The Chesterfield advertiser. [volume] (Chesterfield C.H., S.C.) 1884-1978, October 25, 1917, Page Page 2, Image 2

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HOPED MORN WOULD 1 FIND NO STOVE IN HOME < I i MRS. BURGIN THOUGHT THE < CHANCES WERE HEAVILY I AGAINST HER t HER CHANGE "A MIRACLE." ) ? t Greer V/r-man Talk# Interestingly of | Her Remarkable Experience ( 1 "I was in an awful condition when j I bo^an taking Tanlae and had been jj for two years, but Tanlac trot me in t good health," was the emphatic state- * ment of Mrs. I). J. Burgin, of Greer, S. C., in a statement she gave May (] 10th in endorsement of Tanlac. "I . was suffering from the after effects of malaria. My system was out of order, I was weak and run down and my face was as yellow as a pumpkin. I My feet and legs felt like they were dead or asleep, and tingled all the time. Really, I had begun to wondVr if I ever would regain my health, and I didn't think I had a chance, for so much medicine had failed to help ! SCHi I Al I n I Eiducat HI 10:0( - by B Best === Larg< Scho< Pupil basis ^ Only i tree. Kach dav make a paraclu |jy k ree to all. | Chest Sbhhhhhhb me. In fact, I felt so badly that 1 >ften told my family at night I hoped Lhere would be no stove in the house n the morning so I would not have to rook breakfast. I had stomach rouble very badly, too. "Tanlac is the grandest thin;* in he world for a condition like I was n, and it soon got my stomach i rood shape, my face cleared up and egained the right color and my ap elite soon came back. No matter low bad a headache I had, one dose >f Tanlac relieved it. Soon the Tanac had me feeling fine and strong. took some of the Tanlac tablets, ind they helped Tanlac ever so much o t*et me well. Those tablets are hi' best 1 ever took. "I am triad to recommend Tanlac, or it is the finest and, of course, the inly medicine that ever helped me." Let M2 Pay Your Bi'l This call 1 make to all, while you arc well and sound. Let me pay your bill, when you are ill, and feed the children when you are gone. N. A. A. I. CO. S. J. SELLERS, Agent llllilllllillliilliilllli OOL 1 DMITTl ional Daj ) A. M. Magnificent parade < and. school float in parade >st percentage of enrollment fr ol making best showing on foo Is must march by twos. Form for decision. Line of march w school children in parade admi Ballon? of the hair the Far rte drop from his mai ALL ATTRACTIOh 11 FY<s ^ J"?A ?4 jAL PFRR A JLJ A T*. | Q W SI :erfield November 7, ingle Admission 25 cents; Seas< Pass-out Tickets FLY SWATTING SEASON IS HER1 This is the season for a prefitabl fly campaign. Flies can not live ou of floors now. The cool nijrhts numl and chill them and myriads of then die off. If the females lay, the ojrtr eitht r do not hatch or else they ar slow in doinjr so. Few flies are bre< in the cooler season, and of the adult few survive outside of those that ire into the houses. Fly swatting in hot weather is dis couratfinfr work because all out o doors is swarminjr with flies. Smal hoilSO Funinniirnu dn nnl iml because this outside host is an inox haustible reservoir. When one run a home fly swatting campaign in Oc tober he knows that he does not hav< this outside host to contend with Kvery fly living in the open tries t< get into the house, tries to get wher. the wideawake housewife can swa conveniently and effectively. A further reason for fly killing a this season is the fact that the fe males that are to prevent extermina tion of the race are laying up in th< EBB CHILD ED FRI /, Friday of Floats by schools in County 1 om any one school in line. . . t ation in line and marching wi 'ill form at court house, tted free. i Ascen nous Capt. Jack will j mmoth balloon. T JS FURNISHED BY Founded on Clean A r \ji u wim The Best of all 1 Countj 8. 9. 10.1917 WW w :>n Tickets, non-transferable, $1 will not be issued. E warm places for the winter. A iit tie while ago when the weather was c warmer they were out of doors. A 1 little while later than now now, when \\ it-- '* >' cne weamer is colder, they will be ir u dark, inaccessible corners. Now is s the accepted time. Fly swatting gets one somewhere now that the flies are fewer. Fly 1 traps are only fairly successful. They * work best where flies are numerous, t tl seems that flies do not care to patronize traps except under the enthusiasm example and contagion of the mob spirit. Sticky fly paper 1 works fairly well. I At the beginning of the anti-fly . movement there was not much proof that flies spread disease. They were regarded as a nuisance, health officers condemned them and the people tool - their word for it. Now there is exi? cellent proof that flies spread typhoid. The proof stands the closest scientific scrutiny. n addition it seems seasonably certain that flies spread summer diart rhoeas in babies. And now the army sanitarians are accusing flies of t spreading ameba which causes camp dysentery and perhaps even other diseases. As these the verdict pro bably rests "guilty but not proven." i ?Dr. Evans, in The State. REN | LE | Nov. 9 ,5.00 gj 5.00 ||S 5.00 sions | *o up high and his attraction i^ ttractions jj I on Merit jj fhat's Good jj r Fair | .00 liiiiiKillllillffijiiii!!!! mar ====-. 1 TIDE HAS TURNED AGAINST 8 KAISER, McCORMIClf SAYS Paris, Oct. 17.?The tide has turn-jtftt|a%? ed; there will be more atrocities* there will be terrible battles?but despite events in Russia, the AustroGermans everywhere are being driven back and from the f^arso to the channel thev 11 ro nil Inriiiriir oViln <* ? ^ tack." This was the estimate of the wa^jy as Representative Medill McCormiek, *-j of Illinois, presented it to quests at ' n luncheon at the Palais Dorsay. McCormiek was the guest of honor, the luncheon marking his formal farewell after six weeks' journeying in . Europe to every front except that of Russia. McCormiek emphasized the imprsssion he had obtained throughout his travels in France, England and Italy, of the democratic solidarity of tho allies. He assured France of the determination of the entire American nation to fight with all its power to a victory. "In speaking of the entire American nation," he added, "I include the splendid loyalty of a majority of the Americans of German blood who are . no leas patriotic than those of other . j extraction. From the lips of Ameri- .. ^'1 i can officers with names as Gernu^Bl as that of Hindenburg I have hearc^ described with loathing and bitter anger, the deliberate killing of heroic nurses by German aircraft. "These are bad tidings for the kaiser. "The morale of the German officer prisoners is now lower than it was I two months ago. More boys of six- { teen are now found among the pri- } soners. "Events in the reichstag and in theGerman fleet, despite closed eyes of the German autocratic laders, appear in burning letters as the handwriting on the wnll to such governors of the wflfr empire." McCormick explained that great jC haste in America's part in the war "* was impossible, considering the vast- > ness of the American war program. 1 GERMAN SUBMARINE STRIKES HOMEWARD BOUND VESSEL Washington, Oct.?The American army transport Antilles, homeward bond under convoy, was torpedoed , and sunk by a German submarine in the war zone on Wednesday. About < 70 men are missing and probably lost. The army and navy officers aboard j and th?? sh!n'? ?">?? ? .f ? movva ntic (hlllmi'; the 167 survivors. The missing are ' members of the crew, three civilian engineers, some enlisted men of the navy and 16 of 33 soldiers returning: home for various reasons. Neither the submarine nor the torpedo seen and the transport, hit squareljr^^^^v amidships, sank in five minutes. IT WAS WAR J From The New York World: m What RornstorfT did, what Papon I did. what Roy-Kd did, what the vari ous pro-German organizations did, 9 v.;> ; all done under orders from Ber-< H 1 in. There was nothing casual or ac- 9 9 cid.ental about it. Germany was nmk- 9 ing war upon the United States for 9 more than a year before Congress de- 9 clared that a state of war existed. It ? was a sneaking yellow dog kind of |9 war, hut war it was, and like all Ger- JgE man wars it was managed by the German general staff. 9| Read the label on your paper. Jn If it doe* not show your aubscription tjzm to be paid up, you should need no ipg other invitation *o pay up. 3 ^ 5iTHHnHRHHMBMM I 1 I I! Rubbing Eases Pain 1 Rubbing sends the liniment tingling through the flesh rind j pain. Deman I a 1 ji liniment th.it you con rub with. | J ho be it tubbing liniment is JI < 1USTAN& LINIMENT t Good for the Ailments of Horiei, Mules, Cattle, Etc. j Good for your own A cites, r Pains, Rheumatism, Sprains, Cuts, Burns, Etc. > ^ 25c. 50c. $1. At *11 Dr?leM. i