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♦SI I ICI< I I^I^'JS tSvVI^IO At the Boston Bargain Store ! have just bought a big stock of goods at a sheriff’s sale in Greenwood. I bought them at a very low figure and I am selling them at less than they can be bought at wholesale this day in the Eastern market. This stock em braces Clothing, Shoes, Hats, Gents’ Furnish ings, Dry Goods, Millinery, Corsets, Notions, etc. It would take all the columns of The Led ger to enumerate the bargains I am offering, but I will give you a few sample prices : CLOTHING. One lot suits, formerly sold at $3.7a, at $’2 One lot suits, formerly sold at $.>.>►<>, ai 3 ds One lot suits, formerly sold at $8.50, at o 93 One lot suits, formerly sold at $ 10.7)0, at < 98 One lot of men’s working pants at dr>c, l'.le and 9<8c per pair. 300 pair woolen Sunday pants, formwlv sold at $ 1 .<>0 to $3, ooiu^ at 08c, .tl .48, $2.24 and $2.98 for the best. Children’s pants, all ages, JOe a pair and up. Children’s suiU in proportion. SHOES. One lot of men’s brogans and Sunday shoes at Toe and 9oe, formerly sold at $1 and Jjsi.dO. Men’s $2.50 at $1.75. Men’s $1.75 at $1.2 4. One lot Ladies’ fine shoes, formerly sold at $1.50 and $2, will sell at 75c, $1.24, $2.00 and $8. Ladies shoes at $1.59 and $1.98. A full line of Children’s shoes, HATS. Men’s hats, formerly sold at 05c, at 89c. $1 hats at 75c. $1.50 hats at 98c. Fine" Railroad hats, $1.50 and $2, to be sold at 98c and $1.48. LADIES’ SKIRTS. $1.50 skirts at 98c. $4 skirts at $2.04. $7 skirls at $4.99. GENTS’ FURNISHING GOODS. 50c shirts at 84c. $1 Fnited Brand at 09c. 10c collar at 5c. 15c collar at 10c. 25c tics at 1 >c and 18e. ->0c tie at 88r. Liti GOODS. Calicoes at 4c. Fine Cashmere, 19e. worth 85c. Fruit of the loom bleaching. 1-1, at 7'ie. 10-4 bleaching ;u 19c, worth 2."c. Lining oi all colors. 4e. knitting eotton thrt'.ad at L>c ]>er jouml. $1.25 biaukt Is ;>t <.)e per ji;:ir. $8 blankets at $1.98 ] er pair. 75c and $1 comforts at 49c ;iud 09c. CORSETS. 200 25c corset - at 19.\ Laurel 50c corsets at 88c. N. II. 50c. corsets at 8>>c. '4. il. $1 corsets at ti9(•. R. R. .s.^c corsets at Ole^. P $1.5o corsets at Oi^c. It. A C. o>c corsets at o9e. R. A (<. $1 corsets at 74c. ( '. B. 85c corsets at 09c. This stock also embraces a lot of magnifi cent Umbrellas, Trunks, Valises, etc. These goods must go and will positively be sold as advertised. Gome before they are picked over and secure a real bargain. AI . I ‘O IVIAA IvOI'IA in the fu- selection of it will not be an audience We have just received our first installment of embracing the latest novelties in carpet and damask effects, and at the very best values to be had. We have also added a line of Window $5*Ii£ide^ in felts, water colors and some fast Hollands, and our line of Rugs can’t be surpassed. All other lines full up and at the low est possible prices. See us before buying, and we will be glad to have you call whether you buy or not. Respectfully, Having bought the entire interest in the lumber business of J. F. Ezell, of the firm of J. E. 14/ell A Co., 1 will continue to carry a full line of Builders’ Material. The same will be sold as cheap as it can be bought anywhere. Mr. E/ell will still he with me, and will he glad to serve his friends and customers with the* same courtesy as heretofore. Yours for trade, T. I. WALKER Tl)« Gifusj Gil) Laud and irapmenujl Company Offers for sale Butldinjr Lots In lliis flourislilny town, OafTnoy City; Also Farms n--..r by and In reael. of tin- Sidiools of I. i most one Sprlnys and of 1 Lis place, in lots of fiorr MU) Iik) in i < s on liU'ral time rat i s; tilso Afrriculturul L::nds U'n;ut for Farm uur- poses. For full particulars apply 1.0 j. v. a^jh. N. K.—All t re.sspassl n on lands of this com pa uy. cutlin and rernovtm; 11 re her. tisfitiiyor hu nt iiijt are for hidden under petniltv of >■, w THE GIRL FROM CHILI. A Liuu^liabl^ Farre by h Comi'-iuy of Capa ble ComiikediaitM. The initial performance at the opera house since passing into the hands of Mr. \V. H. Ross demon strated the fact that lie has a good conception of what will please the public. The weather all day Wed nesday was anything but propitious for a large audience but by night it cleared up and there was at or.ee a rush for tickets to see “The Girl from Chili.” It can be safely said that if Mr. Ross continues to display the same good judgment ture that he did in the his first attraction that a difficult matter to grt for a show in Gaffney. The play was a rediculous farce in which there was little or no plot, but ; in the hands of the capable company sent here by Mr. Fitz it served us a vehicle for laughing purposes. Mr. Lysander Hourt, us Robert Light- ! heart, a cheerful liar, was all that could be desired. He. assisted by Mr. Mudge, Mr. Sherman, Mr. Mar- j tin, and Miss Carrall, kept the audi ence in a state of laughter from the rise of the curtain in the first act to the full in the last with breathing t pells between. Tiie other members of the company sustained their parts in a most creditable manner. All who went txpreesed themselves as delighted and all who failed to go missed one of the l est chances th y ever had of enjoying a hearty iaugh. luriu Work Jleliiiul. During the dry weeks of this year the ground was frozen too hard lo work, and now for some weeks it has been too wet. Very few spring outs have been planted, scarcely any ground I,as been plowed since Cbrist- m i< 8'me farnu r>\ however, have • t <• I’lsid. rab:e work repairing and - iinigibeiiing terraces and clearing sorubs and briars from their lands, making them ready for the plow. Ji rained all day Wednesday which will almost knock out the-chances of a spring out crop and retard much ot < r impmiai.t work which should have been done in this month. N > gardening lias been done. Rut suit able weather always has come, and n i people know better how lo make the most of it than d >es the average Cherokee farmer We look f ir hus tling among our farneTs som, and when they do get straightened out they will make things happen so rap idly that to see them moving would inspire a siedh. Wheat and oats have stood the heavy free zes remarkably well. Some howevi r, have been damaged, but i :s thought not materially. Tin- lii l! Stas Arrivt-il. Some time ago John Geddes inter ested himself in the matter of raising funds for the purpose of purchasing a bell for the new church edifice of the Liin st®ne Street Methodist j Church. He was one of the most persistent solicitors ever seen in this section, and he succeeded in securing the necessary subscription to the fund. The bell arrived several days ' ago and John began the work of Col lecting the subscription. It was ; pretty hard work but John has now 1 finished and the bell is paid for, and he rt quests us to say that “Her peo- ! pie neeria nota crosser de scrceta ! whena da see a me now, as J ha va col lected alia dvr mon, and dey needu : nota be erfraid of me.” A New Comer. Mr. Hugo 8. Dodenhofl has opened j an office in Gaffney and will deal in general insurance, real estate, stocks and bonds. Ho will deal in city and county property. Mr. Doden- boif seems up in his business and we trust that his venture in Gaffney will he equal to his most sanguine expect ations. The claim of other cough medi cines to be as good as Chamberlain’s are clfectuully set at rest in tFe fol lowing testimonial of Mr. C. J). Glass, an employe of Jiartlett A Den nis Co., Gardiner, Me. He says: “l had kept adding fo a cold and cough in the winter of J897, trying every cough medicine I heard of without permanent help, until one day i was in the drug store oi Mr. Houlehan and he advised me to try Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy and offered to pay back my money if I was not cured. My lungs and bronchial tubes were very sore at this time, but J wa 3 completely cured by this remedy, and have since always turned to it when I got a cold, id hoop, find relief. I ai-o recom- ’ I i! ; o my friends and am glad to ay it is the best of all cough in :• iris” For sale by Cherokee Drug Company. (lone to Join tli«*'Anjftrli». Freddie Willie Madora Byars, the eight year old daughter of W. J). and Madra Byars, died at the home of her parents last Saturday, after a long illness. She was a bright little sunbeam that God had given the loving parents for a brief space of titne that they might learn to love and to cherish her. But He saw fit to call herayayaud may the grief stricken parents find it in their hearts to say, “Thy will be done.” The funeral wss conducted last Sabbath by Rev. J. M. Bridges of this city. M<'l>ani4l-.M ullinax. On Tuesday at the residence of Rev. W. V. Moss, in King's Creek neighborhood, Mr. W. R. McDaniel and Miss Gracie Muilinax were united in wedlock, the Jtev. Mr. Moss officiating. These young peo ple belong to worthy families of Cher okee township and have a host of friends who will wish them much joy and happiness in their married life. A Clu i'okft- iialKt'd Jltt-f. L. W. McGwinn, one of the enter prising market men of Gaffney, killed a stall fed beef last Tuesday that ru t ted Co) pounds. Mr. McGwinn in formed a Ledge r representative that this was probably tiie finest beef ever k'Mod in this county. The beef was raised n Cherokee, and hud been stall fed for several months before being killed. The Fair will have its annual opening white goods sale on YIOTV S > A'V II. 2i<>, Women as Well as Men Are Made Miserable by Kidney Trouble. Kidney trouble preys upon the mind, dis courages and lessens ambition: beauty, vigor and cheerfulness soon i' y 9 disappear when the kid neys are out of order ' or diseased. Kidney trouble has become so prevalent | that it is not uncommon for a child to be born i afflicted with weak kid- . ’ neys. If the child urin- ! ales too often, if the | urine scalds the flesh or if, when the child reaches an age when it should be able to control the passage, it is yet afflicted with ^ bed-v/etting. depend upon it. the cause of the difficulty is kidney trouble, and the first ; step should be towards the treatment of these important organs. This unpleasant trouble is due to a diseased condition of the kidneys and bladder and not to a habit as most people suppose. V/omen as well as men are made mis erable with kidney and bladder trouble, and both need the same great remedy. effect of : It is sold The mild and tin, immediate Swamp-Root is soon realized, by druggists, in fifty- fC i cent and one dollar i ^ sizes. You may have a| sample bottle by mail free, also pamphlet tell- Home of SwampRoot. ! ing all about it, including many of the thousands of testimonial letters received | from sufferers cured. In writing Dr. Kilmer & Co.. Binghamton, N. Y., be sure and mention this paper. Hugo S. Dcdenhoff, Insurance - and - Real - Estate. | Farm :iii<I ■•ity propi i t;, fur sale, i i'actory sit' s \yu.i;!inI. lti>u.s.‘s rentwj and j ; ri'iit ••oiU rtvd < ' i'i•.-;>■ •:!<: hr " inviu-d. J-.i.dii-.'xiiii tun-si-uy li nisc and lot Hi \:*iiO | • feet, on Cherokee avenue, for sale at a bar- j i F :i 'n. < diev, Footn f over I». A. Jones Co. Phone No. inu. beginning at 9 a. m. A beautiful and stylish stock has been laid in for this season and the prices for this day only will be made very at tractive and far less than the worth of the goods. This sale will embrace everything usu ally included under the name of white goods, dimities, lawns, nainsooks, piques, ducks, em broideries, percales, calicoes and everything that is to wear and delights the feminine mind. For this sale only 12' and 15c checked and striped dimity will be sold at 8c a yard; fine grade of 19 and 24c dimity at 1 2'c; nice qual ity of plain white lawn 5c; 9 and 12ic nainsook 6c; 14 and 19c nainsook at 10c. The price of all 40 and 50c striped and dot ted piques will be for this sale 24c; 24c satin striped piques 19c; best quality lace striped pique, worth 14 and 19c, 10c; i9c soft finish, light piques, s2c; best grade white duck 10c; any piece of embroidery in the store, 10c. These prices, as will be seen, are scarcely more than half the worth of these goods and will be good for the day of sale only. Monday, February 26. Best Prescription ior Malaria, Chills and Fever, y . a IfYIVP' Q i < %A V W O is. ^ .o Lwlwoo VJ Those win; vvitnubsr ! the '•(Jirl fnua Chili" ; peiTtmuanee lust Wednesday ni}rht evidently j enjoyed themselves, if Liuyhler e.m t>e taken [ ! as titi itulieatioii. Those v.ho purchase thetr Staple and I utiey Croeenes. t i/.iis, iohaee », < liUteetioiieries and Fruits of uswillenjo^ ; themselves, as the priec- are a-, low as is eon- 1 si.-.teiit w ith jzood business and tl • poods are as pood as the best. All {foods delivered in i the city, and everythin}; iruarunteed to he | just as we represent it to he. (Jive us a. call when ip need of anything In j our line. PEELER k GAFFNEY. Just Received a 11e>]i hn of I.owney's n'e.1 “uunaiiy's Chocolates and Bonbons. loose and in packages whh-h is t in- finest and j | best line of e.. udies in town, j (Jive us a vail for anythin# you want in ' fine confectioneries. It is simply Iron and Ouiiiine in a tasteless form.... Sold by every druotrist iii tiie iiiaianal sections cf the United States No cure, no pay— Price, 50c L h Lj* ■C? a. a tS*»^ 4» ft. o .s f J: It S; makes w T»>- ^ i dnuiREM r-- .w : ^ACuUS s A v m ^TAS igm bk,,. First Tasteless Tonic ever manufactured- All other so-called “Taste less" Tonics are imita tions.. Ask any druggist about this who is not PUSHING an imitation, va T 4% 1 . cn'v ’ t, *v ■ 'il^ , H T ' ® vM .Si® ot. Ixhjis, 1:0., Feb, G, 1S50. j Piliis tT-sicirra Co., City. Goi: tic..tv ■:—V7'' w’c’i to coitgrcit utato you! 0.1 11’ ; • :* * vc lu’ j| Orov •'j J'r/: Cit eya.i Itlistff 'S.’.I' r< >ri :■» j:., ; ' 1 <ls,to ' ■ '■ J j ... 1st. \ find that V. 1 ZaSOl: < Jj->;, / Pa; gfjgTAILf^ i. ..C*, ti J. t ■ .k: CA:.-; o-a c-.i, va CcJ 1. a'l irip : re a 1 a..} * ' dad obilso, ...ea b..—ov/xta, ivv fe.LY&K UJita OIL v: — f . • -’e *rvc t or eight differ* ” <:’■ Jt I ce'.l tea bottles '■* t > >vli; I : ! l cixof t'cc otjuw:;. xotticz ox GzwTi flit— 'Tonic in i •-‘■-"i 1 i h .vo sol l more .1 I ha-1 Hr. I) ive Woods cured £vo cases cL.UjVi.i-c.. ..<>tUe. LviPoctfuilv, JCHZf T ViNYA&D. CONSUMER. WnimsBoao, Tex., Sep. IS, UM> Pas:3 MsoretNa Co., St. Louis, Mo. CK-nilcntcn;—I write you a few lines of erst* itude. I think your Grove’s ToMieIc*3<ShfII 7ou'r,tt i-: oao of t bo best medicines in the world I r Chills and Fever. I have throo childrea that have been down with malarial fercr for 18 inontbs and have bcufjht Chill medicines of sU !:ir. '•} and Doctor’s bills coinin«r in all the time until I rent to town and got throo bottles of Crov<'*a Tonic. My children arc all wdi now and it wag yourTastclwn Chill Tonic that dw it. 1 cannot say too much in its behalf. Yours truly, JAilLd D. BOBEBXB* nil Parlor Grocery. Money to Loan FIRE, LIFE A?.D ACCIDENT INSURANCE. On farn.injr lands. Fm- y |. l ynie..ts. No com- | When you nw .1 a Fire. Life or Ace! lent ,iiis>:o;n* s}*e<t. I4.jr,-..wer pays.-u-tuul cost i Policy e;,!! and get otfes and iulormaliou. of tx:rf<'< t!HK lotiu. j men St « per tent. | Vour business solicited. JNO. U. I’ALMKU & HON. j Prompt attention. or MKSSin:. WALLACE A (N't.UAtUyV. C ' | JONES J. DARBY, Agt. (JattriOV. f*. C. Office over li. A. Jones & Co.’s store. COTTON J’LANTLKS wini .•ire interested in hi^li prices for eotton next fail can hear of somethin;* to their ad- vanta/e hy M'lidluga postal card at once to 'J itK ADAMS COTTON COMI’ANY, Charleston, S. C. 2-J0-4t 11 H t >1 ilfatTV , riie iincl IVc w'esrit I Hook in IIoy«’ Hat®. Wo;ii- One of Our “K. 15. it." IXitts*. fc4eo TJts I tef'oi-o You Ituv. Our line of Men’s and Beys’ Shirts have just arrived. You can buy our $1 shirt hereto for 90c. Think of it! We have the best shirt for 50c. you ever wore. The Ladies can’t afford to pass our large stock of Shirt Waists from 50c. to $1.50. Be sure and see our line. V/ecan save you money on Shirt-Waist Goods and Percales. W'e have some special bargains in this department. Nov/ is the titne to buy your shoes. See and cal! for Drew-Selby & Co.’s Special. Wear one pair and you will have no other. Bear in mind, Men and Boys, that we have the Bostonian. This shoe has a rep. that knocks out all others. We are offering bargains in every departments and if the people will give us their business we will surely save them money. Our Embroidery Sale is Every Day, v snd we have enough for one and all. Just give us a call and we will try and please you. Yours truly, uriTK