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*avv. Entered as second-ciass mativ. postoffice at Chesterfield, South Carolina. inc. musLLt shoals KKUJtCT The two Senators from South Carolina, Hon. Ellison D. Smith a*ul Hon. Nathaniel B. Dial, are entitled to great credit for the zeal and ability with which they advocated the great (muscle shoals power proposition. The bill passed the Senate but. at this writing the other branch of Congress had not acted upon it. There was opposition to the measure by some Senators because of it being located in the South, though, of course, they disclaimed such motive. Hon. J. T. Hetlin, the new Senator from Alabama, also gave the measure the benefit of his signal ability. In summing up the worth to the country and to the farmers of this enterprise Senator Heflin said: "Mr. President, when it is completi ed it will turn out nitrates for fhe i Government and free it from depend"ence on a foreign country for its nitrates. It will furnish fertilizers to farmers, and it will deliver them from tKe clutches of the fertilizer plant, as I said before. Not only that, but the Senator from Utah has shown us that certain power companies are waiting to buy power from this very dam. So it can be made to s"rve four purposes?furnish nitraty to the Government, furnish fertilizers to the relieve farmers from the exorbitant prices now exacted by tin. fertilizer trust, and make money .-ellint; horsepower produced at Muscle Shoals. It will, when finally completed, serve the good mentioned and also prove to Ijh' be a good investment for the CJovern. HELPING THE FARMERS Bk In a inll before ConeTcss Senator Harrison, of Mississippi, seeks to amend the Farm Loan act so that *7* joint stock agricultural banks would be authorized to make loans on cotton and other agricultural products stored in warehouses licensed by the government. j_,oans on agricultural products would be limited to IS months and not exceed <>0 per cent, of value the staple product offered as security for such loan. Each bank must have at least $50,000 stock subscvibed?and ten persons are minimum required for organization of a bank. I WILL By S. E. Kiier I will start anew this morning with a higher, fairer creed; I will cease to stand comp'aing ot my ruthless neighbor's grfced ; I will waste no moment whirring and my heart shall know no tear. I will look sometimes about me foi the things that merit praise; I will search for hidden beauties thai elude the grumbler's gaze; I will try to find contentment in the paths that 1 must tread I will cease to have resentment when another moves ahead. J will not be swayed by envy when my rival's strength is shown; I will not deny his merit, but I'll strive to prove my own; I will try to see the beauty spread be lore mo, rain or shine? I will cease to preach y >ur duty and be more concerned with mine. fletterheada i Come to Us I vpr^ntj' l |jm/ck/et^re ^ BEGINNING THE DAY | ^ A MAN begins the day In ? goo humor," observed the professo "everything will prosper with him." "You tnlk as though beginning th day In a good humor was as easy a falling off a log," said the low-browe man. "I suppos shine hooks, an .vou think a mai L &*iK < can be In a gooi ? humor just b; 3 * "K" ^ 'H( >K<?' Inal Sunny Sam uel, and I Just naturally go annua shedding light Into the dark places and making everybody glad. At sue! times the world seems an unqualifiei success, and the fact that I was hori Into it iloes not cause me any remorse If some prominent citizen hacked m< up against a fence and asked me wlm made me feel so gay, I couldn't giv< him any helpful Information. I don' know, myself, what causes the chip per feeling. I suppose It must he he cause my works are In good condition doing their digestive stunts at the oh stand. "After a few days the glad feelini passes away, and instead of being i Sunny Samuel I become a Mnurnfu .miim's, i nave n11 kiiuis or present! meats of ovil. I have n linn comic lion tlmt Hie bottom is about to <lro] out of everything, and that I'll lx mixed uj> with the wreckage. I tak< a pessimistic view of everything, am go grouching around until even tin cows are sick of seeing me, and the; give me a lift with their hind feet a a gentle hint that I should come ou of my trance. "If a leading business man aske? me to explain my melancholy I eouldn' do it. The world seems to be movini along as though nothing had happened the same old sun is shining on the da; shift, and the scented zephyrs ar blowing through my whiskers as o old. "Often a man begins the day wrong through some accident or unpleasan experience. Then he knows why h< has a grouch, hut that doesn't hell > him to get rid of it. This mornini I I was lying in bed dreaming that i was the only original white hope, am . that I was making a heroic effort t< bring the laurels back to the Oauca sfian race. I was just admlnisterin an uppercut that seejped destined t bring home the bacon, when I fell ou of bed and practically ruined mv hea< against the floor. "I came downstairs in a beastly hti mor. and after breakfast T went ove and picked a quarrel with old Dor little, so that he had to shin up a tre to escape violence, and all because was feeling ornery. It wouldn't hav r?ii i * i*?t iiutv IIIU1I Hf n il iut? l llll I in order to begin the (lay right nil ninn has to do Is to begin It right. "I have gone out from the house t milk the cows in the morning, many time, feeling as blithesome nnd gin as a diekeyldrd, and quite sntlstie ; that the day was going to he on round of pleasure. Then a cow woul . give me a poke in the ribs with on of her celluloid horns, or push her hi ! splay font Into a brimming bucket c milk, and the Joyous stuff was all of nnd IM be so sore nil day that Aur Julia would hnnd me my meals wit a pitchfork. "The other morning I got up feelin I so mean that I was ashamed to bio in the mirror. I went downtown aftc breakfast, in the mood to rob a blln organ grinder of bis few plugge nickels. Then I went to the post o the and got n registered letter, man who had owed me $2 for flv years had an Ingrowing conscience ji last, and sent the money to mc. Whe I left the post ofllce everybody con mented on my winning smile and sal I was the lilt'e sunbeam of the town, DR. L. H. TROTTI, Dental Surgeon unesterneid, S. C. Office on second floor in Roi Building. J. ARTHUR KNIGHT Attorney-at-La w Office in Courthouse Chesterfield, S. C. DR. J. T. RUTLEDGE Dental Surgeon At Pageland Tuesday nnd Wednes day. Remainder of time at Chester field, oflice in Bank of Chesterfield building. ER'S DEVIL rA-A PAW e>*T ME, tot 1 4 j 1 Ai's - ; wnere 10 go to nnd it and told them - ; how to answer the inquiry of the one 1 | who owned It. Tills shows how pers. 1 fectly our I.ord knows our ways. Clod li j uses unlikely nnd apparently Insignlfl1 ' rnnt things In the accomplishment of 1 his purposes. '. j 2. The fulfillment of prophecy (vv. e j 4, 5). Some five hundred years before t j tills Zechnrinh had made this predicp ] tion. If the predictions of Ills first t coming were thus literally fulfilled - 1 there is no alternative hut to believe - | that those of Tils second coming will . i. | he literally fulfilled. The prediction j il of Zechnrinh 14:3-11 will he hist as i | llternl as that of Zechnrinh 0:0. g ! 3. The obedience of the disciples j it I (v. 0). The request ninv have seemed I 1 strange and unreasonable, hut tin y j fully obeyed. True disciples will ren- ] - | der full and glad obedience no matter > > how strange the command may seem. E? j II. The Entrance of the King (vv. i? : 7-ii). 1 j 1. The disciples put their garments p i upon the nss and set the T.ord upon r ' them (v. 7). This act showed that they s | recognized Him ns their King (II Kings t ! n-ni 2. The multitude. Some spread their I I garments In the way; others who had ] t no garments to spnre enl down ? hrnnohes and did the same with them. It 1 which was Just as aeeeptalde to llim 9 To'give what we have and to do what e we enn Is all that He demands of us f . 3. The eltv shaken (vv. 10. 11). This was a stirring time, hut one more ' stirring Is coming. That will he when t the T.ord eotnes In power and glory. p j III. The King Rejected (vv. 12 17). II The immediate occasion of this res Jeetion was the cleansing of the tern J i pie. A like cleansing hod hern made some two years before (John 2:13-17). 0 hut the worldlings had pone hack to l" j their old trade. ^ IV. The Nation Rejected by the ^ i King (w. 18-W). Having in this official presentation nhown their unwillingness to receive Christ, lie turns from them and hv '* parahles makes known their awful conr ditlon. J" p 1. The harren ftp tree cursed (vv. j 18-22). It was on the morrow after His official presentation as .Testis was j returning from Jerusalem that He observed the unfruitful tip tree. Recanse of hunger He sought for tigs. ann muting nunc Fin caused to fall ; upon It a withering curse. This flg tree full of loaves hut barren of fruit . Is a typo of Israel. With Its loavos It gave a show of life, hut being desti' tuto of fruit It bail no right to on1 outnbor tho ground, o 2. The para bio of tho two sops f vv. ^ 2fi-.*I2). Roth sons woro told by tho p father to work in tho vineyard. Tho j one. like tho profligate publican, ro j fused outright to obey, but afterward repented and went. The other pre tended willingness in obev. but In real(J r Itv did not. 'I lie fir.-M one represents R the puldieans and harlots; the second. ^ the self-righteous, proud Pharisees. priests and elders. The l.ord ileelnrod j, that the publicans and harlots would go In'o the kingdom before tliein. 3. The parable r.f the householder ,t i (VVn (1) The householder. This was Rod v i himself. (2) The vineyard. This ! means Israel (see Isn. a;1-7; .Tor. 2:21 ; ? I's. sf>;S). The Lord went to particular pains to gather out this nation ? and make It separate, bestowing peculiar favors upon It. This vineyard so well kept and provided for did not bear fruit. (II) The husbandmen These Ht'rc the spiritual guides, the si rulers nnd tenrhers of Israel, the moinliers of the snnhodrln. (I) The son_ anls sout for the frmts of the vineynrd. These wore the various prnphots whom <1 od sent to the tuition. The maltreatment and rojootion of the prophets Is fully set forth In the Seriptures. They were hen ten and killed. (5) The Son. He Is tlio I.ord .Testis Christ, Cod's onl> and beloved Son. He einne inlo their midst. 3666 Breaks a cold quicker than any remedy wr know. By Charln ? N< 4 OLfc | SOUt J " IMPKOVCD UNirOKjfYKTERNATlONAL " SfiNftSfSflKHi i Lesson (By REV. P. B. FITZWATER. D. D.. 1 Teacher of English Bible In the MooUy Bible Institute of Chicago.) ((c). 1920. Western Newinnper Union.) LESSON FOR JANUARY 30. (i r- JESUS' OFFICIAL PRESENTATION AS KING. P s ' LESSON TEXT?Mutt. 21:1-46. ll I GOLDEN TEXT?Blessed Is he that 1 cometh In the name of the Lord.?Matt. ; 21:9. " REFERENCE M ATER1AL ? Matt. 20: '* | 29-34; Luke 19:29-46; John 12:12-19; 1 Pet I- 8:18. j j PRIMARY TOPIC?The Story of a Wonderful Procession. 11 JUNIOR TOPIC?A Wonderful Proces[1 slon. y INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOPIC ' ?Honoring Christ In Our Lives. K TOUNO PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPIC 11 ?The Lordship of Jesus: Its Meaning for S Us. i- I. The Preparation (vv. 1 G). i 1. The sondlmr of the disciples for I the ass (vv. 1-.1). He told them Just f SLATS' DIARY*]! v Friday? The teecher ast Jane why was they not very menny winmills enny more & Jane sed they ran out of wind since they was a useing so menny Aroplains & Balunes. Saturday?as pa & ma & mc was a walking down the street they was a fella on the corner begging for money. Pa was kinda grouchy & didJ A 1 uem nave no munny enny now as ma had been shopping yesterday & he sed 2 the beggar Why do ycu stand there a begging and the beggar replyed ft sed I haven't . no automobile 2 beg in. Sunday?pa was a jawing at me because I had run around with sum ruff kids. He sed I should ought 2 be more partiekular. Look at me he sed I am acquainted with all of the best people in town Ma sed Yes he is but they is a lot of them wont admit it. Monday?pa was warning ma about desee germs which is on money like small pox & dipthery ft meesels ft mumps & bunyuns and etc. But they issent eny danger of ma getting any deseeses unless the germs is tnitey quick jumpers. Tuesday?.lane saw me running away frum Pug Stevens wnich sed hn was Jl fniritr u'liaU tVic otiiffu. outa me. She curled up her lips & sed meanishly Yure a coward & it was a 1 disprace 2 run frum Pup like you , done. I diddent say much 2 her cause she is a lady hut beleeve me I wood 1 rether be dispraced than disHpgurred. Wednesday?the teecher ast a question of Jake What is a Volcano s & he sed to her a Volcano is a mountain which is hollow & full of hot ' lather. Thursday?Jane rote me a note & sed on it Dear Slats do you still like , mo? what did you pet in rithmatick? what arc you going 2 do a Saturday? . 1 rote* back & answered her I'll say so. sixty 8. trap mushrats & skunks, i ; ^ Best Farm Improvement "I know of nothing I could buy j that would bring the same amount of happiness and contentment," is what J. 11. F. Duhmo, Fouiton Iowa, says about Dclco-Llght. "I could pet alonp better without my auto and truck than without DelooI i.rht ? Write for Catalog Funderburk Electric Service Co. Pageland, S. C. Dealer for Chesterfield County. 1 {iloofjrici Jor sv&ry JToxvn " I There's a Satisfied User Near You !t=? J; SUMMONS i State of South Carolina, County of Chesterfield. In Common Pleas i Jamie Cannon, by his Guardian ad Liten, F. M.j Cannon, plaintiff, vs Craig Chapman and Carl Chapman, j I Defendants. To the denfendants above named: You are hereby summoned to an! swer the complaint in this action, and j ! to serve a copy of your answer on the undersigned attorney for plain[ tifF at his office, Chesterfield, S. C., within twenty-one days after the day ! of such servce; and if you fail to so serve your answer as aforesaid then the plaintiff will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the comj plaint. C. L. Hunley, Plaintiff's Attorney. Dated at Chesterfield, 3. C. 'Dec. 22, 1920. Notice To Craig Chapman and Carl Chapman, above named defendants: You will please take notice that the ^complaint in the above enttitled action was this day filed in the office of the Clerk of Court for above State and County C. 1j. Ilunlev. PlnintilT'^ AHni-nm, Dec. 22, 1920.' 6t-6 ? Sughroe wtfmpet Un<r>n 1" 'V4 ^ e>\o \ AC HOLE \H KNN EMTrs) ] EAnrnHNNGr'. / \ U 2 ".vvT .. Everyman's Mill Anrl ^ItnrA A AX1VI. k7tV/JL V Meal, Grits and Flour, the best to be bad. Mill Feed, best quality, Lowest Price in town. Come to us for Staple and Fancy Groceries, Tobaccos, of all kinds. You will like our prices on everything. D. P. DOUGLASS To My Customer s Am Friends You will find me in my ware house back of the old Swinni< louse. Bring me your cotton and seed. I will pay you the high sst market price for same, and will sell you bagging and ties flour, seed oats and sV?OOS VimianVirvlrl an/1 oil r>Vi li /-.V A'ln " , -Kswjy ..vWk'VUViVi UUU OUi/li UlilCI gUUUO XO will have room to carry until I can build my newrstore. I will sel them cheap as any one. Don't expect to carry very much on these declining prices >o as to be able to give you best prices all the time. No war price will hold, and you may expect them to decline. John T. Hurst | She S'eople.i ifyank | Ob' CHESTERIIELD ! Will Appreciate Your Business. Total Resources Over | $200,000.00 j Our customers and friends helped us to do th is. When in nt ed of accommodation or you have money to deposit, come | to see us. Guaranteed burglar proof and fire proof safe, j Let us show you this wonder. A cordial welcome awaits you } It. B. LANEY, President G. K. LANEY, V.-President j CIIAS. P. MANGUM, J. A. CAMPBELL, | Cashier Assist. Cashier I Rank or 'Ghedterfield The Oldest, Largest and Strongest Siank in CA\ ?sterf eld, S. G. 4 Per Cent. Paid on Savins* Deposit*. $1.00 Start* An Account See U* C. C. Douglass, Cashier. | R. E. River*, President. D. L. Smith, Assist. Cashier M. J. Hough, Vice-President. D. H. Douglass A*sist. Cashier i A VALUABLE ASSET One of the most valuable assets of this bank?an asset that cannot t estimated in dollars and cents but which is most important in enabling us t understand the banking needs of the oeoolf of this rnmmmtstv nish them absolute security and satisfactory service^? is the continuous su cess which this institution has enjoyed. We will appreciate an opportunity of placing our facilities at your di posal. THE FARMERS BANK RUBY, SOUTH CAROLINA I\ H. BURCH, R. M. NEWSOM M. L. RALEY, President. V.-President Cashie SPER CENT ON THE BANK OF SAVINGS COURTEOUS SERVIt When Smoking Was Scandal house. It was necessary that 01 To smoke publicly on Sunday was should go to church, and a stutu recognized as a scandal by the Pilgrim provided the officers of the law wi farthers, although they found the authority to visit "any house whe growing of tobacco a profitable occu- ^<iy may'suspect that any slothful pation, and the practice of smoking ('? lurke att home or gctt together tu.. ? ? comnnnie to _ ^ vw I.B.IVVV vuc MUU1IV |\C W VJ ??vv.??b v" me iiciyvb huh uesijfneo . r . . , ship of God or prophane the Lord to incline one to a devotional frame Day an(, findinfi, any guch di{Jord of mind. Nobody was allowed to fhull return the names of the perso; smoke within two miles of the meet- to thr next court. He Meets up With a Mean Hound !evOtWS ) fjM C JMtODEUT \ vhu. Hr x MviTvwvi'\ lnvp?U j Mp ^ \ we ooue w ' . ?~~gs?sf-.J ^ V -r Q l 1 ^ Five Minute Chats on Our Presidents ##########?< D V A lire tlAn/> a mi amjj <inmc.j mvnuAn j J (Copyright, 1920, by Jtmn Morgan.) GEORGE WASHINGTON O i C 1732?(Feb. 22) Born near Fredericksburg, Va. 1753?First expedition to the West. . > 1754?Second expedition. 1755?On staff of Gen. Braddock. 1759?Married Martha Custis. WASHINGTON was made of the same cluy as most Americans ! who have won high leadership and, ' like them, he cnt his teeth on the V crust of poverty. Only four or Ave [ of our presidents came from poorer homes than onr first president and ho , had less schooling thnn fnnr.fiftlia nf I his successors. He was. In fact, the only president In the first forty yenrs I who wus without a college education, i Not starting to school until eight, he had to leave at fourteen to go to work. Thenceforth until the Revolution the _ j woods and fields were his only school- * I room and life his only schoolmaster. I, I We never can truly understand this man If we start with the mistaken Idea 1 that he was the product of wealth and , aristocracy. His people reully were only a plain, though alwnys highly reI spectnble family, living on the outskirts of the cavalier castle which set l, up Its manors In the James river region. George's own father, who at * r . ' Washington's Earliest Portrait. one time hnd been a palling captaip In tlie trade with the mother coun11 try, left his wife and children at his 1/ death live thousand acres of land, mint; ur n-ss unproductive; twentytwo slaves,, a slender purse and a lean larder. While at Mt. Vernon, which his oldest brother, Lawrence, had Inherited, he learned the simple rudiments of surveying, and Lord Fairfax, who lived nearby, employed hltn to survey a vust estate In the Vulley of Virginia. In Ida y6nng manhood Washington found his'"Inclinations strongly bent to arms." To softer arms than those of Mars the young militarist also was | inclined. Prying posterity finds him at sixteen pining for a mysterious "lowland beauty," who would not have the penniless surveyor. He received also by his own confession a "cruel sentence" from a "Miss Betsy," and afterward \vas rejected by Miss Philllpse of New York. At last the oft-dlsappolnted wooer came to the White House on the Pamunkey, and once more he lost _ his heart. The mistress of the manor, I Mrs. Martha Dandridtre Custts. was wisp enough to keep It, being a widow of seven y^ors, the mother of two fatherless children, the owner of large estates. >e When flying embers from the war ,o fields of Europe Ignited the savage forests of the New World, Washington was a militia major, and he was dispatched on a mission to the Ohio, a perilous journey of ten weeks s_ through a wintry desolation. The next year he went again with a hand of soldiers, for now the Seven Years' ? war had spread to America. His campaign was hardly a glorious failure, ^ but he reported that he liked to hear tlie bullets whistle. Now General Bruddock came to scorn the colonial breed while he r' showed them how British regulars fought in proper, soldierly formation. 'F. The undrllled red children of the forest stubbornly refusing to fight on vhe 1e European plan, Bruddock fell amid his panlc-strickcn troops on the Mononga* una. At tne neaa of his prove In the th wilderness the prayers for the dead rc.' were read by Colonel Washington. . I Although Washington had won no battles, he hod made a most Important ,n conquest. When the Seven Years' war r- came he was still an Kngllshman, and I'e to him an Island three thousand miles er away still was home. In his contact n8 with lirltish otlicers he was shocked to find them aliens to him and his New _ World and himself only a colonial in their eyes. With native condescension they undertook to tench him his place, hut with native Independence he objected. iv in*- nme tne seven - Ycars' war wan over the colonial colonel no longer was an Englishman. That lllualon was I gone and had left Washington an American. Catarrh Cannot Be Cured With LOCAL. APPLICATIONS, ua they cannot reach the seat of the UlseaceCatarrh la a ini>oi * -- * _ ?????. influenced by constitutional conditions, and In order to cure It you must take an Internal remedy. Hall's Catarrh Medicine Is taken Internully and acts thru 1 the blood on the mucous surfaces of the I system. Hall's Catarrh Medicine was ; prescribed by one of the best physician* i In this country for years. It is composed of some of the best tonics known. m combined with some of the best blood purifiers The perfect combination of the ingredients In Hall's Cstarrh Medicine Is what produces such wonderful results in catarrhal conditions Send for testimonials, free. . ? _ V. J. CBKNgT dtCO.. Props.. Toledo. O.