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The Chesterfield Advertiser PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY Subscription, Si.00 a year. Entered as second-class matter at the postottice at CheatcrMeld. South Carolina. PAUL H. HKAHN Editor and Publisher. ITS COMING HOME For three years we have looked on as interested spectators while all Europe was rent and blown asunder by the most terrible conflict of which nian can conceive. Some of us have kjiown from the very first that this was our fight. Our military authorities realized at once that brave little Belgium in offering her last drop of blood in defense of democracy was fighting for the safety of the United States of America as truly as she fought for her own and her allies' safety. But this view was not shared by our people. We were inclined to look upon it as "their" fight, a European disturbance in which we were not con cerned. We were terribly slow, almost disasterously slow to realize that this fight is our fight, that if we do not take the dare now ami fight with out allies on foreign soil we will soon be forced to fight this iron monster sin gle handed on our own soil. We hope we have not delayed too long already. The last few days have brought home to us a keener realization of our situation than we have felt before. We are beginning to realize that I the privileges we have enjoyed and taken as a matter of course are going to cost something. Because a great monarchy has waxed strong and arogent we are compelled again to battle in defense of our liberties. The liynt that our grands res fought 140 years ago must he fought again. The great mil of honor has been called. Those who are again to take up arms in defense of American liberties have been designated. From the names now being published selections will be quickly made of those destined to follow in the steps of their revolutionary forebears. a In many homes in this county, as in every State in this great nation thenis some fear and even consternation as the truth is realized that a son must go "over there" and take part in that terrible conflict. And so it is that the war lias come to C,hosierfield County. Nearly as many brave boys have volunteered as will be called by selection, but this did not bring home to us the obligation that every man owes to his countrv as did the nublicatinn of this j*reat list. We can bojjir to see that some of the suffering of our glorious allies is Koinp: to l<e ours. We are to have a share in their sorrow. God help us to meet with lnaver\ and devotion the privations and offerings that are '> !' us! THE CAUSE OF HIGH PRICES. As an cxpluna'ion, or pe rhaps excuse, for the h:t !j price of livinjr, the cause of it at! :. > a-<- la I to the v; r in Europe. This theory is altoire'.hei wronp: if the statement of Congressman Cox, of Indiana, is correct, in a recent speech h< aid: "Prices of tile r eces. i'ies of life are hijjher today in \meriean eiiies than they are in any of the cities of England or France, and this amidst p'ent. in our Nation. Son < 'Jiinif is wrone;? radically wronjr and I Unow of nothing to correct tl s wronj: and evil except the Department of .fustire." This bcinj." true the Departm lit of Justice outtht to e l>u y oucht to Kct after food speculators with a l?ijf stick. The men or the corporation that in this time of nation.il afflict Ion would boost the prices of food and clothing of the peopl- are very properly described as "high handed pirates." If Mr. Hoover is to be the Joseph who is to protect the p'-ople of this country from the avarice of speculators and from the danger of famine it is to be hoped that he may be given as Joseph, the son of Jacob, was given by J'haroah, full authority to deal with the situation. He pro\ ided wise- ' ly and sa\ ed the people from suffer-I irig. As our laws are founded upon the ' ten commandmcn's as recorded in j the bible, so our lawmakers may find | in that same boo . any examples of j Healing successfully >. ith national I problems. HIT THE FOOD HOG Hon. David F. Houston, Secretary | of Agriculture, does not seem to he ' frightened by the threatened food shortage, or the high cost of living. I He spoke of a dinner in Washington 1 at which ten men were guests. The dinner cost the ten men $25.00 and , yet, he said, they were discussing the ^high cost of living while they were eating this extravagAnt meal," The amount th^y paid /or it would have paid the moij^hly grocery bill of the average Amerielh^family. We hear -' -iKSCJS"* VRH "^?5* MRS. HAGUEWOOD'S CASE NTEREST1NG STORY OF ANDERSON WOMAN IS AMAZING IN SOME DETAILS MADE GREAT CHANGE Hj?? Word# Of Advice And Comfort For All Troubled As She Was. "I think every ailing person ought to take Tanlac," declared Mrs. Girtie IIa#uewood, of GO Riverside, Anderson, in a statement she gave May 2Gth. "I was suffering from an aggravated liver trouble and kidney trouble and was on the verge of a general breakdown when I began taking Tanlac. I had dizzy spells that would be so bad I would fall and I suffered a great deal from this and ihe pain that went with the attacks of liver trouble. My back hurt me so terribly that I would have to have h dp to got out of bed, and I had the most awl'ul attacks of sick headaches imaginable. My skin had become so .lark that I was almost brown, because of the liver trouble. I was just barely able to be up and I could not work. "But the Tanlac got me in fine di ?pe, and I am strong and hearty low. My skin has cleared up a lot ind 1 do not have those di'/'/.y spells u r tiie headaches now. I have :? line .. petite and 1 never belch up my food . i I e 1 used to. The Tanlac got my kidneys and back in fine condition, too, and I'm not troubled with backic'.ie now. It is a good medicine, Tanlac is ." Tanlac, the Master Medicine, is . old i>. TV... ru,.?t?-ii..i.i i-v / . i. t%. ? iiu viiuotuiiiiriu l/ruj; ^ f rliS. C.; T. E. Wannamaker ?Jc Sons, Che raw; Mt. Crojjhnn llrujr Co., ML. Crojrhan, S. C.; McBue Drujr Co., MeBee, S. C.; Paguland Drtitf Co., I'ajreland, S. C.; J. T. Jowers ?.V: Sons, I' (Torson, S. C. Adv. who occupies a whole seat in a car while others may be standing. This man is akin to the food hop; who pays $2.50 for one dinner, when the dinner pail of many a poor fellow's empty. Secretary Houston did not approve of the extravagance of the Washington dinner. lie said the co " of the unnecessary and wasted foe 1 ni lha' haner would have saved the lives of v enty-five Belgian children, lie o i-ted. however, that "a nation that e n raise nine hundred million hush ! ' >f corn in a year is in no dnnyer of starvation, but that we shall need for our allies more food than v.e have ever had need of before." The danjr'-r seems o l>e in ov -r-c.in sumption not in underproduction of food. THE STORY OF YVONNE (New York (llohe.) . Yvonne X , a deeply religious, ca refully nurtured, unmnrried eirl of I.ille, France, is asleep when a loud I. -ot f: comes, and her mother answers. r!i>rm?n unliliorv liniuh lm into i In. .Mi's bedroom. "(Jet up and dress," t!,ey say. "You arc t?? leave in twenty minutes." The uirl is marched oil", i e| otlu-r soldiers out ulc remark: "" Vi it! Vtni'vc euiurht :i pretty one." Yvonne? is herded with a number of her ; r!s and il .1 with some men. ! i e j:e\t day arrives, after travel IC all ni.'.ht it: cattle trucks, in the Ardennes. The tcirls are taken before a medical officer, stripped naiad, aai obscenely inspected. The better ' oking ones arc assigned to a house 11 I learn that they have heen announced as women of evil life. Sold: rs are allowed access to them. They .r - told: "Don't make such a fuss. \ oti are all French and all alike." Other curls are taken to the fields ' ml lashed when they halt in their .1 ks or dare speak to one another. 'I: If starved, worn out by constant rror , made as useless for immortal purposes as for manual labor, what (oip.e.s of them no one knows. Of I <5,0<M> deported from Lille only forty-eight, ^ vonne X being one of them, were returned, when official Oermany announced that it had bene voh ntly restored the deported to their homes. The story, told in the journal kept from day to day by this little girl, :s published in the Revue des Deux Morales. No one who reads it will have any doubt of its gruesome, awful truth. Not the excessess of individual soldiers are presented. Here is a deliberate action by a responsible gov rnmrnt. i ne Kaiser, countenancing heso things, in effect orders them to occur, and so floes Hindenburf, Hethn an n-1 lollweg, artd the whole rotter crew. Scheiflenmann stands i>y si1< id. The German people utter no i*i huke. Why is the world fighting Germany? IT you don't know, if you are still 1111ii formed -is to why America is in the war, read the words of ties deponed French girl. If you do not. rise from the perusal with a holy purpose to do ail in your ability to overcome a power re-non ihle for such monstrous wickedness, then you should look to the integrity of your own morals and ask yourself if you are not a deporter at heart. To Keep Tomatoes From Firing. Hid you ever try the oat straw remedy to keep tomatoes anil beans from firing up? Just cover the ground, about the plants with oat straw to retain moisture, and you will have no mm/mm AMERICA'S UFE RESTS ON FAMILY Without Soundness In the Home All Else Is Naught. i WOMAN THERE PRE-EMINENT By Rev. Or. NEWELL DWIGHT HILLIS,P?b!o of Plymouth Church, Brooklyn, N. Y. j#" ';. . In "The Atiierlt>un T'linlly" l)r. iL Newell Dwitflit f IIII lis, pastor of Plymouth church. Rg"PN*^| ltrooklyn, pays ^ ^ of sermons ho Is rk.v. iir. m;\vi:i.l pre?. l'rovdwig11t 11ii.lis. er|,s xxxl Ity way of pie-eminence the American family is I'm first ami most important of American institutions. No otlmr idea lies so close to the heart of our eager ami commanding Ameri: ean society. From the family have come our school, our church ami all our civic ideas. The republic could spare all its other forms of democracy more easily than it could the loss of the idea of the family. The men' mention of certain names? the Field family in connection with the Atlantic cable, the movement for international law am] the great names on the bemh of the supreme court is lill<il with suggest Ion. Witness also the family of Lyman 1 leecher and the Adams family of New Knghtnd. Mill 111 1 y these I amines nml their influence is the shadow east across the laud in the form ??f the lust 11liti< lis they < rented. No other nation lias exalted the family after the fasliion of this republie. In this republic all things Were and are at d will hi' for the sake of the family. In the Interest of the homo and the beloved ones there ail the wheels turn round, all the ships set sail, till the tools Work by night and day. To bring back treasure to the home men dare the ehill under the frozen north and burn under the tropin sun. Take the family out of American society and it is taking the Intellect fn in the body, the bent fr"tn the sunbeam, the ?-ulfroiii th" library, the sun from the s! v, leavhi: only a black and empty socket. V. 'en the sun dies nil the harvi sts die with it. Tho History of tho Family Is the History of Woman. In general the history of tile family is tho history of woman and her love, it is a singular fact that the libraries hold tho history of wars, arts, law, ships, engines, stones, stars, but that no one has ever written a history of love. An American scholar in one of Ills "club essays" lias commented Willi keen satin' upon the oversight of the lb-dorian as to that strange tumult of the heart that begins with the exchange of (lowers, that journeys on toward poetry and daily letters, tlint begins to talk in images of paradise or hell and before the Inllanitnation lias subsided culminates in a wedding or a suicide. Tin* liistory of literature is very largely the history of this beautiful :nnl pathetic m!lachuiout that establishes I' " : i:?I has enriched the hoiiic llir u:ch nil I'tf ee:,Juries. In the far <>f! !! ! -.v davs the old hook tells us about ;> ' rave l ey ami a heatltlful firl who al u 'it ' 11 down ami prayed to 'I 1 that I! i m'-'ht yrow old toifellier. That enthronement of I ho h ! i rplatus the hleal of Jlehekuh and !- \ Woman'# Place In Literature. Italian li'? : lure was horn with I'.oat riee, jn-i aa I.aura made I'etrareh and I re. < < a I raiislluttred I'nolo. It - a woman id-at that walks through all tlie pat es of Mallor.v's "Morte d' Arthur" and ylorilies each Idyl of the kin-.-. Shako -peare tiaderstood, for it. Is a mail's hltiuder that preeipitates every i ri--i? in the life of Hamlet, slain l.y indi -i i -a: of (tilicllo, stupid, slain hy hi* own Jealousy; ?.f Ifenrv \*111 and Wolsey. ruined lliroimh selllshnos-s and hliud amliilion. Always w le-a r?deno 'hut l omos it. is at the lei nd ?.f some linoeeiie. I'orti'i or ''or* d> K i. 1'very i.oM-psi i,f th- t order of Intellect puts worrian in the very J heart of the seen-. Jennie Deans' sheds luster upon all who stand with . in the elrele of her life Haw(home's j Hester ylorllic- the dark shadows of i 'The Scarlet Letter." At the Moi.de. Literary eluh in the Darker II :-e itostoii. ;ii <inr !**? KUl|il) V. i.?I<? I.if erson made the statement that the novel was In some respects 'lie high- | est form of literature, hut was Imp.sslhle without a woman standing 1;j the, center. A Book Without a Woman. A man, " !Ir< ;. do k'' MtJfTBJ . i lit 11 nr. 11 I .'. re nllirne-d tint he ' < .. ! write a novel that would sic-. in\ without mentioning t ie t inn of woman. No woin.it.' ; tiaine ! meiitione<l in the pages, hut ttte on ...!, .|\ Murray revealed the failure of his hook in the title, "The Story of n Mini Who I'idli't Know Mi eli." The I tit I figure in Murray's in In i- ;i youth who had a)! Hi - feminine qualities, through wliieli AI iir; ti y hoped t o eio|:e t lie sy in pa t lie tie Interest of his renders. It eould not he el Iter wise. So. iet , i> n unit rep re settling the i*ii i<-ii of two l eiit | lei'ii iiienls. lite lunseiiliiie that is fixed and iiiiiillei'ahle, the feiniiiiue w ith with It tiie woman is stained through and through, like crlnc-on set in tiie finest wool that eannoi he washeil out. <{od never intended that inen should be feiuln^ed or women made virile. The pathetic attachment that lias subsisted between great souls like Pebeknhmid /nunc, Aspasla and I'erlcles, Robert ! Browning and Elizabeth Barrett tells ran turn a hut lpto a house, a tent Into a palace and, though the house be only a frail tent set up In the desert, with no lamp save the light of the llrefly, yet for Jacob home Is where Itachel is and heaven Is that unseen city of amethyst behind whose walls of silver Kachel hath disappeared. Th# Breakdown of tha Family. /Now, all these considerations increaso the alarm of patriots who love their country when we come to consider the threatened breakdown of the American family. There is a well known principle In economics that a strong demand will create the instruments for the supply. The mere fact that there are now 3,000 courts to which unhappy couples may repair for divorce publishes the keen demnnd for institutions that can sever a tie that is frail as a thread, but should be us strong as a steel cable. It Is a far cry front tlie 3,000 divorce courts of today back to the time a century and n half ago, when tlie mother of Alexander Hamilton, a beautiful Huguenot girl, living 111 tiic west iiuiin isiauas, wanted ti divorce from the Dane, who had become drunken, cruel and depraved, who had pone hack to lOtirope and from w hom she never heard again. There was not one court In the Hrltlsh colonies or in Great Britain that could give a decree of separation. Divorce meant that tlio woman with her wroups must go to London, Reeuro influence st roup enough to carry a bill through the house of commons at au expense of about Now the pendulum has swung to the other extreme. Divorce In America. There are now .1,000 divorce mills grinding all day long In our country. Sixteen thousand divorces have been granted within a single year, though the same year witnessed only 8tK) divorces In Knglnud and about a score in Canada. Indeed, the records of our country showed some time ago three divorces in Canada ami over 10,(tu0 in our country. Most disquieting the spectacle of the minister uniting young men and women in the morning and a .luvij.,; nvi nun uig 11111 I lit* liner | noon. The blackest part of the trage?ly concerns the children, now denied a father's guiding hand and now without a mot her's love. Reasons For Divorce. From the viewpoint of Tennyson's "Drown of Fnlr Women" of the ninctcouth century and our own observation of nohlc women in tlie twentieth woman's chief motive for asking separation is her revulsion from the Immorality of man. Home poor women appeal to the courts because of lion- 1 support and the neglect of a man to provide for ids children. At rare intervals a working woman seeks redress from a Judge because the man is a tyrant and so brutal in Ids speech ' that tiie little children Ilee at the approach of their father as the dove does from the hawk and the lamb from the coming of the wolf. Hut the eldef motive in the vast majority of cuses is woman's dislike of lepers, physical ami moral. Think of what lies back I of die fact thut In a brief Interval re- I cenlly fifteen hundred babes born in the tenement regions of New York ' were committed to homes for feeble | minded children! Even in the furotf 1 times of Pliny, sixty years after the birth of Jesus, the Human lawyer explains the divorce evil by the immorality of men. How significant Is this j passage; "Five hundred years after | the City of the Seven Hills was found- ' < (i ii uivurce chsu obtained a place in our legal record. I will not uudortuke j to assert Hint there were no divorces ' for the first 5(H) years of the life of j Koine, luit certain it Is that there is ' no nutlientic recorded divorce during these first five centuries." Then what happened? IHiring the era of luxury and luuuimonism men became false, immoral, sensual. For a time the Ho- J man matrons cherished secret anger, j then their itwli dial ion broke into; speech. At last these injured women ' to ,|; on the aspeet of the unrelenting tigrc<s wiiose whelps have been lnJiii'od, ami within a single month tlfty K< man matrons poisoned their liushands. What evil men did sow that they were made to reap. Woman's Revolt. Hither the workingmen of this country must give up whisky, sensualism, drugs, and maintain a life of health ami sobriety and keep themselves as clean within and without as they were during their twenties when they were lovers, or else the working women are going to refuse to hear children that carry forward the sins of their fathers. These women understand the threatened breakdown of the American phy- j si'iuc. It Is not their fault that in the tenement house region < hildren are bora with imperfect vision, toctli willimit enamel, feeble hearts and poor circulation. Science, sound ethii-s, love of humanity, all unite in telling us that tlicM* working women are right in tlie rebellion that they are organizing. Olie of the duties that lie in front of < ur dators Is the duty of giving i I'V !i.othf)P rlr?li r ? . j, ... > ii ?** I \r\Jt # ill ll'UM $ln*j ; year for the support of every babe .-lii b'-nrs niitil the child Is fourteen years of age. When the state plays fair with these mothers there will be a resolution In this country. The overthrow of the saloon will do much to hr1r.se In this new em. and that Is a victory already within night. Tha New Woman. V.'hst then. Is the Influence of the o ea!."d "j.ew woman" nj >ii I he America:, farnfi.vV So fa i rea? hilig is that u that the answi r must bo based upon ati analysis of what makes the twentieth century American w.unan t<? l.e spoken of as 11 "new woman." I'irsl of a I, ' hi* is an educated woman. One h indie] years have now passed since the Jtoston High school was thrown open to Kirls with hungry minds. During 'his century young women have exhibited an enthusiasm for tin* higher sliica11<>n ?|Ulte uiiilrcaiiieil of duriiiK otber centuries. In the avernge high a<-hoo| of the country two young women ginduiite to every young iuuii. Tin b<?y hi Ills eagerness to enter business droj>s out of the hiKh school, while the rlrl cj.rrlen on her studies. In the state university also, little by little, youiiy women are equaling In number tie young men who are studying for tin professions. If this tendemy continue the time la not far distant when tin overwhelming majority of the student* I receiving tlmlr diplomas In the depart I mmSjmrn sciences will l><> women. I Tha New Woman Ha# a Claar Vision and a Warm Haart. To the education of the new woman we must now add her clear vision and her warm heart. Of old philosophers used to say that tunu has nu intellect first and incidentally a heart, but that woman has a heart first and incidentally a mind. The statement Is meaningless because It Is untrue. Wlieu fully unfolded the intellect menus the whole soul in the uct of knowing, and the heart means the whole man or woniau hi the act of feeling; hut, given a great sorrow, woman Is struugeiy gifted with sympathy. From a woman's heart is born the movement of brave Mary Ware in the time of the plague in Loudon; the struggle for soldiers on the buttlellcld by Florence Nightingale and Lady Augusta StanIcy, braving every form of death in the Crimea; the plans of the Christian commission women in our civil war. working with the ambulance force In | (lie very midst of battle; the Ited Cross [ movement at the battle front of Eu- rope. And think of Mary Slessor, beginning us a missionary in Africa aud little by little achieving on influence so unique tliut the members of the cabinet in England sought her advice, that the native tribes appealed to her decision, that feuds betwecu states and warring hosts might be settled I Influence of Women In Amorican Society. No words can describe the influence of the modern woman in American society. Who can tell the achievements of these women who have organized the movement for the higher education in Wolleslev, Vassar, Smith and Bryn Mawr! Women like Frances Wlllard and Jane Addanis and I)r. Anna Shaw and a host of others linve changed the very atmosphere of this land. Women without financial ability? liarrlman and Itusscll Sage and the man who founded the Boil .Mniche in Paris all left their millions to their wives. When that Frenchwoman lost lior husband she carried the sales of i tbo Bon Mnrcho from CO,000.000 of francs up to 100,000,000 and 200,000,ooo, bccuuse she was free through death to work out her own Ideas. When the bees that are the female workers and collect all the sweets In the hive have gotten through with their lords they sting the males to death, and the females spend the winter eating the honey that their own skill gathered. Pr#-?minenc? of Women Through 8klll and Delicacy. An ox enrt demands a man's muscle; steam locomotives depeud upon a i man's brute strength; the next age will lie an age of electricity and chemistry. An electrle machine is best handled by a delicate finger. Once the giant forces are controlled by electricity, n woman's sensitive hand may handle them better than a man's. An era may come, therefore, in which women will have the same pre-eminence In society and the creation of wealth as the femule workers have In the beehive. Most of the charges brought against woman as to her Inferiority represent the verdict of a male Jury and a mule Judge, who for purposes of self defense brought in n verdict against woman in general and pronounced her guilty of inferiority. The time may come when women will constitute the Jury and Indict the man for inferiority, and then? heaven help us all in the hour of the Jury's verdict, for it remains for us to confess that hi 110 count re luv? numon tried so successfully to put ethics into Industry, Justice Into luw, gentleness into government, sympathy Into reform and purity and tenderness and love Into the household. No land can l>oa8t a womanhood more glorious. Great is the power of trade and com merco. Wonderful the strength of man to till the granary and the storehouse. Marvelous the achievements of the soldter and tlie sailor, hut man is not a ' body. Ilis soul uses the body, and the chief influences that shape character, create institutions and regenerate laws are the Influences of heart and conscience and social sympathy, that are the pre-eminent gifts of women. Ah children wo all wake to conscions life lying upon u woman's lap, in youth it was a woinun's hand tlint pointed to tho paths of prosperity and peace, and when tho end comes, happy Is the old ] man upon whose fevered brow in the last hour a woman's hand falls, ami the first face beyond into which the J weary and worn man shall look will he the face of a woman, his mother, who ' lingers about the gate of heaven until her son cornea home. LIFT YOUR CORNS OFF WITH FINGERS Trlli how to looarn * tender corn or callua ao it lifta out without pain. I You reckless men and women who are pestered with corns and who have at least once a week invited an awful death from loewjaw or blood poison are now told by a Cincinnati authorityto use a drug called freezone, : which the moment a few drops are ap- ! plied to any corn or callus the sore- ! ness is relieved and soon the eutire corn or callus, root and all, lifts off with the fingers. Freezone dries the moment is is ap' plied, and simply shrivels the corn or ' callus without inflaming or even irritating the surrounding tissue or skin. A small bottle of freezone will cost very little at any of the drug stores, but will positively rid one's feet of i every hard or soft corn or hardened ] callus. If your druggist hasn't an; 1 freezone he can get it at any whols i sale drug house for you. 2-Adv. If your paper has lat in its arrivals, it w< to notice the date o money as well as 1 9 ,4 $}ank of "Ch Oldest Bank In C We solicit your business. We pa XOe Jnvite X(cu Your Patronage wanted. \ it will receive court* SAFETY DEPO! OUR MOTTOs "STRENGTH R. E." Rivera, President. M. J. Hough, Vice-President. 3 ? a i She See ale I " ESTABLISH EL Capital Stock R. B. LANKY, Pres. C G. K. LANEY, .J Vice Pres. & Atty. We want your business an When you come to Chesterfield, pay interest on saving deposits per anum. 'Chesterfield, - t ? mam Insure the Happiness of_ Your Little C Any parent charged with neglect c come indignant. Still there are some ] neglect to provide for their welfare. The little one* must be protected. ' a bank account. If You Haven't an Acco For the Child The FARME I)H. R. L. McMANUS . IW.nfiu* ! Office over Bank of Chesterfield. P* Will visit Pageland every Tuesday; til Mt. Croghan every Wednesday. Other days in Chesterfield. Prices reasonable. All work guar- ^ inteed. / DR. L. H. TROTTI, tj. Dental Surgeon ^ Chesterfield, S. C. o Office on second floor in Ross Building. y1 All who desire my services wil\ H please sec me at Chesterfield, as I H Have discontinued my visits to other H towns. H P. A. MURRAY, Jr 8 Attorney and Counsellor At Law I [Office in Courthouse H IfANNA &* HUNEE \ 8 ?A TT< > ltN E Y 8? I it. K. Hriuih C I< Huniev H Chesterfield, 8. O. I Office ir Peoples Bank Building H Catarrhal Deafness Cannot Be Cured H hy local np;>ll> utlons. ua they cannot rcuch IE (he diseased portion of tho car. There HH la only one way to cure catarrhal deafness, na and that la by a constitutional remedy. Catarrhal Deafness la caused by an In* flamed condition of tho mucoua lining of the Kuatacblan Tubo. When this tube Is Inflamed you have a rumbling sound or Imperfect bearing, and when It la entirely closed. Deafness Is the result. Unless the Inflammation can be reduced and this tubu^^H restored to Its normal condition, hearing I^^B will be destroyed forever. Mnny caste of^^H deafness are caus<*d by catarrh, which IsHH an Inflamed condition of tho mucoua sur* fr.eea Hall's Catarrh Cure acts thru the ^^B blood on the mucous surfaces of the sys* ^^B Wo will give One Hundred Dollars for ^^B any cntu of Catarrhnl Deafness that cannot ^^B bo cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Circulars free. All Druggists. 76c. T. J. CHENEY A CC.. Toledo. O. WANTED?OLD FALSE TEETH^^ Don't matter if broken, I pay $2 to $15 per full set, single am! partial g> plates in proportion. Send by par- I eel post and receive check by return mail. F. TERL, 403 N. Wolfe 3t? Baltimore, Md. ai ir ely become irregular ? 3uld be a good idea \ n you label. It takes abor to run a lesterfield y interest on time deposit* tc Visit lis Whether large or small , ious attention , *|JI SIT BOXES AND SECURITY." - I C. C. Douglaif, Cashier. j D. L. Smith, Aaaiat. Caahiar. j J 96 iftank { ) IN 1911 $25,000 J . P. MANGUM, Cashier Z . A. CAMPBELL, Assistant Casheir ^ d will treat you right. J como in to soo us. Wo 2 at the rate of 4$ per ccut 2 laa icuth Carolina | >nes! ^ ?f his children naturally will bemrents who, through carelessness, ' There is no better protection than iunt Open One Today ren's Sake RS' BANK m Watch the label on your aper. It tells when your me is out. mmmmmmmmmmmmmmm jjl *reserve Your Complexion ie easy, pleasing way by using lagnolia Balm before and after V i'.tings. You can fearlessly face te sun, wind and dutft because fl ou know Magnolia Balm keeps M 'M Condition Powders _A A high-class remedy for horses !N^H n<l nui'.es in poor condition and i nred of a tonic. Builds solio iuscIc and fat; cleanses the sy.; :mf thereby producing a smooth lossy coat of hair. Backed ia ..'JB ones. 25c. box. Solo by flj D. H. LANEY I POULTRY WANTED Jg^lWYChick?n?, H?n?, Gmh,