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j To Ever I True! We do work quicker. We alto sua If you owe u tions. We would a hundred doll an Potatoes. Chicken The bad che give to a man wh< If you want to get it for you. Wehave at t Spark Plugs and now or ever befor Also have C KINDS OF TRUC Bring your rr to the Sheriff. Lucas Sal | We ha1 j r? i kt- 1 rriday iNight, We still have just opei Toys Now is It will p thing in our li We w purchase PL jLarnu i / i j I i JUDICIAL SALET Pursuant to a decree of the Coui of Common Pleas for Chesterfiel County, S. C., in the case of H. I Holder, plaintiff, vs. Nancy Sha\ Ada Shaw and Sallie Shaw, defen< ants, I will sell at public auction, b< fore the Court House door at Che terfield, S. C., within the legal hou of sale, on the 3rd day of Januar 1921, to the highest bidder or bi< ders, for cash, all that certain piec parcel or tract of land situate i I The Best Family Re Because (it remedies have Is 1 I Clierfterfielrl ID. H. DOUGLASS, President W. J. DOUGLASS, Vice- Pre ALSO FIRE, ACCIDENT IN We Ruy umI Sell I yone Who Own k or Tractor or \ on a cash Basis. We can do yo rantee our work. is, come and pay us or pay part i I not refuse to receive a dollar if, ? We will accept anything on a is, Etc. cks that we have and cannot co 0 can collect them. anything?Ask us. If we haver Just anything for an Auto. ill times all sizes of Tires, Tubes, lots of other things. In fact th e in the town. HALMERS, DORTS, GRAY DC IKS at a SPECIAL PRICE FOR S lechanical troubles to us, and tak 1 Auto Goi e Contii decided to run our 1 , Dec. 24th. have some real values ned the largest stock ol And Holiday ever shown the time to buy that Chi ay you to see us and ge ine. ill save you mone ' ers Haraw; The House of Bargains. i Chesterfield county, S. C., containinj rt | sixty-five (65) acres and boundec Id' north by lands of the Chesterfield De j velopment Company, northeast bj lands of the W. P. Shaw home trac v> and where he now resides, west bj 1- lands of Axcey Shaw and the Ches e- terfield Development Company, an< B. south by other lands not known. Clerk of Court for Chesterfieh S County S. C. y, I n ??* "/nr.. *. xr? irmwuuai, i- Dec. 1, 1920. e' , in 666 quickly relieves a cold. I medy orks when all other ceased to work Life Insurence Loan 8 Ins. Go. C. C. DOUGLASS, Sec'y A Mgr. a. GEO. W. EDDINS, Treasurer. , HEALTH, HAIL, LIVE STOCK SURANCE Real Estate Mffwy Laaaed n is a Car, Vants One ur work cheaper and ? to 9 Mid show good inten- w you owe as much as >f ccount?Wood, Peas, * s llect we are loing to 8 w U 1't it we will be glad 11 fl Springs, Coils, Bulbs, jj e most complete line 1< w >RTS and SEVERAL " ALE. e your other troubles ' u e) tt mpany I I 11 ( tl tt - I TLn I - I. & S' !: ti 11 cc I th tli in I j qi II ta cc lues tt tii Dig sale on until j ol I cc I- th at in stock and s i ** w 1 Id I le Goods ii j in Chesterfield. *> m II m I t prices on any- i * 101 I sy on every ? are Co e 1 tu m i< Di e? 1* If I *" I 01 ? T1 r With Good Wiohe* I fcl |r In a small town not long ago after I nc . a fire, some children held a fair. The I j sum realized was sent to the pastor I c> t of the church. Their letter read: I 00 r "This $30 was raised by a fair, and I " . we are sending it to you. Please give I j it to the fire sufferers. I "P. S.?We hope the suffering is I T jlnot all over."?Everybody's Maga-I ? - V* *,ne- gi s< Great Snake* tt "Hear about Nutley's getting stung a . by a rattler last week"? tu "Gosh, no! How did! it happen?" th ? "He bought a used flivver without first testing it."?Buffalo Express. m U SCIENCE AIDS THE DYSPEPTIC c< LI The Application of a Scientific Treat* W ment?SarDraS?Ha* Proven Of Great Benefit yc To successfully treat any ailment an one must find the cause of the trou- j** ble. To remove the cause is to eliminate the disease. wl Science teaches us that Dyspepsia and Indigestion with their kindred ailments are the result of careless dU treatment of the organs of digestion pr and assimilation, and the resultant aa improper functions of those organs, of To stop indigestion and Dyspepsia Aa therefore, one has but to habits, especially of eating, and assist the stomach and liver in the discharge _ of their functions. SarDraS, a scientific preparation of medicinal herbs and roots, contains u the proper ingredients to enliven the ? liver and kidneys and renew the vigor * of the stomach glands. Contains no ? alcohol. c\ mj If you are suffering from Digestive troubles, regulate your habits and ? take a tablespoonful of SarDraS be- 1 fore every meal. It will do what the [ t( common laxatives cannot. The result is simple and gratifyiug. At all job bers and dealers. adv. v ISSUED un TEAR BT U.S. TREASURY fill Ciw>l?>? Llna of Qovammanl Savtaga SoovrMI** and Plaea Saving* Mavamant on Poaco Baolo. Completing tbo Ma* of goTaramant trtaga aaoartttoa and placing tha raaaary **Ttaga movement oa a aolid aace-time fcaala, two now treasury ivlnge securities will be Issued durtg the coming /ear, nays a recent anouncecneat treat Secretary Houston, he aew Issues will be a |1 Treasury avings Jauo aad $25 Treasury avings Certificate. The $1 stamp, hioh will be aon-lnterest bearing, Is > be bright red In color and to bear le portrait ef Alexander Hamilton, rn$ Secretary et the Treasury. The 16 certificate will be similar In degn and terms to the $100 and $1,000 reasury Savings Certificates which ill also be offered in 1921, to mature tauary 1, 1*16. The new securities will supply a $1 alt for sarlag, and a registered govrnmeat security la the $25 denomlnaon whioh can be conveniently purlased through the accumulation of te $1 stamps. The small denominaoa war-time seourltleo?the $5 War avings Stamp, tn a 1921 series, and te 15 cent Thrift Stamp?will also be Yered during the comtng year, as will te registered Treasury Savings Cerflcates in $100 and $1,000 denomiuaons. Demand Continues Strong. Notwithstanding the reaction since te armistice from habits of saving, scrotary Houston said that the deand for savings securities has connued atronir In ma?w -* ~ - v |/?I bO U1 W1 U )untry, and that he believed that aa te security markets become more seted treasury savings securltiss bearg Interest at 4 per cent, compounded larterly, exempt from state and local xes and from the normal federal in me tax, and redeemable substantialon demand, should prove increasingattractive, particularly to the multude of small investors. With theae considerations la mind, te Treasury is committed to the connued sale of government savings seirltles, and feels that as time goes i sales of savings securities over the ninter, at post offices and banks iroughout the country, should play 1 Increasingly Important part In the irrent financing of the government. To this end, the Treasury is also immltited to the continuance of the ork of the Savins* Division. In Washgton and in the Mveral federal rerve districts. This organization entavors to promote the purchase of ivernment savings securities; It detlops and protects the secondary merit for Liberty Bonds mnd Victory otea and other war iesuee ef governent securltle*. It also unites the ef. rts of alt helpful agencies and move ents, financial, industrial, educaanal, eonsmerclal and social, In a -oad savings campaign to make peran ent the habits of saving and laistment in United State* Government ?urltles. Its work along these lines III be intensified In 1921, the savings ganisatlen for this district, with ladqwarters in Richmond, Va., directg activities in Maryland, the District Columbia, Virginia. West Virginia, orth and South Carolina. Organisations Co-operating. Requests that the savings work be atlaued and offers of active co-opation In the tww? calved from national organizations eluding ths American Federation of ibor, nearly avsry fraternal organlta>n of promlnea.ee la the United atss, and presidsnta of vemen'i ormlsatlons. The work of the Barings irlelon has also been splendidly sue>ssful In the schools. In response to the demand, the Serge Division will Intensify during 1921 i campaign te spread broadcast the sentlal facts relative to wise earing id spending and investment, and the mtlnued development of new capital, lie earlage eecuritlee to he offered ire also heen shaped te meet these teds. The |1 Treasury Savings Stamp id the 925 Treasury Savings Certlflite come as a reault of work carried In the great industrial plants of the luntry. This campaign demonstrated at workers like a |1 unit for saving id that they are seeking an Investent security of the $25 denomination, he 25 cent Thrift Stamp and the $5 rar Savings Stamp, which have lined a strong foothold la ths ihools of the nation, will be connued during 1921 in order that every merican youth may have the opporinKy to become an active partner In le business of his government. The 1921 War Savings Stamp of $5 aturlty valae will be larger in size isn ths 1920 Issue, will be orange In >1 or and will li??? -?- ?14 ~m ??? n >M vv?i vuy yurn ail UI Inoola. The 21 cent Thrift Stamp ill be unchanged. Aek your employer or banker to sell >u Liberty Roads on inetallmente, id take advantage of the opportunity esented by present market prices. save up until you have enough to y a $80 bond. War Savings Stamps 11 help you aava. Jou ean't lose the handsome profits e you if you buy Liberty Bonds at esent market prices and keep them itll maturity. The wealth and credit the nation are pledged to their remptlon at par. Rub-My-Tiam relieves Rheumatiam. euralgia, Sprains. A tats of Ohio. City of Toledo, Lucas County, a* Prank J. Chanay makas oath that ha t aanior partnar of tha firm of P. J. hanay 4k Co., doing businaaa In tha City f Tolado, County and Stata aforasaid, nd that said firm will pay tha sum of NB HUNDRED DOLLARS for aach nd every caaa of Catarrh that cannot be urad by tha use of HALL'S CATARRH IEDICINB. PRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to bafora ma and subscribed In ljr~Pr*S5nc*' th*" ,th day Of December, .p. ym. A. W. QI.EAHON, Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Medicine la taken Insmelly and aots through tha Blood on be Mucous Surfaces of tha System. Sand or testimonials, free. I??- ' - -? ^ I liltLE IF COM CMf WILL IIVE MILLIONS TO FARMER Whsthse Op Not Ho Will Motrin HI* Profit Depend* Upon How Wisely He Invest* the Mon*y. Tit* great**! com crop kt history I* being harvested In America this year. Th* present promts* of 1,916,191.000 bushels of corn is or*r 90.000.000 bushols In excess of any crop *v*r JK?n mr%A ? ?-1- *AA AAA AAA " * . ? -UU ucail/ ?W,VW,UUV OUIBtll nor* than produced last year. The ooodKton of the crop as predicted by the Crop Reporting Board of the Department of Agriculture Is 24.8 points higher than the average and the high, est since 1906. There will be efoout 00,000,000 bushels of oats more than last year, the crop approximating 1,444,862,000 bushels. Those figures, announced by the Department of Agriculture. Mean that hundreds of millions of dollars will go Into the hands of the farmers of America. How many of those millions remain In those hands and how many are allowed to slip through those hands depends upon the Individual farmers themselves. Not all, by any means, will be proAt. It Is not how much the farmer gets for his crop but what ha is abla to hasp that oounts. If ha Is led into unsafe investment, he will have no profits even If he sold his crop for far more than It cost. If he wastes the money 1 on what he does not need or really 1 want he will have no profits. Even i If the farmer koeps the money he gets j | | tor nis crops, he may mlm a rood I pert of his annual profits unless he in ests it wisely. But *he farmers of America can put their crop dollars to work. They can 4 consolidate and hold their profits and increase them if they will. Ldbsrty Bonds at present prices i^Ter an opportunity to do both. These securities not only pay a satisfactory interest, but they art sure to advance to par at maturity. The money invested in them is snfo, because it is backed not only by the great crop itself but by the prospect of all future crops and the total wealth and taxing power of the greatest government In the world. The money so Invested is available for use almost as if it were cash, for Liberty Bonds are a recognized prime 1 security for any loan the farmer Ia jj likely to need. What Is the farmer going to do with hts onop money? Is he going to waste It or Invest it In speculative or Insecure stocks, or is he going to put it into the securities of the government in the management of which he has an active part? Is he going to wind up the year without a profit In spite of the great crops or is he going to hold on to his profits and make them work for him? It is up to the farm sr. " ^ DELC0LI6HT ^0Wxy_JTgixm? I 1 There's A Delco Light Man Near You = Delco-Light is backed by a F] strong sales and service organization and by a big permanent factory. No matter where you are there is a well-trained Delco-Light man near you. He will gladly call 558 and show you how Delco-Light will ^ make your home a better place to tc live. ai hi Write for Catalog ni tl Funderburk Electric bl ai Service Co. * PtlaUnd, S. C. Dealer for Chesterfield County. si There's a Satisfied User Near You Rub-My-Tism cures bruises, cuts, ?' w burns, sores, tetter, etc. 8 c< o1 STOMACH TROUBLES E Indiana Lady Had Something Like . Indigestion Until She Took I Black-Draught, Then Got All Right. Beymour, Ind.?"Some time ago | naa a bick speii, someimng nae inaigestlon," writes Mrs. Clara Peacock, of Route 6, this place. "I would get very alck at the stomach, and spit or vomit, specially In the mornings. "Then I began the use of Thedford's Black-Draught, after I had tried other medicines. The Black-Dranght relieved me more than anything that I took, and I got all right "I haven't found anything better than Black-Draught when suffering from trouble caused by constipation. It Is easy apd sure. Can be taken In mall doses or large as the case calls for." When yon hare sick stomach, Indl geetion, headache, constipation, or other disagreeable symptoms, take J Black-Draught to help keep your ~ system free from poison. Thedford's Black-Draught is made from purely vegetable ingredients, n acts in a gentle, natural way, and has ^ no bad after-effects. It may be safely * taken by young or old. C Get a package of Black-Draught to F day. Insist on the genuine, Thedford's. HOff p?ir'n i 1 ~ SIZSTMC* Dash! Roman Begins with a baffling crii fashionable section and si of the wildest of mining a Introduces a new heroine paperwoman. Concerns largely the advei reporter, and her successfi mystery. Proves that a w< may frequently penetrate helpless. A blending of I real spirit of both localiti OUR NEW STARTS NE EEDING VALUE OF COTTON SEED \ When cottonseed meal, containing v y 36 per cent, protein (so-called per cent, meal) costs $50 a ton, cot- r n seed properly fed are worth * ound $33 a ton. If the seed must be ' 1 luled back to the farm after pin- N ing, or if the meal can be hauled to ie farm instead of hauling the seed A ick, that is if no extra hauling costs (1 re involved in, we would rather have ton of cottonseed meal for feeding tan a ton and a half of cotton seed. The feeding values are about the c ime, but a larger amount of feed ilue, or a part of a full ration can e supplied by cottonseed meal than y cotton seed, because there is an <cess of oil in the seed. When cotton seed are cheaper, they lould be used to a limited extent; ut resentment toward the low price f seed should not lead us into the istakc of feeding them when they re not of as good value.?The Pro- ' ressive Farmer. FOR SALE Two mules, one cow, one good ox, ne Pedigreed Duroc boar, three sows ith pigs, three to four weeks old, >rn, wagon, harrow, planters, and < Lher farming tools will be sold at ( iy place on Wednesday, December 2nd, unless sold at private sale be- ' >re that date. i W. A. McNair, j Chesterfield Route 4. 2p-52 i I The elmpte external treatment that I I quickly reaches the seat of such dia- I I orders. It should be In every home I I ready Tor emergency. j | Names of principal Insredienta are I I printed on every pncknge. Ask your Ij I doctor if there ! anything better. Get ORIUM^from your druggist I The Orium Co., St. Louis Ki GASOLINE SYSTEMS Oil Tanks and Pumps, Air ompressors, Computing Scales loor Scales, Show Cases, Acount Registers, Rebuilt Cash Registers, Safes, Store Fixtures. nAMlLlUN 9ALL5 tU. Columbia, S. C. . I ^I Y OF THE NORTH " HTC-i ce! Mystery! me in New York's most lifts immediately to one imps. v^j into fiction?the news- j itures of Stella Donovan, il unraveling of a strange iman and a woman's wit where a man would be Last and West, with the SERIAL :XT WFFkT LAMP WICKS NEED CARE Never attempt to cut lamp wicks. Vipe them off with a bit of soft paper vounded over the finger, declares Good Housekeeping." Remember that tot until there is a smooth layer of tacked-down carbon will you get the nost even burning flame. Cutting the vick gives you a ragged wick, that in urn causes a ragged flame. It goes vithout saying that a wick that is mce allowed to burn out of oil is prac-ically ruined. The stove will give off in odor until a new wick is installed ind the stove is again clean from the ;arbon deposits due to imperfect combustion in those last moments of burning out. For every complaint of m oil heater that burns with an odor, .hese is some such explanation of careless usage. Summer Episode "Then you won't let mL> hug you?" "No." "But I hugged you while we were lancing in the ballroom." "That's different." "Well, what shall we do?" "Go back to the ballroom," the girl suggested.?Louisville Courier-Jourlal. SUMMONS State of South Carolina, bounty of Chesterfield, In the Court of Common Pleas. iV. C. Sutton, Cornelia Rorie, Gladys itorie, Ethel Rorie, Fannie Rorie, Co a Rorie, Sallie Rorie, Jannie Rorie Elizabeth Rorie; Boy Thompson, Waler Blakeney, Mary Blakeney, Dave Bakency, Nettie Blakeney, Stella Bakeney, Lee Blakeney, Mott Blnkely, Ola Blakeney, Fisher Blakeney ind Rosa Blakeney, Plaintiffs, vs 2. M. Tucker and Cora Reddick, Do"endants. To the defendants, C. M. Tucker ?nd Cora Reddick: You are summoned and required ?o answer the complaint in this action, a copy of which is herewith served linon vrni- and fn soruo n -- -r? ? * ~ "* your answer on the subscriber, at his :>ffice in Chesterfield, S. C., within twenty (20) days after the service hereof upon you, exclusive of the day of such service, and if you fail or refuse to so serve your answer, within the time aforsaid, then the plaintiffs herein will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the complaint. Dated at Chesterfield, 8. C. this 24 day of November, 1920. J. A. Knight, Plaintiffs Attorney*