The ledger. [volume] (Gaffney City, S.C.) 1896-1907, November 29, 1901, Image 3
Itching Skin
]»i tr. !>v diiy
Ti i .< Uh i *i- lint f those who
jjit' *. ui.f>‘• 1111 um* ;* afiiictod
vith Ecv.oma <»r S;i!. KImmimi—and out-
; do not cure.
Th< y can’t.
T . * * t> n f trouble in the
b'ood — uiuke that pure and tbi;' seal-
ire, burning, iteliing skin disease will
disappear.
“1 was taken with an itchine on my
arms which proved very disagreeable. I
concluded it was sail rheum and bought a
bottle of Hood’s Sarsaparilla. In two days
after I began taking it I felt better and it
wan not long before I was cured. Have
never hud any skin disease since.” Mrs.
Ida K. Ward, Cove Point, Md.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
and Pills
rid the blood of all impurities and cure
all eruptions.
For Sale.
OST—A package of sheet music.
- to Miss Ethel Sarratt.
Return
It-pd
wr all forms of Malarial poisoning take
Johnson’* Chill and Fever Tonic. A taint
of Malarial poisoning in your blood means
misery ami failure. Blood medicines can’t
cure Malarial poisoning. The antidote for
it is ./oAosoo's Ionic (let a bottle to-<Uiy.
Costs 50 Cents If It Cures.
Ml . n,. !■■■—!■
“I have been troubled n great deal
with a torpid liver, whn h produces constipa
tion. I found C’ASCA li I'.TS i ) bo nil you claim
for them, ami secured such r< lief the llrst trial,
that I purchased another supply and was com
pletely cured I shtll only he too glad to rec
ommend CascaretH whenever the opportuuity
Is presented.” J. A SMITH.
*620 Susquehanna Ave , Philadelphia, Pa
MA TA Dip Sold and guaranteed by all «lrug-
BW" I gists to C1IKK Tobacco Habit.
ALL WOMEN
Wine of Cardui is the guardian
of a woman’s health and happi
ness from youth to old age. It
helps her safely into womanhood.
It sustains her during the trials
of pregnancy, childbirth and
motherhood, making labor easy
and preventing flooding and mis
carriage. It gently leads her
through the dangerous period
known as the change of life.
WINE''CARDUI
cures leucorrhoBa, falling of the
womb, and menstrual irregularity
in every form. It is valuable in
every trying period of a woman’s
life. It reinforces the nervous
system, acts directly on the geni
tal organs and is the finest tonic
for women known. Ask your
druggist for a $1.00 bottle of
Wine of Cardui.
RatoNville, Ala., July 11, 1900.
I am using Wino of Cardui and Thed-
ford’s Black-Draught and I feel like a
different woman already. Several la
dle* here keep the medicima in their
home* all the time. I have three girl*
and they are lining it with me.
Mrs. KATE BROWDER.
For advli-e and literature, adilre**, giving
lymplonui, "The Ijtdlr.’ Artvinory l>ei>ort-
mentThe Chattanooga Medicine ( euiuany,
Cbaltanooga, Tenn.
MANY LIVES LOST
IN RAILSOAD W8EK
Accident Occurred on the
Wabash Near Seneca, Mich.
HUNDRED SUPPOSED TO BE DEAD
Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do
Good. Never Sicken, Wenken, or Gripe. Hie. 2. r >c.&0c.
... CURE CONSTIPATION. ...
Sterling Kemeily t'ompnnj, ( liirngo, Montreal. New York. 320
WOMAN'S TROUBLES AND FEMALB
DISEASES CURED BY
Johnston’s
Sarsaparilla
QUART BOTTLES.
Painful and Suppressed Menses, Ir»
regularity, Leucorrhcea, Whites, Steril-
> ity, Ulceration of the Uterus, change
of life, in matron or maid, all find re
lief, help, benefit and cure in JOHN8-
TOhTS SARSAPARILLA. It is a real
panacea for all pain or headache about
the top or back of the head, distreso-
ing pain in the left side, a disturbed
condition of digestion, palpitation of
the heart, cold hands and feet, nerv
ousness and irritation, sleeplessness,
muscular weakness, bearing-down
pains, backache, legache, irregular ac
tion of the heart, shortness of breath,
abnormal discharges, with extremely
painful menstruation, scalding of urine,
• swelling of feet, soreness of the breasts,
neuralgia, uterine displacement and
catarrh, and all those .symptoms and
troubles which make the average wo
man’s life so miserable,
MICH IO A* Ditto VO.. Detroit, Mick.
For Hale by Company Htore, (JulTiiuy Mfg.
Co Oil fl my. H. U.
Misunderstanding of Orders Said to
Have Caused Collision—Engineer
and Fireman of One of the Trains
Killed—Conductor Blamed.
Detroit, Mich., Nov. 28.—From 100
to 150 persons were killed or injured
last night in the most disastrous rail
road wreck in the history #f Michigan
railroads. Two heavily loaded passen
ger trains on the Wabash railroad col
lided head-on at full speed 1 mile east
of Seneca, the second station west of
Adrian. The westbound train of two
cars loaded with immigrants and five
other coaches were smashed and burn
ed with the result of awful loss of life
aud fearful injuries to a majority of
its passengers. The eastbound train,
the Continental Limited, suffered in
scarcely less degree.
The track in the vicinity of the
wreck is strewn with dead and dying.
Many physicians from Detroit have
gone to the scene.
Blamed Concfuctor.
The track at the point where the
collision occurred was straight, and at
hrst the officials could not understand
how the accident could have happened.
No. 13, which ordinarily is due to
leave Detroit at 2:od o’clock, was two
hours late, leaving at 1:20. The two
trains meet at Montpelier, ()., accord
ing to schedule, but No. 4 had orders
to wait for No. 13 at Seneca. The
blame is therefore plai ed on the con-
duotor or engineer of No. 4. Had the
train been held at Seneca the accident
would not have occurred. Train No.
4 was due at Seneca at <»:43, according
to the change in schedule, but appar
ently orders to wait were disobeyed
and the probabilities are that the true
story of w hy will never be told, as the
train crows undoubtedly met instant
death.
Emigrants on Board.
Train No. 13 was- a regular train
carrying two cars of emigrants going
west and was behind time. This train
was composed of seven coaches, haul
ed by two engines. Nos. 88 and 151.
Reports differ as to the number of
coaches carrying emigrants. One says
there were five or six coaches carry-
iug this (dass of tourists.
It is not thought that any Detroit
people were injured, as train No. “,
immediately behind No. 13, contained
the Detroit passengers for Chicago.
As soon as the news of the disaster
reached Division Superintendent
Burns, of Detroit, the wires were kept
hot ordering specials from Adrian, Pe
ru and Montpelier to the scene of the
wreck. A special tram from Detroit
carrying 32 physicians and surgeons
started for Seneca and was given the
right of way. When it reached the
scene of the wreck the work was at
once commenced succoring the wound
ed. A special train from Adrian bear
ing all the doctors and physicians in
the city had been at work for an hour,
but the flames retarded the work of
rescue. The wounded had been placed
on stretchers in the coaches sent from
Adrian.
At 10:45 o’clock the first train load
ed with wounded left the scene of the
wreck for Adrian. The dead were left
behind, to be carried in on a later
train.
The wrecking train, ordered from
Montpelier, 30 miles away, arrived
shortly after 9 o’clock, but the heavy
vestibuled cars of No. 4 lay between
it and the burning immlgraat cars,
so that but little aid could be render
ed to the rescuers.
When the special train bearing the
wounded reached Adrian the injured
were carried in ambulances, drays and
delivery wagons to the hospitals until
they were killed, when private resi
dences in the neighborhood were plac
ed In service.
Engineer Strong's Statement
Engineer Strong stated tn positive
terms that his orders directed him
to pass trains Nos. IS and 3. the lat
ter closely following No. 13 from De
troit, at Sand Creek. Said Strong:
"I saw the headlight of No. 18 four
or five miles before the collision oc
curred. but 1 supposed the train was
side tracked at Sand Creek waiting
for us to pass. The glare of the pow
erful electric headlight made It Impos
sible to see tne exact location of the
other train. The fireman and 1 ooth
jumped from t ie right hand gangway.'’
Strong and the fireman were both
hurled 300 feet, but although cut,
scratched and terribly jarred, they
were not seriously injured.
The immigrants and other passen
gers on train No. 13 were crushed be
tween the splintered cars.
To add to the horror the wreckage
caught fire instantly and In a short
time the bodies of the dead and those
of the injured who were pinned down
were being burned.
The spot where the wreck occurred
was in the open country, with out one
farmhouse near by and facilities for
aiding the injured were extremely in
adequate.
As soon as the news of the disas
ter reached Superintendent Burns
here a relief trflin was dispatched to
the scene with a score or more sur
geons on board. Farmers from near by
and those who escaped from the wreck
made heroic efforts to rescue the less
fortunate.
The eoniWtion of the wreck was
such that in the darkness It was Im
possible to render immediate aid.
The scene Immediately surrounding
the wreck was terrible. !♦. the semi
darkness, illuminated only by the glare
from the fire of the wreckage, men
stumbled aiiout over corpses which fell
from the ruins, and which, after the
flames had died out, were hauled from
the debris. People came hurrying
from the near by villages, and these,
with the help of those who escaped
on train No. 4, did what they could.
The immigrants who escaped from the
last one or two cars were unable to
speak English and could give no idea
apparently of the number of people
who were in each car. The number
of dead must be considered purely as
approximate. Railroad doctors and
others agreed that the number must
approach 100.
Among those killed were:
William Dowd, Delray, fireman No.
13.
C. W. Baldere, Ashley, fireman No.
13. aud
James Brown, porter, Chicago.
At the union station in this city
during the night were many sad epi
sodes. Relatives and fiiends of the
passengers who were known to have
been on the wrecked trains besieged
the railroad officials with entreaties
and inquiries. One little girl waited
until 2:30 a. m. for her sister, Vida
Decas, of Tupperville, Ont., and was
then informed that her sister was
among the dead.
The latest news from the scene is
being handled over a special wire ar
ranged for by the Associated Press.
Considerable light was shed on the
cause for the disaster by the orders
which the conductor chowed as his
authority for proceeding past Sand
Creek.
The order which whs delivered to
the train at Holloway read us follows:
‘‘Order No. 28—Trains Nos. 13 and
3, No. 4 engine 009 will meet No. 13
at Seneca and No. 3, engine 623, Sand
Creek. Engines Nos. 88 and 151 will
double head No. 15.”
It is understood that the engineer ,
and conductor oi No. 4 received a sim
ilar order at Montpelier, ()., but if so •
these orders were disregardeu. if it |
‘ develops that the orders issued to both ;
trains were to the same end it is con
sidered that ihe responsibility for the
disaster rests wholly with the en
gineer and conductor of the eastbound
Continental Limited.
Many of the burned bodies cannot
be identified. Only six bodies have
actually been recovered. A small pile
of crisp, blackened fragments that
covered two stretchers was all that
could be found.
FEA!1 OF EXPOSURE
CAUSED HIS SUICIDE
Stuart It. Young Shoots Him
self at Louisville, Ky.
WOMEN AND SOCIETY.
WILL GO AS MISSIONARY.
HAD BEEN CITY TREASURER
He Learned That Experts Were at
* Work On Hie Books and Feared Re
sult—Friend* Would Have Come to
His Assistance. 7
GEORGIA LEGISLATURE.
Hon. Hiram P. Beil to Address House
and Senate.
Atlanta, November 21.—Hon. Hi
ram P. Bell, a member of the
Georgia senate and one of the few
surviving members of the secession
convention, will address the general
assembly on the historical scene en
acted in that memorable body.
The bill by Mr. Taylor, of Houston,
to pay clerks for issuing and sheriffs
for serving subpenaes to go before
the grand jury, which failed yester
day because of a lack of a constitu
tional majority, was reconsidered by a
vote of 87 to 18.
Hon. Thomas Egleston, the newly
elected member from Fulton to suc
ceed the late Porter King, was escort
ed to the speaker’s stand by his col
leagues, Messrs. Slaton and Houston,
and sworn in by Associate Justice
William H. Little, of the supreme
court.
The house overwhelmingly Instruct
ed the Western and Atlantic commit
tee to report back by next Monday the
Felder resolution requiring the gov
ernor to institute proceedings against
the lessees of the Western and At
lantic to keep the property in proper
repair. It had been tabled In the com
mittee because of the expressed fear
that it would endanger the depot bill.
The senate refused to reconsider the
passage of the Wright dispensary bill,
passed yesterday, aud it was transmit
ted to the house for the concurrence
in that body of the amendments pro
posed by the senate.
CLASH EXPECTED SATURDAY.
Kentucky Union Miners Will Ignore
Order to Disperse.
Madlsonville, Ky., Nov. 21.—Every
thing is quiet in the mining district
this morning.
The union miners, now in camp In
the county, say they will Ignore Coun
ty Judge Hall’s order to disperse and
it looks as if there will be a serious
clash between the authorities and the
campers on Saturday. President Wood,
of the United Mine Workers, aaya
the men will not disband.
Judge Hall says: “If the miners
in camp are not dispersed by Satur
day morning at daylight I shall call
upon General Murray and his troops
to disperse them. This is positive and
final.”
Adjutant General Murray says: "I
ami my men are subject to the orders
of County Judge Hall. If he directs
me to make his order effective on Sat
urday morning I shall deem it my duty
to comply.”
TRESPASSER KILLED.
Louisville, Ky., Nc /. 28.—After be
ing offered an evening newspaper by
two newsboys which said his books
were under examination by expert
accountants, Stuart R. Young, city
treasurer of Louisville, last evening
went to the rear of a warehouse at
Sixth and Nelson streets and commit
ted suicide by shooting himself be
hind the right ear with a pistol.
A great sensation was created late
•his afternoon when the last edition
of an evening paper appeared with
story saying in substance that account
ants were at work on the books of the
retiring city treasurer, Stuart R.
Young, and that it was reported dis
crepanciet had been found m his ac
counts. Immediately the friends of
Mr. Young began to look for him, not
believing the reports, 'they were sur
prised at not being able to find him.
They hoped tor the best, however, be
cause the reports could not be sub
stantiated and the expert accountants
refused to make a statement.
Shortly after G p. m. Mr. Young was
seen at the ladies’ entrance of the
Louisville hotel on Main street, be
tween Sixth and Seventh, where he
lived with his bride of a few months.
Two newsboys ran up and said:
“Mr. Young don't you want a paper?
It's got your pic ture in it.”
Headlines Frig' tened Him.
One glance at the double-column
he adlines told Mr. noiing why the pa
per had printed a double column pic
ture oi him. Instead of entering the
hotel lie walked down Sixth street to
ward the river, the newsboys follow
ing him on the other side ot the street.
Just after passing Nelson street Mr.
Young turned off betwen some uox
curs.
The boys feared to follow him any
further, and returning to the Louis
ville hotel, described Mr.Young’s ac
tions to “Kid’’ Johnson, a hackman
whose carriage stands in front of the
hotel. Johnson was acquainted with
Mr. Young, and following the direc
tion given by the newsboys, passed
between the box cars and brought up
in a cinder-covered driveway in the
rear of the warehouse ju * east of the
union depot. There he saw Mr. Young
lying face downward in the cinders,
his right arm under him. Johnson
shook the form of the man,not suspect
ing he had killed himself. Seeing a
bullet hole behind Mr. Young's right
ear Johnson turned tne body over.
Then he saw a pistol in Mr. Young’s
right hand. Life was extinct.
Johnson ran to a telephone and call
ed up the residence of Young’s father,
Colonel Bennett H. Young. Mrs. Stu
art R. Young answered the telephone,
but the hackman called for Colonel
Young and told him the news. Colonel
Young Immediately went to the scene
of the suicide with some of his son’s
friends. One of these, who is one of
the most prominent business men In
Louisville, walking up and down the
cinder driveway, said, with tears roll
ing down his cheeks:
“If his friends could have found
him today this never would have hap
pened. If money was needed wo
•hould have supplied it.”
Stuart R. Young was 35 years old
and one of the most prominent men in
Louisville. He was a graduate of
.Princeton university, a son of Colonel
Bennett H. Young, a prominent law
yer and ex-confedrate soldier of Louis
ville. He married last July Miss Bes
sie Wymond. one of the most beauti
ful women in Kentucky and daughter
of L. H. Wymond. Four years ago
Mr. Young was elected city treasurer
and under the law was Ineligible for
re-election, his successor having been
elected on Nov. 5.
There was some delay in Mr. Young
turning the treasurer's office over to
the newly elected treasurer, James M.
Camp. Mr. Young said he wanted
time in which to verify his account at
the bank. Mr. Camp said tonight that
Mr. Young had never turned over to
him the bank pass book.
Mr. Young is said to have bet quite
heavily on the races.
(All cumriuinlciitions to lids iv'liinm should
bo addressed to I’. (>. Itox l.Vl.)
New forma of skirts are always in
teresting, and I may inform m> read
ers that there will be plenty of choice.
First there is the skirt with one
shaped flounce. The skirt is made
fiat, round the upper part or with
Hinall gored pleats.
Then there is the skirt with three
shaped flounces set slightly lower in
front than behind. Sometimes they
only start from the apron on each
side and run round the back.
A plain skirt made in one piece is
also admitted. Another new skirt,
has no flounce, but is so shaped as to
give the effect of a flounce. In the
place where the flounce should be.
that is about one-third from the
ground, each breadth is sloped away,
so as to give fullness to the bottom
of the skirt. There is no change this
season in the upper part of the skirt.
i
Fight With Virginia Hunters In Ten
nessee.
Middlesboro, Ky., Nov. 21.—In a
fight with Virginia hunters, who cross
ed into Tennessee near Hunton, one
man was killed.
The law does not permit game to
be carried from the stale of Tennes
see and floes not allow hunting on
farms where notice is posted forbid
ding it. John Smith, on whoso farm
the intruders were found, asked them
to leave. They refused. Smith and
his sons armed themselves and drove
them off. In the light Thomas Wallace
was killed.
Wounded By Jealous Woman.
Charleston, S. C., Nov. 28.—Sarah
Hines, 20 years of age, shot Chauncey
Stillman, 19 years of age, in the neck
here last night and then tried to take
her own life. They both came to the
city recently from Buffalo. Stillman
Is an electrician and employed at the
•xposition grounds. Jealousy was the
cause of the woman’s act. She came
here with Stillman, who has recently
been devoting himself to another wom
an. Miss Hines waited for Stillman
outside his boarding house at 85 Com
ing street last night, aud when the
young man appeared opened fire on
him. The first shot took effect in the
nerk and three more snots went wild.
Bhe then shot herself in tho head, in
flicting a painful flesn wound.
Price of Light Oils Rrduced.
Corsicana, Tex., Nov. 28.—Local oil
producers have been notiflea of a reduc
tion of 10 cents per barrel In light
crude oil. This is the lowest price
readied since the advance made after
the expiration of the 50 cem per bar
rel contract, under which the pip*
lino was established.
Mrs. W. H. Smith has returned
from a pleasant trip to Clover and
Gastonia.
Mrs. T. B. Butler has gone to At
lanta to attend the marriage of Miss
Draper.
Miss Addie McArthur has gone to
Charleston, where she will act as an
attendant at the marriage of her
friend. Miss Sprunt
♦ ♦ ♦ ♦
Mrs. Laney and children, of Mon
roe are guests at the home of Mr
and Mis. Itobt.'Gaffney.
Miss Inez Sarratt. after returning
home from Union, has been hastily
recalled on account of the illness of
her sister, Mrs. Hemes. ,
Miss S’eel, of Yorkville. is visiting
Capt and Mrs. J B. Bell
♦ ♦ ♦ ♦
Mrs Pam Litthj ihn has gone down
the country to visit relatives.
Mrs. Mince Mon-head and daugh
ter are -(pending this week with her
parents, Mr ami Mrs. J. T. Brown.
♦ * ♦ ♦
Misses Gertie and Bessie Ballenger
have gnn to spend Thanksgiving da 1 .
with tln-ir grandparents. Mr. a d
Mrs. W. L Linseomb
♦ ♦ ♦ ♦
Mrs Fletcher Smith is visiting in
the country with relatives.
THANKSGIVING OBSERVED.
Gaffney Men-lmiitu Close Their Stores and
Alanufactor* Shut Down.
Thanksgiving was generally oh
served in Gaffney yesterday, all places
of business being closed and work in
the manufactories being suspended
A union service was held in the
Presbyterian church in the forenoon.
Rev. J. B. Bozeman, pastor of the
Cherokee Avenue Baptist church,
preached an excellent sermon on
“Giving ” A collection for the poor
was taken.
In the evening a special song ser
vice was held in the First Baptist
church ; Ri-v. Dr. Rice, of Ut ion, nude
a short address. The choir singing
was of an unusually hi^h order, while
the male quartette singing of Messrs
DuPre, Osborne, Lipscomb and Rich
ardson was of such a character as to
merit unstinted praise. A collection
was taken for the Greenwood orphan
age.
Quite a number of people went
hunting and game suffered as a re
sult.
Good dinners were served in the
hotels and cafes and there were few
homes in which the festive turkey
was not in evidence. Altogether it
was a day to be thankful for.
SHORT LOCAL ITEMS.
LaCrosse, V/is., Gii! Undismayed By
Fate of Miss Stone.
Now York. Nov. 21.— Undismayed
by the fnte of .Miss Stone, tho kid
naped missionary. Miss Mary Roys, a
girl from LaCrosse, Wis., will tonight
become the wife of I elioy Ostrander,
who will take her to Samakov, Tur
key, the very station from which Mia»
Stone was taken by the Bulgaria*
brigands. Mr. Ostrander expects to
assume the post of an instructor in
a missionary school at Samakov and
his bride will help him.
The bride's mother is Mrs. George
W. Cole, of this city, and the wedding
will take place at her home. Mr. Ow*
Grander te from Troy, N. Y.
Colored Numlny School Orgitnl/.ed.
On Sunday the 17th inst., Rev. ti.
T. Dillard, D. D , of Columbia, with
the assistance of Rev. D 8. Collier,
organized a Presbyterian Sabbath-
school in this city. This is a worthy
move on the part of these colored
people, and is hoped by the teacher;
and members who are greatly iuteree-
fced in the noble work, that thevr
efforts may be crowned with succese.
The name of the school is “Dra
per” Sunday school, and it meets
every Sabbath afti-rnoon at 3 o’clock
at Peeler’s old store on Mills street.
The friends of the school have a cor
dial invitation to meet with it and
aid in fin- good work it is intended to
accomplish
Wliiit’s Your l-'ai-o Worth?
Someiitms a fortune, but never, if
you have a sallow complexion, a
jaundiced look, moth patches and
blotches on the skin—ail signs of
Liver Trouble. But Dr King s New
Life Bills give Clear Skin. Rosy
Cheeks. Rich Complexion. Only 25
cents at Cherokee Drug Store.
The fl ij* r* on many a man’s grave
ar*- Choked b\ t.he widow’s weeds
Educate Your Rowels With Cascareta.
Candy n:o -lire constipntion forever.
10c 25c. I f O 0.0 f aO, druggists refund money.
<’nq left s nr*- line weather vanes —
only tix-d wh«n they become rusty.
Iloxv Are Your Kiilui-y*. f
Pr Hobbs’Sparatnis Pills cure all k id m-v ills. Sam
ple tree Add. Sierlini: Remedy Co.,Chicago or N Y-
The p'-rsi-tent tramp is qualified to
give sn expert opinion on that perplex
ihg qu* stion, “When is a pup a d’'g‘P
Wheat sowing is still being pushed
by our farmers and cotton picking is
about over.
Gho. G. Byers has returned from
the North, where he went to buy
holiday goods for himself and Car-
roll & Carpenter.
The proprietors of the Gaffney
street railway are putting in new ties
and making other repairs on their
road between this place and Lime
stone.
Grenard Lodge, No. 186 A. F. M.
will hold a special convocation tbis
evening. A large torn out is de
sired as work will be done in the first
and third degrees.
Mood Turner has moved bis stock
of fancy groceries and confectioner
ies into the building recently occu
pied by Zed Hope as a barber shop.
Zed has gone with the Exchange
shop under Harry Knox
The weather this fall has been
ideal. It has been dry and bright,
just tinged enough with winter to be
invigorating and make one feel as if
an extra eiixer of life were being
wafted to him on every breeze.
Mrs. Fletcher Smith, after a week
or two of slight sickness, is recuper
ating at the home of her uncle. Mr.
Durbin Littlejohn Her many friends
in the city wish her speedy recovery
and return to the city.
It is rumored that the S. C A G.
E Railway will, beginnig December
1st, put on double daily trans
between Charleston and Marion. N.
C., and will operate them during
the continuance of the Soutn Caro
lina Inter-State and West Indian
Exposition.
Tim Worltl’H Grt-xtest Ftytr lVI#-«ll<-iiie.
.IoIimsom’s Tonii- does in a duv wlmt slow
Quiuim-e iiinot do in ten dsiys. Its splenaid
cures ;m- in strikin'- contrast with the feebte
cures made hy (Quinine.
If you are utterly wretched, take a thor
ough couisi- of Johnson's Toni- and drive
out every trace of Malarial poisonitit-. The
wise insure their lives and the wiser insurw
their in altli hy usin>r Johnson’s Chill and—
Fever Tonic. It costs 50 cents if it cures;
not one cent if It does not.
The da, ’f-a* a woman washes her
head her family cxoects very little
ei8“ of her , tt
Buy and Try a Box TonigM.
While you think of it, go buy and.
try a box of Cascarets Candy Ca
thartic, ideal laxative, tonight. You’ll
never regret it. Genuine tablets
stamped C. C. C. Never sold
bulk. All druggists, ioc.
-r
'F
H M It
JHICHESTER'S ENGLISH
PENNYROYAL PILLS
Always reliable. I aitlr* nnfr Pni|i||J*< fca
C«*U'HK»TKKTI EMUI.MHf in B4>« aw*
'il-na metallic boxes, sealed with blue rib
f wwe no other. Hofhae dnngrrow
tati ona nnd Imitation*. Buy of your l>r
> lend 4«. in stamps for Partirnlara, Tii
-nanlala and “ ttr llrf (tor laMHra,” in Mil
a roturn Mail. 10.000 Testimonials. Bold I
tL* Pniggists.
0HICHB8TBR CHEMICAL OO.
SSdto JSadUon Eqaaro,
Ma^laathU]
PHIL.A., Pi
For Sale
F oil SALK Orn-llllekensderfer typewriter
In good order. J. Eb. Jvfferlv*. ll->-tf
LEARN STENOGRAPHY BY MAIL
To those wish'ns; to )rarn Mnnson’s By*-
tent of PhenoKrupic short-hand I can fn»-
nlsh the books (post p-tid) at pubUsbosi*
prices.
The entire course Is covered by twen^-
lessons arruntred hy Mr. Munson himself ttm
as to enable any one to acquire a knowledg*
of the art without the aid of a teacher.
The Art >‘f I’honoitraphy is tho only bntrir
that teaehes Munson’s System fully. arrtfMw
price is #2 no
Orlwlllxiw the book with tin- twenty
lessons by mull for |4 (10. This I ml ml**
correction of the written exercises
Jas. L. strain,
l-awk-4t. Ktta Jane, S. V.
Summons for Relief.
State oe South Cakomna, I Court ofGc
County ok Ciikk ikke. j nmn Pleaa.
Rouert M. Northey, In Ids own rlitht amt a*
Administrator of the Kstutc of Franklin 8,
Northey deceased, plaintiffs.
against
John F. Northey, Sando Northey, .1. A
ander Northey. Mary K. Northey, Alice J.
Northey. DoukIhss Northey, Shell Northey,
Koy Northey, Janie* K. Northey and Joseph,
F. Northey. defendant*.
The Defendants In t Ids action above iiuummI*
Yon are hereby summoned and required to*,
answer the complaint In this action, a ropy
of which Is herewith served upon you. an«CU»
serve a copy of y< mr answer to t he said eons,
plaint on the subscriber al his otth-e at Gaff
ney, S. (’., within twenty days aft< r rh„
service hereof, exclusive of the day of suelfc
service, and If you fall to answer the <-oi»-
plalnt within I he time aforesaid, the plaln-
UIT In this action will apply to the (!ourt tor
the relief demanded In the eomplainl.
(Dated) Gaffney, s. < , Oct. 14th, I1n>|.
To John F. Northey, lames It Northey ami
Joseph F. Northey, non resident defendant*.
Take not Ice, that t Ft- complaint In this a»v
tion was hied 111 the office olthet leiknff.hn
Court of Common I’lcas for Cherokee Cnuiw
tv. 9- C.. on tie- 14th day of Oct. lunl.
. * J. K. WknsTK.it,
Plaintiff's Attorniry.
Gaffney, S (5.. Oct. Mlh. 1501.
Pub. oct. 251 h, Nov. 1st, 8th, l.dh. 22nd, Ott»
W01.