The ledger. [volume] (Gaffney City, S.C.) 1896-1907, July 23, 1901, Image 3
rf-
TOBACCO SPIT
and 5M0WR
YourLiftawayl
V«ni c«n h* cured of anr form of tobacco utlns
eaail.v be mafU: well, airoiijt, inaKiictk'. full or
new life and vigor by taking NO-10-BAO,
tiiat m«k«« wrak men sirong. Many eaia
tan troumlk in trti days. Over BOO t OOO
•iirad. Alt druggists. Cure guaranteed. Book*
let and advice 1RHB. Address ^TRRl.l.NG
llKMUOY CO.. Chicago or New York. . 437
Notice!
The Gitffuoy Pressing Chib will
ilo nil ybur cleaning, pressing
and repairing for $1.00 per
month. Will clean hats and
Jcirts. TOM ESKRIDGE.
PLxt u>Ofe»*ii*irO»tl>vv. over Curry’s store.
‘ d-fti 1m
JUST RECEIVED!
f have just received by to
day’s express shipment of
_ Rocky Ford
it CANTALOUPES.
They* are fresh" and nice. I
also have & full Rue of ffesh,
fancy and staple GROCERIES,
CANDIES and CIGARS.
GEORGE D. JEFFERIES.
we?
l.V- *
Viutbrop College Scbolarship
and Entrance Examinations.
- ThoeMiiiiiMiitions for the award of vacant
RckolursiriD* >h Wtntbrop College aud for the
^tdmtaiion of uew student!* will be held at tbe
County Cburt House op Friday, July ISth, at
§ a. m. ^
Applicants must not bp less tbau fifteen
-■v years oTcge. '
When si'holarsliips are vacated after July
12th they will be awarded to those making
the highest average at lids ejamliiatibn.
The cost of ittuujdanee, Including board,
urulsheffVifttn, hew, light aud washing, is
S«.00 per rnOnth. •* . .
Jp’or further Information an4,H catalogue
aiiclVoA Ib-eslfleut I>. B. Johnson, Uock. Hill,
8.ifc.
■ -
Ite
County Mutual
■ Jf
( Association
hasl^Aed between 400 and 500 policies to the
Oltlzeni of the county aggregating ^0,060.
Vrhg^.re yet a-fow property owners who Mvo.
pot tfsftrod Will. US whotn wethlnkshoulddo J ^ound^nMlVy and Vhow ion that sin
so now, or its Soon as possible, tut a prwtootton ^ '
to theniSelves aud families, foi; the uhe^
* tpdct<gl happens to us all sooger or luter
hap^y b* be who Is prepared to raaot
fKabrgeucjr 1%» can safely say tha\ there
\ M cheaper or better Invesimeotofferefl^fou.
A. Uavidson, Ualfuey. and Mr, gaiuk
ey, Aldngdon, are agents, who arwan
feed to appraise your property niiUl laaae
'icy on-same. . \ ,
i. m. i.i nLWoiiN, Pms. •
’ J. Kb .TkrPKRics. Sec. and 'Vreas.
j net ^recei ved a large |tock
Sjtelij 1 Doors, Mattel pieces'
di.ril kiO
'looring, Jr
ods
Wa8hi»«jton, July 21.—’ n this dls-
•ourso Dr. Talma go shows that there
Is n tendency to excuse brllUant faults,
because they are brilliant, when the
same law of right and wrong ought to
bo applied to high places and low; text,
■Daniel iv, 33. “The same hour was the
thing fulfilled upon Nebuchadnezzar,
and ho was driven from men and did
cat grass as oxen."
Here is the mightiest of the Baby
lonish kings. Look at him. He did
more for the grandeur of the capital
than did all his predecessors or suc
cessors. Hanging gardens, reservoirs,
aqueducts, palaces, all of his own plan
ning. The bricks that are brought up
today from the ruins of Babylon have
his name on them, “Nebuchadnezzar,
son of Jtfabopolassor, king of Babylon.*'
Fie wap a great conqueror. He stretch
ed forth his spear toward a nation, and
It Surrendered. But he plundered the
temple of tbe true God. He lifted an
Idol, Bel Merodach^and compelled the
people to bow down before It, and If
they refused they must go through the
redhot furnace or bo crunched by lion
or lioness. So God pulled him down.
He was smitten with what physicians
call lycanthropy and fancied that he
was a wild beast, and ho went out and
pastured amid the cattle. God did not
excuse him because he had committed
the aln in high places or because tbe
transgression was wide resounding. He
measured Kebucbadnezear in high place
just as be would measure tbe humblest
captive.
But la our time, you know as well as
I, that there is a disposition to put a
halo around iniquity if it Is committed
in conspicuous places and If It Is wldd
resounding and of large proportions.
Ever and anon there has been an eplr
demlc of crime in high places, and
there Is not a state or a city and hardly
a village which has not been called to
look upon astounding forgery, or an
absconding bank cashier or president,
or the wasting of trust fund or swin
dling mortgages. I propose. In carry
ing out tbe suggestion of my text, as
far as I can, to scatter the fascinations
K.. ^ Gtfaranged and
1^ * Varnish* alt
■ 4 son aWe pifcex. Gill and see hyp
;%hnn you waut iiythifiig fn hi
; id©7 No chargario* jtialriBi
liiiates. ^
18
*g
is sin and wrong is wrong,-whether In
.high place or low place, and that It
Will be dealt with by that God who
-dealt with impalaced Nebuchadnezzar.
HomUity of tl** Gospel,
h* All who preocti fed that two kinds
of BOnuviS are ueosmry *be quo so
the faith of the goopei, tbe othee-on the
morality of the gospel—and .the one to
Just as important as the other, for you
t know that in this land today there are
hundreds of men biding behind the
communion tables and In churches of
Jesds Christ who have do bnaloess to
be there as professors of“ religion. They
expect to be ajl right Wtli) CM, al
though they are ail wrong with man.
And, while I want you to understand
'that by tbe deeds of the law no flesh
living can be Justified and a mere bon-
eft life cannot enter us Into heaven, I
want you as plainly to understand that
unless the Hfe is right the heart la not
right—grace.In the heart aud grace In
the life. 8o we must preach sometimes
the faith of the gospel and sometimes
the morality of the gospel.
It seems to mi there has not been a
time la tbe list 50 yean when this lat
ter. truth needed more thoroughly to
be pnaented in tbe Americ&n church-
It net
•very day of bis life, tub
,DR. JJjFi
Deatist,
Igffnejrv - ■'. v: 6. C.
wm«e ovyr J. K. Toll cion’s flew stow
month:
ovei
In emee from lit to 26th of etch
Dr. C. T. LIPSCOMB,
' Dentist,
fefle* over R. A. losot A Co ’s Ston.
tad atofBce six davs la the week
G. W. SPEER.
I< N I5V.A'r-l.A w.
•wJ-’CAFF
A
li
es. needs to-be presented today.
~ A missionary la tbe Islands of the
Pacific preached one Sabbath on hon
esty aAd dishonesty, and on Monday be
found bis yard full of atTitytai of
goods whlcb tbe natives harj brought.
He could not understand It'until a na
tive told him, “Our gods permit us to
purloin goods, but tbe Go6 you, teid us
.about yesterday, tbe God,of l>eeveo and
earth, ft seems, is against these prao-
ticefl, and so we brought ail the goods
that flo uot belong to us, and they are
in the yard, and we want you to help
us to distribute them among their right
ful owners.” And If In all the pulpits
of tbe United States today rousing ser
mons could be preached on honesty and
the evils of dishonesty, and th# ser
mons were bleeaed of God. and ar
rangement should be made by which.,
all the goods which have been Improp
erly taken from one man and appro
priated by another man sfioold be pot
lb tbe city balls ofl tbe country, these
Is not a city ball in tbe United States
that would not be crowded from cel to*
to cupola. Paltb of the gospel—that
V* (Phot preach and we do pepteb.
Morality ot tbe gonpfe me most Jo* as
cflrtnlnly proctotife ^
Now, look abroad afid aea fii fasci-
natlona that gre thrown around dif
ferent styksa of crime. Tbe qoeetlons
nr#. Ttihuar tueolook*
cd up and tmMJh “0b wiw d tzsWtow fii
one docude, and In the m-xt decode he
Is one of the inonarehs of the stock
market. That’s the way to do It.’* To
this day the evil Influence of that prof
ligate financier has been felt, and with
in the past few weeks be has had con
spicuous Imitators.
There has been an irresistible Impres
sion going abroad among young men
that the poorest way to get money Is
to earn It. The young man of flaunting
cravat says to the young man of hum
ble apparel: “WhatI You ouly get $1,-
800 a year? Why, that wouldn’t keep
me In pin money. I spend $5,000 a
year.’’ “Where do you get It?” asks
the plain young man. “Oh, stocks, en
terprises, all that sort of thing, you
know.” The plain young man has
hardly enough money to pay his board,
has to wear clothes after they are out
of fasbiou and deny himself all luxu
ries. After awhile he gets tired of bis
plodding, and he goes to the man who
has achieved suddenly large estate, and
he says, “J ust show me how it Is done.”
And he is shown. He soon learns how,
although he Is almost all the time idle
now and has resigned his position in
the bank or the factory or the store he
has more money than he ever had,
trades off his old silver watch for a
gold one with a flashing chain, sets
his hat a little farther over on the side
of his head than he ever did, smokes
better cigars and more of them. He
has L i hand in. Now, If he can es
cape the penitentiary for three or four
years he will get Into political circles,
and be will get political jobs and will
have something to do with harbors and
pavements and docks. Now he has got
so far along he Is safe for perdition.
Romance of Crime.
It is quite a long road sometimes for
a man to travel before he gets Into the
romance of crime. Those are caught
who are only In the prosaic stage of it.
If the sheriffs aud constables would
only leave them alone a little while,
they would steal as well as anybody.
They might not be abte to steal a whole
railroad, but they could Boaster a lead
of pig iron.
, Now, 1 always thank God when I find
an estate like that go,to smash. It Is
plague struck, and It blasts tbe nation.
1 thank God when It goes Into such a
wreck It can never be gathered up
again. I want it to become so loath
some and such an Insufferable stench
that honest young men will take warn
ing. If God should put into money or
its representative tbe capacity to go
to its lawful owner, there would uot
be a bank or a safety deposit in the
United States whose walls would not
Be blown out and mortgages would
tip, and parchroeots would rend, and
gold would shoot, and beggars would
get on horseback, and stock gamblers
would go to tbe almshouse.
Row many dishonesties in tbe mak
ing-oot of invoices, aod In the plaster
ing of false labels, and In tbe filching
of customers of rival bouses, and lu the
making and breaking ot coat carts.
Young men are Indoctrinated In the
Idea that tbe sooner they get money
tbe better, and the getting of It on a
larger scale only proves to them their
greater ingenuity. There Is a glitter
thrown around about all these things.
Young tflenjiave got to find out that
God looks upon sin In a very different
light ' '
A young man stood behind a counter
In New York selling silks to a lady,
and he said before the sale was con
summated, “I see there to a flaw In that
silk.” The lady recognized It, and the
sale was not consummated. Tbe bead
mao of tbe firm saw tbe Interview, and
be wrote home to tbe father of tbe
young man, living In tbe country, say
ing: “Dear air—Come and take your
boy. He will never make a merchant.”
Tbe father came down from tbe coun
try borne in great consternation, as any
father would, wondering wbat bto boy
bad done. He came into tbe store, and
tbe merchant said to him, “Why, your
sou pointed out a flaw lu some silk tbe
other day and spoiled tbe sale, and we
will never have that lady probably
again for a customer, and your son
never will make a merchant.” “la that
all?” said the father. “1 am proud of
blm- I wouldn’t for tbe world bavo
him another day upder your influence!
John, get your bat aud coat Let ua
start” There are hundreds of young
men under tbe pressure, uuder tbe fas
cinations thrown around about oom-
merctol Iniquity. Thousands of young
men have gone down under tbe pres
sure; other thousands have maintained
their Integrity. God help you! Let me
say to you. my young friend, that you
~+4.
J. r E.‘-WEB!
jo rt House. (PrObi
Gaffney City* 8* C>
i lb ail the courts.
*V..•>
gitfe&HcSSsa
-+j. c:
^JEFFERt
GAPFNE
n
m
tbat evayy rifeo SOd womau has asked
bavti bees: Bb&lderimfc be exi$ae4 bfl-
caipue It la on * tug* acajaf is Iniquity
gfl%>od to be flnrsoed of tbe tow ln
iniquity
to >nrroed of tb* law ln
a* It to on a small acale?
ive tbe penitentiary for the
man who steals an yvercoat from a
fratrsck tod all Canada for • mao to
^raflga in if be baa robbed the gpblic of
{omioot?
' Fosstaaflon •« FrsM-
book agon all fbe fbaoinatloaa thrown
a rear d fraud 4n ibis country. Toe know
for years men have'been made beroee
of and plctoriallxed. and in various
Wflfa presented-to tbe public, M though
sometime# they were worthy of admi
ration. If they Mt#* Mattered the f untie
of banka or iwaOewft! great <*W *
Money <
did m baton# to them.
~ ^ dazed
JAMES A.
mm
menTtove been /tozed wltfc thie
accumulation.*»Th«*y have said:
|> tbe etoy to do It. What’s fee
our plodding Oh with small
wt salary when we
biAness Jife- and with
itagcn i achieve such A fortune
[Thieved Y 1 A dlffer-
appUed to the
it which
Whlfh
can be a great deal happier hi poverty
than you ever can be happy In a pros
perity which. comes from 111 gotten
'gains. “Ob;" ybd say, “I might lose
my p&Oiu It is easy for you to stand
there flad talk, but H Is no easy thing
to gat V place when you bava lost It.
Besides that, I have a widowed mother
depending upon my earnings, and yob
moat not be toqjwcklew In giving ad-
.vice to mw” Ah, my young friend, ft
to always aafe to do right, hot It to
paver safe to do totwng! You go home
and ten year mother tbe pressure un
der which yoa are in that atom, and I
know what she will say to yon If she
to worthy of yon. She will say: “My
oeo. com# oat Rom there. God h**
taken cafe Of in #11 these years, and be
will take care of us now. Come out of
that?*
False te The!* Treat.
And remember that tbe man who
pets his gain by Iniquity win soon lose
It all. Qne moment after bto departure
from life be will not own an opera
bona* bo will pot own a certificate ot
stock, be will not own one dollar of
goYeramct# securities, and tbe poorest
boy that stands on tbe street with *
fenny to bto pocket looking at the fu
neral procession of the dead cheat as It
goes by will have more money than
that man who one week preylous boast
ed that be controlled fee money mar,
6b, tbpr* to •upb a fearful faedoa-
tlon in this day about fee tup df tFWt
funds! It baa got to bepopular to take
tbe funds of others and speculate with
them. There are many who are prac
ticing that Iniquity. Almost every man
i ff the course of bis life has tbe proper-
y ot other* pot to his care. He has
administered perhaps for"' dead fp|*bd;
be is an attorney, and money passes
from dobtor to creditor through bto
hands, fit b* la In a commercial
and gets a
tats
through bto tinndsiBr he has aoine of.
U"** h» ‘ Hy or unfew. 4r<
and subsidies and supplier and aalailcs
arc In his hands. Now, that is a trust.
That is as snored a trust as God can
give a man. It is tlm concentration of
confidence. Now, when that man takes
that tnouey—the money of others—and
goes to speculating with it for his own
purposes, he Is guilty of theft, false
hood and perjury mid in the most in
tense sense of the word Is a miscreant.
There are families today—widows aud
orpbana—with nothing betw-een them
and starvation but a sewing machine,
or kept out of the vortex by tire thread
of a ueedle red with the blood of their
hearts, who were by father or husband
left a competency. You read the story
In the newspaper of those who have
lost by a bank defalcation, and it is
only one line, tbe name of a woman
yon never hoard of, and Just one or
two figures telliug the amount of stock
she had, tbe number of shares. It is
a very short line lu a newspaper, but It
Is a line of agony long as time. It Is
a story long as eternity.
Now, do not come under tbe fascina
tion which luduces men to employ
trust fuuds for purposes of their own
speculation. Cultivate old fashioned
honesty. Remember the example of
Wellington, who when he was leadiug
the British army over the French fron
tier, uud his army was very hungry,
and there was plenty of plunder on the
French frontier, and some of tbe men
wanted to take It, said: “Soldiers, do
not touch that. God will take care
of us. Ho will take care of tbe Eng
lish army. Plenty of plunder, I know,
all around, but do not take It.” He
tokl the story afterward himself, how
that the French people brought to him
their valuables to keep—be supposed
to be their enemy—brought him their
valuables to keep. And then, be said,
at a time when tbe creditors of tlie
army were calling for money and for
pay all the time, and they bad so much
all around about, be did not feel It
right for blm to take it or for tbe army
to take It.
Oh, that God would scatter these fas
cinations about fraud and let us'all un
derstand that if I steal from you $1
I am a thief, and If i steal from you
$500,000 1 am 500,000 times more of a
thief!
Society to Blame.
So there has been a great deal of fas
cination thrown around libertinism.
Society Is very severe upon tbe impu
rity that lurks around the alleys and
low haunts of the town. The law pur
sues it, smites It, Incareerates It. tries
to destroy it You know as well as 1
that society becomes lenient In propor
tion ns Impurity becomes aflluent or is
in elevated circles, and finally society
Is silent or disposed to palliate. Where
Is tbe Judge, tbe jury, tbfe police officer,
that dare arraign the wealthy libertine?
He walks tbe streets; be rides tbe
parks; be flaunts his Iniquity in the
eyes of tbe pure* Tbe hag of unctoan-
uess looks out ot tbe tapestried .win
dow. Whereto fee tow that dacee take
tbe braeen wretches and pul their
faces In on Iron frame efla state prison
window?
Sometimes it seems to me as If so
ciety were going back to the state of
morals of Hercutoneum, when It sculp
tured Its vileness on jplliars and temple
wall and nothing'blit the lava of a
burning mountain could bide tbe Im
mensity of crime. At wbat time God
will rise up and extirpate these evils
upon society I know not nor whether
be will do it by fire or hurricane or
earthquake, but a holy God. 1 do uot
think, will stand It much longer. T be
lieve tbe thunderbolts are hlsalog hot
and that when God comes to chastise
tbe community for these sins, against
which be has uttered himself more bit
terly than against any other, tbe fate
of Sodom and Gomorrah will be toler
able as compared with tbe fate of our
modern society, which knew better, but
did worse.
We want about 10,060 pulplta In
America to thunder, “Alt adulterers
and whoremongers shall have their
place in tbe hell that bnruetb with fire
and brimstone, which is tbe second
death.” It to bell ou earth and bell
forever. We have got to understand
that Iniquity on Columbia heights or
Fifth avenue or Beacon bill to as dam
nable Id tbe sight of God as It to lu tbe
slums. Whether It has canopied coucb
or eiderdown or dwells amid tbe pu
tridity of a low tenement bouse, God
Is after It In his vengeance. Yet the
pulpit of tbe Christian ebareb has been
so cowed down oo this subject that It
hardly dares speak, and men are al
most apologetic when they read the
Ten Commandment a. » v
Then look at tbe fascination* thrown
around assassination. There are In all
comflounities men who have taken tbe
lives of others unlawfully, not as exe-
cutiopers of tbe law, and they go scot
free. You say they bad their provoca
tions. God gave life, god be atone has
a right to tike tt, and be may take It
by visitation of Provtdeoce or by ait
executioner of tbe law, who I* bto mea-
sengee. But when » man aseumea that
d trine prerogative be touche* tbs low
est depth of crime.
Society to alert tar certain kind# of
murder. If a citisen going along tbe
road at night to waylaid and Main by
ft robber, ive all want tbe vlllala ar
rested and executed. For all garrotlng,
ta all beating out of life by a dub or
go ax or * slungsbot. the tow has quick
Hiring gnd heavy stroke, but you know
that when men get affluent and high
position and they avenge their wrongs
by taking tbe lives of others great sym
pathy Is excited. lawyers plead, la
dles weep, Judge halts, jury to bribed,
and tbe man got* free. If tbe verdict
happen to be against blm, a netv trial
to balled on through some Wcbnicality,
ftnd tk#y adjourn for tfHltofsae that
never come and adjourn , and adjoun^
until the community bft* forgotten an
about It, bad tbfe tbe prtoo& djMr
open#, agd thg nrurtlerer goes fro*. *
Notv, N captfei paatotghent be right
I say tot (be apt ortbe poMkbed fflur-
dtafr go With the Ife of tbe vulgar ae-
Mask}, fet us have T?0 perttolitj of
fellows, no aristocracy of electrocution
Chair. Do not let us float back to bar
barism, when every man. was bto own
Judge, Jury and executioner and that
man bad the supremacy wbo had tbe
sharpest knife aiid. the strongest arm
Ibd tito flPfclGftri Atop Uljfl the stealfe-
lest revenge. He wbo willfully and In
hatred takes tbe Ilf a. of another to
I care not wf ’
farplgu court or'moNsjfcliterature nuy
ixAiali fia» criuw uii#0 1 lonlis Ilk* !*«•»-
ism, but lu the sight of God murder is
murder, and the Judgment day will so
reveal It.
Now, do not be fascinated by the glam
our thrown over crime of whatever
sort. Because others have habits that
seem brilliant, but yet at tbe same
time are wddfed, du not ehoose such
faults. Stand Independent of all such
luiiuences. Put your confidence In the
Lord God. He will be your strength.
“Vengeance is mine. I will repay,
salth the Lord.” Cultivate old fash
ioned houesty. This book is full of It.
Old fashioned honesty such as was spo
ken of by Dr. Livingstone, the famous
explorer. You may not know he was
descended from the Lighlnadcrs. Dr.
Livingstone said that one day one of
the old highlanders called his children
around him and said: "Now, my lads,
I have looked all through our family
line. I have gone back as far as I can,
and I find that all our ancestors were
honest people. There doesn’t seem to
be one rogue among them, and you
have good blood. Now, my lads, be
honest.”
Four Plain questions.
There are hundreds of young men
W’ho have good blood. Shall I ask three
or four plain questions? Are your hab
its as good as when you left your fa
ther’s house? Have you a imol ticket
in your pocket? Have you a fraudu
lent document? Have you been experi
menting to see how accurate an Imita
tion you could make of your employer’s
signature? Oh, you have good blood.
Remember your father’s prayers. Re
member your mother’s example. Turn
not In an evil w-ay. Have you been go
ing astray? Come back. Haro you
ventured out too far?
As I stand in pulpits looking over
audiences sometimes my heart fails
me. There are so many tragedies pres
ent, so many who have sacrificed their
Integrity, so many far away from God.
Why, my brother, there have been too
many prayers offered for you to have
you go overboard. And there are those
venturing down into sin, and my heart
ache* to cell them back.
At Brighton Beach or Ix>ng Branch
you have seen men go down into tbe
snrf to bathe, and they waded out far
ther and farther, and you got anxious
about them. You said, “I wonder if
they can swim?” And you then stood
and shouted: “Come back! Come back!
You will be drowned!’’ They waved
their band back, saying, “No danger.”
They kept on wading deeper down aud
farther out from shore until after
awhile a great wave with a strong un
dertow took them out, their corpses
the next day washed on the beach. So
I see men wading down Into sin far
ther and farther, and I call to them:
“Come back! Come back! You will be
lost; you will be lost!” They wave
tbeir band back, saying, “No: danger;
no danger!” Deeper down and deeper
down until after awhile a wave sweeps
them Out sad aweepe Chsm off &kwm.
OU. coma back! fftw on* fen heat avtfly
ma#
“Oh* you say, “yoa fladft know
where t came from. You don’t know
wbat ay history has been. You don’t
know wbat Iniquity I have plotted. 1
have gone through tbe whole catalogue
of si tv’*— My brother, 1 dtrflOf'ktlOWtbA'
story, but I tell you this: The door of
mercy to wide open. “Though your
sins be as scarlet, they shall be as
snow; though they be red like crimson,
they shall be as wool” Though you
have been polluted with the worst of
crimes, though you have been smitten
with tbe worst of leprosies, though
you bare been fired with all evil pas
sions, this moment on yosr brow, hot
with iniquitous Indulgences, may be
set tbe flashing coronet of a Saviour’s
forgiveness.
Pleued with the nan, tbe Mint* below
In eonga their tongue* employ;
Beyond tbe aky tbe tiding* go.
And heaven U filled with joy.
Hor angel* can their Joy contain.
But kindle with new fire;
The sinner loet if found, they ling.
And strike the sounding lyre.
[Copyright, 1901, Loot* Kloptcb, K. Y.]
"H?
- , . *«.». <*■**< wr gp f,,.wr.'-war
of ladies’, misses, and children’s
slippers. Only a very few pairs
of them left.
r *} ‘Jff* ^ ^ ‘ * ’ V • ■* £ •
*. * ; *• ; , .. » / V.- &i : ■ .* r-‘
Ladies’ Slippers, $2.25 and $2.50, at $ 1.80.
“ 14 $2.75 and $3,00, at $2.39.
Not many pairs of them; don’t wait till sizes
are all gone; this chance is too good for you to
let slip.
Misses’ and children’s slippers in black and
tan at similar reductions.
One, two and three strap sandals, $1.50, to
go at $1.19.
Oxfords, $ 1.25, $ 1.50, $ 1.75, at 98c, $1.19,
$1.38.
The" , , Store.
NEALTH and vimitv
■ ■■ XXR.. MOTT’*
m ™ m m m WTElIVVJEnXIWJH X»XXjXrfB
The great remedy tor nervous prostration and all diseases of the generative
organs ot either sex, such as Nervous Prostration. Failing * ~
organs of either sex, such as Nervous Prostration, Failing or Lost Manhood
Impotency, Nightly Emissions. Youthful Errors. Mental Worry, excessive use
ot Toboeco or Opium, which lead to Consumption and Insanity With every
■PI PH $& order we guarantee to cure or refund tbe money. Sold at fil.Ofl ner box
AT i Cfl UOlROi 8 boxes tor $6.00. DH. MOTT’S C1IKM1CAL CO., ClevelandVoWo!
M&' For sal© by Cherokee Drug Co.
ms French Periodical Drops
CAUTION
Strictly vcgetable,_perfectly harmless, sure to accomplish
DESIRED RESULTS. Greatest
Beware of counterfeit* and Imitations.
known female remedy.
^ -hegenulneleput np only In pa*te-board Car-
y** 1 ton with fao-Hlmllo signature on side of bottle. thu«: ~
Bond for Circular to WILLIAMS MFU. CO., Solo Agent*. Cie^•land. Ohio.
For sale Jjy Cherokee Drug Co.
H
I0TE HEADS,
1000 FOR . . . $1.00
u u
2000
“ . . . $2.50
it ii
6000
“ . , . $5.00
” EIYELOPES,
1000
“ . . . $1.75
II
2000
" . . , $s oo
II
5000
“ . . . $6.25
< >— ;
- - -•’* ■
LETTER HEADS,
, r
BILL HEADS,
STATENEHTS,
ADD EVERY KIED OF PRIIITII6 AT LOW
PRICES. ORDERS BY HAIL PROMPTLY
FILLED. '
■ .. - y
THE LEDGER,
GAFFNE 1
HOOWS THE Biffi
- The most desirable, simplest constructed,
w ^justed, giveriest results.
satisfaction guaranteed.
Jr
am
Call
sowing peas, corn, oats.’ wKiStTrye^ or
(V>. tj „ ■ >»•- *cS' O''' . '
eed.
5 and see the machine,
&
3mm
■s?
&
- t -
*r - J
K#r^
sarjTfii
a
■UBL.qM' i-r r 4
wt
holdluR elafina ligiti
tut* irf I>. Frank ItoLare, dtx'f
quested to pmuent U>e sumo, duly ‘St
to the Judge of Oberoked Crtm>t|,wn
or boforftiept. 1H, tfOt; and all peradioa''
ddlttud tofthfd.eatuL'.'tte re<me«te«l
Wktia u**dera|guad^
naytahut