The ledger. [volume] (Gaffney City, S.C.) 1896-1907, March 05, 1896, Image 4
THE WEEKLY LEDGER: GAFFNEY, S. MARCH 5, l>s!)<■>.
THE WEEKLY LEDGER.
rum.isnKD kvlky tih'ksdav r.v
Th* Limestone Printmr aorl Publishing Co.
invutporated.
fi.oo per ^'car.
THli GOVZrtNOR'S TACT.
An Ir.c:tlf3t of i
V/ILLIAM It AND MME. PARLAGHI. ! THE DICTATOR AND THE YANKEE.
X .
It was at P.
in tho Tr aisv.::.
1 he si'.iiEj: of 1■
ju.'t :1,
LL'o at r. Gr.r.th Af-
:: inc.
r»c.'t goldfields
t ::o ; v.I'.iy cvriiiu^ in
o. Il.o Lain v;::r tv as
;::d jx .re and jdouty
801:10111111" About tbo V/omaa Artist anil
tlio K:a;icror’s I'oc'Ioc'sa for IJor.
Mae. Vilna Pr.rl iylii, who was re
ferred lo i:i cno Oi the Paris newspapers
:i fr.'oud of M. Posearlial (Jacques
An Amnslnc Ftory r.f Canaan Ittacco nr.il
a Hustler Vtoz.1 t’.to I'crth.
A gent If in an who went to Ycncznola
Feme years ago to rccr.re a cr.ntract from
! the government tells :.:i i::tc:c: ting story
Highest of all in Leavening Power.— Latest
r. o. gam:
Editor.
ED. H. DeCAMP, Manager and
Local Editor.
I'hf: Li'.ixiEK is not responsible for
Ifce views of correspondents.
Correspondents who do not contri
bute retrular news litters must fnr-
ntci* their name, no! for p ildieat ion,
(kHt fo.* identification.
Vrite short letters and to t he point
%,« Jwsure pnldiea?ion ; also endeavor
lice hv Tuesday.
<m twt t
m J enrrespon
L’ !
I'
enee should I C ild-
Ma uiger.
^•»»cd to Kd. ii. Det’unil
Obituaries will he punli-hed at five
jivuu a line.
ii'aC’L of thanks will he published
#ue cent a word.
%‘&ding notices will he pu
tU Ive cents
I'm lii'il
INii^
o conics o
a line each insert ion.
ftho paper are five
*«p!* each.
TFfrRSDAY. ?dA
ISfK)
JuuJ c'.aie with Vl:ri;.!i:i:;s just past after
nc ri' il. 111 five yeur.iuf i:o::tii:;:..l border
warfare . :id fina’.e ir.l Lcj vca.don.
The i- .tv v.orc arait.i'g ti.o arrival
of Culci.c l bir Ov. 1Lanyin, t!’-) govern-
or of ti e Transvaal during tho brief
British r yiiue, who had ]:ro::ii: ecl to
ride in i. in Leya; n'may;, ho miles dis
tant, and attend a dinner to Lo given in
his honor.
In talking over t!:o preparations for
the event, some ill advised youngster
wond:ic d if tho re pect duo to the gov
ernor demanded the v.caring of evening
clothes.
Each 1 f tho party owned n dress Knit,
put away s: uuewhcre, but r.eao had a
laundered white £
there, bat they had net L
months, and Barker, tho only store
keeper, had ne ver even heard of starch.
In this dilemma a Dr. Aw.ten, who
was in camp on a visit, veins leered to
rido to L.ydonharg and bey tome, and
did Fo. A laundry was an unheard cf
luxary, hut tho youth who had started
the tieuldo declared ho hiiow hew starch
was mod. andolicrcd to direct tho wash
ing and ironing of tho shirts. With tho
aid of an ancient negro who did odds
and ends around tiio storo they were
fixed up and duly delivered.
When tho men in evening drees cat
St. Cere), Tho Figaro editor recently ! cf his experiences will: (iuzman Bianco,
arrested in tho Lebaady caco in Paris, ■ who was then the ar.trcut ef tint cogu-
is a portrait painter in Berlin. Sho is a tr y p or tj nc0 , • i; mouths ho was
H
.01
•‘jiuc iinpatienco
Berlin, slio has painted the portraits of |
famous persons, such as Moltko, Louis turned to him v.th
Kossuth, Windthorst, tho former leader j and faid:
of tho center of tho rcichstag, and Em- I .“Come to my country houso at Auti-
peror William II. Tho emperor ex- nBno at G o'clock tomnrow morning
pressed himself as satisfied with the uud v - c will close this nun.cr up. ”
picture. “I’ll bo en hand, your excellency,”
Mme. Parlaghi is in tho habit of i . ,
complaining of tho jealousy of her col- t J '
K lilnci I i:,.|
W ^ ::< >■' . (.
?:i in u.‘;o m
only
leagues in art. To this jealousy, sho
said, was duo tho refusal to admit tho
hirt. TIic shirt:) wore i portrait of Moltko to an art exhibition
in Berlin, although MoMke i.) alleged to
have declared the portrait to bo tho
best picture of him overdone. Sho com
plained to Emperor William II, who
was gallant enough fo buy tho picture.
Ho thus put himself in conflict with
tho jury of a»lists and provoked endless
discussion in tho German press. By his
order tho portrait was placed in tho
grand hall of tho exhibition. William
II openly censured tiio decision of tho
jury in language rather disrespectful to
tho artists, and added that in tho grand
hall of honor, hut for tho portrait of
Moltko, there would not bo a single
COURT OF ARBITRATION.
The English press is more than or
dinarily pacific in discussing Ameri-
cun quest ions. Its surprise cm
hardly he figur d when it speaks of
the hitter feelings existing in the
■rinds of many Ann rieans against
klit* •‘mother e umtry.” which feeling
asserts has no place i:i the lu arts of
Kngli.shim 11 against the child that
rebelled, secured its irecdom, and
How has a family of its<>\\:i.
Be that as it may,* the two nations
ought to be friendly. We speak the
SVtlllU ] *11S »»il 1*, illl- bound by eom-
Hion tics and have like aspiration.
We have hud enough of wars. The
• Id mother is worn and tired an I
friendly still. Xow l*iien is a good
time to push the formation of our
Anglo-American court of urbitr.it.o i.
Chicago, New York and I’fiiladel-
phin have taken the initiative. Lei
o*lier<*:tiv's follow until the senti-
tuvnt grows ami crys! ali/.cs
something definite.
DiiTerences we must expect to have,
but dilTerence can he settled without
throwing down tho gauntlet, drawing
tho sword and rushing to deadly com
bat. May the happy day he hast
ened !
down, they discovered that tho zeal of | work of real art. Tho journala of Berlin
made fun of this opinion guardedly,
both in prose and in poetry.
Mme. Parlaghi bocamo celebrated
after receiving these evidences of im-
tho volunteer la.undryman Lad far out
stripped his kiKAvk dgo. The shirts had
been starched back and front from col
lar to hem. Thero was no time to mako
any change and Iko martyrs to fashion
resolved to sit it out. Most of them hail
increased in muscle and girth since their
clot las were made and looked fully as
unhappy an they felt.
Soup was served as soon as the gov
ernor arrived. He noticed that his hosts
were moving uneasily in their seats,
and tiio chairman cf tho occasion, a big
Africander, serene in flannel and cordu- j
roy, cxphinicd in a whisper the cause, j
Then Cok nel Lanyt n exhibited a speci- i
in n i f the tact that had made him he-
lovid, ;.:^i is still remembered grateful- i
ly Ly many who experienced his conr- |
ti.y. As ;ccn as ho recovered the use of j
his video ho rcso in his chair and made ;
perhap.) ;he most welcome address ho ;
had ever uttered.
“Gcntlmrii,” ho said, "it’s go in- j
fernally hot that I must ask your per- |
niisrit n to take e ir my coat and this
thick colhu . I would Imvoik no so with
out m-kin;;, only you ail lock eo spick |
anil spay. I wish you would keep mu in i
eer.mti nance Ly following my example.” I
The goverm r looked deliciemsly cool j
in a ;!:;n uadi cm uniform coat atul duck :
inn.
into i |fie
I lii
< ... s, and the men recognized i
id hi:; suggestion and gave
perial favor. A merchant in Cologuo
asked her for a portrait of Bismarck,
who, ho said, was his personal friend.
£ho wrote a letter to the ex-chancellor,
announcing her arrival in Friedrichs-
rub, but the letter was not opened, and
sho and her husband returned to tho
railroad station to tako tho train fur
Hamburg. But Bismarck, who was out
riding,met tho couple and invited them
to remain. Ho went to the kitchen and
gavo orders to increase tho dinner bill,
as tho princess was at Hamburg.
Mme. Parlaghi gained her point and
a few days afterward aho began the por
trait, for which she n only two sit
tings. After tho first sitting, on Jan. 1,
1893, Bismarck invited her to dinner.
A few days later, while tho prince was
posing for tho second time, ho spoke
thus of tho Moltko incident:
"When a man raizes himself above
tho lovel of average intelligence, ho ex
cites envy, but When a woman has to
struggle with men, they treat her rough
ly.’’
Mme. Parlaghi gavo drawing lessons
to tho Empress nf Russia when tho em
press was o))ly Princess Alix of Hesse.
At present sho is making a full length
Tho next morning ho was called at 4,
galloped cut to Antimino, and was at
tho dictator’s residence before tho clack
in tho parish church struck G. To his
curpriso ho found CO or* 90 people wait
ing to bo received, and sumo of th m
men of importance, while the president
sat upon the porch sipping hie c Cca and
reading tho morning paper. Ir was con
sidered a dreadful breach of etiquette to
interrupt tho gn at man when ho was
reading, and there was net a person in
tho entire company who dared do it.
They Limply stood around or sat Ly
vhcro ho could f ro thna and av.aitcd
his summons. But tho Y ad.co marched
boldly up to the porch, cud raid, "Good
morning, general. ”
Guzman Blanche looked up in sur
prise from his paper, I,at tho Yankee,
knowing his temper and ] culiarities,
did not wait for him to speak.
"In my country, general,” ho said,
"it is not tho custom b r people to get
up go early, but it is also a point of
honor to meet an engagement i rumptly,
and you Etc I am hero on time. ”
“Have you had your cclice?” asked
Guzman.
"Yes, sir; at thehctol a few minutes
ago.”
"It must have been mi.crablo stuff.
Yen ought to taste mine. 1 uso none but
what I grew on my own plantation, and
always carry it with me, no matter to
.what part cf the world I go,” and ring
ing tho boll ho ordered a cup cf coffee
and a roil far his caller.
But tho latter did rot propose to
waste time, and immediately said:
"Yon did mo tho honor to cay yozter-
day that yon would cioro up that mat
ter at oar interview’ this morning, and
I havo come prepared to do so. ”
"I wish my people were e.i prompt
as yen. Oar groat fault as a nation is
procrastination. If v.cv.i ro as energetic
as your countrymen, Venezuela would
dost:- v *d b ■
cars, ( " il ij
there. 1. ;, s j
thousand d >il
To I’.ii l.l j
Qnrnn, ,
ing of th. • . r khj
Go r/’ai rnih- i aol
on: hu|
All' !l]
A Colonial Lady’s V/ardrobe.
Mi-dress Jane, widow of Cnthbcrt
Fenwick of Fenwick Manor, legislator, ] cr! , s . ; ,\ir I n.,
councilor, commi.ssioner, died in 1GG0, ^ ()V;n (lll t , , \v
leaving a will through which we catch
glimnies of tho wardrobe and toilet of
a colonial lady of tho period. To her
stepdaughter Teresa she leaves the little
bed, the mohair rug and the yellow
curtains, besides her taffeta suit and her
serge coat, all her fine linen, her hoods
and scarfs, "except the great one,” and
her three petticoats—tho tufted holiand
one, the now sorgo and tho spangled
one. To her own three boys s-ha gives
that "great scarf” and all her jewel:-’,
plate and rings, except h: :• wedding ring,
which goes to Tereza, and to each a bed
and a pair of cotton sheets; to her step
sons Crrthbert and Ignatius, an ell of
taffeta; to her negro maid Dorothy, her
red cotton coat, and to Esther, tho new
maid, all the linen of tho coarser sort;
to Thomas, the Indian, two pairs of
shoes and a match coat, and to Thomas’
mother, threo yards, of cotton; to tho
Rev. Francis Fitzlieibert, a hogshead of
tobacco annually for five years, and to
her slave William his freedom, provided
ha pay a hogshead every year to the
chinch, and to the church, tho same
HE
j. X.-TkX*-
' shop! it Wilier-
Air line, wen
the repain a
lotiveswenda'A
worth serwal
(led to break
Quitman t >
next month.
Four E g SJ
Having the t. ld|
good am
them. Hi
than umk'
(•'aimed fo
re i
S
.es i
1):*.
Kin:
a el
consumption, enu:;
each i !e gear,;:. r|
tors, t lie great re
ach and I-.i In
Salve, the he.-
King’s M \v
perfect pill.
Hoad.
2G.-it»a«S
of ti» Ml
itmto*'-
iew radfcoa
fifteenth of
»seo
jrithtw)
, Jlllvif's ■*
ijo'.vinjto
IJicmimji
rovtry.V
fill ckv
petri? k.
kver vi;--
William, *‘t r he a slave forever, if lie fort he
t t
shall over leave her communion ;” for
hud not her beloved brother William
Eltonhend and many of her dearest
friends "died by the bloody fangs of
Puritan wolves?”—John Williamson
Palmer in Century.
Russia's I’tacuo of Rodents.
Russia has suffered from a genuine
plague of rats and mice, and the story
is attractively told by United States
Consul Hzenan at Odessa, in a report to
tho state department. Tho vermin first
appeared in southern Russia in the au
tumn of 1893, and they increased in
cumber with marvelous rapidity, ow
ing to tho heavy grain harvests leaving
much unthrashed grain, and in the mild
weather. In addition to tho common
houso and field mon o, another and now
variety appeared, having a long, sharp
nose. These mice overran every place,
and they moved in vast numbers like
armies, and in instances did not hesi
tate to attack men and animals. While
tho rats were not so numerous as the
is at 1 aelu <! !i
tell von
I*. Dul’rc
mo:
s (Ini_ r s!
.cS|
I’s Anita
m, and It.
. ,■
flH'h ;i"?
flt'iiio,'
".fl
fl chuv-',
flrc i:r>
‘ • .V ill wl
Hjf giad
I f 111. m.l
B'i at
Cut
Cut
Df*5/•» p •
ii! \t tliiriy (i n
i! . 1 )l'V l.i • ) . -
- r : ri=*c
* a ^
pH jrni
loma
-•'■'ft? I
14!-** .fcans fo tile
Z'M- .Je.l ll:i ■ pi ' ,-.
rfl
k A
Jeans for ... •. a «• 1 ■
8'.>1 H its for -l.G
jiK*
'I.UO liats fi :• Z'.i- :: I
Rea^
dy fl
o rl-, o
an:
I’aat-a Sbii-ts.
portion to altov
I lest a I i wo .I F! ui!i -I IS 11»'l'. ;
■'oi-.. me u <■
Yuur& : > -t'ci - :: t::. v.
>i i
■ T-* » T - 1
;Ell]
him three c!;ror: . Thru they stripped to | portrait of tb.o^nng of Wurttemborg.—
SPAIN INCENSED.
It is not surprising that Spain i=
ini •nscJ. Certain senators in their
zeal for Cuba in her struggles for
freedom let passions rule the hour.
We believe that Spain lias been in
human. relentless, domineering m
her control of I’uba ; t hat Cuba ought
to be free; that she wiil be free. At:
the game time there is a certain re*
spect due to Spain ns to oilier na
tions with whom our relations are
friendly.
The abuse heaped upon Spain by
Senator Vest, of .Missouri, was un
called for and out of place in the
United States senate chamber.
There dignity and calmness should
reign. The granting bcligerent rights
to Cuba may be all right and proper,
but we must believo there is a better
way than that adopted by tiio Senate
of the I niled States.
Spain is proud and high-spirited
oven though her pultn.e-t days are in
the past. An insult is as hard for
their maa r.-hiits and trousers and en
joyed tho n maindc-r cf tho evening, not
withstanding tho jokes of those guests
who had not been blessed with univer
sity educations and aristocratic tastes.
Tho d i canled Hurts were stood around
tho back < f tho room like tombstones as
monuments to their owners’ discom
fiture, t,i rviag as reels to hold up the
cum.' L.' e u - and waistcoats.—New York
£u:i.
Rid a 'Il-Kpcltcil Word Cause War?
An ingenious explanation of the fic
tion of Dr. Jameson is given by the
London correspondent of tho Birming-
iG.: :;o. /,(carding to this, Janie-
; sou, with iiiz men, was waiting for
some word from Johannesburg. It came
in a tohgram worded thus: "Revolution
carried, in compliance with your de
sire.” That was tho telegram received.
The telegram actually sent from tho
Johannesburg committee was, "Resolu
tion carried, in compliance with your
desire.” That "v” instead of "s” made
all the difference. Jameson made his
plunge into the i nomy’:; country, cxpect-
I ing to find tho settlers in arms waiting
I for hi:; coming. Instead, ho found ouiy
great masses of armed Boers barring his
way. The Boers were fully prepared and
expected Ids Cwming. Tina raises the cn-
rior.y : ugge: ricn, flad they anything to
dov.ith altering tho telegram? Was it
a trap for the English raiders to draw
the i i:: . i < vder to justify tiro quaint
utterances of Krcgcr that when tho tor
toise put cut its head they would cut it
off?
Now York Sun.
naurtin's Correspondence.
Hannibal Hamlin, perhaps the most
Jypical cf Maine's great sous who havo
won national honors and a national
memory, always saved tho letters which
ho received, but preserved no copies of
his replies or of his share in any ccrro-
.spendonee. 'So General Charles Hamlin,
his sou, who is preparing his biography,
finds himself with trunk after trunk
filled -with letters written by the most
conspicuous figures in tho lifocf tho na
tion for tho past GO years. In many
cares lie desires ids father’s answers
find is having more success in tracing
and fiecuring them than might bo im
agined.
bo a richer and more productivo na
tion,” and with that they went into
busiuezs.
For an hour tho details (f tho conces
sion wero discussed, and being agreed
upon tho president dictated to his ste
nographer tho terms cf tho contract.
Then turning to his guest ho eaid :
"My secretary will w rite this out, and
tomorrow we will sign it.”
"I would prefer to have tho deemueut
signed now,” was tho Yankee's reply.
"You havo jut raid that tho fault of
your people wan procrastination, and I Second National Ban
propose that wo avoid it this morning. ” •|* cnn *. IVS . • • v ( , r j.,
Tho secretary looked up in amaze
ment. He had seen men sent to the cal
aboose for less, and evidently expected
that tho dictator would call a police
mice, th'‘y wero more destructive, oa:- Vn \ ■
ing everything, gnawing away wood- U IJtf'Q f ft 1 A I
work, and even ruining entire build- J^J LI ^ U U »|
mgs. After exhausting all other means,
the plague was finally terminated in
1891 by resort to bacteriology, when tho
vermin wero destroyed by tho inocula
tion of a few n dents with contagious
dlscaso germs.—Washington P. sr.
DRUGGISTS.
\Y
A Bank Preside
T. Nelson, pres
it.
nervous t rouble.
bnt of t be
Jackson,
igi st ion and
would rather give
;V ;;a
)
'<rr
f; 'v* -: )
e, •
,p
man to take tho Yankco in charge.
Guzman was a little angry r.t first; but,
seeing that his guest was net abashed,
sipilcd and said:
"That is a neat way of applying my
philosophy to year own interest. Wo
up the use oi' any remedy I ever tried
than King’s Royal Germetuer. As a
nerve tranquilizer, and restorative,
it is ail that can be desired. It is
not a narcotic in any sense, hut pro-
> 4> j .
./ ' :
1*. J '
A few days ago he received an almost I will wait until tho document is written
invaluable collection of them from and eigu it here.”
Washington, which had come into the
possession of ex-Postruastcr General
Horatio King, himself an honored son
of Maine. During tho war Vico Presi
dent Hamlin conducted a personal cor-
Handing a cigar to tho Yankee, he lit
pno himself and sat down for* a chat
while tho secretary war writing. Iti a
moment or two tho dictator general of
polico tapped ct tho door ard raid that
rospcndenco with tomo of tho loading ho wanted to see tho president concern
Hiding T!:rir Lights.
The increase in crime has led to the
formation of a novel club. Fifty men of
power, and we should be as careful wealth and high Ktauding in business
not to he unjust to her as wo would circles havo organized an "antijewelry
her to take as for any European
be to any other power.
rUBLIC FUNDS FOR SCHOOLS.
At least half lias been called.
Regularly has the treasury of Hie
nation been called upon to contrib
ute to the
■upport
see l n run
wearing club,” and have pledged them-
isclvca nor to wear anything in public
calculated to tempt a pickpocket or foot
pad, not evcij a watch and chain, until
tho pi lice (lepaitiucut shows homo sign
of Kuppri sujg crime. This action was
taken after a well known millionaire
who likes diamonds had a tfcfiOD ".spar
kin'’ plucked from his shirt front whilp'
ho was enjoying a cigar on the front
platform of a surface car. As a result of
th a action, these members of the clnV
schools, particularly in the Wot and
among tin Indians. The opposition
was led by representative i.inton. of who formerly disported diamond rings,
Michigan. His subject was a good to sny roMnug of diamond collar but-
ono, and so wc!l did ho handle it ' thcr expensive ornaments, are
going around today hko other plain citi-
that the vote, when eas., was over- zeus. Thus contempt for tho police
premises to work at least one needed re
form. It may suppress a vulgar display
whelming in favor nf abolishing the
appropriation. Church and State
are separate. Most proteslant
chunhes do not ask. and some will S
not accept g< vern 'I 'lit ai l, wliile
others are hungry for the crumbs of
comfort that have been given for the
asking.
There Is no established church in
this country und from tho nature of
the case there never cun be. The
secretary of the interior lias thus
been relieved of an unpb;.tsint task,
for the receivers wero never satisfied.
Like uni’ dged birds their mouths
wero open except when closed to i
swallow the dainty uioxsei. j
of dazzling wealth here.—Kansas City
Star.
Costuraicz :»n Immortal.
The exact price of an "immortal”
costume is worth giving. Tho embroid-
i icd coat of a full blown French aca
demician costs 500 francs, the white cloth
waistcoat b5 francs, and the striped
fjouw rs ?0 francs, tho plumed hat ami
box an? down for 59 francs, and tho
sword, with scabbard, for 40 francs;
total, 094 francs. It is irreverent even to
narrate that Rndolpho Halis, the pnet
tavern keeper of the Chat Noir, recently
bought up the coats of deceased aca
demicians for his waiters. The govern
ment, however, put a stop to so flagrant
a desecration.
Federal general?, whoso communica-
ttens, after tho lapse cf years, possess
ext ran dinary interest. la these old let
ters, too, is further corroboration of
what General Hamlin has always known
—that previous to tho war his father
and Jefferson Davis were particularly
intimate and relied up( n each other to
carry various measures through tho ecu-
cte.—Lewiston Journal.
.Saw tho roiat.
It is related that Baron do Rothschild
pf Paris onco called Guzman Blanco the
fichest man in the world. When the
Venezuelan dictator protested against
the compliment, Rothschild retorted:
"You are surely the richezt man in the
world, for who else has estates compris
ing GOO,000 square miles of territory?
Who else has an income of $97,000,000?
Who else has 3,500,000 slaves?” Guz
man was not slow in seeing the point.
Siiron S. Hartman, of Tunnel on.
West Va.. has been subject to attacks
of colic about onco a year, and would
have to call a doctor and then suffer
for about t wc!vo hours as much as
sonic do when they die. lio va*
taken n oently jus* the same as »)
other times, and concluded to try
Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and
Diarrboo Remedy. He says; "I
t ml; one dose of it and it gave me
relief in live minutes. That is more
than any thing else has ever done for
me.” For sale by The Dul’ro Drug
Co.
ing a matter that required his instant
attention.
“Ycu will havo to wait until I am
through with tki; Yankee,” was tho
dictator's reply. "Ho b; teaching me
tho way they do business in tho United
States. ’’—Chicago Record.
Marvelous Results.
From a letter written by Rev. .1.
Cunderumn, of Diainondale, Mich.,
we are permitted to make this ex
tract: "I Ii ivo no hesitation in rcc-
! onimem’.ing Dr.King’sXcw Discovery ■
as the rssults were almost marvelous
duces t lie
happiest elTi
■its
lit on
t lie
disordered
nervous sy
stem
I
con-
sider il an
invnluaide
rein
e ly,
and
have for j
ears been
re co i
nmer.
ding
it to my
friends.”
New
pack
nge.
large bc.ti
lo. 10S doses
, !?L
i'or
sale
by W. B.
Du I’re.
KIM.'MtirK
M'ZFEM).
K. ('.
AU
SFKLD &
SE
Vt,
A RCTI ITI-t
TM >
Atlanta
> ’ * *
•
(J
. A.
Plans and Specifications for private anJ
public buddings.
DRUGS, MEDICINES,
PAINTS, OILS,
GLASS,
PUTTY, 5:0.
in
'L
e case of my wife
While I w:
as
pastor of the BaptiM Cbureliat Rives
Junction she was br. light down with
' pneumonia succeeding la grippe. Ter-
i riblc paroxysms of coughing wouid
| last hours w'tli little interruption
and it seeimd as if she could aid sur-
! vive them. A fiiend rcc-'iunieiiileil
Dr. King’s New Discovery; it was
quick in its work and highly s itisfae-
j torv in results.” Trial bottles free
! at W. 15. Dul’re's drug store. Ib gu-
| la - «A-/i. :71c Mini I
Cut Prices
At J. I. Sarratts
i
vM n >\v offering my entire stock at prices ili.it wi
wanting goods. Gents’ low cut shoe' sOc, Ladies
I sell to anyone
Glle, Chiids oOc
nnd up. Men’s suits, new goods $52.ott and up. Rants lUc and up. Cof-
feetilhs for $1. Sugar. Rice, Tea. Lard. Meat. Flour, and fobucco at
BD i'TO .l I’RICES. Califcrnia Hams Sc. Dove bra d'.)(•. Monazito
tools, sm-li as Shovels, Spades. Mattocks. Ricks. Ac . . Iicapcrtban any
one in town. A few Straw Hats left at Niw York cost. Gent's shirts
KB
anil.up. Suspend* rs oc and up.
Re-jeet fully.
Give m» a cull when in town.
J. I. SC ATI I
THE WEBBER HOUSE,
T. S. WEBBER, Prop.
S You 210"VV Ylli.l t
T. DAYKNRORT keeps on band constantly a large stock of the best
quality of GROCERIES. ' ‘ " 1
BE5T PATENT FLOUR A SPECIALTY.
Armour’s can goods and smoked meats on hand all the time and
every!long in the fancy grocery Jine of the best quality. You are in
vited to call and we will give satisfaction.
T. DAVENPORT.
A flrHt-class private Imardlm; lions*
at reasonable rate*. Periuanent and
Iranslent liOiinleisaeeormiiiNlated. Meals I
supplied to those who desire at moderate 1
rate*. i
Ii!l
We equal any
in the world. “YTYT -
Our patrons LIMESTONE SPRINGS
recommend us.
All work guar
anteed and com
petition met.
th£ LEDGER.
^ WORKS
CARROLL & CO., Lessees.
Manufacturers of
BUILDING, * PLASTERING * AND * AGRICULTURAL * LIME
And Dealers In
Coal, Shingles, Laths and Plaster Hair.
Oymamite, Blasting Powder, Fuse and Pynamite Caps.