University of South Carolina Libraries
*" : t v, ' ' # The Chesterfield Advertiser PITBI.T8HKD KVKHY T1IU11S1>AY Subscription, $1.00 a year. \d verttsinir rules furnished on application. Kntered us second-class mutter ut the postoitico ut Chesterfield, South Cumlina. r.\n. n. iii:\i;x Kditor and Publisher. vr vy Mlfc/ RETURNS TO HIS FIRST LOVE. It will be remei cred th;it Col. (Icorge Harvey, former cdi,or ol Harper's Weekly, an 1 now editor of the North American Review, at one time bitterly criticized I'resid -at Wilson, He was an original Wilson man ?in fact has the credit of fir.st suggesting the Princeton man foi President of the United Slates. Well, after criticizing President Wilson and his policies in very strong language. Col. Harvey comes back to his lirst love. I his paragraph, in Col. Harvey's be: i s'.nh. atones for h;s past fault finding and is a fine tribute to tin President. "Whether Woodrow Wilson hasbeen 'out the child of fate, doing as lie was bidden by events, or whather he saw all that was and foresaw all lhat would be, and chose the psychological moment for each decision he finally struck when the iron was hot, struck bravely, sublimely, and then and there made himself intellectually and morally the foremost man of all the world." V/ H Y NO! HAVE A BAND CONCERT? It has boon sujjko.-loi! that Ohostorliohl arranjjo for a l>an<l cancel" oiio evening a wook. Thoro is al roaily a platform on tho oourihous lawn and it will require vory liltlo ox ponso to cloan oil' the lawn and place benches around to aeooinodalo the pooplo. The hand is now able t> make vory ajrrooablo musio. The band will lion: lie. by a wee-kly publa porfornsanoo and such a jrathorinjr o. tho pooplo will bo of so'i.o aid dovol opine; a bottor oonnnui ity spirit. Thi is a jjood |c|oa. -hall we- put it into of foot? The first dollar to defray ox ponsc ha.- a!r >i> I,. :> -ui. -< dad. Xioholas L"!;1: >! th, inonibor ol Cohjnos-, and . > < -ih-l;\v of ox I'ivsi don! Koc.a\o.t, in.aio .hi- statoilioi! ia a I'c c i . . , c i i i.ich ho sup pot cod :'ri.;d W.1 on's oiiiol'v one; bond i suo. i . : . r.<.rili r< forrin; to < 'c i. Itco.. 1:'. ro > .a vi. '.i i< ]"i'o idollt \N i: on ad: ' vVo a I o ao t.i: v. I day not as par lisans, not a- i?. i?. . a: r Ib.publi cans, but oi. y a . .day . ho I?< !'!!>ni* ?I i.-ai ho *i?>11 par tisan spirit of :!i in.i \v: ihuiiil antly illusti.. -i . t- . i\ ,1/> whohi . Ol.st Olillil ' I if no lt.o.- hilt or 1 . , < ,; i upon lh* I'ros.iii li? of '.< I .11.1 owr ? ! t. i ii ' 'I ".im t? : cr ,'i.s it. <' ' h.-ai ? ?I support." 'Iho ; ?tu : 111 :;A. ?ii M its best to 1 in 'i!'. 0 ! mi.- i ni-ci- . .iy to n. i- s.w.'ui sup K<stiori; "li tin p-i.'-r. hoys, if tin k .isiT shou' 1 ,j? 1. 'i,.- coiinvr you uon 1 ii.. . , n <? ii ii (jorman." Itlll < -.?-11 - I Wo i..i 1 1 Ill I' spoil fJonnai) \\ <.ro . i;,.i, . 11 1 n-paa. choo.ic*. REfilSTRATION DAY N/'. 1 iONAI. iiOI.JDA".Wnshinppon. .\i.iy ('< . sir. tiou D:.y for ani.< - ! i . ?vill h. l.i iilo I ii - III . . o p |>.11 -iI);.. cI thiis'nsa in ail 00it11111111 i(io- tio ro-.iiit ry. .i ui>o -? 1 - 1 !;o (Into ' h a proo'amal ion of ho I' -vm . i 1: anioun's .0 11.1 - a 1 - ; i ; holnlay 011 llio o .! . ' a i f. ci'il ir\ Itakor. < i i;r:noa >f I < a i <> Nat ioi a! ! ) !' . . I Si* i 1:. ( . 11 . 1.- ' I I ! i'i - i 1 .1 t li>- ioa'l with tin' a. 111 . . 11.0 ( iii.it>. 1 oI ( o.',..io-1 co 1.1 1 i; 1 I S a! ( ami tl.o lil.'ioua! 1 . ii to- - of n-i.Polii ami <l< ffiisr .mm- , i.i :c i I:i it mi ninr .I>ie hi . a On Ihe i'\ t 11<i'. h r? :: enthusiastic iw. tration of evorai million im ii will i i im. c-Ij ! ten tin- 'lay of |? aim. ; .i? :.ii < !' l>r.? , ? will lie the orili r of tl.? day. 1'hesi rail a will ho fur t h?- purpo.-e of do inn' honor to those who ? iri. ' r. Th'-iv will he t alks h\ yo. er iior-, iua.v< r presidents of camber. of commerce, a..'I others, all sounding the h, ii noii of patriotism. co-operat: j f. canni.rt .Mr. 15- J. iJouirla will this sun. nier operate his bit* e.. n r, on Manpijiii avenue, near Depot -.r . \\ are j^lad to make this annoum- .< at as the facilities there oifi red ;n ih. canning of j/ordi o prmiuee will hi oi preat value to the peopie. See Mr. Doie-la; : and make atrnn^enient r.ients to save all youi fruits and \e;.etahh that you .are not able to consume or sell. TEETrl WANTED Old false teeth; don't matter if broken. I pay $1 to $10 per set. \ Send by parcel post and receive check ^ . x by return muil. F. Terl, 40d iNortii ^^^^^Voi/eSt^Baltimore, Md. > UNITED STATES HAS GREAT OPPORTUNITY But Congress Passes The Time Away In Oratorical Flim Flam The United States, the savior of the world, the restorer of imperiled democracy! How often we have heard that said since the war began. How many of us have never taken it seriously nor stopped to understand what it really means. They understand in France, j I have a letter from Paris about that and it gives a rather different im(pression of the feelings of the French ! people from the news despatches. 1 You have read how the American Hag was displayed everywhere in France and everywhere was cheered with boundless enthusiasm, how the French government from the president down gave us the warmest welcome, and what affecting tributes to this country were printed in the French press. But this letter tells me that all this did not begin to express the profound emotions of the French people, for nothing can adequately express them. They were touched by the though of America and France side by side lighting for a great cause, touched by the expressions of American sympathy, touched by President Wilson's wonderful address, which has become the French bible of democracy. And still there was something else regarded by French statesmen, hinkcrs and skilled observers as the .nost wonderful of all. It was this, that the United States vas unselfish. About its aims there was no taint ,?f the sordid or the mean. It had no <>rr:f !< I .l.wi r...l imn.. 0 grab. It was aloof from all the lists that for centuries animated all die governments of Kurope. For reasons above anything ever known in European history it had entered upon 1 war in which it had absolutely notli mg t<? gain. Also one other thing: Since the time when France, threatni d with destruction by the German .lonh was driven against all her i"Piv to take up arms to save her life, ne I nited States was the only nation hat had entered the war without barami ig or stipulation. \Yi n every other government on uth sides it had been necessary to .e:.er, to make arrangements, to offer nducemeiits or at least to give mutciai reasons. \\ 1 li the United States not a word as exchanged. It asked for nothng, suggested no terms, hinted at no 'Urgain, ottered no conditions. When the time came it went forth o make war because of a conviction f duty and the feeling that not otlir.vis. could society be preserved or .belly be rescued. It aid this, the French point out, . .'.lin ing the most tremendous bur.ens of cost, sacrifice and debt, that _ in!;1 ill oe iriu- lo ilscll, its laitn and lu- welfare of mankind. i I: .1 they say thai a nation having hen hi tlu* world such an example d' high aims and disinterested puro.-< stands in a position of majestic iv.it and influence, and will, if it Ms on change ail the course of all >. plomai y and all the internationI tela'.ions <d' the world. Hitherto all these things have been n 111? ife-cohl philosophy of cut n'o.ii . if the I niled Stales keeps s w< rd and wavers not from the nt a i' litis announced, that old basis in no . i r come i?aek, and man in ti ear i tips l irwards the distance of en tunes. It i irue. what these sympathetic r.uichmen have so quickly perceived, id d is a truih to make us most iber, tlmughful tmd diligent that we poti whom litis fallen this greatest of I opportunities in till human records > mm c (Jod and man should never .ii in the slightest particular to be .yal to the task that has been enlisted lo us. If for tiie sake of profit or comfort r tii.a'ili >n, or because of mental is, v\e tail short, and chaos comes rain in the world, we shall he re lonsitile to the end of time. For lh< uty was laid upon us and we shirked it. Hat, brethren, we shall never make null on that duty nor think of our Ives again as worthy of freedom or f any place in history but a place of .litinc, il now we allow congress to .1 to tho gulden moments in fiddle addle, idle debate, the schemes of .-.loyalty or the schemes of personal mhition. Our opportunity is withering in our ..an ds. At such a time talk is foolish. . h> re is nothing to talk ahout. We now I ho joli we have to do, it lies erfei ly open before us. While in ongrc s men patter and pose, France s heiiitc massacred and Great Britian i.-K ! hy disaster. Six weeks iave p ed in oratorical flini flam. t is now high time for ction. Ail we hem ve and all we love and i! we hope for is at stake. The ieeision rests with us. It is the swift punch that does the lUsiness! What h The Security For A Liberty Loan Bond? The faith and honor of tho United tales, hacked by all of the resources >f the Nation and the American people. A Liberty Loan Bond is a mort<age on all the resources and taxing (powers of the Government and all of NOTICE OF GENERAL ELECTION IN CHERAW TOWNSHIP FOR MEMBER OF BOARD OF PUBLIC WORKS Notice is hereby given that on Tuesday, the 5th day of June next, an election will be held in Cheraw Township, Chesterfield County, South Carolina, for a member of the Board of Public Works for said Township, the term for which Mr. J. W. Covington was elected having expired. Polls will open at 7 o'clock a. m. and close at 4 o'clock p. m., and the following have been appointed managers of said election: Cheraw?R. N. Stricklin, G. W. Ginn, T. B. Watson. The law governing General Elections will be followed in every particular. Managers will please designate one of their number to call at the Court House for boxes and instructions on or before Monday, June 4fh. - '!? ? * manuKfiN win select tneir own clerk. J. N. Stricklin, It. M. Myers, J. O. Taylor, Commissioners of State and County Elections for Chesterfield County. NOTICE OF SPECIAL GENERAL ELECTION IN JEFFERSON TOWNSHIP FOR MEMBER OF BOARD OF PUBLIC WORKS. Notice is hereby given that on Tuesday, the 5th day of June next, an election will be held in Jefferson Township, Chesterfield County, South Carolina, for a member of the Board of Public Works for said Township, to fill out the unexpired term of R. A. Griffith, resigned. Polls will open at 7 o'clock a. m. and close at 4 o'clock p. m. and the following have been appointed managers to conduct said election: Jefferson?W. M. Miller, C. A. Baker and Lewis Ilorton. Catarrh?C. C. Ilorton, B. E. Funderburk and Win. Raley. Angelus?I). A. Clark, J. E. Lee and W. L. Ilorton. The law governing General Elections will be followed in every particular. Managers will please designate one of their number to call at the Court House for boxes and instructions on or before Monday, June 4th. clerk. J. N. Stricklin, R. M. Myers, J. O. Taylor, Commissioners of State and County Elections for Chesterfield County. Dirty Windows and Poor Eyes. The factors largely responsible for poor Illumination are sinull, narrow windows, low power artificial lights placed too far from the point of operation, and neglect of facilities at hand for obtaining light, according to the Pennsylvania Department of Labor and Industry. By this neglect Is meant lack of cleanliness. This applies first of all to the windows. There Is scarcely a single Industrial locality which does not contain at least one building, and all too frequently several buildings of the same type. They nre built with a supply of window space sufficient to illuminate amply the Interior. The dust and dirt accumulated upon them, however, destroy in large proportion their usefulness. The same condition Is found in artificial lighting. The electric light bulb, dusty or streaked with dirt, the result of hurried and incomplete attempts at wtisning, orton shaded with a fixture meant t<? he a reflector, hut which lu reality 1h anything hut that, faintly illuminates the work and impairs the health and the efficiency of the worker.?Scientific American. The Eccentric Chinece. Petroleum may he n thing for which one's taste has to he cultivated. At any rate, the Chinese dislike the smell and touch of It so badly that they are much In the situation of the people who seventy-five years ago had salt works In western Pennsylvania?they abominate the petroleum and abandon a well when the proportion of oil to brine Rets high. Their repugnance for crude petroleum may he measured by the fact that in China it takes from one to three generations to bore a well! For the refined products of petroleum they have no such aversion, or even for the tin cans In which they get it from the United States, making out of the latter a source of almost as many of the necessaries of life as a South Sea islanders finds In his favorite coconut palm.?The Nation's Business. A THOROUGH TEST One To Convince the Moit Skeptical wnotierncia rieauer. The test of time is the test that counts. Doan's Kidney Pills have made heir reputation by effective action. The following case is typical: Chesterfield residents should be convinced. The testimony is confirmed?the proof complete. Testimony like this cannot be ignored. J. N. Stricklin, editor of Chronicle, Creen St., Cheraw, S. C., says: "I have used Doan's Kidney Pills for kidney trouble and a lame nnd aching hack and they have given me he best of relief. 1 have found them o lie just as represented and I consider them a fine kidney medicine." (Statement given in Dec. 1910.) On December, 10, 1914, Mr. Strick'in said: "I still use Doan's Kidney Pills whenever I need a kidney medicine and they always benefit me." Price f>0c, at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy? get Doan's Kidney Pills?the same lhat Mr. Stricklin has twice publicly recommended. Foster-Milburn Co., Props., Buffalo, N. Y. Has Stopped Losing Time From Work GRATITUDE OF BOTH HUSBAND AND WIFE IS WON WIFE GIVES DETAILS Mrs. Finley Say* They Were Enabled To Increase Happiness And Income. "Both my husband and myself think Tanlac is a very fine medicine, because it did so much toward restoring our health and strength," declared Mrs. A. 0. Finley, of Drayton. S. C., a suburb of Spartanburg, in a statement she gave on March 29th. "I suffered from generally weakened system ana i was very nervous when I began taking Tanlac. I was troubled a lot with sleeplessness, and my appetite had about left me. I felt tired all the time and I almost had to drive myself to do my housework. "My husband took Tanlac for indigestion and a generally run down system. When he started taking Tanlac, he was almost past going and he did not eat anything at all hardly. 1 have seen him go to the table and turn sick at the sight of food. "The Tanlac gave us both excellent results. It quited my nerves and gave me a fine appetite. I got stronger and began to feel fine in a short time, and the medicine regulated and strengthened my system. "My husband only took one bottle of Tanlac, and that got him in such fine shape he went back to work when the bottle was taken, and he had not been able to work for three weeks when he began taking it. It gave him a good appetite and stopped the indigestion and built up his system. Hn tool^ Tnnlsm Inct QnnlnmKAv >"'! 1 - - uvpvtM.uo a..I. j he has not lost a day's work since." Tanlac, the Master Medicine, is sold by The Chesterfield Drug Co., Chesterfield, S. C.; T. E. Wannamaker & Sons, Cheraw; Alt. Croghan Drug Co., Mt. Croghan, S. C.; McBee Drug Co., McBee, S. C.; Pageland Drug Co., Pageland, S. C.; J. T. Jowers & Sons, Jefferson, S. C. Adv. What la The Nature Of A Liberty Loan Bond? There are two kinds of Liberty Loan Bonds. Bearer Bonds are to be issued in denomination of $50, $100, $500, and $1,000. These Bearer Bonds, which are made payable to bearer, having interest coupons attached which are detached by the holder when the interest installments they represent are due, and can be cashed at any bank the same as a United States Trimsnru not.. Registered bonds are to be issued, which are registered as to both principal and interest, in denominations of $100, $500, $1,000, $5,000, $10,000, $50,000, and $100,000; checks for the amount of interest due will be mailed out semi-annually to the holders of these registered bonds. A Washington man tells of a dinner at a hotel in that city at which were a number of men interested .n various reforms. About the most conspicuous of these was a man who talked loudly against both vivisection and the eating of meat. He afforded great interest to a certain obscure physician. Toward the end of the dinner the latter leaned forward and said to the man first mentioned. "Pardon me, but am 1 not to understand that you are both an anti-vivisection isl and a vegetarian?" "Your understanding is correct." "Then," continued the doctor, "you will probably be greatly shocked to learn tiiat you have just eaten a live caterpillar with your lettuce salad." ?New York Globe. "I)o you think that the automobile will displace the horse?" asked the conversational young woman. "It will," answered the nervous young man, as he gazed down the road, "it it ever hits him."?Passing Show. YES! LIFT A CORN OFF WITHOUT PAIN! Cincinnati authority tell* how to dry up a corn or callua so it lift* off with finger*. You corn-pestered men and women need suffer no longer. Wear the shoes that nearly killed you before, says thisCincinnati authority, because a few drops of freezone applied dercctly on a tender, aching corn or callus, stops soreness at once and soon the corn or hardened callus loosens so it can be lifted out, root and all, without pain. A small bottle of Freezone costs very little at any drug store, but will positively take off every hard or soft corn or callus. This should be tried, as it is inexpensive and is said not to irritate the surrounding skin. If your druggist hasn't any freezone tell him to get a small bottle for you from his wholesale drug house. It is fine stuff and acts like a charm very time. I-Adv. COUNTY SUPERINTENDED j OF EDUCATION H A. ROUSE Office open every Hutnr ay and the firm Monday of each month. DR. R. L MeMANUS Den tint Office over Bank of Chesterfield. Will visit Pageland every Tuesday; Other days in Chesterfield. Prices reasonable. All work guaranteed. DR. L. H. TROTT1, Dental Surgeon Chesterfield, S. C. Office on second floor in Ross Building. All who desire my services wil\ ( please see me nt Chesterfield, as I 1 have discontinued my visits to other towns. P. A. MURRAY, /r A!t.iriirv and Ominspllor At Law Office in Courthouse HANNA & HUN LEY ?ATTOUNKYS? R. K. Hanna C L HunleChesterfield, S. 0. Office lr Peoples Bank Building GIRLS HAVE PRETY FACE AND BEAUTIFUL COMPLEXION An Atlanta man makes new discovery that makes an old face look years younger. If your skin is dark, brown, or covered with freckles or blemishes, just use a little Cocotone Skin Whitener; it's made with cocoanut oil and is perfectly harmless. A few day's use will improve your looks 100 per cent. The wornout skin comes off evenly, leaving no evidence of the treatment, the new healthy underskin appearing as a lovely new complexion. Just ask your druggist for an ounce of Cocotone Skin Whitener, and if he will not supply you send 25 cents to The Cocotone Co., Atlanta, Ga., and they will send you a box by return mail. If your hair is hard to comb, is bml... ? .1 ...111 ..1 rwnrvj, iic*|J|/y tlllU Will llt'VtT SUiy straight, just use Cocotone Hair Dressing and it will become straight, long, soft, glossy and beautiful in a few days. Mail orders filled, 25 c for large box.?Adv. SWEET POTATOES MAY BE PLANTED AS LATE AS JULY West Raleigh, N. C. May 6, 1917. Gentlemen,? "For a week I have tried to find time to write an article urging the farmers to plant heavily of sweet potatoes. If the war continues for another year the production of human food crops will be a serious problem not only in the South but throughout the world. The Northwest has annually been supplying the South with hundreds of millions of dollars worth of food necessities to feed the people of the South. The enormous quantities of food that the United States have been shipping to Europe must continue and hardships are inevitably coming if the war continues six months longer. There is no crop grown in the South that will furnish as much food value per ncre or so cheaply as will the sweet potato. A dollar's worth of sweet potatoes used as human food has practically double the food value of a dollar's worth of wheat and corn. An acre of average land in sweet potatoes will produce more food than two acres of corn and more than four acres of wheat in the cotton belt. owt'ci potatoes may dc planted as late as July and yield twice as much , human food as corn on land of aver- ^ age fertility. It is the most impor- > tant crop that the South can now ; grow, and there remains May, June ; and a part of July in which this crop may be planted. I "The sweet potato has higher food value than the Irish potato, and I it is now too late to plant the latter with an assurance of success, and then there is practically no seed i available. There is ample sweet potato I seed available, and a bushel of sweet potatoes will produce plants enough to plant from six to ten times as much land as a bushel of Irish. "An acre of land that will produce 15 or 20 bushels of corn, H to 12 bushels of wheat, or 150 to 200 pounds of lint cotton will produce 50, and may produce K0 or 100 bushels of sweet potatoes, depending upon the good preparation of the soil and good fertilizers. No crop will yield so much per acre of so high a food value on so poor a land as will this highly nutritious root crop. Sweet potatoes may follow the various early truck and farm crops harvested in May and June, such as cabbage, Irish potatoes, etc.. small trrain crimson i'lnu?r ?.?#. "In view of the scarcity of potash I would recommend for sweet potatoes between 6fHT~7?nd 1200 pounds of a fertilizer analyzing 8 to 10 per cent, of phosphoric acid, and 2 to 4 per cent, of nitrogen. On very thin land I would use the higher per cent, of nitrogen, and on better land the lower per cent. Yours sincerely, C. L. Newman, M. S. Professor of Agriculture. $100 Reward, $100 The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there Is at least one dreaded disease that science has l>ean shin to cure In all Its stage*, and that la catarih. Catarrh being greatly influenced by constitutional conditions raquirea constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken Internally and acta thru the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of the System thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature In doing Ita work. The proprietors have so much faith In the curative powers of Hall's Catarrh Cura that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that It faila to cure. Sand for list of testimonials. Addraoo: W. J. CIIKNBT * CO.. Toledo. onto. Sots by au DruggtoUk t?o. Mpfr *""<* "" * ? * ^an/c cf X?i Oldest Bank In < We solicit your business. We | ZiV Jnvite Xlca j Your Patronage wanted. it will receive cour SAFETY DEPC OUR MOTTO: "STRENGTi R. E. Rivera, President. M. J. Hough, Vice-President. B zr < I if he 9ecpk ESTABLISH B Capital Stock R B. LANKY, Pres. ( 1 G. K. LANKY, 2 Vice Pi es* & Atty. J We want your business ar When you come to Chesterfield J pay interest on saving deposits J per anum. j 'Chesterfield, - < Young Man, Scatter Yc YOUTH IS PRODIGAL. Frequ KNOW THE VALUE OF A DOLLA1 YOUTH IS NOT EVERLASTING, the foundation for their success by oj ; were young. If You Hope to Amou Delay Starting a Bank A Start It Today. The FARME What I* A Liberty Loan Bond? A Liberty Loan Bond is a solemn promise of the United States to pay p at maturity the amount of the bond to the holder thereof, and to pay in terest semi-annually each from the date of the issuance of the bond until it is fully and finally paid. _ I A KSSVOilS WRECK J From Three Years' Suffering. Sayi J Cardui Made Her WeO. t Texas City, Tex.?In an interesting * statement, Mrs. G. H. Schill, of thistown, * snys: "For three years I suffered untold agony with my head. I was unable to do any of my work. i I I just wanted to sleep all the time, for that was the only ease I could get, when I was asleep. I became a nervous wreck ji'.st from the awful suffering with my head. I wa3 so nervous that the least noise / would make me jump out of my bed. 1 had no energy, and was unable to do anything. My son, a young boy, had to j do all my household duties. 1 i 1 was not able to do anything until t J J took Cardui. I took three bottles in all, ; and it surely cured me of those awful I headaches. That has been three years I . . .. s . ; ?'o?, unu i Know wie cure is permanent, for I have never had any headache since 1 faking Cardui. . . ' Nothing relieved mc until I took Cardui. It did wonders for me." Try Cardui for your troubles? made from medicinal ingredients recommended in medical books as being of benefit in female troubles, and 40 years of use has 1 proven that the books are right. Begin taking Cardui today. NC-134 ? * % % Used 40 Years J CARDIli 3 The Woman's Tonic % e Sold Everywhere ? _ _ r.9 k jfl I ??? I . kedteriield 1| Chesterfield I nay interest on tfnre dcpcfit J i to Visit Us 1 Whether large or small JRm teous attention )SIT BOXES I 4 AND SECURITY." j | \ C. C. Douglass, Cashier. I D. L. Smith, Assist. Cashier. j iQank 1 I) IN 11)11 | : $25,000 I 3. P. MANGUM, Cashier | J. A. CAMPBELL, S Assistant Casheir Z id will treat \ou right. , come iu to see us. We at the rate of per cent $euth Carolina | " Don't * mr Dollars! i ently the young man DOESN'T i. The big men of the country laid ' tening a bank account when they * I mt to Anything Don't ccount. , ; US' BANK ; Watch the label on your aper. It tells when your ime is out A 3 ^reserve Your Complexion lie easy, pleasing way by using Magnolia Balm before and after \ ?utings. You can fearlessly face he sun, wind and durft because rou know Magnolia Balm keeps 1 ou safe from Sunburn and Tan. ^ This fragrant lotion iswonderfully y^tVr^i' soothing, cooling ancl a Kreat com- I fort after a day outdoors. ^ ^ J Magnolia Balm is" A yr? the skin-saving ( y beauty secret 4 // 1/" 'H which is regularly ''fl V^l used when once 'i y tried. Magnolia Balm LIQUID FACE POWDER. Pink. Whit*. Wot* Red. 75c. at 'Pniggltb or by rnall direct. Sample (either color) for 2c. Stamp. .yon Mf*. Co., 40 South Fifth St., Brooklyn,N. Y. iKSSk. ' ^ ASHCRAFTS Condition Powders A high-class remedy for horses <4||H u.M fliultl in poor condition and V n need of a tonic. Builds soli. jfl nusclc and fat; cleanses the ay* | em, thereby producing a smooth | (lossy coat of hair. Packed ifi \ k>MS 25c. box- fioU bf A D. H. LANEY POULTRY WANTED M IJMLLBUY Chickens, Hens, Geese, Jfl