University of South Carolina Libraries
f, Mid** - "! nil i t- * <* , THE QU OF CL( ?HFs How much in Looks, I got for my Money? is answered most convincingl lines we are showing this F Just to look at our will make you anxious to only is their cut admirably < patterns are of a wide ran qualities are cut in the clol CURLEE AI CLOI Are supplied in Models th? Whatever your build Portly, we will lit it so th( admire your choice. We are showing the I new colors, Belts and Hall Just received a new s OXFORDS, low heels, eni Buster-Brown Hose 1 25 cents to $1.50 the pair, j | Interwoven Toe and the colors, Cotton and Silk We can meet your re alls: C&rhart, Headlight ai Teal-Joi "The Home of Salesmen: B. F. Teal, H. I SEE US FC Seed Rye, Seed Stuff; Baggii Bagging 2 and For the best! ; Syrup grown on J. C. Rh per gallon. We also carry ceries. J. C. Rive PIGS FOR SALE?By H. L. Spencer, Che raw. 61-p 4 FURS?Am In the market for all kinds of Furs. D. H. Laney. PIGS?Will sell ten or fifteen pigs, three to five months old. D. H. Laney. .WILL SELL at Mt. Croatian, on Saturday, Dec. 2d, at 2 o'clock, one mare mule, 7 years old, weight 1100 pounds; good condition, works good. 2t-48-c t a ? JU. A. YY UISUI1. I FOR SALE?Highest grade fertilizers and fertilizer materials any quantity delivered from warehouse in Chesterfield. M. C. Lancaster at W. A. Rivers store. tf i . FOR SALE?25 acre tract of land known as the A. S. Lesly land, bounded by lands of J. I. Kannuh, Bert Funderburk, H. N. Chewning and Buck Curry. tf J. A. Knight. 4 - LOST?One female Walker hound, white and black spotted, bluck head and ears. Notify J. W. Atkinson, Pageland, Route 3. tf Rockingham Marble WORKS ! t Manufacturer of fine come- I tery memorials in marble and j granite. Call in to see them, i make your selection and save j the agent's commission. All i work guaranteed. ( O. W. DOSTER, Prop., j j Rockingham, N. C. | ?% f% ?% Cure. Malaria, Chills *n<l Fsrer, Dengue or V V V Bilious Fever. 9.. C. RHODE ISLAND REDS Pullets and Cockerels $3.00 Up To $10.00 Each A Few Good Cockerels To Go At $1.50 to $2.00 Each J. W. HANNA WOODMEN MEETING Tha Chesterfield Camp of Wood ESTION I DTHES A Comfort and Service can a question that can be g y by an inspection of the 'all. ILL and WINTER SUITS own one of them. Not I correct, but the colors and ige, while the WEARING ih and sewn in the seams. SID MARKS ; rHES it it will please you. I , Athletic, Filling out, or ) most candid friend must II SPORT MODELS in the f-Belts for Young Men. hipment of Ladies SPORT i lipped with rubber. i for Ladies and Children, j Heel SOCKS for Men in ' quirements in good Overid Riverside. , ries Co. ! Good Clothes" ] VI. Rivers, W. W. Thurman. j >R YOUR J Oats and Feed ng and lies 21/2 pounds, home-grown fers' farm, only 75 cents 1 a full line of Staple Grors & Co. i CABBAGE PLANTS?Eary Exp., Extra Early, Early Jem, Wakefield, Early Winninpstead. Ready now for planting., B. Thurman Teal, Chesterfield., ' 2tp FOR SALE?1-horse farm containing 23 9-10 acres adjoining Center Point School lotjgood 4-room hoasc; good well water; good barn and stables. All practically new, near two good churches, good neighbors. Part cash, Balance easy terms, See W. R. Johnson or W. J. Perry, Chesterfield, S. C. tf FOR RENT?Large one-horse farm, 2 Mj miles from Patrick, on Chesterfield road; dwelling and three out-buildings. See ltp A. J. Williams. M FOR SALE?Ford touring car, lot of corn and fodder, farming implements, wagons and buggies, ltp A. J. Williams, Patrick R.l t? LOST?Between J. L. Stancil's and Mt. Crophan, one 7-inch idler pulley. Finder notify F. W. Rivera and recive reward. 48p STORE BUILDING and Farm for rent at Teal's Mill, tf. D. T. Teal, M.D. NOTICE The Town purchased material for fifty water connections and until this supply is exhausted water will be delivered to he curb in front of the property for ten dollars. After| wards the actual cost of material and labor, twenty-five to thirty dollars, will be charped for each water connection. Those who contemplate using city water are urged to file their applications at once, accompanied with ten dollars, for after the first fifty applications the price will be advanced to actual cost. Connectinos will be made in order that applications are received. iMiective uec. l the following rates will apply to consumers of electric current: First 25 Kilowat hours, 15c per hour; 25 to 50 hours 14c per hour; 50 to 75 hours 13c per hour; 76 to 100 hours and over 11c per hour. The minimum rate per month will be $1.50. A discount of ten per cent will be allowed on all accounts if paid at this office by the tenth of each month. LOCAL ITEMS Miss Dorothy Lucas is visiting relatives at Florence. Mrs. C. K. Curtis is spending some time at Paxville with relatives. Dr. W. G. White Jr., of York, is the guest of Dr. and Mrs. D. H. Laney. The Civic League will hold it regular meeting Friday afternoon at 4 o'clock. Mill Feed! Mill Feed! I have it in both white and jute *acks, all wheat feed. W. P. Odora. Miss Bert Cromer, registered nurse from Columbia, is attending \ Charles Rivers, son of Mr. R. E. Riv-. ers, who is suffering from an attack! of influenza. Mrs. C. J. Sellers, who was accidentally shot when a pistol fell from her husband's pocket last Saturday, is reported to be improving since the removal of the bullet. Mr. Sellers is deputy sheriff. State Warehouse Commissioner J. Clifton Rivers was in the City Wednesday. The flour market is constantly advancing. See me for your needs in the flour line. 1 keep the cars roll, ing. W. P. Odom. The "Italian Mountaineers" will be the third entertainment of the Lyceum series for this fall. This company of musicians will appear in Chesterfield the evening of Thursday November 30th. The place to be announced later. Look out for circulars. It will pay you to come on tke railroad track to see me. My overhead expense is light, and I sell close. Try me. W. P. Odom. The Lucas Auto Co., Inc., has opened and is now doing business at the old Lucas Auto Co., stand. The inmates of the County home were brought to the Fair Ground last Thursday by Dr. D. T. Teal, where they were admitted to 'he Fair and were served with a dinner by the ladies of the Presbertein church. Mrs. Jose Evens, of Pageland, spent last week with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Lancaster. Mrs. Randolph Shannon and daughter, Bettie Jane, of Jefferson, are guests at the home of Mrs. Shannon's aunt, Mrs. J. A. Welsh. U/L- _:it. i ww * j iuvi juur hiiik ana butter supply by using Chow Chow. Any experienced dairyman will tell you quicly it will do this very thing. W. P. Odom. Mr. J. C. Rivers is in the hospital in Charlotte with the "flu". Mrs. Rivers a'id his siste,- Mrs. Ada Watson are with him. When aslced what feed he wanted for his hogs, Mr. V. E. Kohn who exhibited Hampshire hogs at the Fair, replied, "Pig Chow." He said "Pig Chow" was the best feed for hogs he had ever used. Get it from W. P. Odom. Mrs. W. C. West, of Hartsville, was in town a few day last week. Time for payment of Town taxes expires next Thursday. After that day penalties will be added. If you want eggs while they are high, use Purina Scratch and Purina Chowder. This feed will not make a rooster lay eggs, but it will make a hen geri busy. W. P. Odom. Mr. C. S. P. Meehan has returned from Orlando, Fla., where he purchased some fine barred rocks. Extra large Jersey Cabbage plants. Ready to set out. 100, 30c? 500,$1.25; 1,000, $2.00. By parcel post mail charges extra. A. F. Davis Mar ket. tf Miss Singley, of Prosperity, has accepted a position as stenographer in the law office of J. Arthur Knight, Esq. To My Friend* and Coitomeri: I have recently moved to Ruby at which place I can be found for all kinds of repair work on both shoes and harness and other articles of leather. I am prepared to do your work in first class style both as to workmanshop and materials. I sow or peg soles on your shoes. Bring me your repair work. Pricer reasonable. E. A. Hartsell. 4tp-50 The Willing Workers will give a box supper at Friendship church Thursday night, Nov. 30th. Proceeds to help pay for piano. There will be a box supper at Wexford school house Friday night, Nov.1 24th. Money realized from same will go toward buying a piano for the school. Everybody invited. Salt! Sal*! Now is the time you will need salt. I am unloading Five Hundred bags to-day. W. P. Odom. Jule Douglass, son of Mr. Carl Q. Douglass, is recovering from an attack of influenza. The Wamble Hill Federal Farm Loan Association is in position to take a few applications for farm loans for a limited time. Rate of interest, 8 1-2 per cent. See B. J. Douglass, Sec'y., The many friends of Mr. D. P. Douglass are delighted to see him out again after a severe siege of the flu. :>e?! W. U. L*nc*?ter at Chester* firld for boat |rada fertilizer for fall or ipriaf. Shipments for immediate delivery. tf Nf quickly reliores Cold* and LaCrippe, Constipation, BU*e*? PATRICK Quite a number attended the hot supper given at the Patrick Graded School building Friday evening, Nov. 17. Fried and steamed oysters were served and also coffee, cocoa and cake. Three beautiful cakes were baked by the following school girls: Misses Lucile Bromcr, Juanita Winburn and Julia Pankey. There was a very exciting contest for one of these delicious cakes. A bottle was filled with berries and the one who gussed the number contained therein was to receive the cake. After the contest was closed, there were found to be four who had guessed the light number which was 1,111. The successful contestants were Misses Mamie Kneown, Hallie McNair, Messrs Edward Clark and Burt Turnage.Consequently the cake was Quartered among the four. The net receipts taken in were thirteen dollars, which goes to.the improvement of the school. We owe much of our success in the supper to the many good ladies of Patrick who helped. We were indeed glad to have the Rev. Mr. Shealy with us. * , 1 he boys and girls" here are taking great interest in Basket Ball and are getting ^eady to challenge all neighboring team*. Miss Hallie McNair, a student of the Chesterfield High School, is here for the week end. Mr Tom Buie, who is employco by Clemson College for farm experiment work, spent the wcek-md at home a short time ago. A very interesting candy pulling: party was given by Mrs. D. P. Buie at her home Saturday evening, Oct. 28. Those attending were Misses Carey Ahl, Mamie Keown, Josephine Talbert, Mrs. Grace Morrison and Mesers L. M. Campbell, O. B. and Julian Ingram and D. H. Laird. The party passed the evening very pleasantly together with music, songs, games and interesting conversation. Afterwards, fruit, cake and candy were served. We are glad to hear that Mrs. W. M. Pankey, who has been in the Florence hospital for the past several " weeks, is some better. Also Mrs. Ida Clark and Mrs. J. E. Williams have recently returned home from the hospital and are improving rapidly. Mrs. F. S. Short and her mother Mrs. J. H. Scott have been quite sick for the last little while with the in- ' fluenza. ? TL^ n ni 1? m 4* xuc ivev. mr. oneaiy, pastor OI me Methodist church here took tea at the home of Mrs. C. Ingram, Saturday evening, Nov. 11. We are anxious to keep Mr. Shealy with us but no one can tell what disposition the conference will see fit to make which meets shortly. Mr. Jerome Williams, member of the Patrick Babtist church is making preparations to commence his Ministerial course at Edisto Academy aftter Christmas. The farmers here have been busy for the past few weeks planting small grain and winter cover crops. They are planning} to fight the boll weevil another year with a renewed fight. | PLAN FOR WEEVIL CONTROL Kecommmendations for boll weevil i control at the conference of agricultural scientists and scientific farmers held in Columbia November 18 on call of Governor Wilson G. Harvey, are as follows: Destroy the weevil's winter quarters, by plowing under cotton and corn stalks and by cleaning terraces, ditch banks and other trash on the farmPrepare land early and thoroughly. Plant best seed of approved varities. Among the best varities are Lightning Express, Cleveland Big Boll, Delta Ty(pe and (on wilt-dnfestedi land) Dixie Triumph. Plant as soon as ground is warm. AJ1 cotton in a given community should be planted at about the same time (from the first to the middle of April.) Practice frequent shallow cultivation to keep up fruiting. Practice thick spacing. Practice early square picking if cheap labor is available. This must be done very thoroughly every five days if possible in order to be effective. Definite recommendations on poisoning are deferred for future consideration by this conference until the proposed conference at Washington has been held to determine upon the genoral policy to be recommended for 1923. : NOTICE OF SALE OF VALUABLE REAL ESTATE Notice is hereby given that on the f irof M/vn/4n?t r\ 4 Vvam 1 AGO L /. inov uiunuajr ui i/cvcmucr njt+c+y ucfore the Court House door at Chesterfield, South Carolina, within the legal hours, we will offer for sale to the highest bidder for cash the following tracts of land in Court House Township: First?That tract of land near Chesterfield containing 48 acres, or more or less, bounded by lands of R. E. Rivers, Pine Grove Cemetery, Sneedsboro and Jackson public roads and also extending a short distance across Cheraw public road. Second?That tract of land containing 49 acres, more or less, bounded North hv lands of Mr*. J. W Flout/. lass, East by lands of J. B. Streater, South by lands of W. W. Davis and West by land of Tump Perkins. L. J. Gainey, by T. R. Eddins, Atty. in Fact, Dorothy Eddin*i_ BOOMBS irinn ft in in mil m | AVE, I Perfect T?VSRY user of an Avery V -t?' Disc Harrow becomes thusiastic salesman for it. anxious that all his friends sh joy the same perfect satisl which he finds in this woi implement. He tells them " 10 Real Reasons " for Volcai cess. (See panel at right.) ] plains how the Volcano is c ride and easy to handle. Hi difficulties so often found < LI harm la a full Una of ram tillmga imptamanti, and FAR IV STORIES OF QREAT INDIANS By Elmo Soatt Utafson JopyrlKlit. Ills. Western Newspaper Union. SHORT BULL, THE SIOUX CHIEF WHO "SAW GOD" OUT od the Pine Ridge reservation in South Dakota there lives a tragic figure. Once he had been a great chief, the herald of a millennium. Now he Is a prophet discredited, un Honored and blamed for the death* of many of his people. This man Is Short Bull (Ta tank a Pteclla), chief of the Brule Sioux, the "man who saw Clod." Lute In 1880 a thrill ran through all the western trlbea. Far out In Nevada & man had arisen and proclaimed him elf the Indian mesalah. Delegations from many tribes visited him. He told them that a great day was coming when the whites would be burled under u new layer of earth which would spread over the whole country. The buffalo would be restored and all their dead friends and relatives would be brought bach to life. Short Bull visited this messlah and was deeply Impressed. In his superstitious nature there was no room for doubt. He had seen the vision splendid?he had seen God. He could not have known that this messiub was only a fanatical Piute named Wovoka or Jack Wilson, a faker, whose miraculous appearance before the delegation "as though floating on air," was only a cheap magician's trick. Kxnlted almost to a frenzy and believing himself the personal representative of this holy man Short Bull returned to his people, gave them ghost shirts and taught them the Ghost Dance. The madness swept the Sioux. And then?years afterward Short Bull ?viu mn oivi;. oumr mi uir ruiriM saw in the craze the chance t<? sweep the Sioux Into a final desperate attempt against tiie white domination. They distorted Its meaning, according to Short Bull. They whispered that no white man's bullet could penetrate the ghost shirts. They forced him Into war. Soldiers arrived to put down the Uprising. Then some one blundered and the Mottle of Wounded Knee reaped Its red harvest of Sioux lives. When the Ghost Dance madness ended. Short Bull was taken to Fort Sheridan, near Chicago, as a prisoner of war. Hut after some time lie was allowed to return to his people, lie found himself almost an outcast. "'1 hey blame me for a war?ray own people, my people who had seat me to the sunset thut I might talk to Him, the Holy Muni" was the heartbroken rrv of rfhort Bull. "I saw film and brought them Hla message, a messago of peace. But they would not heur it. They changed It. They tuude It war. And they blame me?me, who saw God!" ?A?"Boston hi...?u oeuiia you get. Boatoi is much better. He Is a wise man who wasted no energy on pursuits for which he is not fitted.?Gladstone. Happy the home where so many "reasons" don't have to be given thai are explanations. Marriages are made In heaven, bnt moat of the preliminariea are arranged In the porch swing. A man never realizes how man) things he disapproves of until his owa daughter reaches sixteen. A cynic Is one who na*er bellevei what a senator says unless he Is call log another senator a liar. HV VOLCA If T Disc Ha, : Satisfaction olcano ordinary disc harrow have been gotan en- ten rid of by Avery designers. Of its He is spring pressure, bottom oiling, flexlall en- ible gangs?and its many other faction advantages. You, too, will find iderful complete satisfaction with an Avery of the Volcano. You, too, will say you no sue- never knew before what a perfect nc c?- l/isc narrow was until you incu me asy to Avery Volcano. Come to our store qw the and learn all about this famous disc on the harrow. out Acer y walking, riding and tractor plow. Champion haroatting and hay machinaa IERS HARDWARE I CHESTERFIELD, S. C. k. ^ i'^1 . ' Thanksgiving Turkey in the oven. Biggest bird we've got| Pies and ceke a baking, Kitchen piping hot. Everybody hungry. Children wild as hares| Mother very happy? Angel unawares. Dinner on the tablo? Naught to do but eatf Father ashs the blessing, Rising to his feet. Knuiflf) i ^ * i 4 * C I What It Re It means Genuii 50 per cent of \ less than 10 cen Repair Shopwh Mechanics perfc | It means giving Iujuus, irrompt i Ford Owner's & It means to cor you with a Foi will make you ai enthusiastic m< great Ford famil . We are Authorize We can supply yc duct the Ford Mot - mm rrows?&? I iimx r m Nil A better disc harrow for 10 real reasons & Spring pressure adjustmrnt at inaide ends of gangs. 2 Sclf-tiahtcninu. Hitr. spool construction. II 3 Extraheavy sang bolts. I 4 Even penetration in H| uneven Kround B Positive lubrication from bottom of bearH Full-floating, flexible 7 No twisting strain on bearings. 5 Minimum running frio* H H 9 Easy to ride. B tO Easy to handle. fl D Bora liava both tke draputiela^ Girl* tko wlafi **4 krooatj Baky toko* tko wiok kwt| j Older folk tko root. j All tko family kappjr, Crackia aut* aad }*k*(| May *ay*?"Pa** tko ooody.1* Dad hand* oat tko o?okoo, Motkor start* tko *i*|iaf, Qvaror la kor toIco? "PraUe God for kl* morales. Let ?i all rejoice." OMfitfo ' * ' si ally Means ne Ford Parts, vhich retail for its. It means a ere expert Ford >rm the workl Honest Courattention to the irery need. istantly supply *d Service that nd keep you an smber of the iv. Ml Ford Dealers. mi with any pro- | or Co. malm. ' :rV;'* 4