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;V *ld the GOLD DUST twins do your work." »Aa dm v J ol f tsv», GOLD DUST wake' the clothes white and clean without ir.jUry to fiie fabric in any way. “ Housework is hard work without Gold Dust. For greatest economy buy our large package. THE N. K. FA1RBANK COMPANY. Chicago reran* In <SafTney. Prof. R. O Sams ten yearn ago planted a number of pecan trees on ' < ne of bis Into in the city, which have beer, growing well under hie careful attention and last year pro duced u few pecans. This year the trees are still vigorous and now have on them a full crop of well matured I and delicious nuts. Mr () 8. Kendrick has a tree which Pas a good crop also. FJoth Mr Kendrick's and Prof. Sams’ give promise of long life and large yields. A Ken I Katate Deal. M. C Ijipscotnh, of White Plains, and S M. I.ittlejohn and J. FI Curry, of this city have each bought one of Capt W. H. Richardson’s valuable business lots, corner of itirnie and I.imestone streets. This ts some of the finest and m >st valua hie business property in the city and we l(K>k for splendid improvements on them soon. r,*\ / ^4 is W BOYS CLOTHING. Making your purse good by selling you better goods. Continuouslylstrivingto do you better; not how much we can ask you and get it, but how close we can sell you and come out whole. Is not this a good way for you. We think it a good way for us because we Avant your lasting friendship. “When your goods are higher I find them better.” Hundreds of our custom ers say this and this is the reputation we are trying to build up. LADIES GOODS DEPARTMENT. LADIES BEAVER JACKETS-We have them in Blacks, Tans and Castors. The kind that fit and make you look stylish. The half-weights. They are not so heavy and a burden for you to carry. Price $3.50, $4 00, $5.00, $7.50, $8.50 and up to $ 1 5.00. SKIRTS AND WA!STS--Flannelette waists 50c. Flannel waists $ 1 .00, $1.25 and $1.50. Black silk waists $3.50, $4 00 and $1 5.00. Separate skirts, black and colors, $1.00, $1.25 up. Do you find it hard to find suits that stand the romping, jolly boy? we know you do- Then buy the *‘Star Make” made by the old lady, Mrs. Jane Hop kins, who makes the best boys clothing in the world, $1.50, $2,00, $2.25, $2.50, $3.00 and up to $5.00. They cost you no more for same goods than the other kinds. If they do not give you satisfaction go back to Wilkins, he will make it right if it takes a brand new .suit. Knee Pants 25c, 50c, 60c, 75c and $1.00. The best 25c Hat is our cloth hats. Large line of Caps in the new shapes—golfs and long bills- Do not worry your headsfor fear you pay too much -for your goods, we take all that risk and give “your money back” if you want it. PERSONAL PARAGRAPHS. I’nopU- Von Know «n<l roopli* Von Don't Know. FF I) Matthiti, of Raveiintt, whh in 1 to Ht-t* Th*- Ledger Tuet-dny ' Uncle Joe” Flunkey came to the 1 eity Tuenrlay on huninen*. M. M Tat> . of Wt liHtt r npert Tiles* , j day in the city Mr. Tate in a clone i ohnerver and reportn rather gloomy i ' pronpectn in bin nection, incident to ' j fhickety corn crop being deni o nd, and the niiort cu»p >>i cotton atm low j price receivt-d for it. Robt Munroe and Ed. Emom went ; to Charlotte, N. C., Wednenday after noon to attend a meeting of the D [ O K Iv. They carried overcoats but | ! didn’t expect to need them 8. IF Anthony,for a long time a most j i valued citizen of (tafTney, bu' now a j 1 prosperous farmer near Glendale, wan ' | m th city Wednesday,and wan grei ted i ' by hin many old friends. H< renewed | for The Ledger. \V. C. McAbee, of Clifton, t an in en ; appointed cloth-room overseer with j the (JafTney Manufacturing' ■omriany. I I’rof Thfimas'Martin, of Fair F Test, : | lias be *n 'p riding tile wee*c at Lime- j | stone College tuning the ce> !■ g<- pi- ’ i anon. Mr Martin is a native of Spar- I tanburg county, was edu -atid at j I Cedar Springs, has a fine reputation | j in his business, and is a perfect gen tleman. Don Lumpkin, of Blacksburg, a I prominent official of the S. 0. ifcti E Railway, paid The ledger a visit | Wednesday. Jones J. Darby, Gaffney’s bustling | insurance man, spent Tuesday in | Spartanburg J. C. Inler, a prosperous young farmer from over the Broad, made a business trip to the city Wednes day Mr. Isler reports fanners busy in his section. He is from Cherokee township, where corn and wheat growing and hog raising are special ties with farmers, which keep the low price for cotton from pinching so much. M. B Sams is home from Clemson for a few ouys. Fie looks a good deal like a soldier hoy and his friends are ; d -lighted to greet him. M B Scruggs. E-q.. a prominent I citizen and farmer of F'zsils, spent, j Wednesday in the city. Wm J Vaughan, of Gowdysville, one of Cherokee’s best citizens spent ; a while in the city Wednesday. Miss Maggie Werts arid Miss Annie McClain, tw’o popular teachers at Fiimestone College, spent Thanks giving with their friend Miss Annie May Martin, at Fair F’orest Basil Pettit, of Ravenna, who farms for what there is in it, and gets it. came to the city on business Oliver Hames, the popular post- muster at State lone, and one of Cherokee’s good farmers, called to see The I.edger Wednesday. W. Sam lopscomh made one of his hurried visits to the city Wednesday John a» d James Gibbon two bright young sous of oyr worthy old friend Mr J J. Gibbons, of Mount F’nron. io Cherok' e township, paid The lied- g r an appreciated visit while in the city Wednesday. Edmond FUanton, of Corinth one of Cherokee’s good farmers paid The Ledger a PI• usatif vi-ot Wednesday. Wm. Moss, one of ‘the oldest and most highly respected citizens of the county, was in the city Tuesday. Mr Moss was one of the iron workers at tlie Cherokee Fort! Iron Works in Die ante bellum days and has hy hard work, strict integrity good sense and management made himself one of the most prosperous and inde pendent farmers in the county. Thomas S Moorman, Jr., of Col umbia has been spending some time with his uncle. Col. J. (J Uardlaw on Frederick street. Mr. Moorman is a young mau of much promise FFe served as 2nd lieutenant in the 2nd S. C. V. in the Cuban war, was appointed to same office in a U. 8. regiment and served with distinction in tFie Philippines, and while o Gaff I ney, was appointed » lieut* » aM in | the regular army Tni*> 'e • g -od | record for our young frieiui Put onr I old friend Thomas 8. Moorman 8r wasiqual'y well diet u gU'shtd e* m Conf* iP rale soldier. V M. Johnson the w*-avi r> < m foreman si Chen kee r» e Min* made a short visit to GelT • > ' u s- way. Mr Johnson is a un i o an o» acknowledged ability, Pas ina l> tapid progress in Ins kiusiness and » t ,r, ::iii future is liefore dim He a' i Pis charming wife would tv- cordia'D received in their old (iaffi ev Pome again. Graham M acorn son, a prosperous Broad river farmer, spent Tuesdav in the city Hon. Wm. J' ff- ries made a busi ness trip to the city Tuesday Maj John F. Jones, of B acs-burg, came ov• r to (tuffruy Tuesdav on busitiess. He looked over the * heutre and office huiiding and wa- pleased w>tii it, and jjPe spoke pleasanily of (faffpcy’M progress Alonzo Hnnmett, a prosperous young meiclmnt and farni< r <0 Mer- in city t lo iy to (’her ^ trip H» O' re' urn non and farmers esday iievens, a prmnin Ki r.-huw. mi it a Jim Wilkins, two of It iv» nna. were nt lum- mt mber 8t'>ck (Tomuany, cer w week on h sh<>rt ini' home Thu Messrs prospi mu in town I John F bermai of of the ti ff e\ Uve was in trie city Tuesday. N W. H irdin FTsq . of Blacksburg, was over fur a few hours Tuesday. A \j Crutchfield, of the Crutcli- field-Tolleson Company in Spartan burg, wa* in (Tuffuey Tuesday. Hon. Wm. Jefferies, of Home, was ir town this week C H. Woodliff of Gainesville Ga., representing the Atlanta Constitu tion, is in th** city. Mrs. C. N. Legg, of Mercer ap pears to be the champion gourd raiser of the county 8he has a gourd measuring fifty-eight inches in length that grew on her place this year, and we doubt if any one in the county can show one ro heat it. Job Couldn't Have Stood It If he’d had Itching plies l hey’re terribly annoying; but Bocklen’s A r nica 8alve will cure the worst case of piles on earth It has cured thou sands. For Injuries, F’ains "r Bodily Eruptions it’s the best salve in the world Price 2f)c a box. Cure guar anteed. 8oid bv Cherokee Drug (To. One of the hardest things in the world is for a man who is stuck up to get down. Dr. Itull's Cough Syrup cures the most stuPUmi coughs, colds ami lung affec tions. Kven incipient consumption has la-en successfu 1 ly cured hy this inarvi.-Ions remedy. Sufferers will ohtaiii relief after a lew doses. Artificai wool made from turf fi bers is now emnloyed at Dusseldorf, Germany, for manufacturing cloth bandages, iotts, ruga and *o fortii People Helieve In It. It lias liecn cy iiicallv said that anything can be sold by advertising now-a-days. This is not so. Many liniments have been advertised but only one— IV-rry Davis’ Painkiller—has stood the test of sixty years’ use. To-day its popularity is grc-aler than ever and is based not upon what any body says but upon what the remedy dot s. There is but one Painkiller, Perry Davis’. COG Alii £ * “ 1 ’ ’a; i F i >■. IIitbitH C irwl at ■ lu.istor iuu 1 , In duyw. tlmi' rcM*. t>f r«fwr«ncM8. 25 venrs u J Horn*) Trttulment owit FHLK. \.i ir* B.M.WOOLLEY. v< DON’T TOBACCO SPIT and SMOKE YourLifeaway! You can t>e cureti of any form of tobacco using easily, Is- made well, strong, magnetic, full of new life and vigor hy taking NO-TO-BAC, i that makes weak men strong. Many gain ten pounds in ten days. Over 500.000 cured. All druggists. Cure guaranteed. Book let and advice 1-KKH Address STKRIdNG REMEDY CO., Ctiicago or New York. 437 £ .(?* lU' r ?r in t. 1. Hi 'I A DEAFNEoa AX.L CASES r * . M i . M W 41 4. K1 L n rable. J"*4 6 Vi J - J 'J ._-V i by our new invention. Only tliose bon HEAD mm 07*3E imZltfELH. T. A. WERMAM, Cc EALTI^ORE, ^AYS: Bai.timork, Md , March ro, tool. Gmtlemrn • — Bejng entirely cured of denf'ir«.9, thanks to your treatni nt, 1 will n.v.- ;-,iveyou a full history of my c.iv. to l e u- i ,.L - > <! • ,;i. About five yc.ii.; ago rnv right ear h-.-gan te siug, a my hearing in this car i - y 1 underwent a tri -t:.v..» or ca: r-n. for three ci.' i. her of physician 1 an. u , ..i ■ . t in . only an operation help v.. i c-., i,.ii cnl then © -ise, but I then •nvr e- ie.i- . . < u \ i-i a Now ' o-g paper, and ordered your treat- nent. After! 1 • • <i, a«d i y. after fir . , . . .. I thank yoa heartily and I ■ Very i . A. v:;RMAN, 730 S. Broadway, Baltimore, Md. Our treat tn f f tJ.rr j)a i ft •••-. your usir-tl om: put ion. Examination .-ml » ;• - . r *f."' ’inr* r ft'*‘ •FftRST atn nc’iiiiial advice ire-. \ jU lUhl Al HOlVIt coat. mmirm /.• t if, sale ave., Chicago, ill. t on g tiing worse, u •* LI lost iv • c corsul’cdanum- Vliot M methat iie . 1 nci.-.es v.-o-ald 4»- MtgS FiVcrybody, who has tried one, will tell you that Leaiiar Slows and Laops are iiio Best. You can j>rolit by others’ experience. We sell and guar antee them. And it will pay you to call and see our complete line of FURNITURE * 1 which consists of too many articles to mention, till of which we will sell you at live-and-let-live prices. SHU FORD & LEMASTER. Store Phone bd. Pe*idence Phones 0-1 and 95. DR. LYON’S Strictly vegetable, perfectly harmless, sure to accomplish DESIRED RESULTS. Greatest known female remedy. PAUTMM Buware of counterfoils and imitations. The genuine Is put up only in paste-hoard Tar- DMWIlwnl tori with fac-simile signature on side of tt>') bottle, thus: sg+s? -c bend for Circular to WILLIAMS MK(i. CO., Sole Agents, Cleveland, Ohio. ^ ^ iJif^For sale by Cherokee I)ru»f C’o. AND VITAUTV I>XX.. 3V5lC>’JC”X-I» WEXtVi-JXTLTPJ Jtl The great remedy for nervous prostration and all diseases of the generative organs of cither sex, such as Nervous Prostration, Pan mg or Lost Manhood, Impotency, Nightly Emissions, Youthful Errors, Mental Worry, excessive use of Tobacco or Opium, which load to Consumption and Insanity With every icjcd IICIMf! t& order we guarantee to cure or refund the money. Sold at si.00 per bur, AM tn UOINIL 6 boxes for $e.OO. Dlt. MOTT’S CHE HU AL CO., Clevcluud, Ohio. ^Jf“Kor sale hy Cherokee Drug Co. LOSING OUT SAL "Wo 7\.ro Coixtom plaa Chango JANUARY 1ST, 1902. OUR ENTIRE STOCK Dry Goods, Clothing, Hots, Shoes, Notions, Etc., Etc. TI Oil/- A Call and Soo l J’ss I5oior*o leaving J. C. LIPSCOMB & BRO'