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all day, www when it's damp or ^ chilly? Suspect your kidneys and tj try th* remedy your neighbors use. John Howell, Broad St., Bennetts- ? ville, S. O.j says: "Four years ago I jj was nearly down and out with kid- C ney trouble. - Every muscle of my back was stiff, making heavy lifting K and stooping almost impossible The kidney secretions were highly colored and contained sediment. I was in n terrible shape. Mornings when I got g up I felt tired and my sleep didn't re- It fresh me. A friend advised me to P use Doan's Kidney Pills and they t( surely did great work. They soon fixed me up in fine shape and I am glad 'to give them my endorsement." A Price 60c, at all dealers. Don't II simply ask for a kidney remedy? get Doan's Kidney Pills?the same ?k.? U. o 11 l a r.1 - wint mi. xiuwcii riuu. r osier-ivi iiburn Co., Mfgrs., Buffalo, N.Y. Ad.9 Why War Stamps Ara Sold Great Britain in the seven weeks ^ after the armistice had n total expenditure of more than 370 million pounds sterling, whereas the expenditures for the seven weeks before the armistice, at a time when hostilities were at their heigl^ just exceeded 360 million. This indicates that oth- ^ er great nations, as well as the United States, are finding that they will require more funds tif1 get through the year following the great war than they did to carry on the war for a year. This also explains the neces- ^ sity for th continued sale of Gvern- 0 ment Bonds and War Savings Stamps, j, h Waste neither time nor money. * Make use of both.?Buy W.S.S. ? _ ~k NEaVOUS WRECK j From Three Tears' Suffering. Says ** Cardui Made Her WeU. ? Texas City, Tex.?In an interesting d statement, Mrs. U. H. Schill, of this town, 0 says: "For three years I suffered untold n agony with my head. I was unable to tl do any of my work. b 1 just wanted to sleep all the time, for u that was the only ease 1 could get, when L I was asleep. I became a nervous wreck " just from th* twful suffering with ray 1 head. * 1 was so nervous that the least noise * -would make me jump out of my bed. I n had no energy, and was unable to do anything. My son, a young boy, had to t .do all my household duties. ? 1 was not able to do anything until I r look Cardul. I took three bottles in all, 0 and it surely cured me of those awful h headaches. That has been three years tl ago, and I know the cure is permanent, p for I have never had any headache since b faking Cardul. .. a Nothing relieved meuntll I tookCardui. It did wonders for me." Try Cardui for your troubles?made ? from medicinal ingrt jients recommended j' in medical books as being of benefit in female troubles, and 40 years of use has (> proven that the books are right. Begin <{ faking Cardui today. NC-12J WEtia VVHWN The Create In Goodi Tt/ti M m* perfect G NMllllflil'lil iii ifi'iTngirffPHffn I'ffiiM JfflP Scaled Tight K BKBtsxastmmamamammimmmmmmmm CURTIS ARAMT WINS PRIZE! i CUmiom Collage?Prize winners i the pig club contest for 1918 have eon announced by Mr. L. L. Baker, upervising agent of Boys' Club Vork. Bryan Martin, Greenville ounty, won first prize in the sow and itter class; Zola E. Walker, Edgeleld County, second; Curtis Arant, Chesterfield County, third. . Curtis Arant bought a purebred ilt weighing 02 pounds for $50. At he close of the contest the gilt weigh59 pounds, a gain of 297, and is alued at $200, she being one of the lost typical of her breed in the tate. Total expenses were $56.35, ;aving a net profit of $143.65. .His rizes are a short course scholarship > Cieinson College and $5.00 by the [ational I)uroc Record Association. MOISTS TOLD 10 DO SOMETHING THAT IS SEIMOML L T. BURQE, MISSIONARY, 8AY8 CHURCH MU8T KEEP PACE WITH WORLD, WHICH 18 DOING THING8 DIFFERENTLY NOW, OR FALL HOPELE88LY BEHIND. Appeals to Church to Make Supreme^ I Effort and Sacrifice at Thla Time 1 to Christianize World and 1 Present Arms. 1 Plans of tho Methodist Episcopal ' Jhurch, South, indicate that their field >1 work will greatly broaden In tho ' lext few months and will Include : lorope and Hussla. "The Methodist ^ Ihurch has been plodding along (or 1 lany years and has made a tecord hat every Methodist Is justly proud i f." said It. T. Hurno, of the Siberian y Commission of tlie American Red j Cross, In a letter from Vladl vostock , hnt has just been received at head- \ uartors In Naahville. 'it lo time, however, for the Me'bdlat Church to do something senna- . ional and unuaual. All the world is olng things differently now and the rganization that cannot keep pace s lust fall behind. We should go Into ho countries of Europe and Russia, v o pioneers in a work that might mean c lore to prevent future wars than the a .eagun of Nations. Christianize and a ducate the peoples of the world end here will ho no more wars. But If r re have harmony 'by threate and fear c nd by conet&nt ahow of force, I eee o reason why it might not be another unstion of 'a scrap of paper.' "Rut It would be madness to at empt any work In Siberia or Rusvta 1 t this time. No completo or intelllout Investigations can be made until rder Is restored, and from what I ave seen it will be months before hat task is accomplished. The cam- . 'algn for thirty-five million dollars to ( e conducted May 18 to 2G will go long way toward solving a big prob- ( ?m. "Keop In mind alwayn that the com- ' lex Ion of the world hae entirely hanged and that not only muat there e complete reorganization in eco- 1 lorntc, political and aoclal rendltlona, 1 nt mot particularly In relfgtoue coa* I itljn* " LEYS 5/ Name 'j-la/td W 7Lw E21K #/ i UlLiW 1 J 1 i i CPtRlflht r or Lastsj VICTORY LOAN FILM b TELLS WAR SECRETS Secrets of the war recorded by the notion picture camera and only now j released by the censors are revealed , n "The Price of Peace" an official 'ilm issued in behalf of the Victory Liberty Loan, and to be shown at 3heraw at an early date. "The Price of Peace" is the only >fficial picture ever assembled which purports to cover the war from the lay it was declared down to date. The purpose of the picture as anlounced by the Department of the Treasury throuKh Frank R. Wilson lirector of publicity, is to put before he public a graphic accounting and o make clear why there is now a Vicory Liberty Loan. The picture opens with a scene in Presidents Wilson's office and a reference to that momentous April 6, vhen war was declared. It concludes vith a remarkable view of the Statue >f Liberty, in New York harbor, and he homecoming of our army. Rut here is a vast deal between, includng the embarkation of troops, their anding in France, final training over here, then the despernte realities of he front line trenches, gas attacks, irmy railroading under fire, the rreat attack from Soissons to Cha,eau Thierry, infantry and artillery inder heavy bombardment, a battle ' jetween aeroplanes and the down- 1 ng of an enemy airman, the observ- | ition balloons under fere, then the I lAttlf* Hnnd. nriunnoru nnnf urnil - ? - ' ? ""e t cuns, our troops marching over the [thine into Germany, Generul Persh- . ng and his men in Prussin, Christmas vith the Army of Occupation in Gerliany, and the homecoming, Probably the greatest thrill of the licture is the scenes where our troops 4 ire going "over the top" and into the vheatfields at 4:35 o'clock on that Famous morning July 18, 1918. rhcre is a dim, misty light, faithfully jortrayed by the photographer that 1 rives these scenes a pecular and fasc- < nating intensity. Other scenes of f lesperate fighting show an American 1 >attery under heavy fire from enemy 1 runs in the Argonne, In yet other 1 icenes American soldiers are shown 1 iravely advancing under shrapnel I 'ire across an open glade. Two are < ihot down near hte camera. ( The activities of the American na- 1 'y furnish another important chapter 1 >f the picture. A number of impress* t live scenes show the German fleet I teaming in to surrender. < Near the conclusion of the film forner Secretary McAdoo is shown in his 1 dlice at the Department of the Treas- 1 lry welcoming Secretary Carter Glass 1 vho forthwith sits down to his desk I nd writes a message, to the Anicricun I >ublic. I BUILDING UP POOR LAND There are mnny thousands of acres >f land that must be fertilized and ilanted in vigorous growing legumes For two or three years, before corn ?ats und other crops that should en,er into a systematic rotation of crops ' in be profitably grown. The most gorous growing legumes should !>' ;rown on the poorest soil, and applications of acid phospate made wherever phosphorus is needed until _.ll r nit* son is leruie. No crop thut impoverishes the soil should be grown on any acre of land on the farm for more than two years in succession, a systematic rotation of uli of the feedstuffs grown should be fed to livestock and the mamanure carefully saved and applied lo the land. . We should depend mainly upon deep plowing, n systematic rotation if crops, including legumes, the addition of humus und the application of acid phospate and barnyard manure to increase the productiveness of the soil. An occasional application of lime on other than lime soil will im prove the mechanical condition, promote bacterial growth and be especially useful in producing more favorable conditions for the growth of leguminous crops. ?The Progresjive Farmer. Speaking of Luck When on his way to a poorhousc to become an inmate, Harry Congdon, 32 years old, stopped at the postoffice from force of habit Monday. A clerk handed him a letter. It was form a lawyer in Syracuse, N.Y., informing Congdon that an aunt had died and left him $5,000. Five seconds later his poorhouse per mit had become a scrap of paper? or muny scraps? Condon was performing a hornpipe. A little later, on the strength of his letter, someone loaned him money to take him to Syracuse.?Monroe Journal GIRLS!. LEMON JUICE IS SKIN WHITENER How to Make Creamy Baauty Lotion For a Few Cents. The juice of two fresh lemons strained into a bottle containing three ounces of orchard white makes a whole quarter pint of the most remarkable lemon skin beautiAer at about the cost one must pay for a imall jar of the ordinary cojd creams. Care should be taken to strain the lemon juice through a fine cloth so no lemon pulp gets in, then this lotion will keep fresh for months. Every woman knows that lemon juice is used to bleach and remove such blemishes as freckles, sallowness and tan ind is the ideal skin softener, whitener and beautifier. Just try it. Get three ounces of nrchard white at any drug store and two lemons from the grocer and make up a quarter pint of this sweetly fragrant lemon lotion and massage it laily into the face, neck, arms and Minds. Adr. 1. I gRIGH r. FUTURE TOR I HOCUKAtSINC IN SOpTlf In Mississippi, the number of hogs lias increased 66 per cent in four years. Seventeen counties in southeast Alabama last year shipped over 2,300 cars of hogs. Like stories of the irreat expans:on in hoc product-1 ion oome from all parts of the South, I from Virginia to Texas. Shapely J Durocs, Poland-Chinas, Ilerkshircs , and Hampshire* are replacing the razor-backs, and good feeding and care are coming td be recognized as \ essentials in profitable hog production. All of this expansion and development is nothing but naturnl, for the Tact i& that the South is probably better suited to hograising than any other part of the United States. Our mild climate and long growing seaion make possible the production of x wide variety of crops for hog feeding, and the cheapness with which these crops may be grown almost injures cheap pork production. During ( the next ten years we expect to see I in the South a still greater expansion 1 if hog-raising industory, for prices ^ ' [jromiHo 10 remain goon, ai<> even | ' when prices fall, the Southern hog I 1 grower who follows the right methods j :an remain in the business and pros-1 ( ler longer than the man in the North possibly can.. , For the farmer who will get a good | srecd, who will learn what the best j ind cheapest hog crops are anil how i ;o grow them in ubundance, anil who ] will work with his neighbors to sell 1 n carlots, few lines of farming are 1 nore attractive than. hog-raising. 1 ?The Progressive Farmer. I ZOTTON MAY SOON GO 1 TO GERMAN FACTORIES Pnris, April 21.?The supreme economic council will meet to-morrow to consider proposals to grant a limited tupply of raw materials, notably cotiori, to Germany to enable the facories there to start work and to rerelieve the unemployment which is laid to be at the bottom of much of J he disorder in Germany. The coun;il, it is said, also will revise regulations for German exports required to nay for food imports and probably will discuss the new economic situation created by the slackening of the nlockatlc regulations as applied to [iermany's neutral neighbors. After April 25, goods and comnudities may be shipped to the neural countries adjoining Germany /irtually without restriction, the neu- ] trals themselves assuming responsi- ! bility against the re-export of pro- i bibited wares to Germany. There was no lagging by the American soldier in any of the drives in France that effected victory, and there should be no lagging by the people at home in the Victory Liberty Loan drive that is to elect payment for victory. Beware of Counterfeits! Some are Talcum Powder. PAIN'S MASTER | "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin." For Headache Colds Neuralgia Grippe Earache Influenzal Colds Toothache Neuritis Achy Gums Lame Back Lumbago Joint-Pains Rheumatism Pain! Pain! Adults?Take crno or two tablets anytime, with water. If necessary, repeat dose three times a day, after meals. Since the world-famous discovery of "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" introduced in 1000, billions of these genuine tablets have been prescribed by physicians and Proved Safe by Millions. /T\ Buj CroM IpAYHRfl "Bayer" on genuine % K #J . Tim*.. ASPIRIN 1 i Aiylrin i? the trade mark of Barer Manufactory of Monoaceticacidcaur of Salicrlicacid ' Ask for and Insist Upon "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin." American Owned, Entirely. SO oaut pacfcag??Larger ataea alao. P|Bv5p>B| i ym k A A nl 1' y IP yAm . M uM i * y U. b M __M i ' ttfasTViiME i k^'. ft. - fl HARRY W. WEBB. He la a Baltimore theatrical mnn tnd has heen appointed film chairman tiy the War Loan Organisation of the ) Fifth Federal Reserve District. He ' will direct the movie program of the ( lintrlct, his biggest Job being the dis- i tribution of "The Price of Peace," a J movie of actual battlefield activities, I which will be shown during the Vie- ! tory Loan campaign. Mr. Webb operates six of Baltimore's leading motion picture theaters. He haB had wide business ex- I perlence, having held executive positions with electric light and telephone plants In Wilmington, Pittsburgh and Baltimore. He was formerly vice presdent of the Wilmington Telephone & Electric Light Company, and was also engaged in the development of several >f Baltimore's suburbs. Recently bo irk devoted his time to the motion picture business. HIS BROKEN NECK CUBED BY COLLAR Surgeons Mend Lieutenant After Fall of 2,500 Feet and He Now Flies Again and is Happy. There ia a man in San Franc-laco walking u round will* a broken nec.i. He is Lieutenant Charles M. Cumulna, of Virginia. Cummins was an arftiy aviator. While making a flight at Ucratnei Field, La., in February, 1918, he* fell 2.500 feet, fracturing the fourth, fifth, and sixth cervical vertebrae and dis Locating aeveral other vertebrae partially. After the fall he wan nent to Lotterman General Honpital at the I'renidio In San Franclaco for treatment. Army anrgeonn who are working ul moat miracles there in the reeonstruc. tion of the war wounded finally fitted a metal colar on the aviator to curry tbe weight of hie head. It worked? and now Lieutenant Cummins is walk ing about apparently normal. One of Many. Lieutenant Cummin's cane is only one of many, but it stands out be cause of the popular superstition that n man can't live if his neck is broken. The reconstruction surgeons at Let terman are working on hundreds ot rases much more difficult than the flyer's. They are receiving men there daily from the battlefields of France, whose legs and arms hang withered and helpless and they are turning these men out. after monthH of treatment *nd patient mechanical manipulation, ihle to use their arms and legs and apitble of making a living The cost, >f course, is tretnendons when one lakes into consideration tlie fact that the same work Is being carried on in uany military hospitals , More Money Needed. ' Already Congress has appropriated Millions of dollars to carry on the sork and many millions more will lave to be made available for the muse. For It is a cause, this regen 'ration of the men who gave their nxlies to their country. Part of the money to lie realized 'rom tbe Victory Liberty Loan will be .? ul for this job of reconstruction or egeneration. Think of this when you ire making up vonr mind as to how rinch of the loan you. personally, ore rolng to sishHerihe. i.nu'onant i nmmina mHoe a nigm vith his collar on just to convince inisclf tlint he hadn't lost his nt-v. IVe can't atTord to lose our nerve, on i dollar nnd cents proposition in I'm ace of the deeds of such men. | TRADED H18 LEG. A Canadian Baptist minister. <& I, who chose a rifle rather than :i T I ? chaplaincy and lost his leg In 4 5i action, was lining commiserated T P on the "Iohh" of the leg. n "I did not lose tny leg," he re. & ? plied. "I traded it fofr s clear % * conscience." ^ L "I traded it for a clear con ? b Kclonct," i i i Better trade jrour dollars for * | : ' a clear consdsnce In the Vic- < ' \ tory Loan. Yon won't regrat It * > isnd jrwill gat the dollars < hack with Intaraat. J J 9100 Reward. SIM Tha readers of thla paper will be pleased to learn that there la at leaat one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure In all Its atagea and that la catarrh. Catarrh being greatly Influenced l>y constitutional conditions requires constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Medicine Is taken Internally and acta thru the Blood on the Muroui Burfaces of the System thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, giving the patient stienRtb by building up the constitution and assisting nature In doing Ita work. The proprietors have ao much faith In the curative power of Hall's Catarrh Medicine that they offer Ont Hundred Dollaro for any caae that It falla to cure. Send for llat of testimonials. Address F. J. CHENEY A CO.. Tolodo. Ohio Sold by all Druggists, TVo. | Weighed 90 Pou PERUNAf Recommends H to Her Friends "1 don't need Paruna any more. I ana nil well. I have taken six bottles. I ninety rounda before I atarteal^vha Peruna. I was Junt as yewramtf t?0 weakly. I ksd (Ives WMH* ? ever nettlair welt> SUbh * fed* and splttleR^nnd-dMlM kol ret nB?lliln?. Now slnoo talcing FerVins T Welsh nr " kdUMM. -??d thirt y-Bve ponnOb. ATI my friends mid would never vet well. 1 Was just a shadow. > 1 buve surely recommended yojet" Ityrrifrm to many of my friends, and Away are umIhk it. I will reeommbpd I'rruai, tor I Mm so thankful for what it has done for nr.* Kvetywker^ , M >1 , I ' = f 4 Personality We altri largely to ih #our cuatomei atitution. It is alw in any of the THE FARM RUBY. SOUTH T. H. BURCH, R. M. NE President. V.. <D *0 s/juriii vi v? The Oldest, Large Bank in Chert* 4 Per Cent. Paid en Saving* Drp See U R. E. Rivera, President. M. J. Hough, Vice-President. Blissful Depravity In a border Southern town lives an i elderly negro carpenter, who is J locally distinguiscd for two things-? j ! his use of large words and his abiding j ] fear of his wife, who is big impressive ; and domineering. In this town three j young professional men keep bache- j | lor quarters together. j t Not so very long ago one of the | three called the darky to do some small repairing jobs about the apart ment. "Ross" inquired the old, man in the midst of his work, "does vou white gen'imens live heah in tot;* 1 depravity of de feminine sex?" "We do" was the answer. From the bottom of his henpecked a soul the old darky fetched up a long deep sigh. "Well, suh" he said "ef I wuz ez ; you is, I would suttenly remain so." Wrong doing to another reacts j most heavilv against the wrong doer i Most men who think the dead line j is at forty were stilFs when they were ! ' thirty. 17 51 It's Pair woathor Vou J Stood by mo "lift CORNS OR j CALLUStS OFF 1 Doesn't hurt! Lift any corn or callus off with fingers IT ij i Ho.i't suffer! A tiny holtle of . i Freezone eosts hut a few cents ut | ;.ny druK store. Apply a few drops i on the corns, calluses and "hard skin" on bottom of feet, then lift them off. When Freezone removes corns from the toes or calluses from the bottom of feet, the skin benenth is left pink and healthy und never sore, tender or irritated. >ll?? < lurn l.nlir, 21 N. Clold St., Aland Ruphltt, Mich. In her letter oppoeltn MIhm I*ohr telle in convincing wordu of tho benefits ehc received front l'cruna. ibuto our success in hanking io friendship existing between \s and the personnel of the in'ays a pleasure for us to serve various lines of banking. 7 0 0 r> A mrwr CKS DA1N1S. I CAROLINA WSOM M. L. RALLY, 'President Cashier. II heateriield St and Strongest srfield, S. G. osits. $1.00 Starts An Account s C. C. Douglass, Cashier. D. L. Smith, Assist. Cashier. DR. L. H. TROTTI, Dental Surgeon Chesterfield, S. C. Office on second Hour in Iiosi Buildinp. All who desire my services will dense see me nt Chesterfield, us I lave discontinued my visits to other owns. DR. R. L. M c M A N U S Dentist Office over Iiunk of Chesterfield. iVill visit Pai;clund every Tuesday; dt. Crophnn every Wednesday. Other days in Chesterfield Prices reasonable. All work piiar inteed J. AKTHUR KNIGHT Atlorney-al-l.aw Office in Courthouse Chrilerfirld, S. C. MANNA A HUNLEY ?Attorneys? E. Hannn, C. L. If unlay, Chcrnw. Chesterfield Offices: Peoples' Hank Chesterfield I(>ink of Cheraw Hl?l^., Cheraw A CIIr% A noncKArI^ Condition Pov/cerj. A high-class remedy for ! >r-cs Hal nudes in poor c Mi'liu'uu i".: 1 n nred of a tonic. lUiilds soli? iir.sdo ami fat; cleanses tliesy- d in. thereby jiiod.u. inv; a sin<-< i. '" v ? at of I ii. i\ ?! r? M 1 ?vrv Victory Liberty I onn Thousands of tnoii who entered the iehl perfect physic illy nr<- now crip?If ( for life. These men will he aught a method of irninr their living by the government. 'I hey must In gin iill over again. The government merely asks you to lend your money at a fair rate of interest to help pay the expense. Will you hesitate to subscribe liberally to the Viclory Liberty Loan? You cannot run away from a weakness; you must fight i? out or you perish; why not fight it out of you now, right where you stand??Stev on.