University of South Carolina Libraries
Women as Well as Men Are Made Miserable by Kidney Trouble. Kldnry trouble preys upon the mind, dis courager and lessens ambition; beau.y, vigor and cheerfulness soon disappear when the kid neys are out of order or diseased. Kidney trouble has , become so prevalent a that it is not uncommon for a child, to be born A A afflicted with weak kid- 11' neys. If the child urin ates 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-wetting, depend upon it. the cause of the difficulty is kidney trouble, and the first step should be towards the treatment of these ijaportan* organs. This unpleasant trouble is due to a diseased condition of the kidneys and bladder and not to a habit as most people suppose. Women as well as men are made mis erable with kidney and bladder trouble, and both need the same great remedy. The mild and the immediate effect of Swamp-Root is soon realized. It is sold by druggists, in fifty- fC'f cent and one dollar sizes. You may have a sample bottle by mail free, also pamphlet tell- nom© of swamp Root, 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. COCAINE**»wm$KY ! ft SPJIwl Habiu Cure<t at m;- Senator * ” ■ i um . In #0 «. U m trod. Li of raferoncos. 25 years a apFciaity-. Root ou ri Huim; 'i reutmout aent KREL. A<! trea^ B. M. WOOLLEY. M. D.. A iai.'w. r-,. • / For FBEB L j Utm Scfeolarshif POSITIONS "GUARANTEED, Under $3,000 Cash Deposit. Hal road Far* Paid. frpas all rear to Both Eaxrs. Very Cheap Board. Georfcia-Alabaina Business College, Macon, tborgik. Reed end Take Warning, farmer Hrown “(jOfxJ uiorniiii;. Ilro. t-niitli, have you lieard the newsy /.t'hulori lia’ris was burned out ioek, stoek and bairel this mornitnr; lie and family barely escaping with their lives from the burning house. One of their babies was badly burm il. for they forgot it when they ran out. hut Z< h put a blanket over Ills head and ran into the room where it was in a cra dle and got out Miih it Ids hands are badly blistered too. All their clothing, furniture and supp!ies for t his year was lost lie didn't save anylhb'g. M's. Harris is prostrated and Zeb fe us It will kill her. They have six ba bies. t ie* oldest • nly 10 years old. Poor fel low, he is ruined I” Farmer l-mlth ‘'ile was insured In the Cherokee Mutual, wasn’t he? I saw the agent at liis house last week talking to him about insuring Ids house and contents.” Itrovvn "No. he did not Insure. The agent told him he would insure Ids bouse for#400, furniture and clothing for #100; that the cost would he#;.V» fot first year and tlgfa eacli year after on that amount, hut Zeb said he would wail awhile, for lie needed the money to buy a ls<\ of tobacco now, and wanted to make a go»xi psyment on his land mortgage in \t fall; so I am ' tying to m t upmo'ieyto buy Mrs. Harris and their babies some gar ments to put on. but everybody says Zeb ought to have protected himself by taking out a Holley in the Cherokee Mutual Insur ance Company. which was organ)mi for such cases, and they doa’t have much sympathy for him. for this company is prompt to meet the losses of its inernirers ” Uev. A. 1>. DAVIDSON. Gaffney. Agent. Mk. FRANK McUINKY. fe Abingdon. Agent. Money to Loan on City and Farm Prop erty and Mill Stock. JAMICm A. Attorney. A FREE BRIDGE Has Keen liuilt Over Cherokee Creek, Leading to Cherokee Ferry, Direct line fromGaffney to Blacksburg and Antioch. Open at all hours night and day. Come and try it. Terms cheap as the cheap est. .1 NO. L. BLACK. DR. J. F. GARRETT, Dentist, Gaffney, - - - S. C. Office over J. R. Tollebon’B new store In office from let to 26th of each month: Dr. C. T. LIPSCOMB. Dentist, Office over ft. A. lone* ft Co ’• Store Can be fotird .t efHce sir days In the w©eV G. W. SPEER, AX KOI* N KV AT-I^A W. GAFFNEY, S. C. Office over •. >V. Tolleson’s Store. N. W. HARDIN, LAWYER. I’rac’icu iu all Courts and ail branches of the Law. Office over J. \Y. Tolleson’s store. Office hours from '* ■*) a in. to U p. in. every day in the week. WALLACE & OTTS, LAWYERS. Office upstairs, between U. A. Jones and Davenport. Phone 87. J. E. WEBSTER, kkt 1 orney-l.va.'w* Bee in Court House. (Probate Judge soffice Gaffney City, S. C. Practices in ail thecourti. Colleo- onu a specialty -f J. C. JEFFERIES4- OAFFNEV, S.C. Coranierrlal Law. Corporation La, Beal Katatti Law. Money to loan on approved security. JAMES A. WILLIS, ATPORNKY AT LAW. < * A. Y. O. Notary I'obi'.c In office. Prompt attention ylven to wi, business. Offi *« over U. A. Jones ft Co.’s store, D. U Du' ' so C. P.Sanders. W.H.Hall.Jr Dl'lCAH, SANDERS & HALL, Auo^noyf-at-Law. l>«c« jvti it ToUa oa' Oo.'i Ivors- MY CAPTIVE. By JOSEPH A. AITSHELER, AuUwr of "A SuldUr v) MauhtiUan," Hum of fiomtovu," Etc. {top.TTfflit. 1WI0. by Jr>Kph A. AlUbr'.er.l In preparing this story fer the press in last issue our aiske-up, be ing somewhat frustrate,! by the thought of his coming nuptrials, in advertantly got the matter somewhat mixed up. We therefore reprint it for the benefit of our readers who have been enjoying the story. CHAPTER X IN MORGAN'S CAMP. Thru wo proceeded to the encamp ment, and Colonel Washingtou himself went with us, his plans being changed by my news. Aly head was buzzing with excitement We were going to fight Tarleton at last, though with all the odds against us, numbers, discipline and arms, while Tarleton himself had won his reputation as the ablest and most successful cavalry commander iu the British service. We might again experience the disgrace and disaster of Camden, but Morgan was no Gates, and perhaps, on the other hand, we might equal the exploit of the wild borderers at King’s Mountain, though it was a little too much to hope for that But still we would fight, and to a young man it always seems better to light than to run. “Old comrade, J * 1 said to my horse, “we light the enemy tomorrow!” He nodded joyously aud then looked gravely at the bandage around my head. “It is nothing,” 1 said "I will take it off tonight. My.head is well. ” He nodded again, as if all his trou bles were over The wife of Captain Dunn ot the South Carolina militia was in the camp, a lady whom I knew, my distant kins woman, and Julia was given into her charge. "Take good care of her, Cousin An na, ’ 1 said. "Remember that she is my prisoner. ” “ Ydor prisoner, is she?" she replied enigmatically “But remember, Philip, that the captor often becomes the cap tive. ” “Cousin Anna.” 1 said indignantly, “1 hope you are not going to preach our defeat by Tarleton ou the very eve of battle. It will have a discouraging ef fect.-' “1 said nothing about the battle. Go and attend to your work, Philip. 1 will take care of the girl. ” To Julia 1 said: “We fight tomorrow, and I may not see you again. ” Then I bent down and kissed her lips. She replied very simply and earnestly: “May you live through it, Philip!” Cousin Anna’s back was turned, and sho did not see or hear. I turned away and began to examine the camp and this field, destined to bo the scene of a memorable battle which tvas itself the opening of ono of the greatest, most skillful and successful campaigns ever conducted on the soil of our continent. We were on a long slope, consisting of several hills rising above each other like the seats of an amphitheater, though at a much greater elevation, as the slope was so slight that it offered no impediment to the gallop of a horso. The men were gathering up old rails, which they were using for the camp fires, and I noticed many old tracks of the feet of animals. To my question one of the men said: “We are going to fight where the cows pastured. Don’t you know that this army is camped ou the cow pens of a very worthy man named I lunnah? And these rails are the last that are left of his pens. ” Behind us flowed the wide, deep and anfordable Broad river, retreat thus be ing cut off iu case of defeat. I asked the meaning of this strange military ma nouver which meant either victory or destruction, aud again the explanation was ready: “More than half of our men are mili tia, and you can never tell whether militia will run like rabbits or tight like devils. All early signs fail, and General Morgan says it’s cheaper to have the river behind us and make ’em fight than to station regulars in the rear to shoot down the cowards. ” Presently I saw General Morgan him self passing among the men and prepar ing for the expected attack iu the morn ing This was one of our real heroes, a fighter and leader and no politician, a man whom the great Washington es teemed and loved to reward. 1 had seen him at Saratoga and elsewhere, and his figure as well us his name always drew attention. Over six feet high and built iu proportion, with a weight of 200 pounds, and a large, fine, open face, he was a type of the true American., the best of all men in mind and ho _ J There was plenty of provender in the camp, and I gave Old Put the first solid meal that had come to him in several days. 1 wanted him to he in good trim for the morrow, for he and I were to take our proper place with Washing ton’s cavalry, to which we belonged, only a handful of men, hut able and true and capable of doing great things in the nick of time. There had been some question about the bandage on my bead, which I wore as a precaution against taking cold in the scalp wound, but I showed that it was only a trifle, and Colonel Washington rightfully re marked that such a alight wound would only increase a man’s efficiency on the battlefield. Then he presented me with a fine saber, which I needed badly, and told me to lie down on the ground and go to sleep, but 1 could not sleep just then, aud with the freedom of our colo nial armies 1 roamed about the encamp ment. The campfires flared up iu the cold January darkness. The men sat around them, talking aud playing cards with old greasy cards or singing the songs of the bills and the woods. Some of the soldiers were asleep on their blankets or the hare ground, for we were always a ragged aud unhoused army ut the best, aud only a few of the officers had tents. A slurp breeze came from across the river, and the flames bent to it, their light flickering over wild, brown faces that knew only the open air, wind, rain, hail or whatever came. Most of them still carried their curved and carved powdorhorns and their bullet pouches, inseparable companions, over their shoulders, aud their long, slender barreled rifles, so unlike the British muskets, lay at their sides. Um tkk in the fiioes of the men, deepening the br ,*n and giving them another shade of the Indian A curse mingled now and then with the singing and the talk of the card players, aud frqm the bin ders of the camp came the stamp of the horses aud ait occasional neigh In the darkness, half lighted by the reeling fires, the camp became a camp of wild men, whose faces the wavering light molded into whatever grotesque images it chose We were bnt a little army, only HOfl strong, hut many of us had come great distances aud from places wide apart An arc of 1,1)00 miles would scarce cover all our homes There were the militia. South Carolinians and Georgians, raw troops, whom ono can never trust ; then the little remnant of the brigade that De Kalh had led on the fatal day of Camden, splendid soldiers whose lino the whole British army could not break, the survivors now eager to avenge the disgrace their brethren suffered on that day; then the stanch Virginia troops, that we knew wonld never fail, and near them our two or three score ol cavalry men under Washingtou—a little army, 1 say again, but led by such leaders us Morgan, Washington. Howard and Bickens! Down the slopes the sentinels were on watch, but there was no fear of a surprise, for the scouts were just bringing in word that Tarleton could not come before daylight, ami then, owing to the slope and the open ground, his approach would be seeu for a great distance. The new men talked the most, some about the coming battle, eagerly, volu bly. others about things toe farthest from it, but iu the same eager, voluble, unreal tone. The veterans were silent tnostly, and already with the calm and hardihood of long usage were seeking the rest and sleep which they knew they would ueed. A tall, thin man, with a wild face, whom 1 took to be one of the preachers at the great revival meetings so common on the border, rose in the midst of the camp and be gan to speak Some listened, and some wjnt on with the talking and cord play ing. I could hear the rustle of the paste board as the cards were shuffled. He was a fighting preacher, for he exhorted them to strike with all their strength iu the coming buttle and if they must die to die like Christian heroes. He prayed to God for the success of our arms, then stepped down from the stamp on which he had stood and dis appeared from my sight. He fought in the front line of the South Carolina militia tho next day. I sought my own place in onr troop and lay down upon one half of my blanket, with the other half above me. Old But gnawed at some foddt r beside me. “Wake me up in tho morning when you see the firs;t red gleam of the Brit ish coats, old comrade,” I said, and, knowing that he would do it, I closed my eyes. Bnt sleep would not come just yet, and I opened my eyes again to see that the fires were sinking and the darkness was coining down nearer to the earth. Half the itfen were asleep already the others were qniet, seeking sleep, and the steady breathing of near 1,000 men in a close space made a strange, whis tling noise like that of the wind. A flaring hlaz-; would throw a streak of light across a sleeping soldier, showing only a head or a leg or an arm as if the man Intel been disjointed. I would hear the faint rattle of a sentry’s fire lock and the heavy hoof of a horse as lie crowded his comrades for room. An officer in dingy uniform would stalk across the field to see thgt all was right, and over us all the wind moaned and the darkness gathered close up to tho edge of the dying fires. Weakness ovir- powered ray excited brain aud nerves, and 1 slept This story will be continued from week to week in the Friday issue of The Ledger until concluded. You Know AYiiat You are Taking When you take Grove's Tasteless Chill Tonic because the formula is plainly printed on every bottle show ing that it is simply Iron and (Quinine in a tasteless form. No cure. No Bay. 50c. When the devil comes to an empty mind he is sure to find a place to stay all night. Stoj>«Tli« Cough Anil \York>« off Tho Colil Laxative Bromo-tjuinino Tablets cure a cold in one day. No Cure, No Bay. Brico 25 cents. Forty-eight thousand Torks have been exiled during the last 11 years. Ah the hot weather of summer isappro.-u-h- ill", this paper will constantly keep is-fore its reiiiiers TKKTIII N A. a remeiJy which, where known, is l>ein#' universally used to prevent and counteract the effects of warm weather upon small children, and it is hoped that all mothers of tlds community will keep their children iu a healthy condition hy irlviui; It. for it costs only 2.» cents at druggists; or mall cents to f. J. Moffett, M. 1*., St. Louis. Mo. A thousand times better he lied about than to be lying about others. Hr. liull’K CoiikIi Syrup, the people's friend' has been In llfce over lifiy years. It cures the severest affections of the throat and Inn^s; such as bronchitis, grip pi-, laryngitis and in cipient consumption. I'rlce only -.T, cents a bottle. a NOTICE. P ERMANENT WORK AT good wages will be given to good families with spin ners, doffers and other hands for prompt application. Apply to T. A. SIZEMORE, Supt., American Spinning Go., Greenville, S. G, Attention Electric Light Subscribers. 'T"H K electric I Ik hi plant afti r Bunday nltfht * 2Ut. will be shut down for probably one week on account of chuniflnK machinery, etc. 4-IV-U W. H. DlThk, Mitr. County Commissioners Meeting. -pilK Board of i'uurity ('omnilMloner*are ‘ hereby notified to meet iu the court houto In Ouffiiey on Tuesday. April Su’d, at 10o'clock a. m., for the purpoae of reconalderiuif the matter of the Broad river bridge locution. J. V. WllghCMtl., 4*UPU Couuty Bupcrvlior. kMITH LIPSCOMB SONS. At .« M iliia Tim m’bj Mfcht u FIiik Was 1 icm.ntrd to the l amp Sniiib Lipscomb Camp, Sous of Veteranc, m t I'uikI »y night hi tho i-hrk of court's <'Hicc in the court house. A large numb r of the sons were present, and I hey were phased to have with them several of I he old- veterans of the city who followed l.e > and Jackson. These veterans had attended tho meeting by special invi tation from the tump, and some of them made short talks to the sons which were thoroughly onjoved. One of the most pleasant and in spiring features of the meeting was the presentation to the camp of a lovely Confedt rate flag that had been sent to it bv .Mr. Smith Linscomb, of Texas, in whose honor the camp was named The flag was presented by Mr. J. R Webster, of CowpMiS, in a n.*at and well-timed little address, and bath the flag and the addriss were received with t heirs and enthu siastic applause. The camp highly prizes this flag and the kind remem brance of its honored donor, and Mr. Lipscomb may res’ assured that his handsome gift will be carefully pre served and warmly cherishtd by each and every member i f Utu camp. Mi«s Florence Griffith was elected sponsor for the camp to represent it at the Columbia reunion. She w ill select her maids of ho: or to accom pany her. The meeting, upon the whole, was a very enthusiastic one a.id the camp is now getting in floe shape. A ••Muni” Ht'i'»*|ithju The ladies of the Bresbyterian church will hold a “Mum” reception in their church on Friday night. April 26th. Kefr< shmentH will be Bernd in abundance and the proceeds will he used for church purposes. Everybody is invited. Tin- IS«-ftt lilitoil l’iirilii-r. The blood is constantly being puri fied hy the lungs, liver and kidneys. Keep these organs in a healthy con dition and the bowels regular and you will have no need of a blood pu rifier. For this purpose there is nothing equal to Chamberlain’b Stomach ami Liver- Tablets, one dose of them will do you more good than a dollar botth' of the best blood puri fier. Brice, 25 cents. Samples free at Cherokee Drug Company. Doubt others more and yourself less and you will have m ire backbone 13 sell. If troubled by a weak digestion, loss of appetite, or constipation a few doses of Chamberlain’s Stomach and Liver Tablets. Every box war ranted. For sale by Cherokee Drug Qo. We should find a great deal more good in our fellowmeu if wo would only look for it. Taki- l>r. Itull’n Lou"li Syrup for ail tlniHe ilaiiK* rous iiffn-tious si-vi n- eiiMa, pli-urisy and Krippit wlileli Fall ami Winter iiriuz aloiiK. i< is tin: fii-eate.st i-ur.- fur broucliitU and all throat and lun^ uffeetions. Doctors Advise T he remedies they think best suited to the needs of their patients. When the disease is of a nervous nature, with head ache, sick stomach, failing appetite, indi gestion, restlessness, loss ot sleep and a general run-down condition, a nerve tonic and brain food is an absolute necessity. The best of all remedies for weak, debili tated, exhausted nerves—best tor the doc tor to prescribe and best for the patient to take—is that incomparable restorative, “Nervous piostration caused the most severe pains which would move around in ditfeFent parts of my body. Everything 1 ate caused me distress and at night I suffered so much with my head that 1 could not deep. Several physicians pre scribed for me and at last one doctor advised me to take Dr. Miles’ Nervine. 1 did so and was helped flom the first dose. Six bottles restored my health.” Mrs. k. J. Prunty, Martinsville, Va. D*. Miles’ Nervine. It makes the nerves strong, the brain clear, the appetite keen and the digestion perfect. It rebuilds the failing strength and is an unfailing cure for nervous prostration. Sold by all druggists on a guarantee. Dr. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind, Watch for the i i «riu <1 it’iiiii'M jv;»»v. i> ift/OT/mAO y ,,u 'll K't wlmt y< Waicnes “ :iyr ' ir A larjm suul i-li-Kaut hs- sortnit-ni uf new waii-lits , will shortly Iks In my sliow- ; i-asi-s a waiting your in- ,, spi-otion. If you want a IIin* watch, don’t buy ore until you have seen my line. Buy from a reliable jeweler fOU I THE VIVIAN De MONTO GO. OF SPECIAL ARTISTS v* • , - v M // *93 AM) THE FENNY COMEDY. -THE - “THREE MARRIED MEN." 8 Biff SPECIALTY ACTS. A BIO CITY SHOW. Prices, 25,35 & 50 cts. Clerk’s Sales. Stite ok Sorru Cxhoi.ina. < O >1 NTY or CHKItOKKK. f C. 11. OalTney et al. vs Edna Northey i-t ab in obedleuceto an order inside herein, I will sell to the Highest bidder, sit Gaffney, S. C . before the eourt house dimr, during the It Kal hours of sale, sab-s lay May *itli, IliOl, the fol lowing described lands, to- wit: That piece of land Wl feet wide, parallel willi Orenard stn et, beiiiiinlii" at I tact-street and running to the UeorxTa road, across the "Culvert branch," and being a coutffiuallon of Logan street. That piece of land 00 feet wide. Ix-KlnnliiK at alley back of J. A. Gaffney’s house, and runnluK parallel with Logan street to corner of lots Nos. 50 and 51, and being a continua tion of Carpet Mill street. Those three pieces of laud us alleys, 2u feel wide, running parallel with the two. aboyc streets. Those four pieces of land ft) feet wide, and those four pieces 30 feet wide, perpendicular to the above nami-d streets ami alleys, ln-zln- rdiiKoii Grenard street and the Georgia road and running to line of J. T. Uarr.es’ land. All of same being better described as streets and alleys of theGaffuey Estate lands on plats made by H. O. Sams, surveyor, on March 20th and November 1st, 1000, and all lying between Batnnel Jefferies’ line and Hue from cornerof lot No. 4* on J. T. Haines’ line to corner of lot No. 63 and thence to corner of lot No. Wi on the Georgia rood, and lM-tween J. T. Haines' line and the Georgia road and Grenard str«-et on East side of ’’Culvert branch” Also all the H4 feet streets and 20 feet alleys, designated ou plat of Nor. Ut, BKjn. In the within case, belonging to the es tate of Thos. W. Gaffney, tleri-asuf. lying West of tin- ‘‘Culvert branch." beginning at corner, Intersection of Georgia road and Car pet Mill street, and running thence to corner of lot No. Hi on J. 'J'. Haines' line. I'hut Is to say all tin- streets and alleys West of tills line. Terms of sale: One-third cash, and tin- halant-eori a credit of one and two years. Purchaser to pay for all papers. J. Ku. JsrrcHiKS, Aurll 17,iuu..;h crkc.c. m Special Prices. ( I am now offering spec ially low inducements for you to bung your repair I ? work to me. For a limited tbce only I will do ail kinds of repairing at mu-h below my usual rates. All work guaranteed. Don’t ( forget to cal! and examine / my new goods. THOS. H. WESTROPE, The Leading Jeweler. For the Building Season. L. BAKER lias j list received a large stock of Sa-Ii, Doors, Mantelpieces and all kinds of Trimming, Flooring, Ceiling, Siding, Box ing, Molding, Brackets, etc. No. 1 Heart Pine Shingles and a good stock John W. Masury Sons Guaranteed Paints and Varnish, all tit the lowest rea- sonable prices. Call and see him when you want anything in his line. No charge for making estimates. LOOK OUT BOYS for your own interest and I will look out for mine. When you want a good wheel to ride call on me, and when you want to buy an tip- lo-dati- wheel I am ugi-nt for .Monarch and Barbs’ Bicycles and will sell you one aschi-ap as dirt in the old field, for diasli. When your whci-l gets out of fix bring it to rue and I will repair it cheap and guarantee It. I sell all kinds of fixtures I am still selling Kansas City Beef and Fresh Fish. W. J. MANESS. Phone No. 17. The Up-to-Date Market Is up, standing on three feet. I tiave Fine Kansas City Beef and Cherokee Beef, your choice from in lo 12 ic. Steak. Fine Seed liisli Potatoes, Onions. Sells, White Peas. While Deans. Canned Goods of differ-nt kinds Sour Kraut, Tomatoes, Canned Beef. < aimed Com, Apple Butter, Jellies. Pie Peaches, etc.. Heavy and Fancy Groceries, < ’ountry Pr-Klin-i.-. when can be got. and Poul try, Fresh Fish nearly everyday. All orders filled and delivered promptly. Call No. IM phone and I will try to please you. Respectfully, L. W. McGUINN. Notice to Have Streams Cleaned. All land owners are hereby notified to have all stre ams running through their premises thoroughly cleaned of all olr-t ructions that w ill in any way prevent the free How of wa ter. By order of the Board of County Commis sioners of Cherokee < ounly. S. C. .1. V. Wrirxcur.i., W. II. Ross. Supervisor. Clerk of Board. 4-a-4w ITor Building and Plastering Lime, Coal, and Plaster Hair, Plaster Paris. Kosendale Cement, Portland Cement, Dynamite, Biastlng Powder, Ease and Dynamite Caps, call on Limestone Springs Lime Works CARROLL & CO., Lessees. Telephone 57. T. 1. WALKER, GAFFNEY, S. C., Deals Exclusively In Lumber and Builders’ and carries In stock a complete line of DOORS. SASH, BLINDS, PAINTS, OIL, PLASTERERS’ MATERIAL, and everything need oil for building purposes. Look him up when you need anything In his line. Do You Want Insurance ? 1 am prepared to furnish poli cies in the very oest companies at the lowest rates. If you want a bond ! can make it for you. See me before you insure. F. G. STACY. w. y. iiai.p. .1 k. W. W. Tuomah. J HALL & THOMAS, Surveyors and Engineers, GAFFNEY, S. (’. Will do nil kinds of Surveying, Engineer* ing. Platting, etc. Accurate iusltumt-uts, correct mi tiugis. reasonable charges. All business will rec eive prompt attention < >11100 over .1 R. Tolleson’s store. Paint, Oils, Lead. Now D tin* time to paint your house. A tempera- lure of (JO (leg. to 70 deg. is probably the best for painting. We arc agents for Hirshborg, Holland* r & Do’s celebrated. Stag Brand Semi-Baste Prepared Paint. We guarantee this paint to be made of perfectly pure materials, Pure Lead, Pure Zinc, Pure Linseed Oil, Pure Turpentine and Pure Coloring Material, and to be absolutely free of all or anyjpf the numerous forms of adulterations used in many paints. The texture of Stag Paint is apparent immediately upon application; texture and purity are the quali ties that make good paint. Wear is the best evidence of good paint—Stag Paint will wear. We have iu stock all kinds of Prepared Paints, Colors, Leads, Putty, ifcc., etc. V * CHEROKEE DRUG CD W GAFFNEY LIVE STOCK CO. Dealers in MULES, HORSES, Harness, and Vehicles of Every Description. We sell the Old Hickory and Tennessee Wagons, the very best made, and the famous Parry, Babcock, and other excellent makes of Buggies, Phaetons, Car riages, etc. We have the finest lot of Mules ever brought to this country, and our stables are headquarters for drovers and out-of-town dealers. Wc will endeavor by fair and courteous treatment to all to warrant the confidence and patronage of the public. Ours is the finest livery stable to be found between Charlotte and Atlanta. Come to see us when you desire anything in our line. Our prices are the lowest commensurate with correct business princi ples. We sell for easli or on time for good paper. O.iffntry X-yiv r o C^o., one Mtre**t. IS. C. A. N. Wool. I’residcnt. R. R. Ritowx, Vlcc-l’reslib-ut. IVIcreli«.iit» .ind I*l»iiter» IS.uik OF GAFFNEY, S. C. OAPITA U #30,000. State and County Depository. DiH*sa ffoui-r.-il Ranking anil Exi-hang© bu*lnrss, L w,.-ll Htti-,1 up with Fin- Proof Vault and Burglar Proof Safe, with Automatic Time I^M - k. We wila-it the bti!>iii<",-> of peoulo of all occupations. O. M. M V IITYI. (h,shier. IT TO LADIES AND GENTLEMEN WHO APPRECIATE STYLE FIT AND COMFORT. i » "SHAMROCK” SHOE IS THE BEST. $2.00 AND $3,001 J. D. GOUDELOCK, COMMERCIAL HOfEL CORNER. SOLE AGENT,