The ledger. [volume] (Gaffney City, S.C.) 1896-1907, July 26, 1895, Image 3
i
u
WE ARE THE PEOPLE!”
Chronic Nervousness
Could Not Sleep, Nervous
Headaches.
Gentlemen:~1 have been taking
your Restorative Nervine for the past
three months and 1 cannot say
enough ju its praise. It. has
baved Hy Life,
io given up hope of
ev again. I was a
chronic suilerer from nervousness and
could not sleep. I was also troubled
with nervous headache,and had tried
doctors io vain, until 1 used your
Nervine, mrs. m. wood, r inRwood, 111.
!f)r. Miles’ Nervine
Cures.
Dr. Miles* Nervine is sold on a positive
puaranteo that t!:.; first bottlo will benefit.
All rlriiititists ..ell it .'it f I. ('> bolt les ft r tfi, or
it will be sen’, prepaid, on ma-ii.t ot price
by ti.o Dr. Milo::' Mcdi-r.i C’o., Elkhart, Ind.
1,000,000 People Wear
WATERWORKS-—YES,”
RIES THE DAY.
CAR-
The Vote Stood Almost Three to One
In Favor of Waterworks, Which
Plainly Indicates Gaffney’s
Progressive Spirit.
One hundred and thirty-nine to
fifty-one!
That's the way the vote stood and
it was in favor of waterworks.
The election was an exceedingly
quiet one and only a few friends of
"no water” interested themselves
in the election, while the friends of
“water” were more aggressive.
Hi s Honor, Mayor Littlejohn, was
the first man to vote. He showed his
progressive spirit in the manner in
which his ballot read—“Waterworks,
yes.”
Each of the aldermen voted for
water, as did also all three of our
hankers. Very few colored people
voted and they were about equally
divided on the subject, the mill
people were almost solid for water.
Tin; 1.i;im;i:k learned from a city
official that a survey would be made
at once and that bids would he adver
tised for.
Several times during the day tlie
discussion between the friends of
both factions waxed rather warm but
no serious trouble resulted.
And still (ialiney grows and pros
pers as no other town in the state,
and its all because we are a wide
awake people.
HAND
SEWED
PROCESS.
$5.oo
$4.oo
$3.50
$2.50,
$2.25 4
For Men
BEST
IN THE
WORLD.
$3.00
$2.50
$2.00
$1.75
For Bors
_aiiYonll5
Wear IV. !<• Oouglait rimes nml imro from
SI.OO to fclt.OO i\ «»:iir. All Kl.vlr* und
tViUlliu. ’J bo :nlva:i;’c iii leatlii r lias increased tlic
nrice of oilier makes, bat the quality and prices of
tV. I,. l>uii;Ti:iM hliocN remain (lie saino.
Take no substitute; sect!.at name ami price is stamped
on sole. tV. 1.. JIutiirSoH, IIuoCKTon, Mass. Sold by
WILMS BROS.
1
PT u \ js
•• r;
i
South Carolina at the Fair.
The following general letter has
been sent, out by Commissioner
Roach;
Dear Sir: ! have established head
quarters in tliis city, und am now
ready to receive ail contributions to
tbe State exhibit at the Atlanta ex
position. Please advise me what
may be expected from your county,
ami the approximate quantities of
each t oat will be sent. I am espec
ially anxious to receive at an early
date specimens of woods and miner
als. as they will have to prepared for
exhibit ion. Speeimens of building
stones, esneeially granite, must be
large enough to be dressed to cuius
of eight inches, i have arranged
with tbe railroad companies to bring
to Columbia, free of charge, all ar
ticles intended for tbe exhibit, and
addressed to me as commissioner.
Perishable articles, such as fruits,
should, however be sent by express,
collect. Please see ilia! the blanks
are property filled out before ship
ping-
It is extremely important that I
should receive full and early infor
mation as to what your county will
do towards making the state exhibit
1 will, therefore, be
if you will comimini-
at your earliest eon-
Yours very truly,
E. E. Room-:,
Commissioner.
\
\ v:
a success, ami
obliged to you
cate with me
venieuce.
of
Watches
(W’V'&IO*
and
•an lie
busine
Jewelry
by visiting our place of
In DuPre's Drug Store.
Is Your Baby Pretty?
Tbe publishers of Ladies’ Every
Saturday, of Philadelphia. Pa., will
deposit One Hundred l>ollars(. , )il(l(MMl)
lo tin' credit of the prettiest baby
whose portaait is received by them
for publication ; Fifty Dollars f•1'><M)(j)
to the next prettiest; Twenty-Eve j
Dollars (.fJodHl) for the third; Fifteen i
Dollars (^In.iMi) for the fourth, and j
Ten Dollars (^PUitl) for the fifth.
Tiio name and P. O. address of the |
parent must be plainly written on the I
buck of photograph before forwarding. ,
Enclose three two-eent stamps fori
sample copy with full particulars. |
Address: “Photographic Contest.”
Ladies’ Every Saturday, J(> South!
Seventh Street. Philadelphia, Pa.
Etta Jane Notes.
|Correspondence of Tiik Lkikikk. |
Etta Jam:, S. C., July ‘JJ.— I had
the pleasure of attending Abing
don Creek church and Sabbath
school yesterday. Rev. Mr. Hopper
preached and J M. Littlejohn, town
ship superintendent, gave the Sun
day school a plain practiele talk. He
is a zealous, faithful worker and has
done a great deal for the cause. A
Home Class Department was organ
ized which increases the numerical
otrength of the school considerably.
Wc are beginning to need rain
again.
We regret to hear of the death of
Mrs. Ida Rhyne which took place at
her home in Gastonia, N. C., last
Thursday H»th inst. after an illness
of fourteen days, with typhoid fever.
She leaves a husband and three child
ren, the youngest a babe nine months
old, besides a host of relatives and j
friends to mourn her loss. She was j
about thirty years of age.
An incident connected with herlife |
or history I might be pardoned for j
writing just here: She was the in
fant child of Dr. Alexander White,
who was assasinaled on the night, of
August 21th ISbf), nearly thirty years
ago. .lust before the fatal shot was
fired by tbe skulking, cowardly as
sassin who was crouching behind the
palings a lew feet from where the
father was sitting at the window with
his child upon his knee, in blissful
ignorance of bis impending doom.
The child began to fret, and as its
mother took it a Hash in t he window
and the loud report of a gun together
with the heavy thud rang out on the
night air. Before its echo had ceased
to reverberate among the neighbor
ing hills the immortal spirit of Dr.
Alexander While bad returned to the
God who gave it. .Mrs. Rhyne was a
member of t be Lutheran church, of
Gastonia, N. C. The tunoral services
being conducted by Rev. Mr. Long,
her pastor.
Our brother Occasionally is nurs
ing a wounded hand. He is always
in some trouble it seems. Rut I
daresay he has done what all the
other correspondents put together
havent done this year, if ever before
(if they are like this one.) He lias
sold fourteen borne raise ! ami home
cured hams ami any amount of vege
tables ami fruits besides butter, eggs
and ehiekens in ahum
plenty left for bis year
lives at home ami lias one of as clever
little wives as North Pacolet affords.
I learn that the cotton crop on (*.
(.’. Roberts line plantation on
river is a cumplolt failure
lias attacked it. The corn
fine 1 hough.
James Woolbright sent me a
sample of the flour be is making in
the Garner mills at Skull Shoals.
It is as line as any Western (lour we
have ever seen and be says lie can
make from forty-one to forty-two
pounds to the bushel out of good dry,
clean wheat.
A. A. Surratt has got
ing cloth which is giving
isfaetioii.
Rev. G. M. Boyd will begin a pro
tracted meeting at Wilsons Chapel
on Saturday before the second Sab
bath in August, Blth inst. The ini-
I tiatory service will be a Children’s
Day exercise, 11 is the wish of both
pastor and people that all Christians,
irrespective of denominational ties, j
| unite with them in their prayers for |
j an outpouring of the Holy Spirit on J
| that occasion. The people of Wilson's
lapel are proverbial for their Chris- |
^thwih—i
lO 1 < > 111 i 11 £»;!
Xhin
A
/~\UR Summer Coats are THIN, our prices are even THINNER, your pocket book may be THINEST.
^As the thermometer runs up, our coats run down. Last Saturday they run out. We have
just run in a new lot of 1 50 of the cool coats to be sold at 1 5c. When these few are gone we
can get no more. ‘'Seek them early and ye shall find them.” Yours for business,
II.
ir
& Co
lance and has
s supply. lh'
Broad
The lice
crop is
a new boll-
■ general sal-
>> nave vnu ci
all.
We will be gin
All work done by a skilled workman
with years of experience.
CORRELL & BRO.
L. BAKER,
CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER,
Will do any class of carpen
ter work promptly and at prices
to suit the quality, and always
keeps on hand Mooring;, ceiling,
siding, sash . doors, ole. A Iso a
good supply of heart pine shin
gles at market price. Will also
make out hills for huilding ma
terial lor parties who desire it
and Mil the same for a small per
cent. Give me a trial.
Respectfully,
Xw Milker,
Unclaimed Letters.
List of letters remaining
office uncalled for to dale:
J. W Crolls.
Miss Emma Cysk.
Miss Ida (Jeter.
Bob Henderson.
C. A. Mayfield.
S. It. Mom*.
Thomas Vinson.
James Wilson.
•ailin'
in t be
or these
X. B.—Persons i
letters will please say advertisei
Tin: Licikjkk.
T. H. Litti.k.ioiix
July 2d, 1895.
in
P.M.
J NO. EARLE BOMAR.
S. J. SIMPSON.
A. McIVER BOSTICK
BOMAR, SIMPSON & BOSTICK,
Attorneys at Law,
GAFFNEY,
S. C.
K. S.
Insurance and Real Estate Agt.,
Merchandise Broker
And Dealer in
ihe Celebrated No.
Vhitler & Wilson
Sewing Machines.
The Ballcw Family.
The eonl ribut ions for the relief of
the destitute Ballew family the past
week were by no means what they
should have been. These people
need the assistance you can render
and it is a duty you own to humanity
and to tbe God who made it possible
for you to possess what you do to
helpthcm. Among the contributors
the past week were two dear little
children, a hoy and a girl, who bad
denied themselves of some coveted
toy or sweet-toothed morsal in order
they might contribute their mite to
wards helping these poor people. As
we said last week, don’t be afaid of
over doing the thing because it will
be many weeks before these poor pa
rents will be able to provide for the
needs of those unfortunate little chil
dren.
— •
Killed While Robbing a Store.
News reached the city early in the
week that James Burnett caught a
man in his store at Clifton, either
Saturday or Sunday night, and shot
him. It is reported that the victim
is dead. No particulars could be ob
tained.
C
tian fellowship and brotherly love.
They desire to make all brothers and
sisters fee! at home with them, and
those who attend tliis meeting, with
the right motive, may expect, to be
benefit ted by it. .1. 1.. s.
: : i;;ju.E33 people op to-day.
An Ali.vs.lnlnn Tribe Know:* Nothin;; of
t'ookliif;—1'rlinttivo A inlntnn it It OH.
If the eating of flesh food be in
stanced as u distinction that separates
man front anthropoids, it can be urged
on the other side that the latter feed
on insects, and w hen in captivity by no
means despise flesh food. The lirst
man, too, was probably a “vegetarian,”
but necessity and the absence of sutli-
cicnt vegetable food for his augment
ing species may have driven him to a
flesh diet.
The cooking or roasting of meat
must he regarded as an acquisition of a
later epoch, because in the earliest
stages of man's development there was
undoubtedly a very long fireless period,
and because there are said to he tireless
people even in the present day, such as
the I tokos, in Abyssinia, observes the
Fortnightly Review. The Australians,
too, knew nothing of boiling and roast
ing food until the advent of the Euro
peans. For the rest, all the savages
know how to kindle fire by the
well-known method of friction of
two sticks, or, what is simpler,
they take a torch along with them
on their wanderings that never
goes out. The Amlamanites preserve
their fire by consuming the interiors of
hollow trees.
Since the Amlamanites have come in
contact with Europeans they have
superseded this method of preserving
fire by the use of matches, which are
very favorite objects with them. They
eat their food either raw or roasted,
less frequently boiled, as they have no
cooking utensils. Moreover, aceux'ding
to the latest accounts from Otto Luders
of these savages, great mortality pre
vails among them, and they withdraw
themselves into the woods more and
more at the approach of the Eui’opcan.s.
They go completely or almost complete
ly naked, live in holes in the earth or
under overhanging roeks, or build
themselves a sort of rougli hut with
brunches and leaves. Their weapons
are spears, bows and arrows tipped
with iron, which they seize as booty
from the wrecks of stranded
Gowdeysvilte Gems.
|('oiTespondence of Thk Lkikikk. ]
Gov hkvsvim.k, S. 0., July22.—Mr.
and Mrs. \Y. A. Peeler, of your city,
are visiting Jacob ITidinore and Jack
Kendrick.
Supervisor J. B. T. Scott inspected
the Skull Shoals bridge the loth and
foundthat it was amost ready to fall
in. He employed R. \Y. and I.. H.
Davis to do some repairing.
We have no candidate out yet for
the constitutional convention. We!
hope no one will come out for that
office, whether erformcr or eonserva- ;
five, who are not competent.
“Doc” Spencer was down in our
settlement one day this week and
bought seven head of cattle from A.
A. Sarratt.
We all want to go to Jonesville the
2nd of August to he at the “Old Sol
diers Reunion.” We hope to see
some of your Gaffney people there.
It will he a big thing.
Prof. A. G. Davis will teach a sing
ing school at Mesopotamia church in
August.
There was a picnic near Maj. J. H.
Litt lejohn's last Sat urday and Gaff
ney was represented.
Brother J. L. S.. the young boys
that met at poor little Dixie’s grave
and preached his funeral are very
sorry that they had ever heard of
Dixie. They were hoys of some of
the best families in t he county. Please
don’t mention it again as the hoys
have repented and say that they will
never do so any more.
The lenth of August is the time to
sow turnip seed, and in good ground
is t he place to sow t hem.
I nch* Jake Pridmorc says he never
saw as many bumble-bees in his life. |
He said he had a basket full of pears |
that he picked up for his hogs, and |
the honey-bees and bumlde-beecs had i
got into them. He says there was
a half gallon of humble-bees and
when he went to get them for his 1
hogs they run him olf, but he man-!
aged to get them after a while and he i
emptied them into (lie pen and then
the hogs and bumble-bees had a
lively t line of it.
! see in the paper that confidence
is returning again from one to an
other. 1 am glad to know that it is
a fact. I believe it for i can tell that
old lady Glib will trust me more now
than she did some time hack.
Mrs. Mary Reaves, nee Miss Mary
Kendrick, of Darlington, is visiting
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. F.
Kendrick.
I. M. Peeler, of your city, is put
ting up goods in the store-house
formerly used by W. A. Peeler, at
Skull Shoals.
Asbury Goforth visited R. W.
Davis Sunday find put his knife in a
watermelon weighing 2<J lbs. You
bet Asbury done justice to the
melon. Ci.in.
How’s This.
Wc offer one hundred dollars re
ward for any ease of Catarrh that
cannot he cured by Hall’s Catarrh
Cure.
F. J. CHENEY A CO., Props., To
ledo. ().
We tin* undersigned have known
F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and
lie!ieve him perfectly honorable in all
business transactions and financially
able to carry out any obligation made
by their firm.
SUMATRA TOBACCO.
Romo of tlio DinioultlcH Agiilndt Which
(irowers of the Wood Contend.
Only the strongest and most cx- I
perienced coolies can properly cultivate
an acre and u quarter, and even with
them tin* last third of the field is much
inferior to the rest. Besides, says Good
Words, tobacco is attacked by several
insect enemies, and particularly by
BIRTH
The
OF THE KING OF ROME.
small green e
grasshoppers.
''scltoment In l*«rlH Over That Mo-
mentoiiH Event.
March came in that eventful year of
IkU; and when the morning of the
20th dawned all Paris was in the streets.
For like wildfire spread the rumor;
there is a baby at the Tuileries! Every
hour the crowd grew denser. At open
windows, along the streets, in the great
garden of the Tuileries, people waited
In tobacco intended for expectant, listening for the voice of the
.
;me s
atcrpillars and large
“filling,” or manufacture, a few holes
on tin* leaf are of less consequence, hut
“wrappers,” to be of any use, must ho
without a flaw, and the “worms,” un
less carefully hand-picked, will reduce
the profits to a very small margin.
Another peculiarity is that if the to
bacco is flooded, even to the depth of
an inch, it
large part of tin expenses of an estate
consists of an elaborate system of
“pnrits,” or drains, to carry olr storm
water—a difficult thing to do in the
level coast districts. At length the
leaves of first-planted "trees” begin to
wrinkle and show yellow spots, and
now the peculiar labor system comes
intonation. Ea h afternoon the coolie
cuts his ripened tobacco und carries it
to the “hnngsul." or drying shed, of
which there is one to cvcrv ten fields.
cannons of the Invalid soldiers’ home
to tell whether the baby was a ’>oy or a
girl. Of course everyone hoped it was a
hoy,for that meant un heir to the throne
of France—their future emperor.
At the first boom, says St. Nicholas,
a mighty silence fell upon the listening
city. Every one stopped, intent, anx-
instantly perishes, and a j ious. One—two—throe, they counted.
Boom, boom! went the guns up to nine
teen — twenty — twenty-one. The si
lence was intense, the anxiety pro
found. Twenty-two! There came a
mighty cheer, a roar from thousands
and thousands of throats. Hats were
flung aloft; people cried with joy, and
danced and hugged each other, ami
cared no more to count, though the
guns boomed away until the full salute
of one hundred and one was fired. For
that twenty-second boom told the story
—the baby at the Tuileries was a hoy.
Then, out of the cheering, came a
mighty shout: “Long live the emperor!
Long live tin* empress! Long live the
king of Rome!” For that was to he the
title of this baby prince, whose mother
was an empress, whose father was
greater than . 1 ing.
is?
A horse kicked II. S. .Shafer, of the
Freemyer House, Middleburg, X. Y..
on tin* knee, which laid him up in
bed and caused the knee joint to be
come stitT. A friend recommended
him to use Chamberlain’s Bain Balm,
which he did, and in two days was
able to he around. Mr. Shafer has
recommended it to many others and
says it is excellent for any kind of a
bruise or sprain. This same Remedy
is also famous for ii scores of rheum
atism. For sale bv \V. B. DuRre.
13 JUSTASCOC
WAWRANTELJ.
(» A I •
Darla Mctllclno < ’ *, M I
Gent lemon V &u!<l
G1U»vi - 1 \ : 1
Loimlit thrf»o j:r.
1 criom •• ll
iicvit s »M :t:i cr!
XucLuu your
in*:
tr
\Y
MERIT is the character-
tie of Hood's Sarsaparilla. It
I cures even after other preparations fail,
j Get Hood's and ONLY HOOD’S.
A.
.•■'"'A s
uMiJ,
0 n ■)■} l
: n$>jr&nQ,(z
y
07
[Acn
si? 0 ?’
:ve.
(^Doifar^ w {(f
buy 3 js&n? .
n; ail
STr£.5
Tbc^.
BANKEF
does a genera! Ban
1 imsme:
IToof
\Y
Af.
o r
>aie
c o
>yih
JWf Jiyjyycxxe-
/ ; fylky tuiik
j! Lvi-Kj poJir? ,
w i*:
fug;
West A Truax
gists, Toledo,().
A' Marvin, Whole
ledo. <).
Hall’s Catarrh
ternally. acting
blood am
system.
holesale Drug-
Iding, Kinnan
Druggists, To-
f Premium Carolina Buggy*
'Flu.* Host 'Filing; on 'Wheels.
1 heir Spindle Body I toad Wa^on is a Beaut v. Hvervtliing; they
make is lully guaranteed. Gall on us and examine them and ^0
prices before you buy. We also earry a lull line of all (trades
•Did Styles, Irom the* cheapest to the BBSl , which is the L’remium
Carolina Buggy, built on honor by the CA BOLINA BCGGY GO.,
'l 01 k\tile, S. C. ( all and see us. \\ e shall lie pleased to show
und sell you anything in our line.
GAFFNEY WAGON AND FDRNITNRE CO.
! >at( ty Di po i:
1 rent.
I
Buys and sc!
Buys ('minty at
Your busim
SS SOilCll
soutiiek:;
<12 AST:
L
gyr\.:
PIED MONT AIR LINE.
Conohnscl) scn:::H'i.u or
: Til A IN'S,
Cure is taken in
directly upon the
mucous surfaces of the
rice 75c. per bottle. Sold
by all Druggists. Testimonials free |
iiTcroll &: Ht,
xsiviviciiCi*^, ""
Transact a General Banking Business
IIN'rCiKCjjH'r allowed on Time Deposits by wiMCiEiA1.
Arrangement.
Safety Deposit Boxes for Rent.
Vour 1 *iitroiuiyfo oc!.
in
V
The Gaffney City Land and Improvement Company,
DlTcr for Sale Building Lots in this Flourishing Town,
Ci A IT IT IV IC Y
IT
means so much more than
von imandne—serious and
diseases result from
c. 'ding ailments neglected.
1 )on’t play with Nature’s
preatest or ft—health.
:
Also I ,inns near by and in reach of the schools of Limestone Sprin
ol this place in lots of from JO to lOO acres on liberal time rates.
Also Agricultural Lands to rent for farm purposes.
For full particulars apply to
MOSES WOOD, Agent.
All trespassing on lands of this Company cutting
or hunt ing are forbidden under penalty of law.
an'!
N. B.-
! timber, fishin
aim removing
Drowns
V
L] f ^ # p :
A. I x/ki
Irom the wrecks of stranded ships. >> vA* ^TT
Their hatchets and axes, formerly made y Lj? J, ^ A O 1
of stone, are now mailo of iron, and are >
The
Mothers In Trouble,
is the condition of those
ex- |
of stone, are now made of iron, and ai'e
hound to the handle with thongs. They
only count up to three, and have no
conception of God or immortality; they
belie e in a good and had spirit only,
If ymi arc feeling
out of sorts, weak
j and generally cx-
Ohansted, netvous,
Iiave no appetite
and can't work,
V. gin at onrcl.tk-
•ing ti'enio.t reli.i- i
•‘t’le sUengtic nir.*;
medicine.>•.liicli i ;
|Down's lion Htt-
"ters. A few Lot
ties cure—benefit
conies fiom flic
very first dose-//
roe;/'/ j/iim your
teeth, and it’s
pleasant to take.
.Needles ..otf n
dilfereut makes ol
l .ll'llllil.'lll s
machines.
ail
’Office over 11. A. Jones’ store.
peeling I it become mothers, lo such hide their dead in tho ground or throw
them into the sea or lay thum on wood
en scaffolds, dance to the tune of a
sounding board, have a very keen sense
of vision—with their arrows they shoot
fish that no European can see—are of u
fioroc, suspicious disposition, und, ac
cording to Luders, they probably con
stitute thu transition of primitive na
tions of Indians to Auslruliuus, u rem
nant of an extinct peoplo. They are of
nearest kin to tho Negri ton of the
Philippines. Their body height is fifty*
slato flfty-^BQkUjph^
t Ov.
It Cures
pepMfl,
LIMESTONE * SPRINGS * LIME * WORKS,
CARROLL & CO., Lessees.
Manufacturers of
BUILDING, * PLASTERING * AND * AGRICULTURAL * LIME,
And Dealers In
Coal, Shingles, Laths and Plaster Han.
Dymamite, Blasting Powder, Fuse and Dynamite Caps.
Ladies, Take Notice!
Soap! Soap!! Soap!!!
■ \ (-
t.
Northl.ouati
No.
May 1S0C.
hr 11.
Lv A l hint a
UO 1
•d.OO
" AtLi*. ta 1: ihnc
A '
“ N .o. US
“ Da(or
iu;
st j ^
•’ Corn 1 a. ;
“ Alt A ry
•‘ '/' . von
•• \V«>:mir.sicr
'* S I: .J,
“ Central
4*1 •
1>
“ (ir *;*nville
. • «*
•• 8p
0.1 ; *
i.‘2 •
’• li.a '.- r.:...
7 0
*' Kin Moant n
r>
44 Gastonia
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12.15
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12.0.")
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12.55
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11.05
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i 1.15
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2.45
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1
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“ Cornelia
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1
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’ 6.25
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U.03
M.” r.ooa "N.’
■iStou trd Sou'.:
-oug'.i I-’aUinau
we point to a t rue friend in Motiikk’i
Rid.11.1. which not only makes child
birth easy und painless, hut leaves
mother and child in healthy and vig
orous condition ; restores the mother
to her original beautiful form.
Brice *1 per bottle; J bottles for
•4*2..>0. I'orsah* by druggist, or sent
1 by express on receipt of price by
MOTHERS RELIEF€(».,
JK Bcters St., Atlanta, Ga.
For sale by W. 11. DuPro.
Kidney and l.tver
TrouHcs,
Bad Blood
Ncrvou.s nilmc
^ complaints.
i•due it In . fj.-b. „ ,1 tpd
tor. All others ;t*< v.ib-
•.{•t of i wo 2c. i lamp'
; iiti : t t f 1 CBeautiful \N lit .
'* Vic>\ J and b >>L—ticc.
■ CHEMICAL CO. UALTIM> MD.
sale by NN’.B . DuPUE, Gaffney,
l/itva Oil, Butte
mid (iI vcorinc ;
•milk nml (llycerino; Olive
\ r ;tselim*, Buttermilk and
•P!
Magnolia Bomjuet, I’eneli Bio
Ijltel, (.'lieu I 111 *i*|' Juiee—the hlt<
Gentlemen!
The Country Gentleman Cigar,
Paint your house while we are
dde
Buttermilk
•h Hazel;
iiose I loll'
‘•A ' a. m. *'P.” p. 12. * M." coca “N." nl;
Nos. 37 amt38—Wash
Vcstlbu’.ed LlmltcJ T:
between New York nnd New Orleans, via \\ ..1
Ington, Atluuia and Mou^omery, ond uiso Lo-
tween New York and Memphis, via W . :Ia. r -
ton, Atlanta and Birmingham. Din'i g Cars.
Ncs, 83 and 37 United States l ast Mail, Bull-
man b>e;ijng Cars between Atlanta, Mcnt-
fomery and New York.
Nos. 11 and II, Pullrasn SlMpiBg Car batwoen
Iffglnnond, Danvlllaand ilre tnaboro
W. A. TUUK. 8. n. UAUDWXCK.
Oen 1 Base. As't. Ass t Osneral Par; A ,
W*sn/VQTO!», D. O. ATLAVT.r. '*.
tv. U BYDEK,
•lebrjiteil I In* world
Most giving materia
Superlntent
th CarolB.a
tnt,
V7
Phouc 21, Nij* hi
W. B. DuPRE,
Oall 47-2 Rinjjs.
W A ■IIINO 1
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