The Chesterfield advertiser. [volume] (Chesterfield C.H., S.C.) 1884-1978, January 02, 1919, Image 3
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(CooiMud From Last Wook)
(, CHAPTER XV.
_ 1 1
J* Suls Blesse.
As usual, when we got to Brest there
was rush work day and night on the
Cassard to get her out and supplies of
all kinds were loaded for our next
rislt to the Turks. The French garbles
were always keen for the trip
back to Brest?they were sure of loading
up on tobacco and other things
they needed.
My twelfth trip to the Dardanelles
was different from the others. The
Cassard was doing patrol work at the
time in the neighborhood of Cape
n.ii<? in.M. ?
m. nvoc ui ua wiiu ana nervoa
cn the Peninsula before were thanking
oar stars for tho snap we were
liavlng?Jost cruising around waiting
for something to happen.
We had not been there very long before
something unexpected did happen,
for we ran Into two enemy cruisers?
which I afterwards heard were the
Werft and Kalscrllche.Marine?one on
the starboard and one on the port.
? How they had managed to sneuk up
so near us I do not know. They
opened up on us at not much more
than a thousand yards and gave us a
hot time from the start, though with
any kind of gunnery they should have
done for us thoroughly.
Ws came right back at them and
were getting In some pretty good shots.
I was In the 14-lrich gun turret, starboard
bow?my old hangout?and we
were letting them have It about four
hots every live minutes and scoring
heavily.
I do not know how long we had been
fighting when part of our range finder
was carried away. It was so hot,
though, and we were so hard at It that
such a little thing like that did not
bother us. It Is hot In any gun turret,
but I have always noticed that It Is
hotter there In the Dardanelles than
In any other place. The sweat would
simply cake up on us, until our faces
* were just covered with a film of powdery
stuff.
But the range finder was carrio
away, and although It looked bad f<
us I was feeling so good that I vol
unteered to go on deck and get an
other one. I got outside the turret
door and across the deck, got the necessary
parts and was coming back
with them when I received two machine-gun
bullets In the rleht thlirh
One went clear through bone and all
and drilled a hole on the other side,
while the other came within an Inch
Of going through. The peculiar thing
la that theae two were In a line above
m the wound I got at Dlxmude. The line
la almost as straight as you could
draw it with a ruler.
Of course It knocked me down and
I hit my head a pretty hard crack on
I Woe Able to Crawl on to tho Turrot
boor.
the ate of deck, bot I woo able to craw)
ou to the turret door. Just aa I waft
- .k._. A AW. - ? "
vuui iv cuier uitr|ua was area. iMi
particular charge happened to be defactive.
The shell split and caused a
back Are sad the cordite, Are and gas
came through the breech, which the
explosion had opened.
It mast hare been a piece of cordite
which did it, but whatever it was, it
hit me in the right eye and' blinded It.
The ball of the eye was saved by the
French surgeons and looks normal, but
'/.V.'v-* It pains me greatly sometimes and
they tell me It will always be sight1
waa unconscious immediately from
the blow and from the quantity of gas
vf, ? Wife* I moot have swallowed. This
M 4*6 **> a great deal of damage
' and glvne me dissy I pells often to this
day. I do not know what happened
'> jTj J daring the rest of the engagement, as
I dkl not regain consciousness until
|hres dope Inter at sea. But 1 heard
ha the hospital that the French super.
; Jhidnaught Jeanne d'Arc and the
.*pjtgbt cruleet Nevmandy wars in It aa
.'.Wall as oarselvas, though not st ths
Umo I was wouoded, and that wa had
(ill been pretty well battered. The
, Oases rd loot 96 men In the eugagoj
./.JigOt and tfed 48 wounded. Borne of
. oUr turrets were twisted into all man9p
sap Of shapes and part of our bow
a aarrled away. On# of our lieuwOHHP1
waa killed In the engagement
(aid that both the Werft and
Marine were sunk in
V,ft A jfiM
OC HBmiI frOBH UM WBTIT WHO wtW
prisoners at Interment camp*.
When tr* arrived at Brest the
wounded were taken from the ship in
ttetfchevs and after we had been rested
for about fifteen minutes on the
dock put into ambulances and rushed
to the hospital. On the way those who
could leaned out of the ambulance and
had a great time with the people along
the streets, many of whom they knew,
for the Cassard was a Brest ship. And
i of course the women and' children
| yelled, "Vive la France P and were
' glad to see the boys again, even
i though they were badly done up.
| Some of our men were bandaged
all over the face and head and It was
funny when they had to tell their
names to old friends of theirs, who
did not recognize them. As soon as
one of the Brest people recognized a
friend off he would go to get cigarettes
and other things for him and some of
them almost beat us to the hospital.
I do not know, of course, just what
the surgeons did to me, but I heard
that they had my eyeball out on my
cheek for almost two hours. At any
rate they saved It. The thigh wounds
were not dangerous In themselves and
If It had not been for the rough treatment
they got later on they would be
quite henled by this time, I am sure.
I I really think I got a little extra atI
tention in the hospital In many ways,
I for the French were at all times anxious
to show their friendliness to'
America. Every time my meals were
served there was a little American
flag on the platter and always a large
American flag draped over the bed. I
had everything I wanted given to me
at once and when I was able to, all
the cigarettes I could smoke, which
were not many.
While I was still In bed In the hospital
I received the Croix do Guerre,
Willi lis. ~M
win ui inn iieun n?r uie r rencn peo|>in,
iDd also thanked oil the Americana
who had come over from their own
land to help a country with which
moat of them were not connected. He
said It was a war in which many nations
were taking part, but In which
there were Just two Ideas, freedom ,
and despotism, and a lot more things ,
that I cannot remember. He finished (
by saying that he wished he could dec- 1
>rate all of us.
Of course It was great stufT for me 1
and I thought I wus the real tiling 1
sure enongh, but I could not help i
thinking of the remark I have heard i
here In the States?"I thank you and
the whole family thanks you." And It i
was hard not to laugh, Also It seemed <
funny to me, because I did not lightly
know Just what they were giving me
the medal for?though It was for one
># two things?and I do not know to
this day. But I thought It would not
be polite to ask, so I let It go at that
There were twelve other naval officers
who were present and they and .
all the other people did a lot of cheering
and vlved me to f fare-you-well.
It was great stuff, altogether, and I
should huve liked to get a medal every
day.
One day I received a letter from a
man who hod been In my company In
tl e Foreign I?eg1on and with whom I
had been nrottv chummv. His letter
wmk partly In French and partly In
Rngllsh. It wan all about who had
been killed and who had been wounded.
He also mentioned Murray'*
death, which he had beard about, and
about my receiving the Croix de
Guerre. I wan wishing he had anld '
something about Brown, whom I had
not heard from and who I knew would
vlalt me If he had tne chance.
But two or three day* later I got
another letter from the same man and
when I opened It out tumbled a photograph.
At first all I saw was that It
was the photograph of a man crucified
with bayonets, but when I looked at
It closely I saw It was Brown. I
fainted then, just like a girl.
When I came to I could hardly make
myself think about It. Two of my
pals gone I It hurt me so much to
think of It that I crushed the letter
up In my hand, but later on I could
road parts of It. It said they had
found Brown this way near Dlxmude
about two days after he had been reported
missing. Ho three of us went
over and two stayed there. It seems
very strange to me that both of my
pals should be crucified and If I were
superstitious I do not know what I
would think about It. It made me
| sick and kept me from recovering as
! fast as I would have done otherwise.
Both Brown ahd Murray were good
| pals and very good men In a fight.
I often think of them both and about
| the things we did together, but lately
II have tried not to think about them
much because It Is very sad to think
what torture they must have had to
stand. They were both of great credit
to this country. '
The America* coarai visited ?
I Received the Croix do Querre.
which I had won at the Dardanelles.
The presentation was made by Lieutenant
Barbey. He pinned an American
flag on my breast, a French flag
beneath It and beneath tlmt the war
cross. He kissed me on both cheeks,
of cburse, which Van taking advantage
of a cripple. Hut It Is the usual thing
with the French, as you know?I mean
the kissing, not the meunness to
cripples.
Wllen he had pinned the medal on
he said he thanked me from the hot~
* ki- ? * ?
SSHTrSHS"
questions. We played lota dt games ' i
m09tlj Wlth dlC?' and had '
SnUleZnfTrm,,y- After 1 became J
Th-rt . 6 argued w,th m? that ,
?nd thQU?h I really t
who?i h <{0~~however much I disliked
from 5h? 8l':'n~he got to* discharge |
il?? . eervlce on account of phys- ,
'"?ZtT to dl?b,r,. tt? SIS
duties. After I had been at the hos- ?
p al tor a little over a month I was ?
discharged from it, after a little party I
IW """> everyone taking pan
ndal. the ho Wowing .nd*!?,,.
BtoSS?n??^t my '"vorlte dirge I
piayed one after another. , ,
Sherlock arranged everything for
srx to New cioth',
saw iw 1 UP to St Naza,re and ,
? whlTe ?ndanf ,OU.Jer' IOafed around ,
T? 80 v,a'ted Lyons. I
'hort Um,! 1 returned to <
Setw7orr7Ld?Vh? 1
P 5 n,e fT" of thlngif I had ;
picked up around BuroDe and i, * ?
Amon,kei'Plnl W,th ,ny ?randmot?er '
Among my belongings were severa
things I should like to show by X
ographs in this book, but no one but
merm?;dH can gee them now fQr
the locker of DavyJones they went, j
CHAPTER XVI. J
Captured by the Moew* !
. 1"1'1 c?>?t ?/r and after <
said J10 <IroPPed our pilot, I 1
d h?pm2f: "Now we are off, and
11no?f oP 1 f?F m*- l of the ?
"lf^dld net 7 But the 1
eyeTl llgT* ^th'the^ i
I got up about four o'clock the next 1
Wi?rih r" Sundny' ^ccrn! 1
wm everforget. ? ' d? n0t ""?k 1 ,
down rr", 1 Wa" ',r,'"w4 1 *< >' 1
h." to,'1",. rWr"e peat ""to "on.
tl Z tbc p",nt locker, Where I ?
5 aTT Then back again on '
which r . ? my8e,f a hammock ?
which I rigged up on the boat deck 1
bath" a? th 1 WO,,,,, hQV? ? n'- -n '
torn^dcU0 WMth" ? >?.t <
tAnnTl.? ,* h"d ,he ""tomork '
wirung I went down to the baker i.nH 1
few Lt,hhChat K,lth h,n,~and "tolu a ?
? hUns, which wns what I was 1
enlly after?and away to the galley 1
Im. .brhe"kfu8t- 1 wa? almost exactly <
-midships sitting on on old orange
n n ni, "?l b<H?n th"? '"ng when 2
hi ' PH' ' "hip's carpenter stuck I '
his head In the door and sang out '
Ship on the starboard bow." I did '
sh.p.Payonn^atten,,0n t0 h,'?' because I '
' on the starboard bow were "
:;;hrx: ? ??
I i i ' P wnH not crazy uhout I
in!2," ' f?r he cam, In 1
nd .at on another box an(1 1
nS"g' "? thought aho 1
SnlTnafem """ ""W ,h<1 ""'<'"1,1;
I ate all i could get hold of and wei t 1
out on deck. I stepped out of the gal- 1
h-y Just In time to see the fun. The '
wentWa" opposite us when away
went our wireless and some of the
hosts on the starboard side, and then
boom, boom, and wa heard the re^rt
whl~i heard the shrapnel I I
T t m h a/OUOd UH Ju8t 08 1 had many I <
time before. I Jumped bnek In the I '
shnkif aD(1 ?1,PH and the cook were '
shaking so hard they made the pans I
toThlfh t!T ,flrl.nfir Rt?PPcd I went up '
the boat deck. I had on all of my '
clothing, but Instead of shoes I was I 1
wearing a pnlr of wooden clogs. The <
men um? boys were crazy?rushing <
around the deck and knocking each ?
other down, and everybody getting in ?
wTb0f!y .0,SrV' Way' We lowered our '
laeoh s IngMorci h?f nf I ,
and boy* were already In the wuter.
Why they Jumped I do not know.
Then the German raider Mocwe
beaded right in toward us and I
thought Hhe was going to ram us, hut
she backed water about thirty yards
away. She lowered n lifeboat and It
made for' the Georglc, passing our
men In the water as they cume and
crashing them on the head with boat
They Crashed Them on the Head With ,
Boat Hooks. I
looks when they could reach them. 1
( noticed that there were red kegs In
:he German boat.
When the llfebo't reached the Jamb's
laddera I went over to the port '
dde of the Georglc and then the Ger- '
nans came over the aide and hoisted
jp the kegs. The Germans were
urned with bayonets and revolvers. |
lomc of them went down Into the enftiie
room and opened the sea cocks,
kbout this time some of the Lliney* ,
une up from the poop deck and I
old them to stay where I was and
hnt the Germans would take us over 1
n lifeboats. Another squad of Ger- 1
nans hoisted eight of the dynamite
cegs on their shoulders and down Into
So. 6 hold with them.
Mean Ume the Germans saw us up
>n the boat deck and came up after '
as. Ar.d over went the Limeys. But 1
( waited and one or two more waited 1
with me. When the Germans came up
to us they had their 1 *volvers out
tnd were waving them around and i
'
reS5?^S)tt 'strafe BttflSl^hr"
Hiking about "schwelfihunde." Then,1
iie first thing I knew, I waa kicked off
nto the sea. I slipped off my trousers
ind coat and clogs, and, believe me, It
van not a case of all dressed up and
10 place to go I
Then I swam hard and caught up to
he Limeys who had Jumped first. They
vere asking each other If they were
lownhearted and answering, "Not a
)it of It. me lads," and trying to sing,
'Pack up your troubles In your old kit
>ag," only they could not do much
dnglng on account of the wuves that
dipped Into their mouths every time
:hey opened them. That wus Just like
Limeys; though.
Some of the boys were Just climbing
ip the Jacob's ladder on the Moewe
when the old Oeorglc let out an awful
ronr and up went the deck and the
matches high In the air In splinters.
[)ne fellow let go his hold on tl>o ladler
and went down und be never came
ip. The Germans were making for the
Moewe In the. lifeboat and we reached
it Just before they did. Up the ladder
ve went and over the stdu and the
Irst thing we caught sight of who the
Herman revolvers In our faces drilling
is all Into line.
The lifeboat brought back the ship's
papers from the Georgic and we had
oil call. They kept us up on deck In
)ur wet underwear and It was very
:old Indeed. Then the first mate and
:he old man and one of the Gertuuu
ifllcers culled off the names und we
Found we had fifty missing.
The Iloche commander had gall
enough to say that he wus not there
to kill men hut to sink all ships that
were supplying the allies! lie said
RniflflnH VVI1 u IrvlnfT of o ? ../? n?
? ? w OM?? tu UCiUlUIiy,
uut that they would never succeed and
'.hat Germany would Btarve the allies
rery soon.
After roll call some of us asked tho
Icrmuns for clothes, or at least a
place to dry ourselves In, but Fritz
:ould not see us for the dust on tho
ucean and we just had to stand there
and shiver till we shook the deck, almost.
Then I went and sut down on
the pipes that feed the deck winches,
l'hey had quite a heud of steam In
them and I was beginning to feel more
comfortable when I got o good clout
alongside of the heud for sitting there
and trying to keep warm. It was u
Herman garhy nnd he started calling
lie all the vurlous kinds of scliwelntiunde
he could think of und he could
think of a lot.
Finally they mustered us all on
another part of the deck, then drilled
us down Into the forecastle and read
the martial law of Germuny to us.
at least I guess that Is what It was.
It might have been the "Help Wanted
?I)og Catchers" column from the Florin
I.okul Taggubhle for all most of us
tnew or enred. It shows what cards
the Oermnns are?reading ull those
tour-to-thi?-pound words to us shlverDg
garbles, who did-not give u dime
i dozen whether we heard them or not.
fritz Is like some other hot sketches?
ue Is funniest when he does not mean
to he. Every German la a vuudevllle
iklt when he acts natural.
There were hammocks there nnd we
jumped Into them to get warm, but the
Germans came down with their revolvers
und bayonets und took the
hammocks uway und poured witter on
the decks and told us to sleep there.
They could not have done u worse
trick than that.
Then they put locks on the portholes
ind told us that anyone caught Middling
ivlth the locks would be shot at once,
rids was because we might sight a
llrlttsh or French man-of-war at any
time und us the Moewe was sailing tinier
the Hrltlsh flag and trying to keep
jut of trouble they did not want us 1
it the ports signaling our own war- [
dilps for help. If they had bucked
my of the allied ships nnd hud 11 fight
vc would have died down there like
uts. j
The Moewe had already captured
the Voltaire, Mouut Temple, Cumbrian
Range and the King George and had
the crews of these vessels between
leeks with us. These men told us
low th(%Germaiis were treating tliein j
ind It looked to me as though the eve- 1
alng would he spent In playing guinea
lud a pleasant time would he hud by
ill?not. |
The crew of the Mount Temple were
in deck working when the raider sudtul.lv
...........1 n?. .... ?i...?.
vyvuvu IIIU "II l nuiu. A nu Ul '
three men Jumped Into tlie water un<l
the Germuns turned a gun on them
while they were swimming and killed |
hem. That was Just n sample of what
tifirl happened to them.
The men now began running up and
down In a Hue to keep warm, but I
took a little run on my own hook and
treated myself to us much of a oncejver
of the ship as I could. I do not
t>elleve the Moewe had more than a
three-fourths-inch armor plate, hut behind
that she had three rows of pig
Iron, which made about a foot In thickness.
There was nothing hut cable
strung along tin- deck and when I saw
that I would have given anything to
have hud a crack at Iter with a 14-Inch
naval. And I sure wished hard enough
thut one of our ships would slip up on
lis, whether we were caught between
decks or not. I went aft as fur us tho
sentry would let me and I saw that
she had three spare six-Inch guns under
the poop deck and two six-Inch
[ileces mounted astern. The guns were .
mounted on an elevator and when the |
lime came they ran the elevator up
until the gnus were on a level with the
poop deck, but otherwise they were
nut of sight from other ships.
For our first meal they slung a big
feed hug half full of ship biscuit?
lyirdtuck?to us and some dixies of
tea. After this festival we began
roaming up and down the deck again,
because It was the only way to keep
ttiiiiii. i fs?m-nn r* r nnmru unr buiuw
of the advertisements in magazines,
whore they nhow a whole family HltMi?k
around a Christmas tree In their
underwear and telling each other that
Wheals Unions?the ftoonay Kind?
were Just what they wanted from
Kanty. Only we did not have any
f'hrlstmas tree to alt around. Wo must
tiavo looked funny, though, and I would
have had a good laugh If I hud not
been ho cold.
We could not go to sleep becauae
the dedkh wore wet, nor could we sit
down with any comfort for the name
rcuHon. Besides, we thought we might
Tomorrow is unborn, yesterday is
dead, today is yours.
buck tip against A British or a French
cruliifr at any minute and most of us
thought we would stay up and get an
eye full before we started for Davy's
well-known locker.
About two bells the following morning
the Moewe's engines began to
groan and shake her up a bit and we
could hear the blades jump out of the
water every once in a while and tear
away. She went ahead In this way for
m.me time and we were Imping she
was trying to get away from a cruiser
and some of us were pulling for the
cruiser to win and others Imping the
Moewc would get her heels cleur and
keep us from getting ours.
The Iluns were running up and down
the deck yelling like wild men and
one of our men began to yell too, He
was delirious and after lie yelled a
bit be Jumped up and inude n pass at ~
the sentry, who shot at him but I
missed. The shot missed me too. but
not very much. Then they dragged
the delirious man up on deck and Lord
knows what they did with him, because
we never saw him . gain. I'.ut we did
Hot hear any sound III- i they might
have made In slioolii : Id in. ^
(To be Continued) '
AUDITOR'S NOTICE |,
The Auditor's office will be open g
for the assessment of all personal a
property, poll, road and dog tax front *
January the 1st, 1919, and February
the 20lh, 1919. a
All ablcbodied men between the w
ages of 21 and GO years are subject
to a poll tax of $1.00 and those be- ''
o
tween the ages of 18 and 50 are required
to pay a commutation road b
tax of $2.00. a
The law requires 50 per cent, penalty
added on till property not returned
on or before February the J
20th.
The office will he open every day i
except as below stated.
I will be sit the following places on
the dates named:
ratricK, January the 27th from 9
to 12 o'clock.
Cedar Creek, January 27th, from 1
to 3 o'clock.
John II. Wallace's, January 28,
from 10 to 12 o'clock.
Cash, January 28, from 1 to 3
o'clock.
Cross Roads, January 29, from 10
to 12 o'clock.
Mt. Cro^han, January 29, from 1
to 4 o'clock.
Ruhy, January 30, from 11 to 3
o'clock.
Guess, January 31, from 12 to 3 *
o'clock.
Antfelus, February 4th, from 1 1 to
3 o'clock.
McBee, February, Gth and Oth.
Middendorf, February 7th, from !
11 to 2 o'clock. j ^
Jefferson, February 10th.
J. G. Holly's, February 11, from
10 to 12 o'clock. =
W. J. Hicks, February 11, from 1
to 3 o'clock.
Pajfeland, February 12 and 13.
Dudley, February 14th, from 10
to 1 o'clock.
Cheraw, February 17th and 18th.
T. W. KDDINS, I
County Auditor
+++ + + + + ++ > + + + ,l.++ + 'l,+ +
+
+ DEMOCRACY V8. AUTOCRACY. + 4
+ + I
+ "There Is no royal road to d I
+ food conservation. We can only + ?
+ ucconiidlsh this by the voluntary 4- |
r action or our wnoie pttipie, men d*
+ element In proportion to It h +
+ needs. It Is n mutter of equality +
+ of burden." +
+ The truth of this statement, +
+ made by the United States Food d+
Administrator soon after we en- d*
+ tcred tho war, has been borne +
+ out by the history of our ex- + b
+ ports. Autocratic food eontrol +
d* In the lands of our enemies has +
+ broken down, while democratic d*
+ food altarlng has maintained the 4
d* health and strength of thlscoun- d+
try or.d of the Allies. d+
d*
+ + ! ++ + -Hr* + d-d-dd?vd- + *
EVER SALIVATED BY
CALOMEL? HORRIBLE!
Calomel is quicksilver and acts like
""" i
Calomel loses you a day. You
know what calomel is. It's mercury;
quicksilver. Calomel is dangerous. It j
crashes into sour bile like dynamite,
cramping and sickening you. Cqlo- j
mel attacks the bones and should
never bo put into your system.
When you feel bilious, sluggish,
constipated and ail knocked out and
believe you need a dose of dangerous
calomel just remember that your
druggist sells for a few cents a large
bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone, which
is entirely vegetable and pleasant to
take and is a perfect substitute for
calomel. It is guaranteed to start
your liver without stirring you up
inside, and can not salivate.
Don't take calomel! It makes you
sick the next day; it loses you a day's
work. Dodson's Liver Tone straightens
you right ip and you feel great.
Give it to the children because it ia
perfectly harmless and doesn't gripe.1
? i
?
I AM GLAD *
PERUJ
Glad to Try Anything
'Three years ago my system
was In a terribly ran down condition
and I was broken out all
over my body. 1 bognn to be worried
about my condition anil I
VM clad te try aaythlaK wklfk
would relieve me. Htrnna wru
recommended to me a" a fine
blood remedy and tonic, and I
soon found that It was mirihy
of praise. A few bottles rkassrd
my condition materially and In u
rliort time I was nil over my
trouble. 1 owe my restoration to
health and strength to i'uruna.
I nm Kind to endorse It.**
fold livery where
JRIT1SH HAD A BIG SUBMARINE ?
TO USE ON THE GERMANS I
i
Naval officers who arrived in New
fork recently on the vessels that had [
ormed the Sixth Squadron of the (
J rand Sea Fleet told of a new sub- <
mrine of great size that England has '
uilt, and which carries a twelve-inch (
un. This newest addition to Brit- '
in's fleet is said to he longer than '
he latest type of German U-boat, j
'he big gun was mounted forward,
rns to bombard Heligoland,
nd its principal mission they said, (
'asto bombard Heligoland.
The submarine would come up near
he German tsronghold and fire hut
ne shot. This accomplished her mision,
and she would return to her
ase. According to reports, the re- <
Bring Your
Problems To Us
Just at this time, ]
leina of peace?niuil
man should watch h
and should form bar
upon.
Malca THIS your
whatever might dev?
efficient co-operation
VOU throw around i
safeguards. Isn't tl
THE FARM
RUBY, SOUTH
r. H. BURCH, R. M. NE
President. V.
fwi
umti
UNITED
flOVERJ
Buy The
Help Win
rOK SALE EV
ifyaiik of %
Oleic* Bank Ir
R. E. Rivers, President.
M. J. Hough, Vice-President.
I
^ Undo
I SOUTHERN LIFE AND 1
ABILITY INSURANCE PRC
Insured receive an income f
and permanent disability, I
the full amount of the policy
no deductions whatever be
payments made during the I
I Chesterfield L
| C. C. DOUGL
i ALSO FIItE, ACCIDENT, HE
H INSURi
I W? Buy aid Sail Real
_>t .Vr .. ? ... i**.
',..111 ?
J
Was in a
J Terribly
Run DownL^oy
Condition
Mbt Rlcka LropoM,
288 Lnyco HI., Mrnnsha, Wis..
&fc*y I.Iederkrans. MIbs l^eopold's
letter opposite conveys In no uncertain
way the Ktatitude sho
' feels for l'eruna. I
Liquid and Tablet Form I
mil of the gun was so heavy that the
submarine was sent about six feet
under water.
Another development of the submarines,
the officers said, was a vessel
that was capable of making twenty-five
knots on the surface. She
was said to bfc driven by steam. They
learned of this vessel only when she
tied up to an American dreadnaught
n a fog. This boat carried four-inch
juris and a crew of fifty men. She
was eciuioned with lnm'.mn?o
ess apparatus. An officer who inspected
her said that when Kubmeiy"K
the two stacks folded back and
he openings closed automatically.
Good habits are most precious gifts
vith which we can endow our chilIren.
hking
>
problem* of war?and parkap* prob1
be faced. Thi* mean* that *T*rjr
ii* business more closely than ever,
iking connections that he can RELY
hank, and you can he certain that
;lop, you can rely upon prompt and
Furthermore, our officers will help
'our business the strongest possible
lis worth considering?
ERS BANK
I CAROLINA
WSOM M. L. RALEY,
-President Cashier.
""Hi
W
www
iv m
STATB9
IMEMT
m And
The War
ERYWHERE
kejterfield
i Chedcrficlcl
C. C. Douglass, Cashier.
D. L. Smith, Assist. Cashier.
.. 'IU. .
I 1 lie
PRUST COMPANY'S "D1S)VISION"
not only does tha
or life, in the evetn of total
>ut the Beneficiary receives
at the death of the Insurad,
ing made for the disability
nsured'a Lifetime.
oan 8 Ins. Co.
ASS, Manager
ALTH, HAIL, LIVE STOCK
\NCE
Estate?Money Loaned