The ledger. [volume] (Gaffney City, S.C.) 1896-1907, January 05, 1904, Image 3

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William rt. Uali,. .Jh. jamru a. Wilms. HALL &l WILLIS, ATrOHNKYS AT LAW. HTAH THKATHK BLIMl. C» A. H'rv FC V . l_:. Notary I’abllc In olbiM*. I'roiupt attention •riven to all business. AH EDUCATED STOMACH Chemical Expert Tells How He Subdued His Appetite. Dr. D. P. THOMSON, Dentist. SYBTr.M OF LIVING EXPLAINED. -St) lee over Cherokee I>ru« Oo. NEW MISSIONARY PLAN. SHALL WHIP BE USED? Or. C. T. LIPSCOMB, i) e x r i ts r H<*ruoe Pletelier*» DlKeatlve Apparu- Ina Una Permitted Him to I.lre nt | the Waldorf-Aatorin In New York nt a Dollar u liny—llna ileen Forty i Yenra l‘hlo<'ntinK It—Leta Him Live 1 on Twenty t’enta nt New Haven. Yale Men to Fatnltllah a TcncblnK Institution In China. A new idea in American foreign mis- Evanston Educator Thinks sion work is behind the venture which ! an association of well known Yale j Best Way to Punish. alumni has just planned for China, 1 says a New Haven dispatch to the New i York Times. Instead of preaching, the Yale China i mission Will limit its efforts to teach- Professor Henry L. lioltwood Tells ing. Instead of going out among the of '*’ ,irtc Things Needed to Cure Chinese armed with the Bible, the men j who have taken up the venture will It THEEATS NOT ENOUGH, HE CLAIMS Office in Star Theatre Building. Phone No. 20. J, F. GARRETT, Dentist. Office Over The Battery. ’Phone 82. City Registration. A stomach at the Waldorf-Astoria hotel in New York has brought confu sion upon the lordly Oscar and thrown his waiters into a panic. The possessor of this remarkable or gan is Horace Fletcher of New Haven, expert in chemical physiology and hu man nutrition, says the New York go armed with text books, grammars, histories, volumes on economics, on medical science and on mercantile life, natural science and mechanical and mining engineering. While the Yale China mission is not to be in any sense an ordinary religious mission, a theo logical course will be included in the curriculum, and there will be a school | of pedagogy for the benefit of young 1 Chinese who propose to teach in the 1 will be in the office of the City Clerk at the City Hall every Friday and Satur-, , day of each week up to and including wur,,l * o0 ‘l I )tM :11 February 13th, and every day after that yearning for more. I>nt :i date up to and including February 20th, * " ‘ ~ for the purpose of registering the voters of the town. Hooks will close February 20th, 1904. T. J. Patrick, 12-29 Supervisor of Registration. World. Externally Professor !• letchor | governmont schools. The association is rather thin in a dignified academic 1 has 817.000 in hand and has not only way and totally barren of any physic-1 made arrangements with the Chinese al sign of his unique possession. For 1 government, which will establish tin* the Fletcher stomach is unique. It not school on a safe footing, but has set- only knows what it wants, but can ask tied upon the city of Changesa, capital for It. While at home in New Haven | of 1bfi Province of Hunan, where to the Fletcher stomach calls for 20 cents' commence operations. ml feels no 1 TLl! 6 eneral l )lan of tbe mission is not; ^ van8 ton it the Wal- ■ to establish another evangelical veu- ! j| era id Dnmlit Evil In Schoolboy*—1‘renl- dent Under of Columbia CnlvcrHlty Indorse* the Rod—ChicaKo Princi pal Wants Pnblio Sympathy For Teachers. Professor Henry L. Boltwood, princi pal of the high school at Evanston, 111., says the whip is a good thing for bad boys. He thinks that he can trace the bandit evil to the lack of corporal pun ishment in the public schools. He re gards it as maudlin sentimentality on the part of members of school boarus to prohibit whipping in the public schools and holds that such prohibi tion is iu part responsible for the de velopment of bandits and hoodlums. These statements he recently made in an address before the co-operative class of the First Congregational church of says the Chicago Record- Icity Saturday and favored The Ledger with a call. Sam Jefferies, Jr., was an early visitor in the city Friday morning. He called on The Ledger and contin ued a name on its list. 1 lie Southern is still building double tracks in Spartanburg. John F, Jameson, of Bowliosville, dorf-Astoria, in the abandon of a holi ^ ure ant l thus add to the already nu-1 ,.j i iavt . nothing to retract,” said Pro day, the Fletcher stomach raised the i merous missions in the empire, but to j> essor Boltwood when told that his re- Notice. All persons in Gaffney are requested to lie vaccinated at once. Those who com ply with this request and afterwards con tract smallpox, will lie caret! for by the town. Vaccine points will lie furnished by the town. 11-27-tf limit to $1 a day. The professor has occupied a three dollar room at the fashionable hostelry, and appetite, tempted by an elaborate cuisine, has had free rein. But beyond the one dollar i ark the Fletcher stom aeb stubbornly refused to be lured. “I oat just what my stomach asks put into active co-operation with the present established missions a univer sity training school for natives who go into the government schools to teach. The mission will provide educational facilities which will equip native Chi nese to better their own people. Last June tlie plans of the association were for,” said Professor Fletcher the other 1 only partially formulated, but the de- | w p) 10U t power, day. "It tells me precisely what to tails were left to be worked out during order, and 1 obey.' marks bad caused considerable crit- cism. ‘‘Of course I do not believe iu in discriminate whipping in the public schools, but in forbidding corporal pun ishment members of school boards are asking of teachers what is asked of no „ ^ , government on earth — namely, that 1 »ud Mrs. 8. H. Griffich and they shall maintain discipline and rule , jtllldr £ Q returned home Friday night You may try moral rom Healh «P r ing8. where they had PERSONAL PARAGRAPHS. Feojtle Yon Know and I’eople You Don’t Know. Mr. J. I. Sarratt and Mr. and Mrs Arthur Peeler are at Peaks, in Lex ington county, on account of the sen ous illness of Mr. Barratt’s grandchild a child of Mr. and Mrs. John Swygert. Miss Maud Thompson left Sunday ; waVa business visitor in the cit 5 Fat- for \V hite 1 lams to take charge of j urday, her school there. W. J. 1 homas. of Thickety, spent J. Emile Harley. E^q., who spent, some time in the city Friday the holidays with his parents at W.l- YVm Wisher, a King’s Creek bust- liocon, returned to the city Hatur- ler, was a business visitor in the city ^ Friday. ’ Capt. J. C. Otts, who has oeen A. VV. Smith, of Algood, spent some spending some days with relatives in time in the city Saturday. Greensboro, Ala., returned to the Vance Starnes, a sterling citizen of C t 7 h Un \x- ay, r? j ^ King’s Creek, came to the city Fri- John W. Boss called to see The day on business. Ledger Saturday and renewed. Mr. and Mrs. L. D. Bonner were W. Sam Lipscomb came to see The shopping in the city Friday Ledger Saturday anti renewed. YV. C. S. Wood was in' the city Miss Minnie Hollis, of Greenville, Sarurdaj’. arrived in the city Friday. She is ■ a Calvin Moore, a substantial farmer charming young Jady and will spend of State Line, spent some time in the some time here with her numerous city Friday. relatives and friends. , ■—— ' J. C. Nance, one of cur Mississippi | ~ friends, who has been spending some f* L\ time in this county with relatives ^ and friends, was in to see us yester day and says bo wiii leave for his Up-to-DatelJob Print- Mississippi borne next Friday night. 1 * * S. R. Humphries, an extensive farmer of Byarsville, N. C., came to the city yesterday on business. He LEDGER Office. called on Ihe Ledger and renewed. M. J. Hicks, a prosperous farmer •f State Lint, was in the city Satur- lay. Capt J. J. Magness, of Grassy Pond, came to tne city Saturday on business. ing, call at the Gaffney, S. C. BRING THEM TO ME suasion on a hoodlum five days in the 1 b ® en tc > Griffith’s parents. the summer. This fall the final deci- week foi . to ‘ rtv weeks in the y ear , and Mr - and Mrs. P. T. Twitty. Dr. S. H. Griffith, PHYSICIAN - - SURGEON - - OCULIST. Former pupil of the celebra ted Oculist, Dr. Julian J. Chisolm, of Baltimore. Has also takeu special post-grad uate course in the Eye, Ear. Nose and Throat Hospital of Baltimore. Classes Fitted Accurately and Scientifically. ^“Office iu Cherokee Drug Co. B’ld’g. When ihe professor has breakfasted sion has been made as to the policy to; he wH1 stin ,\ e a hoodlum at the end , R A ’ Wes brook, an over-tbe-Broad at the Waldorf the autocratic stomach be carried out. has said to him: SaveiiMoney “Oatmeal for me this morning, with a dasli of cream. Not a bite more.” Luncheon passed unnoticed by the ! j professor’s abstemious digestive ap paratus. For dinner the Fletcher stom ach has whispered to the professor: “Mr. Old Boy. for a banquet a gas tronomic debauch order me a club sandwich, with plenty of gravy. Let ’em scree a cup of chocolate on the side." Oatmeal and < remii costs .‘5f> cents at the Astoria. A dub sandwich is rated at 10 cents, and chocolate is valued at 2."> cents per cup. These de tails account to the penny for the pro fessor’s lavish expenditure of a dollar ( per day. “I have all I want here,” explained the professor, "and never average above $1 in table expenses per day. My j stomach literally asks for what it wants. 1 “That may sound strange to you," he continued, "but, as a matter of fact, APPEAL OF BALDHEADS, Afflicted Men Wnnt a lloN|>itnl For Treatment of Hair DiaeaneN. The suggestion made by a correspond ent who signed himself "Thirty-six and Bald” that there is need for the estab lishment of a special hospital for the treatment of hair complaints finds fa vor with the baldheaded fraternity, says a London cable dispatch to the Chicago Inter Ocean. “I have a disease of the hair produc ing baldness,” writes “Getting Bald.” “and have visited the three largest skin hospitals in London and the leading physician attached to another hospital, whom I saw’ privately. All four agreed in the nature of the complaint, but al’ prescribed different modes of treat ment. all of which I eonseientiouslj tried. Only one of the four had made 1 study of the hair.” “Surely some of your readers mus of the year. “Some of those who favor moral sua sion will tell you that a threat to expel a bad boy is all that is necessary, but of what power is a threat when the very tiling he most desires is to be ex pelled? ‘Darn you. you dassent touch me!’ is what they toll their teachers. In my opinion, based on many years of farmer, paid us a visit yesterday. Dr. Wm. Anderson, of Blacksburg, •vas in the city yesterday. Orie Ellis, of Kola, Miss., who has been spending some time in the city with bis, uncle, Mr. Logan Ellis left for bis home Friday night. He came in to see The Ledger and added his name to our list. The coiil season is approaching. Bow about those last winter suits that are too good to throw away, and yet need brightening up a little ? BRING THEM TO ME and have them overhauled—I’ll make them look fresh and new. Clean ing. pressing and tailoring done by an expert. W. H. ROBINSON, Tailor. Over VV. U. Telegraph Office. observation, three things are necessary John M. Smith, of Cowpens, was in If we would cure the bandit evil among j the F ^ a * V T bu81Dese He schoolboys—first, the establishment u f came 8e ® ihe ^' ed 8 er - free kindergartens; second, the rigid en- 1 Alfred Harris was in the city yes- forcement of the truant laws; third, the 00 us ness. restoration, to principals at least, of the * P - Scruggs, of Ezell, was a city power of corporal punishment. As mat- ! v,81t0 T r tors now stand, weak sentimentality protects bad boys ;uid leads to crime. Professor Boltwood seems to be sup- J. J. YVhisonant, late of Blacks burg, now a prominent saw mill man of Gordon, Ala., was among bis many ported to hi. ufornl attitude as to whip. ! he „ ^Friday. He fa- H vored The Ledger with a call and re newed. 1 by buying goods from I. M. Peeler. lam now making theory, an( i I have perfected the work a run on Shoes and will save ing principle by years of constant prac- you money on them. tico M - v 8tomach 10,1:5 me what to oat I havp inqt rpppivpd a lot and my braiu lel,s my 8tomach bmv 1 IldtVO JU^l iOteiYCU d 101 muc h. The two influences have made Of the best inserted Steel my appetite and my desire one. &ces, see them before buy- “ Now to c *p ,a,n ,his: Tbo otbor Groceries goods at bottom prices. Give me a call. * I. M. Peeler. know of some treatment that will effec my stomach is in absolute control of i a cure without the drastic expedient o my appetite. That is the secret of my shaving the top of the head for eight o nine months, as suggested by an ex pert," is tlie plaintive appeal of “Se- nox.” who writes of the “untold misery of baldness.” On the other 1 and. the principal of a school of shorthand and typewriting, who complains that he is “unfortunate ly not bald.” says. “The great profuse ness and thickness of my hair has been a great trouble to me and has caused me an immense amount of headache. I should be almost as pleased as your correspondent if Mr. Carnegie would provide a hospital for the discourage ment of superfluous hair.” morning my stomach said it needed certain nutritious substances contained and all other! In oatmeal and cream. The demand was as plain as if my stomach had said, ‘Fletcher, this morning oatmeal and cream.' “Now, in an untrained state 1 would doubtless have gorged myself upon oat meal and cream, but with my objective self upon the alert I said, ‘There is suf ficient nutriment in one bowl of Wal- 1 dorf-Astorla oatmeal and cream.' “1 never eat.” continued Professor j Fletcher, “until my stomach demands It. YY^hy, up at New Haven I live com fortably on 20 cents per day. Some days I eat as many as four meals and on others but one. It is just as my IT MEANS SOMETHING * 'il '■-hp., yo:* • 1-0 IP TO i when you speak of being up-to-date. It means that you will find Our Photographs “present time” pic tures in every way. They have that soft finish and delicate tone which tells of the touch of the ar tistic and the fidelity to the nature and de tails which the cam era alone will not give. Each sitter is carefully posed. None of the beauties ing unruly pupils by the recent utter- ncos of Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler, resident of Columbia university. New | ork. who said in part: • 1 have never been a principal, but I nve come into personal contact with rincipals. 1 mean this literally. There i a tradition in school No. 1 in Pater- on that they used to have two meet ings before school every morning. The first was a prayer meeting, and the second was a moral meeting. The moral meeting was for the purpose of thrashiuu those who were not attentive ai tht’ prayer meeting. Tlie moral meet ing wits much the longer of the two. "I understand that iu New York we are without that admirable exercise and that the modern child has to get mi as best tic can on persuasion. I hope that the large hearted and senti mental and soft hearted will give us a chance to get back at the boy in the only way in which the impression lasts. 1 offer myself in evidence.” James C. Ailing, principal of the Ja cob Beidler school in Chicago, said he hoped the schools would never return , to the use of the rod because of the Tlie bead weaving fad has reached turn b tt ckw’urd spasm in New York, tl/e YV hite House, says a Washington I i(Ul at tl)e suim , time he ai^ucs that the teacher’s position is not properly up- Now for the New Year! . . IStart it right by com ing to us for your :: Staple and Fancy Groceries, Canned Goods, Cigars,Tobacco,Fruits, and Confectioneries. Our lines are still complete and contain nothing but the fresh est aud the best. HAMLIN & RADFORD. Misi Eva Hoover, a charming young lady of Charlotte, N. C., is in •it - city the guest of her uncle, Mr A. J. Perry, Dr. Forest McKown, of Cherokee ! Falle, was iu the city yeeterdy. Govan Black,ot Grassy Pood, came to the city yesterday on business. Mrs. Peratina Bobo arrived iu the city Friday and will spend koine time with her daughter, Mrs. A. B. Gaines . , „ , , on Victoria avenue. I wlU sell « for lhe next 60 da y s . the cele $50! As we art overloaded with wagons we BEADWORK AT WHITE HOUSE Mr* r ’ Koosevelt llecomcM Kxprrt and Inntractn Her Friend*. Vpocial to the New York World. Mrs. /koosevelt has become an expert in this < art. She uses the small looms which stomach determines for me. Here ay wm . devised bv the Indians for facili- the Waldorf I have been extravagant | fating their work. Much of her leisure (with :i guilty flush). 1 have had two time is devoted to making chains and big meals regularly each day—oatmeal I belts. for breakfast and a club sandwich While at Oyster Bay last summer ,,, r ,„ with chocolate tor dinner. My know! Mrs. Roosevelt took lessons In bead ^mdovers a ml the press that it edge of the exact requiremeflts of the weaving. Since that time she has the courage out of many of their tissues led to the selection of these • taught many of her friends to make the , (0St t ,. il( .i 1( ,r.s would not use the YV. H. Martin, of Ezell, came to the city.Friday afternoon on business. Misses Leila Bonner, Ola and Cleo Little, lift yesterday for Due YVest College. Mr. and Mrs. B. M. Stallworth, of Gainesville, Ga , arrived in the city Friday to visit Mrs. Stallworth’s parents, Gapt. and Mrs. H. P. Grif fith, at Limestone. Mr. Stallworth returned Saturday but Mrs. Stall- worth will remain some time. M. C. Lipscomb,a prominent farm er of White Plains, came to the city yesterday. YV. F. Dye, a prominent citizen of Blacksburg, paid us a visit yesterday. C. B. Turner, of Grassy Pond, was a Leger visitor yesterday. brated Old Hickory*' two-horse wagon, with bed and brakes complete, for $50.00; the Taylor one-horse wagon for $25.00. ; This is a great slaughter but our loss is your gain, so come and buy while they are cheap. Mules! held by ihe press. He claims that the teacher stands in loco parentis and j should have the same right to discipline ! by whipping that belongs to the par- cut. “Why may a parent whip a : child V" he asks. “The teachers are regu lated bv so many 'don’ts' both by their , takes * them The Albert Bettis, a prominent planter Mules! Mr. Johnson has just returned from J. H. Rh y ne, of Blackrburg, 1 the West, where he bought a fine lot of to the city yesterday. , , Ira Hardin, of Blacksburg, spent e u es ' some time in Gaffney yesterday. J. YV. WhGouant, of Antioch, was a business visitor In the city yester-1 Respectfully, Gaffney Live Sfock Go. dishes. j various beudwork articles now so fash Tor example, oatmeal is ueai mo-i ionablo. Ethel Roosevelt and many of during. ,,s lal and proteid, blending! i! er mtle friends have belts and chains yp JONE H. GARR 625 Limestone St. ‘Phone 176. Residence 171 RYDALE’S TONIC A REAL CURE FOR * IMi-A-ILi-A.RI.A_. % It has recently iieen discovered that the germs that produce Malaria, breed and multiply in the intestines and from there spread throughout the system by means of the blood. This fact ex- , plains why Malaria is hard to cure by the old method of treatment. Quinine. Iron, etc., stimulate the nerves and build up the blood, but do not destroy the germs that cause the disease. Rydale’s Tonic has a specific effect upon the intestines and bowels, freein*' tl)em from all disease breeding mi crobes. It also kills the germs that infest the veins and arteries. It drives from the blood all poisonous matter and makes it rich and healthy. RYDALE’S TONIC is a blood builder, a nerve restorer, and a Malaria destroyer. Try it, it will not disap point you. GAFFNEY DRUG CO. with the cream, make an tyeal morning food. In the club sandwjch we have a peculiarly well rounded' dinner. The toast, made of whole wheat bread, has special virtue; the lettfieo supplies veg- of face or figure arc | otab, ° iU ' id and valuable Its; (lost. the bacon provides jjll the proper' of | meat and of fat, wl^le the cream v'ps*- ing, formula of m.yown, adds a marked degree of palatatality. “But I would /ot advise this diet for every one,” lie Continued with delibera tion. “All people are not alike. The trouble nowadays Is that men let their stomachs run riot with their bodies. We must discipline, must educate our stomachs we discipline and educate our brains. With study, care and prac tice any ot/ a live on 20 cents a day, and live w eveloping wonderful en durance aud fine health. “I am fifty-four years old, but not a month ago I took the strength test In the Yale gymnasium and bent out some of our famous athletes. In endurance! I believe that I far outstrip them all., What is the explanation? Why, the I stamina aud power have come to me ns a result of what I eat and how. This Is my advice to everybody,” continued the pRofessor impressively, “Get iie- quainti>d with your stomach. Find out what K wants and eat just as little of it ns possible. Half the Ills of life are due to unwise and excessive eating.” Professor Fletcher admitted that he had been beset by many temptations notably “buked beans” and "hot tlap Jacks,” hut he had turned Ids back upon these delicacies. He has been educating his stomach for forty year*. which were made by the president’s wife. rod if you gave it to them, but from tlie best to the weakest they desire it stronger public sympathy for the girls who stand between a compulsory attend- nnce and a challenge not to touch them.’ ” Cornstalk Eiai.teen Feet Hitch. The teachers themselves are divided What is believed to be the tallest, as to the wisdom of permitting whip- stalk of corn ever produced in the conn- j Many 0 f them would prefer a try is that raised in 1908 by Daniel E. law agalnst it a8 tbat wou i d take the Ilaupt of Norristown, Pa. It is eight- responsibility of decision from their Mr. Haupt planted , ghQyjjers. As matters now stand the boys know that thrashing Is forbidden. eeu feet in height, the seed last May in the garden of his home on De Kalb street. When ^his particular stalk began to show unusu al growth he carefully tended it, and when cold weather halted Its upward progress it had developed Into a record breaker. “It was not done growing when the early frost came,” said Mr. Haupt, "and 1 think If fhvorable weather had continued it would have gone up five feet higher.” There are two ears on the stalk, one eighteen Inches long and the other thirteen inches. — 1 ttreen For Hveulnic Wear. Green is a tremendously popular color for evening wear just now, and there are few women so plain this hue doe> not become them, says the New York Press. A blond looks well in pale green, a brunette in apple green. In termediate shades are generally becom ing, but tlie most fashionable shade is bluish green, the color of a bffitlo ti-. Green spangles are unexcelled for mod ish evening gowns, and, in fact, "ob cussy” decorations are all the vogue. For the hair, “buds” are wearing green leaves covered with a varnish that pro duces a glistening effect. In the word- of » wlttv woman. “It^s to glitter” and the wilder ones among the young sters consider that they cannot be beat en. because, as Professor Boltwood says. “Dam you, you dassent touch me.” As a rule, however, teachers do not use the whip even where the law per mits it without warrant from the par ent or guardian of the troublesome boy, and they prefer to have this warrant In writing, so that if any trouble is made for them they have the documentary defense to show. With respect to various transgres sions of a more serious character, or vices as some prefer to call them, many teachers and principals today hold the view that serious punishment Is called for. though mostly forbidden by law. These transgressions degrade the boy. They lower his moral status. If not checked and uprooted they will lower his character for life. They need sterner and severer punishment than moral suasion, something from which whatever of true nobility there is In the boy will revolt. Corporal punish ment is not thought to be the remedy for such offenses. If too severe It sa- rot's of cruelty and so might harden and Imbltter the youth. from across the broad, eras a city visitor yesterday. County Commissioner T. M. Little- johr paid The Ledger an appreciated visit yesterday. R M. Roach, a successful planter from across the Broad, paid The Led ger ao appreciated visit yesterday. Magistrate B. J. Gold, of Blacks burg. came to the city yestercay. E A. Trescot, Esq., was iu the city yesterday on legal business. Rev. N. b Clarksou, of Blacksburg, spent some time with friends in the city yesterday. We have not heard much com plaint among Cherokee farmers. R. J. Kirby, a prosperous farmer of Sunny Side, spent some time in the city yesterday. Misses lone and Agnes Littlejohn returned to their schools at Union and j Lockhart Saturday. Brown, the New Orleans cotton bull, says prices will go higher. t W. H. Carroll, a successful farmer | from across the Broad, was in the I city yesterday. Joe Phillips, of Grassy Pond, came to the city Saturday ou business. John Thomas Ruppe, of Maud, was a citv visitor Saturday. Saudo Northey spent some time in the city Saturday. John R. Killian, once a prominent mill man here, but now "Super” of the Olympia mill iu Columbia, was In the city Saturday and paid Tbo Ledger an appreciated visit. Magistrate Geo. D. Scruggs, of Ezell, came t3 the city Saturday. James Brown, a native of the Union part of the county, but now a prominent business mao of Houlka, Miss., is in the oour'v visiting bis friends and relatives. He waa In the F^oi—^ BulliilDK anil Plastering Ltrne Goal, aud Piaster Hair. Plaster Pans Shingles. Portland Cement, Dynamite, Blasting Powder, Kuse and Dynamite Caos rati on Limestone Springs Lime Worts CARROLL ft CO., Lessees. T dephone Look Out for Old Man Maness. He is coming anil don't you forget It. We are In the swim—come swim with us. Just let us tell you good ladles, what we have got to eat: Fresh Pork, Picnic. Armour and Gold Brand Hums. Dried Beef, Bologna and all other kinds of Sausage, pure Pork Sausige when called for. Hogshead cheese, pressed Pig’s Feet, Sliced Ham, tresh Fish every day In the week, and Beof to- beat the world, cut just to suit you. We also carry a full Hue of Heavy md Fancy Groceries: Fiults and Vegetables of all kinds, Oysters most any day you want them. Don’t forget the place. Just cull telephone No. £1 and the old man Maness will answer quick and deliver goods promptly. We want one thousand dozen Eggs at once; also green Hides Will pay the highest price, cash. Don’t forget the old man Maness. next door to I. M. Peeler and Carroll Carpenter & Byers’Grocery store. The eld ellable meatcutter, W. J.MANESS, Proprietor. -a . . j* A _ ^ : v - bk I'lnti' ii