University of South Carolina Libraries
* Ho Wi<*> y Don't Waste Grain 11 r Feeding stock whole grain i this time is sheer waste and ei f f!>. / ' tw to be gi usei *or fcuoss eon " - sumption and let us supply yoi with prepared stock feed soil able for your needs. If you hare grain to sell o stock to feed come to see ui : Chesterfield Milling Co rr I THE I LAST WORI K. I taction. It is provision to inst H vision in s nutshell: Ffefl li If. before reaching age sixt; H manently incapacitated through ^ thereby from work of any kind, and, beginning six months later, H come for life, at the rate of om 9 policy each year, payable monthl; [ i Not only that, but at your f / s I beneficiary the full amount of tl ^ ever for the payments made dur % . jg "? . ^ Further mors, during ?uch di M tinue to increase and dividends - ' 9 the premiums were being paid ii H For example, suppose you Company ;and suppose you lost 1 M and one lepr, or had your eyesigl a came totally and permanently dii U accident?you would have no f would receive $84.80 every mon1 your death your beneficiary wov A policy, $10,000. ijfl Could any propositi U I Chesterfield I rW W. J. DOUGI 9 ALSO FIRE, ACCIDENT, H I " B We Buy and Sell Real [" DR. L. H. TROTTI, Dental Surgeon Chesterfield, S. CL Office on second floor in Rosa Buil ing. All who desire my services witt please see me at Chesterfield, as I have discontinued my visits to other A towns. fc . ' r HUNLE V ? ATTORNEYS? R. R, Hanna C L Hunle? i Chesterfield, 6. O. \ 'Office ir Peoples Bank Building i DK. H. L. McMANUa | Dentist ^' 4^,. Office over Bunk of Chesterfield. Will visit Pagelund every Tuesday; Mt. Croghan every Wednesday. Other days in Chesterfield. Prices reasonable. All work guaranteed. How's This ? Wo offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any caso of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. , Hall's Catarrh Cure has been taken by catarrh sufferers for the past ? thirty-five years, and has become ik. . " - - niuiiu ma iii? uiuii ciinuie rerneuy lur Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Curs acts thru the Blood on the Mucous surfaces, expelling the Poison from the Blood and healing the diseased portions. After you have taken Hall's Catarrh Cure for a short time you will see a great Improvement In your general ^^iealth. Start taking Hall's Catarrh ^ ^sadHLpre at once and get rid of catarrh. ?5?H<"iid for testimonials, free. V. J. CHENEY A CO.. Toledo. Ohio. Sold j/y all Druggists, 76c. Tax Notice is hereby given that the of taxes from October 16th to Dec. The levy is as follows: State t. Ordinnry county Constitutional school Roads rogctTi t tirro . m Total ? Special taxes as follows: Cheraw Graded school, local . Cheraw Graded School bonds Cheraw Township Hoad Bonds . Jefferson Townshin Rnml Rn?/ii f> Alligator Township Road Bondi i - Special, Local and Bond k 2, 3, 4, 6, 34 F 1, 17, 37, 41, 42 Eg. 7,19,20,21,22,24,25,27,35, P 12, 14, 31, 32, 36, 40, 45 46, < If 13 ' 5, 8, 15, 16, 23, 30, 38, 49, , 10, 26, 44, 50. . v ... . 88 ...., U .... , ^ 18 K/ 9, 28 - pioll tax between 21 and I tima. TMa October 9th, 1917. u I have the agency in Ghesterfiel !* county for Owen Bros., of Greei wood, S. C., manufacturers of moni r ments and tombstones. Artisti ' work and the best of material. Price and terms reasonable. GARY DOUGLAS Chesterfield, Route 4 29-] THE provision in Southern Life and Trust Company poli)cies for total and permanent disability is the last word to be said in life nsurance proure the insurance. Here's the nro. y, you become completely and pcraccident or disease and prevented your premiums immediately cease, the Company will pay you an ine-tenth of the face amount of the ydeath, the Company will pay the he policy, deducting nothing whating your lifetime. [ ability the policy Talues will conwill continue to be paid, uet a* if t cash. hold a policy for $10,000 in this both arms or both legs, or one arm it destroyed in an accident, or besabled from any cause?sickness or urther premiums to pay and you ;h, just as long as you live, and at lid receive the full amount of the on be more atractive? ,AOVI Pel-. i ivan v* HIS* \JU? LASS, Manager EALTH, HAIL, LIVE STOCK IANCE "Estate Money Loaned Guard Yaur Children Against Bowel Trouble Many children at an early age become constipated, and frequently serious consequences result. Hot being able to realise his own condition, a child's bowels should ha constantly watched, and a gentle laxative given when necessary. Dr. Miles Lanative Tablets are especially well adapted to women and children. The Sisters of Christian Charity, $31 Charles St., Luzerne, rt., who attend many casos of sickness say of them: "Bom* time age we Wage* using Dr. Wllea' Laxative Tablet* and find that we like th*&_ very zauoh. Their gotten Is excellent and we are grateful for having been made acquainted with them. We have bad feod results In every case and tbe Bmtere are very much pleased." The form and flavor of any medi' cine is very important, no matter who is to take it. ^ The taste and appearance arc especially important when children are concerned. All . parents know how hard it is to give the average child "medicine." even though the taste is psrtially disguised. In using Dr. Miles' Laxative Tablets, however, this difficulty is overcome. The shape of the tablets, their appearance and candy-like taste at once appeal to any child, with the result that they are taken without objection. The rich chocolate flavor and absence of other taste, make Dr. niiies i.axuwvc i Diets iac lueai I remedy for children. ? If the first box fails to benefit, I the price is returned. Ask your i druggist. A box of 25 doses costs only 25 cents. Never sold in bulk. MILES MEDICAL CO., Elkhart, Intl. Notice tax books will he open for the paymenl 31st, inclusive. 8 Mills 6 V4 44 3 I " 19 Mills f, Mills 4 2 s (1 44 * 7 44 in School Districts Nos.? 2 O *1 o 51, 62 4 is r, 6 Ml 44 7 8 9 10 11 44 12 WR2 it " is W . 14 Mb " ^taxes are payab *HMwaSrai6yrai ttTilif" ^inHnk| ^^^LSmUh, outside aid Cynthra Catoe, outside aid X~ John Goodwin, outside aid 3. ' W. N. Brantley, outside aid vi dMR, A- Purvis, outside aid W ^^QKloline .... d Nancy SultfvanTotniVMHE^^^I *- Wm. Miles, outsida Eliza Adams, outside 'aid c Louisa Melton, outside aid 8 M. J. Davis, outside aid Alice Hugggins, outside aid S L. D. Robeson, outside aid P Eliza Ann Brown, outside aid .... Elmira W^"h, outside aid Asmand^Sutton, outside aid Mary Jackson, outside aid Randall Hammonds, outside aid . . Mary Brown, outside aid riannan urant, outside aid Rilla Melton, outside aid Mossey Jordan, outside aid Harriet Stanley, outside aid Henry Steen, outside aid Thursday Brewer, outside aid .... Nancy McFarland, outside aid .... Cancy Cassidy, outside aid Nelson Johnson, outside aid Chas. Levatt, outside aid M. J. Tucker, outside aid Sophia Sellers, outside aid Caronna Strcater, outside aid .... Chas Evans, outside aid Eliza Harp, outside aid Thos. Von Blochamn, outside aid, . John Layer, outside aid Thos Horn, outside aid M. F. Cross, outside aid Lewis Bruner, outside aid Geo. McNair, outside aid .. Sarah Rodgers, outside aid, W. L. Boan, outside aid D. A. Stafford and wife, outsido aid Caesar Pegues, outside aid Wm. McBrick, outside aid Adeline Burr, outside aid Cary Caulder, outside aid C. M. Hunt and wife, outside aid . Stephen Johnson, outside aid Lee Deese, outside aid Viney Little, outside aid, Dave Hubbert, outside aid John Poison, outside aid Peter and Luther Gainey, outside ai Susanna and Lucy Sellers, outside s Dick Baucom and wife, outside aid J. D. Smith, Clerk of County Board T. W. Eddins, Auditor W. A. Douglass, Treasurer R. A. Rouse, Superintendent of Edi I. P. Mangum, Clerk of Court .... J. T. Grant, Deputy Sherriff ., ... Hanna & Hunley, T. W. Turner, magistrate D. P. Douglass, salary H. T. Atkinson, salary J. A. Turner, county commissionner T E. Mulloy, county commissioner A. Sullivan. SunerintenHent nf nnnr Bank of Chesterfield, R. R. Coupons John Ratcliff, gang City Market, gang Chesterfield Hardware Co., gang . . O. A. Edgeworth, R. & B H. W. Pusser & Sons, gang Joh nGraves, gang P. A. Nicholson, gang W. L. Guy, gang T. II. Douglass, magistrate J.T.Grant, j,ai report h . . S. B. Rodgers, magistrate J. N. Davis, peace officer C. L. Melton, peace officer W. D. Craig, lights J. G. Hursey, magistrate Chesterfield Telephone Co., rent . . W. A. Douglass, postage .R A. Griffith, peace officer John L. Gulledge, gang J. W. Ousley, magistrate Theo Winbum, peace officer T. W. Gregory, peace officer D. F. Brock, magistrate J. W. Brock, peace officer F. M. Moore, peace officer G. D. Gulledge, magistrate Ellen Smith, outside aid W. B. Atkinson, gang M. A. Kelly, peace officer Redfearn-Rivers Co. gang E. R. Knight salary Wm Boan and wife and Betty Redd Maggie Burr, outside aid II. Baily Crawly, outside aid Madison J. Jordan, outside aid .. . Jas. P. Brock, outside aid B. A. Hendricks, gang Anderson Lucas and wife, outside s W. N. Lee, magistrate P r* M/.T ? J J . V/. mvimut Hi, pcatc V1I1CCI MI1U U Cheraw Chronicle, printing Sandy Lowry, janitor A. Blakeney, janitor , J. L. Tyler, outside aid Krnest Moore gang F. P. Evans, magistrate F. P. Evans, magistrate W. W. Melton, R. & B W. M. Redfearn, hauling Griggs Bros., R. & B. J. S. Clark, freight Rilla Melton, outside aid ( Thos Von Blochoven, outside aid . W. L. Boan, outside aid 1). A. Stafford and wife, outside aid C. M. Hunt and wife, outside aid . . Dave Hubbert, outside aid, John Poison, outside aid Susanna and Lucy Sellers, outside a Dick Baucom and wife, outside aid Lee Deese, outside aid Ilurst-Streater Co., gang J. D. Smith, Clerk of County Board T. W. Eddin8( salary C. W. Rivers, gang II. T. Atkinson, salary John Ratcliff, shoeing mules P. A. Nicholson, gang ft., n. Knight, salary W. B. Atkinson, gang James Broom, gang Nat Ratcliff, gaig Duncan Oliver, gang T. W. Turner, magistrate W. K. Parker, wood for jail .... J. C. Miller, hay for RanR John G. Hursey, magistrate .... T. E. Mulloy, county commisaione W. M. Griffith, gang Bennett Oliver, Rang J-_ A^Knight, salary QUARTER JtY 1ST 1917. ? 2.50 J 5 ,'-2.60 10.00 2.50 2.50 2.50 2.60 2.60 m 3.00 . 3.00 2.50 2.50 5.00 2.50 2.60 2.50 5.00 2.50 2.50 2.50 2.50 2.50 9.00 6.00 2.50 5.00 2.50 2.50 2.75 2.75 2.50 2.50 2.50 2.50 3.00 2.50 2.50 2.50 2.50 2.50 2.50 i 2.50 2.50 5.00 12.00 2.50 2.50 2.50 3.00 15.00 2.60 3.00 2.50 2.50 6.00 d 6.00 kid 5.00 5.00 16.66 36.11 36.11 ucation 100.00 164.94 62.50 2.60 16.66 125.00 20.83 8.33 8.33 farm 63.75 234.00 6.80 * 42.10 37.39 63.82 Ol 14 ^1.14 30.00 58.80 7.75 12.50 13.00 16.66 33.34 33.83 41.00 50.00 15.00 4.32 33.33 3.56 50.00 33.:>2 6133 16.66 16 66 16.66 20.84 2 50 1.28 16.66 30.80 100.00 ish, outside aid 7 50 2.50 2.50 5.00 2.50 7.00 dd 10 00 20.83 ies 34.13 15.00 3.13 0.37 ir>.oo 14.00 26.00 26.00 2.00 31.18 46.90 36.26 9.00 2.00 6.00 1 12.00 15.00 2.50 6.00 5.00 5.00 3.00 59.06 16.66 36.11 9.35 on uo 6V.OO 2.16 53.76 100.00 2.36 3.83 1.28 3.00 16.67 7.60 109.83 26.00 r 8.33 7.28 4#. .W:. .4MT... ,.jf\ioe.72 M Hmmk W*?k n Tt V Five-Passenger Touring Car Th ree- Passenger Fleur de. lys Roadster $725 Sedan, $1095 Sedanet, $845 CARE OF SWEET POTATOES ^ When editors instruct farmers as H to the best methods of raising and jl handling crops they sometimes make |l an great mistakes as Horace Greeley 1 is said to have made in his great I g newspaper, the New York Tribune. I He was particularly fond of pumpkin I pie, so the story goes, and he under- I took to tell his farmer friends how H best to gather the pumpkins so as H not to bruise them, thus causing them to spoil. He is reported to have said: H "Don't shake the tree, but" pick the M pumpkins off carefully, one by one. Hand picked pumpkins will keep till I Christmas or longer." Now we know more about pump kins than that, but what we started H out to say, as Luke McLuke would >10 observe, is that the Department of , H Agriculture wishes the farmers of IB the country to give more attention It to the proper storing of sweet pota- H toes. A great loss is sustained be- ! I cause of improper handling and stor-;M ing of potatoes. Hi On the same line Mr. Brehm, of IS the University of Tennessee at Knox- I ville, Tenn., says fifty per cent, of I the sweet potato crop is lost every El year because of improper storage. BB The greatest los is the result of IS bruises in handling at digging time, H according to Mr. Brehm, who says: H "The keeping of sweet potatoes nar- ? rows itself down to four principles, I all of which are simple enough. They m are: "Dig when thoroughly matured. "Handle them carefully, do not ? bruise them. 2 "Cure them thoroughly. = "Keep proper temperature after potatoes are cured. "Potatoes are the coming money crop for the south," says Mr. Brem b< "and the earlier the farmers learn ^ the best methods of kepinR the ve{?etable the more profitable it will be to them." tj, A bulletin has been issued on this subject, which may be had from the Department of Agriculture at Wash- ol ington, or possibly from County Dem- ^ onstration Apent W. J. Tiller. ai According to a ruling just an- pt nounced from Washington the rate (j, for first class postage will be three cents in place of two, after November 1st. Post cards will require two cents. Thus does one woe tread fast ^ upon the heels of another. YES I LIFT A CORN A OFF WITHOUT PAIN! Cincinnati authority tall* how to dry up a corn or callus so it lifts off with fingers. ' ;r You corn-pestered men and women ' need suffer no longer. Wear the 1 shoes that nearly killed you before, nay* thieCincinnnti authority, because * a few drops of freezone applied do- sl rectly on a tender, aching corn or cal- ^ lua, stops soreness at once nnd soon j the corn or hardened callus loosens so Jp it can be lifted out, root and all, without pain. ' n A small bottle of Freezone costs very ^ little at any drug store, but will posi- ^ tively take off every hard or soft corn w or callna. This should be triod, as it L is inexpensive and is said not to irri- u tate the surrounding skin. n If your druggist hasn't any f(?a- * zone tell him to gat a small bott^for jyou fmbI hi# wholesale dru^btwaae t 1 ;^' ^r vSr Mgffi^saBB ^yjflji 6jj???g2ifil ie Qualitg Goe5 C < rConstar Common report?backec careful observation?lea pect mucb 1 IKU1 new 1 1 Those expectations ai excelled. Conforming faithfully formanee to your concep comfort and utility, the &rows in your favor. |I Let us show yoi| this H ^et us point out its sp 1| Let us prove to you?ou y ?what it will do. 1 LUCAS AUTO jg DEALERS | CHESTERFIELD, SO. C I We Are Highest Ma Fo I >ong J Cott Hursey SEND US YOUR LETTER Many families in the countv will ... Mi ; receiving letters fr >m sons and da; others in training camp* and on the wj, rin^ line in Krar.ro fmm now until Jo ic end of the war. Many of these Hi tters will contain items that will be , lai f interest to oth?r? outside the da :>me circle. Send ti> these letters by nd we will be fjlad to publish such ^ artions as seem of ni-nst, and enE?avor to avoid th< things that are O. F a personal nature. - wi ALOMEL SALIVA ITS AND MAKES YOU SICK. Ol Hi wc ct? Like Dynamite on ? Slujfgi *h be Liver And You l.oui h -pf Day'i Work. bo There's no reason why a person p iuuiii utKc sicnening, salivating caiolel when 50 cents buys a bottle of odson's Liver Tone?a perfect subtute for calomel. It is a pleasant, vegetable liquid hich will start your liver just as urely as calomel, but it doesn't make ou sick and cannot salivate. Children and grown folks can take lodson's Liver Tone, because it is erfectly harmless. fC' Calomel is n dangerous drug. It is ?> lercury and attacks your bones, 'ake a dose of nasty calomel to-day r< nd you will feel weak, sick and naueated to-morrow. Don't lose a day's J fork. Take a spoonful of Dodaon's .ivor Tone instead and you will wake p feeling great. No more biliousess, constipation, sluggishness, head- m che, coated tongue or sour stomach. rour druggist says if you don't find >odnson's Liver Tone acts better han horrible calomel your money is raiting for you. ?????^ ^jjjjj^^Jjl If leaf Through. td f ? ^ JU. A*., W" f V I r - I Paying rket Price I r \ I Staple on Bros. CHESTERFIELD, ROUTE 3 Mr. J. E. Johnson and daughter, ss Mary, spent Saturday and Suny at Mr. J. A. Oliver's. Miss Lexie Rivers spent Sunday th Miss Blanche Teal. Misses Clarcy Oliver and Marjr hnson visited at Mrs. John W. irst's Sunday. Miss Lillio Rivers entertained a 'tr? L ~ " ..uxiuti ui ner mends Satury afternoon. She had music, and nies were played. It was enpoyed all. Mrs. John B. Rivers visited Mrs. sggie Smith Monday afternoon. We are glad to know that I'rof E. Green is going to tench school ain this session. Miss Lillie Rivers spent last week th her aunt Mrs. J. A. Oliver. Misses Mary Johnson and Clarrv iver spent a while at Mr. John 1). vers' Sunday afternoon They >re accompanied home by Miss 1 aland Mr. J. A. Rivers. There will be pray meeting every husday night at Shiloh. Kverydy is invited to come actory to Customer Eliminating Middleman's Profit Food For Man and Beast Paints, Oils, Greases. Safes, Desks, end Office Fixtures. as - " - niunumenii, iombitoiHi and Grave Supplies. Singer Sewing Machines. We make a specialty of seed* ain?wheat, oats and rye. Prices i request. . All business guaranteed or money (funded. i. > ife, Health Accident Insnrance Strongest and Safest Corapastes All claims paid as soon aa adjust* tents made. S. J. SELLERS Local Brokerage Insurance