The Chesterfield advertiser. [volume] (Chesterfield C.H., S.C.) 1884-1978, May 01, 1919, Image 2
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The Chesterheld Advertiser ,?y
PAUL H. HEARN inf
Editor and Publisher.
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PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY i,u:
srrn; ? -zrrrz r: '"n
ouoscnpuon Kates: ?i.bu a Year;
six months, 75 cents.?Invariably in r
advance. tQ(J
" tov
Entered as second-class matter at the j
postoffice at Chesterfield, South .'"
Carolina.
, Co
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A GOOD RESOLUTION the
Here is a good resolution, which is i
we think every man and woman in w'|
Chesterfield county should make occasionally:
ma
WHEREAS, The merchants of in?
Chesterfield county do pay taxes and l^u'
licenses to the State of South Caro- '
lina, the county of Chesterfield and
town in which they are located; and i,el
whereas they do continually lend sup- wa
port to the public schools, the ?VI
churches and other worthy institutions
and are interested in the up- ma
building1 of the State, county and 8<K
town in which I am interested; there- xva
fore??
1 DO RESOLVE henceforth to give
the local man preference in all my ^ol
purchases; that I will not send away ^rt
my good money to a mailorder house nu|
until I have first tried hard and
failed to find the goods that I desire f,e:
in a store in my own county. 'n<'
This resolution repeated once or ^et
twice a week by every man, woman
and child in this county will work ma
wonders. It will build better roads m|
and schools, improve the preachers 1,111
and pay them better salaries and in
a very short time greatly improve the ls 1
economic condition of the county.
T fl
A French author wrote in 1918, 1
"There is no French town in which wh
the wounds inflicted on the battle- nUj
field are not bleeding." He has writ- p|.
ten what he calls "The New Hook of tin
Martyrs," and gives thrilling inci- the
dents of the irrent .....1 .....
emu ?iw- poi
ful suffering in France. Is it any rj.jr
wonder that France insists upon ' ?m
reparation from Germany for what i sal
that country has endured? 4 nia
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There i
And it meets
here; and it >
"7?<
Withoui
further parti
Atfe
Name ....
Address .. .
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HE JEWS ARE GOING HOME
rhe changes that the future hisian
will record resulting? from the
nnan war will be numerous and of e
at importance. Not the least of t
remarkable ? quences of the aw- p
contest wid be the return of the t
vs to their old home?the Holy s
id. ~ f.
The Zionist movement is making f
at progress and is backed by some c
the leading Hebrews of this n
in try. ,,
The Jews did their whole duty as f
al Americans, many of them giv- i(
their lives on Flanders fields and f
ier battle grounds. They contrib- n
d largely of their means, also,
fing Liberty Bonds and War Savs
Stamps, assisting the Allies ii?ost ^
jrally in winning the war. ^
rhe British soldiers in the East ^
k from the Turks the cities and (j
ms, with whose names the Bible
s made us familiar. At this writ;
it is not known what the Peace
nference will do as to the restora- ^
n of Palestine to the Jews, with P
right of self-government, but it s
i safe guess that this act of justice t1
be granted to the sons of issael.
Minister Balfour, of England,
de a formal declaration, recogniz- r
; the right of the Jews to possess ,
1 land fioni which they sprang.
Due by one it appears that, as the
ult of the war, the scriptures are
ng fulfilled. Whether the German
r was the great Battle of ArmaIdon
must be left to the divines j
?> h.n.n m.wl? ?| iU
v? iictt v iiuuiv c4 V,IUBU atuu^ ui iiirat*
tiers, !>ut even the layman can
that many of the events of the 1
r seemingly fit in with the deelara- ?
ns of Holy Writ. t
The Catherine: of the Jews in the c
mcland is claimed to he one of the 1
at events that will precede the
llenium. 1'
The awful cruelties and barbari- '
s of the late war do not seem to r
licate that the world is jrrowintt 1
;ter. But on the other hand the s
t that the Allied nations tfnve v
ny pr? cious lives and millions and v
llions of dollars that civilization I
irht conquer barbarism, is evidence f
it the cause of rijrht and of religion
march in tr on. 1
f
iKING IT OU1 ON THE MULE ]
One of our returned soldier boys ,
o has been Home for about one t
mth has put in nearly thirty days \
iwmjc on his mother's farm. In \
> meantime he is giving that mule t
army manual of arms. Says the t
>r brute already knows, "Eyes I
ht, atten-shion, forward march," \
d that he is truing to made him s
ute his superior officer or court- c
rtial him. c
THE
L 1 K.J V JUVJO 1 UI
ij You Live
You Can Get 1
l any obligation on my part, p
culars in regard to "The Pilot H
Occupation
a
COTTON LINTERS TO MAKE
PAPER
The government has on hand sevrul
million pounds of cotton linters
hat were being used in making explosives.
Now that the war is over
he government has discovered by a
eries of experiments that a high
rrade of white paper can be made
rom these linters. We may get
heaper print paper after the government
finishes its experiments and a
profitable use will have been found
or a heretofore compataritvely use[?ss
cotton product. It will help the
armor and the printer, two useful
members of society.
An exchange says that when the
Kentucky distillers get ready to dump
wenty million gallons of whiskey ino
the Ohio River Weary Willie may
lecide to take a bath.
The American Red Cross is now engaged
in distributing 25,000,000
pounds of foot!, clothing and medical
upplies among the destitute inhabiants
of the Balkan countries.
Silver has been discovered in large
luantities in Arizona. No, brother,
ust stay where you are and plow that
nule right on. It is not free silver.
RESULTS OF WAR SURGERY
Colonel .Joseph A. Blake, speaking
tefore a distinguished medical audi nce
at Paris, made the statement
hat there was little new develop
Dn the Road to !
is nothing complicated
the every requiremenl
'ou cant lincl the same
? Pilot Spe
Protects Y ou
If You Die
Supports Yoi
If You Are Disabled
P V*/\x M /"I /'\n I 4 ?
neni 01 surgical knowledge during
he war. Colonel Blake has been the
lncf surgical ollicer of the American
lospitnls in France.
"There have been," said the doctor,
lowever. "fruitful investigations and
djservations in regard to the treatnent
of wound infections and shock.
11 the first two years of the war a
earch for novel treatments led surreons
toward a universal panacea foi
vound infections by antiseptic means,
t is only more recently that aseptic
irinciplcs have been re-established."
Colonel Blake has developed an aptaratus
of swings and pulleys for
racture cases, which has been widely
mitated in the allied armies. The
atest treatment of wounds, said the
loctor, is away from violent antisepics
and based on the principle that
veil-nourished tissues can not only
vithstand, but can eliminate infecion.
He states that he believes in
he methods of the French surgeon,
'.email re, who simply cleansed the
vound, removed all devitalized tisues
and foreign matter and then losed
it immediately without the use
>f an antiseptic.
i?i wmama m?i??w?a
PIL
Safety" In Life
i about tliis new Sou
[ of the man seeking pr
protection combined in
rial"
r Beneficiary
1
r !
Old Age
rhia Policy for Any Amount F
lease send me M
>pecial" Policy V
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TEMPERANCE LEADER
ENDORSES TANLAi
MRS. STONE WAS ASSOCIATE O
LATE POUNDER OF THE
W. C. T. U.
THROUGH SAN FRANCISCO FIR]
Relates Experiences With "Mastc
Medicine," Which Gave Wonderful
Benefit
One of the features that distingu
ishes Tan lac from all other proprii
tary medicines is the large numbe
of prominent people everywhere wh
are giving it their unqualified er
dcrrseir.ent. Among the statement
receniy received at the Tanlac offic
is one in particular that is sure t
arouse widespread interest through
out the country, having been mad
by Mrs. Martha H. Stone, of 722
Third Ave., Northwest, Seattle
Wash. She is'a noted temperance lei
turer, who for many years was assc
'ciated -Vith the late Frances E. Wi
lard, fc under of the W. C. T. U. I
iviaiuii; ner expurieiii'i's wun iui
!ac, Mis- Stone said:
I thin': it is the duty ?>f everyon
who has been relieved as 1 have, t
do what they can to help other?
therefore, it gives me pleasure to to
>f the b.?iv fits I have derived froi
the use bf Tanlac.
"I was a great sufferer for man
years with stomach trouble, which bt
ame so bad F had to take to my bee
where I lay for six weeks, entirel
helpless. The least noise would ui
set me and I was not allowed to se
myone for fe r it would excite m<
ind I was told that my entire nervou
ystem had suffered a total collaps<
fou see, I had passed through th
.treat Sun Fmnc'jco lire, in which
ost everything f possessed and my e:
perience was a severe shock to my a
ready over-wrought nervous systen
When at last I was able to get on
of bed I would have such awful di;
7.y spells that everything in my rooi
seemed to spin around as though
was in the center of a whirlpool. M
tomach was weak ami my appi
tite so poor that I hardly ate a thinj
ind what little I forced down soure
ind formed gas that pressed up i
my throat and chest and made ni
hoarse, so much so that 1 had di':
culty in speaking. I also sufferc
much from pqm in the lower part i
mv body from the gas. My liver, to<
was all out of order and my kidnej
gave me no end of trouble.
"When my son-in-law saw that th
OT :
Insurance?A 1
thern Life and Trust 1
otection for both his fai
any other policy, we
Ilf you
receive
2 11 you
will rcc
3 U >'ou
^ If you 1
r- If you 1
O the age
(And U
ceive $
pay men
rom $1,000 Up to $10,000?N<
jhesterf
(
f, * f.fl ,.11-r 'n A I I
i_.L. i i =-5>r3
i
medicines I was taking were doing f
C me no good, he induced me to try} f
Tanlac, as he said it had done him so 1
(
p much good he believed it would help j
me, too. To oblige hurt I got a bot- ]
tie, and the fir3t few dyses convinced '
me that it was just what I needed,'
and my first bottle put me right on :
E my feet. I am now on my second I
bottle and am in splendid shape, for !
my nerves are practically in a norm- i
al state for the first time in several
years, which I consider a remarkable
thing. I have a fine appetite and
I
: Jgltm
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Copyrif ht 1119
by H.J. Kevooldf
Tobacco Co.
,0 R
SPEC
New Economic En
Company Policy; it is so
nily and himself. Just cc
^ant to talk to you.
die from Natural Causes before {
die from Accidental Causes befc
eive
(lie between a^e GO and age 70,
ive to age 70, you yourself will rec<
)ecomo totally and p TnvVrently (ii
of 70 a monthly income of
ten at a^o 70 or at prior death yoi
;i 0,000, no deduction whatever
ta.)
ot More Than $10,000 Issued to Ai
iela Loa
o Insui
Chesterfield, South Caro
- ?IU.J . - ? , . I 1
u cat most anything: Twant without
differing any unpleasantness after-.'
-vard. Tanlac is fast helping: nie to
nercome^my troubles, and I feci that
[ am getting on just line ever since
[. began taking: it-'*
Tanlac, the Master Medicine, is sold
!>y the Chesterfield Drug Co., Ches.
terfield. S. C.; T. E. Wanamaker &
Sons, Cheraw; Mt. Croghan Drug Co^
Mt. Cioghan, S. C.; McBee Drug Co.,
McBce, S. C.; Pageland Drug Co.,
Pageland, S. C.; J. T. Jowers A Sons.
JefFerson, S. C. Adv
| |
I ' ill
;QAY, you'll have a
O put pep-in-your-sn
ring-in with a jimmy ]
nail some Prince Albei
Just between ourselves, you i
;ver will wise-up to high-3pot- 1
noke-joy until you can call a pipe s
y its first name, then, to hit the !
?ak-of-pleasure you land square 1
l that two-fisted-man-tobacco, <
rince Albert! ?
Well, sir, you'll be so all-fired 1
ippy you'll want to Ret a photo aph
of yourself breezing up the |
ke with your smokethrottle wide |
3en ! Talk about smoke-sport! <
Quality makes Prince Albert so j
You buy Prince Albert everywhere to
tidy red tine, handeome pound and
?that claeey, practical pound cryet
moietener top that heepe the looat
L J. Reynolds Tobacco Comp
% rrr: tanOEVHHHi
:ial
idowment Policy
simple a child could un
)nsidar its main points,
i^e GO, your beneficiary will ^
>re atre 60, your beneficiary
your beneficiary will receive
eive
tabled, you will receive up to
u or your beneficiary will rebeing*
made for disability
ny One Person.
n
ranee I
lina
/ "
TRESPASSING FORBIDDEN
This is to notify all parties concorned
that trespassing: on my lands
is forbidden, especially the hauling of
straw, wood and lightwood.
8-p S. M. JACKSON.
S^Phone Lucky 13 for a boa of
Norris' Candy.
Thrift is the corner stone of democracy,
the ideal of which is the
greatest good to the greatest number.
Be democratic; be thrifty; buy
W.S.S.
streak of smokeluck that'll *
nokemotor, all right, if you'll
pipe or cigarette papers and
rt lor packing!
v 5
appealing all along the smoke line.
Men who never before could
smoke a pipe and men who've
smoked pipes for years all testify
to the delight it hands out! P. A.
can't bite or parch! Both are
:ut out by our exclusive patented
process!
Right now while the going's
good you get out your old jimmy
pipe or the papers and land on
some P. A. for what ails your
particular smokeappetite 1
i
bacco if mo!J. Toppv rod bag9, %
half pound tin humidorM?and u
al glass humidor with tpongm ,
:co in such perfect condition.
>any, Winston-Salem, N. C.
m
/
9
derstand it.
enumerated H
a r i
)
M5,000
25,000
10,000
10,000
* . < . Jr
100
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