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I 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* «E GUARANTEE THE RELIABILITY of Every Advertiser Who Uses the Columns of This Paper. BEST ADVERTISING MEDIUM. A Newspaper in All that the Word Implies and Devoted to the Best Interest of the People of Cherokee County. -4* ESTABLISHED FEB. 16, 1894. GAFFNEY, 8. C., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1905. $1.00 A YEAR. COTTON PLANTERS AND SPECOLATORS. “ONLY TWO SIDES TO THE QUES TION” Says Mr. Smith—The Selling World and the Purchasing Wolrd—Orga nization is Simple. It is a matter ol surprise as- I go through the South to find that there is a disposition among its people to ask how this organization is to be perfected and how we propose to gain the object in view. The. process is so simple that it seems to me that this is perhaps the reason why we are so slow in approaching it. There are but two sides to the question: The purchasing world and the selling world. The farmers who make the cotton, the speculators, the cotton buyers, mill men, in other words, those who buy cotton, who handle cot ton and who manipulate it for the purpose of making money other than alterable in their observances and re sults as the laws in the physical world. God intends that man sh^ll proper just in proportion as he mixes brain with business. The world in its progress has learned that combi nation is the basis of all success; that the man who attempts to stand alone is lost in the fight of life, hence by combining they have been able to overcome, depress, and sacrifice for their own gain the disorganized and ignorant world, and my plea to the Southern cotton grower is that know ing this law to be a God-given law his only hope to withstand the ag gressiveness of combination is to op- •pose it with combination, hence the position occupied by the Southern cot ton grower, having as he has a mo nopoly of the greatest staple on earth, it is simply a question of his power to control for has own benefit this wonderful wealth-producing commo dity. It is a nitiful sight and one that would move the heart of any man to see a Southern farmer in whose veins flows the blood of heroes, hav ing in his hand this great Southern staple, walking the streets, a beggar on his own domain, asking the world to price, to weigh, to grade, this won derful wealth-producing element of his and out of which he is getting barely enough to go hack to his pover ty-stricken home, his work-worn wife, his ignorant and poorly fed children the producers. Now this consuming „ , world or buying world have no other 1 to overflow by another twelve months sources from which to obtain dotton I labor the coffers of those who sit except from the South. It is useless !fl'otate to him how much they to speik of foreign competition. That j idea has been exploded for for'yi years for the reason that just after the vvar in 18G<> cotton was bringing $1.8!) per pound middling in New York. Seven European stitLs met for tlie purpose of devising ways and means of raising cotton in their ter ritory in competition with American cotton or a; least to supply in some degree the famine that was then ex isting in the cotton world. It must In will allow him to live on to make their yearly crop of cotton. I have thought as he walked the streets with a sam- p.e of cotton in his hand, was this really, actually a sample of cotton; it is the currency of the South, the predominant industry of the world, and the South’s monopoly. Upon it depends the South’s ability to devel op her marvelous resources, to edu cate her people, to see to it that wealth and character shall be charac- understood that Europe had then the | teristic of her in place of poverty and same facilities for handling cotton. I ignorance, every department of our for manufacturing it and for raising! commercial and social life is depen- it as she has today. She had her or- 'l f ‘nt upon this our great staple. And ganized mills, her capitalists interest-1 1 have seen him, the individual farm ed in cotton, practically the same ter-! *‘ r °f the South, with a sample of this ritory she now owns, the same cheap! the currency ol the South in his hand labor, the same brain, and after six i a* he walked the streets with the years of experience these European | tragedy of a disappointed life stamp- states were called to make a report i ° ’ °n his features, having left at his as to their experiment. Cotton was | home a family whose hopes for the then selling at G5 cents per pound j simple joys and comforts of life are middling in New York. The report wrapped up in the silken fiber of of this committee of which only t wo j this thing that they may set a price, reported was that it was impossible! n °t on cotton but on the possibility to grow cotton in competition witli | of converting this thing into the brain American cotton at the fabulous price i an, l character of his children, bring- of Go cents to $1.98 per pound. Now i >ng comfort and happiness to her who it is very evident to any man that | has been a helpmate all these years if Europe could not raise cotton in I and upon* which depends the possi- competition with American cotton at >»i1ity of his own personal indepen- these high prices, what may she hope dence, and I have seen the dejected to do in competition with America at look of disappointment as he has so 10 cents to 15 cents per pound? All i often turned over all of this price- this rot about foreign competition is | less hope and possibility into the but a hoax flaunted in the face of the hands of another and go back to take ignorant Southerner to make him dis- e again and to repeat once again pose of his cotton at whatever prices I this terrible tragedy of the Southland, these speculators see fit to give him, I have pledged my God as I pledged this fight. Aren’t you afraid that by carrying the price too high you will stimulate competition and kill the goose that lays the golden egg?” My reply to him was, "The goose is all right. We are after the scoundrel that has been stealing the golden eggs and for the first time in the history of this goose we have had a setting of the golden eggs and the hatching was so according to our taste that we have gone into the goose busi ness.” In conclusion, I want to say that that which has nerved me to make the fight in the South is that this is the same old fight that was waged forty years ago. only in a dif ferent form. Then it was for political supremacy; now it is for financial su premacy. And the same men and the sons of the men who with a heroic sacrifice made the name of the South glorious is the one which will make her victorious in the other. It is not necessary for me to plead with these men and the sons of these men to re member that thin tattered line who with bleeding feet and breaking hearts stodd defying the well kept and or ganized forces of the world, and with the cry of mother, wife and sister, from a desolate land, pleading with them if possible to come home and help them in their extremities, and on the other hand the call of their leader to try once again the test of arms against overwhelming numbers This grand exhibition of heroism by these heroes who against all odds with bleeding feet and breaking hearts, when the ertmmam* was glveh sprang forward and up the horrid hill of self-sacrifice bathed in the blood of friends, brothers and countryman, toil ed onward and upward and. wrote with their own heart’s blood high up on the shaft of fame the immortal names of Lee and Jackson and. though the stars and bars went down in d feat in the face of overwhelming num bers, today the South organized under the banner of cotton will carry this fUg on to victory and having driven back forever the grounds of ignoi- nnre will once again vindicate \her right and her ability to be the garden spot of the world. THROUGHOUT THE PALMETTO STATE ITEMS OF INTEREST OF PASSING EVENTS IN SOUTH CAROLINA. RAVENNA READING. Personal Our Happenings All Over the State Taken from Our Exchanges and Tersely Told to Ledger Readers. It was decided Tuesday by Super visor Walker, of Greenville, that the election on the dispensary in that county would take place Novem ber 14. C. S. Jones has filed suit againqt the Bank of Fountain Inn in Green ville county, for $5,000 for failure to honor his check for $250 when he had more than that amount on deposit at the bank. Former Supervisor Owens, of Rich land county, whose name was “pro minently mentioned” several times In the recent report of the special legis lative committee investigating Rich land county affairs, has returned to the State and |s ready for whatever is to he done. Paragraphs About Southern Neighbors. Ravenna, Oct. 11.—Messrs. Walter Green and Charlie Humphries, who are attending Furman University, were visiting' relatives and friends here last Sunday. Mr. C. C. Kirby, of Gaffney, visits our Sunday school quite often, and if all reports are true, there must be "something doing.” After hearing so much talk about the fine speech of Mr. Ed. Smith at Gaffney Monday, we were glad to sec that the editor of The Ledger was going to publish it in full. Mr. “Dick” Jolly’s show passed through here last Tuesday and show ed at Mr. H. S. Lipscomb’s store Tues day night Mr. Lee Littlejohn, of Pacolet, was among his friends last Sunday Mess. C. E. and C. D. Pettit attend ed preaching at Corinth last Sunday. Mr. M. W. Brown, of Jonesville, was a welcome visitor at our Sunday school last Sunday Since the fail in the price of cot ton, our farmers are holding back for 11 cents. Messrs. Ben Waddell and “Babe” Parker, who purchased land near Thickety, will move from here this fall. The Goucher people were certainly liberal in subscribing money for the orphanage. Mr. T. G. Chalk lias sold one of his \ttorney General U. X. Gunter whoi nm ] es —••ohl Joe.” has been at Batesburg in bed with a I Mr. Beam, of Jonesville, was fixing relapse of typhoid fever was taken | organs in this section last week, to Columbia Tuesday suffering with | Mr. F. J. Parham and Mr. Miles an attack of pleurisy. He is now in ('amp, of Thickety, were ”in these THE TARHEEL STATE RECENT EVENTS OF NOTE NORTH CAROLINA. IN the Columbia Hospital. His friends all over the State hope for him a speedy recovery. diggins” last Saturday night. Miss Laura Brown and brother, Baxter, spent Sunday at Pacolet mills. C. BLACKSBURG BREVITIES. but the simple question that covers the whole situation is, have the South ern people the brain, the money, the manhood, to hold this, their one mo- you today never to lit this fight un til the time shall come when they who are the born heirs of this wonderful inheritance shall have given to them Gaffneyites in Greer. The two items below are taken from the Greer Observer, and will he interesting to Lodger readers be cause they refer to our boys: H. C. Knox has leased Davenport s hall to he used as a theatre, which will he known as the Piedmont Opera House. Many needed improvements will he made and the public is assur ed of the opportunity of seeing a num ber of high class theatrical prOduh- lions during the coming winter. nopoly, against all the forces to the j a just and equitable return for this contrary, and to demand of the world j they give to the world. It is need- 'hat they shall give in return for! less to call attention to the fight made American cotton a profitable price to! this spring. For in the face of a those who are fortunate enenigh to I fourteen million bale crop we started hold a monopoly of it. The question ; when the world declared that eleven that for forty years has confront- million hales was all that the con ed the Southern cotton grower is how j sumption required and that there he might manage to make a living by! would he a surplus of thee mil growing cotton. A simple comparison lions of bales left on hand and. of his methods of doing business with | therefore, if the South wished them other methods will serve to vividly to take it all they would have to sell bring out how it is he is poor and it at a price that the consuming world others that handle cotton and handle was willing to take it at. which was other business make a competency <> cents per pound. The result of that and in some cases grow rich. Right fight has now passed into history. The here in your town I go to a merchant world has taken the fourteen millions and ask him what he does to make a for the simple reason that it had living. His reply is‘ “I merchandise.” been sold at profitable prices to the “How do you manage to make manufacturers before a bale of it was money?” He replies by saying: “I placed on the market by the men who go to New York, buy my goods, add grew it. Now let me say just here the freight, to the original cost, clerk that I have no quarrel with the mills, hire, store rent, interes*, all inciden- If they can sell the American cotton tal expenses to get it ready for the crop on a basis of 10 cents per pound trade, and then on top of this I add for the raw material at the different whatever per cent I think the people stations in the South, and having will stand, and when I have sold my made these contracts then go to these goods I have the original cost plus I different stations and buy it at my nrofi* and if I can sell enough 5 cents per pound, I s^y I have no goods it is a mathematical problem, quarrel with them. That is a busi- very simple, until I shall have made ness transaction and they art* in it enough to retire from business.” I for the money they can make, and if sav to him: “That is a go4d business they can sell it at 10 cents per pound proposition and it only needs push and then buy it at 5 cents per pound, and energy to accomplish your pur- they are entitled to all they get and pose.” I go to a live stock dealer and ; I have no quarrel with them, but I ask him how he manages to make do feel like kicking the man who lets money. His reply is, “I go west, pur- them have it for 5 cents. As I said chase my mules and horses, add the before cotton is the currency of the freight, their feed, all the incidental South. This is not a farmers fight expenses until I sell them, then when alone. It Is a fight that ought to be I do sell I add $25 or $:50 per head and taken up and waged by every voca- it is only a question of how many I tion and avocation and profession in sell to decide how much I make.” 1 all the South. Cotton Is the financial say to him that is a good business heart of the South’s commercial sys- proposltlon. I go right out to your tern. Lower the price of it and you most intelligent farmer and ask him weaken the financial vitality of every what he does to make a living. His department of our commercial life; Mr. LaFar Lipscomb, of Gaffney, a graduate of Clemson College, and a civil engineer of experience and suc cess, has been engaged to make the survey of the new county. Mr. Lip scomb and his surveying squad ex pect to begin work next week. A thoroughly accurate and reliable sur vey will he made and the new county lines will be run with political as well as mathematical skill. It will take something like thirty days to complete the survey. Suit has been instituted in the United States court in Charleston on nine promissory notes for $5,000 each, by the Continental National Bank, of!p ers0 nals and Locals from the Iron Chicago. The bank is represented by | city Across the Broad. Messrs. Lyles and McMahon, of Co ! Blacksburg, Oct. 12.—Mr. W. J. lumbia. The petition states that the; Moorepead spent Tuesday in Hickory notes are past due and have gone to j Grove on business, protest and ask the protection of the, D r . j. q. Black and Mr. J. R. Heal- eourt. It is understood that the suit 1 iin were called to Charlotte, N. C., on is no surprise to the present manage-! account of the illness of Mr. Healan's ment of the mill. daughter, Mrs. King. Miss Annie Davis, who has been The Continental Bank of Chicago, j the guest of Mrs. Jennie Deal for through its attorneys filed suit in the several days, ’returned to her home United States circuit court in Char-!i n Atlanta.* Ga.. Wednesday. The Meeting Closes. The meeting at the Presbyterian church closed last night. Mr. Listen lias preached some excellent sermons during the week and at ail times the meetings have been interesting and instructive. Mr. Listen goes to Salem today and will preach there Sunday morning, returning to Gaffney in the afternoon and preaching in the Presbyterian church again Sunday night. He has not as yet expressed a determination as to whether or not he will accept the pasttorate of this church, but the eongregation is hopeful that he may decide to come. The Show. The Gagnon-Polloak Stock Company opened a three-nights engagement at the Star Theatre last night. We went to press before the performance, therefore cannot say anything con- eerniftg the merits of the performers, hut from the advance notes are led to believe that the show is a splen did popular price organization. They will appear tonight and tomorrow night. Last night the bill was “No Mother to Guide Her.” Tonight the hill will he “The Winning Hand” and tomorrow night the engagement will close with “The ’toad to Frisco.” reply is, “I grow cotton.” I say to him, “How do you manag* to make money?” “Well,” .he replies, “my land rent Is worth so much, guano so much, plow hands so much, the labor to grow it. pick it, gin it so much, and , it costs me about 7 1-2 cents per pound in the South should See to it that to get it ready for market.” “Well, this great cardinal principle should then what do you get?” “God Al- bo so systematized and organized that mighty only knows. Just what the at all times there should flow into the stimulate the price of it and the stim ulated circulation is felt in the smallest capillary of trade in every department of our commercial life, hence bankers, merchants, lawyers, doctors, in fact every form of activity other fellow sees fit to give me.” Therefore can there be any surprise that we find the cotton producers of the South, the producers of its wealth, poor, while the balance of the world are the possessors of the wealth pro duced by them? The cardinal differ ence between the successful business world and the unsuccessful cotton grower is simply the difference be tween ignorance and intelligence, be tween the observance of the unalter able. inexorable law and want of it. South an adequate return for this her greatest commercial commodity. There seems to he a disposition on the nart of some to fear that the farmers and their friends in the South if they win the fight and do succeed in gain ing the power to dictate the price of cotton will be disposed to put it so high that they will jeopardize their own interetss *>y causing manu facturers to curtail their purchases. As a gentleman said to me some time hack. “Mr. Smith, we recognize I want to state right here and now that you have won one victory and that the laws of business are as hn- that you will probably win out on New Cure for Cancer. All surface cancers are now known to he curable, by Bucklen s Arnica Salve. Jas. Walters, of Duffleld, Va„ writes; “I had a cancer on my lip for years, that seemed incurable, till Bucklen’s Arnica Salve healed it. and now it Is perfectly well.” Guaranteed cure for cuts and burns. 25c at Cherokee Drug Co.’s drug store. Even a very weak man can often shoulder a responsibilitv. Letter to C. L. Harmon. Gaffney, S. C. Dear Sir: A little water in milk don’t show, you know; a good deal don't show: you know that t<x>. * Three-quarters chalk in your paint don’t show. It’s just as good as wat er; and Mmo is another. But you are an honest man, and your milk is rich with cream that is only waiting a chance to get-up on top and say: “Good morning "m ready for breakfast." So is your paint if you paint De- voe. It wraps your house with a coat that keeps-out weather and keeps in soundness. Go by the name. Yours truly F W Devoe & Co 128 P. S. Our paint is sold by R. M. Wilkins Hardware Co., Gaffney, S. C. leston Mondav a bill of complaint against the Union Cotton Mills, of Union, and T. C. Duncan, the former president of the mill, alleging that they had allowed ninb promissory- notes, aggregating $45,000 to go to protest. The notes were for $5,00n each, made payable at 4 months with interest and that complaint alleges that no part of the amount has been paid. Geo. T. King, of Piedmont, commit ted suicide Sunday night about 1 o'clock, by severing the jugular vein with a razor. Mr. King had been in ill health for some time and frequent ly when he could not sleep he would walk out into the yard. Sunday night he arose about 1 o’clock and w’ent out. His wife thought nothing more of the matter until next morning, when she started out to milk, she saw her husband’s body lying near the hog pen. Upon examination she found that there were five cuts on his neck and his body was cold and still. In one hand he held the box of the razor, which he used. Mr. King was about (10 years of age an.l leaves a wife and several children. He was a member of the Baptist church and an honest and upright citizen. Sunday night $wo miles l>eyond Landrum. Mr. J. H. Hyder while traveling towards Asheville was as saulted and robbed of $12.30 by three brothers whose names are Lyder. It is said that Mr. Hyder was caugqc from behind, thrown down, choked, and was severely beaten with a club. During the scuffle his pocket book was taken from him. After recovering from the shock Mr. Hyder returned to Landrum and had warrants sworn out for the robbers. All of the rob- 1 hers were arrested on Monday and carried before Mr. Elage the magis trate of Landrum. Strange to say. Mr. Hyder met them and withdrew the charges of assault and robbery. The Lyder’s paid the the costs, re turned the stolen money and were allowed to take their departure in peace. Fate Davenport, colored, was killed by passenger train No. :18 of the Southern road late Monday afternoon while walking along the track near the coal chute at Spartanburg. Da venport was walking south and was struck by the northbound train. His neck, l^ft kqee, left hip and left arm were broken. He probably never knew what struck him. The train, wjiich was 1n charge of Conductor S. Stova), was stopped as quickly as pos sible after the accident. Upon exami nation the body of the negro was found some distance from the track. In the pockets of the deceased were found a cotton bill, a knife, emptv purse and a whiskey flask contain ing a small quantity of liquor. The deceased was a member of the color ed Odd Fellows and the lodge of which he was a member conducted the funeral. Mi. L. Tempton, of Smyrna, was in town Wednesday. Mr. Cummings, of Charleston, spent Wednesday in town with friends. Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Shiver, of Rock Hill, are visiting relatives in town this week. Mrs. Janie Fortenbery and son, Arthur, of Gaffney, spent Tuesday in town with her sister, Mrs. J. B. Shi ver. Capt. Charles Dunlap, of Rock Hill, w r as in town Wednesday night. Dr. J. T. Darwin, of Gaffney, was in town Tuesday on business. Insects in Cotton. Mr. Julius Hammett, who lives a few miles below Gaffney, sent us two small insects Tuesday, which he found on his cotton. They are very small, brown in color and oblong in shape, and Mr. Hammett thought they might be some of the boll weevil tribe: but they are altogether unlike a specimen of the genuine article sent to this office by a friend in Texas some time since. Mr. Ham mett found these insects in large numbers in the bolls of his cotton; and they, or something else, have damaged it considerably. Items of Interest Concerning Our Neighbors in the Old North State Culled Expressly for Ledger Readers. The State has authorized an In crease of the capital stock of the American Warehouse Company, oof Spray, from $100,000 to $500,000. In the whiskey election held at Elizabeth City Monday the town went dry by '51 majority. Two years ago the city went dry by a large ma jority but 120 saloon men were, at that time, disfranchised. They vot ed in full force this time. The prohi bitionists claim a great victory. A mild sensation has resulted from the developments of the death of Mrs. Robt. Jossey, which occurred near Salisbury one week ago: It is now believed that the deceased was poisoned and that death resulted therefrom. The body is to be ex humed and the stomach examined for poison. It is not known whq is sup posed to have administered the dead ly dose, Jule Suftin and Solon Drum, two white men, engaged in a fight about two miles east of Newton, late Sun- . day afternoon which came near re suiting fatally for Drum. Suftin struck him on the head with a piece of wood or iron and for a time it >vas thought he was fatally injured and he was later reported as dead. Drum, however, will recover, although pretty badly hurt. Charters are granted the Raleigh Investment Company, of Raleigh, ca pital stock $25,000. J. S. Wynne and others stockholders, to deal in real i 4 He; Phonoharp Co., of Concord, capital stock. $5,000, to deal in musi cal instruments: and the State char ters the American Yarn Company at Spray, Rockingham county, with a capital of $225,000, B. Frank Mebane, W. R. Walter and F. H. Marshall as the stockholders. The concerts will spin and weave cotton and other tex tiles. A special to tin* Gazette News from M di-ion says: Yesterday morning about 4 o’clock, George H. Cunning ham, of Bulltown, W. Va., an engiq- eer on the South & Western railroad, who has been conducting a survey on the Blue Ridge north of Marion, fell out of a window from the third story of the Eagle Hotel about 35 feet. His right thigh and right arm are broken, his hip is dislocated and he is cut on the head. Physicians think he will live. It is understood that, he says he was dreaming that he was en gaged in a battle and made a charge and went out at the window. Accident to Shifting Engine. Wednesday afternoon while shift ing cars near the powerhouse, in this city, the shifting engine and tender jumped the track and plowed up the earth considerably. The engine was running slowly at the time of the accident, and no material damage was done. It required about an hour to place things to rights. First Baptist Church Notes. Dr. Simms will fill his pulpit as usual at each service.- All night services at 7:45. The Sunday school meets at 9:45. Strangers and visitors are cordially invited to all the services. Full of Tragic Meaning are these lines from J. H. Simmons, of Casey. la. Think what might -have resulted from his terrible cough if he had not taken the medicine about which he writes: “I had a fearful cough, that disturbed my night’s rest. I tried everything, hut nothing would relieve it, until I took Dr. King’s New Discovery for Consumption, Coughs and Colds, which completely cured me.” Instantly relieves and perma nently cures all throat and lung dis eases; prevents grip and pneumonia. A* Cherokee Drug Co., druggists; guaranteed: 50c and $1.00. Trial bottle free. A street car coming in from Lind- ley Park in Greensboro at 7 o’clock Monday evening struck an old de mented colored woman, named Tina Staples, and instantly killed her. The body was not mangled, being thrown to one side of ’he track. Coroner Turner investigated the accident and deemed an inquest, unnecessary. The woman was walking in the middle of the street in front of the Pomona graded school and stepped in front of the car which was running down grade rapidly, and the collision could not he avoided by the motorman. who reversed the current and applied brakes promptly. Daniel J. Sully, the New York bull cotton operator, addressed 500 busi ness men and farmers, the latter re presenting ten counties, in Raleigh Monday afternoon. He urged them to hold, declaring his belief that the crop will not exceed ten and a quar ter millions, and said if it is held, 11 cents could be obtained this month, twelve cents next month and a fur ther increase, hut tha; if the price goes below nine cents between now and the end of the year, the farmers will never see ten cent, cotton again, unless there is absolute disaster to the crop. Mr. Sully was given tre mendous cheers. SIMPLE REMEDY FOR CATARRH. Just Breathe Hyomer Four Times a Day and Be Cured. If a few years ago someone had said you can cure catarrh by breath ing air charged with a healing bal sam, the idea would have been ridi culed, and it remained for that eniT- nenet investigator, R. T. Booth, to dis cover in Hyomei this method of cure. Ten Nights in a Barroom. 1 Hyomei has performed almost mir- The Frank E. Griswold Company; aculous cures of catarrh, and is to- played "Ten Nights in a Barroom" to j day recognized by leading members a tent full of people in this city Wed nesday night. The actors in this web known temperance drama performed of the medical profession as the only advertised remedy that can be relieq upon to de just what it claims. The their parts well, and many who wit-j complete outfit of Hyomei costs $1.00, nessed the play pronounced It a good! and consists of an inhaler, a medicine one in every respect. 1 dropper, and a bottle of Hyomei. , i Breathe Hyomei through the inhal- Buford Street Church Notes. | ,>r for a few minutes four times a Sunday school at 10 a. m. Junior dav, and it will cure the worst case league, at 4:30 p. m. Preaching a? of catarrh, it soothes and heals the Plans to Get Rich are often frustrated by sudden hr^ak down, due to dyspepsia or constlpa-j 11 a. ni. an 1 7:30 p. m. A change will] raucous membrane of the air passag tion. Brace up and take Dr. King's lie made in the worship Sunda>. es. nrevents irritation and effects a New Life Pills. They take out the : Every member is urged to be present, complete and lasting cure, materials which are clogging your A cordial invitation is extended to all In Gaffney there are scores of well energies, and give you a new start, j strangers. known people who have been cured ! of catarrh by Hyomei. if it does not Guro headache and dizziness too. At Cherokee Drug. Co’s drug store; 25c, guaranteed. “Gat tha Habit," go to 4 NELSON’S. Girls, if you want red lips, laughing cure you the Gaffney Drug Company eyes, sweet breath and good looks use i vUI! return the money you pay foi Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea. The > Hyomei. This i s the strongest evi- greatest beautifler known. 35 cents, lonce that can he offered as to their Tea or Tablets. Gaffney Drug Co. faith in the remedy. f i