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(^ ^MjjMiiMi^g^^g^i The Chesterheld Advertiser PUBLISHED EVKRY^ THURSDAY Subscription Rates: $1.00 a year; six months, 60 cents; throe months, iJ5 cents?invariably in advance. Entered as second-class matter at the postofiice at Chesterfield, South Carolina. PAUL H. HEARN Editor and Publisher. SOME ISSUES There are several issues that we would like to see discussed during this campaign by the candidates for the legislature and senate from Chestrfield County. Chesterfield County needs a hospital where her patients can receive proper treatment and nursing. Hardly a wek passes but several patients must be taken, at great discomfort anil expense, to Wadesboro, Florence, v .nariouo or v otumota. ny me assistance <>f visiting specialists our local physicians could take care of our worst cases ripht at home. All cases of contagious diseases could by this means be removed from the home durinjr the course of the disease, thuremovinp from the community, a source of contagion. Such a hospital would in time become self-sustaining, but jf it is to be a public institution it would require public funds for its establishment. There is already a strong sent: ment in favor of this movement. We would like to see it espoused by one or more of the candidates. Then there is no more vital question than that of pood roads. In fact "Good Roads and Hotter Schools" oupht to be the keynote of this compaipn. Anybody can promise a reduction in taxes hut it takes a man of coura*re to face his audience and say, "If we ;* ? to tro forward in the matter of better health protection, poo I roads and better schools there can be no reduction of taxes." I ??t 11 fcj tn\ furu'nril TRIBUTE TO SENATOR TILLMAN Referring to the re-entering into the senatorial race by Hon. Ben Tillman, .Mr. James A. Holluinan, staff correspondent of the Atlanta Constitution, . irote to his paper, in March a letter paying high tribute to South Carolina's great senator. Wh.le the State of South Carolina is mourning the loss of this stalesman of the old school, the tribute ol Mr. ilolloman, written several months betore the Senator's death, will be read with peculiar interest, we append some extracts from Mr. JIolloman's article: "Benjamin R. Tillman i.-> a wonder .ful man in many respects; unique in many and picturesque in not a few. Another term in the senate may mean a life sentence for him in the senate chamber of his country. If it should so moan?and here's hoping he lives to be a hundred?he wih die with his political boots on. Something else. He will die building up and maintaining the greatest navy | in Hod's hinh seas. The navy is his hohhy. As chairman of the naval affairs committee in the senate his work has heen con-truciive. Many month a^e he saw the handwriting on the wail. H< heenn to hu.hi the An.'-r.can i a.y to prepare r, when "pre paredness" was unpopular in this country, lie had tin- co-operation of the house comniilt? i 1!< had the en operation of the secretary of the navy. '1 he re.-a,', is, while the war department is di. organized in man> branches, due more to the inac.ivi \ of the legislative t'onuuittees than to the mistakes of the war department officials, the navy is as nearly perfect as the most exacting coul I hop* and the work is not yet finished. That is why Senator Tillman wants to sta> in the senate. Men Tillman came to the Unites States S( nato in lKDu. He has served without interruption since. Twentyfour years when his term expires! That is a proud record of itself. There are only two men in the senate who have a longer continuous service, fhey are I.od^e, of Massachusetts, and (iallimre-. uf Mew Hnmnahire Senator 'I illrnan has. therefore, .served through the democratic adnnnistration of Crover Cleveland, last term, and the republican ad ninistrations of McKinley, Roosevelt and Tuft and the democratic administra tion of the first term of Woodrow Wilson, ile has been on the naval committee from the beginning ar.d for several yeflrs was the ranking democratic member, while the committee was organized by the republicans. Say what you please about Ren Tillman, he has his enemies and his friends; his enemies are bitter, h.h friends are loyal; but measured by the standard of manhood he is- ever> THE WEALTHY NOT SLACKERS That patriotism is not confined to the common people, so called, but actuates and inspires our men of wealth, is proven by many instances of generous deeds of millionaires and multimillionaires. Here is a single instance that is a sample of many others. Mr. Frank H. Buhl, of Pennsylvania, who died recently left two million dollars, to be used in helping people who have been made destitute by the ravages of war. During his lfietimc Mr. Buhl used his large fortune in helping his less fortunate fellow men and by the gift of this two million dollars built a monument for himself more enduring than marble. There are many other people of wealth in this time of stress doing their duty nobly and patriotically. A daughter of the great banker and financier, .1. Pierpont Morgan, is? now doing Red Cross work in France. She is spending thousands of dollars in building up the homes and villages destroyed by the Germans. She is not alone. Many of tin wealthy of the country are not only g*\sng of heir means but giving themselves to the work of helping in nospiud and ied Cross work. "Garnbed." a my t; rn> is engine hat the inventor clniiv>d w.u i <le clop great horsepove vh u fuel <d" any kind, has be mi in\estigat .1 by a committee of se'e.jt.i:!^ men and '"ound wanting. Aemiding to the in. entor's claim perpet ml ; ;.?t:<? is n* I o be compared with hi . wen,! n ful ngine. It I raws its power from the .ir, converts it into mii've f ?rce tha' II drive the most i ..v im d hmery. Put Mr. Garabed Girossion fail*d to convinc" the seiertHl*. ii.en lis model machine woo' I not run and Mr. (J. G. will have to try again. GERMANY'S FOES ARE TWENTY N A TI O N S?A NDTRUTH On the days when the new; from ranee has I ccn most depressing I wave noticed a curious phenomenon. I have noticed that many people y to me on such dark days, "it will ?' a Ionic war." But not one single san or woman will admit the slightt doulit that Germany must ultimately lose. No matter how much ground the Germans gain, the common man perils in regarding their gains as pureiy temporary. IIow shall we explain this fixed and tuhhorn blindness that refuses to accept the evidence of the War maps. The common man is not good sit elf-analvsis: he would probsibly lino lifficulty in giving reasons for the aitii that is in him. Hut that faith is founded on nulling more nor less than this that 10 cause can finally prevail which built upon and bolstered up with i ies. Some day the German people will understand how great a military deeat they sutfered when they star ed heir war by trampling upon truth, mined, tin re are signs that they '.ready begin io realize it. "The war was forced upon us," their rulers cried. "England schemed nd plotted it." The world knew it for a lie in 11: and now, in 11) IX, conies Prince .ichnowsky, the last Gentian amine sador to England, confessing in his thnt it :? In- thiit I'm ands strovo to the uttermost for peace I'hey may prosecute I'rince Lichowsky for treason; but Truth they in neither imprison nor wipe ou; before a firing s<|uad. Kmperor Carl of Austria may disss his minister and explain until e is breathless that the French have falsified his peace letter. The common man is unimpressed: e has passed judgment upon those xplanat ions even before they are uttered. For four years every day's history has been teaching him that Herman explanations and promises and treaties are unworthy of his trust: and it will be four hundred years before the influence of thai touching; dies out of the world. The common man does not know uoh history; but embedded deep in nis heart is a convict on that the vorld is slowly growing; better; that n the long; run rig;IU triumphs over wrontr; that Truth crushed to earth does rise agrain. Truth is no more to he withstood \ i ? i MIII ?m\ < J 111 i nauiMi inn ? ICmerson J. We can drive a stone upward for a moment into the air, but I is yet true all stun- s will forever .ill: and whatever instances can be noted of unpunished theft, or of a e which somebody credited, justice 1 list prevail, and it is the privilege >f truth to yet itself believed. At almost every period of the world's history some man or body of nen have snuyht to set themselves airainst this inexorable law. A lyiny, jealous populace forced Socrates to drinlt the bitter hem>' k and succeeded only in makiny Socrates immortal. A crowd of false witnesses rushed csus to the Cross and the Truth vhich they thouyht they had cruci.1 u 11: > l > ... '. 'I "IIII III.II o< II luini'iiiim, HI prend its power around the world. Napoleon, one of tho greatest liars f history, sought by mitfht yoked nh deceit to build his empire. He as wiser than the German?wise nou^h to know that the fo he ha . nost to fear was Truth. He sent Madame de Stael into exNo. 666 Thia ia a preacription prepared especially ifor MALARIA or CHILLS 4. FEVER. Five or aix doece will break any caae, and if taken then aa a tonic the Fever wHI not return. It acta on the liver better than Calomel and doea not gripe or aickoQ. 25t HHHifeJkaaMWMd T"n V J .* -i.4 ' ' ' 1 AFTER A YEAR'S WAIT * SHE PRAISES TANLAC SAYS WITH CONFIDENCE THAI "IT CERTAINLY IS FINEi' SHE KNOWS IT VALUE Mrs. Davis Declares Tanlac "Re stored Me lo HpaltK end Sfi-pn ttK11 "A year has passed since I first took Tanlae, and now I can say with confidence that Tanlae is certainly n line medicine, for ! know what it wik lo. 1 am triad to five this statement n endorsement of Tanlae," says Mrs Rllie C. Dgvis, of Drayton, S. C., :i suburb of Spartanburg, in a stale mcnt she gave June 1th. "1 tool; i'anlac for stomach trouble of a bad Kiinful form, and also 1 suffered from attacks of appendicitis. nerves were bad and 1 suffered ; lot with indigestion. 1 was weak and overwork had almost downed mj health. "The Tanlae stopped the indigos tion, though, and soon I was not troubled any more with appendicitis /hose pains in my side left, too. Th< aedieine gave me back my appetite trengthened my nerves ai.d restore* :e to health ana strength." Tanlae, the Master Medicine, is sold by The Chesterfield Drug Co., Ches ..-C.,.1.1 V /' . T IV n*? a? ? - u.iiivm, *>. v/., i. i j. >> ctiiam-iKirr ? Sons, Che raw; Mt. CroRhan Drujr Co, Mt. Croj?han, S. C.; McBee Uru? Co., McBee, S. C.; Pageland Druj; Co. Pajjcland, S. C.; .). T. .lowers & Sons Jefferson, S. C. Aclv thought in those who hid never : be t t into their heads to tliink before 01 who had forgotten how." But, in the end, the truth that he rie.i to suppress by his decrcs ol oanishinent rose up and supprosscc hint. Until (Jerntany has destroyec men's convietion that Truth mus' prevail, it will profit 1::t! to destroj ships and soldiers. Her chief enemy is not an arntec force, but deepest! most sacred fiiitl of the human heart: The faith that righteousness though often eclipsed, is never tinallj destroyed. The faith that a lyinjr cause is re sisted by the very stars in theii courses, and by the arm of Him ii whose siuht "lyin^ lips tire abontina t ion." Bruce Barton, Kditor of Kvery Week fws.s.1 NER SAYINGS STAMPS 15SUKB UY THE UNITED STATES jDOTERMMENT Buy Them And HelD Win The Wai FOR SALE EVERYWHER1 fw mila UIW wm gov1 Buy Th Help Wii FOR SALE I iBank, of X [Oldest Bank R. E. Rivera, President. M. J. Hough, Vice-President. . A Bank Accoi Is the Gibraltar If you are a man of family you i ACCOUNT IS THE BULWARK, T It protects you in tine of need. It gives you a feeling of indepen It strengthens yon. It Is a Consolati to Your ' The FARM BAPTIST SUNDAY SCHOOL CONVENTION Program for the Chesterfield Baptist Sunday School Convention. To be held with Hopewell Church Friday and Saturday before the fourth Sunday in July. Friday?10 a. m. Devotional Exercises, Mr. Kirby 1 It i vers. 1.-., 1 ?r ?? ?i ? i *jiik vriiiucill Wl L/UiL'^illUA UIHI I t'" ports from the schools. Preparation for the Lesson.." (a) Scripture Preparation, Rev. . 1 B. S. Funderburg. I (b) Lesson Helps, Prof. W. P. . Coker. j (c) Heart Preparation, Rev. A. I T. Stanedenimire. [ ! Topic: "Ilow to Enlist the Whole j Community in Sunday School Work." j (a) Should Rewards be Offered, ! Rev. J. K. Ilair. I (b) Personal Effort, Mr. C. II. River. (c) A Lively Program, Rev. A. 1 I). Brown. i Trained and Enthusiastic Teachers, r Rev. II. L. Baggott. Recess for Dinner, 12:30 to 2 p. m. The Sunday School and Kingdom Work, Dr. J. L. Bristow. 1 Address on Sunday School Work, Dr. Thos. J. Watts. Saturday 10 a. m. Devotional Exercises, Rev. F. M. [ Cannon. Address on Sunday School Work, I Dr. Thos. .1. Watts. I he Sunday School as an Evange . ig Agency, Rev. .1. C. Lawson. Recess for Dinner, 12:30 to 2 p. m. A Standard Sunday School, Dr. | h..s .t '1 ho Pastor's Relation to the Sun-j tl.iy School, Rev. J. K. Hair. ' All Schools in the Association j douse send full delegations to the i 'onvenl ion. P.. S FUNDKUIUIRC;.! W. P. ("OKKit, T. w. KOI>INS. P AND A DIFFICULT FEAT, TOO I A drill sergeant was hard at work on a s(|uad of "rookies." " j, "Company!" lie called out. "Atten- ^ i | lion! Everyone lift your left leg and .: hold it straight out in front of you!" | One of the squad held up his right I leg hy mistake. That brought his , right-hand coinpaion's li ft leg and his own close together. The ollicer, as he glanced down the line, observed v ; this fact, and exclaimed angrily: 0 "W hich one of you blooming ga. loots over there is holding up both r of his legs?" Youth's Companion. L - 1 . LEMON JUICE IS n FRECKLE REMOVER t ,l Girls! Make this Cheap Beauty Lo- *' tion to Clear and Whiten your Skin. a Squeeze the juice of two lemons 1 into a bottle containing three ounces ' of orchard white, shake well, and you v have a quarter pint of the best free- s kle and tan lotion, and complexion beautifier, at very, very small cost. 1 Your grocer has the lemons and ' any drug store or toilet counter will supply three ounces of orchard white 1 for a few cents. Miissniw thie cifoni. 11 ly fruKrnnt lotion into the face, neck, ' arms and hands each day and see c how cler, soft and white the skin be* conies. Yes! It is harmless. Adv. 3. I : n,, TKOSSTAUn U IY TUB ? '.D STATE? K UtKAVENT n lem And i The War I JV liitY wiusKis i( Ikcdterfield ; Ir. Chesterfield s' C. C. Douglass, Cashier. '' D. L. Smith, Assist. Cashier. j( ? ~ I11 ? e; of the Home! v i nust have a ba./k account. A BANK HE OIBEALTAR, OF YOUR HOME dcnce. on to Your Wife, Children ERS- BANK i' S f * 2522/ I I M m m m m m 1 1 jTrrf * ^ \j It" INIVERS1TY OF SOU. CAROLIN; cholorship and Exatnina tion. The examination for (he award o acant scholarships ii. the L'niversit; f South Caroiiiia am! for ndiniss'oi f new students will l>e hold at th ounty courthouse on Friday, duly 1'J 918, at 9 a. m. Applicants nius iot he less than sixteen years o Ke. When scholai ships are vacan fter July 12, they will lie awardei 0 those making the h'/hest averaj* t exaiuinatioji, provided they meo he conditions jrovernirir the a wan tpplicants for seholatships shoul 1 rite to President Currel for seholai hip blanks. These blanks, properly filled out b he applicant, should he filed wit 'resident Currell hy July ">. Schoarships are worth $100, fre uitiou and fe< s, $!.VS total. 'I h lext session wi. open September 1> 918. For further information an atalogue, address The PRKSIDKNT, University of South Carolina Columbia, S. C. JGH! CALOMEL MAKES YOU DEATHLY SICK top using dangerous drug befor it salivates you! It's horrible! You're bilious, sluggish, constipe.t <1 and believe you need vile, clan ;erous calomel to start your live nd clean your bowels. Here's my guarantee! Ask you ruggiat for a bottle of Ilodson's Li er Tone and take a spoonful L.might f it doesn't start your liver an tmighton you right up better thai alomel and without griping or mak ig you sick I want you to go back t< he store and go' your money. Take calomel and tomorrow yoi nil feel weak and sick and n.'.useatd >on't lose a day's work. Take j poonful of harmless, vegetable Dod irn's Liver Tone tonight and wake u[ eeling great. It's perfectly harm :s8, so give it to your children an] me. It can't salivate, so let their at anything afterwards. Adv. 2 DR. L. H. TROTT1, Dental Surgeon Chesterfield, S. C. Office on second floor in Row uilding. All who desire my services wi? lease see me at Chesterfield, as i ave discontinued my visits to othei >wns. DR. R. L. McMANUS Dentin! Office over Hank of Che t .-field, /ill visit Pageland every Tuesday It. Croghan every \\Y Iih lay. Other davs in Che.-.tei-field Price* reasonable. All work guar nteed. J. ARTHUR KNIGHT Attorney-ft I-Law Office in Courthouse Chesterfield, S. C. HANNA & HUNLEY Attorneys? 1. E. Hanna, C. L. Hunley, Cheraw. Chestcrfieh Offices: 'eoplea' Bank Bldg., Chesterfieh Bank of Cheraw Bldg., Cheraw , siY . rhc Quality Goes Clear Thror Buy a Dort aru rho only extravagant car is the unu \ car in uso i3 a car that is saving t thrift to buy a car and use it. The Dort is tho sort of a car that is U3ed?ot itself. Li?,ht, easily handled, costing littlo hesitancy about usin& it "early and often." Vou can (Jo more with a Dort to ?>,et you nhot by fccttinft "on tho ground" instead of teleplv because of the outdoor air you &ot in usin& y In any way you loot at it, tho Dort will Buy a Dort and uso it. LUCAS AUTO CC THE DORT MOTOR CARCOMPAN Foursoason Cars: /"O* N o..; v Tho Doit. SoJ.n, /T I I |A Coupo ond SeJ.inet - | .1,1 .1 *-) I enjoy nri-.il popularity 1 B r-, 'T I araon>> th05" seeking j y?X , f i" ? car ''ne oppoar- ~r I] " L V J/ once, utility und com- >L 'Jr ? ? ft iort at a low price. -mk ? 5 ?. A S O N SWAT THE FLY! 13y Dr. W. A. Evans, in The State Twenty years apo Vauphan, Ree & Shakespeare estimated that abot one-quarter of the typhoid fever i f our army raised for the Spanish-Ann y rican war was due to infection h u Hies. That horrible typhoid rat seems to us today to be the prei , shame of the last quarter of that eei tury. Today our armies do not have tj f phoid fever, in part because there at t fewer Hies around our army camp j but in preater part because the so (i diers are vaccinated apainsl lyphoa ( While army typhoid has com to a . , em! the civilian population still paj (| 1 tribute to th s unncia ai\\ disca. The few points needed to pi<* that llies spread typhoid fever I prove it so thoroughly that none cou j, deny it have been cleared Jp. \V can say with certainty that if thei t. were no flies the amount of typhoi , would be preatly lessened. The proc ^ is pood that flies are responsible f< ,j der two y< ars of ape. much of the diarrhoea in children ui j der two years of ape. , I Levy of Kichmond trained th nurses of that city never to let th Hies pet to soiled diapers and at th same time trained other people ther C to prevent fly hreedinp. By thes two measures he materially lowere * t'ne haby death rate of Richmond. The New York Society for lmpro\ inp the Condition of the Poor by - canipaipn of fly supression malenali - reduced the baby death rate in a set r tion of* that city. British observer have contributed still other proof ths< r flies are responsible for a pood pal - of (he diarrhoea death rate in you children. ' If we look over the cities of thi a country we find that wherever Hie - abound there is much typhoid and iri & fant diarrhoea. The case upuinst th fly is much stronper that .t was 2 J years U'fo. 1 have just read the most dispust 1 inp article that I have read in a Ion time. It was a study of flies an 1 U-.l.lt.. ,.~.l .. *1- 1 .( ihiMiin aim t\ aiuutv i?l lilt? Ul't'OII) position of bodies. It was wiitten l> 1 ' i 5? 17 ; Jaggs g.1 or I J FROM MY Barred : | Foundation Stock ! v?.. r?~ i uu \jun VJL'I M-jlfgS i 11 Florence, S. C., Nov. 6-9. P? exhibition Pen, let Cocker Florence, S. C., Dec. 26-29. 1 and 2nd Cockerel bred Pu hibition Hen, 2nd Cockerel uion Pen. i B. C. P i | $amrock( 1IMI1IM I I , i I HiUJlUI >? - 1 a . '< iqh* 1 Use It scdl or tlxe useless car. ime und money. It is te that more than pays for fur upkeep, there is no it quickly; you can do better oninp,; you will feel better our Dort. increuse your efficiency. )., Agents Y. FLINT, MICIL ?A, ipioppj) CARS two British scientists?Foreman and Graham Smith?and it appeared , in 'the Journal of Ilyiriene, a hieh 1 too disgusting to print. i-'lies are lL vomited and otherwise soiling several n time} a minute. > They can not light on food and y stay there a half a minute without .e soding it, in addition to tiuoking it t with the filth they have walked over, i- Think of the nastiest possible contaminations that your imagination can > - conceive of and then accept my word e fur it when 1 assure you that the s. truth is at least twice .13 bad as you 1- have imagined it. 1. The filth may be nothing more n than filth repulsive to the asethctic ,'s sense. It may he charged with any one of several kinds of disease proc ! ducing bacteria. ,1 , WHEN HER BACK ACHES V , l' A Woman Find* All Her Energy end Ambition Slipping Away. >r Chesterfield women know how the l- aches and pains that often come when the kidneys fail make life a burden. 10 Eackache, hip pains, headaches, dizzy spells, distressing urinary troubles, v | are frequent indications of weak kide j neys and should be checked in time, d I Doan's Kidney Pills are for the kid- ' neys only. They attack kidney dis- J^j eases by striking at the cause. il J Call Chesterfield sufferers desire V | stronger proof of merit that this "-I Henncttsville woman's word? J Mrs. N. J. Dickens, 110 Powers 11 St., Henncttsville, S. C., says: "My j kidneys were out of order and I had i*, a constant pain across my back. I ! was sore and lame mornings and was is hardly able to do my housework. My s | head ached alll the time and I had i- j dizzy spells and other kidney disore j ders. Doan's Kidney Pills relieved i) ! me of every symptom of kidney trou| ble." | Price GOc at all dealers. Dont X simply ask for a kidney remedy?get I | Doan's Kidney Pills?the same that - Mrs. Dickens had. Foster-Milburn y Co., Mfgrs., Buffalo, N. Y. Adv. 4 ??????????mmmmmm G.iaii;isii!y |* HIGH CLASS 1 | Rocks J Thompson Ringlets ,:S From These Winnings > Dee Fair, 1st Cock, 1st Hon, 1st J st and 3rd Cockerel Mating, 1st I ?*? ^ illeta, 1st exhibition Pullet, 4th ex* I bred Hen, Champion Male, Chame ARKER 4 >urn, S. C. , ;