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Hlowes prices! re* ' 1 w 11 T n P.Antin no Tr* Prn\/o i 1 ' m v/ w 1 I 1.1 I VI V/ A V A I V> V Ci I Throughout Our Entire Stock , i Men's and Boys' Clothing, Hats H '' Gents Furnishings I And SHOES For Every Member Of the Family - / -. I " -II - / TEAL-JONES CO. J "The Home of Good Clothes" Edgeworth Jewelry Go. o o 5 ' If you buy your phonograph now?ami you can suggest yo.K own terms of payment, too! fl There's no spring to this offer; no joker in it. J I or Actuelle records; FREE if you buy a Pathe Phon fl small models 3 and 6, which ore not included). No I cash or extend the terms on easy payments?the fl .... B ords will be delivered with the instrument as quick I selection. | FARMERS HARDWj Are Showing Diamonds, Watches ; Chains And Jewelry Variety of Clocks ? i Ross Building, next to Dr. Troth's Office -. I We Will Give Yoi worth of New R FREE I i=?l llStli rri LOCAL ITEMS j When writing to inquire about your taxes be sure to state in each letter where your property is located, otherwise I may not be ablo to give you the information you desire. 45tf J. A. Welsh, Treasurer. Kub-My-1 ism relieve* Rheumatiim, Neuralgia, Sprains. 8 Edfeworth Jewelry Co., watches, clocks, jewelry, glass, china. Ross building. Mr. Smith D. Ellis has returned from a two weeks vacation spent in Georgia. Eyese examined glasses fitted. I am ! here to examine your eyes and frl glasses. All work guaranteed. E. M. Edgeworth. Rub-My-Tism cures bruises, cuts, burns, sores, tetter, etc. 8 Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Johnson, of Rowland, N. C., spent fair week in Chesterfield visiting with Mrs. Johnson's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sellers. To break a cold take 666. 8 E. M. Edareworth has reonened her optical office in the Rosa building next door to Dr. Trotti's office. Eyes examined, glasses fitted. Regular communication of Chesterfield Lodge No. 220 A. F. M., will be held Friday evening, November 19th, at 7:30 o'clock. B. F. Teal, W. M. BAKER?LITTLE On Friday evening, November 5, Mr. Waymon D. Baker, of Mt. Croghan, and Miss Esther T. Little, of Charlotte, were married at the home of the bride's parents, Rev. and Mrs. J. W. Little. Rev. Dr. Carroll, of Allen street Church, Charlotte, performed the ceremony. The happy young couple are now at home in Mt. Cioghan, where Mr. Baker is engaged in business. 666 Breaks a cold quicker than any remedy we know. PRIZE WINNING SWINE The following are the prize win ners in the swine department at the County Fair: Aged boar?L. S. Graves, 1st; T. H. Douglass, 2nd. Senior Yearling Boar?F. W. Rivers, 1st; one entry. Junior Yearling Boar?J. A. Davis, 1st; one entry. Senior Boar Pig?L. S. Graves, 1st; C. W. Rivers, 2nd. Junior Boar Pig?W. A. Douglass, 1st; N. P. Watson, 2nd; T. H. Douglass, 3rd; W. C. Owens, 4th. Aged Sow?L. S. Graves, 1st; W. J. Tiller, 2nd. Senior Yearling Sow?No entry. Junior Yearling Sow?J. A. Davis, 1st; T. H. Douglass, 2nd; Johnnie Owen 3rd. Senior Sow Pig?C. W. Rivers, 1st: one entry. Junior Sow Pig?W. A. Douglass, 1st; N. P. Watson, 2nd; L. S. Graves, 3rd; W. C. Owens, 4th. Get of Sire?L. S. Graves, 1st; W. J. Tiller, 2nd; T. H. Douglas-:, 3rd; N. P. Watson, 4th; W. A. Douglass, 5th. Produce of Dam?W. J. Tiller, 1st; T. H. Douglass 2nd. Promotion Club?I.. S. Graves, 1st; 1. ti. Douglass, Z'li!; iS. 1'. Watson, 3rd; W. A. Douglass, 4th. I.. S. Gruves showed Grand Champion Boar a.id Sow. The above is a list of the Durocs, Mr. F. H. Boatright showed a Junior sow pip and a Junior boar pig, Poland chinas. li $25.00 v/x/vyx V4U % ?25 worth of Pathe ograph (except the matter if you pay $25 worth of rec;ly as you make your IRE CO. mrnrnmsmmmmmm* ^ / . "-ft iiil\mi "ain* . . - ^LtL. ^ ^ .. - ) - . j CLASS! PIED^ BUILDING MATERIAL ? 3 tor* front; 20 feet wide; plate (flats; tuo-way prisms overhead; two doors; heavy steel beam lor two story building. Has not been used because of change of plans. For further information write or call at Advertiser office JOIN?the WHITE Pressing Club, $2.00 per month, five suits cleaned and pressed. At HURST'S BARB* ER SHOP. 4143 /OR SALE:? Fulgrum Oats, $1.65, f.ob., in ten bushels and more. Send check with order. Subject to previous sale. H. L. POWE, Che raw, S.C. TRESPASSING FORBIDDEN Notice is hereby given that all trespassing on the lands of Mrs. Ellen Sowell and Miss Siddie Rivers will be prosecuted according to law. ltp-50 TOR SALE?Pigs, shoats, fine milk cow and beef steer. !n W. R. Huneycutt. NOTICE OF COURT The Court of Common Pleas, fall term, will convene on Monday, December Oth, 1920, at 10 o'clock, A. M.' Petit jurors and witnesses take notice. Grand jurors need not attend. I. P. Mangum, >v. 16th, 1920. Clerk of Court. NOTICE OF SALE State of South Carolina, County of Chesterfield. Court of Common Pleas. Ellen Brown, Nancy Rascoe, Alex Brown, Mary Brown, and Hugh Brown, as administrator of Thomas Brown Estate, Plaintiffs, Maggie B. Quick, Defendant. By virtue of Decree and Order of -ale passed in the above entitled action by Edward Mclver, Resident Judge of the Fourth Judicial Circuit, on November 9th, 1920, I will sell before the door of the Court House at Chesterfield, S. C., between the legal hours of sale, on the first Monday in December, next, the same being the Gth day of said month, to the h i />ooU r*-?l 1?... ing descr'bed real estate: All that certain tract of land situated in Chesterfield County, S. C., containing two hundred (200) acres, more or less, bounded on north by lands of Sallie Griggs; east by lands of J. D. Tolson; south by lands of B. G. Griggs and west by lands of Mary Gainey. Purchaser to pay for all necessary papers. I. P. Mangum, Clerk of Court, Acting as Master, Chesterfield County, S. C. ON THE JOB EVERY DAY RED BLOODED MEN AND WOMEN ARE SELDOM SICK WATCH YOUR BLOOD CONDITION If You Look Pale, Feel Gloomy And Run-down, Take Pepto-Mangan And Build Up You see men and women who are never sick. They work hard, look robust, eat heartily and enjoy life. They have plenty of rich, red blood. That is why they are never ill. People who try to get along with weak, impoverished blood always have a struggle. They go from one sickness A PKilrlnnw WA an*M.? ? ?? ? w uiivvuvii viniviicii witc ooiiic may. If you keep your blood rich and red you'll enjoy full vigor. Disease has little chance to develop in healthy blood. As soon as you feel run-down take Pepto-Mangan for awhile. It will feed your blood with the ingredients needed to create a good supply of red corpuscles. Pepto-Mangan is sold in both liquid and tablet form. Take either kind you prefer. They are alike in medicinal value. But be sure you get the genuine Pepto-Mangan?"Gude's." The full name, "Gude's Pepto-Mangan," should be on the package. Adv. HOME BUILDING St LOAN NEW SERIES: Notice is hereby given that a new series will be opened by the Home Building & Loan As sociation of Chesterfield on October 10 and will close on November 10. Persons who have been unablo to secure stock in- the Association may now be accommodated. Please call and place your subscription with the Secretary, who will explain the plans and workings of the association. J. C. Rivers, President. James Ross, Vice-President. C. C. Douglass, Sec'y-Trea. tf.' WbW B The triple external treatment that H B qulcklylruchrs the seat of ouch diS- B H orders, fit should halo evsry homt I B ready Tor emergency. B H Names of principal Ingradlenta ara H M printed on every pachr.ee. Ask your B doctor if there la anything better. B B Oct ORIUM f.om your druggist D or Mnd lor free aampte. V B TU Oriurn Cov? Si. Louis H Tor ftie Y llfeasjh : \ .ft >-s4 J ; i* * . . ^ >'i ' Divine Lesson in the Garnering of the Golden Grain The summer ts over nnd the harvest is past. The sad skies, the bleak fields, Ihc hare trees, the raw winds that whistle and groan and sob and i sigh their dirges mournfully remind us that the season ofi fruitage has gone by and the time has come when we can only turn away, each to himself, and measure up our garnerlngs. Nature gives us a seed time nnd a harvest time. But these would be meaningless to us did she not also send a season when, at the warning touch of winter i chill, we must measure our gains and , consider our losses. But for the lessons of this season no man would labor; we would know naught of temperance or thrift; we would go through the bright spring only singing, and Idle away the summer In dreams. So It Is part of the divine plan that each of us should now go apart and carefully separate the wheat from the chaff, the flowers from the weeds, and that which Is good and sound and en* during from all that perishes and taints. It Is now that each must hon euuy examine ana weign trie proaact of his own works. It were useless now to try to deceive even ourselves. Now, If nt no other time, we see the vast difference In value between the picked fruit and the windfalls. The one heap we proudly stord aw&y, knowing It will keep sweet and whole to the winter's depths, and the other we cast aside, that It may not contaminate as It rots. It Is a sad, sweet task?sweet for the counted gains, sad for the opportunities lost and to come no more. And as we garner the gains we also garner wisdom. As we sepnrate the wheat from the chaff and the sound fruit from the | windfalls, so, whether we will or not, Dadcl} " <=* w ^2^^, .? _* J W0\ There one? did live a turkey cock, And ho was very proud; And walking with hlo little flock ? goBDiea very loud. POrhapc it may your feelings ehock? Mo lived beneath a cloud. LEVEL HEADED FOLKS KEEP THEIR SYSTEMS CLEAN SarDrtS, An Excellent Tonic, Stim xlant And Blood Purifier, la Ex> tenaively Uaod To Condition The Body The difference between success and failure frequently depends upon the physical condition of the body. With habitual constipation, indigestion and bad blood, no one can be at hia best. With a poisoned body the mind fails to perform actively. The common aim lien to inaniftli'ltfiiifrimtsi irmiT^ r J fell W-v<?'% * ' :JJ >v*-r,% ffe ? 1 $. Jfc-Afc /Vfr' * s; 3 |r ' i^JMm ?i i I B3N^HHH^1Pi^liiN ?f?b. ?3flKSj2i9C^K^ fi'' * we must In the Inner consciousness sopnrnte the true from the false In principles of labor nnd living. No man, even of three-score?a.ve. four-score and ten, has ever known this law to fall In a single season. I! knows no variation In all the cycles of time. But grains and fruits are not all that we are garnering. ChalY and weeds are not all we ought to separate and enst away. There are things more important still. In the storehouse of the heart and mind and soul. Is It not well to seek. Just as curefully, though sometimes In vain, to keep only th? better, the brighter, the more enduring things? When the bleak November of life comes we shall have need of them. Dreary will be the winter to htm whose granaries are empty. But drearier and more desolate still must be the winter of old age to the man or woman whose mind and heart and soul have brought from the harvest only the Joys that are chaff nnd the virtues that are mere windfalls, attalned and adhered to only through easy convenience. When that winter comes, as It must to many of us, we shall have only ourselves to turn to. and wa ahull flnu only that which we have sown and harvested tn the bright aprlng and golden summer?the good grain, the sound fruit, the flowers, the high Impulses, the sacrifices, the loves, yes, and the cheat, the chaffrthe weeds, the windfalls, the hates, the jealousies, the low passions?all these and nothing more, to sustain us or to render us desolate. We may, If we will, make each day a cycle of all the seasons. We sow each morning and reap each noon and garner ench evening the fruits of our living In this little day. Day by day, If we strive on In right and hope and courage, must our knowledge and our strength, and our store Increase. Day by day, through many fallings and fallings, do we come nearer to the true manhood and the true womanhood.?Charles Grant Miller In the Christian Herald. 1 Gobbler's Prem Hh* rTv cBwiw Wy ^jnrfl#!^ " ' ^ 'Z??l ~ He could not speak of cranberry, Nor mention pumpkin pie Without a painful reverie, > While teare etood In hie eye. And sage, and eummer savory. i hey always mad* him sigh. 1 sense step is a tonic. SarDraS, a scientific preparation of beneficial herbs and roots, purifies the blood, j enlivens the sluggish liver and kidi neys, stimulates the stomach and intestines and cleanses the system. A tablespoonful before each meal will make a decided difference in health and disposition. Don't use mere laxatives. They le**c you in worse condition than hafora. Trv S?rnmS P.nn. tains no alcohol. rt At all dealers and jobbers. 1 i? I'll h' lT<lrJ'--"--,"JU"i*'-'-' "Think and Thank" Suggested Motto for Nation Today "Th'nk nnd Thank" was the motto upon the family crest of the great Ilehrew philanthropist Slr^Moses Montellore. It would be an appropriate armorial motto for America today. These two little English words, differing In a single vowel, were originally Identical. In the Anglo-Saxon tongue, a "thank" was a "think." Thanking comes from thinking, and thankfulness from thougbtfulne8s and thanks giving from thought-giving. This will be a season of unusual thanksgiving? for we are made to think as we have not been wont to think. It will be a very selfish soul that this season falls to think of the sorrows and the sufferings of others. Look back at that first American Thanksgiving. Strange skies, sparse settlements, sparse larder, savage enemy, but thankful spirit 1 What makes the memory of the Pilgrim so precious? His thankfulness I As Howell puis it: "It Is no Improper comparison that a- thankful heart Is like a box of pre-, dons ointment which keeps the smell long after the thing Is spent." The Pilgrim and the Puritan have passed on. hut they have left us a precious possession?a Thanksgiving day and the Thanksgiving spirit Theirs was the Indomitable spirit because they "thanked God and took courage." They landed undesignedly on a "rock-bound wintry strand," but they thanked God and took conrage. They found no gold, but they did find the golden grain of a first harvest and they thanked God and took courage. They found a rude wilderness, but they thanked God and took courage, and furrows were turned and towns were built and cities grew and factories flourished and culture developed and Instead of a wilderness a garden blossomed and the fragrance of their memory still survives and the spirit of their grace still Inspires. onition And though In Juno ho spread hlo tall, And looked Hike Henry Eight November always found him pals, 8ane D',learte In his gait If anyone would see him quail, Just say "decapitate." I -FINE OFFICE POSITIONS Paying splendid salary* are sec>rded every day by our employment bureau. We can (111 only one fourth >f the positions listed. Ji you want a position with a bank a HiarVi nlooo Kitoinaoa Kahoa %uWa*a 'uture advancement is assured, pre>are now by taking our business :ourse. We guarantee positions as toon as the students are fitted to ake them. For particulars, write )RAUGHON'8, Columbia, S. C. adv? .-.iW&Wl.