The Chesterfield advertiser. [volume] (Chesterfield C.H., S.C.) 1884-1978, November 30, 1922, Image 2
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PSftNet Coptenti 15Phrid DraohJ
Bill (L'MjiMl I
k?nS8&f| ALC<MOI.^^reROgKrl
tmlBB AVc^clabk lYcparabonfcf As J
BMBBW simUattfifctbeFoodty fc^nU-1
tinglheStoaadcsandB<*rebrf|
RBSftj Thereby Promoting Di^c^rtfeJ j
gE$K J Cheerfulness and RestContains!
mpaPtl neither Oplam, Morphine nor1
MaaHAHCfllgi
|| J*+rarau?kSdMuasmax I
I 1 I
A helpful Remedy for I
Constipation and Diarrhoea.!
' And Fcvcrlshncss and I I
Loss of Sleep i i
Waaillin^thefcfrora-inlnfluMy f
fac-Slmile Signature of I
Tin: Centaur Company. i
ygaTT/frv SPOHN'S
MjS" 1
(o f CY\\ Influenza, D
f~ S !|?Hi BO prevalent uinoiiK
l~\l? */Z0l ?''or n''arl>' thirty j
V~*IV' X??S9I yqi lh'"if <ll*p.v?< s. i?h i
VyfVjlSfTVW/rt J alouiU 'lose "corvlll
Aa a ri-nipdy for e
Vrpp rOy ami certain S.I.I I
^ SI'OII.N MKDICAI.
DON'T MM
INFLAMED LIDS
H laereatfc* t!i?* IrriWt. n. ^ //
*a? MI1VH hl.L KYK /
4AI.VK, i simple, tl?- / I \*jv vt \
indabl*. jaf* remedy. / I \ /A
tS? at all drurcltls. f I r-^ \
At the Opera.
Mrs.?(Soo4 heavens Can that be
Mrs. Blank in tlint brazen decolette?
Mr?Yes; that's her all over.
Dr. Peery'* "Pend Shot" In powerful but
afe. One dose la enough to expel Worms or
Tspewortn No castor oil necessary. A>lv
When the King "Backslides.'"
Not ?*\eryone knows that whenever
the Ivtrv" visits Balmoral ha changes
Ids religion and becomes, temporarily,
x Breshyrerhm. This "change" is "offeial,"
ffli the Act ot I'ni*>11 provided
Unit, whan in Scotland, the sovereign
must ha a tneiuher of tlia Scottish
church. At CrathUv whara the royal
parly tuvuriahl.t worship, soma of
Scotland's foremost praaahars ara usually
invited tootlie'ate.?fussing Show.
London.
SAY "BAYER" wh<
Unless you see the "Bayer
not getting the genuine B;
physicians over 23 years ar.'c
A crept only "I)aycr" package w
Handy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tablets?J
Aapirla Is tbo trado mark of I!ujer Manufad
ff?5
' 11 ' If oot i-kU Of your drutfv'at. writs '^lo
]TC5 "NU-IDE
I rl< V A high grftdn srhoo
I I j ati'l tMf ily. K<|uipp>'d ?
J I ft- -Irf Maof M'h'iola pr>'(i*rtlin
I I A Vf7 I ] I JJi v.UVlBll to HctlOOll. \
U \ I \Jj THE TUCKER MAN
S fl Saves Need
H w w Putnam Fadeless I
? ? ?LCASTORIA
For Infants and Children.
Mothers Know That
Genuine Castoria
Always f t
Bears the vr Mr
Signature
ft lA**
lw Use
U* For Over
Thirty Years
CASTORIA
TMC CCMTAUfl COMPANY. NKW YOAK CITY.
DISTEMPER COMPOUND
h iiuli.iprnwiljl? in Ireui log
istemper, Coughs and Colds
horses and muli>a ut tills season of the year,
rears "SI'OIIN'S" has been K W' n to prevent
veil us to relieve ainl cure them. An aerations"
your horse ami keeps disease away,
uses actually Buffering. "Sl'OIIN'.S" Is quick
In two sizes at all druy; stores.
COMPANY OOSUKN, INDIANA
Appropriate.
"Ilnv?> ymi ypiiil The ('tinnil?stl'?M
\\n. Who's it hyV"
"llonriotta Mann."
| Important to All Women
Readers of This Paper
Thousands upon thousands of women
have kidney or bladder trouble and never
suspect it.
Women's complaints often prove to be
nothing else but kidney trouble, or the
result of kidney or bladder disease.
If the kidneys are not in a healthy con
union, mey may cause the other organ*
to become diseased.
You inay suffer pain in the back, headache
and loss of ambition,
j Poor health makes you nervous, irri!
table and maybe despondent; it makes
any one so.
But hundreds of women claim that Dr.
Kilmer's Swamp-Root, by restoring health
to the kidneys, proved to be just the
remedy needed to overcome such condi- (
tions.
Many send for a sample bottle to see '
what Swamp-Root, the great kidney, liver
and bladder medicine, will do for them. By
enclosing ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co.,*
Hinghamton, N. Y., you may receive sample
size bottle by parcel post. You can
purchase medium ami large size bottles at
all drug stores.?Advertisement.
Any wit y, the knocker doesn't drop
liis bitiitiner the minute the whistle
i
It would !><? sininjit* if tlu* coiupuny
' :i iiiuti koops didn't know him.
>n you buy. InsistI
Cross" on tablets, you are
ayer product prescribed by
1 proved safe by millions for
>lds Headache
>othache Rheumatism
iuritis Lumbago
mralgia Pain, Pain
hich contains proper directions.
\lso bottles of 24 and 100? Druggists.
lam of MonoacetlckcldoRtor of HaiU-yitcacUl
SOLD |
so
j?iMne years
lUmoitli Ch ?<i|I O*.. LoutarflU. Kr.
A" SCHOOL DESKS
(Patent Applied For)
>1 desk fln'shcd in dark oak. Adds hcntitf to any
U and durable. Seat turns up and down r.ol lelcssly
ilh ercellent Inkwells. Thousands sc.Id last year.
mi to the cast Ironorsetnl steol at the same j rtoe.
Write at once for ra'alo^uo and prices.
UFACTURING COMPANY, Darlington,S.C.
Buying a New Skirt
Dyes?dyes or tints as you wish
IS
1
COTTON COUNCIL OF GOVERNMENT
MAKES SEVERAL
SUGGESTIONS.
WOULD PLANT 60UD SEEDS
Conference Preliminary to Cotton
States Conference to be Held in
Memphis in December.
J Washington. ? The Government's
policy with regard to all phases of
; the cotton industry was outlined by
members of the department of agricul,
lure's-cotton council to the cottou conference
held in connection with the
1 annual convention of the Association
1 of Land Grant Colleges,
i Presidents, extension directors and
! deans of colleges of the various cotton
growing states, who have long
i been active in promoting the cotton in1
dustry. and experts in every line of
| cotton growing and cotton marketing
! were brought together to discuss a
! definite policy, with regard to every
! phase of the cotton industry. The
conference was preliminary to the cotton
states conference to be held in
Memphis early }n December and i
which Secretary Wallace of the depart- |
ment of agriculture will attend with i
several government cotton experts.
Recommendations made by the cotton
council of the department of ag- I
m ulture, after many conferences in !
which experts in every branch of cot- i
ton ernwimr nnd t.i-ifi-. '
--n 1.1.1111UR iiiumr !
pated. were laid before the conference. '
which was developed from the ideals
of Dr. H. A. Morgan, president of the I
1'niviM'sity of Tennessee, and who has 1
made several tonrs of tho cotton belt j
on investigation for the department '
of agriculture.
One of the principal subjects cover- |
ing the recommendations is the fight
against the boll weevil. To'overcome |
its ravages it was said to he of first 1
necessity to mature the largest possi- I
hie crop in the shortest possible time. '
To accomplish that end the ectton I
council's recommendations include: |
Selec tions of well-drained, fertile j
soils; if possible, only land capable of
producing, with reasonable fertiliza- |
tion, at leant half a hale per acre.
Preparation of a good seed bed liher- j
ally fertilized.
Planting of good seed of improved, i
i early maturing variety, recommended I
for the locality by the state expert- 1
ment station and department of agriculture.
i lauiiiiK "i seeu or a single variety
by entire communities and counties.
Securing and maintaining of full I
stand through proper planting and 1
liberal use of seed, and early and t'reqnent
thorough cultivation.
Destruc tion of all possible weevils,
cither by hand picking or poisoning, if j
weevils are numerous at* the time
cotton is Just beginning to square.
Picking and destruction of ail punctured
squares every week or ten days
for a month. If not equipped to poison
by dusting. Then, if weevils are still
numerous, apply calcium arsenate dry
dust poison, following directions of
department of agriculture or state |
college of agriculture.
.
Economic Conditions Improving.
Washington.? Kconomie conditions
throughout the country are swinging
back to 1!I20 levels, according to the
survey of current business during Oe- .
toiier issued by the commerce department.
"The clearing up of the bituminous
coal situation," the survey said, "has
enabled the steel mills to increase
their operations, hut the unfilled ordere
continue to gain. Production oi
doiii imumtnrms and anthracite coal
show further increases, but the transportation
situation, with a record postwar
shortage of cars, is still a limit
ing factor, not only lor coal hut steel,
building materials and other products
for which the demajid has increased.
"Dwindling stocks, delay in transportation
and Increased wages clue to
labor shortage, have combined to raise
prices to a marked degree. The volume
of business, as reflected in sales
of mail order houses, chain stores and
in bank clearings and debits, continues
to increase and expand to meet these
conditions. This has resulted in a
r'se in interest rates and a fall in bond
prices.
Widow Will Be Given Pension.
New York. Although Mrs. Frances
Stevens Noel Hall, widow of Itev. Ed- I
ward Wheeler Hall, slain with one of
his choir singers in New Brunswick. 1
has not applied for a pension, she will J
automatically he granted one. it was !
announced at the offices of the Episcopal
church pension fund.
Richmond Music House Destroyed. I
Hit hinond, Va.? HMro of unknown or- !
Igin destroyed the music house of
Corley company. Inc.. in the center of
the business district and damaged ad- |
joining buildings, causing a total loss |
estimated at approximately $100,000. j
The music store, carrying a large
stock of musical instruments and supplies,
was a total wreck.
Damage to the stocks of adjoining
buildings was caused by smoke. and
water. Two firemen were overcome. '
but neither is believed to be seriously
i injured.
Two Children Scalded to Death. j
Rome, (5a.?Two small children of
Mr and Mrs. L. S Curtis were scaldI
< d to death and another child and the j
, father and mother severely burned and
may die as the result of an explosion
! of a boiler in a saw mill located 18
I mib s from this city.
| The explosion is said to have occurred
about noon. Curtis Is a fireman
?t the mill. His wife, accompanied by
the three children, brought dinner to
the plant for him and the family was
seated In a semi circle fn front of the
boiler when the explosion occurred.
EXPL7?Q ^ALABAMA
480 MINERS ENTOMBED WHEN AN
EXPLOSION OCCURS IN WOODWARD
IRON MINE.
FATE OF 215 IS UNCERTAIN
125 Men In the Mine When Partly
Whe^ked by Dust Explosion Removed
Hours Afterwards.
,
Birmingham, Ala.?Seventy minora
were killed and sixty injured some
of them seriously, in a dust explosion
in Dolomite mine number 3 of the
, Woodward Iron company, nine miles
from this city, which trapped 480 of
the workers beneath the surface, according
to an official statement issued
here by D. E. Wilson, treasurer of
the company.
Daniel Harrington. United States
mine rescue official stationed here,
had previously sent a message to- the
Pittsburgh station, estimating the dead
at 50, with at least that number injured.
State militia Is gradually assuming
charge of policing the district surrounding
the mouth of the pit and it
was stated that martial law might he
called to avoid congestion about the
mine, owing to the influx of the curious.
According to Troasurer Wilson. 1
many of the injured were already >
at their homes after receiving first !
aid treatment at the mouth of the I
mine, their hurts being only of a I
minor nature. Company physicians j
worked at top speed in emergency hos- j
pitals established on the ground at '
the mouth of the mine.
Mr. Wilson stated that the miners j
believed to have been fatally injured ;
had been removed to the Elizabeth j
Duncan hospital at Rossenier, near the '
scene of the accld' nt.
The fate of 213 others entombed ,
in Number 3 mine was regarded as !
uncertain by rescue crews who aug- j
metited their force for exploration of
all entries of the pit. One hundred
and twenty-five men out of the total
of 4S2 in the mine when it was partly
wrecked by a dust explosion, were removed
late In the day from the pit
by means of a mtm-way connecting !
mines Nos. 2 and 3 of the Woodward
company. Fifty of the men were hp- j
ported injured, a few seriously.
Fifty men, mostly white. were
caught under the wreckage of the j
three "skip" cars which plunged at j
great speed when they broke loose !
from their moorings on the tipple j
1100 feet above. Rescue crews found
mangled bodies and a score of injur- I
ed men entangled with twisted steel
and splintered wood.- The men were
skilled workers, many of them sub- (
foremen and electricians employed in \
the underground "yard." ! i
Rescue workers reported that the i
number of dead would run high, ft '
being believed that many of the re- t
mnining 21 f? unaccounted for would , I
be found dead or injured.
Fire, which followed the explosion, j
hindered the work of rescue, and was j
believed to have beeii responsible j
for many deaths. The injured aniong .
the first men rescued were removed: I
to Bessemer hospitals.
As the work of rescue progressed. !
reports brought to the surface grew ;
less hopeful. One squad of workres !
reported seeing bodies "strewn all i
along the main passageway.''
As darkness came. women and j
children, white and black, crowded
closer about the mine anxiously waiting
in common sorrow word from the
pit. The injured were being removed
by rescue crews, while undertakers'
assistants were preparing for removal
of the dead found In the entries nearest
the man-way. No attempt at identification
of the dead or seriously in
jurco uad tieen attempted, the work
of emergency relief claiming first attention.
All the doctors and nurses
in the community had been marshaled l
to care for the wounded. | i
The American Red Cross aent a t
corps of nurses and assistants to the i
scene of the disaster. Ambulance i
companies armed with lung motors. .
joined the rescue crews, whoso op- |
' rations were directed by Kd Flynn.
head of the Tennessee Coal, iron and ,
Railroad company's safety department. |
and Frank H. Crockard. president of (
the Woodward company. ,
Officials of the company directed ,
that every effort should be made to ,
identify the dead and injured, in order
to relieve the suspense of the ,
hundreds of families In the camp. <
At the company's office la was j
stated that out of 475 men who check- <
ed In for work, 40ft were underground ,
when the explosion occurred. :
Big Price For Strawberry Plant.
Three Rivers, Mich ?Fifty thousand
dollars for a single strawberry plant :
was paid by Frank K. Heatty, president
of the It. E. Kellogg company, fruit
growers.
The plant Is to be known as "Rockhill,"
in honor of its breeder. Harlow
Rockhill, of Conrad Iowa. The price
is believed to be the highest ever
paid for a single strawberry plant.
The plant bears in early summer and
begins again in the late summer bear
ing continuously until frost.
Agreement Reached on Cotton.
Washington?lfc'presentatives of At'antic
and Oulf steamship companies
conferred with the shipping hoard on
(otton differentials between various
North Atlantic. South Atlantic and
Oulf ports, and it was announced later
that a temporary agreement "satisfactory
Oulf operators" had been
rea< lied.
Details will not be made putilic. it
was said by shipping hoard officials,
until the delegates report the agreement
to their respective companies
tor ratification.
* "
lillp
III -v
H ^^^^gS^Wltio ^ *^! .^i
Nnvy men from the naval air stallo
hi nod forces and held a blj^ carrier piget
to their lofts at the air station. The pi
youngster is holding a bird.
NO CURVATURE HERE j
/ J
Charles \V. Boggs. dr.. of Oklahoma
,'ity. Oklalioma, showing his hack,
vlilch was adjudged the most nearly
icrfvct of atij among -4*?, Mk? contest- I '
ints in the recent contest held hy the ,
S'ational Assoelatidn f??r the I'reven- ;
Ion of Spinal Curvature. Play did it ?
leullhful, happy, outdoor play.
FOR WINES AND BEER
1
Congressman Julius Kahn of ?*itli'ornla
left homo for flu* extra sesslou
>f congress with the expressed inteti1oi\
of introducing legislation to 1 il??*r- ,
tllze the Volstead art. Here he Is seen
.alklng ahout prohibition.
it Would Ruin Them.
Roberts and Walker had discussed
he question of lify after death for
noro than two hours. Roberts held
hat the grave was merely a gate into
i greater and eternal life. Walker 1
oiild not he eonvlneud of the exist
Mice <?f ilie hereafter.
"Snv what you will," Walker in- 1
dated, "I cannot help but believe that !
Aeath ends all."
"I don't see hmv you. a lawyer, can
say that," Roberts retorted. "Why, if
iW'iitri ended everything most of you j
lawyers would sturve!"?Kansas city
Star. I
Romance and Mush.
Thp Woman has a friend whose lit- '
tie hoy is a devotee of the movies. Hut
not long ago he came home rather 1
hored. The movie had been about romance,
he said, at least, that was its
title. So curiously did he pronounce
the word that his mother felt confident
that he didn't know what the
word meatus.
"Son." she asked him, "do you know
what romance means?"
"Sure," he said, and then added disgustedly
"It means mush." Chicago
Journal.
Lobster Travels 500 Miles.
Five years ago the bureau of fisheries
assisted in planting some Allan
tic coast lobsters In I'uget sound. All
the lobsters were branded with the
mark "K-17." one of these lobsters
has been taken from the waters of
Oregon, boo miles south of I'tiget
sound.
Learning Through Mistakes.
A man who does not know how to
learn from his mistakes turns the best
schoolmaster out of his life.?Ueory
Ward UwL'cher.
1r
n on North Island. California, and scho
in race In which scores of birds were r
lotograph shows Ensign Charles G. Sh
Chicken Farm 1
BsRswfll^'sss
In tlu? heart of the Baltimore busl
story Franklin building, A. C. Franker
ind his wife have rived in a small <*o
Itave laid out a little garden, with a
ivumn-a iu cumiut'ic uieir tony mrni I
Put in Asylum to
* -w ' lr*H
W /*
M ~Sfh *
| ] / . \k .: ,*? /
;:> ^;:; '* f
$ :: -V' '*': * /
'
I sN, ' ' m i
v '
imrotliy Gordon, heiress to #400,00<
asylum nt Waverley, Mass., and her uua
he placed her in the institution to pi
Newell, a student. The superintendent
really is insane. Miss Gordon and Nev
Iowa's Senator-El
ii a ? a m
ta S - - - " ^ - This
shows Smiili \V. Ilrookhnrt,
his son .loo inspecting prospective line
fanners were ehielly responsible for Se
lion over Clyde I?. Herring. l>einoerul.
GATHERI
Sweden's populntion increased 0f>.7L\">
in 11 CO.
I'rlncess Mary's favorite flower Is
the sweet pea.
Systematic agricultural drainage is
nriiiKinj,' itiHiiit tin* decline of mnlurln
In southwestern Missouri.
Iron copper. zinc and practically
every other element known to he on
earth has been detected en the sun in
a gurieouH state.
ol children of San Diego recently comeleased
by the youngsters to race buck
one sturtlng one of the races. Bach
s Up in the Air
ness district, on the roof of tlio fiveifeld
has started a chicken fnrtn. Ho
ttape' on the roof for five years, nn<l
dog. [/igeons aind the usual country
tome.
Block Elopement
2SEH!w^ 2
t, is seeking her release from .an insnne
rdlan, William F. Jnrdlne, has admitted
event her elopement with Wlllard R.
t of the hospital says he believes she'
k-ell are shown In the illustration.
lect Real Farmer
Itepuhlimn senator-elect of Iowa, and
on on tii.s farm near Pes Moines. The
iiator Brookhart's nomination and elec
/ .
ID FACTS
Pocket grasshoppers generally llv?
In pairs or groups.
The automatic telephone has been
introduced In Japan.
There were more than f?0,000 students
of engineering In the technical
schools of this country last year.
It Is estimated that 900,000,000 f>eo? ^
pit? iivp ;n rounirii's wnerc nooKwornj ^
infect Ion Ih a strloUH immure to hcultll
and forking efficiency.
r