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The Chesterfield Advertiser ; - Paul H. and Fred G. Henrn t PlK... Editors tl PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY Subscription Rates: $1.50 a Year; 1 six months, 75 cents.?Invariably in 1 advance. * I Entered as second-class matter at the > r?L?*. is-iJ o?ii. pvai.uiiii;a a k viicaicinuiu, ouuui 1 Carolina. < NO ROOM FOR ANARCHISTS > Referring to the strikes and unrest in this country, Senator Kenyon, of Iowa, made these pertinent and patri- 1 otic statements in a recent speech in congress: , "The old Ship of State in this hour is floating on troublesome seas. Whitecaps of anarchy are battling its voyage, but? 4We know what Master laid thy keel, What Workman wrought thy ribs of steel. So we fear not the sudden sound and shock. We know the old Ship will safely weather the storm? 4In spite of rock and tempest roar, In spite of false lights on the shoreThere are misguided i.ien in America to-day ? thousands, and even millions, of them. Tin y are to be pitied. They do not know the purposes of America, for they have had no opportunity to learn. They do not know that this is in fact the land of the poor boy; that the men who ' have given their lives at the doors o! :..u? ' vpput lUJIllJf III 1^ I I I 1 Ul I'JJl'll I" the children of to-niorrow; that tinopportunities for their children are ' the best of any nation of earth. ' * * * Let the anarchist understand that his doctrines have no more elFect upon the structure of this government than the waves lapping the rock 1 of Gibraltar. But let him know that ' if he desires to advance those doc ^ trines he will have to seek other shores. America is no place for him. Let hint know that there is but on. flag in this country, the Stars and , Stripes, and that there is no plact ( for the red llag of anarchy. "It is no time to be pessimistic in all the turmoil through which we are passing- It is time to follow the doctrine of the beautiful Psalm of v David: 'I will lift up mine eyes unto the ( hills from whence cometh my help." Upon the hills of America shines t the vision of national perpetuity." t Th- re is an old saying, "As smart I as a Philadelphia lawyer;" but a law- a yer in that city has been sentenced to t pay a tine of $2,000 and to serve a > term of four years in the pcnitcn ! tiary. Hi evidently was not one of the smart ones, or perhaps he was too ? smart. 1 \ An aerial freight service between :I New York and Cuba has been under- ' taken. A seaplane, carrying freight. * ' went from New York to Havana. The 1 dockmen and longshoremen strikers ' did not interfere with that freight 1 It was "up in the air" but it 1 here just the same. t.e. .pi to capture Kdsel Ford, .i .un of Henry Ford, resulted in -he capture of the would-be kidnappers. They only wanted $200,000 as a ransom for th< son of the automobile n?an. The four men who were captured were sent to the workhouse ( for three months, which was rather light punishment for the crime at- , tempted. r. They are having a coal strike in 1 Italy and some of the Italian cities t are having their houses warmed by 1 heat that is piped from ,vo|canoi s that arc plentiful in some parts of that country. The food administrator of New York has been giving the public some good advice. This paragraph from his statement is as good for th-people of Chesterfield county as for New Yorkers. He says: "With careful shopping in making one's personal expenditures, somewhat like that observed in making business expenditures, with careful studying of the advertising appearing in the papers, and by following the rule of making purchases from dealers of in- i tegrity and responsibilty, there would J be no just cause of complaint of j either profiteering or misrepresenta- i tion of quality of the goods pur- J chased." J NOTICE TO TAX PAYERS When making inquiries by mail concerning amount of taxes, etc., it K is essential that tax-payers name j each separate piece of real estate , owned by them, together with its location, in what township, school dis- J trict etc. J. A. WELSH, ^ Treasurer. 666 has more imitations than any [. other Chill and Fever Tonic on the market, but no one wants imitations S< / . medicine. They are dangeroue. H L, ' HEEP HUSBANDRY ADVOCATED FOR S. C. That sheep husbandry can be made profitable industry to the farmers f the State was the statement today y B. Harris, State commissioner of Lgriculture,cimmerce and industries, - ho has just returned from the Vorld Cotton Conference at New Organs and the Texas State Fair. Mr. larris, who has been raising livestock or thirty-seven years, said thatsheep an be made to combat the boll wee. il as an economic menace. He said hat sheep can be made to pay a hunIred fold in one year. The commislioner's statement follows in part: "Being interested in the sheep hus>andry I went over from the world's rotton conference to Dallas Texas, .0 attend the Texas State Fair, Texas )eing now one of the great sheep 'rowing States. The cattle and hog ndustry has been pushed in South Carolina, and very properly, by the jxtension forces of the federal government in co-operation with Clemsn College, but sheep husbandry seems to have no friends to espouse its development. We have many farms in South Carolina that ar not i idapted to cattle raising but would lie suitable for sheep raising successfully and profiitably. "If any one wishes to succeed and make money in the livestock indus:ry, first his farm must be suited for he kind of livestock that the farm an offer a home to. Therefore I vould advise any farmer to make investigations before he invests in any >reed of livestock. Any farmer can ;et this information if he will seek t from a farmer who has a thorough radical knowledge as to conditions jpon and surrounding his farm. "While in Dallas; Texas* the other lay I was talking with a banker who las a large Hock of sheep and he said hat sheep, well eared for, would pay 100 per cent, per year on the investment is correct, and I am going to rood farmer money to buy breeding nves for the purpose of stocking his lis flock. "Let's see if the banker's statenent is correct, 1 am going to give a rive a concrete illustration of what lappened last year to a farmer in itiehland Contny, who said: "ounty, who said: "'I bought a ewe in August, 191S, 'or $ti. She dropped a lamb on Kebuary i">. On April 1st 1 sheared he ewe and sold this wool for fiftyvvo cents a pound, or $2.<>n. On the ~>th of May the lamb weighed gross ieventy-five pounds and I sold it on lie Columbia market for seventeen ind a half* cents, the carcass bringing ? 11 K. Deducting the cost of the we from the sale of the wool and the ale of the lamb, the profit in nine nonlhs was $9.7H or DJU per cent. \nd 1 yet have the ewe!' "The Texas banker said his slogan vas 'Sheep on every farm.' My ex erience with sheep has been similar o his. Sheep eat many weeds and hubs that cattle or hogs will not ouch. There were about f?00 sheep xhibited at the Texas Fair. Vbout all of the breeds were shown. 1'he largest number were Shropshires ind Hampshire's. There is very lit!e difference in these two breeds, ['hoy are a good combination sheep, or wool and mutton. "Now it does not take so much noney for a snioll farmer to start nto sheep husbandry ami 1 would adise him to start on a small settle ind grow into the knowledge of how o ttike care of them. I know a neat many will raise the objection hat we cannot raise sheep, for the Iocs. I want tn civ richl hern that f you never K,-t any sheep, you will mviT tret any dojf law. (let the heep ami the doy law will follow in he course of natural events. The heep may he protected against dojrs n the mean lime, hut sheep trrowintc vouhl he so much more profitahle if he sheep <lnl not have to he watched lyrainst dojr.s. "Now, as to the wool. You may xpeel it always to hrinjf a trood price or under boll weevil conditions we annot raise cotton cnoujrh to clothe he world and wool is the next most ivailahle fabric fo r clothing and heep are trwod as a means to cum>nt the holl weevil. Many thought hat the holl weevil wouldn't come >ut he's here, and he will he a hlessASPIRIN FOR COLDS Name "Bayer" is on Genuine Aspirin?say Bayer Insist ??n "Payor Tablets of Aspirin" n a "Bayer package," containing proper lirections f>>r Colds, Pain, Headache, Neuralgia, Lumbago, nod Rheumatism, "fame "Bayer" means genuine Aspirin >rescribed by physicians for nineteen M-ars. Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets !Ost few cents. Aspirin is trade mark >f Bayer Manufacture of llonoaceticcidester of Salieylicacid. amrs Watson Says, "I'll Never Foret When Father's Hogs Got Cholera "One morning he found 20 hogs end and several sick. He called in ie Vet. who after dissecting a rat lught on the premises, decided that ie rodents h:ol carried germs. Since ien I am never without HAT-SNIAI'. 's the surest, quickets rat destroyer know." Three sizes, 25c, 50c, $1. old and guaranteed by A. F. Davis, quare Deal Drug Co. and Pageland ardware Co. , ^ _ - -a?L - ing to the State if he will make farmers think and make them change their mode of farming in order to make the farmer support himself." Mr. Harris said that if any persons are seriously interested in undertaking sheep growing, he would help them to investigate and might offer some ideas as to handling ewes, which are very scarce. Of all the mutton eaten in South Carolina 99 Vfe per cent is cold storage. If thoroughbred ewes cannot be obtained, Mr. Harris says that the bucks can, and that grade ewes can be had. He does not think it difficult to get started, but advises that farmers investigate before taking the step. He will take pleasure in co-operating with them through the State Department, he said. According to the figures in his office all of the sheep in South Carolina would not average 675 to the county, the figures on the tax books being about 110,000 for the state. In 1880 there were in South Carolina 188,889 sheep, and as late as 1907 there j 60,000. If the increase of the use of mutton is not a fact it should | be ,to offset in part the increase of the cost of beef. South Carolian offers the opportunity to raise yearly tens of thousands of sheep on land that is now or soon will be available for no other purpose.?The News & Courier. BOLL WEEVIL NOT YET IN CHESTERFIELD COUNTY The Wadesboro Ansonian recently published a rather startling rumor from some place in Chesterfield County not far from the North Carolina line. It is to the effect that the Boll Weevil has been found on cotton bolls in this county. So far as can be ascertained at the county seat the rumor is not founded on fact. It probably had its origin in the discovery some weeks ago of a few strange insects or worms that had injured a few bolls in this county, but which were not specimens of the boll weevil. County Demonstration Agent W. J. filler has kept a close watch on developments of this character and has sent a number of suspicious specimens to Clemson College for examination and classification. None have proved to be boll weevil and none have been found of sufficient menace to cotton to cause alarm. The Ansonian quotes an Anson County farmer as dolefully remarking: "If the boll weevil spreads to this county, we have seen our best days." This sa<l prediction is pretty generally contradicted in the many excotton states, where the weevil has come and has done its worst. In one county in South Georgia where the pest made cotton growing impossible, there is talk of erecting a monument to it, a.- an appreciation fur what it has done for that community. And .he c\-cotton grower#are the loudest in its praise. $100 Reward, $100 The readers of this puper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been nhle to cure In all its siages and that Is catarrh. Catarrh being greatly Influenced by constitutional conditions requires constltuiional treatment. Mali's Catarrh Medicine is tnkon internally and acts thru the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces (if the System thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, giving the patient strength by building up I lie constitinlon and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faitli In the curative power of Hall's Catarrh Medicine that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that It fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address K. J. CHKNKY A CO . Toledo. Ohio. Sold by all -Druggists, ,5c. fei t r ... *: %\ : <1 W n m Kh ? % , \ Lay a pet on \ rolling 'em with ! >RIW6E 11 _ . t i rnc r.ai onai joy smon Rolling your own cig k about as joy us a sidel your grip! For, tak2 it at an] flavor, fragrance and coolnt life as every "p. a. home-Mi Prince Albert pul.T nov/ smi delightful rolled into a cigarette ?i to it like you been doing it since a and a cinch to handle ! It stays p start to hug the paper arounrl tl You'll like Prince Albert in r. ji rolled cigarette, too! Bite and |>ai process. You know P. A. is the t pipes where one was :> d In way. And, me-o-my, a wi vary time you fill up I % ?/ 'i The New 0 towli^r(<^fct?bwb?brffi^ ' ' >iiiijiii ii in n 55 ?a?tm ovfdi ami-* w* Come see this car. LUCAS AUT As Dead i ^gl|ALOMEL Every druggist in town?yc gist has noticed a great falling all give the same reason. E place. "Calomel is dangerous and Liver Tone is perfectly safe prominent local druggist. Take "Dodson's 1 Dodson's Liver Tone is personal! guaranteed by every druggist wl sells it. A large bottle ebsts but few cent*, and if it fails to give eas relief in every case of liver sluggisl ness and constipation, you have onl to ask for your money back. Dodson's Mvor Tone is a pleasan tasting, purely vegetable remed harmlnart tn KnM* nhil/1 ? "' -J-w ^' "'** r *vv ' r^gmr-Bgp' r?'b'rJ \e areites with Prince Albert i ine as you ever carried arot / angle, you never got such qi uss in a makin's cigarette in ade" will present you! skenoi ior.a under your bonnet 1 and, so euuy to roll! And, you ju way back! You see, P. A. is crir, ut?and you don't lose a lot wht 'ie tobacco! immy pipe as much as you do in a ch are cut out by our exclusive ps obacco that has led three men to fore. Yes sir, Prince Albert blaj id of smokesport will ripple you 'verland Four ~l 4$J *1r ,D * TOUR1:NG '' '_ | j ?~~ ~~~ 7~ ~? $ THRCPFOINT R SPRING | p?(Z) "^-XOOC v(?A?w?^^ paM^pC.; ^^ 0 COMPANY ; :/'V^ ^ >ur druggist and everybody's drug; off in the sale of calomel. They )odson's Liver Tone is taking its 1 people know it, while Dodson's and gives better results," said a [ : t m i . 1 ^ivei lune insteaal | ly Take a spoonful at night and wake 1 to up feeling fine; no biliousness, sick I n headache, acid stomach or constipated (y bowels. It doesn't gripe or cause in- | ^ convenience all the next day like violent calomel. Take a dose of calomel today and tomorrow you will feel i weak, sick and nauseated. Don't lose a day's work! Take Dodson's Liver y, Tone instead and feel tine, full ?f ,s. vigor and ambition. i|B| \ v -h X. \ rleM Hl? I. Krync.ld* >ac?u Co. A waiting your Uf-io, you'll /inrf toppy rati hag a, firfp r?4 lin*. handsome pound and half pound tin humidora? and?that daisy, practical pound cryatalglaaa humidor , with aponga molatanar top S JUSt that kecpa Princm AI hart in auch perfect condition I 1 1,1 R. J. Reynold* Tobacco lalitV, Company 1 your winl? 8*1?. W.O st take J IIlIII VUiFH up n you home- r-t it en ted J smoke sed the ~ ~?r Sewnei($ ' Need no recommendatioi We now carry a compi licious sweets, always j IN OUR MARKET WE CAI The Choicest B Pork the M; PRICES ALWAYS A. F.DAVIS GSE53EE! If you have farm^ or city property subdivide and sell your property / profitably for you. I Farm Lands Oar Specialty Ninety-Seven Thousand Six Hundred a fl Land amounting to over Fl^E AH I ?, 1918. Write for bookl< mation about our aucti /^/BRYoN ATI UTTir rnir y^/nuimii IUA: (Sgl jWSSPfe J ft "THE NAME THAT Offices: PETERSBV Reference: Any bank h Uncle Sam Sa Of Life Insuri That $10,000 is the right at lows in the Army to carry, bilities with theirs. Then i with theirs. Are you carryi Death, Dt bt I If your home is mortgaged, your widow would have to 4 life insurance policy sufl .] mortgage. "Life Insurance is the pathy for the widow is coim I Chesterfield Lo C. C. DOUGLAi ALSO FIRE, ACCIDENT, HEA INSURA1 We Buy ?d Sell Real E /7\ - >" ' i y^anK ct The Oldest, Larges Bank in Chestei 4 Per Cent. Paid en Savings Depot See Us C. C. Douglai R. E. Rivers, President. M. J. Hough, Vice-President. D 7 Your Need Is Legitii within the helpc tice, it will he gl And in anv J pleased to have any business pi you. Our only exi a Bank is the ! er; so consider rHE FARME RUBY, SOUTH i H. BURCH, R. M. NEW2 Pr..UU?t. V.-Pr Off Safts^i fill I 'Candies n. They are perfect. fete line of these deresh, always on ice. IRY AT ALL TIMES \ ieef And arket Affords REASONABLE MARKET for sale, write us. We will V d' AUCTION quickly and V ?Territory Onlimited I \nd Eighty-Eight acres of Farm I LLJON DOLLARS sold in .*t of endorsements and infor on methods. H IT REALTY COMPANY 1 JUSTIFIES YOUR CONF '11E" W !RG. VA. en:' CREENVlLLt, N. C. H I-eicrsbi'rg, 7?. or Crccnvii'c, N. C. f.v' v ;;5v? r ys ince: nount for the young felCompare your responsicompare your insurance ng enough? '5 the Sheriff that is the combination face?unless you have a ficient to pay off the only mint where symi?d into cash." an & Ins. Go. >S, Manager LTII, HAIL, LIVE STOCK MCE sjate?Money Leaned I ?? ?? SI > keaterfield t and Strongest rfield, S. G. iit?. $1.00 Starts An Account is, Cashier. D. L. Smith, Assist. Cashier . H. Douglass A*sist. Cashier I ? mate, )j sound hanking prao ladly met at this Bank. r event we shall he you call on us wilh "oblem that confronts cuse for existence as Service we can renus always. :rs bank i CAROLINA 1 iOM M. 1- RALEY, mMm! CaiUar. j I IiterMUig