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* ?8 %cumei{, Need no recommend We now carry a cc licious sweets, alwa IN OUR MARKET W1 The Choicest || Pork the ! 11 PRICES ALW j A.F.DAVI If Your Need Legil within the h tice, it will 1; And in pleased to \ any busines you. Our onl> a Bank is .1 er; so consi THE FARR ruby, sou T. H. BURCH, R. M. President. Our Sayings ll ifyankei \ The Oldest, Lar Bank in Che 4 Per Cent. Paid en Savings 1 \ Se< C. C. Dc R. E. Rivers, President. M. J. Hough, Vice-President. She Seep OF CHE Will Appreciate Your Bus $200, Oar customers and friends I need of accommodation or y< to see as. Guaranteed bu I Let us show you this wonder R. B. LANEY, President CHAS. P. MANGUM, I Cashier The Columbi 1641 MAIN STREI Street Paving, I! Culverts, 1 Anvthiner 0 v?-r ESTIMATES GI ASHCRAFTS Condition Powder A high-class remedy for horsi ^i.d mules in poor condition ar i i need of a tonic. Builds sol ? iiiscle and fat; cleanses the sy m, thereby producing a snioot ^ssv coat of hair, packed i Ji 'V- "W* **? ::e chesterfield drug c notice of discharge On the 20th of Oct. next I will u y to the Probate Court for a d t-'iurge a* administrator of the Est* i C. C. Cassidy, deceased. .? ANNIE CASSIDY, Sept. IT, 1919. Administrate ' ! HI l?'l. ' I I ' I I II % bandies ation. They are perfect. mplete line of these cleys fresh, always on ice. jj 3 CARRY AT ALL TIMES j : Beef And Market Affords ' AYS REASONABLE [S MARKET Is Imate, elp of sound banking prac)e gladly met at this Bank, any event we shall be lave you call on us with is problem that confronts r excuse for existence as the Service we can render us always. AERS BANK TH PARni IMA v^ni wuuin NEWSOM M. L RALEY, V.-President Cashier. Plan Is Interesting Chesterfield gert and Strongest 5terfield, S. G. \ deposits. $1.00 Starts An Account s Us tuglass, Cashier. D. L. Smith, Assist. Cashier D. H. Douglass A'sist. Cashier le's Sfrank I, STERFIELD f iness. Total Resources Over 000.00 j helped us to do this. When in ou have money to deposit, come rglar proof and fire proof safe. A cordial welcome awaits you G. K. LANEY, Y-President J. A. CAMPBELL, Assist. Cashier a concrete Lo. 5T, COLUMBIA, S. C. Sidewalks, Bridges loors, Walks in Concrete jADLY furnished "TKe?? Rats Wouldn't Eat My Best Grain," Says Frad Lamb It's hard to keep rats out of a feed P store. Tried for years. A neighboring store sold me some Rat-Snap. It worked wonders. Gathered up dead A ruts every morning- Bought more 1 HAT-SNAP. Haven't u rut now.They y woudn't eat my best grain tvhen 1 ^ threw HAT-SNAP around." Three sizes, 25c, 50c, $1.00. Sold and guaranteed by Square Deal Drug Co., ^ A. F. Davis and Pageland Hardware ;f Fair Days?Nov. 12, 13, 14, IS b JSKr lr TO rue last fl^d^^SCALCO "HNS ONLY WmMr AT YOOQ GOOCZAS ? ^MAXWELL HOUSE 1 COFFEE ? ! ' I II' I I, 1 IBM?Ma?? THE PRICE OF COTTON We have said it before and say it again: In order to pay capital invested in it anything like the same returns that labor and capital elsewhere get, this year's disastrously short crop of cotton should bring 40 cents a pound. We wish wo could say it will bring 40 cents, but we can say at least that there are just four reasons why prices are not now mounting toward that figure:?* First, the reduced consumption of American mills, owing, it is said, to labor troubles. Second, the delay in ratifying the Peace Treaty and putting work back on a peace basis. Third, the unsettled conditions in the financial world, resulting in the English pound, normally worth $4.86% in America, now being worth only $4.35. This means that any purchase in America now costs an English buyer 10% per cent premium for exchange on money. The Peace Treaty matter, however, will soon be settled; labor troubles seem in process of adjustment; and we must believe that the abnormal situation with regard to English money will soon adjust itself. The fourth reason why cotton prices arc not climbing toward 40 cents, however, is most important of all. This reason is simply the belief that farmers will let the crop go for less. No well organized pnion of town laborers would submit to any less remunerative prices for their la I bor, however; and why should the farmer? If he goes on a strike, he can hold out longer than the city wage earner, and why should he not in a peaceful and legal way refuse to take less than a fair price for the product of his toil? In view of the reduced acreage this year, a good crop of cotton should have brought 33 to 35 cents a pound. With a disastrously poor crop such as we have, 40-cent price means only a living wage for the producer; and he, like the city laborer, owes it to his family and those depended on him to demand this living wage.?The Progressive Farmer. Guaranteed burglar proof safe. To be doubly safe, we carry burglar insurance. Cbas. P. Mangum, Cashier People's Bank. 666 quickly relieves Constipation, Biliousness, Loss of Appetite and Headaches, due to Torpid Liver. Negroes in and around Helena, Arkansas, attempted to force the white population to pay .them more money than they were getting for picking cotton. They had organized and were drilling with rifles. Their leaders are said to have made them believe that by killing off the whites they could pick cotton and sell it for fifty cents a pound. Five whites and eleven negroes are reported killed an-i many negro< s wounded. Scores have been jailed. Federal troops have the ? . oae. Shirts Work Shirts, $1.00 to $1.25, goot or men, $2.00, $2.25; Level Best We are the Dress Shirt people. \ f and varied assortment in all NOTICE OF"^A?"?T~ " State of South Carolina, ' County of Chesterfield. E. M. Steen, F. S. Steen, Lillie McCM1 Oi. * tiiiun oieen, anu uee oieen, Lula Steen and Willie Steen, by their guardian ad Litem, Ellen Steen, and Ellen Steen as* guardian ad Litem for Lee Steen, Lula Steen and Willie Steen, Plaintiffs, vs. J. D. Ingram and A. M. McNair, Defendants. Pursuant to an order signed by His Honor Judge Edward Mclver, Judge of the 4th Judicial Circuit, I will offer for sale before the Court House door at Chesterfield, S. C., on the first Monday in November, 1919, (between the legal hours for sales) all that certain tract of land situate, lying and being in above State and County, Alligator Township, known as the Duncan Steen Estate Lands. Said tract contains one hundred and sixty-eight acres, more or less, and is bounded as follows: North by lands of H??yt Belk. east by lands of Christopher Blackwell and Bud Morris, south by lands of Baxter Blackwell and west "by lands of A. M. McNair and Lucius. McCoy. Terms of sale, Cash. Purchaser to [ pay for all necessary papers. rw.? o 10to I. P. MANGUM, Clerk of Court as Special Referee CITATION The State of South Carolina, County of Chesterfield. By M. J. Hough, Probate Judge: Whereas J. L. Lisenby made suit to me to grant him Letters of Administration of the Estate and Effects of Laney L'senby, deceased, These are therefore to cite and admonish, all and singular the kindred and creditors of the said Laney Lisenby, deceased, that they be and appear before me, in the Court cf Probate, to be held at Chesterfield, S. C., on the 16th day of October, next, after publication hereof, at 11 o'clock in the forenoon, to show cause, if any they have, why the said administration should not be granted. Given under my hand this 1st day of October Anno Domini 1919. M. J. HOUGH, Probate Judge. mi < ' i i ?M?i?m i i,i i WATER WORKS MAN , GIVES OUT FACTS TELLS OF TRYING SEARCH DUR- ; 1NG EIGHT LONG YEARS ' ___ SURPRISED IN END Jolly Declar?i Other Remedie* Failed j But Tanlac Made Him Strong "I have been trying for years to ! get something that would relieve my | troubles and have found it at last in ! Tanlac," said Alfred Joll, of 3291 j Quittman St., Denver, Col., an employe of the water works department of that city. "For a long time," he continued, "my stomach was in such an awful fix that I could not eat hardly any- j thing without being in misery after- i wards. Even the lighest foods would bloat me up with gas and I was constantly belching up sour, undigested food that at times would almost choke me. Often I get dizzy that I would almost fall, and I would get nervous that it was almost impossible for me to rest at night. I suffered agony from rheumatism and I was in such a wretched condition generally that I was hardly fit for anything. "After trying nearly everything I could hear of, I took Tanlac, and it has made a different man of me. My appetite is splendid now, my nerves nr<? sfpaHv T olnnn Ul'rt ? i.rw- .*4 -* M. otvvp imv a iv/^ ai infill. I have gained eight pounds in weight and am in better condition than I have been in many years." j Tanlac, the Master Medicine, is sold ' by The Chesterfield Drug Co., Ches? terfield, S. C.; T. E. wCnamaker A Sons, Cheraw; Mt. Croghan Drug Co^ t Mt. Croghan, S. C.; McBee Drug Co., McBee, S. C.; Pageland Drug Co., Pageland, S. C.; J. T. Jowers & Sons, Jefferson, S. C. Adv SPARTANBURG COUNTY DECLARES INDEPENDENCE Spartanburg County has declared her independence of the cotton speculator and has set a fine example for other counties in South Carolina and other cotton states in her organization of the Spartanburg Cotton Association and her plan to warehouse and ^ finance her cotton crop. Up to date ^ over 2000 members have been secur- ^ ed for the County Association, with membership fees of over $10,000, j and an organization has been pcfected t Put the outstanding feature of the organization's work in Spartanburg has been the provision for a system of cotton warehouses for the county. It c is proposed to build in the county sev- '' eral cotton warehouses to serve im- ' portant sections. The stock subserip- c tions for the warehouses amount to 1 $150,000, and members of the Asso- J ciation have guaranteed $500,000 for > this purpose. The warehouses will be operated under the United States Federal Warehouse act.?The Pro- j gressive Farmer. ] s "ShoE Crimson Clover Texas Rust Proof Oats . . . EWe can supply all var table Seeds for Fall and V Our Stocks Are Pure, DOur Prices , Our Service is Prom ? RHENEY 5 CHARLEST | I Uncle Sam Si H Ar r.C ? I lit Lite Insui That $10,000 is the right lows in the Army to carry bilities with theirs. Thet with theirs. Are you carr Death, Debt If your home is mortgage your widow would have t life insurance policy s mortgage. "Life Insurance is t pathy for the widow is co I Chesterfield L B C. C. DOUGL ?| ALSO FIRE, ACCIDENT, HI SJ INSUI ^ Wi Buy S?ll Kt?i < ' ,w" "Nnc \"j^ *&< /&* .. ,?t f *&. . I ...^ t'opvrlijht li R. J. licyiicids Ti y OU certainly get yours \ call for a tidy red tin or a t makin's cigarette! You'll wan of your smokestunts! Why, awaiting your can in a home packing ! Talk about favor! Man, mi smokecareer until you know t contentment! And, back of P. Prince Albert's quality?sta cuts out bite and parch ! Wit! rette will outlast any phonogra is a cinch to roll. It's crimp ct Prince Albert upsets any n jimmy pipe can be ! It is the pipes where one was smoked t to the joys of smoking. R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACC The great railway strike, which has lmost paralyzed business in England, las been settled. The workmen and he Railroads each made concessions. Vork wus resumed Monday. Both ides will now submit to arbitration, >ut the workmen art' guaranteed ertain wage increases in the meanime. Col. Townsend, Dodd, commander f I.angley Field Va., was intsantly tilled after flying from Langley to Philadelphia, Sunday when bis ma:hine, in attempting to land struck a ree. Col. Dodd was one of the first American Army Officers to get a Hyng license. i = Rub-My-Tism is a great pain killer. It relieves pain and soreness caused by Rheumatism, Neuralgia. Sprains, etc. Gro" S | 13c lb. jp| $1.10 per Bu. ||j ietics of Field and Vege- _ Winter planting. |L Fresh and Reliable Are Right T"\ tpt and Courteous ^ SEED CO. S ON, S. C. j ays ranee: I amount for the young felCompare your responsi1 compare jTour insurance ying enough? t I * , * & the Sheriff ! d, thai is the combination j I 0 face?unless you have a I ufficient to pay off the j I he only mint where syni- I ined into cash." ! oan $ Ins. Co. ! ASS, Manager EALTH, HAIL, LIVE STOCK tANCE ; 1 E*UU?Money Loaned ?mmiwmmmuLiamnm. t 11.1.V v J* '4 ibatcu Co. *-- -/ vhen you lay your smokecards on vh ;oppy red bag of Prince Albert and t to hire a statistical bureau to keep you never dreamed of the sport tl rolled cigarette when it's P. A. i an, you haven't got the listen of hal //hat rolling 'em with P. A. can do f< A.'s flavor, and rare fragrance?pre nds our exclusive patented proces 1 P. A. your smokesong in a makin iph record you ever heard ! Prince it and stays put like a regular p, otion you ever had as to how de ip tobacco that has made three men >efore. It has won men all over the :0 COMPANY, Winston-Salem The HAMLET W.I). JA.MKS, Su A thoroughly equipped i.i.? trcatment of Surgical, Modi Special Attention Giv< Tonsils and Lj/'/ : ' w4 y J n ^ f v * ' < % THE B who buys the furnishings fo surely be CONCRATULAT in selecting our si ore as hea? DRAPER IKS. and all the fu home. Come in and let us shov New goods arriving on right. Farmers' lai Th/>cI xii(/ vuju Wo Are Sj: HIGH GRADE And FRESI When You W WE Hi The Casl J the national 1 ? yoy smoke makes a whale of a cigarette! A waiting your mmy-mo, you'll _ *o h1r? f'nc1 toppv ""d fcn??s. t,dy r9<l t. IdUlt, tin*, handbomo pound and I mil n half pound tin humidora? and?that classy, practical > COlint pound crystrlglass humidor with sponge moistoner top hat lies thnt keeps Prince Albert in . such perfect condition I ^t ' 1 " MM???W??m?M? -Mi ?. rn ^ ~ HOSPITAL rgeon in Charge dilution for the scientific cal, X-Itay, Radium Cases en to the Removal of Adenoids ' f\v\ XNl; X; ;- j ,K/ W RIDE ? her homo lVom us will EI) upon her tfooil taste Iqiiartors for CARPETS, rnituro necessary to her . you our immense stock, every train. Prices are rclware Co. i t Maiket\ I 5 KHMullStS III GROCERIES j i MEATS ! ! /ant the Best j ^VE IT i r Marketi I v j