The Chesterfield advertiser. [volume] (Chesterfield C.H., S.C.) 1884-1978, August 09, 1917, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

1 11 1111 1 The Chesterfield Advertiser ? riTHLasnun KVKKY THUISSIUV Subscription, 91.00 n year. Entered an second-class matter At the p>>?tolllce at Chesterileld. South Curolma. PAUL. II. HICARN Kdltor and Publisher. 4f TWO MEN F.lihue Root is a Republican ami cannot in any sense be considered a a Wilson man. Hut his words prove him t<> be a democrat and an MIKK't'AN'. In his first address on iiis re'.urr from Russia he said: "Do not argue about why we are ir the war, but realize that the time h i: come when American liberty, Anmri can justice, American independents and freedom is the stake for which \vt must fight. "If a man now says 'my wages before my country," <-r 'my balance sheet before my country,' or my el.i-; or creed or assocku :o.i before m\ country,' he is not an American. America is in peril. No question i> worthy of consideration until we settle the question of whether democracy shall live. Democracy hangs by -j thread. Its existence depends upor the union and utmost dclerminulioi of the United States of America." Compare these words with those ??l a certain South Carolinian who spoki to a crowd of picnicers the other day "I am not for war; 1 wouldn't can what kind of Anu-rica there was if I hud lo be* dead and under ground. We believe the sentiment <?f Klilun Root is the sentiment of South Carolina in this crisis. A NEW ARGUMENT NEEDED It will be recalle.l that only jecenth the stock argument against universa sulfru.'te was that women can no shoulder a ' i.'le and (ieht for her eoun try. In the litciit of developments it Russia, where a reyiment of womei soldiers, though deserted l?y the met in at ins and cut to pieces by the one my stood their ground, ami wher many thousands more women ar training.' in the army and navy t "save Russia," where does this argu meet stand now? One of the most conspicuous devel opments of this war has been the J"'?e that women can master about even occupation that man has heretofon called his own. it > ems that this denumnnt wa. . l ? l. *11 . : a : ii . .try in :i'ir nil- siny supcrsimoi of man's superiority could be dispelled. JAPAN Sl.NDS US A CCMMISSIOh .( pin is -endinu; a commission coin posed of sonic of its l?c-t state* men to ?I,* United Slutes. h y v ;!1 dis cu . vith our ^'ivcrnnuit! at Wash inyton the best means of breaking I'ru-sian d? pot n and winnine" tin war. Japan help in this crisis wouhi be of enormous value. Japan has not be-n injured by lie war am would enter it with fresh and stronu troops. From h*-r jreo^raplii<*al position Japan could sever tin* trunk line that Germany has maintained and now maintains between Merlin and Con staniinop'e. If the conference with the Japanese commissioners r< tills in that eour: try eo' -rin into the war vigorously alone thi line the power of the Raise will i).* itreutly weakened if tiol <!? st ro; ed. The Japs are a li'tb* people physi ca.'iy, but a miphty nation and remarkably jp.od fi-.-hlc-rs. .Mr. Judson Hand, who died recently in .South <e ornia, left a birjje ?*state, part of which was 200U ballot of wine made from his viru-yard. .Mr Hand is aid to ho . .erhaiiy ed a wish that the wine be ;jiven 1tin State I'niver ity, but did no' mention the wine in his will. A. (i'-ortria is Kmc ?Ii-y there is ax murl ajritat.-m in the State as to the di. position of the wine as if Mr. Man' ha<l left a whit'- ? !< phant t<> hi- care' for. The State legislature now ir session has lic-n i-alleil upon to setlli the matter. "The jji-rms mostly come fr?m 11 r ntany," |>roclairns a leading eilitoria in The New York Times. We shuihlei to think what the editor of that pravi paper would <lo to himself jf he real ized that a spark of levity had erep into his columns. ?-r?- A gentleman in New York offers ti pay any American aviator stonn win will fly over Berlin and dr> o a fev homhs on the German capital. H? would probably douhle the amount .1 a bomb hit the Kaiser. Thank heaven for flefiin! New Yory District Got 214 Out of 34? New York, Aug. 4-.?New York'first exemption district to fill its quota for the national army was announced today. Its quota was 214 men, who were obtained out of 342 rfien examin ed. Of the 189 districts in the city many have not yet begun examinations. ?M??mTrBgyvqir*.v^ \ - JfT\ (SI JUMP J'WBl.-. -v- N * ' . " ' ACCEPTED ADVICE OF HER GEORGIA FRIEND "I DON'T THINK IT CAN BE EXCELLED," SHE DECLARES EMPHATIC STATEMENT M r?. Ida Vernon, of Anderson, Grateful For Her Good Fortune "Tanlac is the finest tonic I ha"c ever taken. I don't think it can be excelled." This emphatic statement was made by Mrs. Ida Vernon of 31 Henderson St., Anderson, in m endorsement of Tanlac she jrave May 23. "I took Tanlac for a badlv run down condition and my health was so bad I was unable to do m> housework when I began taking Tanlac. I employed a cook then. 1 had indigestion badly, and lots of foods 1 ouldn't eat, because of the suffering i ihey would cause me. Really, I wa: iust a nervous wreck. I had been un i I *r treatment almost continually foi almost live years, but I did not seen i o improve any. "A friend in South Georgia toh i ne about Tanlac and I took it. Am . the Tanlac got me feeling as well a: I ever felt in my life. My appetite was returned to me, the indigestior '.v.ts stopped and my whole system was irengthened. Tanlac surely did he!| . t.o wonderfully. I gained about tei pounds in weight, too." Tanlac, the Master Medicine, is soh by The Chesterfield Drug Co., Chesterfield, S. C.; T. E. Wannamaker A :mi?k ( '.hftrnw TVT f rV/weU?.?> ft ? ??.? . Vlt. Cro^han, S. C.; McBcc Drug Co. r McBee, S. C.; Pagelnnd Drug Co. i IV.gelund, S. C.; J. T. Jowers Sons i JofForson, S. C. Adv i ? 1 " . . . - . r GOV. BICKETT SPEAKS ? t ______ * ' Between loyalty and treason * Gov. Bickett, of North Carolina " I takes no middle course, as thc&c * ' words of his indicate: "The man who in this perilous ' hour lifts his voice to weaken the ' nation's will or shorten its arm is ' a traitor to his country and a friend to its foes. He is more ' than a traitor; he is a murderer. I Any word spoken, any deed done ' to hinder the vigorous prosecu- ' tion of the war means a prolong- ' ation of the war, and this means ' 1 " the added loss of life "1 do not propose to tolerate ' treason in North Carolina by word or deed if there' be power in the State or federal government to prevent it. You and all sheriffs and solicitors in the State are directed to report hy wire to * the United Stales district attor* ney and to this office any man ' ' who, by word or deed, gives aid ' and comfort to the enemy hy ' seeking to palsy the nation's arm ' as it is raised to strike." *********** 1 PVDI /\c m/c c ic r r cp All VI1 I 1_ A.I UWJI V C. J U JC.L.H03 "America can make new ami powI erful i*xplosivcs enough to blow (Jcr many to kingdom come. The problem is in devising a safe method >f transportation." That is what a hitrh official of the ordnance department declared when . I ifUncle Sam would utili/.e "ter .ral," an explosive said to be so pow rful that five grains would lay tin Woolworth building; in a pulverized 1 .reck. Kvery day chemists and inventor c.-iejre the ordnance depart men V wit h ' ormulas for explosives hundreds of .111es more powerful than dynamite, 'any mark a new record of strength n explosives. Itut all have failed to solve the problem of transportation. Necessarily such hitfh-powered ex .losi. es must be "handled with care." be lightest vibration is suflieient to am e a discharge. ("ommanders of munition trains are nervous when carrying such simple articles of war as lynamite and shells. Their hair p-row i ?y i ransportatinj? higher explosive i- nitroglycerin and trinit rotoluel, : I ey balk at any more powerful ex io.-b vi*:-. PRODUCE WANTED \V<- will buy all farm produce ? >: < !>t perishables. Do not ship oat ? e.'.t of the county to sell. tiring then o us. IIursi-Strenter C<> A THOROUGH TEST One To Convince the Most Skeptica Chesterfield Reader. I The test of time is the test tha counts. Doom's Kidney Pills have math heir reputation by effective action. The following case is typical: Chesterfield residents should h< convinced. The testimony is con , tinned the; proof complete. Tcsti uony like this cannot be ignored. J. X. Stric-klin, editor of Chronicle t Croon St., Cheraw, S. C.f says: ( "1 have used Doan's Kidney Pill for kidney trouble and a lame ant tolling back and they have given m< f 'he best of relief. I have found then o be just as represented and I con s:der thorn a fine kidney medicine.' (Statement given in Dec. 1910.) On December, 10, 1914, Mr. Strick I lin said: "I still use Doan's Kidne? Pills whenever I need a kidney medi cine anil they always benefit me." Price ISOc, at all dealers. Don't i simply ask for a kidney remetly? get Doan's Kidney Pills?the samr ihat Mr. Stricklin has twice publiply recommended. Foster-Milburn Co., Props., Buffalo, N. Y. ,-v ' . * ^ ^ > COUNTRY NEEDS. MEN OF ABILITY l Dr. Hillis Discusses Strikes and Industrial Unrest. . THE REBELLION OF LABOR ' By Rev. Dr. NEWELL DWIOIIT HILLIS, Pastor of Plymouth Church, Brooklyn, N. Y. jgf?' A- n, W li n t fa the \ matter with our ^ What is the cause i ^8SW ol our s,r"i<>s hi"' i s i g ii s * o f the 1 RKV. ..... NKWEI.L. 1|mcsy. ; DW,0"T I luring the Inst two years our people liuve sol.l liillions ! 1 of dollars of goods in foodstuffs, am4 niunfiio.i, to the war .suffering slates in ? Europe. The war trade lias been a i powerful stimulant to the Industrial heart and Induced fevered conditions 1 of trade. Now the country is beginning to liquidate Its wage, Just as in times of panic the country liquidates its inflated stocks and hooiu values. ' It is not wonderful that tltnid men are ' becoming alarmed and panic stricken. ' For a long time strikes in one industry ; y iui \ i; IH'l'll MHIUWCMI I)\ KiriKf'M HIHI . riots in other Industries until In their nInrni many inrii anticipate the lailusIrial war ami the fulfillment of Ilerlicrt Spencer's prophecy as to Immense bloodshed in the collision hot ween the two warring classes, with the over throw of our government ami the estnlilishinent of a military despotism ami a form of industrial slavery of | the severest typo. Hut there Is no j need for calling out the militia because J the street cars do not run or because we have no ereatu for the morning's > coiTee ami no gasoline for the auto. ' Most the Workor Hate the Capitalist? ' I Miring the e three years of war trade > two hla< k passions have developed. * Many rich men f'vl that money Is the > only tiling worth having, ami many , poor men think that every worker must f hate every rich man. A collision, therefore, was luevituhle. The repuhlie is founded upon the liberty of each citizen to sell his labor for whatever lie 1 thinks it is worth or to give his labor * away for nothing. Not long ago a * thousand union men, having decided ? not to work themselves for less than ? s'.'l a day, decided to kill any nonunion , man who under stress of illness in his t family was willing to work for a day. Itut if a nonunion man is to he coerced by guns and clubs and stones what becomes of liberty? When one ox becomes greedy and horns the weaker ox away from the manger wo all It brute force. When one savage ill the South Seas drives the weaker savage from his little tout wo cull it l*11 rl>111'isui. When ono working man ooks to control anotlior working tiiiim l>v tliei lul) it is anarchy. The gravity of tho situation Is not based 011 tiio nunihor of men In this rcpuuhlic who ppU to got tlioir way l?y force of pistol, hoiniishcll ami riot. The Power of Small but Deadly Forces. Inirin r tho I'toiu li revolution only 2 percent o| the | plo believed In brute force ntiil the guillotine. Ninety-eight per real ul the people oppo e<| the Iteil I Terror movcim-nt. Two per rent seems i ne: h :iMe ipiatility, ami yet they 'iiti ne.| the granaries, liarns ami rha* Ioaus m the country, blew up rich men's houses in the city, piled corpses up lil.e < ordw<h| and made the river "seine run i I to tho s<n. t.'rant that ilie apple, ii the on-hard are of unusual ,j, ( and weetness, hut if there lie a spei-U of h'ight upon the fruit that h-e.n will soon go to the heart and rot the fruit of the op hard. (Irantisl that we have a hundred millions of people, -I hundred and llfty liillions of property expressed in terms of cities, villages, factories, farms, mines and diips. If there he sin it will eat like j u eaneer, consume like rust and tiling mr boasted civilization t > wreckage uiil ruin. Small, indeed, the germs of -holera and the I thick death, hut they levnstatcd Knglaiid and ruined I'.tirope The History of Labor. The history of luhor is at once sad nnd heroic, patio-Pic and exhilarating, tragic and glorious. In the dawn of history, where the mists part, the workMr liist annearH as a kIiivc In I-Vvnt Jreoee II IK I ItoUIC. < loiltlclllOII <1 i? I HOt work. Workers were bought and sold ike sheep >ii; 1 oxi'ii iiml, growing old r sick, wore killed. Kaeh palace Inn! a I -slave doorkeeper chained to tin; lintel; 'lie sailor was chained lo his oar and 'he porter lo Ids eart. Idsnhediont, the lave was flogged, tortured and streteht d upon the reek, filing as food ti? tlio lisli or eria ilied. IMiring those hloody , feasts in the Coliseum 1**?,?km> slaves were slain (hiring llie gladiatorial games celebrating the enthronement of in emperor. Little h.v little men began to (piestion the master's right of lif?; or death over his hoiidsinen. In secret revolts were planned. The news of an insurrection of slaves >n Sicily sent a wave of terror over the empire. One young gladiator of great Intellect plan* i nod a secret society and led the revo, hit ion. This revolt of Spartaeus was unto death. lie shook the whole Itoman empire. The revolt, at last, was put down; I yt, like Samson, Spartaeus pulled down the temple and brought about the decline of the Roman empire. When the dust from the ruins cleared away it was found that the slave had lieen succeeded liy the serf. 'J'lio serf belonged to the estate and enjoyed eertaiued privileges. The first fourteen days of plowing belonged to Ills master; after that Kodgo could plow his own littlo field. The first seven days > of harvest belonged to my lord; after that Ilodge could reap Ida allotted field. Kvery other lamb, calf and.co!t belonged to atoi at. did sixty puy* of jolli * ^^^^1 . SIM II ? '!! I I',W1 11 gg?gggi tary service In the winter. * The Rebellion of Labor. In the beginning of the seventeenth century the serfs revolted. Secret leagues wore formed. Wen pons were collected and hidden. At one and the sumo time t>egan the peasants' war in Germany, the Puritan revolution in; Englund and later eumo the revolution in France. Wlieu the clouds and smoke of battle cleared away the worker was free to go into the market and sell his labor. Immeasurable we^p bis gains, and yet, having achieved the wage sysA 4l.? ...? ... It-Ill, iiiu wtiKtt wart iiinuiuuiriiv. niui'tii, the onrly settlors In Virginia sold tliolr labor for four yours in advanre In return for their passage to tills country. The New Industrial World. Today for workinginon the whole world lias become now. Gone the days of the patrician Dives, the serf Lazarus and tbo great gulf digged be twoen. In the republic the difference between the poor innn and the rich man Is n thing of goods on the outsldo and not of quality of manhood on the inside. Doth vote at the same poll, and the two ballots arc of equal worth. Iloth find the paths free and open leading to the schoolhouse, library, college, to land, otneo and honors. A lnw that is beneficent for one man is beneficent for all; a law that is evil for one casts its shadow over all. Grant the soldier ami Lincoln the eraancipa tor read the same newspapers, Joined in a political canvass, bought and sold at the store, as did millions <lf their fellow men. Andrew Carnegie begins as a messenger boy. Kdlson sells newspapers, Jim Ilill toils as a farm hand, Marshall Field commences life at $."> a month and his keep, Sir William Van Ilorne resigns his position as a schoolteacher at $IS a month, builds a railway and leaves $."0,000,000. We all have the same chance that these men hiul, only wo did not huve the brains. The Door of Opportunity. Those men went to a little schoolhouse, as clhl we all; went to a little church, us (lhl we; had three hours every winter night for reading and planning, as did we. They organized their lives and selected a goal, made every minute march and won In a great mice. The men who tifty years from now will control the great railways, hanks, factories, newspaper offices are today building healthy bodies, training themselves to Industry, initiative, self reliance, courage, paying no attention to what Is called "luck." Senator In- ' galls on?e suld that Admiral Dewey was so fortunate that he threw double sixes twice In succession and that there was one man in every generation whose dish was always right side up when- I ever It rained. But the hoy who believes in personal excellence and will not be defeated und tolls on becomes so sensitive to the signs of the apI preaching hour when the gods will j rain gold that his garments are always i spread wide to receive the precious . treasure. j American Inefficiency Versus German Efficiency. For years our people have been fed on flattery and adulation. The writers pour forth an endless flood of honeysueklo liipmr. Great is the United States! What railways! What steel plants! What factories! What gold! What billions! If any one dare say anything uhout our inefficiency he Is straightway lampooned. But look ut the facts. Contrast the natural advantages we possess through the finest hematite Iron ore, unique coking coal, the richest soil, with Germany's poor ore, lower grade coal, sandy Prussian .-..II A .. f,.? ...- I.~.? n? ? jn iw1 n/mi, no mo 11i1cki wheat lands in the world In the northwest, yet average fourteen bushels to the ii<-re. Germany has snarly noil, earries lier nitrates from Chile to tho Prussian Ileitis and raises thirty-five liushels of wheat to the acre. Several years ago Amerlean engineers to (lie nuniher of loo visitetl the iron ami steel plants of England, Prance ami Germany. Preparing t?? visit tho Krupp works, tlie women of tho party feared to go to tho sine I tors on account I of the soot, lest they ruin their clothI it iff. llut, to tin; astonishment of every one, tho German superintendent | told them they did not need black ffloves u11<1 old wraps, hut could wear their white ffloves throuffh the works. In the steel works ut Pittsburgh HO per eent of the coal goes out the top of the chimney, soot falls In flakes, the visitor covers himself with an old rnineoat and then rushes for tho hath at liis hotel. Hut mark how German etli' h ney saves what we waste. The rarhon rising throuffh the chimney is strained out and reliurned; (lie ffas is ctirrled back into a little onfflno and exploded; other invisible km.sea aro ctirrled off in retorts and turned into chemicals, acids, explosives and dyes. The Saving of Waste. The secretary of the Engineers' association mice said in an address on tho ( subject that if Germany's resources of | Iron and coal and ffas and oil equaled I ours they would drive our employers Into bankruptcy and our workmen Into poverty. For five years I have carried a certain knife. Even now the at eel in one Made will nil but shave the linlr from the back of one's hand. The last: atom of phosphorus or sulphur was exV polled. What the German workman has lackod in the material was made up by uccuraey, diligence and skill. When the Grecian mother found that the a word of her son was too short she told him to lengthen it by taking a step nearer the enemy. But broad minded engineers and imports who are willing to tell the truth oltlrm that our equality in any manufacturing department Is based on something that nature (iit<J Providence have done for us through Iho better quality of Iron and coal, oil and gas, Uium handicapping our predecessors, w?lo supplemented their interior material with skill. The time has fully come for American workhigmcn to look at the facts In the case. Illiterate men, who cannot read nor write, can never hope to contr peto with workmen trained In schools that have made them exports with reference to the material and the tools that they are manufacturing. Fundamental Error*. Pertain errors ore fundamental for millions of American workers. Because the union has strengthened them on the ono side they are unable to see how singularly they have been weakened on tho other side. The labor unI Ion has helped men In different ways. 1 The workman who has one day's labor \ IfrmiyMf iwfci * good tame ? ' ' I'I I will II I gahT but when a thousand men Jq5|, with him and their representative has $8,000 worth of labor to aell It increases bis chances. Again, by acting together the thousand men speak with so poworful a voice that they can secure safety .devices for dangerous tools, can secure shorter hours, better conditions, light, ventilation, for through mass and multitude they force recognition from the occasional selfish omployer. By acting together at last thoy have shortened the hours for the woman worker and passed a law against child labor. The cry of the children In the coal breakers of Pennsylvania, the cotton mtlla of tho south and tho woolen mills of New England Is very bitter, and the new child lal>or bill represents a great advance. But. Insisting upon all those gains, the worker has also lost much. Witness tho bright, eager, ambitious man and linuidn lilm #1?a rnrolnoa liolf tlnmbon workman. The former Is keyed clown to tlio level of tho other man until the heart and hope are cut out of him. ^ Dangers of the Mediocre Level. _ Edison secures his Invention by toll- ~ in# not for eight hours, but often for forty-eight hours, gathering momentum until at last he succeeds. If the young lawyer, young physician, farmer, inventor, orator or nuthor were limited to eight hours, so as to give work to other doctors, Inventors, writers, this country would he reduced to a level of mediocrity that, would ruin Hoclal pr< gross. There are three errors, therefore, that are fundamental. First, many workmen have l?een taught to huto capital as little children hate the bogyrnan or (he devil. Capital Is that dreadful ogre, Mephistopheles, that Is always maneuvering, undermining and destroying llio workman. You have board worklngineu pour forth bitter denunciations of capital. Rut this Is as If the workman should hate the trado wind that fills the ship's anils, should hale the river that turns his turbine wheel, should hate the steam that pushes Ids locomotive, should hate the electricity that multiplies his hand und hi* foot. 9 What Capital Does. ? Capital Is simply yesterday's labor grunarlcd. Forethought saves the harvest In many varieties of glass jars, hut capital cans, preserves nml hands forward In fioo different forms the accumulated harvests of labor. Any man who has two loaves of bread and needs but one, two eonts and can wear hut one, two spades aud can dig but with one?that man Is a capitalist. The rich man of today Is the poor man of yesterday, carrying his many days' work forward with him In the form of capital. For the worklngman to hate capital, therefore. Is for him to hate the natural forces that multiply his per- t (tonality through tools ami the human forces Incarnated In propcrts*?that reaper that gives him bread, the loom that gives him clothing, the car and ship that bring him comforts, tools, Conveniences, from distant lands. Alone, capital cannot fling a bridge across tho river. (Granted. Rut alone j an Indian, representing labor, cannot fling steel cables across the river. Roth nniHt unite In tho great achievement I The Need of Ability. "What this country needs Is a few men of ability to show the workingmen how fo convert coal directly Into electricity without the Intervention of steam. Today wo are wasting 80 per cent of our coal. There Is doubtless some poor boy living In the country who has the latent ability to solve this problem. When he solves It he will save the people of this country $500. a year, expressed In coal. If he received $250,000,000 a year and the people received $250,000,00*) more as u free gift, never having done anything themselves, would It not he fair? Ingratitude Is llko acid on a plow. This republic Is suffering grievously at the hands of agitators, who are going up ^ and down the land sowing tares amid the wheat. The rose never hates the gardener. Tho purple clusters never tear off the hough nnd turn It Into a dub against the husbandman digging a about the vine. We need as leaders men with the spirit of Abraham Lincoln, Hi* hard Cohden and Benjamin Franklin. The cause of the workingman and labor is the cause of the republic. One of the bitterest experiences that poor l?oys who have finally won out suffer Is the suspicion, envy and misrepresentation that work like . poison in the hearts of their people. We need to distinguish between the true and false ideas of equality and p work out some practical plan of co-op- j, oration that will solve the problems t now confronting our generation. WONDERFUL STUFF! LIFT OUT YOUR CORNS 1 Apply a few drops then lift corns or ' calluses off with fingers? ^ no pain. No humbug! Any corn, whether hard, soft or between the toes, will loosen ri^ht up and lift out, without u particle of pain or soreness. j This druK is called freezone and is a compound of ether discovered by a Cincinnati man. Ask at any druR store for a small i bottle of free/.one, which will cost but a trifle, but is sufficient to rid one's feet of every corn or callus. Put a few drops directly upon any tender, aching corn or callus. In- j stantly the soreness disappears and \ shortly the corn or callus will loosen j and can be lifted off with the Tinkers, j This drutf freezone dosen't eat out 1 ' the corns or calluses but shrivels them without even irritating the surrounding; skin. Just think! No pain at all; no soreness or smarting when applyiny it or afterwards. If your druggist don't have freezone have him order it for you. If your paper has lat in its arrivals, it wc to notice the date 01 money as well as 1; ,%' ?-. ;? - >"T.V 'V?V:'" . ''' ' oV- ' ' - " * >? Bancnonnsss===s9MBaMBSBae9a9we?Ess iBank of Chesterfield 1 Oldest Bank In Chesterfield | We solicit your business. We pay interest on time deposits XOe Jnvite l(cu to Visit Us | - i ? w ?~ xour fatronage wanted. Whether large or small > it will receive courteous attention wBjj SAFETY, DEPOSIT BOXES OUR MOTTO: "STRENGTH A ND SECURITY." J 1 R. E. Rivers, President. C. C. Douglass, Cashier. ,,ja M. J. Hough, Vice-President. D. L. Smith, Assist. Cashier. l - ra | tfhe People'4 Rank I ESTABLISHED IN 1911 S M 1 Capital Stock $25,000 R. B. LANEY, Pres. 0. P. MAN(iUM, Cashier 2 G. K. LANEY, J. A. CAMPBELL, Vice Pres-& Atty. Assistant Casheir We want your business and will treat you right. * When you come to Chesterfield, como in to see us. We * pay interest on saving deposits at the rate of per cent 2 per anura. * Chesterfield, - tfcuth 'Carolina j Annlv Rnciriocc ^ l'lVUlUUO Sn Your Home! j 1 A bank account makes for HOUSEHOLD EFFICIENCY AND ECON)MY. ^ When you pay the bills of the grocer, the butcher, the baker by check ? pou know just how much it costs to run your home. * BESIDES, A CHECK IS A BECEIPT. * \ \ If You Haven't a Bank Account Start One Today j j The FARMERS' BANK ! 4M _??___???' ? ' I)R. R. L. McMANUS ... 4 . . , Watch the label on your Oentict _ ? . paper. It tells when your i Office over Rank of Chesterfield. . . .3 ? * . ? 1 time IS out- ^ V ill visit Pageland every Tuesday; It. Croghan every Wednesday. dttfi Other days in Chesterfield. Prices reasonable. All work guarnteed. Preserve Your Complexion the easy, pleasing way by using DR L H TROTTI Magnolia Balm before and after outings. You can fearlessly face Dental Surgeon the sun, wind and durft because Chesterfield, S. C. y?u Magnolia Balm keeps I you safe from Sunburn and Tan. Office on second floor in Ross, This fragrant loluilding. tion iswonderfully All who desire my services will soothing, cooling ilease see me at Chesterfield, as 1 1 and a great com* iave discontinued mv visits to other 1 jflU .* ; OA fort after a dav owns. JK\ out^oor8J Magnolia Balm ia V^?L pi the sk in-saving v flANNA HUNLE V fyt beauty ?<="-( lirrr< /A /aV>3 which 18 regularly W/M ATTOKISRYS ll/fe^Lused when once i. E. Hanua C I* Hunle- "r v^tried. Uhealorfield, 8. <\ WM ! 1 >ffice ii 1'eoplcB Hank Bnildin* MfiUfllOllSl 03.11X1 .. . | LIQUID FACE POWDER. Pink, While, 7?oif Red. There Is more Catarrh In this section 1 _ 7.5c ?[ jW*h/ mlldlrmt of the country than all other diseases ' Sample (either color) for 2c. Stamp. put to net her. and for yearn It was sup- LyonMf,.Co.. 40 South Fifth St.. Brooklyn. N.Y. posed to be incurable. Doctors preconntnnt MHBHHHHHIBHBHIIB ly failltiK to cure with local treatment, pronounced It Incurable. Catarrh Is a local dim-aae, greatly influenced by constitutional conditions and therefore re- 4 quires constitutional treatment. Hall's Vv tfh Um. n...,. i.u i.? T ""ei. W We Cheney A Co., Toledo, Ohio, ia n constltutlonal remedy, Is taken Internally xfl&w and acts thru the ltlood on the Muous ? Surfaces of the System. One Hundied W 'pV&L Dollars reward Is offered for any case ^ \'*jrC',cr vftf Kfl'rtlwHtSw that llall'H Cntarrh ('nr.- falls to cure. lj,J A>flt5/?Cc?m ^ Send for circulars and testimonials ~*'0SP^'&'iJg9!aLyVr \\k^u iSl -ify K. J. CIIKNBY A CO.. Toledo, Ohio. Sold by DruRRlsts, 76c. / i'$> *+ Hall's Family Pills for constipation. t>) if ** f ji\ll RUB-MY-TISM I Will cure Rheumatism, Neu- _ i^K/ir I S ? u r> J!l* n _ ? spS^Bmr^rur&roid tuuumoo rowaers Sores, Tetter, Ring-Worm, Ec- a high-class remedy for horses zema, etc. Antiseptic Anodyne, nmi rnules in poor condition and jt used internally or externally. 25c in need of a tonic. Builds solhs -???====?========== muscle and fat; cleanses the syi ely become irregular >uld be a good idea <kMa- .p