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DAYS OF DIZZINESS Com* to Hundreds of Chesterfield People There are days of dizziness; bpehs of headache, languor, backache ; Sometimes rheumatic pains; * c. i'ien urinary disorders. Doan's Kidney Pills are. especially for kidney ills. Endorsed by residents of this vicinity. Mia. II. W." Boyett, 801 E. Evans St., Florence, S. C., says: "I had terriole pains in the small of my back afrid when I stooped, the pains were so bad, I thought 1 was struck with a sha ip .tnife. I hud a terrible time to straighten up. I had awful, nervous spells and the least little thine would irritate me. 1 was also troubled with dizzy spells. My kidneys - i acted irregularly and caused me much annoyance. 1 was told I had Bright's disease, but I knew I didn't. I tried different remedies but nothing I took did me any good until I used Doan's Kidney Pills. After I had taken one box I saw a change in my condition. I took two more boxes and they entirely cured me. . That .was six months ago and I still am in good health. I know Doan's Kidney Pills are a wonderful medicine." 60 c at all dealers. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfgrs., Buffalo, N. Y. DISCHARGE NOTICE On the 26th of May at 12 M., I will apply to the Probate Court of Chesterfield County for a discharge as administrator of the estate of T. S. Gregory, deceased. S. T. A. McManus, Administrator. April 22, 1019. If anybody asks you if you have any children after your off-springs ^ are twenty-one, tell them No. Many a father has received a black eye from a black sheep son. CONSTIPATION I And Sour Stomach Caused This Lady Much Suffering. BlackDraught Relieved. Meadorsvllle, Ky.?Mrs. Pearl Patrick, of this place, writes: "I was very constipated. I had sour stomach and was so uncomfortable. I went to < the doctor. He gave me some pills. They weakened mo and seemed to tear up my digestion. They would gripe me and afterwards it seemed I was more constipated than before. I heard of Black-Draught and doelded to tryjlt. I found it Just what I needed. It .was an easy laxative, and not bad to swallow. My digestion soon Improved. I got well of thd sour stomach, my bowels soon seemed normal, no more griping, and I would take a dose now and theh, and was In good , shape. I I cannot say too much for Black- \ Draught for. It is the finest laxative one can use." Thedford's Black-Draught has for , many years been found of great value . in the treatment of stomach, liver and | bowel troubles. Easy to take, gentle and reliably-, in its action, leaving no bad after-effects, it has won the praise Of- thousands of people who have used It NO-1SI t rftm i ft Flovo 1 I . _ 'Ijf^ Iiy i seale Impurlty-prc Ha wrapped, s y/gH\ Be su ^?|k WRK ) A because It WlfceFIa >v iii riMMfe' , fefhTit PROFITABLE HOG RAISING Although my farm ia small, I always try to keep some little plot ol green stuff growing for the hogs By having a succession of these crops the year round, my pigs make hogs of themselves with but very little other feed. A pasture planted in burr clover and Bermuda is invaluable. It is a stand-by to fall back upon when other crops give out, the clover furnishing pasturage for winter and spring, the Bermuda during ummer and fall. A good part of my land is fenced off in small plots. This is a great convenience, for, while the hogs are grazing down one patch, another can be growing. T|ie following is a succession of crops for hogs that I have found profitable: rape and rye for early fall, oats and clover for winter, then spring oats, peanuts and cow1 eas, with Bermudu, corn and velvet ! sans coming on during the summer. Last-fill, my sweet potato patch <'id good service in fattening the 1 ogs. The patch was less than an : ere in size. After gathering 180 I ushels from it, the hogs were turn<. I in. There were seven hogs and r ine shoats, and the sixteen of them : ade a good living out of the patch for nearly three weeks. After that., I fed them cut potatoes and strings f >r a month. All the faulty fruit an the place e )i's to the hops. Then I plant stuff in the garden to help out their rations, too. It is very little extra trouble to boil a big pot of vegev-.bles out in the yard, and the hogs certainly thrive on the cooked stuff. Consequently I always plant an abundance of the easily raised vegetables, such as turnips, cabbage, beets, squash, etc. They are splendid for the sow and her pigs.?Mrs. J. D. Alison, in The Progressive Farmer. NF.W GASOLINE SUBSTITUTE "Alcogus," a new motor fuel, which it is said, will produce from 10 to 12 per cent, more atmospheres, h .s been approved by the Navy Department and the Bureau of Standards. Speaking of the new disco'vory by the chemical department of the Company, Mr. Rubens of the company said: "We succeeded in developing eleven different kinds of fuel containing different proportions of the same ingiedients. These we have patented. The eleven fuels will do for use in any kind of internal combustion motor, either automobile or airoplane. A'cogas has been tested in many airplanes and in all kinds of motors under every conceivable condition, and it has been found that in cast's where g.solme has become less efficient it has shown increased efficiency. This has been true where an airplane has gone to high altitude and the temperature low. The new fuel will give the same results at GO degrees below zero as at normal temperature." '1 he company is said to be plannirg to produce the new fuel at the r:: lu from 150,000,000 to 200,0C0,00C gallons a year. . Thrift is not necessarily a habit but a conviction. Get convinced now and buy W.S.S. In * Vi V'! 'iJOlLU Lu t f' * r tor P >*? svsry taste (ISj ijlol SljflH d air-tight and |1 iof. in the wax- [ , afety packages. E' ire to get j * j \ 5LEY5 | is supreme ^ quality. | ^; wor Casts IbS -wniftfr, ' i , i IS THE MfND OF WOMAN t INFERIOR TO THAT OF MAN? * r The following argument, prepared c . for a debate at the Chesterfield High 1 , School, is printed by request. I \.? \ ( -The subject under discussion is: r "Resolved, That the mind of Woman I is Inferior to that of Man." Miss t 1 Hildreth presents the negative side, t In the very beginning God made c 1 man of dirt, while he dealt more gent- s ly with woman, making her, not of j, common clay, but of one of this man's ribs. This lirst man and went- r an, namely Adam and Eve, in the L c Garden of Eden, give us an oppor- ^ Lunity to compare the minds of man and woman. In the resistance to S temptation woman proved to be the v stronger of the two for it took the i vejry old devil himself to cause Eve g to do wrong, while Adam was influenced by only a woman. t Favilia, the wife of Anthony, di- t reeled his troops for him at home in a such a way that victory was theirs? b while the supposed ruler was away, making love to Cleopatra. Hut then v v/e can't blame him for this, because b greater men than he had been charmed by this charming and strong-mind- t ed woman of the East. k God directed Joan of Arc, and gave v to her a vision through which he di- t rected her to lead the army to victory. I wonder why God did not in- a trust this great mission to some 1: young man. The countries that have been so j fortunate as to have women rulers ! have never been so prosperous as " I when the women were ruling. Take, for instance, the reigns of Queen , Elizabeth and Queen Victoria, of England. Both these eras were markj ed because of the advancement in ? I political, religious and social reforms, e Some of the women rulers most noted for their conquests in battle and . in the management of their countries during war times were Maria The- c resa, of Austria, and Catherine the li Second, of I'russia. n Not having a hereditory form of j. government, nor national suffrage, p we have not had any women rulers in this country, but we have had n wives of some of our Presidents who, a if given the opportunity, would probably have been as good or better rul- b ers as the Presidents themselves. r< ,'lako, for instance, Dolly Madison, tl who, in a critical moment, saved some v valuable papers and a portrait of i: George Washington for her country, / while her husband, ran, not thinking a of saving anything but himself. b Flora McDonald, a North Carolina t woman, showed she was capable of a thinkine and actine nniefclv in I emergency, by riding twenty miles on horse buck one dark night to warn our soldiers that the enemy was coming. If it hud been a man he prob- 1 ably would hawe reasoned that they t I could find out for themselves, or that <* they were already prepared and thus s< I quieting his conscience, would have retired to a haystack for safety. Of course we are just surmising this and it might not have happened, but, well, unyway it was a woman and not a man who carried the news. In the literary world and the world of dramatic arts women have been ' just as erudite us men, a few of which are George Elliott, Harriet j Bcecher Stowe, Louise M. Aleott and Mrs. Browning, while Sarah Bernt ? hart, of the drama, has been compared with Napoleon by a famous critic of to-day. | We have a good many important i inventions made by women, a few | of which are: A woman invented the spinning wheel; a woman discovered the uses of the silkworm; a woman was the inventor of bronze decoration; it was a woman who invented most of the improvements in the ( mower and reaper; a little girl in1 vented the gimlet-pointed screw; a woman invented the deep-sea tele' scope; a woman invented the streeti sweeper used in our cities. Perhaps we hi^/e not quite as many j women inventors as men, but as Adam Clark very truly said, "One woman is equal to seven and a half men." President Wilson, and he is acknowledged to be the greatest man today, said that as the women were taking a leading part in all important matters of to-day, that he thought i there should be some women present at the Peace Conference. Several women have already gone from the United States, one of whom is Miss Anderson, of Washington City. I think this courtesy is due our women, for they didn't wait to be invited to ihe battle fields of France, but gave LEMONS WHITEN AND BEAUTIFY THE SKIN Make this Beauty Lotion Cheaply for Your Face, Neck, Arms and Hands At the cost of u small jar of ordinary cold cream one can prepare a full quarter pint of the most wonderful lemon skin softener ar.d complexion beautifier, by squeezing the | juice of two fresh lemons into a bot tie containing three ounces of orchard white. Care should be taken to strain the juice through a fine cloth so no lemon pulp gets in, then this lotion will keep fresh for months, livery woman knows that lemon juice is used to bleach and remove such blemishes as freckles, sallowness and tan and is the ideal skin softener, tvhitener and beautifier. Just try it! Get three ounces of orchard 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 daily into the face, neck, arms and ; hands. It is piarvelous to smoothen rough red hands. Adv. 2. i i i i i >" hemselves freely as Red Cross nurses' >r in any other way that they could lelp. Of course there were not any ex:ept the Russian women v t o were alowed to be"- arms. 'I h e Russiari iromen, you remember, organised a egiment known t:s "The Legion of j )eath," for the purpose of saving * heir country by encouraging the men i o be brave. i Edith Cavell, an English nurse, of 1 ourageous spirit, showed h"r noble nind in giving up her life that the ( oldiers of England, France and I5ef- 1 ;ium might be saved. We have Miss Rankin, the eongcsswoman, a champion of prohibi-' ( ion, who is, as n\ost women ire, conerned over all moral issues where he welfare of humanity is at stake. 1 In a good many States all the 1 Superintendents of Education are 1 vomen, which goes to show that the ' nlellectual ability of woman is be-j ;inning to be appreciated. A minister of the Gospel told nte hat he once preached in a peniten- ( iary where the number of white men j done was 350, while all the women, j < ioth white and colored, were only 2K. j i Then, too, in the eyes of the law, a ' iromnn becomes of age three years' efore a man does. Last of all, but by no means least, j he women as mothers, have in their j coping the care and training and de- j eloping of the men and women of he future. One of our Presidents said that 11 that he was or could ever hope to ?e he owed to his mother. Mary Hildroth, Chesterfield High School. 'VICTORY MEDAL" FOR EVERY SOLDIER Washington, Apr.?After prolong d conferences with all the allied govrnments, General March announced [>dav, a design has been approved for i j ssuancc to every soldier who parti- j ? ipated in the great war on the al- : ed side of a "Victory modal" in comlemoration of his services to civil- ( ration. The design will he similar ' or all countries on the face, hut i lay differ in detail for the various ' rmies. The overseas side of the medal will icar a winyod victory and on the 1 everse will he, in the lanj.ruaj.re of | tie country hy which it is issued, the ? fords, "The (treat War for < * i v i I - I r.ation." and the aims of the allies. < t campaign rihhon also has heeu ' dopted to consist of a "double rain- ' o\v" series with the red in the cener. The ribbon will he similar for V f II armies and is to he issued in the Jnited States very soon. NOTICE t All persons owinv. the estate of v ohn P. Johnson, deceased, must set- J lo at once and all those holditij? laims ajrainst the estate must pre - s ent same duly itemized and sworn to. " JESSE 1.. JOHNSON, h Administrator. ^ jware of Counterfeits! 1 ome are Talcum Powder. } DON'T ! FEAR ! v ' Bayer Tablets of Aspirin." ? Quick Relief?with Safety! For Headache Colds Neuralgia Grippe ? Earache IniluenzalColds 11 Toothache Neuritis p Achy Gums Lame Hack t.i Lumbago Joint-Pains ^ Iflipuninlicm P-iint Point il Adults?Take one or two tablets anytime, with water. If 1 necessary, repeat dose three J' times a day, after meals. Since the original introduction of ^ "Haver Tablets of Aspirin" millions uj ?n milliong of these genuine talelets have hecn prescriljed hy phyai- n chin* and taken hy the people each f year, with perfect safety. ^ "Payer f Croaa" <**7 iy eC|*Jl "Bayer" on genuine \ E Ma J Tablets. packages. ASPIRIN ! Aapirin i? the trade mark of Payer Manufac- \ lure oi Moiioaccticacidester of Salicyiicacid Ask for and Insist Upon "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin." * '< American Owned, Entirely. < 20 cent packago?Larger alzee also. %*(ggFJir* *?.w 1 * w < wv" * ?*????* *??*? t? WHAT TIME IS IT?| T?ck-tuck ? It isn t much of a clock as clocks ,o. Just an ordinary. everyday ulu.r. ;uch as one sees on the wall of almost my olTic*". Perhaps you d never gl nice tp at it unless you happened to bo ate for luncheon. It hangs in the counting room of one >f the biggest banks In New York, ind there's nothing unusual about it xcept that it was put up the same lay an Austrian princeling got himself killed at Sarajevo?and started he war. It used to keep pretty good time. After we got into the war ami got :o going good, some one put a little ! ed sign across the face of it so that svhenever you looked up to sec what :ime it was you saw the little sign ; itaring Mt you impertinently; "TIME TO BUY LIBERTY BONDS." | Tlck-tock? That clock was ticking off the minutes when the guns were booming rlotig the Sonnne and while the Crown Prince was battering vainly j ?t the gates of Verdun. It was tic-king when the Lit. 1;s i t a n i a went 'Wft&rS^Z down ? w h e n P/ir/C V Bernstorff went 'PaV \ / back ? when 'w ;' MuffSaBcli K*ront. and when 'S " j there were two A Sffjpjiji j million, with more on the way. months ago when Bioner took out iiis fountain pen and signed his name on the dotted lino?ticking at the rate of $553 a sec and. Tick toe k ? $555. Sixty seconds make a minute?sixty 'Minutes hi ike an hour $50,000,000 a lay. That's what the war was costing America when the Armistice was signed. Quick! Someone! Stop the clock' Well, some one did. That day of our tlrst Pence Tele ration when we all went crazy and tore loose, some wag in the hank did itop the clock. Took out the pendulum and tied a hig piece of black rope on the clock itself And every>ody laughed and yelled their head ff?because the war was over. That was the end of it. The war vas over?the clock was stopped and. 'vervthing. Well almost everything. Other clocks still went on ticking t $555 a second! They're still tick ng. Not at $555, to be sure?but it I vill run far into millions before next tine. We still have a Job to finish. We till have war-bills to pay And Amor t ans always pay their bills We still have an army at the bridge leads of the Rhine, and we've got to eep it there for a while if we're go ng to get a real peace in place of an rmistice. And then there are the soldiers to iring hack and the wounded to rare or and the crippled to make over and nhs to find?before ruir job is finish d?before we can turn all our ener ;ies to making plows and automobiles gain. It's going to take money. And ,'c've got to raise it. That's part of nr Job ?yours and mine and the pro le's next door. The hank with the clock can't do i' -all the banks in the country can't <Tr> t if we are going to go ahead after rard making plows and automohil ml opening up new mines and plant ng more wheat fields. We've got to have credit, if we an (dug to get back on a prosperous ueiness basis And we can't have red it. if the hanks have all their ioney tied up in Liberty Loans. Whenever one thinks of the proserlty and happiness we can have in nil* *<*111111 , ii wr ninnv u^r i?i he opportunities that lie just ahead, e should think of that rloek in the ank with its streamer of crepe and is little red sign: And of the millions of other clocks hat were ticking off the minutes dur tig th" war iiirt as that clock in the .ink did and?well? Tick-took? Those (locks are still ticking 'hep another liberty loan com m: Ti< k tock? What time will it he hv vour clock cxt month when the Victory Liberty londs are offered? THIS KIND OF SPIRIT WON $ THE WAR. ? ; > The following letter has been I received by the War Loan Or < > ganizution at Uichiiioml. Va . : I from Mr. A. W. Hall, manager v > of the Sykesville (Md.) Herald. . Wlio could ask more? The Herald will go to the II' T ... fle?.,inl..n?lon ? * ?1. , va.ii i/ii.iii v?if,aui/..ui ii * iiii" ii ^ "" charge. Moreover, wo invito > . you to uso its columns in imy * [. way you soo nt for the Victory <? J,-. Loan It has frooly given sor- .4 ? vico an 1 space for a'l war a> ii\i k ti?s rod will not stop now. ' Please accept tho fi n copy. <v 9 >&&&&&<%?&' t- "' * State of Ohto, City of Toledo, Lucas County, ss. Frank J. Cheney inn ken oath that he Is senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney A Co., doing huaineas In the City of Toledo, County and Stute aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum ot LINK HUNLHUOD IKJLLA 1(8 for each and every case of Catarrh thai cannot he cured hy the use of HALl/S CATAKKI1 MHPICINI;. FRANK J. CIIKNKV Sworn to before me and subscribed In my presence, this fitli 'lav of December, A. D. 188B. A. IV OLF.ASON, (Real) Notary Public. Wall's Catarrh Medicine Is taken In ternully and acta through the ltlood on the Mucous Surfaces of the System. Semi for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY A CO.. Toledo. O. Sold by all druggists, t&e. Hull's Family Pills for constipation. I : : in ^ ' i ? i.y * - ' ? ~ ? I The First Bottle of y^/MM : Writes | Sir. SI. Vnnlltiren, Knglneor, O. It. & I. Itj*., 17 Highland St.,Grand Itupidn, Slleh. Personality \W attri larjr'ily to th <?;ir customer stitution. It is alw in any of the the farm: ruby, soutf I. 11. BURC1I, R. M. NE President V'.'i~ ftank el %. The Oldest, Lar^e Bank in ChesU 4 Per Cent. Paid on Savings D< pt See U; R. E. Rivers, President. M. J. Hough , Vice-President. i A little trirl was rather driven t<> v-xaj^taTatintr, and would tell wild .stories <>i her adventures. Wne day after her walk in the park she ran u lier mother, exclaiming: "Oh, ma- * .ia, as nurse and 1 were walking in he park a eivai hijr lion sprang out t> ,nd wouid have eaten sue up if nurse ( h lad not puili 1 n.o aside!" < ' "Vou naughty child," said the nother, "tit) to your room and a k .our ttoed angi 1 to forgive you lor .idling such a naughty story ahoul he lion." V Half an hour later hi r mother went \ ip and found her looking very penitent. "Well," she said, "have you asked .our j;ood antfol m forgive you?" "Yes, mama," was the reply; "I lid ask, and he said, 'ihui't mention! t, .Miss Smythe; I've often mistaken] hose !>mr yellow poodles for lions | m vsrj i. You havr not failed in lifV until you aiv [7_\ It's Fair J^C*^Vitaithor ru^f Vou \y Stood by rne LIFT Qtl v. ' | Apply few drops i \:i 02, touchy corns o:! : ' linjj-jrs ' 0 v \ V \ I "n \u Vi\ V I If I hurl a l?il ! Drop a httk j1 Froezone on an aching corn, ins ant ly that corn stops hurting, then y >u i t it ri; i t out. * ?\s, magic! A tiny drop of Free/one costs hut few cents at any drug store, hut s sufficient to remove every hard rn, soft corn, or corn between the .< >s, and the calluses, without soreass or irritation. Freestone is the sensational discovery of a Cincinnati genius. it is I Aonderful. PERUNAl Entirely Free from Catarrh of the Stomach "Peruna has positively done for me whnt ninny doctors failed to do. I linvo been time and OKaln compelled to tako to my bod for days. The Jirst bottle of l'eruna pvo relief and while 1 always keep It in tlio house for emergencies, I consider myself entirely free from eiitnrrh of (lie stomneli, the trouble from which I suffered for so iomr before taking ;hls remedy." I.hltild or Tablet I'orm Sold Mvervwhere Ask. Your llenlt r oirr success in banking e friendship <*:cistinjjt between s and the pi r-'oiii ! of tin? in avs a plvasaro for u. to sorve various linos of banUiiu''. 270 C2L A T+JY 1 CAROLINA WSOM M. 1.. KAi.MY, President Cashier. r " '' ::1 hedterfieid ,St aiui ml'O.l"'".'; ;r? .eltl, S. C. >sits. $1.0J Starts An A-coi.nt ^. C. C. Douglass, Crtimrr. D. L. Smith, Assist Carhi-r DR. !.. H. t KOT I i, Dental Sur<?e n Chcyterftc-M, i- C Oil'tce on .-.n . <1 :*< r i:> Rust lui dintiAil uho <! - re i > - will Vase st't Die : ( !l ;S I nvc discontinue- n... . .. Is . othel nwns. D R. R. L. M c M A N U S Dentist Ofiice over I':.i?'. l" ('lies, er. eld. "ill vi>il I'n'M i inl > i .> 'In? -lay; !l. f'nijrh:in ev< y \\* ?!*i? Other days in Chesterfield. Prices reasonable. AM \vm i jruar ntood J. APTMUR KNIQIIT Attorney-a t -La w Otrice in <'mr" house Chesterfield, S. C H A N N A & HUN I. ii Y ?Attorneys- 1. K. Hanna, C. I. Ilunley, Cheruw. Chesterfield Offices: 'eojMes Rank 1 i 1 . Ch sterfield Rank of Cheruw ( h? raw y ASHCRAFT'S Condition Fev/Csrs A hish-rlass 1 . cCv t t ; ,->es ,i.d nui'es in |> ???t . 1m ion and n need of a tonic. I'.iukN soli* nusclii and fat; mis< s tin. sy . em, thflC'liy prodm u ; f sn n,?j: ;!os-y (.1 :.t of . 1 i n H I ANFV LUCKY MAN \t :t church ennfer > i pcakcr c trail a t'l'inle an'ii; ' < a n'-rsiic? -ii ! eilnc it i" i. \;>i n thankfulness that lie had ' ' i c??runted hv cant .1 vah a * After pion-orim- t'e :i f> w min it 11 the hishop, v v ! i' chair, interruptoil wit h 1 P" t i< n : "Do I tltnlei'si mil t. .ii !( I) >bson is 1 hnnl.ful ft"- hi > orn .< ?" ' Well, \vs v i the nnsv. or; "you f -|l I'll it tl: t vay if ' 'I !i' ?? " "W. 11. :iI' ( h !VP to . " . 'I tho prolate. 'in sv.ciM and i noon lotion- "all I have to say is that In- has much to ho thankful for." J