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ijiwl, "" \ rJBKw The Chesterfield Advertiser , PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY i Subscription Rates: $1.50 a Year; c Ix months, 75 cents.?Invariably in ! j advance. Entered as second-class matter at the 5 postoftice at Chesterfield, South ( Carolina. I PAUL II. HEARN I Editor and Publisher. ? A LIVING MEMORIAL As described .1 another column of . < this paper, Yew Yor City will per -/' petuate the : of her soldier dead who j...\ le r lives for the 1 defense of i io.:i by means of ? bronze tabk. o led on tfrowinn trees, 'Ibis ne item is republished ' as a sujrprc lion to Chesterfield county. What ... ;tv fitting thin*' can 1 Chesterfield do ' .a: plant a beautiful tree at th '' a house for every Chesterfield c i v who eave his i life that we . e. Where New York City pi.i > j ant one tree for each two lu ., . , we can plant 1 one tree f . ii r and place ) thereon a bio . let bearing his name anil such < i i inscription as t may be thoutrh suitable. WK Dli) IT The jxood old s ate of South Carolina went over tl. t >p in the United t 117.. _ It" .... t TVtii ? ui i\ v. aI Chest orlie'd n.'y was one of the eijrhl counties > receive a set of Allied llaK-s for u .is; well done, this county having \<- ceded her quota. 1 The St.-le's quo.. .as $ I,OUT,000. but sh<? j'ave n . ;lian eighty thou sand do,!;.rs n.or than her quota, ? $l,0S7,oU7. ? t THEY HATE TO GIVE UP The Germ ins had occupied for so t lonu a time- the city of Met/, in I or- . rane thai n was hard for thorn to ? realize that it was theirs no longer. . It was for nearly lifty- years a Ger a man Kurriso- When the Allies look i possessi ; >' he c ty a picture of the j Kaiser unj'.nj.: on he wall of a public ..adding, It was immediately taken down, v.Inch action greatly offended iho German commissioner who was in charge <?f the building. Hut he soon hail something mere to bo offended at when he was told to get out. And he got. OUR RICH UNCLE If you do.i' .'cvy that I '..cle Ram is o rir' just pei de-* this fact. iilied to the \1 lies ia'i r .u.uUO. T i tli ] {e 11 r i:. I 11 I - "1 000, and si t n< v i:i 'r. reserve ban !" hi nephew.with which MA KIN', V,' i KRTILIZER The I i . i itrafe plant at Sheffield. A lierun niakinj; nitrate . i 1 be making f rtilizer l f r. instead of producing i r war purposes as was at !, the product of this pre . ill he turned to the chain < I ful pursuits, to the KTowiii' n and corn, for clothing ai the naked and hungry. 'J he hotter than killing peoph- (Jernians. HELPING I ARMENIANS A one > iiin to raise $"0,000,Odd i txi St.ati s for C Armenian ! ri.m Relief will I.e. KJT) January 1 In ih<- t. years the Turks anil th< fi.'i l ive massacre I a million of tii ^ ( or.-tians, leaving about f.'Mi.oiiH i, j>ha11s. There are 4,000,000 "lie . people living in their deso !< .. . , n try and many of them are s arvine ml without means of a liveliiiooil. r condition is now improved to .ins < ;tent lhat they s will no longer ">e ruled by the Turks, c but they are I in i barren, blood- tl tained country and this fund is be- \t injf raised to save their lives and to ; make them self-sustaining. In the case of the Armenians and '' th<? Syrians /<>' I may come out of v the evil of v r. but they have j*one k through a bloody and fiery ordeal. c . n This mil viiian must have taken ^ something stronger then his milk. He tol(f one of his customers that his n milk was perfectly pure, that it had 81 been paralyzed by a government antrcbift, m ' . *'r '.*"W " iAVJ KER YEARS HAD . [ SliGUN TO TELL ON HER\ -IRS. BUTTS DECLARES SHE FELT BADLY N EVERY WAY HEARD ABOUT TANLAC Vfter Taking It Says She Has Praised It To Her Friends Regarding the relief Tanlac i?ave ier from kidney and liver trouble uid indigestion, Mrs. Mary E. Butts, >f Union, jfave this statement on darch 17 in endorsement of Tanlac: "1 suffered from general weakness ind my general health was bad. Inlij?estion caused a lot of suffering and icalTburn caused a great deal of trouble. My liver was sluggish and ! suffered a lot with headaches. Really i felt badly in every way. Kidney trouble caused me a lot of suffering. : am <?K years of ago and my ago iad begun to tell on me. Then I be- j taking Tanlac, for 1 bad heard so' niu h about it eing such a line tonic.' 1 he Tanlac i a c* me a g ?d appetite vi d strengthened my system a: d lolped the indigestion right away. VIy stomach was built up and reguuted. s-.nd so were my nerves, 'll. liuil-.c helped the kidney trouble lent deal, to >. I have told scvera; >oopli about Tanlac, a. id I have >r.iiscd ii to thenv. 1 think it is a fine Medicine for troubles like I rad." \ Tanlac, the Master Medicine, is sold jy The Chesterfield Drug Co., Ches? erfield, S. C.; T. E. Wanamaker & Sons, Cheraw; Ml. Croghan Drug Co, \lt. Croghan, S. C.; McUee Drug Co.. VlcBee, S. C.; I'ageland Drug Co.. Pagcland, S. C.; J. T. Jowers & Sons, lefferson, S. C. Adv HONOR SOLDIER DEAD WITH LIVING TREES Prom the New York Times: Every soldier and sailor from the dorough of Manhattan who gave his ife for llis count rv in ltn- nrixi.nl is to have a permanent living manorial in Central Park. His name ivill he inscribed upon a bronze tablet, a. d the tablets will become in.egral parts of trees to be planted in lonorahlc memory of the grand sac*iIic*??. In order that future generaions may not forget their obligations 0 the men who gave all that they night lie free, the memorial trees will je planted so as to line a long, formtl avenue. The Park Department has contacted for forty American elms, a t ee that flourishes in this climate and ittains a large size. The trees are tursery grown, all perfect in symnetry, thirty feet high, and front ight to ten inches in diameter. These are to be delivered for planting arly next spring. The number will ii\e one tree for each two local Ira ft boards in the borough. Iieween now and next April the comnunity Council of National Defense, 1 body which has maintained in the erritory of each local draft board a ( mmiitee to look after the inter sis of its own soldiers, to care for he needs of relatives left at home tnd to foster a spirit of local patriotic ndeavor and fellowship, will pre?are the details of the scheme. iii Hit? niea.ntime a bronze tablet v i 11 Ik designed and approved by the dunieipal Art Commission. All the ablets will be identical except thai ome may require more space for ionics than others. The idea of . planting trees in nemory of the soldier dead ununited with the American Forestry Association which as a primary su^tresion, pointed out the desirability of hading the Lincoln Highway with r. . that mitrnt have local signifiilife and association that would inure their preservation by the eomlUnities through which the highway ' i si's. The suggestion found immeate favor, arid many communities ar from the Lincoln Ilij hway sipn;ied intention to plant memorial tree a open squares and parks, and some diddle Western towns have even arar.tted for the creation of proves vith trees to commemorate not only heir lead but many notable incidents >f he war, including expressions by mblic men that give promise of beoniin t immortal. It has been suggested that the lantiny of each tree be made the >cca. ion for a memorial service, to >< conducted by the local community ouncds of the* two draft board disriols in honor of wohse dead the tree ^ marked. URLS. WHITEN SKIN WITH LEMON JUICE /lake a Beauty Lotion for a Few Cents to Remove Tan, Freckles and Sallowneas. Your RTocer has the lemons and ny drutf store or toilet counter will uonlv VOU with three oiinrea of or. hard white for a few cents. Squeeze he juice of two fresh lemons into a ottle, then put in the orchard and hake well. This makes a quarter int of the very best lemon skin ^hitener and complexion beautifier nown. Massage this fragrant, reamy lotion daily into the face, eck, irms and hands and just see ow freckles, tan, saliowness, redess and roughness disappear and rjft and clear '.he skin becomes. Yea! , ia harmless, and tha beautiful r*> Bit* will urpriaa you. Adv. 4, Si In i 1 an< I |w.s.s. I WAR SAVINC county or municij when destroyed b owner, if properly possiDLUty oi nsK, | A War as ! THEY RATI COM! A War Savin; I deemed for $5.00 c redeemed before n eat. The safest ai teed by the stron; MANNING AND KILMER ' . 1 The following tribute to Major \\ illiam Sinkler Manning; is taken ! from The New York Times: Of the two men who went straight I from the editorial officer of Tho N!<?vi- ! York Times into the wear of khaki, two h'.vo been killed, two of the j brighfst minds that ever served this lo ws' iper. The first was Xer/t. Joye 1, inn r of the Sunday Department, who was killed while performing duty of speeial danger at the battle ??f the ( ire<i in July. Now comes news of at.other. Major William Sinkler Man- \ ring, of the Washington bureau, killed only fiv?. days before the end of the war. Manning's work was known t i hundreds of thousands who did not know hi?; name or that he existci; for after being a reporter in New Y<>rk he wrote, for years, the news e >.ning out of the United States Senate. About these two young men there hangs an odd similari'y. Both were gentlemen to their finger tips, of an almost dilettante sort of gentlehood. Kilmer was from the North, Manning front the South; New York and South Carolina were their States, i Both seemed to he appointed for greater things than they were titling antl to he it!ling along a pathway waiting for a call. The moment the ea I came they answered it with ; stentorian voice, and were transfigUPt'fL f| hov /!?/! eo/.tM i i". * I* same men. Manning thought Iv h ;rd the call to Mexico in 1910, and ha ie adieu to the ,S oate for boots an 1 saddles. That was a short, Mangled campaign, and he came' home bitterly disappointed after his share in the Villa hu :t, resuming with ditfculty th?> humdrum life; 1917 sounded the real call, and this time there was no mistake. The promise of both these lives willed before German bullets. In Look Ahead! BeIndepend When You C A goodly sum of money in bank ii ing years. You are young and vigorous and f ing good money. Things may not always be so rosy, PLAN TO DEPOSIT A CERTAL BANX. A Bank Book Is 1 The FARMI ?, y-~ ipr en Sancti d Securi ABOVE THE HIGHEST LAW IN THE LANE IS STAMPS can not be touche )ality. They can not be misuae< y fire or accident., or paid to i registered. They are above eve , supreme m sanctity and securil ' Savings St TLrre~* Is as > a Nationa. __>ank Nc PAY INTEREST A 5 OF 4 1-4 PER 'OUNDED QUAR1 Stamp bought in December f >n January 1, 1923. In caao of n< aaturity at their jairchaae priee p id sanest investment in the world rest and T/eal thie.it nation in the Manning's ease it is easy to see where] the fulfillment of that promise would I have lain; South Carolina could not have done too much for the gallant representative of th:a fifth generation "f of soldier Mannings, whose blood has honored every war from the Revolution. He was %a man, too, born to distinction, with a face and figure meet for it, with a heart of iron under the gen 'est of manners. Kilmer, already of celebrity as a poet,? hut capable of greater things than he had ever done, and needing only the contact with the reality of life which the war gave him?as his letters show?to rise to great heights in his chosen field after battle should he ended, had already given proof of the promise he held out. Manning, the son of n governor, the scion of a notably Southern family, had ajways about him a halfgrave insouciance which gave char??. ua. ii- . ?vw? n# urn uiaiiiiuis. nt* scL'incu 10 take life idly, and not to bo suro that it was r.ot wholly humorous; until, indeed, some incident crossed-his way that called for the dropping of the velvet glove, and then a hand of steel sprang forth. Rougher men, deceived by his manner, sometimes undervalued him and found it a costly mist alee. There were cases where such men, recognizing a master, became his friends and devoted admirers for life, though he and they c< ntii.u< I to speak a deferent languaj'e. ( 11 e had the keenest of wits, and a gentle humor which, when the chance; oiTered, shone unexpectedly through his wr.tings on the gravest subjects. As a reporter of nat inventions, tile hardest tied > most d- ii? o work known to thi nper bu ness, be developed amen other men learn through tOi.g rience, the ability to seize instantly on the centre or cause of every ine.denl in the panor..mr. and m> \e it vivid to his readers. Of these two brilliant men, for irow O^d! > a source of comfor*. ?u one's declin* ^ i uii ui cucigy iuuuy. z uu are maxi . l N SUM EVERY #EEX IN THE j 4 i Ko r Best Friend i LR.S' BANK j I fl 0 j ty ity Mw.s.s.1 > l d by nation, state, i when stolen, lost, anyone except the ry law, beyond any * J 1 Secure >te T THE !| CENT TDT V . UXVJU x or $4.23 will be rejcessity, thoy oan be 4us 3 per cent inter?W. S. S.?g-uaranworld. | i ???eei ji mi in?rnr whom thc. future held promises so ' high, which hud the harder fate, he ' who fell at the beginning of the American campaign, or he who saw all of it hut live days? The harder fate fell to Manning, if we are to follow James Whitcomb Riley's "Good-by, Jim": Think of him?with the war plum through And the glorious old Red, White and Blue, A-laughin' the news down over Jim, And the old man, bendin' over him. * * * Of both these men it may be said that the chief sufferer is their country, which would have had great things from them, but which yet has had from them the purest and highest gift, the gift of young, spotless, and noble lives; Curtius's gift, the greatest ever offered to the altar of Rome. FOR SALE OR RENT Small Farm containing 25 acres, 5 miles south of Cheraw; 7 miles from Chesterfield; good new house and outbuildings, on S.A.L. R.R., half mile from Kimberly station. Rural mail route and church and school handy; good land for cotton, corn or tobacco; 22 acres in cotton this year. Bargain for quick sale. , i\. A. JM&L.TUN. Cheraw, R.F.D. 1 2t-lp CONSTIPATION And Sour Stomach Caused This Lady Much Suffering. BlackDraught Relieved. Meadorsvllle, Ky.?Mrs. Pearl Pa'.- , rick, of this place, writes: "I was ' very constipated. I had sour stomac i ,1 and wan so uncomfortable. I went to i1 the doclo.*. lie gavo me some pill:-.'' They weakened me and seemed to ' tear up my digcBtton. They would 1 gripe me and afterwards It steme I I was more constipated than before. I beard of Iilack-Draught and di> elded to try It. I found It Just what I needed. It was nn i.toH.. ' ?. 1MAUV1 ? O, ?UU | not bad to swallow. My digestion soon ( Improved. I got well of tha sour Ston i arh, my bowels soon seemed normal, ! , no more griping, and I would take a t dose now and then, and waa In good shape. I cannot e&y too much for Black* Draught for it is the finest laxative one can use." Thedford's Black-Draught has for I many years been found of great value t \ in the treatment of stomach, liver and , bowel troublie. Easy to take, gentle and reliable in its action, leaving no ' bad after-effects, it has won the praise of thousands of people who have need \ It NO-1W | Catarrhal Deafness Cannot Be Cored I, by local applications, aa they cannot reach the diseased portion of tha ear. Thsre la only ona way to cure catarrhal deafneat. and that la by a constitutional remedy. Catarrhal Deafness Is cauae4 by aa la- , flamed condition of tha muoeu* Itnlnf of 0 tha ICastachlan Tuba When this tube la ' Inflamed you have a rumbling aound or 1 Imperfect hearlns, and whan It la antlrety closed. Deafness la tha result. , Unless tha Inflammation ran he reduced and this tube restored to Its normal oondltlon, hearlns I will be destroyed forever. Many cases of i, deafness are caused by eatarrti, which le 1 an InJIamc-l condition of the mucous sur- r faces Hall's Catarrh Curs acta thru tha blood on the mucoua surfaoes of tha aya- t tin ' We wilt clve One Hundred Dollarn for | any re of Catarrhal Deafness that cannot f be cur .1 by Hall's Cattirrh Curs Circulars * tents 1 WRK All Now i Pink Wrai To save tin foil WRIGLEYS is n< in pink paper ai seeded in wax: 1. The tangey flavor of mint 2. The luscious different flavor 3. The soothing flavor of peppermint A!1 in pink-en? all sealed airto get WR86! 171 mini* JL 1U V TAX NOTICE 1 will be at the following places on the dates named for the collection of taxes. Cheraw, Dec. 3d. Patrick, Dec. 4th. Ous'eydale, Dec. 5th; 1) a.m. to 12. H. K. Linton's, Dec. 5th; 1 to 4. McBoe, Dec. Gth. Angelus, Dec. Oth. Jefferson, Dec. 10th. Pagelar.d, Dec. 11. Mt. Croghan, Dec. 12. J. A. WELSH, ' Treasurer. ' i THE BEST | INVESTMENT IN THE I WORLD I ii WAR SAVINGS STAMPS i I ISSUED BY THE UNITED ' STATES. W. S. 8. PAY INTEREST AT THE RATE OF 4% PER CENT PER ANNUM, COMPOUNDED QUARTERLY. DISCHARGE NOTICE On the 'J 1st of December at 12 o'clock. A!., 1 will apply to the Probate Court, for Chesterfield county, S. C., for a discharge as Administrator of the estate of Aiott Buchanan and Brice Buchanan. W. J. PERRY, Guardian. DISCHARGE NOTICE On the 21st of December at 12 o'clock .*i., J will ap;>iy to the f'robal Court for ' he: .c.ficlu county, S. C., 'or a disci nrpo as Aiimir trator oi .he estate of I. J. Davis, deceased. M. S. WATSON, Guardian. "asw;rafts Condition Powders A ki^h-class remedy for horses ii?' mules in poor condition and n iced of a tonic. Builds solic. nuacle and tat; cleanses tha ay* em, thereby producing a smooth ;loasy coat of hair. Packed im Ikmmm. 25C. hoKn Soke bar " I.. iLEYS * % ) n ? \ ppers * i for Uncle Sam,' >w all wrapped tid hermetically i packages and t Be Sure LZYS because Lasts! |p ?r i iMiir>i,"i*j:nr*rrMM^M KEEP THE .tlDNSYS WELL Health it Worth Saving and Some Save It. Many Chostcvfield people take their lives in their hands by neglecting the kidneys when they know tii se organs nee<l help. Weak Kidneys are responsible for a vast ani' uhl of# suffering and ill health, but there is no need to suffer nor to remain in danger. Use Doan's Kidney Pills?a remedy that has helped thousands of kidney sufferers. The following statement leaves no ground for doubt. t ' * F. M. Easterling, 114 Jordan St., Bennettsville, S. C., says: * '! have used Doan's Kidney Pills arid found them to be as represented. I used them about a year ago when my back was lame and 1 was troubi <1 with a tired feeling. I know what Doan's Kidney Pills were as 1 sold them when 1 was a drug clerk. only took Doan's a short time and \v-s permanently cured." Price GO cents at all dealers. Don't Simply ask for a Kidney remedy? get Doan's K dney Pills ?the s une that Mr. Easterling had. Fester-Mil- 4 burn Co., Mfrgs., Buffulo, N. Y. Adv. I DK. L. H. 1 ROT I Denial Sui iti-on Chesterfield, JJ. C. Office on sfcmi'l !',;>or :i. ti Building. All who desire i.i. please sec mo it (* 1 have discontinued my ' f towns. D R. R. L. P.I cMANIIS Dentist Ana? *? - ? uiuce over nar>K <M C'h'".'iw Will visit Pageland every Tuesday; Mt. Croghan every Wednesday. Other days in Chestr-field Prices reasonable. AH iru ?r anteed J. ARTHUR KNIGHT1 Attornay-at-Law Office in Courthnnao Cheiltrfiald, S. C. ft ANN A 4k HUNLEY ?Attorney*? R. E. Henna, C. T.. ftnnVv * Cheraw. Chesterfield Offices: Peoples' Sank Blfttr.. rh-?,'?rfield Bank of Cheraw BMy., Cheraw a