University of South Carolina Libraries
THE LEDGER: GAFFNEY, S. C., JULY 29, 1897. TM K J»i.oo per Yenr. PUBLISHED EVEKY THURSDAY HY ED. H. DeCAMP. - Editor The Ledger is not responsible for tbe views of correspondents. Correspondents who do not contri bute regular news letters niuet fur- ■>1811 their name, not for publication, Out for identification. Write short letters and to the point to insure publication ; also endeavor to get them to the odico by Tuesday. \11 correspondence should be ad- iressed to Ed. H. DeCump, Manager. Obituaries will bo published at five cents a line. Cards of thanks will be published »t one cent a word. Heading notices will be published at ten cents a line each insertion. community who has a right to an opinion. Be a freeman and wear no ucan’s yoke. Have the manhood to exercise your freedom but do not make a fool of yourself by trying to be conspicuous. We are in receipt of a copy of Lady Cook’s “Essays on Social Topics.*' Lack of time ^ias prohibited a care ful perusal, but if the headings of the various chapters can be relied upon the book contains much good reading and gives a vast deal of territory for thought.? THE OIL MILL. The oil mill is the be;t thing that we can see for Gaffney. You men who have the capital might do well to investigate more fully the workings of such a plant. We need facto ries to build up Gaffney. We publish elsewhere a communication on the subject. It is published just as writ ten—not even the words corrected. We have received another letter in which the nritc-r—a man of reliabili ty—tells us that one of the best men in Blacksburg will take .f 1,000 of the stock. Now is the time to start the ball to rolling. Do not let the oppor tunity slip, but let some good, relia ble man, a man who has the confi dence of thr entire people, and a man who will work, start out and secure subscriptions to the stock. The Ledger will take the names of any who may wish to take stock, and we j would suggest that the shares be made $10 each and that our friends from the county take stock and pay ; it in seed this fall. Let us get io work and have the cotton seed oil mill. May every man, woman and child in the county of Cherokee have a joy ous time to-day. and may none regret ' that they live in what is soon to be, ! if it is not. already the garden spot of the state. MARBLE. We have as line marble in the cor porate limits of Gaffney us there is in the United States and what astonishes us is that our go-ahead people have ! passage through i* of a spark from a ELECTRICAL SPARKS. A test for the porosity of porous cells consists in filling the cell with clean water and taking the per cent, of leakage. The correct amount of leak age is fifteen per cent, in twenty-four hours. A perfect vacuum is a perfect insu lator. It is possible to exhaust a tube so perfectly that no elect vio machine can send a spark through the vacuous space, even when the space is only one centimeter. If the air had been as good a con* ductor of electricity as copper, says Prof. Alfred Danicll, we would prob ably never have known anything about electricity, for our attention would never have been directed to any elec trical phenomena. For resistance coils, for moderately heavy currents, luop iron, bent zigzag shape, answers very well. One yard of hoop iron one-half inch wide and 1-32 inch thick measures about MOO of an ohm; consequently, 100 yards will La required to measure an ohm. The voltage of a secondary Lal'.cry must always be equal to or slightly in excess of the voltage of the lam]) to be burned. For example, a twenty-volt lamp will require tea secondary cells, but ten cells will supply more than twenty lamps. Cog'.-rr t.jon of air ineronres its di electric strength, (lailietet found that dry air compressed to a pressure of forty or fifty atmospheres resisted the so long neglected this great source of wealth. Surely it will not remain la tent much longer. Will some of our readers who have a knowledge of the marble business please give us some information on the subject. This mar ble must be utilized. This immense bed of marble lying idle in our midst is not like Gaffney. There are other i latent sources of wealth around us which we will attend to lattr, hut up and at the marbl. first. Why om. t /;r.‘;pr shui!'.': pretend to bo a friend of ar.othcr and yet enter tain in his heart malice toward that person simply because UiuL person cannot be used as a tool, is beyond our comprehension. Yet there are are some men in this town who are made of such stuff. To quote from a sermon we once heard is the best way we know to express our contempt for such a coward: “Vv'e would rather be a dog standing on the mountain bay ing at the moon tlmu to be a sneaking cowardly whelp that would pretend friendship for a man and then every time v.t had a chance to do him in the La k.” SO, SlI Let every rnofhec’^ son in Chero kee county be on thtir good behavior to-day. Let u» show to the candi dates and to liic entire state that we are the best r«»ised and most polished people in the stale. Do not, for the love you bear your county and the town of Gaffney, indulge in eighty or any other kind of proof. Give the speakers careful and earnest atten tion. Applaud your favorite but do not be discourteous to those you do not favor. Endeavor to leave the imp’* f '« ti on that we :• r<* we -|r(— the very best people in th ■ state. This business of running contrary to the law is wrong. We do not advo cates the dlspeusavy. V.T believe it to be wron 0 . Yet it Is a lav; and wt should abide by it until it is erased from the statute books. A man who will run a business contrary to law is as much a violator of the law as a man who breaks any other law on the statute. We believe the dispensary is doomed, but until it is a settled fact man should abide by the law. The sooner some of the people around this town and country under stand that the principles of the edi tor cannot be bought, and that one dollar a year for fifty-two papers or a fifty cents advertisement does not take to the soon will *hoy learn that they are wasting time in attempting such a thing. We admire u man of conviction but detest a haughty, contemptable imp who imagines he is the only mun in a powerful induction coil, while the dis charge points were only 0.C5 centimeter apart.—Seienti k: American. CONCERNING GLOOMERS. And again. wheTT thv bloomer woman goes into full effect, that deep mystery, the dress skirt pocket, will go out.— Washington Post. Bloomers will never be made the ground for divorce. Wherever the wife wears trousers domestic affairs have reached a settled condition.—Washing ton Times. Tin: difference between ordinary t rouse rs and bloomers is t hat bloomers do everywhere what ordinary trousers do orly at the knees.—Milwaukee Sen- tinel. and Mbs. John Quii.i. had a qur. -r 1 over the matter of Miss Maggie Quill wearing bloomers, during which i John lost his whiskers and Mrs. Quill was deprived of her alleged reason. This seems all the more strange inas much as jonquils are naturally bloom er.;. Perhaps, after all, they are not so much John Quills as passion flowers. —Boston Herald. The late Mrs. Bloomer is receiving posthumous glory to which she is not entitled. The bloomer costume of the woman who wheels is both good to see and comfortable to wear. If the good woman had devised such a costume she might not have been doomed to failure. Father Knickerbocker, however, in ap plication of bis name to a costume, gets no more than his fair show.—San Fran cisco Evan iucr. POPULAR Paris has labora tor estabb SCIENCE. d municipal ; , for bacteriology in the oid Loban barracks, where analysis of sus pected eases of diphtheria are made within twenty-four hours after the ma terials have bet a handed in. A new lead for deep-sea sounding carries a cartridge which explodes on tou'hiag the bottom. A submerged microphone receives Gu; sound, and the depth is estimated from the time ©'•ell- pied by tiie lead in sinking to the hot- About the Public Buildings. (Correspondence of The Ledger ) I may not be very regularly in Gaff ney during approaching meetings and discussions as to location of other puM’c buildings. I take this mole rf fO-jnr- IP - idf-o^ Jr) loC-Oir^ tl)r. court-house and jail. 1 would voie io have the court-house built on the iowtr portion of the city park lot, and the jail on the lot adjoining the park lot, just above the culvert. The public buildings of any city should be near a center, and a jail should not be stuck buck in any dark corner. It should he as much an ornament to the cily as any other building, showing respect to the un fortunate prisoners, as much as to the good looks of the town. I In- cily liai! the court,-house, and the jail would fill up the ugly gap on the avenue, on that side. Don’t lo cale those new buildings to aceom- inrtiate anybody or party interested with it the privilegoof dictating 1 * n anything aim ye the good of all. e editor whut lie shall write, so ; l human K. Gaines. You may hunt the world over and you will not find-another medicine equal to Chamberlain's Colic. Chol- < ra ti u! Dim Nioea Remedy, for bow 11 co upbiiu's. It is pleasant, safe and reliable. For sale by DoPre Drug Company. BIRTH OK A NEW LANGUAGE. Influpiice of liidlnn Suliilrrs on the luliab- Hants of Central Afrlt-a. In a recent issue of the British Cen tral Africa Gazette a correspondent gives some interesting particulars of the progress made in the district at the northeastern end of Mount Mlanje since its occupation by the administration end the building of Fort Lister, which H. II. Johnson planted in that region to command the route frequently taken by slave caravans from the interior to Quillraane. Among other matters which he notices as due to the presence of the Sikh soldiers who garrison Fort Lister is the beginning of what is prac tically a new language. “Where the Indian soldiers are to be found there will also be found a most extraordinary language, a mixture of Hindustani, Swahili, Yao and Chinyanja. This is most remarkable near Fort Lister. It is one of the newest languages on earth; it cannot be more than a year old, but is well understood by the peo ple. The vocabulary is limited, and as for the grammar it is ns yet unformed, but I am confident that should the In dian soldier remain in this country another five years the philologist will be delighted to study the Indo-Afriean language of the future and to trace to their origin the marvelous words eom- ;Rising it. The same correspondent notes that with the advent of the Sikhs a wonderful change has come over the hab|t.s aid! manners of the native. Where formerly his wants in the mut ter of clothing were confined to suf- fleient calico to clothe his family and himself, he now requires boots, tur bans, trousers and coats, and at a dis tance it is said to be now difficult to distinguish the half-naked savage of a year ago from the Sikh soldier in his ordinary dress. Another master in which the African imitates the Sikh is in the military salute, with 'which the native now frequently accompanies the greeting of Europeans, the result being more amusing than correct.” SHE KNEW HER NAME. PROTECTION OF IRON COLUMNS Uriclcti Laid in Portland Cement Success fully Withstand fire. Some experiments were recently made l>y the building inspection department. Vienna, on the protection of iron from tire by easing it with brick, says Engi neering. A wrought iron column twelve feet long, and built up of two channels connected by lattice byr;s. was used. This was set up in a small cham ber constructed of brick, and the column uas loaded by levers. This done, it,was surrounded by a four and one-half inch brick wall laid in fire-clay mortar. The wall did not fit closely around the column, and advantage was taken in this to litf there samples of fusible mrtals, and which should serve as a gauge of the temperature attained. Various samples of atone concrete and other r '^r .'s were eV.o played in the chamber within the column, 'i nis cham ber was then filled with split firewood, which was lighted, and the doors i:n- ir.ediutely walled up with slabs of plas ter of paris. After the fire had broken out the doors were broken in and a stream of water turned into the room from a fourteen horse-power fire en gine. An examination of the room next showed that the walls of brick, laid in Portland cement, retained their strength, while most of the material stone left in the chamber had been de stroyed. The c-iling had boon lined partly with plaster of paris and partly with terra cotta tiles. Both were dam aged. The inelosurc around the iron pillars wa.; still standing firm, though corners of the brick-work were clipped one inch or so. and the lire clay mortar was largely washed out of the joints. On removing the casing, however, the pillar was found to be injured, even the paint being unscorched, and the fusible plugs only showed a temperature of one hundred and forty-nine degrees Fahrenheit. Hut It Wasn’t Her Pann Catling, Only the lirakeinau of the Kailroad Car. She occupied the seat directly in front of me on a Central Railroad of New Jer sey train from New York the other night. She was a plump girl, with au burn hair and hazel ryes. She was evi dently a girl employed in New York— perhaps a typewriter. Her name is Elizabeth. How do I know? Well, I didn’t ask her. I never saw her before, no one called Iter by name and she had nothing about her that served to tell me that her name is Elizabeth. Yet her uumo is Elizabeth. I uni not the seventh son of a seventh son, neither do I possess the power of second sight. But I found out that the name of the plump, rosy cheeked young miss in the seat in front of me is Eliza bith. Before wc had gone many miles out of Jersey City the “sand man” be gan to play havoc with Elizabeth. Her eyes became heavy, and every few sec onds her head would drop. Before wo had crossed Newark bay Elizabeth was sound asleep. The train sped on, and when the speed was slackened the brake- man opened the door and shouted: ‘‘Elizabeth! E-lizabeth! ’Liz’bcth!” With the first word the girl 1 Kigali to move. When the brakeman shouted “E-lizabeth!” the eyes were half open ed, and when he finally called“’Liz’- bt th!” she rubbed her eyes and said, “Yes, papa, I’ll get up.” Through the cars ran the sound cf suppressed laugh ter. But the girl had fallen asleep again, and when the train stopped and the brakrmuu again called out ‘‘Elizabeth! Elisabeth!” the plump girl jumped up and said, “All right; I’m coining. ” This was too much for the harebrained dude across the aisle, and he began to “Ha, ha!” while the giggling middens several seats in front began to giggle more furiously. Even the sedate looking old gentleman seated near by could not suppress a smile. By this time the girl was wide awake, and that she was ccn- Bcious of what she had done was evident by the fact that her naturally red checks became redder still, and I even imagined that I saw tears in her eyes. That is how I found cut that her name is Elizabeth.—Gerald Gray in Allentown Call. IN HOLLAND. Some CnrloKitlr* of Lllqnettc fn fltc Neth erlands. An unmarried girl in Holland always takes the right arm of htr e. cnrt, while the married one selects the left side of her husband. So deeply lias this custom entered into the life «.f Hollanders that at a wedding the bride enters the churah on the right side of the groom, the young wife returning on the left side of h< r husband when the ceremonv has been performed. No unmarried lady in this country can dream of going to church, a concert or any other place of public assemblage without the escort of parents or male members of the family, hhe cannot take a walk, pay a visit or go shopping unaccompanied by her mother or some married lady friend. The Holland young lady docs not go to the theater with the gentleman who has been introduced to htr a week be fore, neither does she vary her beau to suit her dress or complexion. Unmarried daughters an* chaperoned to all places of amnsement. Even dancing parties an* interspersed with songs, recitations, etc., for the amusement of elders of the family who sit around tables socially sipping their coffee, wine or other favor ed beverage, while the young members glide over the waxed floors to the fitful strains of music. Here the young must make the best of their opportunities, for when it pleases the parents to seek (he quiet solace of the house the daughters also quit the gayety of theTallroom.— Philadelphia Times. POWDER Absolutely Pure Ci-leb-at 'I for tt» -it W-:;ven:? s*r<-;?*I» and la-alMifulac*-,. A»*ur'-s I lie ;;„-.i; n ,t a!u:.i :ii.d ail fortes of ;,iia!- ralion cor .r;.on to the chea[, t r.i v'!s itOVAI. IlAKIXO I*OV Ilf.lt ' (1.. N l >V Yons News and Notre. The horse and arrow are the designs most commonly used in weather vanes. It is generally conceded that finely ground bone is the safest and surest form in which to apply phosphoric acid. Crematory ash is a new fertilizer which is for sale in cities that burn their garbage by the crematory process. Bring seed potatoes out into the light. Don’t let the sprouts grow all bloodless and white. Short, green and stubby the sprouts should be found when you are ready to work up your ground, says Rural New’ Yorker. Professor J. C. Arthur of Indiana an nounces a new fungicide for potato scab. This is formalin, which possesses advantages over corrosive sublimate. Eight ounces of formalin to 15 gallons of water make the right bath for seed potatoes. The Missouri experiment station claims that tobacco dust will destroy the apple root plaut louse. Take the earth from the roots and put in the dust. The Kcd Korku. In sight of the Erie tracks, between Susquehanna and Great Bend, are the Red rocks, a red cliff standing above the Susquehanna river. Near them can be seen traces of the grave of a beauti ful Indian maiden, the daughter of a famous chief. She was betrothed to a young brave, a member of her father’s tribe, then encamped near here. Her fa ther desired her to marry the son of the chief of the neighboring tribe, ard the wish of the paternal ancestor usually counted for something. In consequence she resolved to fly to the ‘‘happy hunting grounds,” and one night she stole noiselessly from her wig wam, and, with the death song upon iter lips, flung herself from the high cliff, her life’s blood staining the rooks below. And to.this day they have retain ed the reddish'hue which the rains and floods of a century have failed to efface. When the maiden’s lover saw her mangled corpse, he retired to a cave in the mountains and never again w'as seen alive. Forty years later his petrified body was found in the cave by a wan dering remnant of the tribe. Under his body were found the long raven tresses of the old chief's daughter.—New York Press. Dry Id 2;Annan. Here is a drought story told by a trav eling man: I was driving across the country to a iitt!' 1 town m western Kan sas the other day, •vlien I in't a farn.'i hauling a wagon load of water. “Where do you get water?” said I. “Up the road about seven miles,” he replied. “Ami you haul water seven miles for your family ami stock?” “Yep.” “Why, in the iiamo of sece, don't you dig a well?” “Because* it’s jest as far one w.it km the other, stranger.’’—Kan.-ais C.iy Journal. Kl-niii" la Kentucky. “A Kentucky man, “ says the Cincin nati Tribune, “was lined $25 last week for kissing a girl once. About three months back anothc-r man in the same state was fined $10 for kissing another girl three times. It will bo inter* sting to watch these oscuiutoiy ex peri m cuts, for by so doing we may discover just how often it is necessary to kiss a Ken tucky girl without incurring the dis pleasure of the law.” No Cure—No Pay. Tlcit is tiit* way ail tlruirzists sHI Cl.’oVF.’S TASTELESS (ffl ILL TONI! * 1 for Chills ami Malaria. It is simply Iron and quin hit' in a 1 a st cl ess form. C|iil<lr<-n low it. Adults prefer it to hitter nuuseatini; tonics, hive, all. ” r - Croup. Colds, LaGrippe and Sort- Throat, cured by Goose Grease - no cure no pay. Jtul’UE Drat. Co. We sell and guarantee Klee's Goose Gt eas Linutnent—no cure no pay. < uhitoKi.i: intro Co. TRAINING NATURE. How the Japanese .Malic Marvels for tho r.IarUet. At Jamrach’s, in London, the* other day, some one asked the great animal- eatoiler and importer “if he had run out of mermaids?*’ “We used to keep them,” he an swered, “when they fetched four pound* apiece, but now wc can’t get more than one pound for them. Frank Kueklund burst up the trade when he exposed the method of their manufac ture by the Japanese from a fish and a monkey skin cleverly united; so we no longer make them u ‘leading article,* ” lie smilingly added. “The Japanese are remarkably in genious.” “Not only that, but they possess infi nite patience. The telescope fish is a ease in point, it is u fish of immense leng.h, with a double, fanlike tail, and produced by breeding on the principle of artificial selection. However, they are quite common in Germany now.” “And do you know how they get white Java sparrows?” “They select a pair of grayish birds anti keep them in a white cage in a white nxiin. avd they are attended hy a person dressed in white. The mental effect on a series of generations of birds results in completely white birds. They breed the domestic cock with enor mously long tails after the sam<* princi ple. They first select a bird with a good tail, giving him a very high perch to stand on; then with weights thej’ drag the tail downward, carrying on the same system with the finest speci mens of his descendants till a tail al most us long as a peacock’s is produced at last. And how marvelous they are »n the fertilization of plants! bit* you ever see one of their dwarf traf s, per haps fifty years old, and yet not more ♦ ban an ineli or twffi high?” il “The Foot of a Fly” “Last summer one of our grand children was sick with a severe bow el trouble.” says Mrs. E G. Gregory, of Fiedorickstown, Mo. “Our doc tor's remedies hud failed, then we tried (’in inberiuin’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy, which gave very speedy relief.” For sale by DuPre Drug Company. asJ says an eminent English doctcr, “will carry enough poison to iniect a house hold. M In summer-time, more espec ially, disease germs fill the air, multi tudes are inlcctcd, fall ill, die ; multi tudes escape. These messengers of mischief do not exist for millions. Why not ? Because they are healthy and stronj —protected as a crocodile is agamst gun shot. It is the weak, the wasted, the thin-blooded who tall ; those who have no resistive power so that a sudden cough or cold develops into graver disease. We hear of catching disease! Why not catch health ? We can do it by always maintaining our healthy weight. Scot^£tmttstcn. of Cod-liver Oil, is condensed nourish ment; food for the building up of the system to resist the attacks of disease, it should be taken in reasonable doses all summer long by all those whose weight is beiow the standard of health. If you ar? losing ground, try a bottle now. Bor solo by a!! drngnists at toe. and *i.oa IV. W. ATTORNEY AT LAW, Itlaclcttlnirg; iind Criiffnixy, S». C. W ILL practice In all the Courts. J cun he leaelieti over t he ’phone from Car- roll & Stacy’s Hank, at my ottice in filucks- liut'K. at any moment. O. L. SCHUMPERT. TtlOS. H. HCTI.EK. Wm. McGowan. SCHBMPE8T,«BUTLER«& > KcGOWAH, A TTOItl* is YH-AT-I. A W. Union and Gaffney, 5. C. Very careful and prompt attention given to all business entrusted to us. tv?' Practice in ail the courts. Hugh Long. Theson L. Caudle LONG & CAUDLE, Attorneys-at= Law. GAFFNEY. - - S. C. Prompt and careful attention given to all kinds of legal business. Office next to J. G. Galloway & Son. J. E. WEBSTER, YVttorncrv-A.1- Office in Court House. (Probate Judge’s office) Gaffney City, S. C. Practices in ail the courts. Collec tions a soecialtv. Shingles! - Shingles! DRESSED LUMBER ! Sash, Doors, Blinds, Brackets, Mouldings, and All Kinds of Building Materials, For Sale at Lov/est Sasfi Prices. No charge will be made'for infor mation as to amonnt required for building. Call on L. BAKER. 1DR. CHAS. A. JEFFERIES, Physician and Surge i. SPF.CIALTIES:—bUROEKY, F.VF.. EAR and ! THROAT. Office, Cherokee Dm;: CoY. Store Telephone No. 40. Dr. C. T. LIPSCOMB, Dentist, Office over R. A. Jones & Co '• Stcre Can lx- found at office six days in the week. DR. J. F. GARRETT, Dentist, Gaffney, - - - S. C. 1 Office over J. It. Tolleson’n new store In office from 1st to 2<!th of each month; At Blacksburg Thursday morning | each week, returning to office at 2:30 N ervous Troubles are due to inipovcrislu d blood. Hood’s Sar saparilla is the One True Blood Purifier and NERVE TONIC. A. N. WOOD, BANKER, does a general Bankingand Exchange business. Well secured with Burglar- Proof safe ami Automatic Time Lock. Safety Deposit Boxes at moderate rent. Buys and sells Stocks andBonds. Buys County and School Claims. Your business solicited. SOUTHERN RAILWAY. rrrrxiox i \ i k i.ixb. Comt id.ciI Sch -d'i'.e *>f Pa««r,;*r Trains, ill T.ffeut '!V/ J, iXtfT. t HYDRICK, WILSON & GANTT, Attorneys-at- Law, Gaffney, - - - S. C. f froffice over K. A. Jones’ store. ! V«e»- |N'« IN l et. Ill Northbound. INo.i:,:*,,. ,;h r.<. No. 34 Daily Uaily. j Sici. I Iralijr. j __ _ Lv. AU-.iitn, C. 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