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'VllIC IVfCl>OI£I*. $1.00 per Year. untl her gruuHful uttilude, her line figure, her ruddy complexion, Pet of! liy her tahtefully uriHuged widow’s COOPERATION NEEDED. I'uiciitit to Ni'ihI llitlr riilltlrcn to Mrtiool toSci'iire tlo- of llio Nrliool fund. CII C.MSII Kl» TIIKSPAY AN It KHIOAY BY ICn. If. DkOamp. i'hk Ledger is not reHponsible for the views of correspondents. Correspondents who do not contri bute regular news letters must fur nish their name, not for publication, but for identification. Write short letters and to the point to insure publication; also endeavor to got them to the office by Tuesday. \11 correspondence should be ad dressed to Ed. H. DeCainp, Manager. Obituaries will be published at five oents a lino. Cards of thanks will be published rt one cent a word. Heading notices will be published at ten cents a line each insertion. NOTES AND COMMENTS. Why is a State oliic er of the Re form School li ce a mountain razor- back? Because he can fatten on tne range. Why are State offices far more profitable to the holders than they were under “the old ring,” while the salaries remain the same or are nomi nally reduced? Plain enough, the perquisites have vastly increased. Senator Tillman was in Columbia last week for a day or two. and it was remarked that he did not have one word to say about rottenness in Denmark nor anywhere else. But then lie was tired, “yer know,” from his trip to Cuba. What are the perquisites of office anyhow? They consist of what a man can get by virtue of his office over and above the salary fixed by law, and include such insignificant things as soap, kerosene, lard, hams, wood, coal, oats, hay. jersey cattle, farms, brick-’, tables, book cases, and, us they say in the advertise ments of sales, “many other things too tedious to mention.” weeds, were all subjects for close scrutiny and many compliments, the latter of which were no doubt very gratifying to her feminine tu«tcs and aspirations and amply compensated for the inconvenience and supposed shame of her position, it was even hinted that her beauty, rendered doubly effective by her little coquet tish arts, might have a mollifying influence on the minds of judge, law yers, and jury, and prediefions were made and bets offered on the chances of a mistrial or acquittal—all bused we suppose, on a belief that the fas cinations of beauty are superior in power to the instincts of justice. After all the State is not a nig gardly, parsimonious institution, and it cannot afford to descend to selfish littleness. Its officers are expected to live in a stylo becoming their posi tions and worthy cf the great com monwealth whose servants they are. In order that they may do this, it is expected that they should have some privileges and perquisites not speci fied in the law. We do not object to Col. Neal’s entertaining the board of directors when they come to the penetentiary on State business, neither do wo object to his family’s eating a few vegetables from the penetentiary gardens or using a little fresh milk drawn from the penetentiary cov. s. But if over there was a set of Governors and other State officers in South Carolina who could not afford from their own stand-point to appropriate to their own personal use the value of one nickel beyond their authorized sala ries, that set came in with Tillman and is now reigning with Eilerbe. They obtained place and power by defaming men whose hands were scrupulously clean and one would think that motives stronger than those of common decency and honor would have actuated them to avoid even the appearance of evil. Only a kleptomaniac would steal under such circumstances. It is now pretty well settled that wo shall have no peach crop. In the peach growing sections the crop is reported killed or badly damaged. In our own immediate section there is no prospect for peaches. We have noticed a few straggling blooms in the suburbs of Gaffney, but on the farms so far as we have observed, there is not a single bloom. It is very unusual for peaches to be killed, before even the bud had developed Such a thing does not occur oftener on an average than once in fifty years. ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ Does it pay to spend time, thought, work, and money on tender exotic plants and flowers? Of course to those who have cultivated a taste for rarities in vegetation there is a great deal of pleasure in a rare plant or flower, and the further such a plant or flower is removed from its habitat, the keener the pleasure which it will afford. But does that pleasure after all outweigh the constant care and attention required, and especially the disappointment occasioned by the early death of the favorite? Few of the most beautiful exotics can stand ^^Miunters in the open air, and in such a wiuVSi rs the past one they will perish in the green house unless supplied with artificial heat. We would not be understood as discour aging the cultivation of a taste for flowers. We only suggest that dis cretion be exorcised in the selection of those best adapted to our climate. There are many native flowers which are very beautiful, and with half the care bestowed on exotics, they could te made far more beautiful. ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ Some of the lower counties have promptly raised and forwarded all they were asked to raise for the en tertainment of veterans in Cht-rles- ton. We hope the people of Chero kee will respond promptly and cheer fully to the call made on them. The veterans will assemble in Charleston on May 10th in greater numbers than will ever bo brought together again on this earth and they will be the guests not of Charleston exclusively, but of the State of South Carolina, and every true Carolinian will honor himself by contributing to their com fort. They are men who once fol lowed the lead of South Carolina into the most terrible war of modern times, who vindicated her motives and upheld her honor from Sumter to Appomattox and who held the port of Charleston for four years against the whole naval power of the United States. Remember their heroic sac- rafices and their sublime devotion and superb valor, and grudge not the pittance asked to make them com fortable for only a few days. ♦ ♦ ♦* Pretty Mra. Hughes, who so deli cately and considerately dispatched her husband at Greers a few months ago, was on trial for her life at'Ureen- ville during the closing days of last week. At this writing we have not heard from tho verdict. The self- made widow was the center of at traction for all eyes during the trial, AN OCONEE HOG RAISER. A South Carolina Farmer Who Makes a I'rolit hy liaising Cattle ami llngti. [Keowee Courier.] That a man can raise hogs enough for home use, and thus dismiss com mission men and Western raisers as well, without Interferrring with other crops, is the experience of Mr. It. B. Collins, of Fort Madison, S. C. But a few weeks ago Mr. Collins killed a 420-pounder. “It was no great wonder,” he writes, “because I have neighbors who do even better.” Mr. Collins, upon being asked to give his experience for the benefit of his fellow farmers, modestly said : “I can raise hogs with more ease than I can tuik to the public. I am now giving cattle raising more atten tion than hogs. I sold ten head of steers of my own raising, which were shipped from my home in Fort Madi son in January last. The experiment proved a great success. “As to my hogs, however, I will say that I did kill a pig eleven and one-half months old that weighed 42fi pounds in January last. 1 lay no claim to being the best hug rai-er in my section, as several of my neigh bors have raised and killed ! trger hogs than 1 ever have, though the pig in question beats any yet, taking age into consideration. My experience in hog raising has been on the small scale. I have never tried to raise more bacon than would be necessary to supply every need on my farm. “I can do that cheaper than I can buy it. Of course that can he con sidered at a profit. “I have never triedany experiment in feeding my hogs. Corn first and last has been my main dependence for feed. I wean my pigs at one month old, give them milk and soft bread for a week or two, until they begin to eat corn, letting them have free access to the young weeds and grass. I attend to them regularly myself, or have some special one to give them all they will drink of slop twice every day. Attention is what makes good pigs. “Any family that will try can take four pigs one month old in March and make 1,200 pounds of pork by November or December. “As for breed*, I prefer a cross be- -tweon two thoroughbreds for fatten ing purposes. The pig in question was a cross from an Ohio Chester male and a Berkshire sow. I fed him on nothing but corn all summer, letting him run in a lot with plenty of grass in it, also a branch of run ning water, until in October I en closed him in a floored pen by him self. I fed him twice a day, as I did my other hogs. Most people feed fattening hogs three times a day. I learned many years ago that the mid day fed is lost. Hogs should get hungry to digest their food properly. I wifi say that roasting ears is the best feed for pigs 1 ever tried in my life to make them both grow and fat ten at the same time. February or March pigs make tho cheapest meat that we can raise, generally making 250 and IlOO-poutid hogs in the fall.” Tlte Sure La (.rlp|»«- Cure. There is no use suffering from this dreadful malady, if you will only get the right remedy. You are having pain all through your body, your liver is out of order, have no appetite, no life or ambition, have a bad cold, in fact are completely used up. Elec tric Bitters is the only remedy that will give you prompt and sure relief. They act directly on your Liver, Stomacl and Kidneys, tone up the whole system and make you feel like a new being. They are guaranteed ty cure or price refunded. For sale at DuPre Drug Company Store, only 50 cents per bottle. Mk. Editor :—Will you please give us who live away over here in this new township, space enough in your columns to say Home few things to the public, on some subjects now before us of general interest to all. In the first place the cord of our worthy tSuperintendant of Education in your issue 17th inst. culls for very careful consideration of every tax payer in the county, as well us trus tees, teachers and friends of educa tion. It will bo impossiblejin a short letter to summarise all the reasons why this card so materially concerns us all, therefore I shall only sketch at the more prominent ones now first. It is clear to my mind that our Superintendant most earnestly desires, that trustees and teachers so harmoniously and effectively work together as to secure the enrollment ami advancement in their several studies of every child of legal school uge in the district to which they belong. Now the best means to secure these aims are the ones he desires to see used. The first one of these duties unquestionably devolves upon the trustees, that is; to aid the patrons in securing a teacher who is not only competant to meet all the wants of such school, but also able to retain tho entire confidence and support of every patron living in the school district. This Is sometimes difficult to do, but any other way works an injury to the school in more ways than one. First putrons will not heartily work with the teacher in making or trying to make the school a success. Second some •will not send, and as a consequence the school interest, not only of that school but the entire school interest of the county, is more or less weaken in this way; there is levied a three mill tax on all properties in each county especially for public school purposes and its provisions expect *o reach every child of school age in the State and the money can only beset aside for this purpose, for those only whose names appear on the reports handed to the Superintendent by the various teachers. Therefore no trus tee ought to he satisfied with any teacher who cannot draw around, she or he, the entire strength of the the district in which his or her school is located. We can only command our share of the money appropriated for school purposes by reporting in school by the teachers every child contemplated in the school law. These are two ways in which some of those moneys to which we are en titled may escape us. First, the Leg islature enacted that every school district in the State should have at least three months schools taught in them every year. The salary of these teachers must come from the general educational fund, because this law provides for all children and any district failing to enroll all en titled to free school privilege—and all are entitled—falls just as far short of their share of school moneys as there are children not enrolled in such dis trict and the moneys you ought to control are covered back into the general educational found. This is just what the law referred to as passed by the late general assembly con templates. Second, trustees some times seem to thime tho cheaper they can employ teachers the longer the public term of school. This might obtain if the ^salary of teach ers were uniform everywhere, not otherwise, for moneys not concerned in the districts in a general sense are transferable by tho State Superin- tendent.to any part of the State for school purposes where the general levy docs not meet the wants of the public school in such fields, especially is this is true, if such fields are ::*t able otherwise to run three months terms of school. So trurtees in this way make mis takes almost as inexcusable as ihose made by the parlies who refuse to send on account of dislike to the teacher. Neither of these mistakes is excusable in this progressive day. Then let us every one to whom this card of Mr. McArthur is addressed do all in our power to make successful all plans contemplated in it. To do this not a teacher in the county us well as trustees and all friends of education can afford to let any moment pass unimproved in order to make themselves more efficient fac tors for their several duties in their respective fields. Tho teachers school of training ought by all means to be attended by every teacher. It most certainly pays well for all lime spent in attending it. It is a necessity if teachers desire to keep progress with the fast age in which they live and surely none will neg lect to avail themselves of all gratui- ous benefits that will come to all who attend it. j„. jj. As the season 'rtf the year when pneumonia, la grippe, s>ro throat, coughs, colds, catarrh, bonchitis and lung troubles are to be guarded against, nothing “is a fine substitute,” will “answer the purpose.” or is ‘ just as good” as One Minute Cough Cure. That is the otic infallible remedy for all lung, throat or bron chial troubles. Insist vigorously upon having it if “something else” is offered YOU. Cherokee DrugCo., Gaff ney, 8. C . audit. 8. Withers, Blacks burg, 8. C. Aluminum is found combined with 19o other minerals, and bonce con stitutes a large part of the crust of the earth. For frost bites, burns, indolent sores, ezema, skin disease, and espe cially piles, DeWitt’s Witch Hazel 8alvo stands first and best. Look out for dishonest people who try to imi tate and counterfeit It. It is their endorsement of a good article. Worth less goods are not imitated. Get De- Witt's Witch Hazel Salve. Cherokee Drug Co.. Gaffney, 8. C., and R. 8. Witters, Blacksburg, 8. C. YOUR LORAL PAPER. HAVL YOU ANY IDEA OF WHAT IT HAS DONE FOR YOU? Anfl, i»» to Whnt Yon Miftht IJo In Itctiirn. Hnve You Kv«*r G1v*-ii That h Fnnalnir TlioiiKht f—An ICriltor'ii Interesting Review of the Subject. The paper has done 60 things for you and is only anxious to do 50 more. It told your frieuds whou your par- euts wore married. It announced to the world when you were boru. It recorded the great events of your childhood, when you were lost as a wandering baby, when you had the measles uud scarlet fever, when you fell into tho washtub and nearly drowned, when you fell from the cherry tree and broke your collar bone, when you first started to school and when you earned your first prize. Later ou it told how you had com pleted the studios of the district school and how eloquently you recited your graduating oration. It told of your entering high school or academy. It told of your contests iu baseball and tennis. It told of your de parture for college or your first venture in business. It told of your various visits back to the old homo neighborhood, and it al ways wished you well iu your greatest undertakings. It hinted modestly about tho first time you went a courtiug and gave timely warning to “box folks” that tho neighbors knew that matters wore grow ing interesting over their way. It announced tho time of your expect ed wedding, and it published tho notice of tho marriage license and gave you a nice puff concerning the wedding cere mony. It told of your extended honeymoon tour and of your settling down to house keeping. When you were sick, the homo paper week by week informed your more dis tant neighbors of your lapses and im provements. It told obout your lost cow and led to her recovery. It told how your horse had been stolen and led to the arrest of the thief. When you were getting dull and tired through the monotony of your labor, the paper urged that the people get up a celebration, and you were named as one of a suitable committee ou arrange ments. And when it was all over, it gave you just praise for the suceesa of tho undertaking. In numerous ways the paper has helped to put your name before tho peo ple. And you would never have had your luomtivo office or your honorable recoguition from tho community but for tho kind aid of tho local printer. If you are a member of a Sunday school or society of auy sort, that same paper publishes your aunouncements aud the various proceedings of your meetings. It tells the people much which you would like to have known, but which modesty or necessity prevents you from telling. If you nud all yoor folks have been prosperous and fortunate in your affairs, tho paper has boosted you all the way. If you have had misfortune, the paper asked for sympathy in your behall. Thus the paper has rejoiced when you rejoiced and wept when you wept. If you are a good and enterprising citizen, the paper will always he your friend and will back you iu your euterprises and will help to find your business friends. It tells you where to buy and where to sell. It tells of rogues to bo avoided. It tells you of current prices aud pre vents you from being cheated and swin dled in 100 ways. Finally, when you die, the paper will publish your obituary and will cover over your faults aud will recite the story of your good deeds. All these things tho local editor will cause his paper to do, but no one else iu the world will do them or cau do them for you even for love or mouey. Tho outside paper is a stranger to your little world and is not at all interested in its improvement. Yet your local pa per does all this free of cost to you, if you are willing to receive it that way. However, for your sake, wo hope you are too generous to accept so many un requited favors and that you are willing to reciprocate tho same. Help tho editor. Bo bis friend, and he will prove his friendship to yon. Snbs^ ibe for his paper and pay for it regularly in advance and get your neighbors to do the same. 8end him the news or occasionally a watermelon or a peck of peaches. Invite him to your picnics and fam ily dinners, so that ho can eat a square meal occasionally. Don’t call the ticket you give him to the church concert a deadhead. He can’t buy tickets from everybody to everythiug, but he will say kind words of your performances and thus lead oth ers to buy your tickets. If you have anything to buy or sell, let tho paper assist you to find custom ers. Advertising that really pays the printer benefits both advertisers and readers. If yon have auy job printing to do, don’t take it to an outside office, but give your newspaper tho first chance. Give tho editor a pointer occasionally or write him sensible short articles and don’t get mad if he fails to see every- diing your way. When he does say a good thing, tell him so. In short, remember the golden rule and don’t forget the editor of your local paper.—Richmond (lud.) Enterprise. Think Over Year i-inn. The novelist can give the preacher some good points and especially in the matter of tho sermon plan. After Zola had collected some 1,700 pages of notes and arranged them in order, he writes about “Lourdes:” “My book is finish ed; I have only to write it.” George Eliot would make several drafts of her plot before she wrote a line. Of Mrs Henry Wood her biographer says: “The great amount of thought and de liberation bestowed npon her books was always at the commencement. 8he would first compose her plot—a matter of extreme care and deliberation, where nothing was passed over or hurried. This wonld take her about three weeks •f very close application, and until the whole was accomplished not one word of tho novel was written.” As a rule, the more time a preacher spends over tho plan of his sermon, the less t’me will he need to spend on its composi tion. —Homiletic Review. UuiilnctA KntrrprlNe In Fnrl*. Occasionally as 1 take myjjwalks abroad I am quite paralyzed at tho amount of enterprise shown by certain French business houses. One morning, contemplating taking a traiu at half past 11, it occurred to me to stop in somewhere before going to the station aud buy a book to read on tho journey. It was an idea that seemed to me at that time simple and practical. I bought the book—price 2 francs 75 centimes, or about 55 cents—at a largo bookstore on tho Avenne de 1’Opera (not Flarnmarion’s), and then discov ered I had nothing in my purse smaller than a 100 franc note with which to pay for it. Tho salesman looked at this seriously and tho cashier said they had no change. It was too early in the morning to have any change, he said. From the way he looked at me I could see he thought people had no business to be abroad at that hour buying books anyway. I ex pressed in polite terms my regret at giving trouble, and also inquired if they preferred I should give up my book or if it would be possible to change the note somewhere. The staff of the house was evidently represented by three persons—the cash ier, the salesman and a small boy—and the small boy was finally sent out with the bill. I waited 25 minutes, and then ventured to suggest tlxat I was leaving town and had no time to lose. “At this hour of the morning, madame”—said the salesman, as though that was the end of it. I lost my train.—Katharine de Forest in Harper’s Bazar. Brulna. Talking of brains reminds me that a young medical friend tho other day showed me an abnormally large speci men of the human thinking apparatus, carefully preserved, and which he pur posed to send to Cornell university. He was not quite snro, however, whether he conld not put the brains to some better purpose or present them to somebody more in need of brains. To print tho list of prominent men which he rattled off at random between whom he might divide them equally and thus double their share of wisdom would be libelous. “It is a pity to let brains go a-beg ging,” said my friend, “but unfortu nately that is often the way of tl j world.” When I suggested that lj might put them up at auction and 8 se how much they would fetch, ho replie l: “Very little, I’m afraid. Every cio professes to admire brains, but loves lis money better—besides, brains can be bought so cheap nowadays—but i I conld get hold of a good big lumj of gall—that is what always fetches ihe money in this world.” When my friend asked me if I could make any nse of them, I told him I would try. I did not take them from him. I merely did as I am told is occa sionally done by tho best regulated newspaper writers. I got a little story out of another fellow’s brains.—New York Telegram. Tlie All ICiubracintf. “What have you here?” asked the fresh young man of the waiter at a first class restaurant. “Everything, sir.” “Everything?” sneeringly. “Have it served at once. ” “Hash for one!” yelled the waiter.— Detroit Free Press. O < > (> 11 (l < > 11 !! 9 < > <' (» < > < > < > i > i > It s Easy To Take! O l > & Thin, pale, anaemic girls j[ | [ need a fatty food to enrich j [ ! | their blood, give color to | j {| their cheeks and restore their; j )| health and strength. It is ! I safe to say that they nearly! \ ] | all reject fat with their food. ] j >! is exactly what they require; it not only gives them the im-; ; portant element (cod-liver oil)! > in a palatable and easily di- < |; gested form, but also the hypo-; ! phosphites which are so valua-! ! ble in nervous disorders that | < > usually accompany anxmia. ; | SCOTT’S EMULSION is a! | fatty food that is more easily | digested than any other form | of fat. A certain amount of! flesh is necessary for health. ] You can get it in this way. j We have known per-1 sons to gain a pound a | day while taking it. \ Soc. and $i oo, all druggist*. ' iCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, New York. You should keep posted on tho issues of the day. Don’t worry your neighbor by borrow ing his paper when you can get The Ledger for $1 a year, 50c for si? months, or 25c for thre< months. It will keep yoi posted, so order it at once. Don’t deltty. Royal w Absolutely 'Pure Baking Powder Makes the food more delicious and wholesome ftOV/U BAKING POWDER CO.. MW YORK. 9 Rnvltali Election Bribe*. Parliamentary candidatee will find •omething to interest them in the recent publication of the Iristorioal mauu- •cripta commission. Among the Ailes- bnry papers we read that at Marlbor ough iu 1712 the Duke of Somerset offered an elector for his vote, on behalf of a nominee, a pension of £20 per aimnm for life ana to make him porter of Sion House. To another ho offexed a pension of £40, with a post worth an other £40 a year, and to others he gave sums of mouey varying from £20 even up to £250. Again he promised to edu cate tho son of a burgess and present him to a good living as soon as he was old enough. Strange to say, the duke's candidate was unsuccessful. He was a Whig, aud it is suggested that the To ries must have been more liberal.—Lon don Mail. Tli« Wooden Nutmeg. The protest against the use of the wooden nutmeg as an emblem of the state of Connecticut, at least by Con necticut men, has a plausible excuse. It seems absurd that we should appear to be proud of a symbol of dishonesty, especially a symbol which is itself dis honest and not justified by any event in the state’s history. Bat the protest is rather ’ ite. Is it not possible that our honest thirft, our industry and commercial success have won for us the right to ignore the significance of the emblem and make of it in a way a badge of honor ?—Waterbury American.. A Nencondvelor. Manager of Trolley Line—I think we can take you. What is your name? Applicant—Glass. Manager of Trolley Line—Good day, sir. You can never be a conductor.— Brooklyn Life. A Narrow Kitrapf. Thankful words written by Mrs. Ada E. Hart, of Groton, 8. I). “Was taken with a cold which pettled on my lungs; cough set in and finally terminated in Consumption. Four Doctors gave me up, saying I could live but a short time. I gave myself up to my Savior, determined if I could not stay with my friends on earth, I would meet my absent ones above. My husband was advised to get Dr. King’s New Discovery for Conmmption, Coughs and Colds. I gave it a trial, took in all tight bot- t'os. It has cured me, and thank God 1 am saved and row u well and healthy woman.” Trial bottles free at DuPre Drug Company Store. Regular size oOo and ifl (X). Guaran teed or price refunded. Tax Notice. T HE time for payment of commutation tax Is extended until April 1st. J. 11. Jones. 3-21-31 Treas.. Cherokee Co. Real Estate For Sale. For sale, on liberal terms, five tracts of i land adjointu# Limestone property. Tracts ! vary in acreage from 101, to 70 3-10. Also eljrht lots of the hotel property at! Limestone. Excellent, building sites and i cheap. The old hotel and lot is also for sale. . Apply to R. O. Sams. FOR Up-to-Date Job Print ing, call at the LEDGER Office. Gaffney, S. C. FeanutN for Stork. [Southern Farm Magi/.lne.) Farmers in the vicinity of Alvin, Texas, have found that Spanleh pea nuts make excellent food for stock, ns the animals eat both root and branch, growing sleek on them. “Give mo a liver regulator and I can regulate the world.” said a genius. The druggist handed him a bottle of Dewitt’s Little Early Risers, the fa mous little pills. Cherokee Drug Co , Gaffney, 8. C., and R. 8. Withers, Blacksburs. 8. C. with you whether you continue the, nerTo-icilliug tobeccu hebit. NO-TO-MA 1 " remores the desire for tobee.-o, with out nervouniiisiress. expels nlc<K - tine, purifies the blood, re stores lost msnhood I you strong in healtn, nerve and pocket- book. told. 400.000 ed. Buy esses cured. Buy i-BACfrom _ your own druggist, who will vouch for us. Take it with • will, petiently, persistently One box, gl. usually cures; 3 boxes, BX M, guaranteed to cure, or we refund money. •terUer kwaeSyt.., Chine., keelreel, lew letL NOTICE. I carry in stock a tine of Dry Goods, Notions, Shoes, Hats, Crockery, Hardware, Tinware, Glassware, Groceries, Tobac- coes, Seed Potatoes, D. M. Ferry’s Garden seeds and a general line of merchandise, all of which I sell cheap for cash. Call to see me and get my prices. Respectfully, I. M. PEELER. For Sale^^ 125,000 SHINGLES Finest shlng'lcs In town? ull heart, and as imiooth as If dressed. All full leiiRth. Call and examine them. Also full line of FLOORING, CEILING SASH, DOORS. Ac. L. BAKER. Face-to-face battles are quickest won. The place to get bargains is where business is done. Our advertising is as carefully done as our buying, and every article is exactly as described. You will always find greater bargains in onr store than you were led to believe. Have you tried One ot Our Little “Pig Hams?” If not try one, for they weigh from 5 lbs to 10 lbs only. We have just received an other barrel of that deli cious “Hominy Flake.” Lipscomb & Alexander, The Kings of low prices. '♦1 '♦1 We sell D. M. Ferry’s seeds—reliable % i v V v and too well known here to require V ♦' v '> comment. ♦ v V We cannot sell them for half price, V V V ’♦5 ¥ but the papers are full quantity--Sets V V V $ >< each, and not the half quantity papers V $ * ♦; that you can buy two for Sets. V v V V V £ S. B. CRAWLEY & CO. * V rv li I Don’t Want a Cent of your qkS^ey unless you get value received for it. For that reason I :*TTralways glad to have you look around the store and learn hov much better you can do here than anywhere else, FOR MY GROCERIES, CIGARS ARC TOBACCO are equal, if not superior, to those of any merchant in the city and the prices are invariably right. New goods constantly arriv ing. Spend your dollars and cents with me and I guarantee you will always ho satisfied. "Waltei- Tiaker*. RESIDENCE LOTS FOR SALE BY Cherokee Land Company. We have some of the most desirable lands for residences any where to be found. You can select just what you want. You will not be surrounded by disagreeable neighbors. You can se lect it so that you will have no town taxes to pay. It is located within 250 yards of Southern depot. Cheap prices and easy terras. N. H. LITTLEJOHN, Mgr. t