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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 THE RELIABILITY of Every Advertiser Who Usee the Columns of This Paper. BEST ADVERTISING MEDIUM. A Newspaper In All that tho Word Implies and Devoted to the Best InUrest of the People of Cherokee County. ESTABLISHED FEB. 16, 1894. GAFFNEY, S. C., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1905. $1.00 A YEAR. RATE REGULATION COMING UP AGAIN. COVERING THE RAILROADS AND SHIPPERS. All That is Needed is Enforcing the Laws—Chicago Incident Furnishes Sufficient Proof. Washington, D. Oct. 19.—I don’t like to do the “1 told you so act,” but the recent collection of $25,000 in fines from four representatives of a big beef house in Chicago, for viola tion of the Elkin’s law against rail road debates, puis me in mind of the fact that in several of my letters I have said that there was law enough on the statute books at the present time to raise Cain with both the rail roads and the shippers who have been participating in these rebates if it were enforced. This little Chicago incident proves it. It is true that the offence was committed some time ago when the paying of rebates was quite the fashion. Since the railroad rate agitation has been on the fash ions have changed and railroad com panies are not paying rebates as a rule. Demagogues may still tell you they are but the facts are agin ’em. You may have noticed that the fel lows who paid the fines were employes and not members of th“ firm. The big fellows got away just as big fish Mor ton slipped off the hook after the president’s investigators of the At chison, Topeka & Santa Fe case had him safely hooked and were ready to I in the insurance scandal due to the land him. It strikes me that these fact that they helped him out at elec- little fish gave up a hopeless fight and lion time? Has his suddenly aroused Roosevelt to step in and protect the policy holders of the company. You may remember too that Roosevelt ab solutely refused to interfere and al lowed things to take their course. Any reason for this? It looks to man up a tree as if there was a migh ty good reason for it, and that reason lay in the liberal contributions of money to the campaign managers that succeeded in electing Roosevelt. It has not been brought out in tes timony yet, but it is very well known, that the Chicago beef trust contribut ed $100,000 to that same Roosevelt campaign fund. You know thev did not do it simply because they loved Teddy. Think they did? How about that Garfield report that white-wash ed the whole bunch and showed them to be the greatest philanthropists that ever existed of a lot of blood suck ers who were raising the price of meats to the poor and making every body cough up for the benefit of their own pockets. There may have been no connection between that $190,000 contribution and that. Garfield white washing report, but if Teddy did not have a hand in making the white wash, then some of the best informed men in the country are greatly mis taken. It was a well known fact and wide ly commented on during the campaign that the railroad had laid down on Mr. Cortelyou. and had refused to contribute something like half a mil lion dollars that he wanted them to cough up to help elect Teddy. I won der if that had anything to do with Roosevelt’s suddenly aroused antago- Tiism to the railroad managers, and his desire to take the control of the railroads away from them and put it in the hands of a political commission which he himself appoints or controls.! was t Was Roosevelt’s refusal to interfere 1 ' THROUGHOUT THE PALMETTO STATE ITEMS OF EVENTS INTEREST OF PASSING IN SOUTH CAROLINA. RAVENNA READING. Visit to Happenings All Over the State Taken from Our Exchanges and Tersely Told to Ledger Readers. There are no new developments In the investigation of the mill situation | of our fri ls f in Union. The report that Mr. Rob-1 ertson, the newly elected president.! contemplated resigning is authorita- j tively denied. The supreme court has refused the | appeal of John Waldrop convicted of 1 the murder of S. J. Maddox in Oco nee and sentenced to the penitenti ary for life. Waldrop, will, therefore,! have to enter on the serving of his sentence. Policeman G. C. Corn, of Greenville, j was'arrested and bound over to court; on the charge of gambling. He was released under a bond of $509. His j conduct will be investigated by the, police commission. At'present he is still on duty. wa-. last J. T. Glascox, ,lr., a son of J. T. Glascox, of Harmony. York county, was badly injured by the gin at his fath er’s place. In raking out his hand caught in the saw and his right arm terribly lacerated before it could i) * withdrawn* In dressing the wounds the surgeons took over a hundred stitches. government gave up were landed safely in the attorney’s creel so as to call off at tention from the big fish that the government was nominally after, but who so far it has failed to land. Be tween you and me, I don’t think they will fish in that hole much longer. Teddy has managed to secure a lit tle political capital for his Old Party,” and as other members of the beef trust gave up $100,900 to help elect him, I am betting that they will be allowed to go Scott, free, just as Paul Morton was after ex-Attor ney-General Harmon had him hooked. I wouldn’t be surprised if Teddy should order his local representative there to help out Armour, Dawes, Swift, Morris, Cudahy and the rest of the bunch of big rebaters, just as he antogonism to the present system of railroad management been caused by the fact that the railroad refused to contribute to his campaign fund? Chas. A. Edwards. Rev. Leitch in Gaffney. A revival meeting is now in pro- 'Grand j gross at the Limestone Street Metho dist church, conducted by Rev. Thom as Leitch and his singer, Mr. Mar shall. 1 wo services are held daily, one at 3 o’clock in the afternoon and the other at night, beginning about b o’clock. Mr. Leitch is well known all over the State, and in other States as well, and his meetings are always attended by large congregations. He is preaching some good sermons here. helped Paul Morton when the rebate j and much interest is already being business was fixed on him, and a big manifested in the meeting. Mr. Mai fine or a long term of imprisonment i shall’s voice has lost none of its stared him in the face. Teddy is pretty good to his friends who come to the front with contributions as did the managers of the three big New fork life insurance compaines and the members of the beef trust. These fellows who were fined out in Chica-! go were not on the list of campaign coi^ributors though their were. I think that the Republicans are using this Incident for all it is worth to show what, a mighty good and law-obeying party they are. Along last summer I wrote that if usual sweetness, and his singing ft much enjoyed by the congregations. Furneral of Mrs. Kendrick. The funeral of Mrs. Arthur Ken drick, who died at her home in this city Monday afternoon about one . o’clock, was held Tuesday morning principals | at eleven o’clock at the First Baptist church, and the rfemalns were laid to rest in Oakland cemetery in the pres ence of a large gathering of friends and relatives. The floral tributes were many and beautiful—lovely em- Roosevelt was really in earnest in his : hlems of the affection which was felt desire to have the law against rebates for the young woman while she lived, enforced, he had all the law he need- The pall-bearers were: J. N. Lip- ed on the statute books to punish the scomb. C. M. Smith. A. L. Peeler. .1. offenders. He got a little more of it G. Pridmore, Clarence Jones, and C. than he wanted in the Morton case, T. Clary. . and then decided It was against cor- : porations and not persons that he Court Next Week, wished to act. I wonder if he thinks j The fall term of the court of gener- the public is going to be satisfied al sessions for Cherokee county will when he has the charters of the At-j convene in Gaffney next Monday, the chison, Topeka & Santa Fe, of the I 23rd inst. Judge Klugh will be the Armour Packing Company and the Hutchinson Salt Company sent to states prison for as long as the parch ment on which they are written lasts. That would seem to he the only pos sible outcome of the position he takes that you can’t prosecute men who make political contributions and m ist confine yourself to non-corporeal bodies. They don’t amount to much more than the paper on which their charters are written. If he would get a hustle on and have a few of the men who own these charters fined as the law provides, I think he would make a greater hit with the common run of people and prove his. sincerity. The chances are, how ver, that the men who might be punished, but who made contributions to the campaign fund, will be white washed just as Morton was, while the Republican National Committee will continue to hold up the railroads and trusts for political contributions and blackmail. • • • I wonder if it was because the big railroad cornorations refused to be 1 held up by the Republican National Committee for contributions to the; Roosevelt campaign fund at the last election, that our estimable president is so very hot after railroad rate re gulation by a political commission. Certain things that have hapnoned lately would suggest that there is a good deal more than probability that this is a fact, and that his posing as a friend of the “dear people” is all Rooseveltian bluff. At the insurance investigations now in progress in New York, it has al ready been brought out In sworn tes timony that the New York Life In surance Company paid $50,009 to his campaign fund, and in two years had paid similar amounts to the Republi can National Committee. This is ad mittedly the result of merely scrap ing the surface. It is certain to he developed that the Mutual Life and • Equitable Life contributed at least as much and possibly more to the same fund from the savings of the policy holders for the benefit of their widows and orphans. Perhaps you remember that when the Equitable scandal was first tin-! earthed an appeal was made to Mr. J presiding judge. There is oniv one case of murder on the docket, that of Billie Blueshirt. colored, for killing Cora Rice in this city about three years ago. There! are eight or ten other prisoners in the county jail awaiting trial, mosi of them for minor offenses. The session will continue for three weeks. Death of Mrs. Blanton. Mrs. James Riley Blanton died Monday at the home of her son-in- law, Mr. James Pettit, near the city, and was buried Tuesday at Corinth. Mrs. Blanton was over seventy years of age, and had been a widow for several of Mrs. vears. Phe was the mother C. J. Wall, of this city. The second trial of Samuel P. Har vey, lately cashier of the local freight office of the Atlantic Coast Line Rail road. charged with embezzlement of upwards of $35,000 coming, into his l,ends from freight receipts prior to July. 1901, occupied all of Tuesday in the Court of Sessions, in Charles ton. and resulted in an acquittal after half an hour’s deliberation. Former Supervisor J. E. Speegle, of Greenville, is dead. The end Tues day of the life of J. E. Speegle ha» brought also to an end all intention or plan to have a trial made of ~he transactions between himself and Greenville countv and will bring to a close part of the talk about this man who has been in the public prints for weeks and weeks. Mr. Speegle died Tuesday after a long complication of diseases, all being occasioned by Bright’s ylisease. He is survived by his second wife and by five sons and daughters. At the time “of his death Mr. Speegle waa under a $1,500 bond to appear at court in January. The Federal Court opened in Greenville Tuesday morning, Jiudga William H. Brawley presiding. The new assistant district attorney, Thomas W. Bacot, of Charleston, be gan work .succeeding E. F. Cochran, of Anderson, resigned. Among the cases to be tried are many violations of internal revenue laws from Pick ens and Cherokee counties, conse quent to the voting out of dispen saries; the case of a Williamston merchant sending a dun on a postal card; case of a Spartanburg youth mailing an indecent postal to a girl: a Westminister lad, alleged to have opened mail pouch and rifled it, ann a Greenville county farmer to be tried for peonage. Governor Heyward has after mu tu-e consideration determined to place constables in Picbens county, | " i.ich some time ago voted out the dispensary, and he has determined to wait ’. while and see what the ,Law i and Order League has to say on the subject and what inducements are of fered towards? carrying out the law with reference to Newberry county. ; Governor Heyward, as appears, has ! ted upon the report of Chief Ham- i mett, who went to Pickens and New berry counties to look into the situ- ation. Mr. Hammett was detailed to go to these counties because Gover- | nor Heyward had complaints from there, especially with reference to . the rural trade. Spartanburg—Linscomb-WH Hams Marriage. Ravenna, Oct. 18.—Your correspon-! dent spent last Saturday and Sunday! in Spartanburg with Mr. and Mrs. j. i 1 Kitchens and found chickens, pota-' toes, (both sweet and Irish) and beam 1 plentiful. Mrs. J. T. Kitchens has. bv actual count, lit; cans of fruit and some of nearly every variety, except-1 ing m tscadines. On Sunday morning | I was joined by my brother, Robert ■ who is clerking in Spartanburg, and we spent the day wilh Mr. and Mrs.' w e > X J . T,irner ' eating a splen did dinner we went down to t e Southern car shed and met trains I Nos. 11, 12 and 13. and received some these trains. At a p. m. we went over on main street and heard some Salvation Army men and women sing and preach We went to the Y. M. c. A. hall and heard two excellent solos by Miss Lena! Duthic. of Scotland, after which Dr L. M. Roper delivered a most touch ing and-eloquent lecture. His text; was: "A man’s salvation.” At the I close of his address. Dr. Roper gave' all sinners and any church members: present who had gone astrav an in- vitation for prayer and fuil’v fort v' men accepted the invitation. At 7:3a I hoarded my train for home. Mr. Shelf Pryor, of Gaffney among his friends at Ravenna Sunday afternoon. •Mr. Bunyan Littlejohn, of Union was in “our town” la-t Sunday. AH'. Walter Kitchens, of Spartan- hurg, spent last Sunday with his grandmother, .Mrs. (’. \\ Kitchens. Mr. K. R. Goforth spent last Satur day in Spartanburg. Mi - . P. L. Wilkins, of .Tone vill spent Sunday with his parents M- and Mrs. “Quit.'’ Wilkins. Mr. L. D. Goforth, who came home sick last Monday, has about recover- Miss Cleo Lipscomb and brother, Mr. Oscar Lipscomb, of White Plains atter led religious services at Gouch- er last Sunday. “Aunt Violet” Shippy. an old ann respected colored woman, died «uq- denly last Sunday night 'and v a- buried Monday afternoon at 5 p m Rev. R (\ Campbell, of Gaffnev. and Rev. Mitchell Brown, of this place preached the funeral. Several while people attended the burial Q , V , n . Ur ^respondent was a witness at the \\ illiams-Lipscomb marriage last Wednesday nignt. The marriage ceremony was to have taken place at <.30 but it was fuMy 8 o’clock be fore the bride and groom reached the church, and as they entered a beauti ful wedding march was played by Miss Annie Chalk, after which Rev G. P. Hamrick, of Gaffnev. in a few words made them husband and wife After the ceremony a reception was tendered at the Williams home a large crowd of invited guesfs wen- assembled. At 10:30 the* bHde anS groom led the others to the dining- "'il ere cream, lemonade and eigut different kinds of cake were serv- ed to the guests. All left with cheerful hearfs andk ind words for the newly married couple. Lipscomb - the groom. Neilv M PSt S °, n of Mr ' an(! NeeJy Lipscomb, ard has ma nv friends and is quite nomilar M ss Ellie May Williams, the bride, is the oldest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Hart Williams and is very charming. - Mr. Lipscomb has been quite fortu- for V” , w, f nninK s,| cli a beautiful ladv for his better half. We extend them our best wishes Sp? 0 nfe ,hey » h "'* THE TARHEEL STATE RECENT EVENTS OF NOTE NORTH CAROLINA. IN Items of Interest Concerning Our Neighbors in the Old North State Culled Expressly for Ledger Readers. First section of freight train No. 71. was wrecked at Lake, five miies north of Lexington at noon Tuesday. Eight box cars Vent off the track and smashed together in a cut. No one was injured. Juige Pritchard in Asheville Tues day morning signed an order staying the receiver’s sale at Lmnberton of the Carolina Northern Railroad Com pany until October 27th. An ordei to revoke the order of sale was made returnable before Judge Pritchard on October 25th. Down near Monroe, in Union conn-1 ty, Mr. Harmon King, Tuesday cele brated the IhOth anniversary of his birth and five generations surround- 1 ed him. Mr. King is hale and hearty,! as are all people who reach ‘he cen-1 tu"y mark, an- 1 , it vn. by his express! his children and chi were gathered to help He arranged the af- PERSONAL PARAGRAPHS. Mrs. M. J. Unkenholz, of Liberty, N. Y., arrived in the city Wednesday. She is here visiting hter daughter, Mrs. June H. Carr, and will probably spend the winter as the extreme cold of the north is not to be compared with our mild climate during the wl ter months. E. P. Macomson, of Mercer, was ih town Tuesday. J. L. Strain. Esq., of Etta Jane, spent a few hours in the city Wednes day. E. A. Trescot, Esq., of Blacksburg, was in the city Tuesday. W. Sam Lipscomb, of Asbury, was in town Wednesday. T. B. Butler went to Greenville Tuesday to attend United States court. D. R. Lavender, of Smyrna, spent a short while In the city Wednesday.. Ms. and Mrs. N. G. Littlejohn, of Asbury, were visitors in the city Wed nesday. B. G. L. Pettit, of Ravenna, was in town Wednesday. Commissioner J. B. Bell spent sev eral days In Greenville this week in attendance upon United States court. W. H. Ross spent Wednesday i« Spartanburg. Miss Nanti-Bess Thompson went to Atlanta yesterday to spend a few ays -virh friends and attend the fair. invitation that rlren’s children him celebrate, fair himself. W. S. Walk.' mington. died ! steamer C. M. arrived in that 1 well up Black r, a plumber Monday night Whitlock, ju>t cit' - from river. Ht of Wil- on the as she Point ('as- had been v the river to buy produce and be came violently ill with kidney trouble. He was attended by Dr. Lucas, of Parker’s Eating House will deliver to any part of the city, strained Oysters at 40c per quart, received daily. Open night and day. Opposite postoffice. Don’t Borrow Trouble. It is a bad habit to borrow anything, but the woj-st thing you can possibly borrow, is trouble. When sick, sore, heavy, weary and worrf-out by the pains and poisons of dyspepsia, bil iousness, Bright’s disease, and simi lar internal disorders, don’t sit down and brood over your symptoms, but fly for relief to Electric Bitters. Here you will find sure and perma nent forgetfulness of all your troub les, and your body will not be bur dened by a load of debt disease. At Cherokee Drug Co.’s drug store. Price 50c. Guaranteed. In court at Kingstree last week the ! jury, in the case of the State against Epps Snowden, charged with murder, returned their verdict finding the de fendant guilty. After a few timely words of sympathy and advice to the doomed man, cautioning him and all members of his race against the thoughtless and almost daily use of deadly weapons, and the frequent taking of human life for trivial and Imaginary offenses, the sentence of the court was pronounced, that the defendant should hang on Friday, No vember 24. This murder was the re sult of a dispute between the prisoner and Robert Brown over a few bottles of soda water at a negro storo in th* lower part of the county several months ago, and Brown was the vic tim. Girls, if you want red lips, laughing eyes, sweet breath and good looks use Hollister’s Rocky Mountain Tea. The Full of Tragic Meaning are these lines from J. H. Simmons, of Casey. la. Thihk what might have resulted from his terrible cough If he had not taken the medicine about greatest heautifler known. 35 cents, I which ho writes; “I had a fearful Tea or Tablets. Gaffney Drug Co. —All invited House, meals. who are attending court art to come to Parker’s Eatin* opposite postofflce, for their Clothing at competition at J. pr'jes that I. Sarratt’s. knock Subscribe for The Ledger; $1 a year. 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. Currie, an i put aboard the 'ATlmington. He died a few after the boat reached her boat for! minutes i wharf. Gowdeysville Gossip. Gowdeysville, Oct. 17.—The graden school house at this place is com pleted. It stands on the same spot where the old school house stood. It is a large and beautiful building. Miss Nqfttie Procter visi ed Miss Mittie Kirby, of Grindal. Sunday. Rev. L. R. Gaines filled his regula. appointment at Sunday night. Governor Glenn formally opened! • the State Fair in ’aleigh at noon Tuesday. He was escorted to the grounds by President Ashley Horne, i i Chief Marshal Frank Mebane and l over one hundred assistant marshals. Tiie fair is very extensive, though the agricultural exhibits by no means re present the entire State. People are | pouring into Raleigh and thousand* i witnessed the opening exercises Tuesday. The amusement features j promise to be very attractive. A young man of Charlotte was tried j in the recorder's court in that city Tuesday, morning for a violation of a city ordinance that makes it a mis demeanor for a man to intrude upon i or interrupt college girls on the: street. He spoke and made advances! to a party of Presbyterian College girls Sunday night as they were re-; turning to the college from church. 1 or so it was charged in the warrant There was not sufficient evidence to convict and the recorder discharged the young man with a lecture for his forward conduct. The wat«r works muddle in Char- i lotte is to cost that city another $50,- 000 or. at least, there is a chance for it. At the quarterly meeting of the! water works commission Thursday j night, Mr. C. C. Moore, the well i know dairyman, of Charlotte, notified the commissioners that he would at ! once start an action against the city for damages to the amount of $50.- 1000, estimating this to he due him ; in return for the material reduction i of water at his dairy farm, caused by ; ! the construction of the new water works plant. Hon. W. D. Kirby went to Green ville yesterday to attend United States court. Thomas Hester has returned to hrs home in West Virginia after spending a few days in the city. B. F. Camp went to Greenville yes- o'-day to attend court. Mi-ses Effie and Mittie Hopper and Edith Cook are in Atlanta attending the fair. Mr. and Mrs. M. E. Lipscomb, of Cowpi ns. spent Sundhy in the citv with their daughter, Mrs. It. S. Cook. A. L. rut eh field, of Spartanburg, was in the city Wednesday. H. E. Jefferies, of Star Farm, was in the city Wednesday. C. F. .1. Scruggs, of the Battleground section, was in town Wednesday. and Ella Brown, of visitors in rV* city of SunnysiJe, wr»^ Cherokeeans in the< vis Mr. and Mrs. Martin Roberts, Wilkmsville, were visitors in the of Salem, was in town of Beaverdam. was Misses Addle Goucher. were Wednesday. Walter Kirby. .... mg the lower city Wedensday. joha Harmon, of Wilkinsville. in the city Wednesday. of in the city Wednesday. W. C. Kirby. Wednesday. T. K. Vassey, in town Wednesd ; Jack Littlejohn, in town yesterday. Dr. J. M. Hunter, of Rock was among the visitors in the Wednesday. R. W. Davis, of Jonesvilie, was in the city yester lay. He called on The Ledger and subscribed. J. C. Otts went to Spartanburg yes terday on professional business. George Littlejohn and Earnest Duff went to Spartanburg yesterday. J. I. Sarratt attended United States court in Greenville this week. H. M. Johnson is in the western markets buying stock. of Goucher, was Hill, city First Baptist Church Notes. Dr. Simms will fill his pulpit as usual next Sabbath. The night service will begin at 7:30. Sabbath school at 9:45. The orchestra in the school is do ing good work. COMMUNICATION FROM NEY DRUG CO. GAFF- Offer A telephone message from Gerraan- ton gives the details of a lively pis tol battle which occurred at Smith- town, a few miles north of Danbury. Thursday afternoon, in which Deputy: Sheriff John Smith was wounded i!<' Rehohoth Sunday and ' the side and two young men of thej He preached a very < crowd who attache.] him were also Impressive sermon on both occasions, and to good sized congregations. Mr. J. T. Griffin and family visited relatives at Jonesvilie Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Harris’ baby cut a tooth when it was four weeks old. 1 think that is rather early to prepare for eating. These cold nights and make thickc lothing and feel comfortable. There was frost Friday morning, the 13th inst. ' Messrs. D. L. Fowler and C. 1 Mott went to Jonesvilie Saturday. Brown Eyed Edna. mornings warm fires on =hot. The trouble occurred when the deputy was removing Mrs. Frank Caldwell, who had just been bounn over by a magistrate to court on a charge of retailing, to jail. A crowd | of men, headed bv Oscar Sisk, set up on him, attempting to take t^ie wo man from his custody. The shooting followed the deputy’s refusal to give up the prisoners, about fifty shots be- to Refund Money if Hyomei Does Not Cure Catarrh. To the Editor of The Ledger: We have been asked recently if the advertisement printed in your columns regarding Hyomei were true, where we offer to refund the money if this treatment does not cure ca tarrh. We wish you would please print this letter in as conspicuous a place as possible in your paper, say ing that we absolutely agree to re fund the money to any purchaser of a Hyomei outfit if it does not cure catarrh. This outfit consists of an inhaler of a convenient size to be carried in the vest pocket so that the user can breathe Hyomei four or five times daily. With this is included a medi cine dropper and a bottle of Hyomei. The outfit sells for $1.00 and is a Plans to Get Rich are often frustrated by sudden break down. due to dyspepsia or constipa tion. Brace up and take Dr. King’s New Life Pills. They take out the materials which are clogging your energies, and give you a new start. Cure headache and dizziness too. At Cherokee Drug guaranteed. ing fired in rapid succession. * ^ j most economical treatment, for the not he learned who fired the shot that ; inliaIer )asts a llfetiine and ihere is enough Hyomei for several weeks’ i use. while extra bottles can he ob- 1 tained for 50 cents. struck Deputy Smith or the other two] men who were wounded so fierce did the fusilade rage for a time. The officer’s wounds, while painful ar~ not considered serious. The exten. of the wounds sustained by the others was not learned, nor was it ascertain ed whether or not any arrests were made. —See my in need of ratt. —Don't Crackers In & Coffey. New Cure for Cancer. All surface cancers are now known Co.’s drug store; 25c, i to be curable, by Bucklen’s Arnica I Salve. Jas. Walters, of Duffield, Va., i writes; “I had a cancer on my lip line of Scotch mixtures if; for years, that se ined incurable, till Dress Goods. J. I. Sar-, Bucklen’s Arnica Salve healed If. and | now it is perfectly well.” Guaranteed ! cure for cuts and burns. 25c at forget our fresh lot of ; Cherokee Drug Co.’s drug store. We trust this letter will settle any doubts that may have arisen as to our willingness to refund the money for a Hyomei outfit, in case the pur chaser is not perfectly satisfied. We wish to say emphatically that our guarantee on Hyomei holds good, and we will refund the money to any dissatisfied purchaser states that he has used according to directions helped. Respectfully yours. Gaffney Drug Co. who simply the treatment and not. been packages. Good! Hall] I. —Dress Goods Sarratt’s. at cut prices at J —Hats for Men, Youths and Chil dren at bargain prices at J. I. Sar- ratt's. —Fresh Mackerel, each.’ Hall & Coffey. 1-2 cents. —Try our Rio Hall & Coffey. and Car Java Coffee “Get the Habit." NELSON’S. go to —Just received fresh Premium Hams at 15c Hall & Coffey. lot the Swift’s pound. —Shoes for everybody at slaughter prices at J. I. Sarratt’s. -Get tho Habit,” NELSON’S. go to [ Subscribe for The Ledger $1.00 k year. Subscribe for Ths Ledger, 91.00 • year. I* makes no difference how long you have been sick, if you are troubled with indigestion, constipation, liver and kidney troubles, Hollister’s Rocky Mountain Tea will make you well. 35 cents. Gaffney Drug Co. —Nothing heals Breakfast Strips for breakfast. Try ours. Hall & Coffey. —g 00 A. L. Peeler & Co.'s window of Bowels and Pitchers for We Ines- day. at Hoc each. —Chattanooga and Plows are the best, ware Company. Oliver Turning at Smith Ha. 1-