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1 Bargain Fine F / We still have man) . Hardware* We can list sufficient to indicate how tions we are making thi r J The prices quotec prices and the new Barg now offered. Sewing Machines, were Sewing Machines, were Sewing Machines, were Davenports, were Bedsteads, were Bedsteads, were x Bedsteads, were Dressers, were Dressers, were Dressers, were Dressers, were . . . . Kitchen Cabinets, were Kitchen Cabinets, wert Kitchen Safes, were . . Kitchen Safes, were . . Kitchen Safes, were . . Kitchen Safes, were . . 9x12 Rugs, were Talking Machines, wei talking Machines, weri Records, were Buffets, were We have equally Stoves, Ranges, and H< Collars, Bridles, He Crockery, Enamel < thing you need in HAF It will pay you to FARMERS COP m Make It Your Regulai Get Oil Before Hay, Con Flour, P L It s An Easy W J.C. RIV In Warehouse Ba 0 I Y ou *11 get s I ' with ? P?P tha Prime* Albert Ia bfil told lit toppy rod bog a, tidy rod tint. SI71( hmndtomt pound mnd half pound tin humidora mnd In tho J pound eryttml plot* humidor with tOll tponga moiotanor ~ is In urniture I r Bargains in Furniture and N only a few, but they will be r radical are the price redtlcroughout our stocks. 1 are the old actual selling ;air Prices at which they are | $85.00, now $50.00 i 60.00, now 37.50 50.00, now 32.50 60.00, now 32-50 20.00, now . 12.50 25.00, now 14.50 30.00, now 18.50 37.50, now 25-00 22.50, now 15.00 t 35.00, now 22.50 ! 50.00, now 30.00 j ! 75.00, now 42.50 I ; 22 50, now 15.00 I . . v . .< . 22.50, now 15.00 j 20.00, now 10.00 I 15.00, now 8.50 | 12.00, now 7.50 I 22.50, now 7-50 I e 175.00, now 110.00 I 12?nn n r?\mr ftOCA I - I?v Vf UMiUV r 1.00, now .50 I 57.50, now 35.00 as good Bargains in Cook . waters. . irness, Lines? and Aluminum Ware. IDWARE and FURNITURE. 1 see us before you buy anyHARDWARE MP ANY ~ Business Habit to r Pi ices You Buy ii and Oats deat and ard ay To Save Money ERS & CO. ck of Our Old Stand - V? >4 ipmewhere a pipe and P. A >tart fresh all over again at tfc e!?and forget every smoke exi t spilled the beans! For a j mful with Prince Albert, will >kejoy you ever registered! It >ut a pin in here! Prince A1 gue or parch your throat. Bot lusiv? patented process. So, j i you may have stored away th e! We tell you that you can?a our life on every fire-up?if yoi packing! {That P. A. hands you in a pipe, le^made cigarette! Gee?but rolling 'em with Prince Albe ause P. A. is crimp cut and sb binkAi LOCAL ITEMS Messrs. J. P. Morrison .and Lewis Johnson, prominent farmers of the Middendorf section, w?re in Chesterfield Wednesday. 3000 yards outing all colors hoary grade white at 15 cents the yard. Nicholson's, Jefferson. On Thanksgiving day the bird hunters commence to enjoy their favorite sport. The open season closes March 1st. Each hunter is limited to fifteen b^rds m any single day. 700 pairs n?w Peters Diamond brand Shoos arrived this weak. All styles. Ladies' Broffue Oxfords. All rubber heels. . Nicholson's, Jefferson. The government ginning report Monday showed 2,270,000 bales of ro'ton ginned to November 14th. It ?s ?stimi'ted now that tha total crop for the year will be about eight mil-, lion bales. Cotton has been on the upgrade all the we^k. Middling cotton brought 16 and one-half cents on the local market Wednesday. There s a better demand than formerly for dog tails. We have many new Christmas goods already but not on display. Consult us about .that gift. Nicholson's, Jefferson. Everyone is asked to make a special offering this week for their church orphanage. These institutions are all in need of help; the object i$ worthy. One ca'n make his contribution through their Sunday School or church pastor. Good heavy Union Suits, $1.19 the suit; boys' 49 cOnts up. Nicholson's, J*fferson. Mr. J. T. Hurst is having a handsome brick store erected on Main street. I Our Christmas Jewelry stock best ever. Anything from a collar button I to a Diamond Ring. South Band Elgin and Hampden Watch*s. Wriat Watches a specialty. Nicholson's, Jefferson. | Civil Court convenes Monday, Dej comber G. Lawyers of the county will hold a bar meeting at Chesterfield Friday to arrange a roster of cases for trial. , Dr. and Mrs. F. S. Blar are spend. ing Thanksgiving in Jonesville, with Mrs. Blair's mother, Mrs. McWhirter. Messrs. J. A. Welsh, S. M, Jackson, andJ N. Gaskin are in Marlboro county fox hunting. Fresh Drugs, th? best arriving daily also Christmas goods at Laney's Pharmacy. Mrs. J. A. Welsh has returned from "the hospital in Hamlet. There will be a box supper at Wamble Hill school house on Friday, December 2nd. Proceeds to go to the I benefit of the school. Mr. and Mrs. E. T. White are visiting Mrs. Ben Davis of Cheraw. Dr. Daniel Hampton Laney is hi South Island near Georgetown on a deer and duck hunt. This island contains 19,000 acres and is the best reserve on the Atlantic coast. Doc says the deer must fall. Rev. H. F. Parker will preach at Bay Springs Church next Sunday moraine nt ! ! Mr. W. H. Swinnie is in the Wadesboro Sanitorium for treatment. When you need a coffin or caelcet call on W. M. Redfearn day or niyht. Motor hearae a'rvica for wkite and colored. | j ? le beginning! Get a >erience you ever had jimmy pipe, packed trim any degree of * ;'s a revelation! bert can't bite your h are cut out by our lust pass up any old at you can't smoke a nd just have the titne u play Prince Albert it will duplicate in a you'll have a lot of rt; and, it's a cinch ays put! CMitnai will iom 1m her*. A ko- 1 dak is the finest gift of nil. If interested see vs about your selection. Square Deal Drug Co. Mr', and Mrs. T. R. Evans and son and daughter, Mr. Tracy and Miss Serena are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Spetncer. Rev. and Mrs. A. M. Gardner of Bethune are visiting relatives in and near Chesterfield. \ ! Mrs. B. S. Funderburg is spending some time at St. Pauls, N. C., with her daughter, Mrs. J. D. Caitnady Fresh shipment of Whitman's Sampler. Ask the ladies what they prpfer. The answer is always, "Whit- I ?an'i." Square Deal Drug Co. j Misses Viola and Anna Willie Mima j of Blackville are visiting their sis- j ter, Mrs. W. J. Tiller. Barret*es, any 'kind at Lanay's j Pharmacy. Mrs. J. W. McElwee of Henderson, N. C., is visiting her sister, Mrs. D. P. Douglass. We sell the famous Lord Baltimore Pound Paper, also Symphony Lawn. Square Deal Drug Co. I Mrs L. F. Stratton and son, Wilson of Charlotte, spent several days here last week with friends and' relatives. Reduced prices on all Furniture, Rugs, Art Squares and Mattings. W. M. Redfoarn. Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Craig of Cheraw are spending Thanksgiving at the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Craig. Ladies get some of those Djer Kiss Nips at Laney's Pharmacy. ! "VAMPS" WHO | MADE HISTORY g * By JAMES C. YOUNG. g (Q by lfcOlurs Nswspapsr Syndicate.) THE VAMPIRE WHO 8TARTED PROFITEERING. AFTER seizing half of France and leaving the conquered country to his lieutenants, Edward III returned to England toward the close of the Fourteenth century, the most powerful monarch which the uatloQ had ever known. He had been long at the wars and waa determined te let younger shoulders carry the burden. His mind was bent upon recreation, the rest and plenty so hardly won. His eye fell upon Alice Perrers. She probably was a servant about the palace, and was neither pretty nor talented. But she had a flattering tongue and the will which moves even walls. So It vTas not long until her natue began to be linked with that of Edward. Then his wife died, the good Queen Phlllppa. Immediately Alice Perrers came Into the full measure of her power. This woman had one ruling passion ?money. Edward was completely under her domination. She persuaded him to give her estates In 17 counties, many of them wrung from their rightful owners. She had herself appointed as "guardian" to wealthy .orphans and rifled their property. Court offices were sold through her. She undertook to dictate even In the law courts, and actually sat upon the bench with crown judges to see that they decided In the way she sought. The people groaned and a party began to gather around the Black Prince, son of Edward, whQ had come home from the wars abroad. In an unwise moment Alice had parliament summoned to vote new taxes. But the parliament reneiieu and Edward, near his dotage, was forced to give up Alice, both agreeing that they would never meet again. Then the Black Prince died. Alice came back to the palace, more powerful than ever. At this Juncture she hit unon the Idea of cornering certain Imported luxuries, working through a merchant. 4 The volume of commerce was comparatively small at that time. It was an easy matter to carry out her plans. Bo AJleo became England's first profiteer and gained new wealth. The king was fee We and frequently near death, but Alice tenderly administered to him and by the very force of her own spirit kept him alive. In every direction she levied new exactions and the people were afraid to act. Scandal coupled her name with that of several men, but Edward would not believe her unfaithful. How far she might have gone It would be impossible to say had not the king's falling health reached crisis. At last, when Alice saw that her time had run Its course, she left Edward to die alone. But not until she bad removed the rings from the fingers of this king, whose deeds had resounded through all the world, only to become the prey of a servant girl who was not even pretty. 8he Couldn't Be 8ure. The rather flashily-dressed woman took her fourteen-year-old daughter to the domestic science teacher. "I want her to learn to cook and sew," she said, "so that she can get a husband." For one tnlnute the teacher stared at the woman. Then a twinkle came Into her eyes. "Oh, I don't know about that being no sure a way," she laughed. "You see I teach both and I haven't yet obtained a husband." Not Ho. "Look here, sir I" ominously demanded old Festus Pester, who had been disturbed by queer noises In the nleht "I>o you play the xaxophone?" "No," removing hla hot and expoaIng a very hald head, replied the man who had recently moved In next door. "I lost my hulr In the natural couree of eventa."?Kanaaa City Star. Humoring a Fancy. "What did you do with the man who rocked the boat?" Inquired Dante. "They gave him an aaheatoa canoe," replied Virgil, "put him on a brlmttone lake and told hint to rock to hla heart'a content." v One Definition. Blink a-*' Why do you cell your houae bungalow. / JeekJr.<??'Well, If It len't a bungalow. whet hHT The VM hwK f 110,1 '^I T " r~ ! ' , > . T O I FRATER To Be O A nev being orgs . Manager C This S Carolina f< number of Both 1 ciety on eqi ages of six exceed $10 not to exce 1 The F I ciary Socie I assets of ai | ship of ove ? rence, Kan maintains t cent, certifi plan, ten, 1 cash loan, < a monthly case of acc The S< nal organi: issued refu certificate I years or lo ciety in Ar and is now half new t I , For ft District Mi C.. L. I BNvFfSfc?jj toumtaih play-s 1h 1 cehtej? 6t court * BcTwttN two Infirmat?ii la ooi of the most extensive fights | hat has ever been made by any re- , ligioua body la America for the oradi- ! cation of disease, Southern Baptists, through their Home Mission Hoard, have undertaken the task of combating tuberculosis Tn the 18 states comprising the territory of the Southern Baptist Convention. The first stop In this direction was the recent establishment on a tract of 143 acres at F.I Paso, Texas, ef tha Southern Baptist Sanatorium, where $500,000 from the 71 Million Campaign has been Invested and where $500,000 more will be placed by the end of the Campaign period. The Institution Is located at an altitude of 4,500 feet on the side of Mt. Franklin and commands an excellent view of the mountains of New I Mexico. Western Texas and Old mexioo, wnoie border Is only six miles distant. Dr. H. F. Vermillion Is superintendent. Included* In thisplant at present sre the administration building, the nefrly ] completed women's infirmary and , men's Infirmary, a heating and re- j, frlgeratlng plant and the superintend- | nt's quarters. Provided for In the | , building plans for the future are a i medical and educational building, i nurses' home, children's building, j < dormitories for convalescent patients, i an occupational and vocational therapy , building, chapel, laundry and dllnor t etrueturen. \ 160 People Die Dally. Indloatlng the need of additional effort looking to the elimination of tu- ' beroulosls In the South, reliable figures gathered by the public health 1 agendas of the South and the Nation * show that there are 160 deaths dally e from tuberculosis In the IS states * oomprising the territory ef ths South- 1 era Baptist Convention, making the annual death toll of the white plague H |U* section of the eountry alone i MBrishsw u I cal Lodge of T1 NALAID I rganized In Cht r Lodge of the Fraternal Aid Ur inized in Chesterfield, S. C., 1 !. J. Nichols. ociety has been doing business >r over twenty years, and ha Local Lodges. adies and men are admitted in jal terms. Certificates are issuec teen.to forty-five, in any arnou i.OOO.OO and from forty-six to 1 ed $5,000.00. raternal Aid Union ia a fraterr ty, organized on the Lodge Syst >proximately four million, and ; r 100,000. It owns its own hom< s., Denver, Colo., and Baltimo he full legal reserve on its Amei cates, these being issued on the fifteen and twenty year limited ?xtended and paid up values. It income certificate, carrying in< idental death. aciety is a hundred per cent, soi zation. It has during the past ind vouchers to all American A holders, that has been in fore nger. It was the first Fraternal nerica which adopted the adeq ' writing at an average of a mil >usfness each month, irther information apply to C. mager. 1. NICHO District Manage j ? i Wo mans Infirmary 3apttst Sanatorium meh5 and wovj^gs^jrvv i > sldg. a / i g E^ TO A ^ "PwO ILDINQ #7,7K8. The death rate from tnher-.i culonis is 14.2% higher in the South than In the Nation uh a whole. One , reason for the exceedingly high death rate in the South Is the groat prevalence of the plague among the negroea vho are especially susceptible to tuberculosis, the death rate among them, being three and otie-half times that < among the whites. Hut inasmuch as the negroes will doubtless oontlnue to be intimately associated with the wjiltes In domestic and other work In the future, the whites will never be safe from infection until the neg*)es, is well as the whites, have been freed frem the plague. It has been estimated that the toal economic loss from the ravages >f tuberculosis In the South is $176,* 100,000 a year, and in projecting their warfare against the plague the HapJets hope to greatly reduce this lose, is well as to save the life and promote he health and general efficiency of :he wholo people. Would Educate the Peepla. In addition to providing treatment In 9?nou vhe barn already aw. I' Iff* i i mm m ? ? ? i ? mi? ? + / le ?UNION icfarfiolrl /OLVI I1V1U *" I liori is now >y District \ in South s a large to the So- / 1 from the int, not to forty-nine, lal Benefi- i em. It has . a member- I es in Lawre, Md. It J *ican 4 per ? whole-life 1 pay with also issues iemnity. n ind fratertwo years, 1 per cent. :e for 'two Benefit So uate rates, i llion and a i J- Nichols, ?LS r r " ' j . V , M 4 '1 . ? \ \ IWV^TIHQ OT* I ? ? ' mXHriRMARV treated tuberculosis, the sanatorium ! ' carrying on an educational work that seeks to inform the public at large through the printed page, aa to the danger of tuberculoala, bow it can be ; avoided and how, once it la con* tracted, ita progress can be arreeted through proper eanltary measures at home. Other phases of the educe- . ttonal program inolude the training of workers Inside the sanatorium and pccuiKitloaal and vocational work for patients. The extension department in widely dianemlnating literature on how to combat tuberculosis. An endowment fund that is being created' , for the institution will make possible' a much larger circulation of literature and will also enable the institution totake care of Indigent patients. The ? ib present seek* ink to devise special plans whereby It can serve the negroes of the South in combating tuberculosis. It is felt that the negroes' inability to help themselves in the matter entities tnem to this consideartion and that this assistance should be given, furthermore, as a means of self-protection on the part Of the whites. Other Phases of Baptist Work. In addition to the Tuberculosis Sanatorium, Southern Baptists have a string of seventeen regular hospitals in operation and seven others under course of construction. This hospital property is valued at approximately $7,000,000 and these institutions last year treated 49,000 patient* many of them being charity oases. Southern Bap? tlsts also operate It orphanages ir which approximately 9,000 orphan boand girls are oared for, educated trained lor Christina citisen ship