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| He Chesterfield Advertiser' Paul H. Hearn, Editor and Publisher PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY Subscription Rates: $1.50 a Year; F. six months, 75 cents.?Invariably in advance. Entered as second-class matter at the pestoffice at Chesterfield, South Carolina. j CHESTERFIELD REDS | The visit of Judge Card and other chicken enthusiasts to Chesterfield will no doubt prove of immense value to this county. They?for they all agreed with the Judge in his estimate of the situation i here ? have shown to Chesterfield better than it could have been learned otherwise that in one respect at least this county is premier. We have developed here a wonderful strain of Rhode Island Red chickens that can hardly be surpassed in the United States. Two statements made by Judge Card in the presence of this editor are certainly worthy of repeating, and should stick fast in the mind of every poultry raiser in the county. One is: "Don't go out of the county to buy your Reds. There are better ones right under your nose than you can get elsewhere." The other statment is: "You have the stuff to make the name 'Chesterfield Reds' as famous as Chesterfield Cigarettes." Need more be said? Let those who have imagination and determination take hold of these potential thoughts and carry them to their complete fulfillment. "STUPIDEST BOOK OF THE CENTURY" It would seem that enough had been said and written about the ex-Kaiser but he manages, since he has quit killing people, to keep himself in the < m.ki:. u:. 1-4.?m. ? 4 4. 4. puuuv. cjrc. ins iciti'si Mum was iu get married to Princess Herminie. Although an exile from his former home and kingdom he persuaded her to share his lot. But in addition to getting married William Hohenzollern has written the memoirs of his life, telling what a good, generous, self-sacrificing soul he was while starting a war that has caused milloins to mourn. Joseph Collins, in the New York Times, reviews the Kaiser's Memiors and he does an artistic job of it. Mr. Collins lived in Germany several years am) WflQ nnf HpnpnHpnf nnnn iors for details of the public and private -life of the ex-Emperor of Germany. That he claimed to be devinely appointed by the Lord to do, Hfe will is shown from extracts from his speeches to his soldiers. In one of them he says: "Remember that the spirit of the Lord has descended upon me because I am the German Emperor. I am the instrument of the Most High. I am His sword. His representative." in another spech he said: "Perish all enemies of the German people. God requires their destruction, '..oil, who through my mouth commands you to execute my will." Summing up the book Mr. Collins says: "Kaiser Wilhclmll. has made himr:?i i- i_: _ ' atu iiiiuiuiiai, nisi, oy mis iniamy, second by his stupidity. He commited the greatest crime ever known: he conditioned and fostered the war; and he has written the stupidest book of the twentieth century. By doing the latter he has cleared himself of the accusation of lunacy, but he has laid himself open to have substituted for it that of imbecility." MEANING OF THE NOVEMBER ELECTIONS The results of the November elections have caused the editors of leading Republican newspapers to "sit up and take notice." Instead of trying to explain that it was not much of a shower, these editors are forced to see in the elections a threatening deluge. They have had to admit that the shortcomings of the Republican party have been responsible for the tidal wave of November 7th. They name the unequal tariff measure, Newberryism, (where a member was admitted to the Senate who had paid $1 OH,000 for his seat) as two of the outstanding sins of the party. The St. F.ouis Post Dispatch says: "The tariff of abominations must be revised downward with the plunder of the tariff barons who dictated its robber provisions eliminated. The subsidy program must be aban/Inn />/! XT/x *-??? xr ??1?? * ?v.>^u. iiiiuie iNuwuerryism. "1 no disgrace of the Newberry verdict must be wiped out by the reopening 1 of the Newberry case and the unseating of Newberry.' 1 In Indiana, there was a good turn- 1 over, by the election of Senator Ral- ! ston over former Senator Beveridge 1 and the Indianapolis Mews, right in ( center of the storm says: ' "It is evident that the people voted their disapproval of congress, if not of the adminstrntion. There is a serious warning for the Republicans in the elections, in that what hap- ^ pened after the passage of the Mc- r Kinley and Payne-Aldrich tariff bills 0 had happened a^ain. Everywhere was c revolt n^ainst the oppressive tariff, ^ and it was a protest that will grow c stronger as people feel more and more ^ its burden." f THEY ARE GETTING THERE n An Ohio women has been elected to fit on the Supreme Court bench of . . I.B )NE MILLION CHRISTAINS AWAIT AMERICAN HELP Washington, Nov. 20.-?Upon the luick charity of America largely detends the fate of a million Christians lriven from Aisa Minor by Turkish nilitary success, it is declared at Naional Headquartesr of the American Red Cross. Grpece either will be a! sepulchre or a place of rebirth fori these stricken people, whose desperate plight is further dep:cted in a cablegram received by the Rod Cross from Vice Chairman A. Ross Hill who is directing relief work from Athens. King George of Greece, through Dr. Hill, sent thanks to the Red Cross for its aid and expressed the appreciation of his nation to the American people. The Red Cross is rapidly perfecting its organization in Greece, said Dr. Hill's message, which went to the state: "Hundreds of thousands of refugees are filling the Greek cities and islands. These consist largely of mothers with children who, with old people, are sole remnants of once flourishing populations driven into the sea by the Turks. These miserable women, cold, hungry, despairing, shelterless, walk the streets with babies clinging to their skirts. In many refugee centers women who lost sons and husbands gaze from leaden eyes, life over. Their little children are the only hostages for the future of that element of Greek people who first established themselves in Asia Minor three thousand years ago. "In many barracks children, and old people lie day and night, flies eating at sores on their bodies and faces, their future black., "King George thanks the American Red Cross for its help and extends the appreciation of his nation to the American people. "Smallpox is spreading from one concentration camp to another. Meanwhile Greece is awaiting new floods of refugees. The race is on between American Red Cross supplies and these fresh shiploads of people. The Greek government has telegraphed its representatives in all countries asking the utmost help from every nation immediatly." AND THIS IS NORMALCY Budget experts, according to press dispatches from Washington forecast for the next fiscal year treasury dcf icit of approximate';/ one million dollars. "rine President and his advisers," it is added, "are considering a recommendation of new tax proposals to Congress." If this is normally, make the most of it. The difu'it for the current fiscal year was reckoned by Secretary Mellon, some months ago, at six hundred and fifty million dollars. By one means or auolhei this yawning chasm between prospective revenues and disbursements up to .lune the thirtieth next must be bridged; and whatever the method, there is but one source from which the materal wilt come?the pockets of the people. But six hundred and fifty million is not all, if the Administration exoerts are ricrht. On this Osxn is to bo P:.led a Polion of a billion-dollar deficiency for 1923-24?and again the people must shoulder it, burdened though they already are. Such is the fulfillment of the economy and tax-reduction pledges by which a Republican Congress and excutive were elected two years ago.?Atlanta Jour nal. COOPERATIVE SELLING COTTON GAINS IN FAVOR Columbia, Nov. 20.?The continued onward sweep of cooperative marketing in the state is indicated, officials of the South Carolina Cotton Growers' Cooperative Association said yesteray, by the large number of new contracts coming in daily. Over one I 1 1 - x- * * * nuimiiui niw contracts nave Deen received in the past week and the number of new members is being swelled every day. There is no campaign on at the present time and practically all of the contracts that are coming in are voluntary and officials say are the result of the satisfaction with the way the association is functioning. Credit is being given the Association generally for the strength of the cotton market and the present prices of cotton. One of the large contracts to come in during the past week was from J. [ V. Williams of McConellsville, York Csninty. Mr. Williams signed the contract this week and has turned >ver several hundred bales of cotton. Yesterday a letter was received from him, stating that a number of other farmers in his section were ready to sign. Letters from Marion brought he news that quite a number of trrow rs in that county were ready to af"ix their signatures to the contract. NOTICE OF OPENING OF TOWN TAX BOOKS Notice is hereby given that the tax looks of Chesterfield will be opened )ctoher 15th, 1922 for the payment f 1922 taxes. Said books will be losed November 30th, 1922, and on )ec. 1, 1922 a penalty of 10 per enfc will be added to all unpaid axes on that date. Regular levy is ifteen mills, waterworks levy kventy mills. Total thirty five lills. J. Andy Teal, Town Treasurer. QUAINT SONG OF THANKS Through the hard days of the World War while men were fighting, the women ?f America were working, waiting, ever courageously. Now that those days are over and the dif-* ficult aftermath needs careful handling, woman is still striving to add her service wherever there is need of brave and patient endeavor. Post-war times it is always trying ones. Hence it is with little more sympathetic understanding than usual that we read the lines of a quaint old Thanksgiving hymn, bearing the date of 1783. Its author is unknowh, but its sentiment holds trim tnHnu tKr?n<rVi t v?.ww6?? we nmy wish to change the name of our first President to that of some later leader. The Lord above, in tender love, Hath saved us from our foes. Through Washington the thing is done; The war is at its close. America has won the day Through Washington our chief; Come let us rejoice with heart and And bid good-by to grief. Let us agree, since we are free, All needless things to shun; And lay aside all pomp and pride, Like our great Washington. Though we do not proclaim this anonymous writter as a second Shake spear, let us follow his counsel by bidding farewell to grief, by laying aside pride and pomp, and turning this Thanksgiving season into one in which we remember only our mercies and blesings, which are many. "Come, let us rejoice with heart and voice," for what we have, if it be but little, helping the less fortunate, if it be an abundance. WILL SWAP?1 Pair large mules and wagon for Ford truck. Pneumatic tires. J. D. Burr, 3tp Chesterfield Rout 4 JUDICIAL SALE By virtue of a decree of the Court of Common Pleas for Chesterfield County, S. C., signed by Hon. S. W. G. Shipp, Circuit Judge, the 9th day I of November, 1922, in the case of W. A. Newsome vs. J. B. NorthcuU^ et al., I, W. J. Douglass, Clerk of Court for Chesterfield County, S. C., will sell on Salesday in December, 1922, being Monday, the 4th day of December, 1922, during the usual houVs of sale, before the Court House door, in the Town of Chesterfield, S. C., to the highest bidder for cash the following real estate, to wit: All that certain piece, parcel or tract of land situate in the State of South Carolina and County of Ches-j terfield and being all that certain piece, parcel or tract of land known as part of the McQuay place, bounded on the North by lands of G. E. Kino-1 and W. J. Gardner; On the East by lands of W. J. Gardner; On the South by lands of G. E. King, nnd on the West by lands known as lands of II. D. McQuay?said tract of land containing thirty-three and one half acres, more or less, and being the same tract of land purchased by J. B. Northcutt from W. A. Newsome. W. J. DOUGLASS, Clerk of Court. iir A throbbing^W Mwnervous headache?^ IMENTHOLATUM V ^Lquicklv soothes it J R. L. McMANUS Dentist Cheraw, S. C. At Chestereld, Monday A Pagcland, Tuesday. At Mt. Croghan, Wednesday morning Ru'oy, Wednesday afternoon Cheraw, Friday and Saturday Society Hill, Thursday J. ARTHUR KNIGHT AttorB?T-*t>L*?? Office in Bank of Chesterfield Building 3hoiterb?kL 3 C. L. H. TROTT1, Chesterfield, S. C. Dental Surgeon Office on second floor in Ross Building. [LEAVITT & PORTER FUNERAL DIRECTORS Those who employ us have the assurance that they will receive the hifhrcP (leirroo nf ot>rui/>o ?? Q. WW x/A uvi V IV.V nuu DOI?" isfaction. We are equipped to handle a commission in a thorough manner. Our services are dependable and polite. QUALITY DEPENDABILITY SERVICE Calls Answered Day or Night Chesterfield, S. C. NICHOLAS MURRAY BUTLER ON EDUCATION Education week, set by the American Legion for naional observance December 3 to9, is the subject of a special article written for the American Legion by Nicholas Murray Butler, president of Columbia University. John J. Tigert, United States Commisssioner of Education, and the Natilonal Education Association are co-operating with tht Americanism Commission of tht legion, in making the week a success President Hardinir will isumo * national proclamation, which will b< followed by proclamations frorr governors and mayors. "Education week should be a tim< for strengthening our understanding of the foundations of Americai education," Dr. Butler says in th< article, follows: "From the ^beginning the interes in education of the founders ant makers of America has been unique Harvard College was established ii Massachusetts Bay only sixteen year after the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth The common school quickly grew u] in New England and spread over th< whole United States a? a typica American institution. Horace Mam and Henry Barnard put new life am higher ideals into the American schoo system nearly a century ago. Th< Ordinance for the government of th< Northwest Territory, made in 1787 out of which territory so many of th< middle western states have beei carved, contained express provision for the support and development o public education. Long ago it becami established public law that ai Amerilcan state, or sub-division there of, might maintain by a public ta: any type of instruction that it sa\ fit, however advanced. Thi principle underlies the public higl schools and the tax-supporte< universities and technical schools. "It is American doctrine, fortunate ly,that while education is a prope state function, it is in no sense a stati monODlv. Schools. collorrns nni iTniversfcties flourish and are encour aged to flourish in the field of liberty as well as in the field of government The former .are not suported b; public tax, although frequently thei property used directly for educatioi is exempted from taxation. This is th< state's way of encouraging privat initiative to develop educational in stitutions in the field of liberty B; th'fe unsually happy combination o tax-supported schools, colleges am universities, every public interest i met, while provision may readily b made for every shade of opinion am belief. In this way the America I people keep their educational syster free, elastic and adaptable to thei every need, and avoid the hard am fast j>overnment-made and govern ment-re^ulated educational system of continental Europe. "Every American who understand the fundamental principles which un derlie American education and justtf; the faith of the American psople ii it, will resist all attempts to brea down those principles, to substitut federal control or central regulatioi for local initiative, to displace elast tic!lty for rigidity, or compel conform ity in Prussian fashion instead of up holding liberity in American fashion "From one point of view the fait! of the America people in education i subline, while in another/it is path etic. It is sublime in that it show me American people, at their best, 11 the full expression of their faith ii the progress of mankind, in their un shakeable confidence in the power o intelligence and disciplined cliaractei Their fnith is patheic in that schools colleges and universities, do what the will, fall short of their own ideals an< of what the American people have i right to expect of them. "Education Week should be a tim for reexamining the foundations u American education, for increasinj our understanding of those founda tions, for strenghtening our confi /! ri in on/1 #/v? * ... vitviU| ii?u a v/1 imuiviug H do all in our power to make ou schools, both higher and lower, bet ter able to justify the nation's fa;tl in them and their influence. School? colleges and universities cannot b made by money, but only !>y person alities; must live, and the economi basis of schools and of the teachinj profession must be sufficiently broad sufficiently stable and ample enougl to invite and to retain the consecrat ed service of the highest type o American men and women. "Judged by the standards of his tory, democracy is still an expcri ment. Ir? its short life it has accom plished marvels, but its steady rnarcl has developed many and grave diffi culities. Let me lepcat a sentenc* which I first wrote yeas ago: Thi difficulties of democracy are the op porunities of education." When Baby Freti from teething, feverish nets, cold, coiic 01 stomach and bowel irregularities there U e/fitk nothing that \/ill give it typ ? quicker relief than DR. THORNTON'S EASY TEETHER 1 ' 1 A famous baby's medalist's prescription, successfully used for 15 yeafa. A swee powder that children like-stakes the piaa of castor oil. Contoiw no opiates or hai m N dnwaL Package, 25c, at your druggist Itf it falls to help, your roouey refunded NOTICE OF COURT [ Notice is hereby given that 1 (Court of Common Pleas for Chest field County, Fall term, will conv? on Monday, December 4th, 1922 ' 10 o'clock A. M. i Jurors and witnesses take notic , Grand Jurors need not attend. W. J. DOUGLASS Nov. 11,1922. Clerk of Con > JUDICIAL SALE > By virtue of a decree of the Coi i of Common Ple;s for Chesterfi , County, S. C., signed by Hon. S. , G. Shipp, Circuit Judge, the8th < of November, 1922, in the case ' W. J. Beasley, vs. J. B. Northci 1 et al., I, W. J. Douglass, Clerk 5 Court for Chesterfield Count, S. , will sell on Salesday in Decern! 1922, the same being Monday, 4th day of December, 1922, dur " the usual hours of sale before f Court House door, in the Town l Chesterfield, S. C., to the highest I u der for cash the following real tate to wit: ^ All that certain piece, parcel tract of land situate in Alligs * Township, said. County of Chesl . field and State .of South Caroli 1 containing one hundred ten (1 s acres, more or less, and bounded r or lately, North by lands of B< ' McQuage, and lands of J. H. Gs L> ner Estate; E*st by lands of ? I Watkins estate and lands of M. 1 McQuage; South by lands of the Vi I kins estate and G. E. King, i j West by lands of W. A. Newso , G. E. King and the J. H. Gard s estate, ana Doing tne same tract land conveyed to J. B. Northcutt [ J. A. Curtis, by deed dated Janu 1 10th, 1919, and unrecorded; AL all that certain other piece, pai j or tract of land, situate in Allign Township in said County and Sti i containing Fifty-three and one 1 acres, more or less, and bounded r or lately North by lands of W. Gardner; East' by lands cf Jim Watkins estate; South by lands ^ M. A. Watkins and J. P. King, i j West by lands of Geo. King and A. Newsome?being the tract of 1: conveyed to J. B. Northcutt by M. Watkins by deed dated Novem 16th, 1917. j W. J. DOUGLASS Clerk of Ci r State of South Carolina, County of Chesterfield. r IN COURT OF COMMON PLE r, Janie Funderburk, and F. H. e Funderburk, her husband, Plainti B " VS . E. E. Porter, Defendant. ' s NOTICE OF SALE f By virtue of the authority j ted in me by a Decree of the Cc s in the above entitled case, I will e before the courthouse door in C1 ^ terfield County, at public auct n to the highest bidder during the n gal hours of sale on the first M r <!??y in December, next, the saw ^ ing the 4th day of said month, following described real estate, s wit : "That tract of land in at s County and State, containing hundred forty-six and one-f y (146 1-5) acres, more or ] n bounded north by lands of C. k Porter, Jr., S. N. Sanders and e J. Turner, east by the Turner la n and others, and west by Es lands of G. R. Sowell, and sc by the Chesterfield & Lanca K Railroad Company's right-of-v being the lands sold in the cast h R. L. Turner, as Guardian ad lit s et al v. W. H. Porter, et 9I, conveyed to me by P. A. Mu g Master" n Terms of sale : Cash. n Purchaser to deposit with the C of the Court within a half hour a f bidding off the properity the sun five hundred dollars as an earner good faith,otherwise the property be immediately resold to the higl j bidder at the risk of the prior ] u chaser. Purchaser to pay f?sr pap revenue stamps, and recording fe< e W. J. DOUGLAS' f Nov. 9, 1922. Clerk of"Co I' i--r---Hrmas Severe Indigestion "I had very severe attacks of Indigestion, writes Mr. M. H. Wade, a farjner, of R. F. D. 1, Weir, Miss. "I would suffer for months at a time. All I dared eat was a little bread and butter... consequently I suffered from weakness. I would try to eat, then the terrible suffering in my stomach I I took medicines, but did not get any better. The druggist recommended Thedford's BLACK-DRAUGH L f g and I decided to try it, for, as1 LM aay, I had tried others for two or more years without any lin1 flJ provement in my health. I soon i U1 found the Black-'Draught was i acting on my liver ana easing ni the terrible pain. 11 "In two or three weeks, I B found I could go beck to eating, fg I only weighedj 123. Now I 111 weigh 147?eat dnythlnff I want U| to. and by taking Black-Draught j f|| 1 Ao not suffer, ikl Have you tried Tbedford's Black-Draught? tf aoCdoao 51c '*r* ; SB sssessesBBsassaasssaessEsass -/ . . r- . . ... . the , , Tom Turk 2 A low I The day before Thanksgiving * jsic { There's a prioe upon my bead, J And if I do escape this time ft A There's CKristnias still ahead I f/ r?,' I n. ^ a .? ?' * ??-- uut mougn im feeling dreary Bnd I ddn't wisk tkat I tJere dead! me, ^ ner Of ary 11 s THE RE i tor 1' ^ | Not what you get by chance or J in life, but what you gain by h< j successful. What are you doing mie funds for future ne-da by starv f THE FARMERS a"d M. L. RALEY. J. S. McGR President Vice ber l . DIR )urt F. D. Seller, J. S, - T. H. Burch, AS. ? She Seepi >urt OF CHE! sell Will Appreciate Your Busi hest: $200,1 [onhe Our CU.(tnmi>ri and frl?nd? k lhe nted of accommodation or yr . to see as. Guaranteed bur >ove bet us show you this wonder. ?;.K R B- I'ANEY, President 1! in les8> 1 CHAS. P. MANGUM, jj Cashier tnds tate . ?uth ster | """" ,.y: J ? ill CD I. V. rry. yjuuti a v lerk fof The Oldest, Larj win Bank in Che; hest puriera, 3 4 Per Cent. Paid on Savin *s D 3, See urt. ?? C. C. Ooui j| R. E. Rivera, President. TO M. J. Hoilgh, Vice-President. || The Best \ | Family Rei L Because it w< I remedies have i ml I. t I Chesterfield KJ I D. H. DOUGLASS, President W. J. DOUGLASS, Vice- Pres. U . ALSO FIRE, ACCIDENT, " 1 *.' ,. Pessimist I 11^ A!. TEST inheritance, not what you start with >ncsty is what will make you truly to better conditions? Accumulate ing a savings account HERE NOW. DAW DITDV C C EGOR, MISS ALICE BURCH -President Asristant Cashier ECTORS 11 . Smith, J. S. McGregor ' M. L. Raley, * i i ; V les' fftank HTERFIELD T^t.l R uvraa n.? I 000.00 elped us to do this. When in >u have money to deposit, come jjlar proof and fire proof rfafe. A cordial welcome awaits yon G. K. LANEY, V-President J. A. CAMPBELL; Assist. Cashier : || Ihejterfkld lest and Strongest rt erf. eld, S. G. \ eposits. $1.00 Starts An Account I). (lass, Cash'sr. u. L. bmilti, Aniit. Caehiei R. T. Retlfearn, Tiller medy >rks when all other oeased to work ' s rr r i .lie insurance Loan 8 Ins. Go. G. C. DOUGLASS, Scc'y A Mgr. , GEO. W. EDDINS, Treasurer. HEALTH, HAIL, LIVE STOCK mmmmt