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0 ' f * The Oliver C0RDIAL jNy ,TAT,0N IN RE GEORGE HASTY. ADDRESSEDTO WORKING GIRLS Miss Barrows Tell How Mrs. Pink, ham's Advice Helps Working Girls. protect and stand together, and offer a petition to th*» most high that the An Alabama Man Write* | n Hi* De- cause of crime might be abolished f® n * e - and '”stead of crime being committed Lanett. Ala., May 12. 1906. we can have sweet fellowship one Mr. Editor:—Will you allow me another. , , ., Thanking you for your kindness In ?r? irnjr ToZm. ■” —w" f t ha /bbyTBorrows Visible Writing, Rapid Escapement, Superior Construction, Interchangeble Carriage. The Art Catalogue Tells AH About It—Is Free on Request J. E. Crayton & Co., Gen. Agts. Trust Bldg. Charlotte, N. C. JulySOth pd. The Builders Supply Co . / Successors te L. Baker, Will furnish your Bulldlns Materlai ef the best that the market* afford and at the lowest living price*. No. 1 heart pine Shingles and Laths, Guar anteed Pure White Lead and Zinc, and Pure Linseed OH. Nothing better to paint your house with and costa lees than mixed paints. When in need of anything In the building line, call and see us; we’ll treat you cour teously and make your estimates for nothing. 1^. Baker, 11 MANAGER. TO SUFFERERS WITH CANCER or chronic old sores, write D. B. Glad den, Grover, N. C.. and learn how to be cured without knife or plaster. In vestigate before you take other treat ment. Write today you won’t re gret it. A Pr. 6-3mo. Girls who work are particularly .susceptible to fe male disorders, f especially those who are obliged l to stand on their jfeet from morn- ling until night in stores or facto ries. Day in and day 'out the girl toils, and she is often the bread-winner of the family. Whether she is sick or well, whether it rains or shines, she must get to her place of employment, perform the duties exacted of her— smile and be agreeable. Among this class the symptom* of female diseases are early manifest by weak and aching backs, pain in the lower limbs and lower part of the stomach. In consequence of frequent wetting of the feet, periods become painful and irregular, and frequently there are faint and dizzy spells, with loss of appetite, until life is a burden. All these symptoms point to a de rangement of the female organism which can be easily and promptly cured by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta ble Compound. Miss Abby F. Barrows, Nelsonville, Athens Co., Ohio, tells what this great medicine did for her. She writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham:— “I feel it my duty to tell you the good Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and Blood Purifier have done for me. Before I took them I was very nervous, had dull headaches, pains in back, and periods were irregular, I had been to several doctors, and theydid me no good. “Your medicine has made me well and strong. I can do most any kind of work without complaint, and my periods are all am in better health than I ever was, and I know it is all due to your remedies. I recommend your advice and medicine to all who suffer.” It is to such girls that Mrs. Pink- ham holds out a helping hand and ex tends a cordial invitation to correspond with her. She is daughter-in-law of Lydia E. Pinkham and for twenty-five years has been advising sick women free of cha-ge. Her long record of success in treating woman’s ills makes her letters of advice of untold value to every ailing working girl. Address, Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Maas. THE ORIGINAL LAXATIVE COUGH SYRUP KENNEDY’S LAXATIVE HONEMAR led Clover Blossom tad Honey Bee on Every Bottle. paper and hoping, even praying, that I have not in the least offended any one. I am, Respectfully yours, G. A. Knight. RAVENNA NEWS. Hasty? Every friend of Mr. Hasty could say “Amen!” to the letter of Mr. Ste- ! eall. Iti has stirred me to the depths I of my soul, since reading his letter. For the benefit of Mr. Hasty and his friends I have thought for some time I would write The Ledger a short j sketch of the life of Mr. Hasty, as one Locals and Personals of General ln- who has worked with him, and also terest. he has lived with me, though being Ravenna. May 1G.—Miss Ella a cotton mill man I decided it would Brown and brother. Fred, went to make its way to the ivaste basket. Glendale last Friday and there took But now I feel it my duty to say a a car an( j W ent over to Spartanburg word in behalf of my iP-tated friend, shopping. George B. Hasty. If it finds its way Miss Minnie Burgess has Just re- to the waste basket I will try again turned to her home here, after spend- untii I shall gain access to some pa- ing a few day8 at p aC olet visiting rel- per somewhere in South Carolina a tives and friends, near Gaffney. | Mrs. M. W. Littlejohn is now visit- As I have said, I have worked with | j ng relatives at Glendale and Spar- George Hasty in the mill for the past; t, an h ur g. four or five years, he boarding at my Mr. “Gill" Hames and daughters, house a good portion of his tim e and G f Grindai. spent last! Sunday and I say in the fear of God, George Monday here, visiting relatives and Hasty was *an esteemed, gentleman friends. among his fellow workmen and never Mr. M. W. Brown and Mr. and Mrs. was there a man any more precise and gentlemanly than' was the said George B. Hasty. He was kind, gen tle, mild and always wore a smile for every one. Of course he is a cot ton mill man, and like most of us he Jno. C. Brown and son, Roland Rae. spent last Sunday in Jonesville, the guests of Mr. and Mrs. George E. Brown. Mr. and Mrs. B. G, Clary and family, of Gaffney, spent last Sunday is a poor man, but unlike a good many here with Mrs. Clary’s parents. Mr. people judge us. we have feelings, we and Mrs. B. G. L, Pettit, have hearts, and a good port/ion of the| Mrs. K. R. Goforth returned from mill people actually have conscience, j Cedar Springs Sunday after spending ‘Isn’t it strange?” If any one should a week there with her sister, Mrs. read this who thinks differently we Willie Goforth, who is reported to be would say, God bless your immortal soul. The same God that created you created the cotton mill man and when you come down to give your life to the same mother earth as the worse and with little hopes of re covery. Mrs. Goforth has many friends here, who will be sorry to hear of her severe illness. Mr. B. G. L. Pettit) returned from i mill man. and when the great God of Clifton Monday where he had been to the universe shall decree that time see his brother, Mr. Jack Pettit, who shall be no more, tihen the theatrical i 8 at the point of death from the effect man will have to face the blazing face of a sergical operation for appendi- of Jehovah as well as mill, people, and citis, which disease he did not have. God bless you, then it will he some- Mr. John Humphries, of Pacolet, school Sunday visited our Sunday evening. Mr. W, W. Green, a student of Fur man University, spent a few days here last week with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Green. The following Gaffneyites were visitors in our Sunilay school last Sunday: Messrs. C. C. Kirby, Jack W. Griffin and C. A. 3 Planet, Jr., Cultivators. Numbers 4,5 & 9 Farmers, you need them. Try one and you won’t be without them. With this plow you can cultivate your cotton from the time it comes out of the ground until you lay it by. : F'Oie BY Gaffney Hardware Co. i>r. j. ]vr. HTTIV ri^K, Of Rock Hill, South Carolina thing instead of “Nothing but mon ey.” Someone will want friendship, love, joy. peace and rest. With deep sorrow we read of the tragedy of December 15th, in which George B. Hasty shot to death Abbott Davison and Milan Bennett. We have tried to look at this matter with a fair and impatrial mind and have waited patiently, thinking the com- Mathews, J. ment of the press would cease, al- j Sygmon. though excitement was intensely i Miss Pauline Pettit, one of the high land for more than one reason, i m,>st popular teachers in the county, which we shall look at later), and is spending a week in Gaffney visit- therefore I shall not criticize any one. ing her relatives and friends, only in this respect), some things 1 Miss Edna Brown, of Gaffney, were printed, seems to me, to preju- spent last Sunday here with her dice the minds of the uninformed. | parents. Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Brown. It is a fact that Mr. Hasty is a poor | Prof T. G. Chalk has been called man; has had to work hard for h!s | to an eight-months school at Grin- daily food, and our mind naturally dal to begin July 1st. leads us to the comments of the It has been printed in several pa- Chester Lanter. in which it says Mr. P^rs that the Gaffney Sunday school Hasty’s conviction w r as no doubt due was the only one in the Broad River to lack of friends, influence, etc., a nd. Association which has a teacher’s it further says: “Mauy people have, meeting. This is a mistake, as the been acquitted with much less evl- Ravenna school has a teacher’s meet- dence than Mr. Hasty had lor killing Ing which meets every Thursday in self defense.” If this be true, Gaff- j evening. ney, and not only her. hut South Car-| Quite a large crowd of our youag olina and the South should feel tha* a people attended the protracted meet- wrong has been done by convicting the * nK Pacolet Sunday night. poor man while the rich man with|«J- Q- Bailey, of Cowpens, is conduct money and friends can shoot you |ng this meeting and his discourse down after hunting you up, and walk' ®’ in ^ a 1 ^„ n K |? I t , w ^’ out of the court room a free man. | he V 1 which Mr. Bailey pictured It is a shame and is not to be tole- * n their true H^ht. Rev. J. W. Law- rated by the people of Dixie. Some j son > pastor e f the church, led the comments say Mr. Hasty’s downfall; njeslc* which was an honor to any is due to carrying pistols. At the i choir. time Mr. Hasty boarded at my home , So !J le < )^ the girls say tnev wish he owned a pistol and would some- V <;, C ’ H ‘ to visit this place gain, times carry it, but tell me one editor, T S nc ® OUI \ last letter was written minister, lawyer, doctor or any one 't ac h *' ros t has visited us and killed else who has not violated this section, ™ any tender plants, more especial y of the code. “He that is not guilty j the cotton on low places, which will let him cast the first stone.” Who' haye ^ ba re Pl aat ed. knows that Mr. Davison or Mr. Ben-1 JP* D _ ® r , w5 ? h . net/t had no pistol? Now, understand lP°^ 8 “ an 3 ad to JP* hawk, that we do not take the position to ™ V hU /L®L- n L nl Dr. W. K. Gunter, of Gaffney, pass ed through here last Sunday with his best girl. Miss Sallie F. Chalk is the first undertake to Justify anyone in carry ing a pistol, but the man who lives in a glass house should remember not to cast stones. Who searched the , . nockets of Mr. Bennett when shot? | car ^ ner bave , . aear< * bay a8: W~ It lawfully done? DM the coro-" rlsh whlch wa “ lael M<>,, • aeaVhedtimi” C ‘ Se ' a " '■'>■» Mr ' D ® Ca '»» But back for a few words. What|' ha people ' celebrate the was the real cause of this tragedy? y ' th . „ lld hlB read . Was it not brought on by the sights I b,,cce8s the ^ or anrt ms raaa a man usually sees when he visits I ers ‘ Makes a specialty of Cancers, Tumors, Chronic Ulcers, Scrofula and Rheumatism, Diseases of Liver, Kidneys, Dyspepsia and Indigestion and Diseases of the Genito urinary Organs, Treats without the Knife, loss of blood and little pain to patient. Terms of treatment satisfactory. Twenty-five years, of practical experience. :•:■ ■ ■ — —— Reference To A Few Cases Treated-—- = R. A. Clark, Cancer of aose' .Rock Hill, S. C. J. J. Neely, Cancer of ueek... Tlrzah, 8. C Mrs. J. D. Williams, Cancer of face Uriah,8. C. Mrs. 8. R. Nelson. Cancer of nose.Ogdon, 8. C. Miss Ida VanTissell, Data er of breast Guth ries vi lie, 8.C. W. A. Mulllnax, Cancer of face King’s Creek, 8. C. W. W. Stroup, Cancer of face Lowell, N. C. Mrs. Barbery McCraw. Cancer of forehead Gaffney, 8. C. 8. B. Hanna, Cancer of neck Gastonia. N. C. David Hawkins, Cancer of noseGatfney, 8, C. J. L. Ragan, Cancer of f»ce. .Gastonia, N.C. Mrs. Elizabeth Tracy, Cancer of breast Gaff ney, 8. C. soch places a g the theatre? Have j you never attended a theatre, and did not your eyes behold the handi- Bigger Dividends. (Newberry Herald and News.) The Gaffney Ledger saTs that every woik of God in Us ^“I^eteuess? | ( , heroke CO untv candidate should be S" fair, so beautiful such lovely | made to *< de ci are either for or against plump arms, such winning smiles and ^ roadg » It i8 easy to guess which sweet voices, and more, her snowy way ihe cand i da te will declare hlm- white breast covered with fine tapes try. What is all this for? For the p'ood, moral, intellectual training of our hoys and girls, or is it for drag- '-*n«r down lives and luring young men self but it is more doubtful whether his declaration will result in greatly increasing the number of miles of good roads in Cherokee. Good roads have to be paid for and the proper THE National Bank of Gaffney -4- Oiiffnev, O. - Has a Larger Surplus and Profits than All Other Banks in Cherokee County Combined Capital $50,000 Surplus and Undivided Profits 41,000 If you are a conservative business man, farmer, mechanic, mill man or day laborer you desire to place your money in the saf est possible place, and the safest place is .where the facilities for handling your money are the greatest. Money deposit ed with us is as safe as it is possible for human ingenuity to devise. We want more business, we want your busines. THK Bank of Gaffney Gaffney, G. The Dixie Is offering for this week some rare bargains in MEN’S HEAVY WEIGHT PANTS. Also a line of Ladies nice Shoes, numbers 2£ to 4i at 50 cents on the original cost. Also Men’s Shoes numbers 6 to 7 at same big reduction. : : : ; A brand new style of Shoes and Oxfords for Man Ladies, Boys and Girls, at prices that does sell them. Everything in Dry Goods, Notions and Heavy and Fancy Groceries. Come right along to The Dixie. LITTLEJOHN BROS. and voung ladies to a lower life, and perKOn to declare himself on the is- at last to awakf. in an endless place ~ ‘ ‘ of perdition? Only think, here is where the real cause began that brought about the allege-’ insult that caused Mr. Davison and Mr. Bennett sue is the tax payer. Everybody Is “in favor” of good roads but not all are willing to help pay for them.— The State. There is more need for road im- Bicycles! Bicycles! Come to the Installment House for bicycles. I sell bicycles, rent bicycles, swap bicycles, buy bicycles, repair bicycles and do the bicycle business. Just come and see my line of high grade bi cycles. You can rent from me a bicycle for 20 cents per hour, $1. per day, 25 cents extra for coasters. You can buy a bicycle from me say $5.00 or |io.oo down, and the rest in November if you want it. Come see me, the great Installment House. : : Limestone Street. W. J. Maness’s Big Store. The Gaffney City Land and lni9;o a enient Go. Offers for sale HuIIcIIdk Lots lu this flourishing town, Gaffney; also Fsr'D■ o’Sr by and in reach of the Scnools of Limestone Springs and of this place. In lots of .< to 100 acres e libers) time rates; also Agricultural Lands to rent for Farm For 1 psri uiars apply to to be shot to death: and let me say provement Just now than anything with all candor and all du e respect I we know of. Of course they have to to ever / theatre goer, the sooner the; be paid for but money put in them South rids itself of all such perform- will pay bigger dividfends than in anoos as low-neck chemise and short anything else in which the people sleeve gowns the sooner w ft will nio could put it. 'crime in the bud. But lets look at ! Mr. Hasty’s side of the question. Was Arrested For Forgery, he a wild, reckless, desperate fellow,; j. Mat Pearson was arrested Wed- or did his record show a peaceful nesday afternoon at thei Spiartan malture? The question ntatiimlly mills charged with forgery. The man arises, was there another hotel the was taken to the county jail, where ‘Nothing But Money” people could he is now lodged. Pearson has been have gone to after the alleged insult? a fugitive from the officers of the law II so. whv did they not go. Why was for more than a year and once in not the matter reported to the pro- Shawnee, Oklahoma, he was arrested orietor? My good friends, let us look but succeeded in escaping. The man at all sides with a fair, unbiased wa 8 arrested by Deputy Sheriff W. J. judgment and see if justice has been WhiH and Mr. J. W. Becknell in the done. weave room of the mill. Pearsons Is Let me beg every one who chances wanted for the forgery of three to read these lines to ponder in his checks, two of which were made mind well the real cause of this much against the Bank of Woodruff, 0? talked of crime, and let al] of us in which Mr. J. R. Westmoreland, of this fair South unite our efforts and Woodruff, Is cashier, Mr. August W. fight everything Mat fails to build Smith, of Spartanburg, being preei- y. b.—All person* are tor'jkKJen to enter on company,cutting xnd enmovlng timber or flublntr buntlug, un ter penalty of law. J. V. SAREATT, Agent 1 walk or rlda through or over Tha Ih this dear old place up, and let us all purp-iM.» be willing to lav hold on things that "oint us to a better, brighter and more beautiful home that stands out lands of th< in the future and that awaits all the faithful. Let us al] love each other. dent. Make the girl in the lookingglass as sweet as you can. She’s a good friend to you, and you want to treat her well. $ 100,000,000.00 The State of South Carolina is sending off the approximate annual amount of $3,000,000 in Life Insurance Premiums. That amount, less a small proportion, goes to the North and West each year for investment, and in twenty years; including interest, will amount to something like $ 100,000,000.00 This should not be. Keep your premiums at home for the development of your owrj State. The best way to do this is to have your life insured in the Southeastern Life Insurance Company Of Spartanburg, S. C. Mch. ift-ijrr. ELLIOTT ESTES. Jr., General Agent