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I* . n \ 5 Watch This Column. Gaffnpv is growing rapidly and lota uf property ia changing hands pre paratory to her future upbuilding. Have some fine offerings. Three lots cheap. $275—easy terms' Twenty acres, a store room, five- room cottage. Fine land and a good place to Jo Imsines, seven miles from town, $750. One house in fine condition. $700 cash; $1,200 in one and two years at 6 per cent. Several fine pieces of property to be put on block in July Twenty-seven acres of fine .land in town for a song. If you would like to have a fine in vestment in a plantation come and see me, 500 acres, some good timber and in -good shape. ' Must be sold even if it does not bring but $1,000. 250 acres of pretty land at $10 per acre, lies fine. Town lots of all shapes and de scriptions. Over 200. Knu-e- galore, and 20,000 acres of lane. If you have property to dispose of bring it to me, I am in touch with all the buyers. Twenty-nine on string for :ots this fal\ fifty-six for planta tion 5 :, thirty-four for houses. $fi,0'00 worth of property sold in April. This month will catch me with that much. sold. It cost you nothing to list vour property, all your trouble saved and after sale Is made you are at no expense in the trans fer Buy the bouse you live in for the rent you are paying. Representative of Sun Fire Insur- rance Co., The American Surety Co., Tte Standard Trust Co., who lend money at o per cent to buy and build homes with ten and half years to pay it back if you want. The Gibbs Brick store room, 5- roorn'house, and vacant lot 80x200 in wtrf-T end. $1,800. R. Latta Parish. NEW YORK FASHIONS Women Obtain Mrs. Pinkham’s Advice and Help. She Ha* Guided Thounande to Health.— How Lydia E. rink ham's Vegetable Ctom- potiou Cured Mrs. AIVce Berryhill. ten The Builders Supply Co. Successors to L. Baker, Will furnish your Building Material 'if the nest that the markets afford and tt the lowest living prices No. 1 heart pine Shingles and Laths, Guar tr.teed Pure White Lead and Zinc end Pure Linseed Oil. Nothing bettei to paint your hoase with and costs !t?ps than mixed paints. When in need .■>f anything in the building line, cal md see us; we’ll treat you •oar '.eously and make your eetlmates for nothing. Baker,! MANAGER. It is a great i satisfaction for a woman to feel 1 that sMe can write to another telling her the most pri vate and confiden tial details about her illness, and .know that her let- [ter will be seen by _ 'a woman only. Tl JS Ma-ny thousands of cane* of female diseases come be fore Mrs. Pinkham every year, some personally, others by mail. Mrs. Pink- ham is the daughter-in-law of Lydia E. Pinkham and for twenty-five years under her direction and since her de cease she has been advising sick women free of charge. Mrs. Pinkham never violates the con fidence of women, and every testimon ial letter published is done so with the written consent or request of the writer, in order that oth«?r sick women may be benefited as she has been. Mrs. Alice Berryhill, of 313 Boyee Street, Chattanooga. Tenn., writes Dear Mrs. Pinkham:— “ Three years ago life looked dark to me. I had ulceration ;«Al inflammation of the female organs and was in a serious condition, “ Iffy health was completely broken down and tiie doctor told me that if I was not op erated upon I would die within six months. I told him I would have no operation but would try Lydia E. Pinkham s Vegetable ComiKiund. He tried to influence me against it but I sent for the medicine that same (lay and began to use it faithfully. Within five days I felt relief but was not entirely cured until I used it for some time. “Your medicine is certainly fine. Ilrave induced several friends and neighbors to take it and I know more than a dozen who had female troubles and who to-day are as well and strong as I am from using your Vege table Compound.” Just as surely as Mrs. Berryhill was cured, will Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege table Compound cure every woman suffering from any form of female ills. If you are sick write Mrs. Pinkham for advice. It is free and always help ful Or Mode* In New York—New Coats Long and Short. Automobillng Is responsible for many sensible modes and a few pret ty ones. In the beginning It seemed as everyone were trying to seo how hideous they could make themselves when indulging In this sport but gra dually better looking styles have pro* vailed. As a rule the materials cho sen for three-quarter or full length coats are of the rain-proof sort but this now embraces almost anv sub stantial weave of silk or woolen. It is curious to note how the demand for waterproof materials, have been met on all sides. The latest fabric to 'ike it« place in this class is a waterproof mallne known as Malinette. “Malinette” has come just In the nick of time too. for never was there a season when maline was so much in m terlals be silk, wool, cotton or linen, nothing seems so exactly right as the little allk coats that are being exten sively worn. It is a pretty notion, much indulged, to have these little confections accord with the hat and narasol. and to choose them of a color that will go well with one’s various toilets. Black is a good if rather sombre choice, and lingerie trimmings and touches of color can be employed to make it as youthful and cheerful as Is desirable. New Collar Stiffeners. There are brand new collar stiffen ers to be had this season thar. are more satisfactory than anything here tofore made. These come in dainty silk covered loops, elongated, round at either end, and giving a double sup port wherever t ’ey are attached. These are known as “Tryune’’ collar stiffeners and are being used by the highes; class dressmakers here and in Paris. The material is a secret hut is guaranteed not to rust like steel, curl Furniture! Furniture! DON’T FORGET I you can be cured of Cancr, Tu- I I mor or Chronic Old Sores. Ten I I thousand cases treated. It Is the I j I surest cure on earth. Delay is I I fatal How to be cured? Just I I write * I D. B. GLADDEN, Grover, N. C. I KOI I IQTFR*^ Rocky Mountain 'ea Nuggeis A Busy Medicine for Busy People, Brings Golden Health and Renewed Vigor, A specific for Constipation, Indigestion, Live! and Kidney troubles. Pimples, Eczema, Impure Blood. Bad Breath. Sluggish Bowels. Headache and Backache. Its Rocky Mountain Tea in tab let fo’Tn, 35 cents a box. Genuins made by Hollisteb Dnoo Com pant, Madison, Wis. GOLDEN NUGGETS FOR SALIOW PEOPLE We do not do all kinds of prlntle. we do the GOOD kind. THE National Bank of Gaffney <Jo£iffnev, CT- 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’_jrour busines. THE National Bank of Gaffney Oaffney, CX v r 1/ /A y We have just unloaded another car of Furni ture and can supply you with anything you need in that line at remarkably low prices. While price is a great consideration, we al ways pat quality first, that is why it pays you to buy your Furniture, Stoves, Etc., from us, for we always give you the full value for every dollar spent at our store. Come and let us show you through our stock whether you are ready to buy now or not. It will be time well spent for us both. . ‘. . \ . \ . *. . Shuford & LeMaster Furniture, Stoves and Undertaking. a DID YOU KNOW Smith Hardware Co. Made Harness, Repaired Harness, AND MadeOld Harness Look New? Try us. We make the best. Our line of Buggies and Surries are the best made in the South. T>son <fc Jones, “White Star,” High Point and others. See us before you buy. ; : : : : ; ; ; demand. Almost every hat has more or less of it, and nearly every modish woman on*> meets is wearing a full wide ruff of malinette—if she is for tunate-hut of maline of some sort anyway. These ruffs are so pretty and becoming that they are irressit- ible to the woman who has a generous dress or ordinary maline is, and that a ruff once flattened and made limp with dampness loses its attraction al together. It is here that th^ new waterproof ‘ malinette’’ gets its in nings, for dampness does not affect it at all, and even the economically in clined can indulge and be happy in the assurance that their newly purchased “fluff" will last a reasonable time. Thanks are due the McCall Co., makers and designers of fashion, for handsome illustration accompanying this article. McCall patterns are sold by Carroll & Byers. Dainty Gowns and Silk Coats. To accompany the dainty gowns that are the ruling style whether ma- like celluloid, or stick into your neck as the featherbone supporters are apt T'» do. In another form, a trifle thicker and heavier this same stuff is made up and called “Lastkon." In either style one can get the usual size and a white or black silk finish. Wash Gownt. Wash gowns so called for many of them never come to the laundress for rejuvenation, are to be popular In the warm days of 1900 as they were in 1905. What more can one say? Ma terials are more enticing than ever and give a good pattern and a certain amount of “gumption’’ anil skill with the needle, the prettiest sort of toilets are within reach of almost any wo man. The silk and cotton fabrics are of many weaves and make fascinating drosses, at verv low cost. Self trim mings are fashionable and a little smocking or tucking or frilling put on in braided patterns create effects both modish and inexpensive. Lucy Carter. Wagons! 'Wagfons! TT Our Hardware stock is the most complete and larg est in the upper part of the State. See us for Screen Doors. Always see us for the best and what you wart. Smith Hardware Co. Pope Bicycles! A® to Humbug Prohibition. (News and Courier.) In a recent letter to the Baptist Press Senator Tillman again spoke of the “humbug of Prohibition that we have.” Is that description correct? VVe have a vivid recollection of the jaonditious in small South Carolina towns, where, by special local option,; prohibition was voted during the \ ‘■80’s, in most of them intoxicants! were sold openly. They were sold impudently, often in grocery stores; and drug stores. No one molested. I Occasional arrests, immediately fol-j lowing tne closing of the bars, re-1 suited in farclal trials and acquit-, tals. with the consequence that the. prohibitionists became discouraged and were glad when tue time came ( again to vote on the question and re store the licensed groggerles. Drinking was not stopped; it was not even checked. Groggeries fere not repressed. The towns were small; and the municipal governments weak. One “town marshal’’ was the average police force and the disorders that grew out ot the W.ir and the Recon struction period had not been settled. The wild rl ler who shot out the street lamps after the manner of the West- | ern cow puncher was not an uncom mon type in South Carolina in those .lays. Undoubtedly, that was “hum bug prohibition.” Have we outlined a picture of the Lancaster, the Marlon, the Gaffney, the Anderson, the Edgefield, the Spar tanburg and the Darlington of today? If a traveller should arrive In one of these towns today, would the casual curb-stone loafer point him to any one of a dozen places where he could buy a drink or a flask without fear and without reproach? That was the old way. Or would he he compelled to whis per a word to a hotel clerk, who would direct him to a back passage, where he would find a negro |>orter who would take his half-dollar and in half an hour return with a half-pint of an Indescribable liquor to he delivered with secret incantations and furtive glances by the frightened and fleeing lackey to the shame-faced and sneak ing purchaser under the stairs? That would not be prohibition; but it would he repression and restriction and it would enormously reduce consump tion. It would be as much as the most sanguine prohibitionist could ration ally hope for. If Senator Tillman can array as evi dence only advertisements to prove ‘ humbug prohibition” he is out of court. Such advertisements have al ways appeared, bidding for the trade of persons who order intoxicants for personal consumption. Nobody expect ed the banishing of dispensaries from Edgefield to destroy Augusta’s Edge- field whiskey trade. Everybody anti- cijiated that many persons who had bought case goods from dispensaries would transfer their orders to the nearest whiskey shop town. But the aim of the dispesary was to make whiskey hard to get. Hence the re strictions upon selling to minors and drunkards, the blanks to be signed and other troublesome details. We fancy that the negro laborer who comes in from the country to Lancas ter village on Saturday afternon has difficulty now in procuring his bottle. The few vilage youths who in Marion, during dispensary times, would invest a quarter or half-dollar to help in “making a night of it,” have probably been seriously inconvenienced since the Brice law election. But if newspaper advertisements are to be the test we would respect* fully refer the Senator to the flies of the Columbia Record of a few years ago, then, as now, the leading daily advocate of the dispensary, and we thfnk he will find buried in them a larger volume of whiskey advertis ing than has appeared during a similar period in any South Carolina news paper. These advertisements gener ally carried the legend: “For sale in all dispensaries.” Free Open-Air Vaudeville- (Edgefield Advertiser.) There will be eight weeks of stren uous State campaign, from the open ing day at 8t. George’s on June 19th tl' 1 the curtain goes down on the closing scene at Laurens on August the 15th. Edgefield Is booked for Thursday. June 28th, on #hleh day a free open air vaudeville attraction win he given. Besides the star per formers, the spielers, barkers. Jest ers. tricksters, jugglers, straddlers, ventriloquists, acrobat* slelgjit-ofi handers, wire walkers—more properly wire pullers—will all be here. Let us lift the cur tain and you take a peep at our Bicycles and sup plies. We sell the two well known wheels, Co lumbia, the “standard of tlie world,” Rambler, the “quality wheel.” Also agents for the Rope Hartford Automobiles. Do ail kind of re pairing. If you don’t trade with us we both lose money. J. R. TOLLESON & CO. Southern Railway THROUGH SERVICE Every Day All The Way. High-back Coaches, Drawing-Room Sleepers and Southern Railway Dining Cars. S' Finest Cars, Fastest Time, ConYenient Schedules on Local Trains For Further Information, Consult any Southern Railway agent, -OR- R. W. Hunt, Division Passenger Agent, Charleston. 8. C. Brooks Morgan, Asst. General Passenger Agent, Atlanta, Ga.