The ledger. [volume] (Gaffney City, S.C.) 1896-1907, February 26, 1904, Image 4
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onntTftHK') TUKSI'AV ANI> KKIDAY
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PtRSONAL PARAGRAPHS.
ever
NOTKS ANO COM M BNTS.
Experience is the keen-ed^ed knife
that extracts the cataract from your
defective eyes.
John Capers and Lumus Blalock,
and Deas and Crum, two of their ne
gro chums, have been elected as del-
i gates at large to the national Re
publican convention.
Dispatches announce that the Japs
got the worst of it Wednesday. While
our sympathies are with the brave
little brown men, we cannot but feel
that they are up against a tough prop
osition when they tackle the Bear.
We somehow or other wish they
had not undertaken the job.
♦ ♦ ♦ ♦
The municipal election will take
place Tuesday. So far it has been
the quietest campaign in the history
of Gaffney. No man can with safety
predict the ultimate result, but we
U U»t tile blllife Oi tuau
will come to the fellows who don’t get
enough votes to put them in office
will not be so great as to become can
kerous.
♦ ♦
A northern lady who is wintering
R. B. Lemaster, of Wilkinsville, was
a city visitor Wednesday.
Shields Allison, one of the county’s
sterling citizens, favored The
Ledger with a call Tuesday.
Latta Parish, of Yorkville, spent
Wednesday in the city on a visit to
his father, Mr. C. G. Parish.
E. L. Eison returned Monday from
the northern markets, where he pur
chased a big stock of goods for the
Company store.
W. P. Vassey, of State Line, came
to the city Wednesday on business.
G. W. McKown, a prosperous Broad
river farmer, was in the city yester
day.
John Thomas Ruppe made a busi
ness trip to the city Tuesday.
J. F. Wright, of Etta Jane, favored
The Ledger with a ’call yesterday and
added his name to our list.
W. J. Talbert, of Buffalo, was in the
city Wednesday. He favored The
Ledger with an appreciated call.
D. D. Scruggs, a prominent Ezell
farmer, came to the city Tuesday.
James W. Sparks, of Asbury, was in
the city Tuesday.
E. J. Clary called in to see The
Ledger yesterday and renewed.
R. E. Linder, merchant and farmer
at Aiken was the victim of an assault j of Maud, came to the city Tuesday on
by a black brute the other day. A business,
singular thing about
The Harp of a Thousand Strings. yet tnrough all the changes
__ | Wrlttrn for The Kviitfious il»*r;iid in maintains its stmt identity.
„ T i, v 11. l\ Griffith, and re-published l>y n- Uiok at the tender, helpless infant
.^oide %on Know »nd People You Oou t ^ lying iu t he cradle, or just beginning
K ' ,,1W ! The universe is filled with wonders, to prattle in its mother’s arms. View
J. B. Mabry, of Spartanburg, paid \]jj Ve around, beneath, in whatever the fond mother as she bends over the
a visit to relatives in the city rues- I direction man turns his steps, or at
day- . whatever point he fixes his thoughts,
H. 1). Mathis, of Ravenna, spent j s me t mysteries that stagger
some time in the city Wednesday. credulity, and by wonders that re-
John E. Mosteller, of Grassy Pond, jjj s presumption. And though
made a business trip to the city jes- j n ^j ie triumphs of his genius, he has
terday. , laid hold of the hidden powers of na-
Miss Wilmer Gaffney reiurned the L ure an( j ma( j e them subservient to
first ol the week from a visit to rel- w j]j. though he has accurately
atives in Spartanburg.
s;r,.
marked the orbits of the rolling plan
ets, and predicted with certainty the
return of the stranger comets wander
ing from fields in space so re
mote that imagination itself shrinks
from their contemplation in utter be
wilderment; though he has gone be-
charge with every feature knit in the
strength of a mother’s deathless love.
Mark them well, and stamp the fea
tures of both upon your memory; and
then cast a glance through the mists
and shadows of the rolling years, and
view that manly form moving in the
pride of his strength, and helping
along the journey the wan figure, the
faded, trembling form that moves
with feeble, tottering steps at his
side. Would you recognize the prat
tling infant and the doting mother?
Why there is not the most distant re
semblance between them. There is
not a feature, there is not a particle
neath the earth, and read in the dust ] 0 f flesh, there is not a bone, there is
ol dead ages of wonders too fanciful not a muscle, and, if we could pene-
the affair is
that this lady came down here sym
pathizing with the “down-trodclen
colored people” and was aiding their
education and social advancement.
Her rather unappreciated efforts have
doubtless caused her to change her
mind on the social question. Of course
it will not do to condemn the entire
A. S.
for human belief, and discovered in
the successive strata that underlie
the ground upon which we tread, se
crets which it is almost unlawful to
utter; yet in the grandest triumphs of
his skill and genius, he has caught but
a glimpse of the shadowy outlines of
the mysteries that surround him. And
when the mind, wearied in the vain
effort to explore the forbidden fields
of the Omnipotent Being, retreats up
on itself, it is but to find that the
greatest mystery of all lias been left
behind—the little house not made
with hands, from which the soul peers
longingly forth upon the passing won
ders. Where are the foundations up
on which the structure was erected?
W ire is the motive power that di
rects and controls all its varied and
complicated machinery? What gives
the bounding impulses of youth, and
what mystic influence causes the form
to wither, and the light that beams
from the window to grow dim, as age
bmith, of Loves fepnngs, spent Why should time affect it at all?
Why should a certain number of rev-
some time in the city Tuesday.
Magistrate A. J. McCraw came to
the city yesterday.
olutions of the earth about the sun,
^ i-, , • i called years, or a certain number up-
S. G. Pndmore, a Grassy Pond far- J ’ *
mer, called to see The Ledger Tues- |
day and renewed.
Govan M. Cline, of Blacksburg,
came to the city Wednesday.
Moses Goforth, of Thickety, came
to the city Tuesday on business.
. Magistrate R. W. Lee came over to
negro race for the devilish deeds of c jj. y Tuesday on business.
Calvin Moore, of State Line, was
a city visitor Tuesday.
the baser element, and we do not,
but our Yankee cousins will learn
sooner or later, that we of the South
know a great deal more about the
race question than they do.
♦ ♦ ♦ ♦
In a short talk with Mr. Wm. G.
Fowler, of Etta Jane, yesterday, we
learned from him that the increased
acreage of cotton in his section this
year would hardly be appreciable.
He said he saw signs of a probable
small increase on some farms, but he
feels sure the majority of farmers in
W. A. Jones, an over-the-Broad
farmer, was in the city Wednesday.
John W. Camp, a young State Line
farmer, was an appreciated Ledger
visitor Tuesday.
J. C. Thomas, of Wilkinsville, one
of the four famous “Thompson boys,”
of the 13th S. C. Volunteers, was in
to see us yesterday and subscribed.
M. J. Hicks, of State Line, was
among his friends in the city Tues
day.
Wm. G. Fowler, a staunch man and
one of the most successful farmers
in the county, was in the city Wed-
his section will adhere to their former nesday. He called in to see The Led-
rule of making their own corn for use
on their farms and plenty of meat for
their families. In his own case he
said he would surely plant corn to
make enough for his farm, as he has
always done, and everybody who
knows him knows how well he suc
ceeds. This is an encouraging report
from high authority and we trust that
the whole of Cherokee county will
pursue a similar course.
The following from the Charlotte
Observer, referring to Mr. G. Cleve
land, is one of the cleverest tilings
that we have seen in quite a while.
“Mr. Watterson and Mr. Bryan
are still ’in grips,’ as the phrase goes
in North Carolina. Mr. Watterson
was in .New Orleans on a lecture tour
when Mr. Bryan utilized the occasion
of a memorial meeting at the capital
of Kentucky in honor of the late
Governor Gobel, of that State, to
blackguard the editor of The Courier-
Journal. The latter replied, in an
interview, that the esteemed Bryan
would better have been attending the
funeral of his sister in Oregon, but
now says ir. his paper that lie was
misled as to the conjunction of dates
of funeral and blackguarding and that
‘it appears that Mr. Bryan was not
guilty of the insensibility ascribed to
him; though the festivities at Frank
fort followed so fast upon the funeral
baked meats at Salem, as to justify
a different surmise by one a thousand
miles away from the scone of activ
ity.’ Then he proceeds, in a two-
column editorial, to roast the Nebras
ka colonel to a turn. Meantime, the
most distinguished private citizen in
the world, noting the war ol words
between these two distinguished col
onels—neither of whom hates the
other half as much as lie hates him
grins from ear to ear and exclaims,
ger and added a name to our list.
J. B. Huskey took time to call on
The Ledger while in the city Tues
day.
Charles Gilmer, a fireman on the
Southern, spent Wednesday in the
city with his mother on Granard St.
W. D. Gaston and his charming
daughter, Miss Dora, from across the
Broad, were shopping in the city
Wednesday.
L. I). Bonner, of Goucher, came to
t! '* city Wednesday.
J. R. Dixon, a sterling and prom
inent farmer of Antioch, came to the
city Wednesday.
R. M. Roark, a prominent and suc
cessful planter of Antioch, spent
some time in the city Wednesday.
He favored The Ledger with an ap
preciated call.
D. R. Bird, a prominent business
man in the city of Blacksburg, was
in the city yesterday.
Mrs. Park Thomson has gone to
Seneca to visit her mother, Mrs. Liv
ingston.
J. Swan Parris, of Ezell, came in
to see us yesterday and subscribed.
John G. Kendrick, one of the coun
ty’s most successful young farmers,
was in the city yesterday.
Magistrate W. E. Mabry came up
to the city yesterday on business.
helix Littlejohn, of Ravenna, spent
some time in the city yesterday.
A. W. Doggett returned yesterday
from a visit to relatives in Charlotte,
N. C.
W. A. Jones, an over-the-Broad
farmer, was in the city Wednesday.
Mr. D. C. Phillips, of the “Coalin’
Ground,” was in the city yesterday.
on her own axis, called days, make
the great difference between child
hood and old age? But it is not
stranger that the mysterious hand of
time should leave its traces upon it,
than it is that it should last so long.
When we consider the various dis
orders to which it is subject—the
thousand and one pieces of the most
! delicate and exquisite workmanship,
all moving in perfect harmony, and
each performing functions absolutely
necessary to the well-being of the
whole—we can sympathize with the
. Psalmist in the expression that man
I is fearfully and wonderfully made.
The wonder is increased when we
learn that the machine is continually
wearing out. and by an inherent pow
er of its own, to which men but give a
name when they call it the law of
compensation, it is as continually re
newed.
The most durable work of man
wears by use, or rusts and decays by
neglect, and there is no law to com
pensate the loss. The hardest mate-
trate the chambers of the soul we
would find that there is not a thought,
nor a feeling, nor a motive, nor a
hope that is the same. And yet they
are the same, identical forms that but
a moment ago we watched by the
cradle. The entire composition thor
oughly changed, yet the whole struc
ture remaining strictly the same.
Oh! ye who would hesitate and
stumble at the doctrine of the res- !
urrection, view first the facts that
pass before your mortal vision.
But it is as the temple of the soul
that this structure excites our warm
est regard and demands our highest
interest. Though no man can fathom
the depths of the mystery, yet we :
know that it is the habitation of an
immortal principle—a principle with '
which it maintains so close a con
nection that the tone, and vigor and !
effciency of the one depends in a
great degree upon the condition of the
other. Viewed in this relation how
sacred does it become! How desper
ately audacious must be the hand that
would dare to touch it with the fin
ger of pollution. What reckless de
basement, what sacrilegious deprav-
ty is to be found in the wanton dedi
cation of its high and holy powers to
dishonoring the great God who made
it. And oh! ye who are sad because 1
the time is coming when this myste-
ABSOLUTELY PURE
There is a quality added to the
cake and biscuit by the Royal Baking
Powder which promotes digestion.
This peculiarity of “ Royal” has been
noted by physicians, and they accord
ingly endorse and recommend it.
Royal Baking Powder is used in
baking by the best people everywhere.
ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., NEW YORK,
7
Don’t forget the date. “Heart of Often the explanation has nothing
Alabama” ar btar Theatre Friday to do with the case.
night, Feb. 26. Prices 25 and 50 cts. TT71 Tu 7 7Z ,
w.v. ..o 6 . i - , „ , .. Divorce pulls the feathers from the
rious connection must be severed, look Reserve seat sale opens Wednesday 0 f | OVe
hut beyond the dark and silent river, •' a m *
array yourselves in purple, and re- —
joice as your ears may catch from the I
land of reunion the sweet, far-off For Sale,
strains of the harps that will stay in
tune forever.
Announcements.
F OR SALK OR UKNT—One a-room house
within twenty minutes walk of court
house; small farm attached.
1-^2-Kri. tf Robt. K. Wilkins.
F OR SALK Lot aud six-room house on
Cherokee avenue, Good barn and stables
on premises. Apply t3 Hall &. Willis. At
torneys. 2-y-tf.
Cards under this head will be inserted from ■
now until the election at the following rates:
tor Mayor. for Alderman, to. Each an
nouncement must he accompanied by the
cash.
F OR SALK
Sarratt.
-Cows and Calves.
See Sam Q
1-L-th
‘ial is worn by friction, and even the rnnsMMlnt . ro
spring of tempered steSl will iu the »• Dllbuilipiivt,
course of time lose its elasticity,
which is not regained by rest. But
day by day is the mysterious harp
attuned anew, year by year does the
unseen hand furnish new supplies of
the motive power that imparts health
and vigor to its tones. And when, like
vigor to its tones. And when, like
the snow-white hind of Dryden it has
passed safely through all the perils
that encompass it -perils that always
threaten, yet never overwhelm it;
when it lias fulfilled the purposes of
its maker, and the hidden law begins
to fail to compensate the powers that
are wasted; when the tone of the
thousand strings begin to lose its
weaker and weaker until at last it dies
Salt pork is a famous old-
fashioned remedy for con
sumption. “ Eat plenty of
:ork,” was the advice to the
1 ’ . ETOR KENT—*
For Rent.
poK RENT -Agood two-horse farm with a
ueat five-room cottage.
Apply at once to
2-lti-tf
and i oo
years ago.
Salt pork is good if a man
can stomach it The idea
behind it is that fat is the
food the consumptive needs
most.
Scott’s Emulsion is themod-
ern method of feeding fat to
the consumptive. Pork is too
rough for sensitive stomachs.
Store room on Greuarct street.
Apply to Harry Byars.
I jH>R RENT Cottage on Race street.
1-15-lmo F. G. Stacy.
# ... _
F OR RENT—My residence corner Race at d
Johnson streets. W. li. Smith. 1-S-lf
For Mayor.
At the so icitation of many friends ] an
nounce myselt a candidate for mayor at the
ensuing election, and promise, if elected, to
do everything in my power for the best in
terest of Gaffney and all tbe people.
K. M G A UTS BY.
To the Citizens of Gaffney:
After having so much encouragement,
Irotn your cordial support. 1 again offer my-
s* il a candidate for re-election to the re
sponsible position of Mayor of the city of
Gaffney. I believe I ean do as much good
for the city and people for the next two
years as any man here. If you honor me
again with the office 1 will serve you with
renewed /.eal and energy.
J. (j. Little.
I hereby announce myself a candidate for
the Mayor of Gaffney, and solicit t he support
of the qualified voters, promising, if elected,
a lair and Impartial administration of the
affairs pertaining to the office.
John L SaBKATT.
For Aldermen.
We. the votejsof Ward ], hereby announce
W. Charles Durham a candidate for Aider-
man in this ward.
away and the music is hushed forever Scott S Emulsion IS the most
—then it is but to reveal the fact
that the material of which it is made
was but the dust of the earth.
What a rebuke to the vain glory that
would inscribe the deeds of man on
monuments of marble, that the great
refined of fats, especially
prepared for easy digestion.
Feeding him fat in this
_ , _ O
Maker of all should cause the very wav, which is often the Only
dust to proclaim His wonders! ^ • i ir t i i ^
way, 13 hair the battle, but
Scott's Emulsion does more
than that. There is some
thing about the combination
of cod liver oil and hypophos-
phites in Scott’s Emulsion
that puts new life into the
weak parts and has a special
Knotpcd mi Awful Knlc.
Mr. H. Haggn s of Melbourne F a ,
writes, “My doctor told m I hud
OnnHiimpMon '*nd n»»hing could b>
done for me I was given uo to die.
Hie offer of -i ftee trial bottle of IL.
King’s X ■ * D'scovi n for 0on«utnp
as each bomb explodes, ‘Never touch-I tiec, indue d me fo • ry H. R -uli-
were startling. I am now on the
rngd to recover* » r l owe nil m Hr.
King’s NVw Discovi ry. If -iit> l>
saved my life.” t’ni* gr»*>it cor- i*
gn irunteed for aD throat and lu g
difiettses >. Oht-n k •• Drug Co . drug
gists. Price &0e <fc fl (JJ. trial (no
lle free.
The next thing we notice is the
identity of the human body. We often
wonder how these bodies shall rise
again. After they have been burned
on the funeral pile and their ashes
scattered to the four winds of
heaven; after they have been sunk
in the deep sea and devoured by the
monsters that inhabit the depths of
the waters; after they’ve mouldered
in the grave until every particle that
composed them has lost its identity
in the common dust of the earth how
after all these changes can the idea- . i ;
Ural particles lie gathered up and UCtlOU Oil tllC (llSCUScd luilgS.
reunited? It is not strange that the
Bad
Cold
ed me!’”
♦ ♦ ♦ ♦
Governor Heyward has appointed
Mr. E. J. Watson as commissioner of
the department of commerce and im
migration. a new office created by
the last general assembly. Governor
Heyward lias displayed marked abil
ity in the discharge of the multitudi
nous duties that devolve upon him as
blind Sadduces should reject the doc
trine of the resurrection, when many
a faithful follower of Jesus lias been
staggered at these mysteries which no
i .hi can comprehend. But instead of
attempting to peer into the mysteries
that lie beyond the vale of time, let
us wonder at what passes before our
eyes. How is it that this structure is
•hanging continually, that every |Hirt
and particle of it is undergoing com
plete and continual renovations, and
CV-*
A sample will be
sent free upon request.
Be Mire that tins picture in
the form ol a label is cm the
wrapper of cv ry Untie of
EmuLion you buy.
SCOTT &
BOWNE,
CHEMISTS,
409 Pearl St., N. Y.
50c. and $i; all druggists.
The Fraternal Union of America.
Mr. Needman Laser, one of the Su-
rr* r n m c: "h r ~ '7,4’*
O U Of U Vi../' 4» A t T "
CORES
the chief executive of the State, but i promo Officers of the Fraternal Union
in no appointment has he displayed
more wisdom than in the selection
of Mr. Watson for this position. We
have known Ebbie Watson for thir
teen years. Ho is one of the most
conscientious workers in this State
and his experience and ability vdll
at once give the new office a pres
tige that could hardly have been giv
en it by the appointment of any other
man. We beg that you watch the
workings of the department of com
merce and immigration, and if you
do not see results from it that will
surprise you we shall indeed he dis
appointed. But we anticipate no dis
appointment, for Ebbie Watson will
succeed where thousands of other
men would fall, and nothing intrusted
his cart; aud keeping will suffer
of America, recently spent several
days in Gaffney in the interest of the
local lodge, which was organized here |
four years ago, and now lias a mem- j
bershlp of over fifty. Mr. W. H. :
Smith, president Smith Hardware Co.,
is Fraternal Master: Mr. J. T. Rogers,
secretary, and Mr. C. M. Smith, cash
ier Merchants and Planters Bank, is
treasurer, amt among the members of }
fids lodge can be found some of our
leading business men. This is Mr.
Laser's second official visit to Gaffney, |
and as a result he secured several
new member... The Fra tenia! Union
of America, with headquarters in
iJ! U .-t i* "‘j H
Sir.'ns of I^ollxited Blood*
to
thereby. Hail and good day to you
Commissioner Watson, and may your
days be long upon the land that thy
God giveth thee.
There is nolhi;-.'/ so repulsive looking and disgusting as an old sore.
You worry over it till the bruin grows weary and work with it until the
patience is exhausted, and the very sight of theold festering, sickly looking
place iauK s you irritable, despondent and desperate.
A c'.ip. a; s ne is the very best evidence that your bltxxl is in an unhealthy
and inipowri .k 1 condition, that your constitution isbreaking down under
the ell . i ts of .s - ne serious order. The taking of strong medicines, like
m retr y or pot .. h, will somctini< s so pollute and vitiate the blood and im-
p. tin j -ner d system that the men t s •ratcli or bruise results in obstinate
non-healing sores of the most offensive character.
< if ten an inherited tain tb .ksoutiu frightful eating sores upon the limbs
or face in (.Id age or middle life. Whenever a sore refuses to heal the blood
is al \ nvs at fault, aud. while antiseptic washes, salves, soaps and powders
Oenv'T, Coio., is u t'rRtoru&l Ijuncflci" cTti do Hindi to Icccp down tlic iniliiiiirti.itiou Tiid clcutisctlic sort , it will
ary order, not ora inized for profit and never heal permanently till Lie blood itself has been purified and thedeadly
gain, hut for the protection of its germs aud poisons destroyed, and with S. S. S. this can be accomplished—the
polluted blood is purified and invigorated, and when
rich,pure blood isagaiu circulating freely throughout
the body the 11 sh around theold sore begins to take
on a natural color, the discharge of matter cease#
and the place heals over.
S. S. S. is both a blood purifier and tonic that puts your blood in order
and at the same time tones up the system and builds up the general health.
If you have a chronic sore write us. No charge for medical advice.
can be cured with
Laxative Cold
Tablets. They
are especially in
dicated in incipi
ent colds when
there is fever, a
slight cough and
chilly or creepy
sen s a t i o ns. As
phlegm pr< duces
constipation it is
desirable to have
the bowels moved
freely in all colds.
These Laxative
Cold Tablets do it
most effectually.
Tin-citizi'iih <jf Ward One licreby present
llit* name ol Dr. U. L. S, ttlemyer tor re-elec
tion from Hint ward, believing that Ids
taitlitul service should be recognized by a
ret urn to t bat Mce.
1 lie friend* of M. L. ("Dock”) Ross hereby
present his name us a candidate lot Alder-
iiinn hi Ward No. 2.
I hereby auiiouno myself as a r i no Hate
for Alderman from Ward No. 3.
Maynard Smyth.
I tie triends ot J. 1 1 incken hereby un-
nounce him as a candidate for Alderman in
SK Ward No. 3.
:' The friends of W W. Gaffney hereby an
il nounce him as a candidate for Alderman in
S Ward Vo. 4
I hereby announce myself a candidate for
P Alderman from Ward .‘>at the approaching
^ municipal election. W. F. Mnith.
H — ;
I h<- friends of W F. Brown hereby an-
F- nounce him as a candidate for Alderman in
Ward No. 5.
I hen-by announce myself a candidate
from Ward Six, and solicit your support.
G k<>. W. Wkbsti:k. _
I hereby announce myself a candidate for
re election to tin? position of Alderman from
Ward ti. J. A Gaffney.
Books of Subscription Opened.
Blacksburg, S. C., Feb. 24th, 1904.
Notice is hereby given by the under
signed that books of subscription to the
capital stock of the Whittaker Cotton
Mills will lie opened at the Bank of
Blaoksotirg, S. C.. in Blacksburg, ou the
27th day ol February, 1904.
J. R. Kii.uan,
J. F. Whisonant,
A. H. Bollock,
J. W. Rhyne,
I). R. Bird.
2-26-it. J. B. Rhyne.
Jury List.
members and their families. All the
local lodges in this State are in a
splendid condition and a great deal of
enthusiasm reported. Mr. Laser is
one of the best known secret order
men in the South, and since ills con
nection vfrlth this order he has met
with unlimited success.
One advaotHge of being rich is not
having to appear bo.
THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO.. ATLANTA. CA.
Drug Co.
Ne t door to M. & P. Bank.
T. J). Humphries, Woods.
J. G. Dover, Antioch.
H. C. Teague, Gaffney.
B. F. Vassey, Thickety.
Robt. Whisonant, Blacksburg.
L. C. Mabry, Asbury.
J. A. Kills, Maud.
Felix Isler, Gaffney.
T. C. Petty, Gaffney.
L. C. Warmoth, Gaffuey.
S. H. McCraw, Grassy Pond.
R. N. Fllis, Grassy Pond.
Acey Painter, Maud.
J. T. Martiu, Ezells,
j O. R. Byars, Gaffney.
: R. A. Huskey, Macedonia.
, J. B. Blalock, Blacksburg.
J. B. McCraw, Gaffney.
Pk H. Blanton, Draytonville.
J. H. Webber, Gaffney.
W. K. Moss, Blacksburg.
J. R. Childers, Blacksburg.
M. Martin, Ffzells.
P. T. Sapoch, Blacksburg.
Claud Coffee, Gaffney.
R. K. Sarratt, Macedonia.
F D. Horn, Ravenna.
W. J. Blanton, Gaffney.
D. L. Littlejohn. Gaffuey.
M. L. Ross, Gaffney.
W. J. Harris, Woods.
T. C. Green, Raveuua.
J. T. Moorehead, Sarratts.
J. L. Harmon, Littlejobus.
N, S. Corry, Gaffney.
C. P. Teal, Turners.
Mika, _
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