The Chesterfield advertiser. [volume] (Chesterfield C.H., S.C.) 1884-1978, July 19, 1917, Image 2

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I? I 11" 111. I r. II . . The Chesterfield Advertiser "rUBUSHED EVERY THURSDAY Subscription, 11.00 a year. Entered an second-class matter at the pnstofHee at Chestcrlleld, South Curollna. PAUL H. IIBARK Kdltor and Publisher. w . r There are about sixty thousand German prisoners interned in England and about forty thousand English prisoners in Germany. The Kaiser would probably like to exchange prisoners if he could on even swap. And now it is proposed to put a tax on dogs?not only to reduce the number <>f worthless dogs but to make lite goo.i dogs do their bit by becoming tax payers. A sugar refining plant is being located at Savannah. The plant will cost $2,000,000 and will begin operation at once. This is the second sugar refinery in tlie South, the other being in New Orleans. SHALL IT BE BKEAD OR LIQUOR? In a speech favoring prohibition Congressman Clyde Kelly said: "I have a handbook issued by the wholesale Liquor Dealers Association in which I find the following: 'According to the United States Statistical Abstract there are dOU.OOO farmers raising corn, barley, rye hops, and fruits that go into the production of liquor. When you hear a prohibi tion speech you would imagine that only corn, and a small percentage 1 that, is used. The brewers and <1 i ; tillers of I'e oria alone consume tht entire surplus corn et?>p <>f Iowa ami Illinois, after feedii and seeding Figure up what that means in dollar, ami cents to the farmers of the coun try.' " Mr. Kelly comments upon this statement as follows: "Here is wa:d< of enough food yearly to furnish at army of 7,(tub,POP men. The liquet trallic wastes each dav 1 1,0(>t),00( loaves of broad." An army of citizens as well as soldiers need this bread. On July 7, not long after this speech was delivered, the market reports from Chicago had tin- statement that corn prices had hurst all restraint and had reached the highest level yet after a week that overtopped all previous records. This report is from Illinois, a Stat< in which not many year.- airo corn was so cheap it was used for fuel. GERMANY'S SUBMARINE DISAPPOINTMEN1 The failure of the German submarine navy to ombaras. the transportation of American troops across the Atlantic is hut one chapter in a history of dinppoiniment. The lirst of July was the date fixed by Albert Hal lin, the German shipping magnate, for the conclusion of peace by means of ruthless warfare on the merchant marine of the Entente Allies. As an offset ,o the failure of this rash prophecy, the German Admiralty has recently published ealeulations to the effect that of ten million ton of shippine available for British use more than half had been destroyed by tinfirst of June and from ? itrht hundred thousand to a million more tons were being eliminated each month. Marshal von iIindenberg eonliilently mkmti.s (.11:11 11 iiH* armies 01 mo 1 <'ii trill Power run even hold their own the German submarines will win the war. The weekly report of shipping losses issued l.y the Mritish Government shows that fifteen ships of over llitlil tons were sunk and live ships of smaller tonnage. Sixteen ships were unsuccessfully attacked. During the same period arrivals at IJritish ports were 274a end sailings 2?4ti. No week since that ending June has shown so few losses and only twice since February have fewer larger shi|is been destroy d. The French Government has announced the loss of fourteen merchant ships during the month of June and the escape of twenty others which were attacked ly the Germans. During the same I eriod the French patrol vessel? fought thirty-one engagements with enemy submarines and French seaplanes made eight attacks on them. What measure of success was attained in these contests is unknown. An American transport joined the Portuguese shore batteries in repelling the attack of a German submarine on the port of Ponta Delgada in theh Azores. Teacher "What happens when a man's temperature goes down as far ss it can go?" Scholar: "He has cold feet ma'am." "Father, dear, do you consider it 1 oful to be envious of others?" "Of ? )urso I do Helen. Extremely so." ' Then I'm afraid I'll have to get a MB ' A : : : The : : Scarcity of Labor: Makes farming on a large scale 2 nearly impossible. Employ us 0 to subdivide your farm into | small tracts. We can find the buyers quickly, converting your land into cash and interest bear- | ing notes. Our representative j will call to see you at our ex- ; 9 prnse, and explain our method. Offices: : Atlantic Coast Realty Co.: "The name that justifies your ? ' confidence" * J Petersburg, Va., and Green- a viMe, N. C. 2 p O UPSIDE DOWN IN A CLOUD t'apl. H. C. Hucks, the famous air! man, during a lecture on three years' llyi )<r progress at the Royal Society of ^ \its on Wednesday, .tune described a thrilling adventure in a dense cloud. ; He was explaining Ihe need for some instrument which will show an airman I up in the clouds that he is flying on ja level keel. "i set out on a very cloudy, windy day to do a test climb to 1O.Ut'P feci, on a late type two seater. On reaching 1,200 feet we got into dense rail cloud, but carrie 1 on to beyond b.OOO Vet, stil! in cloud, when the coinpas apparently began to swing t.?e.dly it is the machine that begins so aging, not the compass), and efforts to check the compass had the effect of can ing it to swing violently in the other direction. The air speed then rushed up far beyond normal flying speed; all efforts to pull her up checked her only slightly; then the rudder , we tried, back went the air speed to , y.ere; there was an unsual, canny feel| ing <>f being detached from the ina' I chine, and I knew her to he literally ' j tumbling about in the clouds. All ef ! forts to settle down again to a ',slraight flight seemed to be unavail" ing until we emerged from the cloud wry nearly upside down. Assuming ' control again was then an easy mat' ter. 1 "A few days ago a squadron commander told me that on one occasion ' n IliMi ill l<'r:i io?i> nvorvlliituf It. til.* machine fell out when in a cloud. A 1 week or so ago, on the south coast, a machine disintegrated in a cloud and the main plane landed a half mile from the fuselage. In a cloud you see nothing whatever hut your machine. There is no fixed point visible." Measured by the advance in flying, 1 the last three years, Capt Ilucks said, had been a veritable lifetime. "The - rate of improvement in aircraft is so 4 fast, the pace so alarmingly rapid, that is it almost impossible for manufacturers to keep the pace for it seems that by the time the latest and most efficient type of machine is manufactured in sufficient largo numbers to gratify half the requirements of the service, that type is out of date , and obsolete. Capacity for quickly climbing to a rent height was the most marked development in the modern machine. At the beginning of the war the average height flown on active service was 1, nun to fi.OOO feet, simply because few of the machines then in us" with the impediments carried could get mueh higher. Today a height of 20,000 feet is, I believe, on certain occasions, reached, and it is fairly certain that if progress continues at its present .ate, heights a great deal beyond this figure will be reached as a usual thing. The effects of the rarefied air began to be felt at a height of about 10,000 feet. "Breathing becomes affected, respiration shorter and quicker, there . .. . ..|i|/ivaaivi: IM-Mfwu ION ami i hulking feeling in the* head until the height of about 20,000 is reached." A NERVOUS WRECK From Three Years' Suffering. Says Cardui Made Her Well. Texas City, Tex.?In an interesting statement, Mrs. G. H. Schill, of this town, , says: "For three years I suffered untold agony with my head. I was unable to | do any of my work. I just wanted to sleep all the time, for ' tint was the only ease I could get, when I was asicep. 1 became a nervous wreck : just from tlio awful suffering with my i head. i 1 was so nervous that the least noise | w ould make me jump out of my bed. I had no energy, and was unable to do . anything. My son, a young boy, had to \ do all my household duties. I was not able to do anything until I , look Cardui. I took three bottles in all, i and it surely cured me of those awful headaches. That has been three years ago, and 1 know the cure is permanent, for I have never had any headache since taking Cardui. .. Nothing relieved me until 1 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 proven that the books are right Begin V, - ' WQQcWr* ' ^ . r-~. * '; ' r^J' ff '*V' EDUCATION OUR GREATEST NEEI " * Produces Highest Ordor c Manhood, Says Dr. Hillis. AMERICANIZE' FOREIGNER By Rev. Dr. NPWELL DWIGHT HILLIS. Past* of Plymouth Church, Brooklyn, N. Y. "What Is tli Matter With Or Education? ^ Study of Inte R ^ icctual Preparet K&|PgPPp| Hess," was t h v i subject of nnotl - or of the serk of sermons by 11 V'sf <; ftu^^aaaH dom Is more pn clous than rubic rev. i>it. m:\veli. n"d knowledg dwiuiit iiii.i.is. tlinn much lb gold." Our fathers canio to this new worl bo'iinso they denied the right of Kin James to rule ny man's life save li own. Winthrop. Brewster and the associates each proposed to be 1)is ow king, and they trained their sons I rule themselves. But the men wl signed the compact in the cabin of tl Mayflower were under no delusion i to the ditlicultics involved in educatln men for self government. They kne right well that Prince Charles in li palace was being educated from chili hood in all matters pertaining to poli ieal truth, economic t rut li and fmancii truth, and they determined to prepai their sons for all the problems of go eminent, relating to life, property ar the welfare of their fellows. Upr landing at Plymouth, therefore, tl first thing they did was to set apart public square, a round which the ea ins wore huilded. In the center ? that Rqunre they orootod a tniildin which was to lie used fur moral teac injx on Sunday l>y the minister ai for general education during the wei days by a teacher. One of their tit laws also had to do with taxation f the support of education. And sin all the colonists were to be kings their native right, each law was pi posed before all the voters and them analyzed and debated, and tli n day was fixed for casting the half Election day was made to be a soleti festival, and about it were to lie eh tered nil possible associations of d nity and beauty. High Order of Manhood Produced Oil that high day all work censed a the citizens put on their best garmen At I) o'clock they assembled in t public square, and at a given signal t procession was formed. The minist and the magistrate marched at t head of the company, then came t teacher and I be nhvsiehm followed tho selectmen uihI all the voters. Tb u sermon was preached, in which t citizens were told plainly that for man t<? cast his vote for a seltish e anil without considering how that v< would injure his neighbor's proper! happiness and life was to be guilty a crime. .Men voted as in the sis of the nil seeins <lod. The electi procession in old New ttnglund towwas as digiiiQed and wonderful a cei tnonv tis the one that once took phi in Athens, where each Athenian w made to cleanse his body, put on while roho bound with a violet gin and. bavins been approved by t priest and the civic official, he dropp his ballot into a nimble urn. In t beginning each coiuinunity was a pti democracy I let let* plans for the 111:1 ufneturo of a lush order of inanho were nevet developed The quality ] soul produced is the proof of the 1 | tilers' 1 inn Self government inn | men lira\e. prudent, wise, self relia i and farsighted; It gave men initiati and <111 lei I out all their reserves. A not only were the best interests of t home and the state conserved, t crime was praetieally unknown a whole villages were without lock tair 011 granary or house. That w not only the heroic age of our liisto but the golden age of our patriot!: and prosperity Thf* Rnicinfl Un nf 1 paH#ir? The passing of ti ft eon brief stiuuni and winters witnessed the death of t heroic lenders of the colonists. I postire to tlie New England winters, sufficient food, poor cabins, the t( sion of constant attacks by India united to do their deadly work. Alar ed by the passing of Winthrop, Bre ster and Carver, the colonists began talk about the raising up of leaders take the places of the heroic band t! had gone Instead of sending to Ca bridge and Oxford for their ministt they determined to rear their own w men and produce their own Elisti as successors to the ascended Eiija In KKJii, therefore, tlie colonists unit their gifts and founded Harvard c lege, and a liltle later came Vale a others. Having provided for t training for citizenship of the co tnou people through their school week days, they now prepared to < fleer the regiments of workers by tra ing their own ministers, magistral and physicians. The New Crisis. During the next half century 0 school system did its work successful Tho growth of the population w largely by natural increase. T schools for t lie common people and tl colleges, working with the four pi fesslons. fulfilled the ideals of tlx founders #uf after the civil war crisis developed. < J rent railways we Hung across the Itockles. An area expansion began. I.'eprcscntntivcs the steamships and railroads placar ed central and southeastern Euro] with advertisements. Now settle came in like a flood. Soon millions now peoples were here. Tho scho< houses and force of teachers we equal to the iiHtlve stock, but no pi vision was mnde for the education * * ^HEra*' ''^^>3 ..' , 111 11 1 , " ; i. million newcomers eacn year. Hooh the system was choked with excess of material. School boisMs allowed mat- ' ters to drift. Where there were laws J' making for compulsory education no' ! attempt was made to enforce the laws.1 and Indeed there were no buildings to' i which the newcomers could be sent.' | It was as If the lumberman had cut a ^ third more logs than his mill could saw, so that the logs rotted; as If the raw cotton was piled up with bales exposed to the weather, becauso the mills could not hnndle It; as if the i wheat In the mill grew damp and SI sprouted, because the wheat was beyond the capacity of the milling ma . chlncry. Including the colored race! I and tho nennlo whn n-nm t I - _ ? ?v.v IV* VI (111 UUIU I our educational experts bellevo that ,r ; ve Imve about '20.000.000 of Illiterates j Ten millions more there are who may ie be able to read and write, but bo far ,r | as capacity for citizenship Is concern\ 1 ed, must bo called llllternto by reason ,j. of their lncomi?etenco to pass upon the j. I great economic questions that are vital e) to tho republic and subject to tho bal li>S Impossible For Illiterates to Compete 10 With Trained Workmen. s, Let us hasten to confess that our i- fathers would never have enthroned b. free Institutions and the ballot had s they not believed that our school sys s* tejn was adequate to the task of Intel e- lectunlizlng all the voters. No Ilamll >s ton nor Jefferson ever had to make his ;e mark when ho signed a promissory ie note. It is dangerous to give the lever of a powerful locomotive pulling a Id passenger train Into the hands of a ig ] man who never was on n locomotive is before. It Is more perilous for the lr state to place a ballot that protects n life, property and the welfare of others k> Into the hands of Ignorant men. No io matter how thoroughly educated a man ie is as a lawyer, he would not be guilty is of expressing an opinion as to whethig er or not n surgeon should operate in w the moment when the patient Is wrlthIs log in agony. That Is a problem for il- the expert. Holding a mass meeting r. r.? I..- n ol.r.... r.f I.... l?? ill tlio surgeon should do Is a poor nubre stitute for scientific knowledge and v- skill. The simple fact is thut free inid stitutions and self government are for >n fully educated men. A republic cnnie not be carried on by Illiterates. Better a a limited monarchy with an educated b- house of lords than the despotism of r?f millions of Illiterates. Illiteracy In Connection With Industry. . In the second place, the republic 'j. containing k'o.ooo.noo illiterates cannot ^ compete in terms of industry with trained workmen in the factories of Europe, where experts make cutlery j ' or weave wool and silk. Imagine a million illiterate colored men placed In roj mills and asked to weave cotton goods and then expect to sell that product in the south in competition with the outmi ',ut n n,'"b>n expert English weavers! Can a multitude and a mob 1 Sa |r, stand up against an equal number of | men marching as an iron regiment? ITofessor Barker tells us that there is n new industrial England. The necesnd sity involved in war litis forced conts. servative and aged manufacturers to he take out their old tools and throw he them Into the scrap heap. The old er ideas about holding the hand and llmhc iting the output are gone. "Speeding he up'' Is the order of the day. For every h.v yard of cotton or woolen goods under en the old methods, Barker says, the he workmen are weaving two yards, and " of a better quality, through the new "d methods. But our foreign competitors de are homogeneous peoples. The popuhv lation of Germany is Gerninn, the pcont .... .. . - I no or r raiK'e nre r rencn, ami t no poopie of Groat Rritnin are of Hnglish deOH soont. tradition, language and ideals, ns wliilo wo represent divers races and 10 bloods, with fifty different languages lCe and dialeets. In the nature of the ease. HS preparedness for tlio eoming trade war " is vital to the prosperity of our people. Ii)( Americanize All the Foreigners. (,(j First.?Having affirmed that the presl1(, out erisis is not due to any failure on iro the part of the public school teachers. [U but wholly to the people and the school (((j boards tliat liuve not boon willing to 0f furnish the machinery and linve ullowp.j e?l tlie situation to drift until we have ,1,. 2O.ouu.000 illiterates, it remains now |(t for us to confess that our tlrst edueuV(l tional problem is how to Americanize ml nil the citizens. The lust election I shows that tlie hyphenated American )Ut represents u problem. It has Ufcen the uj subject of universal discussion In the home, on the street cars, in tlie press s ami 011 the platform. Men nre casting ' about for a solution of the problem, sin lip'roit has adopted a slogan, "Americans first." Pressure has been brought to boar upon the foreigners. Realizing their handicap, they have hastened to ts ' take out naturalization papers. They lie linve ceased to leave their families In is- j Italy and return thither with their savin | ings. Mr. Ford ut the end of the eight ?n ' hour shift, at 4 in the afternoon, has ins tds men pass from the machine straight m. into a large room where the teacher w- 1 points, for example, to t lie face of 10 Lincoln and then says, "This is Abra to ham Lincoln," and fifty foreigners nit shout after Idm, "This is Abraham m-j Lincoln!" Then. "This is a slave,' ?rs "Tills is a schoolhouse," "This is a ise savings bank." The superintendent of las each squad of men makes these young !'* ioreiguers understand thai they are ed baiidicut led by ignorance and that liv. ol- lng in the republic and being protected nd by Its laws and enjoying its property he they must devote themselves t<> the m-j service of tho country that has moth on ered them. j'^ One Way to Educate the Foreojn Peo:es p,ea Several years ago, on the ground of self interest, 1 urged men in charge ol a great newspaper to help raise money 'ur to hire a largo opera house on each ly. Wfiuliiiirrl^itk'c, l.lr-i i - ? I 0iWH a i/lllUUIIJ UIM1 Hi I 11 \ 1 r ft as there us the guests of the < Ity nil for elguers who hud been naturalized dur he I lug the year, to provide two speakers o- of nulioiiul reputation, to pin to eucli dr new citizen a little American ting, to a give them an extract from Washing re ton's address, from Lincoln's speech of at Gettysburg and his second tnaugu o( ml, with the Declaration of Inde d pendence, all made beautiful by tbt pe printer's art. I urged that we attempt re to secure the passage of a law that of would tlx Washington's birthday as t>l- the day for the naturalization of all rc foreigners and that every association o- of .patriotism, music, eloqueuce. be tu tal | yoked to Invest tbe beginning of Atnera! lean citizenship with dignity. There i "tpi A, IHAv I ? I . I ?, pleaded who had vision enough to understand tlie scope of the enterprise. But soon or late some such plan will l>e brought about that will Americanize the citizens and do away with the hyphenated American problem and organize all the disputatious groups Into a solid regiment of Americans. We Must Intellectualize All the Workers to Moot the New Crisis. Second.?The second educational task that confronts us Is tho task of Intellectuaiizlng all our workers. The time wns when only the four professions uecded the higher education. Now that life has become complex our tools are delicate as well as powerful. OtliI er nations who are our competitors for the foreign trade are replacing general education with technical training. The old Hebrews compelled each parent to i teach his child a trade. In Europe, 1 even in tbe kind's palace, young princes are taught u handicraft?now as a Jeweler or a lapidary. Tbe time lias come in this country for n radical step. Tbe average boy drops out of school at llfteon or sixteen, but tho most precious years for the boy are his memory years. Before, therefore, tho boy leaves the care of tbe state lie should linve one year to make him a skilled worker in Iron, wood or wool or silk. Galbraitli lias taught us that n bricklayer's lifieen movements of the hand can be reduced to seven, thus doubling the work accomplished, while saving his strength. The Training of Women. livery girl also, lest she be thrown upon her own resources through the death of husband or father, should bo trained how to tuakc a street dress, a party gown, a suit, a work dress and the outer robes. Tho stute should force every young woman, whether her father he rich or poor, to master every detail of cooking, giving six or eight hours a day to the problem until it could not longer be said of an occasional girl that what iter husband carries Into the front luill she throws out of the back door. It may bo also that the whole system of education wlli have to be revolutionized. The American school system is built upon n general training lie fore twenty and a special training after. The history ? men of genius and of achievement shows that the special training should come before twenty and the general training afterward. No one is wise enough to state all the facts in a sinale discussion, but euough facts have been assembled to raise tnany questions concerning the necessity of revolutionizing our entire system of educat ion. We Mutt Socialize All the Families. Tiiinl.?The third educational problem that confronts our country is how to socialize the new families. In the human lawly the new food is turned into vital cells through exosmose and emlosmosc, hut there seems to be 110 similar method between new families ami tlie native stock. Missions, liible schools, social settlements do much. So far as men are concerned the saloon lias helped even while it lias hurt. It has been the poor man's club, where in the evenings lie meets his fellows and enjoys talk, good or bad. This, however, does nothing for the women or the children, nnd they are the real heart of the problem. The last election sliows ttiat within two or three elections prohibition is to become national. Inevitably the saloon must go I for reasons not alone of health and I morals, but of industry. In our American climate, with Its long winters, out ! cities must make ready a substitute to take tlie place of tlio saloon. The ! method must he along this line: A great hall in cacli ward, made cheery 1 and warm, under municipal supervi sion, with music, pictures and stntotnents as to tlie great men of tlio day and great national events. The time ! must come when each day the govern| uicnt experts will turn the whole land for ten minutes into a whispering gal lery, with the newest scientific counsels as to foods and weather and crops, ! with the conditions of the country. The winter nights are America's first great asset, and it is heinc thrown away, hut ultimately this hall ami the method thus outlined will become the university of the workers and a train lug college for worn women and chil dren. Lucky Mai "Not until 1 married did I realize how lucky ray mother was," sighed tin bride. "Why?" "Well, she had me to help her wast the dishes, and I have to do our dishes all alone."?Detroit I'reo Press. yes: lift a corn off without pain Cincinnati authority tells how to drj up a corn or callus so it lifts off with fingers. J till LWI II-JR'MVIUU 1111:11 UI1U WUIIIiri need suffer no longer. Wear thi shoes that nearly killed you before says thisCincinnati authority, becaus* j a few drops of freezono applied do rectly on a tender, aching corn or eal J lus, stops soreness at once and sooi the corn or hardened callus loosens sc it can be lifted out, root and all, with out pain. A small bottle of Freezone costs ver> little at any drug store, but will posi tively take off every hard or soft corr or callus. This should be tried, as i is inexpensive and is said not to irri tate the surrounding skin. If your druggist hasn't any free zone tell him to get a small bottle foi you from his wholesale drug house every time. 1-Adv ff your paper has 1; in its arrivals, it \ to notice the date money as well as ^______ ! o = j flank of X?J Oldest Bank In < We solicit your business. We pj XOe Jnoite X(ou Your Patronage wanted. it will receive court SAFETY DEPC OUR MOTTO: "STRENGTH R. E. Rivera, President. M. J. Hough, Vice-President. 1?_ =~ 5 /7i yn\ yite yeepu KSTABLIS11E Capital Stocl It. B. LANKY, Pres. < I G. K. LANKY, Vice Pros- & Atty. Wc want your business a? J When you come to Chesterfield J pay interest on saving deposits J per anum. : \Chesterfield, - < a Insure the Happiness of Your Little C Any parent charged with neglect Come indignant. Still there are some neglect to provide for their welfare. The little ones must be protected, a bank aocount. I If You Haven't an Acc For the Chih The FARNE DR. H. L. McMANUS Office over Hank of Chesterfield. 1 Will visit Pageland every Tuesday; 1 Ml. Croghan every Wednesday. Other days in Chesterfield. Prices reasonable. All work guar- | anteed. DR. L. H. TROTTI, Dental Surgeon Chesterfield, S. C. Office on second floor in Ross Building. r All who desire my services will i please see me at Chesterfield, as 1 have discontinued my visits to other towns. i 1 P. A. MURRAY, )r' A'l'uwiuey and Counsellor At Law , Office iii Courthouse IIANNA & HUN LEY ?ATiOKNKYS? R. K. Han.)a C L Huule (JhcBterlielil, SS. C. Olline ii l'eoDles Hank BniMmf. i .?? j Catarrhal Deafness Cannot Be Cured ? by local applications, as tin y < innot reach thu diseased portion of the car. There i Is only one way to euro catarrhal deafness, and that Is t>y a constitutional remedy. Catarrhal Deafness Is caused by an Infin tried ton.) it: .11 !." the mucous llnlm* of the Eustachian Tube. Winn this tube is Inflamed you have a rumbling sound or 1 Imperfect hearing, and when It Is entirely closed, Der.fncss Is the result. Unless the > Inflammation can be reduced nnd thin tube restored to Its normal condition, henrlnir . i will be distroyed forever. Many cases of I > deafness sre caused by catarrh, which Is ! | an Inflamed condition of the mucous eurI faces. Hall's Cntnrrh Cure acts thru the , I blood on the mucous surfaces of the sys- i 1 tern. We will give One Hundred Dollars for " ! sny rase of Catarrhal Deafm ss that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Circulars 1 free. All Druggists, 75c. * F. J. CHENEY * CO. Toledo. O. . "wanted?old false teeth Don't matter if broken, I pay $'J to $15 per full set, single and partial platen in proportion. Send by parr i eel post and receive check by return . j mail. F. TERL, 403 N. Wolfe St., . ! Baltimore, Md. ately become irregular vould be a good idea on you label. It takes labor to run a county Hit' kedterfield 1 Chester field ay interest on time deposit* tc Visit Us I Whether large or small eous attention ||f| iSIT BOXES I AND SECURITY." C. C. Douglas*, Cashier. D. L. Smith, Assist. Cashier. :'rf iBank | m D IN 11)11 c $25,000 5 Jj 3. P. MANdUM, Cashier t J. A. CAMPBELL, Assistant Casheir ^ id will treat jou right. * , como in to see us. We 2 \ at the rate of 4i per cent * $ciith 'Carolina : i )nes! of his children naturally will beparents who, through carelessness, There is no better protection than ount Open One Today Jren's Sake ^ :RS' BANK Watch the label on your saper. It tells when your 1 :ime is out Preserve Your Complexion the eaay, pleasing way by using Magnolia Balm before and after outings. You can fearlessly face the sun, wind and du?t because you know Magnolia Balm keeps you safe from Sunburn and Tan. tThia fragrant lotion iswonderfully soothing, cooling ' and a great comV) fort after a day outdoors. | \ Magnolia Balm is \ pf the skin-saving _\S beauty secret MBT1 ' / f which i9 regularly s/l )l( > ^.used when once Magnolia Balm LIQUID FACE POWDER. Pink. While, TlonRed. 75c. at 'DntgghU orbu mall direct Sample (either color) for 2c. Stamp. Lyon Mftf. Co., 40 South Fifth St.. Brooklyn. N. Y. ASHCRAFTS J Condition Powders J A high-class remedy for horses jjk and mutes in poor condition and <|^H in need of a tonic. Huilds solid muscle and fat; cleanses the sy.; ^ tern, thereby producing a smooth glossy coat of hair. Packed io doses. 25c. box. Sold by POULTRY WANTED jl ^V^^V^hickcns,