The ledger. [volume] (Gaffney City, S.C.) 1896-1907, August 01, 1902, Image 5
J. C. OTTS,
Attorney and Counselor.
Ottlet uuMalra. t***i w*'«n K. A. Jonett and
•aTHiipor*..
Of?1c«* ami Ri'sldonce .Phono.
Or. C T. LIPSCOMB.
Dentist.
Iftice over R. A lone» A Co ’• store
rit. rm.i.d ai O'Moe St* i1liV> to the went,
Dr. D. P. THOMSON,
Dentist.
pyOfflco over National Hank.
J. E. WEBSTER.
A.t t A.» - 1 w-t* w ,
Wee U. ('onri fleusfc. (PrcibatesHiOiM ■> nth •
Gafiney City, S C.
c'rartiCOB ID »ali r .he erurTh m-
,1riR« a its
- - - - - - ■ - -
Williams. Hall, .Ik. JamehA. Wii.lis.
HALL &i WILLIS,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW.
<“* a v* in':*< k y . «. c;.
.notary Puhlle 'n oPhs,. Peomui att< "Mori
<lven to aL buiSlness.
i itlce over it. A. Jonex v • 'i. «i sior. .
JR. J. F. GARRETT,
Dentist,
Gaffney, - - - S. C.
)flice over.I. R. ToMpeon’R new “tort
In office froiii 1st to Sfft.h of ench
uuontb :
SHINGLES, BRICK, SASH,
DOORS, BLINDS
and all kinds of Building Ma
terial, Paints, Oils, Etc. for
sale at a small per cent, above
cost for cash. Estimates made
without charge.
L. BAKER
JUNE H. CUR,
ARTISTIC I’HOTOCiRAPHER
Studio at 812 Limestone St,
Gaffney, S. C.
Best equipped studio in this
section. High grade photog
raphy in all its branches.
Call and see “Artist Proof,”
the latest and handsomest style
of photograph ever made.
Finishing for amateur pho
tographers solicited.
Telephone 17G.
tTor—
Building and Plastering Lirne
Coal, and Plaster IIair.
Plaster Paris.
Rosendale Cement,
Portland Cement,
Dynamite,
Blasting Powder, Fuse
and Dynamite Caps, call on
Limestone Springs Lime Works
CARROLL & CO.. Lessees.
Telephone 5T.
Southern Railway Schedule.
Trains from Atlanta. Greenville. Spartan
burg. etc., for Charlotte. Washington, etc
pass Oaffney. s. (No. :iti. Fast Mail, (dally
f:-0 a. in; No. Irl (dally) 4: .’<» p. in : No. fu. Ex
press, (daily) 7:11^ p. in; No. Limited, (daily)
(1:40 p tit. No. IB stops til GatlTiey on signal
to take on passengers for Washington and
beyond.
Trains from Washington. Charlotte, eti:.,
for Spartanburg, Greenville. Atlanta, ete ,
pass Gaffney: No. li'.t, Express, (daily) '.‘:.7f
a. in ; No. 115. Fast Mail, (daily) It :4'.’ p. m: No.
11 (daily) 2:^7 p. m; No. It;. Limited, (dally
10:50 a. in. N >. '17 ship* it Uaffney on signal
to let inf passengers mouj \V .LAijIiig ton.
Through trains for Washington and th
East. Couneetions at Atlanta for all point
*:J0 rr luutes fordinner.
Note: Trains Nos Wl and HU are operated
daily. Trains Nos 54. ;i5, 11. 12. 13. 14, 15 tutd
10 are operated diilly except Sunday.
CONNECTIONS MADE I1Y SOCTBDCND TRAINS.
At Marion: No. 32 connects at Marlon with
Southern Ky train No. 30 which arMves at
Marlon at S:2H a in., from Chattanooga, Ashe
ville and intermediate points.
At Blacksburg: No. 34 and No. II connect
with Southern By train No. 30 which arrives
at Blacksburg tit 7:45 a. in., from Atlanta,
Greenville, Spartanburg and intermediate
points.
At York ville: No. 34 connects with 0 & N.
W. train No. 70 which leaves Yorkville at
10:4s a. in., for Gastonia, Lenoir and inter-
mediatl points.
At Rock Hill: No’s 32 and 31 connect with
Southern Ky train No. 75 which leaves Rock
Hill at 3:30 p. m., for Chester, Columbia and
Intermediate points.
At Catawba .let: No’s 32 and 34 connect
with S. A. L. train No. 32 which passes Ca
tawba Jet at 7:54 p. m., for Monroe and inter
mediate itolntK.
At Lancaster: No’s 32 and 34 connect with
L. & C. train No, Hi which leaves Lancaster
at 4:45 p. rn., for Chester and intermediate
points*
At Camden with A. C. L. (N. W. of S. C.) for
Charleston, Sumter, Florence, Darlington,
Wilmington and intermediate uoints. Train
No. 08 which leaves Camden at 4:15 p. m,
CONNECTIONS MADE MV NORTH BOUND TRAINS.
At Camden: With A. C. L. (N. W. of S. C.)
No. "I from Charleston. Florence, Darlington.
Wilmington and intermediate points, which
arrives at Camden at 11:15 a.m.; with Sout h
ern Ky train No. 77 which arrives at Camden
at 11 ;5» a, m. from Kingsville
At Lancaster: No. 33 connectsat Lancaster
with L. A (’.train No. Hi for Chester and In
termediate points.
At Kook lllll: No's 33 and 35 connect at
Rock Hill with Southern Ky train No. ;i4,
leaving Rock Hill at S:2ti p. in., for Charlotte
ami points north.
A' Blacksburg: No. 33 conneets with South
ern Ry trains N<i 12 at 4:38 p. m.. No. 38 at
.7:06 p. m. and No. 4u at 7;45 p. m. for points
north. No’s 33 and il5connect* with Soul liern
Uy (rain No. 35, leaving Blacksl>urg at 11:25
p. m.. for points south.
At Marlon: No33 connects with S mthern
Ry train No. 35. leaving Marlon at 11:40 p m ,
for Asheville, ( liatiunongn and intermediate
points.
Through car sorvU-e without change Ite-
tweeu Marlon and Charleston on trains No's
32 and 33.
K. H. SHAW,
, Gen. 1'rss Agt
SH.FI JUSTICE DE1LT
ID NEGRIHSCAIUNT
Strung to Telegr iph Pcle and
Body Builet Kiddled.
TAKEN AFTER DESPERATE FIGHT
John Wise, Who Assaulted Mrs.
John Smith Near Pembroke, Is Cap- j
tured by Posse and Lynched—Iden
tification by Former Employer.
Savannah. Ga., July 28.—John Wise,
a negro who criminally asauited Mrs.
John Smith, a young married woman,
near Pembroke Wednesday, was
caught last night at Pooler alter a des
perate tight with a posse.
He was wounded and carried to a
former employer near Pembroke for
identification. He was then taken to
a telegraph pole and strung up until
dead. His body was riddled with bul
lets.
FORT SHERIDAN MYSTERY.
Strange Disappearance of Sentry Tree!
and Two Prisoners.
Chicago, July 28.—Two prisoners.
Fred Ennis and John McQuig, and
Sentry William Treet, of Company M,
Twenty-first infantry, who wfis guard-’
ing them, have disappeared from Fort
Sheridan and no trace of the missing
men has been found.
Searching parties sent out in every
direction have scoured the woods and
ravines, but have failed to secure a
clew.
Whether the guard has deserte 1
with his prisoners, or whether the
sentry was overpowered by his charges
and lies in some deserted spot gagged
and bound, or perhaps murdered, is a
matter for conjecture, although the
trustworthiness of the soldier is
ground for the belief that an encoun
ter occurred.
PARIS RELIGIOUS RIOTS.
Many Persons Injured and Hundreds
of Arrests Made.
Paris, July 28.—Many persons in
jured. ten of them seriously and hun
dreds arrested, are the net results of
the street disturbances yesterday in
which both clerical and autl-cTerical
demonstrations brought about by the
closing of unauthorized religious
schools, were made. There were great
crowds on the boulevards throughout
the evening in expectation of further
rioting.
A long procession of students, shout
ing and making other demonstrations,
joined in the red flag outbreaks at
Strasbourg statue, which was broken
up. Quiet was restored at midnight.
Riots Occur In Venice.
Venice, July 28.—Rioting in all parts
of this city has followed the success
of the clerico-moderates 1h the com
munal elections. A mob smashed the
windows of the Moderate club on the
club’s piazza. Mirabaldi and the mem
bers of the club retaliated by throwing
chairs on the heads of the attacking
crowd. Troops ami the police inter
vened, and order was restored. A
similar outbreak occurred at Padua.
WOMAN DRUGGED AND SLAIN.
Mysterious Murder Committed In Chi-
cago Wine Room.
Chicago, July 28.—Her face black
from strangulation and blood flowing
from a wound in the side of her head,
the body of an unidentified woman,
about .‘12 years old, and fashionably
garbed, wa - found in a wine room ol
Henry O Har s saloon In Wells street
near the river early this morning. The
police soon after arrested James Gram
and .Edward Goff, said to have been
seen in company of the woman.
The dead woman is unknown to the
frequenters of the saloon, and from
her appearance the police say they do
lot believe she was accustomed to
enter such saloons. The theory of the
police is that she was drugged, taken
into the saloon and there killed. Flood
stains were found on the collar, neck
tie and shirt of one of the men under
arrest.
Great Damage From Cloudburst
Hornellsville, N. Y., July 28.—The
surrounding country reports that the
cloudburst Saturday affected nearly
every square mile of territory. A
broad estimate of the damage’is $250,.
000. The crop loss is enormous.
Much stock has been drowned and
many buildings have been washed off
their foundations. The Erie got one
track open late yesterday. It will be
some days before all damages to tho
roadbed are repaired.
Will Bore for Oil.
Scottsboro, Ala., July 28.—Mr. Doty,
the Ohio oil expert, who has been
making investigations in this vicinity
for some time, has returned to his
home. He will return soon with the
necessary machinery for boring for oil.
The first test will be made on the farm
of Scott Parks, near town, on which
Mr. Doty has taken an option.
Strikers Shoot Colliery Foreman.
P^ttsvllle, Pa., July 28.—‘Daniel Lan.
derman, foreman at the Kohinoor col
liery, Shenandoah, was shot today
near his home by a crowd of strikers.
His face and »boulders are torn with
buckshot, but it Is thought ho will re
cover. Albert I^anderman was also
chased and shot and four other non
union men badly beaten.
SOUGHT DEATH IN RIVER.
His Attempted Suicide c rustrated, but
He Dies From Shock.
Wilmington. N. C., July 31.—Ma
jor Abraham Weill, for 25 years solic
iting agent of the Atlantic Coast Line,
and one of the oldest and most promi
nent Jewish citizens of Wilmington,
is dead as a result of his attempt to
commit suicide yesterday aiternoon
by jumping into the Cape Fear river.
The great shock, coupled with his ex
treme age, overcame his physical
strength and he expired without hav-
ing fully regained consciousness alter
his tragic attempt.
The causes leading up to his de
plorable act are unknown to his clos
est friends. He had been in ill-health
for a few weeks, and the past day or
two seemed blue and depressed. With,
out a word of warning to anybody ho
deliberately walked into the river yes
terday, and by quick action a man
standing on the dock at the time res
cued him, but against the strong pro
test of the would-be suicide.
Major Weill was 71 years old. He
was born in Germany, hut came here
early in life. He served in the con
federate army. Since tTie war he has
been prominent in the business inter
ests of the city.
MURDERER ASKS FOR DEATH.
Strangest Case Ever Tried In a Vir-
ginia Court.
Norfolk, Va., July 31.—Convicted
by a jury in the Norfolk county court
of murdering his wife, William Tread
well will not sanction the application
of his counsel for a new trial.
He declares that he purchased the
pistol with which he kiTied his wife
with the intention of killing himself
as well and that the law would as
well take his life. He therefore de
sires that no new trial be requested, and
that sentence upon him be executed aa
soon as possible.
The man appears to have no desire
to live whatever. The case is one of
the strongest ever tried in a Virginia
court. It is a fact that after shoot
ing his wife the man turned the pistol*
upon himself and was weeks recover
ing from the wounds.
BALL PIERCED PORTER’S HEART.
Conductor Kills Negro Accidentally in
Row on Train.
Grenville, N. C., July 31.—Conduc
tor Tuck Hamner, of Alexandria, ac
cidentally killed his porter, Henry D.
McClelland, of Danville, yesterday at
11:30 o’clock at North Gaden, Va.
Hamner was trying to shoot a man
named Coles, who had been very abu
sive to him and who had struck him
several times over the head and chest.
As he drew his pistol Coles seized his
arm and the weapon went off accident
ally. The hall pierced McClelland’s
heart and caused death to result in 10
minutes.
Escaping Convict Shot.
Jackson, Miss., July 31.—George
Reynolds, a safe blower sent to the
penitentiary from Clebourne county to
serve a 10-year sentence, was serious
ly wounded while trying to escape
from one of the trusty guards on tho
farm. Reynolds was fleeing from his
pursuers when the trusty commanded
him to halt. Reynolds did not obey
and the trusty fired, the charge from
the shotgun taking effect in his legs
HAITIEN REPUBLIC IS
iH THROES OF WAR
Foreigners Witnou* Protec
tion and In Danger.
CEN. SOLNAVE WINS VICTORY.
Defeats Troops Under General Nord
and Is Marching on Cape Haitien.
Capitulation of Grande Riviera Is
Expected—Juneau's Army Repulsed.
Cape Haitien, Haiti, July 28.—Gen
eral Albert Salnave entered Limba
yesterday evening and this morning be
was within 9 miles of this city after
having defeated tne troops under Gen
eral Nord, the minister of war of the
piovisional government. The capitu.
laLon of Grande Riviere is expected,
and Cape Haitien p.ol hly will be at
tacked this evening or tomorrow morn
ing. Foreigners are without protec
tion and are in danger. 'Hie gun
boat Machias, which was oi !red to
proceed from Colon to this p >”t, has
not yet arrived. Much regret ex
pressed that no foreign power is repre
sented here by a warship at such a
critical moment.
A dispatch from Cape Haitien on
July 24 announced that an army from
the department of Artibonite, in sym
pathy with M. Firmin, was marthing
on Cape Haitien from three sides. The
three divisions were under command
of Generals Albert Salnave, Emil Gar-
pard and Thesse Mcnfiston. It was
feared at that time that the gunboat
Crete-a-Pierrot would land troops in
support of M. Firmin near Cape Hai
tien.
The United States gunboat Machi. s
sailed from Colon for Cape Haitien
on July 23.
Jumeau’s Army Repulsed.
Port-au-Prince, Haiti, July 28.—The
army under General Jean Jumeau, who
supports the candidacy of M. Firmin
for the presidency of Haiti, has been
repulsed by troops under command of
General Saim-Foix Colin. The gun
boat Crete-a-Pierrot prevented a pur
suit of the Jumeau forces, and General
Colin's troops returned to Port-au-
Prince.
FAILED FOR $500,000.
Cummings & Stockbridge, of New
York, Make Assignment.
New York, July 28.—The firm of
Gumming & Stockbridge, export and
import commission merchants at 11
Broadway, assigned today. The lia
bilities of the firm are given as in ex
cess of $50(1,000, but the assets will
not be known until an examination of
the books is made. It is thought they
will nearly or quite equal the liabili
ties.
A statement issued by attorneys for
the firm says the suspension was im
mediately occasioned by the maturing
ol a number of acceptances aggregat
ing a considerable amount, drawn up
on the house by B. Duran, of Havana,
whose suspension was announced in
Havana last Friday.
Until definite advices from Havana
are received it will be impossible to
(J * 11 entirely accurate statement ol
the uTfairs of Cumming & Stockbridge.
Advertising is
some an art.
If it be an art it is the art
of telling a story simply and
convincingly.
Nobody knows more
about the strong qualities
of an establishment than
the proprietor who oversees
it. Other things being
equal, nobody should be
able to write more convinc
ingly of the articles he of
fers for sale.
In a store where the emplc .*r sells
goods side by side with his clerics it is
rare that the employer will not be the
best salesman.
The reason is simple. He
knows the goods from A to
Z. He probably has pur
chased them. He knows
his aims. His arguments
carry weight because they
are convincing.
The same arguments pre
sented in the same way,
with the same enthusiastic
spirit, the same knowledge
of detail, would attract
new customers if presented
through the advertising col
umns of this paper.
If you have not tried it,
why not begin?
If you have tried it and are not
fied, let ua know about it
i
*
t
l
<
*
<
«
i
<
I
i
<
<
«
<
e
4
<
«
<
<
«
<
f
<
t
<
J
<
«
4
«
f
CHICHESTER’S ENGLISH
PENNYROYAL PILLS
’St,, •//
“tut
»■****. Always n liable. axk ItruKifist for
• MH-lIKKTKIt’K in K«><t and
metallic doxos, scaled with blue ribbon.
4no oilier. K«‘liis«- <l:tHt;<‘rou>» aulmti*
tntaonw ont! imitutioii*. Ill] v of your PmKKist,
< -ieiid t«*. in NbiniRs lor l*ai-li«-ulur». T«-i*ll-
•noniulx and “Keller lor l.aaliex." fa (er/er,
•J i-elnrii Wall. 10.000 Testimonials. Hold by
4.* Urunifists.
CHICHESTER CHEMICAL CO.
<400 31a<li»on Square, 1*1111.4.. I*A.
Mention this paper-
FOR
Up-to-Date Job Print
ing, call at the
LEDGER Office.
Gaffney, S. C.
THE BEST METHOD OF FRYING FOOD.
Some Valuable Suggestions and How to
Get Satisfactory Results. No Need
of Having Dyspepsia.
Most physicians, especially in tha
northern United States, say that fried
food Is responsible for most of the dys-
| pepsia, especially in the south, where
j frying is most prevalent.
This is no doubt true, in a broad and
; average way, but it is not necessary
I that it should be true. Too much grease
j of any kind, and in any way, is cer
tainly bad for the digestion; but the
I conclusion must not be too hastily
: reached that fried food is necessarily
greasy. Grease for cooking should be
| looked upon merely as as a medium for
| communicating a high degree of heat.
It is not usually possible to cook things
! in water”to a higher temperature than
j 212 degrees, and hence in many cases
j it is necessary to cook meats, etc., a
j long while at this temperature to get
: them done. But it is easily possible to
| cook things equally well done in grease
in a much shorter time, on account of
the higher temperature that may be
reached—sometimes 300 to 400 degrees.
The true way to cook in grease is to
get it very hot before introducing the
meat or other article. When it is
dropped in the higher degree of heat
immediately chars the outer surface
and closes the pores, so that the grease
cannot get inside. It is important to
keep the heat up, and not to put the
articles into the grease so fast as to
lower the temperatuiv. , When done,
they should be immediately removed
and laid on a cloth to absorb the ad
hering grease. Many cooks take a
frying pan off the fire with the eggs
or meat in it. all cooked, and leave it
so until served. This is the next best
way to let the grease soak through to
the centre. The very best way to soak
the grease in, and the very best way
to promote dyspepsia is to put the ar
ticles in the frying pan to cook when
the grease is not hot enough.
Frying is generally a most wasteful
manner of cooking, fqr the reason that
so much of the grease is thrown away
after the article is cooked. This is gen
erally unnecessary. If the frying has
been properly done, the grease has not
taken up much from the article cooked.
The grease may he poured from the
frying pan into a vessel of hot water,
when most of the foreign matter will
settle and the pure grease will float,
after somewhat washing itself in the
water. It may then be used again and
again with the best results.
There is naturally a smell from any
frying grease. In Europe, where many
kinds of grease and (tils are used for
frying, people become accustomed to
the different smells, and do not mind
them. In this country all are accus-
tomed to the smell of frying hog lard.
When it was first proposed to cook
with cotton oil the new smell was ob
jectionable, especially the smell of
badly refined oil, and thus there grew
a prejudice against its use. Another
cause for bad results with the oil was
the fact that often times the cook
would not wait for the oil to get hot
enough before putting it in the articles.
When using lard, the cook would natur
ally wait for it to melt, and it would
get hot without provoking impatience.
But the oil looks ready when it is first
put in the frying pan, and there is a
temptation to use it too soon. There
has been much steady work done by
those who make cooking compounds
from cotton oil, with a view to reducing
or disguising the smell. The result has
been most gratifying. There are sev
eral concerns making a specialty of
oil refined for use in cooking, without
further manipulation. The Wesson Pro
cess company of Savannah, Ga., has
been very successful in this line and
will be glad to mail cook books.
There are also a number of highly
satisfactory cooking greases made
from cotton oil and beef fat, such as
"Palmatena” and “Snow Drift,” both
of which products are expensively
manufactured by the Southern Cotton
Oil Company of the Carolinas and
Georgia at their works in Savannah.
They are both high class and reliable
products in which the pure cotton seed
oil is used and they resemble lard in
appearance and results, but are more
satisfactory and healthy, and which are
superior to hog lard from every point of
view. That they are much more
healthful there can be no doubt.
and back.
Reward for Incendiary.
Barnesville, Ga., July 31.—R. F.
Matthews has offered a reward of $50
for an incendiary and hog thief. A
few nights since one of his barns con
taining about 200 bushels of corn was
burned and he has reason for believing
that tho fire was of incendiary origin.
He thinks the incendiary may have
some connection with the loss of 25
fine hogs within the past few months
and hence ho offers the reward for
the proper party with proof to convict.
Fell From Bed; Broke Neck.
Jackson, Miss., July 31.—Ixtuis
Hoffman, a IG-months-old child from
Waco, Tex., mot with a peculiar death
at Castilian Springs, a summer resort
near Durant. The child was asleep
in bed, and. while probably stirring
restlessly about, tumbled to the floor.
The neck was instantly broken by the
fall, and it was some time afterwards
before the accident was discovered
by the horrified parents.
Will Recruit Cabinet With Young Men.
Now York, July 31.—Premier Bal
four’s reconstruction of the cabinet is
likely to be more cautious and delib
erate, says a London dispatch to Tho
Tribune, in consequence of the crush
ing Conservative defeat in North
Leeds. He is now likely to drop
nearly all the superanuated function
aries and recruit hie cabinet with
younger men of energy and force.
Hon. W. A. Broughton Dead.
Madison, Ga., July 31.—Hon. Wil
liam A. Broughton, one of the most
prominent and wealthiest citizens of
Morgan county, died at his home in
this city of acute gastritis. Colonel
Broughton hag held many positions of
trust, and was a man honored and es
teemed throughout the whole state. He
leaves a wife and daughter.
G?ve His Life to Save Dog.
Waycross, Ga., July 31.—Henry Po
land, of Savannah, gave his life to
save bis dog near Fleming. To pre
vent the dog from being run over,
Poland sprang in front of a rapidly
approaching train and was struck by
the engine and thrown in a ditch by
tho roadside. He died soon after
from his injuria,
M\ *
about four years ago. The firm had
had extensive connections in France
and Germany. They are the local
agents of the Comstock Steamship
company.
REV. DR. BALDWIN DEAD.
Was Recording Secretary Missionary
S.ociety of M. E. Church.
New York, July 28.—Rev. Dr Ste
phen L. Baldwin, recording secretary
of the Missionary society of the Meth
odist Episcopal church, died today in
Brooklyn of typhoid fever. He was
07 years of age.
Dr. Baldwin was born at Somerville,
N. J., and entered the ministry in 1858
From 1859 until 1882, with the ex
ception of two years, he was a mis
sionary to China. For four years
while in China he was superintendent
of the Foo Chow mission, and for sev
eral years he edited the Chinese Re
corder. For health reasons he re
turned to the United States with his
family in 18S2. In June, 1889, he was
elected recording secretary of the
Missionary society, which position he
had since followed.
Dr. Wilton’s Sentence Commuted.
Washington, July 28.—The life oi
Dr. Russell Wilson, of Ohio, who was
captured with a revolutionist party
in Nicaragua, has been saved through
the representations of Minister Cor
rea, of that country, A cablegram
was received at the state department
today from Mr. Donaldson, United
mates consul at Managua, Nicaragua,
dated the 26th Instant, as follows:
“As a courtesy to the United States
and sympathy with tho mother, the
president will commute Dr. Russell
Wilson’s death sentence.”
Armour Butchers Join Union.
Kansas City, Mo., July 28.—Thirty-
five butchers employed by the Armour
Packing company have Joined the
amalgamated Meat Cutters and Butcn-
ers Workmen of America. The union
izing of the Armour butchers makes
complete tho organization of butchers
in the principal packing houses of the
country. The Armour men hesitated
about Joining until they were assured
by Charles W. Armour that he would
not oppose their actiqti.
DR. M OFFETT’S
(TEETHINC POWDERS;
„ , Black Sprinok. Ark . 8( i't. Jm.
KeT..l. . Berry ("f Arkitmas Methodist Conference, writes:) “Enclosed Hi I tiftv centH f..r «lieh ideas* uhUI m«
two package* of “TKKTHINA ” We wonder how we have raised children v. shout it. Theotlier day a lady in Mis
souri sent us :i p:wkairo and it camo ut a most opportune time; our l.ahe was in a serious condition j lor. howeU had
hern in had condition for days, anil nothim- that wo Kata di 1 any h- .d; tire : ■ d d.-c of *• | EK’j IBS t ” «are
perfect relief and Im lias had no further UouMo. Other members of tho family iiavo used it and every’dose has
been a perfect success.
INF-1'or sale by all druggist.
Wilkins Hardware Store.
You can buy from us at bottom prices, Rock ilill Buggies,
Piedmont and Spach Wagons, Buggy and Wagon Harness,
Disc Harrows, Buck-Eye Mowers, Rakes, (randy and Rubber
Belting, Steam Pipe Fittings, Spokes, Rims, Screen Doors,
Window Screens, Wire Cloth, Ice Cream Freezers, Cook
Stoves as good as the market affords. Tinware of all
kinds.
We want your business and ask you to see us before buy
ing your hardware.
R. M. Wilkins & Company.
foe Gaffney City Land and Improvement Company
Offers for sale Bulidlug Lots in tblH flourishing town. Uaffney City; Also l-'ar-os on«
by and In reach of the Schools of Limestone Springs and of this place. In lots or f rot
80 to 100 acres on liberal time rates; also Agricultural Lands to rent for Fs-n nn»
poses. For full particulars apply to
J. V. ^A.KKJVTT'T,
N. B.—All tresspassing on landsof this company, cuttln and amoving ttmo*• .in -
nntlnir fo-Kiad** nnii*> news'.*
Here is a Bargain.
ling lots withi
Mill. These lots will
Easy Payment Plan
of only $3 per month. Here is an opportunity
of a lifetime for working peog^MAoly to
icr>.
Two excelent corner building lots within five
minutes walk of Carpet
be sold on the