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THE LARGEST CIRCULATION of Any Newspaper In the Fifth Congressional District, of S. C. EVERY ONE PAID IN ADVANCE The Ledger SEMI-WEEKLY—PUBLISHED TUESDAY AND FRIDAY WE GUARANTEE RELIABILITY of Every Advertiser Who • Uses the Columns of This Paper. BERT ADVERTISING MEDIUM. <— j—o A Newspaper in all that the Wore; Implies and Devoted to the Best Interests o f the People of Cherok* ' Coun<y. ESTABLISHED FEB. 16, 1894 HAFFNEY, S. C., FRIDAY, MARCH 4, 1904. $1.00 A YEAR. THROUGHOUT THE PALMETTO STATE ITEMS OF INTEREST OF PASSING EVENTS IN SOUTH CAROLINA. Happenings All Over the State Taken from Our Exchanges and Tersely Told to Ledger Readers. Several dispensary constables were convicted In Columbia last Saturday of asault, on charges brought by Wel ters Bros., alleged Illicit dealers In liquor. The assault was committed with pistols and the ostensible object of It was to intimidate the tigers. The secretary of state Tuesday Is sued a commission to the Southern Paint factory to be capitalized at $100,000 and with its offices and plant In Columbia. The corporators are: Capt. W. B. Lowrance, of Columbia, and Mr. G. W. Painter, of Philadel phia. This concern will use the ochre In Richland county. Two large heavy double-truck cars of the Consolidated company came together in head-on collision on the surhurban line about five miles from the city of Charleston Monday morn ing shortly after G o’clock, resulting In injury to the motorman and a pas senger of the northbound car, smashing the glass vestibules and otherwise damaging the cars. On Kessler’s farm, near Beaufort, Saturday night about 8 o’clock Henry King, colored, shot and killed his sis ter, Lettice Williams, while carelessly handling a pistol in a small room where four women and two men had been seated telling “dream stories.” Realizing that he had killed his sis ter, King rushed from the house and has not been seen since. He is said to have greatly feared arrest. The material for the steel bridge over Pacolet river at Clifton No. 1 has arrived and has been unloaded at | Com 3rse. This bridge is being I erected by the King Bridge Co., wLich has a force of hands employed at Clifton unloading this bridge. When erected this will be one of the finest bridges in Spartanburg county and will cost $4,000. Its span will be little less than 200 feet, and 16 feet in width. Saturday morning a strange negro was arrested at Holly Hill, Berkley county, and placed in the town jail. He became so violent after arrest that it became necesary to handcuff him and tie him with ropes. Sunday the dead body of the negro was found in a vacant tenant house some dis tance from town, the body having seven bullet holes in it, sitting erect by the side of the wall, still wearing the handcuffs. The affair seems to be shrouded in mystery. In Gray Court, Laurens county, Tuesday morning George and Frank Yeargin, children of Mrs. William Yeargln, were playing with an old shotgun. The gun was discharged and Frank Yeargin was badly shot in the shoulder. The doctors extracted a number of shot, pieces of wadding and clothing from the wound. The boys are about ten and twelve years old. Mrs. Yeargin is a widow. There is much regret over the dis tressing accident. It is not known yet how serious is the boy’s wounds. Mr. David Folk, the aged watchman of the Southern’s trestle over the Con- garee river at Columbia, died Monday morning at 6 o’clock from the effects of a blow he received at the hands of J. B. Lee Strickland on Saturday. Mr. Folk had declined to let Strick land cross the trestle as the latter did not have a pass. Strickland very Im patiently struck the old watchman in the pit of the stomach with a hand- satchel. From 9 o’clock Saturday morning until his death Mr. Folk was in great pain. He was in his 69th year and was too infirm to stand the shock. John Myrth, a young negro 17 years of age, was struck by the Sea board’s Florida limited at Norths Monday and instantly killed. He had been sent by his father to bring a wagon load of fertilizers and was standing in a store for a few mo ments. The team was standing on the other side of the track from the store and as Myrth heard the whis tle of the train he tried to cross the track to stand at the horses’ heads. The train, however, was running at full speed and he was struck by the pilot of the engine. As a result of examination by the comptroller general and his expert, a shortage of $11,475.42 has been dis covered in the books of E. D. Free, county treasurer of Barnwell county, and he has been suspended by Gov ernor Heyward pending action of the grand jury. The shortage covers a period of six years, from 1898 to 1904, and it was only after the clear est examination that the report was made. It L a coincidence that Free is the son of A. F. Free, the former treasurer of that county, who died leaving a considerable shortage and against whose bond a suit was en tered and about $7,500 recovered. Sheriff GUreath, of Greenville, re ceived a telegram late Tuesday from Chief of Police Watson, of Waynes- ville, N.C., saying that Thomas Wake field, charged with the murder of James Hicks near the .Block House ten days ago, had been captured and lodged In Jail. The message also stated that Wakefield’s brother, who was Implicated by the coroner’s jury, would soon be caught, as It was known where he was hiding. Requi sition papers were secured and the prisoner taken to Grenville to await trial at the next term of the General Sessions court. This is the second time Wakefield has been arrested After the shooting he left the Tryon neighborhood, and after his apprehen sion he managed tto dodge the offi cers and got away. He was closely followed, however, and there is not much chance of his escaping again. A NEW ENTERPRISE. A Meeting of the Whittaker Mills Co. at Blacksburg. On Tuesday night the books of subscription of the Whittaker Cotton Mills of Blacksburg, were opened. One-half of the capital stock was sub scribed, and work on the mill will be begun immediately. The following officers were elected: J. R. Killian, president a T d manager; A. H. Pollock, vice-president; C. M. Smith, secretary and treasurer. Di rectors: J. R. Killian, C. M. Smith, J A. Willis, A. H. Pollock and J. B. Rhyne. The new company is organized with a capital of $50,000 with the privilege of increasing it to $100,000 later on. It is the purpose of the management to have the mill in op eration within three months and to n'ive Blacksburg a $100,000 cotton mill inside of a year. Tragedy Averted. “Just in the nick of time our little boy was saved," writes Mrs. W. Wat kins of Pleasant City, Ohio. “Pneu monia had played havoc with him and a terrible cough set in besides. Doctors treated him, but he grew worse every day. At length we tried Dr. King’s New Discovery for Con sumption, and our darling was saved. He’s now sound, and well.” Every body ought to know, it’s the only sure cure for Coughs, Colds and all Lung diseases. Guaranteed by Cherokee Drug Co., druggists. Price 50c and $1.00. Trial bottle free. A NEWSY LETTER FROM ETTA JANE. MOVEMENTS OF THE PEOPLE OF LOWER CHEROKEE. In order to suppress the practice of "doping,” the French Jockey club pro poses to authorize the stewards to examine three hours before or after a race any horse suspected of having had a stimulant administered to it. Do You Want Strength? If you want to increase your strength you must add to and not take from the physical. In other words, the food that you eat must be digested, assimilated and appropri ated by the nerves, and blood tissues before being expelled from the intestines. Kodol Dyspep sia Cure adds to the physi cal strength. It gives strength to and builds up strength in the human system. It is pleasant to the taste and palatable, and the only combination of digestants that will digest the food and enable the sys tem to apropriate all of its health and strength-giving qualities. Sold by Cherokee Drug Co. The tobacco crop of 815,972,425 pounds, at an average price of 6.8 cents a pound, produced a revenue of $55,514,927 last year. The average yield to the acre from 1,037,735 acres was 786.3 pounds. Millionaire’s Poor Stomach. The worn-out stomach of the over fed millionaire is often paraded in the public prints as a horrible example of the evils attendant on the possession of great wealth. But millionaires are not the only ones who are afflicted with bad stomachs. The proportion is far greater among toilers. Dyspep sia and indigestion are rampant among these people, and they suffer far worse tortues than the million aire unless they avail themselves of a standard medicine like Green’s Au gust Flower, which has been a favor ite household remedy fot all stomach troubles for over thirty-five years. August Flower rouses the torpid liver, thus creating appetite and in suring perfect digestion. It tones and vitalizes the entire system and makes life worth living. Trial bot tles, 25c; regular size, 75c. Cherokee j Drug Co., Gaffney; L. D. Allison, I Cowpens. The tip problem has been solved by a Parisian restaurant, so the restaii- I rateur thinks. His custom Is to as sess his patrons 5 per cent, of their hills and to divide the money thus ! raised among his waiters. Colds Cause Pneumonia. One of the most ^markable cases of a cold* deep-seated on the lungs, causing pneumonia, Is that of Mrs. Gertrude E. Fenner, Marlon, Ind., who was entirely cured by the use of One Minute Cough Cure. She says: “The coughing and straining so weak ened me that I ran down in weight from 148 to 92 pounds. I tried a num ber of remedies to no avail until I used One Minute Cough Cure. Four bottles of this wonderful remedy cured me entirely of the cough, strengthened my lungs and restored me to my normal weight, health and strength.” Sold by Cherokee Drug Co. Manhattan Island has an average of 132 people to the acre, while Lon don has sixty. If troubled with weak digestion, belching or sour stomach, use Cham berlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets | and you will get quick relief. For sale by Cherokee Drug Co., Gaffney; L. D. Allison, Cowpens. ' -Yard-wide all silk Taffeta, white and black, worth $1.00 a yard; Silk Sale price, 69c. Carroll, Carpenter & Byers. Personal Paragraphs Concerning Pop ular People and Short Items of General Interest. Correspondence of Tne Ledeer.i Etta Jane, March 2.—Miss Amanda Bratton, an elderly maiden lady, is lying very low at the home of her brother, Ross Bratton, at this time. She is a noble, good woman and has many friends within The Ledger's circulation who will regret to learn of her Illness. The North Pacolet S. S. Convention will meet at Elbethel on the fourth Sabbath of this month. If hades were searched and sifted we doubt very much whether such another set of tattlers,, backbiters and professional scandal mongers could be found as we have living amongst us at this day. For anyone to try to be respectable and some body, is to invite the calumny and ire of all the Satanic forces the infernal regions can parade. We are prompted to make this assertion from a state of affairs we find prevailing through out this county, by which Its very best people are made the victims of malicious and falsely constituted charges. March came like a lamb this year. A nice spring-like morning it is. The sickness in this section is somewhat subsiding, though there are several cases right had off yet. Some farmers are sowing oats and breaking their lands preparatory to planting another crop. The peach trees begin to look as if they will he loaded with fruit this year. Several wells in this section have failed. Mr. C. F. Inman had his cleaned out a few days ago and has got a good head of water. Capt. J. T. Moorehead’s well Is also out of fix, so we are told. Several prospective land buyers have been looking around In this county within the last few weeks. We hope that we may get some good, en ergetic, law-abiding people to move amongst us who will help build up the waste places that have gone to wreck. There are hundreds of acres along Thickety and Gilkey creeks that are now practically useless to their own ers unless they could or would expend labor and money on them to bring them into a proper state of cultiva tion. Mr. Sam W. Foster will move back to Union this week where he expects to keep a few boarders and run a market. Congressman Finley has sent some packages of tobacco seed which we will gladly distribute among our pa trons If they will call for them. He also has our thanks for The Daily Record of Congressional proceedings. That Mr. Finley is one of the hardest worked men in congress there can be but little. If any, doubt. Hon. G. B. Fowler, of Jonesville, Is In this section surveying lands for different parties. He located the school house tracts yesterday for both the Sunnyside and Etta Jane schol houses. Rev. W\ H. White will preach at Salem next Sabbath, March 6th, at 11 a. m. Rev. J. B. Wilson preached at Mes opotamia last Sabbath evening. From those who claim to know we understand that the water is too swift at Skull Shoals to run the flat, and It’s useless to the counties. The bridge replaced would be much more acceptable and convenient. We regret to learn that Mr. Offls Inman has a very sick child. Mr. Beatty Morris’ children are get ting along right well, but Mrs. Mor ris is still very sick. Beatty is a hard working man and we sympa thize with him and his family in their affliction. j. L. S. Death of Mrs. Harris. Mrs. Charles Harris died at her home in this city on the 27th inst, after a long illness and was buried in the family graveyard at the Lock hart place on the 28th. Sne was a consistent member of the Ararat Bap tist church and leaves her husband and eight children to mourn their loss. They have the sympathy of a large circle of friends. The following was contributed by a friend: “A voice we loved is stilled; A place Is vacant in our home Which never can he filled. God in His wisdom has recalled The boon His love had given; And though her body moldeth here Her soul is safe in Heaven.” THR0U6MT THE TARHEEL STATE RECENT EVENTS OF NOTE IN NORTH CAROLINA. More Tin Ore in Cherokee. Rev. A. D. Davidson, a highly, es teemed Baptist clergyman of the Beaver Dam section of the county, spent some time in the city yester day. Mr. Davidson had several spec imens of an ore he had found on his farm which very much resembles tin ore. It Is very much like the ore in Capt. S. S. Ross’ mine. Many think that Mr. Davidson has the “real thing,” and he says if it is, he has plenty of it. Extra!.. Extral —Mr. J. A. Welch, of Baltimore, rep resenting M. Moses & Son, of that city, will be at Carroll, Carpenter & Byers’ tomorrow( Saturday) with a full line of samples of upring and summer clothing. Call and let him take your measure for a suit or pair of trousers. More Riots. Disturbances of strikers are not nearly as grave as an individual dis order of the system. Overwork, loss of sleep, nervoous tension will be fol lowed by utter collapse, unless a re liable remedy Is Immediately em ployed. There’s nothing so efficient to cure disorders of the Liver or Kid neys as Electric Bitters. It’s a won derful tonic, and effective nervine and the greatest all around medicine for run down systems. It dispels Nervousness, Rheumatism and Neu ralgia and expels Malaria germs. Only 50c, and satisfaction guaranteed by Cherokee Drug Co., Iruggists. The Simplon tunnel, the longesc in the world, is to be completed in 1905. The event will he celebrated at Milan, the nearest Important Italian city, by an international exposition. Inflammat'vy Rheumatism Cored. William Shaffer, a brakeman of Dennison, Ohio, was confined to his bed for several weeks with inflamma tory rheumatism. “I used many rem edies,” he says. “Finally I sent to McCraw’s drug store for a bottle of Chamberlain’s Pain Balm, at which time I was unable to use hand or foot, and In one week’s time was able to go to work as happy as a clam.” For sale by Cherokee Drug Co, Gaff ney; L. D. Allison, Cowpens. —Wash and Foulard Silks, the latest patterns, 38c at Carroll, Car penter & Byers. Working Overtime. Eight hour laws are ignored by those tireless workers—Dr. King b New Life Pills. Milllops are always at wmrk, night and day, curing Indi gestion, Constipation, Sick Headache and all Stomach, Liver and Bowel troubles. Easy, pleasant, safe, sure. Only 25e at Cherokee Drug Co.’s drug store. Lost His Grip. When a man has lost his grip on the affairs of life, feels incapable of performing the ordinary duties that business requires, body languid brain dull, his liver is out of order, Rydales Uver Tablets are what he needs. One dose usually will, two al ways will, restore normal condition of body and mind, and fit a man for the duties and pleasures of life again. Ry- •dales Liver Tablets are easy to take, pleasant in effect, satisfactory in re sults, economical. 50 chocolate coated tablets In a convenient box, 26 «ts. Gaffney Drug Co. The largest steamship In the world is the Baltic, launched Nov 21 at Belfast. It is 725.9 feet In length. 49 feet In depth and 75.6 feet In breadth. Its tonage is 23,000. Dangers of Pneumonia. A cold at this time if neglected is liable to cause pneumonia, which is so often fatal, and even when the pa tient has recovered the lungs are weakened, making them peculiarly susceptible to the developments of consumption. Foley's Honey and Tar will stop the cough, heal and strength en the lungs and prevent pneumonia. A four inch strip of land was sold in New York city recently. The price paid is said to have been $1,666. The strip separates two properties on Seventh avenue. Honored at Home. Rev. Parker Holmes, pastor of the 1st M. E. Church South, Hickory, N. C., says: “I have used Rydales Stom ach Tablets for Indigestion and re gard them as a perfect remedy for this disease. I take pleasure In rec ommending them to all sufferers from indigestion.” Use Rydales Stomach Tablets for your stomach trouble and you will Join Dr. Holmes In this stiong endorsement. These tablets will digest the food your weak stomach cannot, and thus nourish the body and prevent the partial starvation, from which all dyspeptios suffer and which causes the loss in flesh and strength all dys peptics experience. These tablets re lieve all disagreeable symptoms at once. They will Increase vour strength and flesh, almost from* the first day’s use almost soon restore you to perfect health. Gaffney Drug Co. —Yard wide black Taffeta, "Guar anteed to wear” woven In every yard. Worth $1.25 a yard; 811k Sale price only 94c at Carroll, Car penter & Byers. --Wash Silks, Foulard Silks, Taf feta Silks, Crepe de Chines—nothing bettir for spring and summer suits, skirts and waists. At Carroll, Car penter & Byers. —Wait for the Silk Sale at Car- roll, Carpenter & Byers. The date will be announced later. Danger in Cold Weather. There Is danger In cold weather be cause It produces conditions favorable to tho development of those germ diseases known as Lagrippe, Pneumo nia, Bronchitis, Consumption, etc. These diseases are contracted while the mucous membrane of the throat and lungs is weakened by inflammation resulting from a cold. It is dangerous to neglect even a slight cold. Help nature ward off disease by using Ry dales Elixir. This modern scientific remedy can i .ways be relied on in all diseased conditions of the throat and lungs. Gaffney Drug Co. A Household Necessity. A good liniment is a household ne cessity. Elliott’s Emulsified Oil Lini ment, meets every requirement of the household and barnyard Ui a most sat isfactory manner. Full 1-2 pint bot tles 25 cts. Gaffney Drug Co. Items of Interest Concerning Our Neighbors in the Old North State Culled Expressly for Ledger Readers The senate Tuesday confirmed the nomination of Roy C. Flanagan as postmaster at Greenville The sheriff of Buncombe county went to Raleigh Wednesday and de livered to the penitentiary authori ties Dr. Jay to serve 30 years for mur dering his wife and two children while in a frenzy at his home near Asheville. The young man, Gatewood, who had the misfortune to get his leg badly crushed last week by falling between the cars of a Southern train, is still at the hospital in Durham. His condition is reported as not being so favorable as it was several days ago. For the month of February, the to tal shipments of gold from the Unit ed States assay office at Charlotte amounted to $17,915.06. The ship ment is considered very good for the month of February. For January the receipts and shipments were $15,990.- 06—nearly $2,000 less than the re ceipts for the past month. Through his attorney, Mr. T. C. Guthrie, of Charlotte, Mr. W. Lee Nichols, of that city, has instituted suit against the Southern Cotton Oil Company for $2,000 damages for injuries he sustained in the com pany's mill at Davidson. The plain tiff lost a hand in the machinery and thinks he is entitled to recover the amount named. A large portion of the most valu able property in Rocky Mount was swept away by fire early Wednesday morning, the loss being estimated at eighty-five thousand dollars. The fire started in the Opera House, in the handsome new Masonic Building which was destroyed together with the United States postoffice, bank building. The~ telephone office and four or five other stores were lost. Thefamily of Mr. H. H. Sells, of Salisbury, poisoned ten days ago, had almost recovered when they were poisoned again Friday night .’ It now seems certain that some malicious person is doing this, a box of rough on rats having been known to have been purchased, and it is believed for that purpose. Tho doctors believe the arsenic has been put in the coffee though none was left by which an analysis could be made. Mr. Sells is pretty sure of his enemy, though ev idence is insufficient to warrant arrest. There is to be a big temperance ral ly in Statesville March 15th. A meet ing was held there Tuesday night, in the office of the clerk of the court, Mr. J. A. Hartness, to further perfect the organization of the Anti-Saloon League in Iredell county. The origi nal members of the league that so ardently fought the cause for tem perance In the last election that whipped out whiskey from this sec tion were present at the meeting, and demonstrated the same strong feeling against the liquor traffic as in the be ginning. Fletcher Brown, who was thrown or fell from a freight train near Old Fort last Sunday, died in Asheville Monday morning at six o’clock from his Injuries. Brown was employed by the Southern railway company as a flagman. He never regained con sciousness after receiving his inju ries. The remains were taken to Black Mountain for interment. He was a son of Rev. T. K. Brown, of Black Mountain, and a nephew of Register of Deeds Fortune of Bun combe county. Mr. Brown had been In the service of the railroad about eiht years. There’s a bright outlook for the location of a cotton mill plant in Brevard. Responsible parties from east of the Blue Ridge have been at that place this w r eek looking the situ ation over and made a proposition to the hoard of trade, which A/ill most probably he accepted. If so, 1$ means that Brevard will have a $250,000 cotton mill In operation In the near future. The committee ap pointed by the board of trade for the purpose have secured an option on the water power owned by Mr. Lee- ther Hamilton on Little river. This power will furnish electric power for ! the proposed cotton mill and for street lights and for other industries. The Remains of Engineer George H. May and Fireman Robert Bessent, who were killed Saturday n the hor rible wreck of a douhle-Header freight six miles beyond Bassett, Va., were brought to Winston Sunday afternoon, accompanied by a delegation of rail- I road men from Roanoke. Engineer Stull, who was on the front engine and who sustained fatal Injuries, was removed to the hospital in Roanoke, where he died at 4 o’clock Saturday. ^ He lived only a few minutes after his wife reached his side. He was : conscious until the end. The unfortu nate man prayed that he might live 1 to see his wife and his prayer was granted. By request Mr. Stull was baptized before the end came. Tom Saunders, colored, a notori ous thief, made his escape from the Rowan county chain gang late Sat urday night and was recaptured In Spencer early Tuesday morning by Chief of Police J. A. Siceloff. During the few hours that he was out of custody Saunders had changd his clothing and had gone to a restaurant in East Spencer for something to eat i The officer was in hiding in the room and at once placed him under arrest Saunders was serving a sentence for breaking into a number of stores in Salisbury. He had formerly been in the employ of railroad detectives at this place in an effort to capture car breakers, and he himself was found with over 3,000 cigars, which he had stolen from a box car. Last week revenue officers from Collector Harkins’ office in Asheville, seized a carload of liquor consigned to Patrick McIntyre, of that city. It was stated that the liquor had been shipped from Davie county, and that it was seized for irregularities. Soon after it was seized Casper & Co., of Winston, notified the collector that the whiskey belonged to them, and filed a claim for the entire carload. Tuesday J. Wiley Shook, counsel for Casper & Co., presented evidence showing that the whiskey was. ship ped and stamped according to regulat ions, and convinced the revenue offi cers that there was nothing wrong with the consignment. The whiskey was then orderd turned over to Mr McIntyre,-to whom it was consigned First BaptistpChurch Notes. At 11 o’clock Sunday Dr. Simms will speak on “How to Be More and to Do More than Other People." The treasurer will read hlssreport to the morning congregation. Usual services a + night at 8 o’clock. All are invited to these services. Sunday School at 9.45. Be on hand. Damon and Pythias. The splendid and thrilling story of devotion and sacrifice, “Damon and Pythias,” will be presented by the F. B. Hallman company at the Star Theatre on Saturday night, March 12, Nearly everybody is familiar with this famous story, and the opportunity to see it on the stage is one that should not be missed. Remember the date, Saturday night, March 12. MANY DOCTORS,' INTERESTED IN THE CASE OF MRS. ROBERT WHITELY. Cherokee Drug Co.’s Vinol Cured Her of Chronic Stomach Trouble and She Has Gained 36 Pounds. Mr. Robert Whitley of Pittsburg, Pa., writes: “My wife was subject to chronic stomach trouble and terri ble nervousness; she was thin, and had a worn-out look. Doctors, after great expense, all failed to help her. At last she tried Vinol, and soon the change in her condition seemed al most miraculous. She continued Its use, and today she is in perfect health and has gained 36 pounds— her friends hardly know her so great is the change. To Vinol we give all Letter to Prof. R. O. Same. Gaffney, S. C. Dear Sir: You are a teacher: here’s one for your boys: If the painting costs two or three times as much as the paint, and one paint goes twice as far as another, how much are those two paints worth? If Devoe is worth $1.50 or $1.75 a gallon, how much is the other one worth ? How much is a gallon of paint worth anyhow? Tho answer Is: Depends on the paint. The reason is:* paint Isn’t always paint. There are true and false paint and short measure. How much is a short-measure gal lon worth? How much 1* false paint worth? How much is Deroe worth? There are millions a year in the answer to this last one. Yours truly F W Devoe & Co Ne$r York the praise, and everywhere I recom mend your Vinol, as I have more faith, in It than I have In doctors or any* other medicine.” Our Vinol cures conditions like this, because It contains in a concen trated form all of the vital principles contained in cod l}ver oil, and It is the greatest strength creator known to medicine. Vinol tones up the tired, weakened nerves of the stomach; It purifies and enriches the blood; it Invigorates every organ in the body to do its work as nature intended, and solid, firm flesh, abounding health and vitality is the sure result. Every person in Gaffney is invited ! to call at our store and get a bottle of Vinol. If it fails to do what we ' claim for it we will give back your I money. You see by the above letter that the fame of Vinol is spreading far and wide. Cherokee Drug Co.