The ledger. [volume] (Gaffney City, S.C.) 1896-1907, October 19, 1906, Image 7
1
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-4.
I
WeaK
Hearts
Are due to Indigestion. Ninety-nine ef every
one hundted people who have heart trouble
can remember when it was simple Indigna
tion. It is a scientific fact that all cases of
heart disease, not organic, are not only
traceable to, but are the direct result of Indi
gestion. AH food taken into the stomach
which fails of perfect digestion ferments and
swellsthe stomach, cuffing it up against the
heart. This Intei icius witn the action of
the heart, and in the course of time that
delicate but vital organ becomes diseased.
Mr. D. Kaublo. ef Nevada, O . aays: I had stomach
trouble and was In a had state as I had heart trouble
With It. I took Kodo> Dyspepsia Cure for about four
months and It cured me.
Kodol Digests What You Eat
and relieves the stomach of all nervous
strain and the hear* of ail pressure.
Bottles onl?. St.00 Sire holding 2H times the trial
Size, which sells for 50c,
froparsd by £. 0. DeWITT &CO.. OHIOAQO.
For sale by
Cherokee Drug Co., Gaffney; L. D
Allison. Cowcens.
W.
WllklnsvlUe—James George,
ward Wright, T. J. Estes.
White Plains—A. A. Crocker. R.
bee. Wilkins Smith.
Woods—W.. C. S. Wood. Ed. Robbs,
Joe Harris.
The Managers at each precint
named are requested to delegate one
of their number to secure boxes and
blanks for the election at court house
in Grand Jury room on Saturday. No
vember 3rd. 1906.
D. R. Hughes,
J. H. Allison.
R. A. Westbrook.
Commissioners of State and County
elections for Cherokee County. S. C.
October IGth. 1906.
Ed-
WORK OF CAROLINA WOMEN.
.r''
NOTICE OF ELECTION.
State of South Carolina,
County of Cherokee.
Notice is hereby given that the
general election for State and county
officers will be held at the voting
precincts prescribed by law in said
county, on Tuesday, November f>.
1906, said day being Tuesday follow
ing the first Monday in November, as
prescribed by law.
At the said election a separate box
will be provided at which qualified
electors will vote upon the adoption
or rejection of an amendment to the
State constitution, as provided in the
following Joint resolution:
A joint resolution proposing to
amend Section 7. Article VIII. of the
constitution, relating to municipal
bonded indebtedness.
Section 1. Be it resolved bv the
General Assembly of tne State of
South Carolina, That the following
amendment to Section 7, of Article
VIII, of the constitution, be agreed to:
add at the end thereof the following
words: Provided, further. That the
limitations imposed by this Section
and bv Section *» of Article X, of this
constitution, shall not apply to the
bonded indebtedness incurred by the
city of Bennettsville, where the pro
ceeds of said bonds are applied sol el;.'
and exclusively for the purchase,
establishment and maintainance of a
water works plant or sewerage sys -
tem and where the question of incur
ring such indebtedness is submitted
to the freeholders and qualified voters
of such municipality, as provided in
the constitution upon the question of
other bonded indebtedness.
Approved the 23rd day of February,
A. V) 1906.
There shall be separate and dig-
tinct ballots and boxes at this election
for the following officers, to wit: (1)
Governor and Lieutenant Governor.;
(2) other State 'officers; (3) State
Senator; (1) members of House of
Representatives; 1'*) county officers.
On which shall be the name or names
of the person or persons voted for as
such officers, respectively, and the
office for which they arte voted.
Before the hour fixed for opening
the polls Managers and Clerlss must
take and subscribe the Constitutional
oath. The Chairman of the Board of
Managers can administer the °ath to
the other members and to the “Clerk;
a Notary Public must administer the
oath to the Chairman. The Managers
elect their Chairman and Clerk.
Polls at each voting plao" must he
opened at 7 o'clock A. M. and closed
at 4 o'clock P. M., except in the City
of Charleston, where the’- shall he
opened at 7 A. M. and closed at 6
P. M.
The Managers have the po”'er to fill
a vacancy, and if none r' the Mana
gers attend, the citizens can appoint
from among the qualified voters the
Managers, who, after being sworn,
can conduct the election.
At the close of the election the
Managers and Clerk must proceed
publicly to open the ballot boxes and
count the ballots therein, and contin
ue without adjournment until the same
is completed, and make a statement of
the result for erch office and sign
the same. Within three (lavs there
after. the Chairman of the Board, or
some one designated by the Boa*-'’
must deliver to the Commissioners of
Election ixdl list, the boxes con
taining the ballots and written state
ments of the results of the election.
Managers of Election.—The follow
ing Managers of Election have been
appointed to hold the election at the
Various precincis in tile vaid County:
Allens—W. G. Arter. Eh. Whelchel,
K. 11. Lipscomb.
Antioch—D. F. Hambright. J. R.
Dickson. Elias Johnson
Blacksburg—J. 1). Kennedy. Elijah
Harold, W. D. Kherer.
Butler—W. W. Hopper. Charles Sel
lers, M. S. Swofford.
Buffalo—A. H. Moore. I»uis Hop
per. S. C. Carlton.
Cherokee Falls—C. M. Byars. J. L.
Plaxico. Rufus Ingram.
Draytonville—R. S. Spencer. John
Barnhill. J. W. Alexander.
Ezell—J. A. Scruggs. O. C. Hames,
R. P. Scruggs.
Grassy Pond—L. Huskey, A. E. El
lis. G. C. Humphries.
Goucher—Prater Smith. J. W. Lip
scomb. C. E. Smith.
Gaffney No. 1—D. J. Holt. J. S.
Wells, W. A. Harvev
Gaffney No 2—T. R. Wllblns. T.
Robbs. J. T. Humphries.
Gaffney No. 3—S. M. Littlejohn. W.
T. Thompson. W. L. Spake.
Limestone—W. I. Jones. Louis
Hambright, Rowan Gibson.
Littlejohns—J. W. Sparks. Charles
Littleiohn. L. C. Mabry.
Macedonia—E. P. Richards. J. L.
Clary, A. Harris.
Maud—A. C. Price. J. D. Hammett,
Robin McCraw.
Kings Creek—Wm. Caldwell. Jas.
Dickson. R. Hayes Mitchel.
Ravenna—B. G. L. Pettit T. E.
Burgess. J. B. Brown.
Sarratt—J. T. Moorehead. W. J
Pridraore, John H. Wilkins.
Turners—W. Landrum Self. Wm.
Austell. C. P. Teal.
Timber Ridge—E. L. Tate, Joseph
Carter. J. F. Jamerson.
Thlckety—I. M. Smith. M. W. Go
forth, D. C. Tindall.
NOTICE OF ELECTION.
State of South Carolina.
County of Cherokee.
Notice Is hereby given that the Gen
eral Election for Representatives in
Congress will be held at the votlne
precincts fixed by law In the County
of Cherobee on Tuesday, November
6, 1906, said day being Tuesday follow
ing the first Monday; .as prescribed
by law.
The qualifications for suffrage are
as follows;
Residence in State for two years. In
the County one year, in the polling
precinct in which the elector offers to
vote, four months, and the payment six
months before any election of any poll
lax then due and payable. Provided,
That ministers in chaige of an organ
ized church and teachers of public
schools shall be entitled to vote after
six months* residence in the State,
otherwise qualified.
Registration.—Payment of all taxes,
including poll tax. assessed and col
lectable during the previous year. The
production of a certificate o- the re
ceipt of the officer authorized to col
lect such tax shall bp conclusive proof
'• f the payment thereof
Before the hour fixed for opening
;he polls managers and clerks must
take and subscribe to the Constitu
tional oath. The Chairman of the
Board of Managers can administer
the oath ty the other Managers and to
the Clerk; a Notary Public must ad
minister th^ oath to Chairman. The
Managers elect their Chairman and
Clerk.
Polls i)t each voting place must he
opened at 7 o’clock A. M. and closed
at 1 o'clock P. M.. except in the City
of Charleston where they shall he
a t 7 \ m and closed at
6 P. M.
Thq. .Managers have the newer to
fill a vacancy nd if none of the
Managers alter; the citizens can ap
point, from among i ip qualified voters,
the Managers, who, after being sworn,
can conduct the election.
At the close of the election, the
Managers and Clerk must proceed
publicly to open tbe ballot boxes and
count the ballots therein, and continue
without adjournment until the same is
completed, and make a statement of
the result for each officer, and sign
same. Within three days thereafter,
the Chairman of the Board, or some
one designated by the Board, must
deliver to the Commissioners of Elec
tion the poll list, the boxes contain
ing the ballots and written statements
of the result of the election.
Managers of Election.—The' follow
ing Managers of Election have been
aonointed to hold the eU-cfion at the
various precincts in the said County:
Allens—J. B. Carter. Will Parks. J.
S. Littlejohn.
Antioch—J. B. Hambright. J. R.
Dickson. Felix Dover.
Blacksburg—W. F Moore. J. M.
Phillips. B. J. Gold.
Butler—R. B. Davis, W. H. Swofford,
Harrison Garner.
Buffalo—W. D Gaston, Claude Web
ber, Mangum Gaston.
Cherokee Falls—Z. Q. Webber. S. S.
Gaffney. A. L. Batchelor.
Draytonville—Chas. Barnhill. W. S.
Wilson, Eliphus Garmon.
Ezell—Geo. D. Scruggs, H. Z. Hicks,
W. T. Scruggs.
Grassy Pond—A. J. McCraw, J. J.
Magness. J. Marion Swofford.
Goucher—J. M. Lipscomb. M. L.
Guthrie. B. F. Bonner.
Gaffney No. 1-*T T. Green. M. C.
Thompson. Lee Hippy.
Gaffney No. 2—R. M. Gaffnev, J. R.
Reason, W. H. Ross.
Gaffney No. 3—J. T. Rogers, E. F.
Lipscomb, Ed. Turner.
Limestone—J. D. Bright. J. F. Far
mer. J. T. White.
Littlejohns—H. E. Jefferies, D. B.
Hughes, R. J. Foster.
Macedonia—J. A. Harris, W. M. Gard
ner. W. D. Byars.
Maud—John Ellis. J. H. Ruppe. Pink
Hammett.
Kings Creek—William Borders Jr.,
T E. Plaxico, Wm. Wilburn.
Ravenna—M. W. Brown, Robert Go
forth. John H. Lipscomb.
Sarratt—Sam Lee, J. G. Kendrick,
P. Y. Pool.
Turners—Jonas Blanton. R. A.
Hawkins, IjouIs Waters.
Timber Ridge—Claude Tate. Makon
Spencer. B. T. Porter.
Thlckety—Vaud Smith. D. L. Vas-
s* - Ed. TJindall.
Wilkinsville—Boyce Whisonant. Jno.
R. Hughes. J. L Strain.
White Plains—C. B. Hammett. Jas.
L->e. Gaston Littlejohn.
Woods—June Robbs. Jake Harris.
Cleveland Robbs.
The Managers at each precinct
named above are requested to dele
gate one of their number to secure the
box and blanks for the election at
Court House, in Grand Jury room, on
Saturday. November 3rd, 1906.
J. V. Price.
M. B. Scruggs.
D. P. Sides
Commissioners of Federal Election
for Cherokee County S. C.
October 16th. 1906.
Doing Wonders for the School of
Their State.
(New York Sun.)
Four years ago in nearly half the
comities of North Carolina the av
erage value of the school houses. In
cludin'' grounds and all equipment,
was less than $70. ,
There were 1.000 district with only
a log school house. There were 1.000
district with no school house at all.
In many cases even the best were
ugly and dirty.
In 1902 some of the young women
of the State determined to try to re
move this disgrace. They went to
work. They organized a State asso
ciation. The first meeting was held
at Greensboro in April of that year.
Next came county associations, oT
wnich al) white women were invited
to become members. These now ex
ist in 96 counties of the State.
Many of these offer prizes to the
district showing the greatest improve-
ment. A typical case is that of Way
ne county, away up in the mountains.
Last August the association In that
county offered a prize of $100. which
was won by District No. 1. The dis
trict is described in Tbe World’s
Work as containing onlv 10 families
with children of school age. There
are only 40 children on the census.
The average attendance for the four-
month term was 27.
Of the 16 families ail are fanners,
and onlv eight own the land on which
they live. One of them has had the
advantage of a high school education.
Seven of them tended only a one-horse
farm. Not a mother in the district
had anv help except what tv-e children
could give night and morning.
Here is the account giv"-’ by the
loach — of the way the school earned
its nvize:
“When we went to the school we
found an old building, the roof of
which had recently been taken from
an old church. The grounds were
small and cut up with gullies cover
ed with trash, leaves and decaying
stumps. The steps were yearly gone;
window lights were broken out.
‘The county gave us panes; the
boys put them in. By Christmas we
had enlarged our yard to about, twice
its original size, taking up 28 stumps.
We leveled the grounds and scoured
the floor and desks.
“We celebrated Thanksgiving Day
and gave a free concert Christmas.
We gave a measuring party and fes
tival for the purpose of raising money.
"After Christmas we celebrated St.
Valentine's Day, Washington’s birth
day and North Carolina Day. We got
up a programme for Parents’ Day
and gave another free concert on the |
last night of school. To raise money
- had an apron hemming and an ice
cream supper and the young ladies
of the association made a memorv
quilt.
"The men of the neighborhood fix
ed the yard, built an addition to the
house and made some new steps. The
school children set out the flowers,
scoured the floor and seats and swent
the yard once a month.
"We hired a painter to put two
coats of paint on th*> inside and out
side of the house. The children were
all anxious to do something to raise
money to buy a picture and some
books. So one Saturday we all went
to a cotton field and picked cotton.
"At 12 o’clock we spread our lunch
es: later candy was served. We then
had our cotton weighed, received our
money, which was $3.75. and went
home as merry and happy as. you
please.
• "The little 6-year-old tots worked
just as hard and felt just as impor
tant as any. 1 had only one boy 17
years old. An the other bovs were
under 12 years. I had four girls over
12 years of age. All the others were
small, but they all worked willingly
and cheerfully as, members of the
Betterment Association.’’
Sweet Simplicity. *
(Saturday Evening Post^
In the old days there was a pro
fessor of psychology at Dartmouth
who was so abstruse that it Is doubt
ful If. at times, he fully understood
himself.
One day he was profounder than
usual. He lectured for nea-ly an hour
on tonics away over in the back of the
bopk.
The class was dazed. It was far
above their heads and they did not
understand even the edges of It.
When he finished, the old man took
our his watch and said genially:
"Now, there are ten minutes of the
hour remaining. If anv student de
sires to ask me a question I shall he
glad to answer it to the best of my
ability.”
The class sat in a stupor. The pro
fessor waited for a time and then
said:
“Is there no one who has a question
to ask? There are remaining several
minutes that could be profitably em
ployed.’’
Finally one student put up a re
luctant hand.
“Ah,” said the professor, “you have
a question. What is it?”
“What time is it?” stammered the
student.
Coon Hunting.
(Lippincott’s.)
The officers of the English squadron
prepared for their recent visit to this
country by an exhaustive study of so-
called American slang, that thev might
enjoy that “delightful American hu
mor” over which the English have re
cently become so enthusiastic.
During their stay in America a
coon hunt was arranged for their ben
efit. the officer in charge explaining to
them that, it was a sport highly
thought of and native to the Southern
States.
As they rode along one of I he Eng
lishmen remarked: “You hunt these
coons with dogs. I think?”
His host assented and the English
man continued: "They are found in
the woods and are often caught in
trees, aren’t they?”
"They are,” replied the American;
“but how do you come to know so
much about coon hunting?"
"Oh,” said the visitor, with an air
of conscious pride, “I’ve read ‘Uncle
Tom’s Cabin,’ you know, and all those
articles lhat have come out in the pa
pers lately, but to tell the truth. 1
didn’t think it was allowed by the au
thorities, no matter what tbe nigger
had done.”
Over-Shrewd Lawyer.
Over-shrewd lawyers often furnish
their adversaries with weapons, says
the Rochester Post-Express. “Did you
see this tree that has been mentioned
by the roadside?” an advocate in
quired.
* "Yes, sir, I saw ft very plainly.’’
"It was conspicuous, then?”
The witness seemed puzzled bv the
new word. He repeated his former
assertion.
“What Is the difference,” sneered
the lawyer, "between plain and con
spicuous?"
But he was hoist with his own
petard. T^he witness innocently an
swered:
“I can see you plainly, sir, amongst
the other lawyers, though you are not
conspicuous.”
In another Instance a blow di
rected against the character of a wit
ness forcibly recoiled.
“You were in tbe company of
these people?" he was asked.
“Of two friends, sir.”
“Friends! Two thieves, I suppose
you mean?”
« “That may be so,” was the dry re
tort: “they were both lawyers.”
The blow that destroys the effect
of an adverse examination is occas
ionally more the result of accident
than of conscious effort. In a trial
not long ago, a verv simple witness
was in the box and after going
through his ordeal was ready to re
tire. One question remained:
“A different story to what I have
told sir?”
“Yes; is It not so?”
“Yes, sir."
“Upon your oath I demand to
know who the persons are who have
attempted this.”
“Well, sir, you’ve tried as hard as
any of them.” was the unexpected an
swer.
It ended the examination.
Host Anything
And a little of everything is
now being shown in my line:
All the new conceptions and *
fads . 1 : ;
..In The Jewelry Line..
Prom the cheapest worth
having to the very finest
specimens and grades. Re
pairing done by an Ex a <ert.
Thos. H. Westrope,
Next to Shuford Sc Le Master.
Calling Him Down.
(Pucb.)
“While I isn't namin' no names and
'don't aim to be pussonal in muh soe-
eifleations," said good old Parson Bag-
star. during a recent sermon. “I is
bodaciously impelled to request a cer
tain worthy brudder to huhafter
please be a leetle mo’ economical wid
his vociferation. It am all right to
soah aloft to a reasonable heiyjit in
nra’r and praise, but when a (ban
sings so vocanically dat he drowns de
choir nlumb out and causese de con-
stable to come uh swaggerin’ 'round
after he thinks de free fight am .all
over, and prays so loud and numerous
i dat de puhsidin’ elder ’nominates it a
t sturbance radder dan a supplication,
it am gho'ly ’propriate for dat annony-
mous brudder to take a tuck in his
vooallty. De frivolous deems it fun
ny. de devout am shocked, and de
sick and conflicted in de neifirhbor-
hood am ’sturbed of deir rest; and it
'pears to me dat dat zealous but
j elaborate brudder am elected to turn
i off his breath ’stid o’ biowin’ it out.”
i "Yassah! Yassah!" doggedly re-
j piled Brother Shinpaw. the culprit.
I rising in his place in the midst of the
congregation. “But l wants yo’ to
un’erstand, suh. dat I’s a free and un
limited moral agent, and has de right
to worship de Lawd accordin’ to do
indication of muh own conscience,
sah!”
“Yo’ sholy is, muh brudder,” re
plied the clergyman, “and yo’ also
most salaciously has! Whuh we dif
fer in de matter am on de extent of
! de longitude to be puhmltted in de
I stretchin’ of yo’ conscience. And I
begs to leucidate dat it ain’t needer
praise nor worship to Far back and
holler at de Lawd like He was a
balkv boss! De hat will now circum
ambulate th’oo de congregation. Hur-
rumph!”
When the Boy King Slept.
A noted tailor was praising the tact
of G. B. Winter, the IxMidon tailor,
who, though he came over to Ameri
ca to remodel the army’s uniforms,
still manages to keep the native tail
ors nleased.
"Winter is a fine designer.” said
the tailor, "and who but he, in the
face of the outcry that went up
against him, could have done his
work here if there had been no out
cry. and at the same time have flat
tered the nation till It purred?
“Winter is tactful and cool. He
offends no one, and it is impossible
to offend him. He reminds me of the
tutor to King Alfonso of Spain.
‘When Alfonso was eight or nine
years old he would often fall asleep
In the midst of his tutor's lectures
and readings. The tutor would then
say in a low voice:
, “ ‘Your highness is indulging in a
httle private meditation. I will sus
pend mv remarks for the nonce.’ ”
Couldn't Be S 0 Old.
AMwnso Mucha, the French artist
whose posters of grateful American
women are no less popular in Ameri
ca than In Paris, is making a tour of
the United States.
“What pleases me in America,” M.
Mucha said, the other day, "is the In
telligence of the people. The Ameri
can public Is far ahead of the English.
On my way over here I stopped a few
days in London, and in the British
museum one afternoon I overheard a
remark that showed well how bejiight-
ed the English public Is. Twp men
were looking at some old Egyptian
coins.
“ ‘Them there,’ said the first man,
‘must be 300 or 400 years old, eh,
Bill?’
“ 'They’re 300 years old,’ the sec
ond man returned.
“‘Ah, Bill. What do ye take me
for?’ said the first man. ‘Why, we’re
only in 1904 now.’”
Do You Think
For Yourself ?
Or, do yon open your mouth like a young
bird-arid trulit down whatever food or medi
cine may be offered you V
♦ ♦ + ♦ *♦*
If, you are an lutellisreut thinking woman,
in need of relief from weakness, nervousness,
pain and suffering, then it means rnurh to
you that there is one tried and true honest
tnedieine of known composition, sold by
druggists for the cure of woman's ills.
•F H*
The makers of l>r. Pierce's i'avui ite "Pro
scription, for the cure of weak, nervous, run
down, over-worked, debilitated, pain-racked
women, knowing this medicine to lie made up
of ingredients, every one of which has the
strongest possible indorsement of the leading
and standard authorities of the several
schools of practice, are perfectly willing, and
in fact, are only text glad to print, as they do,
the formula,'or list of ingredients, of which
it is composed, in pUiin Enylish. on every
bottle-wrapper.
The formula of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Pre
scription will boar the most critical examina
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alcohol, narcotics, harmful, or habit-forming
drugs, and no agent enters into it'that is not
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ities of their several schools of practice.
These authorities recommend the ingredients
Of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Proscription for the
cure of exactly the same ailments for which
this world-famed medicine is advised.
The Japanese paper plant, from
whose bark is manufactured the most
delicate Japanese papers so largely
introduced Into the country has
proved Itself hardy in the Southern
States, and even as far north as
Washington has been kept alive out of
doors.
“Of course, when farmers speab of
their ‘full cribs’ that meang. they’re
prosperous.”
“Not necessarily, it may siniply
mean a plentltude of babies.”
What becomes of all the autumn
leaves the women press?
Her Train.
"How did the queen of Sheba travel
when she went to see Solomon?” ask
ed the teacher of her Sunday school
class of little girls.
No one ventured an answer.
"If you had studied your lesson you
coul 1 not nave helned knowing.” said
their loacher "Now look over the
verses again."
"Could she have gone bv the cars?”
asked the teacher, beginning to lose
patience as the children consulted
their books, but appeared to arrive at
no conclusion.
“Yes’m,” said a little girl at the end
of the class. ’ “She went b*' steam
oars.”
"Did she, indeed? Well Louise, we
would like to know how you found
that out?”
“In the second verse,’’, responded
the child, “it says ‘she came with a
very great train.’ ”
Chamberlain's
f'W
If i'
Cough Remedy
The Children’s Favorite
—CURES—
Coughs, Colds, Croup and
Whooping Cough.
This remedy is faninu« for it* cure* over
a large part of the civilizei] world. It can
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opium or other harmful drug and may be
given as confidently to a baby as to an adult
Price 25 cts; Large Size, 60 cts.
No other medicine for woman’s Ills has any
such professional endorsement as Dr. Pierce’s
Favorite Prescription has received, in the un
qualified recommendation of each of its
several ingredients by scores of leading medi
cal men of 411 the schools of practice. Is
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♦ *1* ♦ f|f
A booklet of ingredients, witli numerous
authorative profeslonal endorsements by the
leading medical authorities of this country.
Will ixs mailed/ree to any one sending name
and address with request for same. Address
Dr. B. V. Pierce. Buffalo. N. Y.
The population of the countcy Is
growing more dense everv year, and
land must naturally become more
valuable. Land gives character to
owners in European countries. Im
proved methods have resulted ip mak
ing ten acres do what ten times as
many did a hundred years ago. It is
surprising what a few acres will pro
duce when Intensively Cultivated. A
large proportion of the farms 6f
France average less than ten acres
each, and a majority of the farms of
Belgium are densely populated, the
people are busv and making a living,
and there is less emigration than from
any other of the European countries.
Thousands upon thousands of small
farq^s can be made In the South with
little money, and while they last hope
for our country will not perlqh.
Cold weather is coming,
everybody will need good
Shoes. The Men and Boys
will need a good Suit, a Hat
and Overcoat. The Ladies
need Dry Goods, Dress Goods
and Flannels. TKe whole
family will need heavy Com
forts, Blankets, Hosiery and
a hundred pounds of the best
Flour. We have all the
above named articles and
many more at prices which
cannot be duplicated. We
respectfully invite you to
call and get prices before
you buy.
Subscribe for Th M Ledger; $1 a year.
To The Public!
We have just fitted up a
building at the rear of our
Furniture Store and moved
our complete stock of Coffins,
Caskets and Undertakers’
Supplies into it. This gave
us considerable moie room
for
Furniture & Stoves
which our constantly increa
sing trade demands. This
extra room we have filled
up with the very best values
in Furniture and Stoves that
money can buy. So we have
no hesitancy in saying that
we are better prepared for
your trade than ever before.
Now, come and let us show
you through whether you
are ready to buy now or
not. We know most every
one expects to buy some
Furniture ur a Stove
some time, and if you will
look through our stock care
fully, for it will bear close
inspection, we feel sure we
will sell you when you do
buy. Don,t forget we are
the only one selling the cele
brated
“Leader Stoves”
and
"Matchless Ranges.”
Yours for business,
Shuford & LeMaster t
Furniture, Stoves and Undertaking.
Brotlw.
Are You
Needing a Well ?
If you are thinking of drilling a
well on jour premises, consult
Lee Bros., Gaffney or Spartanburg.
S. C., as to the merits of a drilled
well. We are now drilling a well
for the Victor Cotton Oil Co , in
this city, and will be pleased to
furnish any information desired
on the subject of wells. - . . .
Lee Bros.,
Gaffney or Spartanburg, S. C.
and WHISKEY HABITS
cured at home with,
out pain. Book of par
ticular* sent FRKB.
| B. M. WOOLLEY. M. D.
Its, 4aa. Office 104 N. Pryor Street.
FOLEYSHONEMAR
•top* tlx* oottglx •net heals luojfa
i| THE BEST FOR
BILIOUSNESS
•BITTERS ANDKIDNEYS.
Kodol Dyspepsia C:
Digests whet you eat*
•ire
THE ORIGINAL LAXATIVE COUGH SYRUP
KENNEDY’S LAXATIVE H0NEY«*TAR
lad CloTtr Bisttoiu xud Hoary 3ee an Every BoUla.
BANNER 8A LYE
th« most healing aalve in the world.