The Chesterfield advertiser. [volume] (Chesterfield C.H., S.C.) 1884-1978, August 10, 1922, Image 2
i the ChwttilitM Advertiser
ffMPB. nifnd O. Hmob
Bk Bdttara
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY
Subscription Kntw: $1.80 a Year;
? fx noutL, 75 cants.?Invariably in
Hr Advance.
Catered aa aecond-claaa matter at the
poetoffice at Chesterfield, South. <
Carolina.
THE MONSTROUS TARIFF BILL
The valiant fight that Senator Simgj,
mons, of North Carolina, is making
against the Fordney-McCumber Tariff
bill is worthy of the highest praise.
Senator McCumber, who is managing
the bill for the Republicans, is met
at every step of his way with masterly
sledge hammer arguments, showing
the Injustice and iniquity of the proposed
tariff.
Senator Simmons is ably supported
by a number of Democratic Senators,
including Senators Dial and Smith, of
South Carolina. Senator Lenroot, a
stalwart Republican of Wisconsin, and
a few other Republican Senators who
cannot swallow the tariff bill as proposed
by the Republican majority.
A writer in the World's Work defines
the tariff thus: "A bill to raise
the cost of living, to hamper foreign
trade, and to retard the return of
prosperity."
In the discussion of the duty on
wool and woolen goods it was shown
clearly that if the high rates are allowed
the prices of clothing will be
most exorbitant.
Said Senator Simmons:
"I think one might safely say that
with the increased protective rates in
the wool schedule and the increased
protection they are going to get in the
way of this comouflaged tribute in the
compensatory duty, the woolen manufacturers
of this country are going
to have a protection which will be so
satisfying- and so complete and so expensive
and all-embraci(ng that at
least for many years to come we will
hear no complaint from the woolen
people of this country that they are
troubled with importations from
abroad. But the people will indeed
groan under their exactions."
Senator Simmons threw a political
bomb shell into the Republican camp
by proposing that the tariff bill be voted
on for final action on August 15.
Knowing that the bill will be passed
finally by the Republican majority
and knowing also that the Republicans
were getting scared because of
the widespread opposition to the bill
even in the Republican p^ess. In fact
it 'was rumored that the Republican
Senators and administration leaderf
tv uciay iiuui V.IKIW
ment of the bill until after the November
election, hoping to avoid the fuli
weight of the tariff as an issue.
Majoity members who doubt the ad,
vantages of the tariff as an issue this
fall have suggested that the final adjustment
of the measure be held up in
conference between the house and senate
until the November storm blows
over.
As the tariff as arranged for the
benefit of the few, the manufacturers
and the trusts, and against the masses
the bollot boxes in November, with
the tariff before them would knock
the Republican party into "innocuous
desuetude," as Grover Cleveland, was
wont to say.
The Dearborn Independent says
that during the 19 months that we
\vere at war 91,000 persons were killed
on oru highways?almost twie that
number of Americans kiled in battle
or who died of wound.
An exchange calls attention to the
fact that Samuel Gompers and B. M
Jewell, who are so vociferous about
the right to strike, preserve a silence
that seems omnious about the rgiht
to work.
Referrnig to ^he lynching of so
many people at llcrrin, Illinois, a
Philadelphia paper says sarcastically
that a mandate for Williamson County,
Illinois, should be given to Turkey.
WOULD SMELL JUST AS SWEET
The Herald does not know all aboilT
the State Tax Commission, but we
know that those who talk glibly of
abolishing that body do not know wha1
they are talking about. A tax commission
by any other name would be just
as much hated. Somebody must do the
work.?Spartanburg Herald.
VAUGHAN
Mr. and Mrs. N. P. Allen attended
services at Sandy Plains Sunday,
where a protracted meeting is in progress.
Mrs. John Tarleton spent Friday
here with Mrs. A. N. Stroud.
Mrs. L. J. Morris spent Sunday afternoon
with Mrs. J. M. Campbell of |
the Friendship section.
Rev. A. B. Smith will start a series
of meetings at David's Grove
Church the second Sunday morning at
11 o'clock.
X '
Miss Dora Pearcy of Virginia, is
in charge of the lay-by school here
and is making a fine impression on the
people as a teacher and is doing her
part to stamp out illiteracy in Chesterfield
county.
Mrs. A. C. Smith of near Wadesboro
is spending a few days in this
section with friends and relatives.
Misnes Vlancy and Susie Vaughan
L of Winston-Salemn,N. C.,is spending a
few days with their grand-parents,
WASHINGTON COMMENT
" "Fools rush in where angles fear to
tread."
There are a lot of "angelic" legislators
in this country who "fear to
tread" anywhere there is a labor vote
because it in'ght no. be cast in their
favor.
There are a few ' fools" who don't
care whether labor or capital, man or
woman, union or corporation votes'
for them, so long as they do what'
I they believe to be wise,right,and j'ist. |
There are some journals in this J
country which do not core who reads
them, so what they publish is honest,
from the heart, and not dictated because
some one "fears to tread."
Hence, is that the words "compulsory
arbitration" are being heard
more and more, since the Uinted
States is having not a taste, but a full
meal of strikes, private wars, interference
with business, and with living,
? uiic si'Vfiai );iuu^d ui lauui UIIU
capital settle their differences by
conflict.
"Compulsory arbitration is a fighting
word to organized labor. It is
abhorrtnt in principal to American
ideas of justice, that any man, in
order to obtain justice be compelled
to do otherwise than is provided in
the Constitution. Compulsory arbitration
might easily be a tool in the
hands of either capital or labor which
would work great hardship.
But a sore afflicted man or nation
will try almost any remedy for the
affliction. So the "fool" who rushes
in where others keep silent is heard,
more and mort, since the United
sarily compulsory arbitration, but a
Supreme Court for Industrial Disputes,
to which all great causes of
difference must by law be submitfed,
and the findings of which must be
obeyed. Individuals assail the Supreme
Court of the United States.
But no one defies it. What it says,
goes. It is final. And its years of
usefulness have shown that it works.
Is it, after all, the "rushing of a
fool" to wonder if, perhaps, a Supreme
Court for labor and capital
might not save, this country more in
what it would prevent in financial,
economic, moral, and even physical
loss that it would lose in substituting
due process of law for the much
cherished "right to strike" and
"right to lock out."
POISONING HINTS
Clemson College, July?. Farmers
who are poisoning or who are about
to poison for boll weevil control
remember the following suggestions
by Prof. A. F. Conradi, Entomologist.
1. Unless the farmer is willing
1 and is prepared and determined to poi.
! son right, he had better not poison
at all.
2 A farmer attempting to poison
' cotton on poor land may expect to
fail.
3 Unless the picking of infested
squares from the plants and from the
ground is most thorough, no benefit
' may be expected. Square collecting
should be done thoroughly, under
' effective supervision, \v:th labor
that costs nothing' or practically nothing
in cash.
1 4. For the mule-drawn and mule"
back-dusters, use gentle mules tc
1 avoid accident. 5. If the poison is
' of incorrect specifications, it may
1 cause burning of the plants ?r it may
' fail to do any good, vtfir the C.S. Delta
Laboratory and Clemson College
have offered all spring and are offeri
ing now, to examine the calcium ari
senate samples free of charge, ami
will furnish upon request directions
, for sending samples.
! G. Extension Service Information
Card No. 22 contains specific recommendations
on poisoning and is sent
, upon request.
7. Ask your county agent.
WANTED?Man with car to sell best
low-priced Cord Tires made,
$100.00 and expenses. Wolfe Tire
Co., 3979 Canal, Ilenton Harbor,
Mich. ltp.
WEAK, NERVOUS,
ALL RUN-DOWN
Missouri Lady Suffered Until She
Tried CarduL?Says " Result
Was Surprising."?Got Along .
Fine, Became Normal
and Healthy.
Springfield Mo,?"My back was bc
weak I could hardly stand up, and 1
would have bearing-down pains and
WM not well at any time," eaya Mrs
ft, V. Williams, wlfa of a well-known
mraier on itoute 0, tills place. "I
kept getting headaches and having to
go to bed," continues Mrs. Williaim
describing the troubles from which
she obtained relief through the use of
Cardul. "My husband, having heard
of Cardul, proposed getting it for me.
"1 saw after taking some Cardul
... that I was Improving. The result
was surprising. I felt like a different
person. |
"I^ater I suffered from weakness
and weak back, and felt all run-down.
I did not rest well at night, I was soj
nervous and cross. My husband said
he would get me some Cardul, which
he did. It strengthened me ... My
doctor ea!d I got along fine. I was in
good healthy condition. I cannot
say too much for It."
Thousands of women have suffered
as, Mrs. Williams describes, until they
found relief from the use of Cardul.
Sisoe it has helped so many, yon
ahoald not hesitate to try ArM If
tronhUd ^th womanly sl^wMB^
|y*7nicn is th
tire of today
I country men an
now of the remai
quality of Fisk T
eons are obviou
any Fisk tire and
y self. You are 1
- extra size, stren
ency and with tli
and a tread th
I protection.
r There's a Fisk Tire of exi
for car, truck or
"Pa, why do they say -n the market
reports that.wlieat is nerveous?"
THE TELEPHONE'S INVENTOR
(From The News and Courier)
Science and invention are crammed
to the brim with romance or
something very similar to it. "A tall
young professor of clocut'on was dos- j
perately busy in a noisy machine j
shop that stood in one of the narrow
streets of Boston, not far from Scol- j
lay Square. It was a very hot after- 1
noon in June, but the young professoy J
had forgotten the heat and the grime |
; of the workshop. He was wholly ab- !
sorbed in the making of a nondescript!
11 machine, a sort of crude harmonica'
j with a clock spring reed, a magnet'
. and a wire. It was a most absurd toy in ;
appearance. It was unlike any other
, thing that had ever been made in any j
country. The young professor had
i been toiling over it for three years, j
, and it had constantly baflled him, until
this hot afternoon in June, 187"),
i he heard an almost inaudible sour.il
I - -- ,
! a faint twang?come from the ma1
chine itself.
"For an instant he was stunned.
. j He had been expecting just such a
.1 sound for several months, but it came
j 7
_ so suddenly as to give him the sensa-j
| tion of surprise. His c\ "s blnzed with
. : delight, and he sprang in a p: -si on of
(' eagerness to an adjoining room, in
.'which stood a young mechanic who
,. was assisting him.
,1 " 'Snap that reed again, Watson!' i
; cried the apparently irrational youngj
, professor. There was one of the oddj
looking machines in each room, so it'
I appears, and the two were connected
I! by an electric wire. Watson had snap.
ped the reed on one of the machines j
land the professor had heard from the
(I other machine exactly the same round, j
j It was no more than the gentle twang ,
. | of a clock spring; but it was the first
time in the history of the world that a
complete sound had been carried
along a wire, reproduced perfectly at
. ;he other end, and heard by an expert
in acoustics."
The "tall young professor" was
I Alexander Giaham Bell and the faint
1 ' 1 1 ' ' tU..* (unit I
twang wnicn ne nearu un uiai hul .
afternoon of 1875 announced the in-1
vention of the telephone. The story,
dramatically told above is taken
from Herbert N. Casson's "History of
the Telephone," as quote 1 by the
| New York Tribune. How much that
faint twang meant to the world is eini
phasized by the miles of newspaper
I space printed about the man who
brought it about and who has justi
died at the age of 75 years.
HOW TO FAIL IN A DAIRY.
1. Don't weigh your milk?
you might have to figure and think.
2. Feed the cows hulls they make
good mattresses.
3. Keep the barn hot?cows like
cool quarters in summes. I
4. Don't have any windows in the j
barn?the hired man might look out. i
hte hired man might look out.
5. Don't go near the barn; turn it 1
over to a negro?he likes to work. j
Uncle Jonnie Shell has just died at ,
the age of 134. This should remind
Uncle Johnnie Rockefeller, who is 83 j
and Uncle Chauncey Depew, who is <
88, that life is short and that they , J
should make the most of theii vouth. j '
I ~ ' j;
Stage Hand (at the last minute sent .
to the stage to say a line for a missing j
actor) ?The p'leece 'ave discovered ,
|
everything, my lord, and are at the t
gate! | I
The Wicked Earl?'Tis false,'*
knave! False!
Stage Hand?Orl right, guv'nor,go '
and ask the bloomin' stage manager , j
MLB R/' P1
\)
^
e big mileage
? All over the <
5 talking right *1
rkable wearing
ires. The rea- ofi
is. Look over
judge foryour30und
to find
gth and resiliese,
good looks jj M
tat gives real
Hi
To value in every size, t
speed zvagon rl
1
"I puess, son. it is because it
expects to be thrashed."?Boys' Life.
HAMBONE'S MEDITATIONS
ONE J>tSE HEAH HAN'F>alm?STS
WANTER READ
"MAH HAN T' SEE HOW j
LONG AH 6WINE LIVE,
But shucks ' AH Tol' im
MAH LIFE ?S IN DE OJL.E j
OMAN'S HAN'!.' r ! i
1
Copyright. 19 21 0/ McOirt Newspaper Syndicate
STORIES OF !
QREAT INDIANS !
Bij Elmo Scofl Walaon + | *
? o|i> i i^lii, in22, U>?lern Newapapei' I'liioii. ?
LITTLE WOLF, CHIEF OF THE r
NORTHERN CHEYENNES
Ml'CII has been written about. Chief
Joseph's retreut which won for
l.im the name of the Indian Xenophon.
Little Wolf (<?h kiiin hkfahlt). chief of
the northern Cheyennes, might well
lay eluitn to that title, for in many respects
his dash for freedom was even
more remarkable than that of the Nets
Perce.
More than l.'VOod soldiers at one
Mine or another tried to stop the flight
of Little Wolf and his little hand of 70
men across the tint plains of Kansas,
Nebraska and the Dakotas. "There
never was such another journey since
the Creeks marched to the sea," says
George llird Grinnell, the ablest
chronicler of this splendid migration.
When Little Wolf ami his com nan
lon-lu-arms, Dull Knife, resolved, in
defiance of the government, to lend
their people buck to Montana, their
agent In Indian Territory trted to persuade
tlietn to stay one year more.
However, the ('heyonnes started and (_
soldiers were sent after the fugitives.
Within a week they had fought them
five times, hut failed to stop them.
Then the whole available force of
the United States army in the West
was called into action and six lines of
military harrier were thrown out to
stop the fleeing Cheyennes. The last
line was far up in Montana, showing
what the army thought of these hardriding,
hard-fighting warriors.
Stopping to fight when they were attacked,
then going on after they had
beaten off the soldiers, Little Wolf's
people kept on until they had cut
through three of the military lines.
Here Dull Knife and Little Woif separated.
Dull Knife was captured and
Imprisoned at Fort Robinson, hut Little
Wolf kept on until he reached the
Hand hills of Nebraska. The soldiers
were unable to tlnd hlrn.
Karly in the spring he took up his
lourney again and Ids hand Anally
amped on Hie Little Missouri river in
Montana. He had reached his homeami
at last. Here he was discovered
>y Lieut. W. 1\ Clark, lofed and retpecU-d
by all the Cheyennes as
'White Hat," their friend.
Persuaded by Clark. Little Wolf
vent with )iiin to Kort Keogh where I
le surrendered to Ocneral Miles. The |
meral invited him to enlist iis a scout |
ilid in spite of the hardships which I
io had Just passci^throUKh, Little I
Volf accepted th^FJnvltatlon and I
Mroved a valuable. ally against the I
u.siiu- sioux. Little Wolf ama final- I
tj^ued OP the i-yaMMMliMMIte I
-M ^ w
TI ___
i ney arc
GOOD, 1Q<
I
Bay this Ggarette and Save Money
L. H. TROTTI,
Chesterfield, S. C.
Dental Surgeon
Office on second ffoor in Ross
lilding.
J. ARTHUR KNIGHT
A t torn ?y-at-Law
ice in Bank of Chesterfield Building
2hcaterh*ld. 9 C.
R. L. McMANUS
Dentist
Chcraw, S. C.
At Chestereld, Monday
A Pageland, Tuesday.
i Mt. Croghan, Wednesday morning
Ruby, Wednesday afternoon
Chcraw. Friday and Saturday
Society Hiil, Thursday
THERE
Not what you get by chance or
in life, but what you gain by hi
successful. What are you doing
funds for future ne da by start
THE FARMERS
M. L. RALEY. J. S. McGR
President Vice
DIR
F. D. Seller, J. S.
T. H. Burch,
/7l jTK
yite yecp
OF CHE
Will Appreciate Your Busi
$200,
Our customers and friends 1
need oi accommodation or y<
to see us. Guaranteed bui
Let us show you this wonder
R. B. LANEY, President
CHAS. P. MANGUM,
Cashier
2$ank of \
The Oldest, Lar
Bank in Che
4 Per Cent. Paid on Saving* C
Se?
C. C. Dou
F. E. Rivera, President.
M. J. Hough, Vice-President.
i
I The Best
(Family Rei
Because" it w<
remedies nave <
jCfietferfield 1
I D. H. DOUGLASS, President
| W. J. DOUGLASS, Vice- Pre*
ALSO FIRE, ACCIDENT, i
9 INS1
v:, .7.- v
??
- Auto Horajhlb Liom > i
Nairobi, Kenya Colony, Eaat Africa,
July 1.?The toot of a single motor
horn has been found sufficient, in
Cj
Africa to quiet stampeded oxen and ^
cause a trio of flesh-hunting lions to
slink away into the bushes. - wj
Two native drivers were recently lei
conducting a wagon drawn by 16 ox- th
en to a railroad camp in th wilds near
Nakuru, the site of the new Uasin
Gishu Railroad, when the spans were vf
attacked by three lions. The drivers Ci
fled to near-by trees. The oxen be-|th
. came panic-sticken, and dashed down tc
i the rough road, dragging along the
body of one ox, killed by the lions, c<
i with the swaying wagon behind them.
The lions followed their Drev.
1 This was the mad procession that st
greeted a lone motorist at a curve of ai
the road. He had no rifle, and it was g
almost an unconscious movement that r<
took his hand to the horn button. At o
the first sound the lions seemed non- g
plussed. The motorist then blew loud fi
j and long. As the uncanny and sustain- tl
ed shriek rose above the clamor of the c
frightened animals the lions slunk b
away among the rocks, headed for the 1
shelter of the bush, and the oxen h
swung clear of the dust-covered au- s
1 tomobile and carpe to a stop at tho ji
side of the road. p
p
ITeinrick?Vot vos you doing,
Flans?
Hans?I vos vill making. To mein o
vife everyting I give?to mein sister
: the remainder I leave?to mein >
oruther residue shall have?unj all i
that vos after that leftofcr to you j
Heinrick, is.?Boston Transcrip. (
. i
;al test S
inheritance, not what you start with |
onesty is what will make you truly j
to better conditions? Accumulate j
ing a savings account HERE NOW. j
BANK,RUBY,S.C.!
EGOR, MISS AI.ICE BURCH
-President Assistant Cashier j
ECTORS
Smith, J. S. McGregor !
M. L. Raley, {
led' Zfyank
STERFJELD
iness. - Total Resources Over ,
ooo.oo !j
telpcd us to do this. When in
ou have money to deposit, come j |
r l t, i t i
rgiar prooi ana lire proor saie.
. A cordial welcome awaits you
G. K. LANEY, V.-President
J. A. CAMPBELL,
Assist. Cashier
II
ZhesterUeld
ge$t and Strongest
sterf eld, S. C.
>epo?ita. $1.00 Starts An Account
i Us
glass, Cashier.
U. L. Smith, Assist. Cashier
R. T. Redfearn, Tiller
%
medy
i
i
>rks when all other
ceased to work
t
,ife Insurance ;
i
8
Loan 8 Ins. Go. |
C. C. DOUGLASS, Sec'y A Mgr.
GEO. W. EDDINS, Treasurer.
HEALTH, HAIL, LIVE STOCK
UA4NCB ^
4
Mult Schuol Dtparteient %
This department is set aside in The
losterfield Advertiser for the benefit
the popils and teachers of the
iult Schools. It is hoped that they
11 make free use of it. Address all
tters and news items to Mrs. J. Arur
Knight. Chesterfield.
South Carolina ranks first in the
ilue per acre of her crops. South
arolina ranks next to the hotiomin
ie ability of her sons and daughters
> read and write.
fieip ?utn Carolina cnange mis urat
>ndition. ^
* x 1}W
Many of the men and women of our
;ate failed to have an opportunity to
ttend school when young, and have
one for years without being able to
ead or write. The State DepartitfWft
f Education is making an effort" t!o '
ive every white person in Chester^
eld County a chance to attend school
his summer. Since August is a vaation
month, "Layby Schools" are to
ie oranized throughout the county. ' x
"hese schools ate open to adults who
ave not reached the sixth grade ih
chool. They are to run twenty days
nd can be taught at any time and
lnce according~TO the desire of the
lupils.
Already the following places haVe
rganized adult schools this summer:
Bear Creek,Shiloh,Oakland Church,
/aughan, Bethel (in Jefferson Disrict),
Sycamore Farm, Dudley, Sandy
lun, Marburg, Staffodrk and White
)ak.
Any place may have one by applyng
to the County Superintendent of
Education.
*finc Words Do One-fourth Our Work
And these words you see:
are to
have and
' you will
the it
be
33 Words Do One-half Our Work
at can she
, if one he'r
but sew much
not hear go
for this they
dear about save
that . all with
your - me tho
write get time
as see on
in; come there
Problems in Arithmetic
The following problems are submitted
for the pupils:
Add:
5 plus 3 13 39 16
4 plus 5 29 27 10
A nine 9 ' Id 1? Of
-* piuo W x u XV U I
9 plus 3 26 9 15
9 plus 9 17 24 21
9 25 ' 38
Mr. W. J. Tiller County Demonstration
Agent, has offered to give
talks on different phases of farming at
the adult shools this summer. It is
hoped that all schools in the county
will write Mr. Tiller and make arrangements
with him to come to their
school. The public will be welcomed
at any or all of the meetings.
If any teacher has any young girls
or Indies enrolled in her school who
are interested in either cooking or
canning, she can secure valuable bulletins
on these subjects,free of charge
by writing to Miss Mary C. Haynio,
Chesterfied, S. C.
County pride should be a stimulating
factor for the adult school, especially
when so many folks have to
sicrf the Dprnncnitin P.ltiK BaII n>l?_
. ...... J _ ?4a J VU
11^ it ClUddy UCOl^UUiVU AO 1UO V4 UV4
mark, this alone is a shame.
A Message On Bible Reading /
The Bible is the word of life. I beg
that you will read it and find this out
for yourselves,?read, . not little
snatches here and there, but long passages
that will really be road to the
heart of it. You will find it full of real
.nen and women not only, but also of
the things you have wondered about
and been troubled about all your life,
as men have been always; and the
more you read the more it will beome
plain to you what things are worth <
while and what are not, what things
make men happy?loyalty, right dealing,
speaking the truth, readiness to
give everything for what they think
their duty, and, most of all, the wish
that they may have the approval of
the Christ, who gave everything fcr
them?jfnd the things that are guaranteed
to make men unhappy?selfishness,
cowardice, greed and everything
that is low and mean.
When you have rend the Bible you
win know that it is the Word of God,
beause you will have /ound it the key
o your own heart, your own happiness,
and your own duty.?~Woodrow
Wilson.
Dear Adult Pupil: Let us get above ?
his low standard; we can, if we will
>nly determine individually to make
Chesterfield County white with res>ect
to illiteracy. By so doing, we will
>e better citizens, better trustees,
>etter church members, and better
chool pat i ons.
#% ?% ?% Cur*? Malaria, Chills,
ki%lh Fever, Bilious Fsf*r
JVV Colds and La Grippe. 37
RESIDENCE PROPERTY FOR SALE
Very desirable residence property