No Intorforonco Willi tbo Forms
Prom Charleston News and Courier: I
Whatever changes the entrance of
the United States into the war might
bring, there is one change which it 4
i-annot be allowed to bring. It must
riot diminish the amount of foodstuffs
produced in this country.
That is a phase of the situation
V
which is of primary importance. Secretary
Houston reported to the President
the other day that in the event i
of war the United States could be
self-sustaining in the matter of food.
That hardly requires proof. But the
United States must be more than selfsustaining.
It should produce more
food than it now produces because not
only must it feed other countrie:
as well as itself, but there are im
perative reasons why it must be able I h
to provide food for its own people at
lower prices than those they are now _
paying. , .
Whatever may be the outcome of
the German effort on the sea, it is going
to be destructive of shipping and
damaging to our foreign trade. How
much damage it will do cahnot be
foreseen, but the damage may easily
be great. To a large extent the prosperity
we have enjoyed of late has B
I been due to our foreign trade, to ac
ing open of the routes of comunica C
tion with the Powers of the Entente
If those routes are closed or even V
partially closed, there is no telling
what the effect will be upon the average
American wage-earner. A
Big food crops will remove or mitigate
this danger, big crops which
will provide fod enough for all at a
reasonable price. There is, there
fore, no more important measure ol h
preparedness than the raising of big 1(
food crops. An embargo on exports p
would be folly since it would
jfrnnirt H^..... ? ? 1- ?1- : -
^Mviigvuvu witc x uwcr wiiii wnicn v/i* i
are at war. We must continue to C
feed the Allies as well as ourselves
during the period of the struggle; and b
it is to us that stricken Europe will a
liik after the struggle for the food it f
will need. However much we may
have to alter the regular routine of t
American life to meet the needs of s
war, the changes must not be such as &
to effect unfavorably the output of a
.he farms. On the contrary, that output
must be increased as much as t
possible. v
j
SUCCESSFUL WOMAN LAWYER '
? t
fjjj0 %> \
Am />.>; i
f i 1
f \* *
Ml ss Margaret Hamilton Krvln, Jr., I |i
of Chattanooga, Tenn., a successful
criminal lawyer after two years ami a |
half of practice, Is the only woman lawyer
now practicing In Tennessee who
has appeared before the state supreme
court. Miss Ervln was reared on Lookout
mountain and obtained her legal t
education In Tennessee. She Is presl- t
dent of the Tennessee Equal Suffrage
association and a member of the na- (
tlonal council of the National Amerl- f
can Woman Suffrage association. At ?.
the last Democratic convention she t
sat with the Tennessee delegation. r
t
rODBOnODiTIAM
Of Interest to Chesterfield Readers. '
C
For months Chesterfield citizens l
have seen in these columns enthusias- *
tic praise of Doan's Kidney Pills, by *
residents of this locality. *
Would these prominent people re- ~
commend a remedy that had not pro- E
ven reliable?
Would they confirm their state- "
ments after years had elapsed if per- ^
sonal experience had not shown the
remedy to be worthy of endorsement?
The following statement should
carry conviction to the mind of every
Chesterfield reader: k'
W. A. McCormac, Dillon, S. C.,
says: "I suffered from backache almost
constantly. The kidney secre- m
tions were discolored and filled with ^
sediment. Nothing gave me relief n<
until I used Doan's Kidney Pills. They
topped the backache, strengthened cc
my kidneys and cleared up the kidney
iecretions." (Statement given March 01
5th, l'JOK). di
Over Six Years loiter, Mr. McCor- be
mac said: "I still take Doan's Kidney **
Pills occasionally when my back aches **
>r I have any other signs of kidney c*
rouble and they never fail to re- yc
ieve me." >n
Price 50c, at all dealers. Don't
implv ask for a kidney remedy? ? <
;et Doan's Kidney Pilla?the same w<
hat Mr. McCormac has twice public- or
" r?commeT>d'"i - MUb"**n CM
io.? Prcpa., Buffalo, Nt Y? ?
OVKIOK or |
JOUNTY 8UPERINTENDE"]
OP EDUCATION
K. A. KOU8K
Olflw upon ov??r.v Satnr?'ay and frbt
rat Monday of each month.
DR. R. L. M0MANU8
Dentist
Office over Bank of Chesterfield.
Vill visit Pageland every Tuesday;
Other days in Chesterfield.
Prices reasonable. All work guaranteed.
DR. L. H. TROTTI,
Dental Surgeon
Chesterfield, S. C.
Office 0t>' second floor in Ross
tuilding.
All who desire my services wil\
lease see me at Chesterfield, as I
ave discontinued my visits to other
;wns.
P. A. MURRAY, Jr
Attorney and Counsellor
At. T .O TTT
Office in CourthouBe
JANNA HUNjLEY
?ATTOUNKY8?
?. K Hann? C L Hunle
Chesterfield, 8. O.
Iffice ir Peoples Bank Building
WONDERFUL STUFF!
LIFT OUT YOUR CORNS
ipply a few drops then lift corns or
calluses off with fingers
no pain.
No humbug! Any corn, whether
ard, soft or between the toes, will
>osen right up and lift out, without a
article of pain or soreness.
This drug is called freezone and is
compound of ether discovered by a
lincinnati mun.
Ask at any drug store for a small
ottle of freezone, which will cost but
trifle, but is sufficient to rid one's
eet of every corn or callus.
Put a few drops directly upon any
ender, aching corn or callus. Intantly
the soreness disappears and
hortly the corn or callus will loosen
nd can be lifted off with the fingers.
This drug freezone dosen't eat out
he corns or calluses but shrivels them
iritlhnnt ovnn ipri*ofi?? 1
. ....VMW v.*v?( utiiuviiifc, nit ouiTUunung
skin.
Just think! No pain at all; no sorcioss
or smarting when applyiny it or
ifterwards. If your druggist don't
lave freezone have him order it for
rou.
SHEW CORDITE TO GET TIPSY
Momin and Girls, Munition Worker*
in Great Britain, Uu Explosive
for Exhilaration.
London.?Officials of the ministry of
nunltions have discovered that a i
rood deal of the "drunkenness" afrlbuted
to women and comparatively ,
roung girls Is dn* to another and hlth- I
>rto unsuspected cause?the chew- |
ng of cordite, the smokeless exdoslve
used In the shell of cannon and I
he ammunition of small arms. The I
xploslve Is being used as a sort of
'pick-me-up" by the tired munition '
vorkers, but Its effect on their health 1
s very Injurious and remedial meaaires
are being taken by the authorlI
es.
Cordite, when chewed, has nil the exillnratlng
effects of a highly stlmilatlng
drug and cannot be tampered
vlth except at great risk. Its effect J
>n the nervous system is immediate
ind ultimately deadly. I
Cordite consists roughly of about
8 parts of nitroglycerin. 87 parts gun otton
and 5 parts of mineral Jelly.
5ach cartridge contains 60 cylindrical
itands of cordite.
CIPLING QUITS IN PROTEST
.eaves Society of Authors Because of
Charity Books Published In
Aid of War.
London.?The Times re-prints from
he British Weekly the following exract:
"Rudyard Kipling. Inclosing his
heck for $500 toward the pension
und, has sent his resignation from the
lociety of Authors, on the ground that
he action of the committee and its uc eptance
by his fellow members prove
hat he is altogether out of sympnthy
vlth the present views of the society.
"Mr. Kipling's resignation, which apmrently
Is caused by a difference of
ipinlon as to the charity hooks pubIshed
in aid of the war. Is greatly resetted
by the committee. He haa
?een a member of the society for 26
'ears." ' (i
,VER SALIVATED BY
CALOMEL? HORRIBLE. 1
I
stomal la Quicksilver and Acts Like i
Dyaamite on Your Liver.
Calomel loses you a day! You
now what calomel is. It's mercury;
nicksilver. Calomel is dangerous.
crashes into sour bile like dynaite,
cramping and sickening you.
alomel attacks the bones and should
?ver be put into your system.
When you feel bilious, sluggish,
nstipated and all knocked out and
dieve you need a dose of dangeris
calomel just remember that your
'uggist sells for &0 cents a large
>ttle of Dodson's Liver Tone, which
entirely vegetable and pleasant to
ke and is a perfect substitute for
lomel. It is guaranteed to start
inr liver without stirring you up
sitfte, and can not salivate I
Don't take calomel 1 It makes you
:k the next day; it loses you a day's
>rk. Dodson's Liver Tons straightis
you right up and you feel great,
ive it to the children because It la
?*?cUgr fc*mU? ?? few* ***
- i
I $$ank of "Ci
| Oldest Bank In <
We solicit your business. We p
XCe Jnvite X(ou
Your Patronage wanted.
it will receive cour
SAFETY DEPC
OUR MOTTO: "3TRENGT1
R. E. Rivera, President.
M. J. Hough, Vice-President.
n
] She Seeple
ESTABLISH E
Capital Stock
R B. LANEY, Pres. (
G. K. LANEY,
Vice Pres- & Atty.
We want your business ar
When you come to Chesterfield
pay interest on saving deposits
per anum.
"Chesterfield, - i
Insure the
Happiness of.
Your Little C
Amy parent charged with neglect i
Come indignant. Still there are some
aeglaet to provide for their welfare.
The little onea moat be protected,
t bank oooonnt.
If You Haven't an Acc<
For the Child
The FARME
WANT TO WORK IN ALASKA I
Sixty Thousand Parsons Have Applications
on File for Jobs on the (
Railroad.
Portland, Ore.?Almost 60,000 persons
have applications on file for positions
with the Alaska Engineering 11
commission, which ha* charge of the y
construction of the government's rail- n
road In Alaska. 1
The commission will employ 6,600 v
men In construction work this sura- c
mer, which is au increase of 1,000 over li
mm summers maximum. The Seward t
division will have 1,000 men, the An- p
chorage division 3,500 men, while the d
Nennna division will have 2,000 on the
payroll. li
From present Indications the line to v
Chlckaloon, In the Matanuska coal 1
fields, will be completed by August 1. |
Station work on the 14 miles from s
King's river to Chlckaloon was let this _
winter and construction Is being
rushed.
Plans for the coming season Include
the construction of all bridges la the *
Seward division, so that by next fall 11
the old railroad between Seward and t
Mile 71 will be ready for heavy traffic, t
Preliminary work is now under way j!
for the construction of tbe $900,000 t
railroad bridge across the Susltna p
river at the mouth of Indian creek. h
Requisitions for supplies to the es- c
tlmated value of $1,055,000 have been s
received at the Portland headquarters c
of the commission. 3
MAKES ANNUAL TEST OF COINS _
Qovsrnment Agents' Inspection to
gee If All Are of Standard
Weight.
Philadelphia.?The assay commie- \
mod, wuicn annually comes to the I
Philadelphia mint to examine the
weight and quality of cold and stiver i
joins made during the course of ^
Che year at the mints In Denver, San
Francisco and this city, has begun its a
work here. The commission numbers *
ifteen.
L. A. Fischer of Washington, who Is '
connected with the bureau of stand- ?*
irds, department of commerce, at ^
Washington, was chosen chairman of ,
he commission^ which Is annually ap- j
pointed by the president. 'at
"The object of the commission Is in
co check up on the various mints and m
lee that the coins stamped off are of I
he proper standard," aald Mr. Flsch- I
nr. "Specimens of coins were selected |"V
it random at the various mints during
he course of the year and sent here
for examination. They reach us here ?
rarefully sealed and we welM^iad,
Cest them." k
*
-rl 11 f r' irn
keaterfield
Chesterfield
ay Interest on time depoaita
: tc Visit Us
J
Whether large or small %
teous attention
)SIT BOXES
1 AND SECURITY."
C. C. Douglass, Cashier.
D. L. Smith,' Assist. Cashiar.
======z===E
,9iS iftank | D
IN 1911
: $25,000
j. P. MANGUM, Cashier "
J. A. CAMPBELL, S
Assistant Casheir
id will treat jou right. 2
, come in to see us. We J
at the rate of 4$ per cent *
: |
tfcuth 'Carolina j
i
saa " '
us
mM
)nes!
of hia children naturally will boparents
who, through carelessness,
There is no better protect!on than
>unt Open One Today
lren*s Sake
RS' BANK
HEW HEARSE WITH DISTRUST
inglish Farmers Prefer Ordinary
Wagons for Coffins at Funeral
Services.
London.?The hearse, although by no
neaiiH a modern invention, baa not
et penetrated Into some of the re- ^? - -1
note country districts of England.
?he coffin of the late duke of Norfolk
idien It arrived from London at his
ouutry estate at Arundel was not put
n a hearse, for none was available
here, but according to custom was
laced In an ordinary farm wagon and
irawn by four horses to the castle.
In many parts of agricultural Rngnnd
the use of a hearse Is regarded
vlth distrust, the farmers' theory beng
that "tha Lord's harvest!^ when
fathered should be carrtM^At. thd
a me way as xnua's harvggt?T
How'iTtaisf? |
Ws offer One Hundtud DonttrBtrard
tor any case ot Catarrh that tenot
be cared by Hairs Catarrh Cuke.
Hall's Catarrh Cura has been taken
>y catarrh sufferers for tj)p*i>ast
hlrty-tlve years, and has Jpecome
:nown as ths most rsllabls remedy for
iatarrh. Hall's Catarrh Curs aots thru
hs Blood on tho Mucous surfaces, spelling
the Polsoh from tha Blood and
ealing the diseased portions
After you have taken Hall's Catarrh
lure for a short time you wlU see a
rest Improvement In your general
ealtb. Start taking Hall's Catarrh
!urs at ones and get rid of Catarrh,
end for testimonials, free.
F. J. CHUNKY & CO.. Toledo, Ohio.
Sold by all Druggists, 76c.
onditioo Powders
A high-class remedy for horses
id mules in poor condition and
need of a tonic. Builds solid {
uscle and fat; cleanses the aysm,
thereby producing a smooth
ossy coat of hair. Packed hi
mm. 25o? fcos. Sold bar
D. H. LANEY
POULTRY WANTED