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NOTICE OF SALE. By virtue of a decree of partition airfi gale of the Court of Common I’leaa in Cherokee county in. the case of Sam’l. Sanders, individually and as administrator of the estate of Henr" V. Sanders, deceased, et. a!.. plaintiffs, against .Benjaman San ders, et. al.. defendants, I will sell at Gaffney, before the court house door, during the loRal hours for sales, on salesday, Monday. Decem ber 3rd, 1906. the fo lowing described property, to wit: All that certain parcel or tract of laud, lying, being and situate In -Cherokee township, said county and 5 ate, beginning on a red oak on Cherokee Falls road, and running with said road 12 chains to an iron Pin in said road; thence N. 88 W. 7.20 chains to a stone on Cherokee Falls Mfg. Co.’s line; thence with said Company’s line N. 87M E. 4.15 chains to a stone; thence N. 18* *4 E. 7.10 chains to stake on d. U Moss’s line; thence with said Moss's line oOVi E. 23.10 chains to the beginning cor ner. red oak, and bounded by land of Cherokee Falls Mfg. Co, estate lands of Henry V. Sanders, deceased, John G Moss. Cherokee Falls road and others, containing Thirty-Three (33) acres, more or less. Also all that other tract or parcel of land lying in same township, coun ty and State as the tract before de- .sciibed; beginning on a stone corner of Cherokee Falls Mfg. Co.’s land and running S. 69 3-4 W. 9.75 chains to a stone; thence N T . 39Vi W. 22.29 chains to sourwood; thence N. 50 3 4 E. 12.75 chains to stake; thence S. 39’4 E. 27.80 chains to a stone; thence S. 87'4 W. 4.15 chains to the beginning stone corner, containing Thirty One and one-third (311-3) acres, more or less, and bounded by estate lands of said Henry V. San ders, deceased, .1. 1.. Moss, G. C. L. 6 M. Imp. Co., and Cherokee Falls Mfg. Co. Also all that other lot or parcel of land lying in same township, county and State as the tract before de scribed; beginning on an iron stake in said Cherokee Falls road and run ning with said ro&d 9 chains to a stake on the Cherokee Falls .Mfg Co.'s line; thence with said Compa ny's line N. 2714 W. 9 chains to a stone; thence S. 88 E. 7.20 chains to the beginning, containing Three (3) acres, more or less, and bound d by estate lands of said Henry V. San ders. deceased, Cherokee Falls road and the Cherokee Falls Mfg. Co. TERMS OF SALE: cash. Parch aser to pay for papers. .1. Eb. Jefferies, Clerk of Court Common Pleas. Pub. Nov. 15th. 22nd and 29th. SALE FOR DIVISION. | Ou Monday, December 3rd. 1906, (salesday), I will offer for sale be fore the court house door during the legal hours of sale, the following prop ity, to wit: All that tract of land above the Dawkins mill, above and adioining the Dawkins mill tract, containing 133 acres, more or less. Also the tract of land known as a part of tlie Xach Phillips tract. Terms of sale: One-third cash; balance in one and two years, with interest at 8 per cent., secured by mortgage of the premises. Purchaser to pay for papers and r cording, with full privilege of pay ing all cash. Plats may be seen by applying to C. A. Jefferies. Chas. A. Jefferies. Attorney in fact for the heirs of Wm. Jefferies. Nov. 9th, 16th. 23rd, 30th. SALE FOR DIVISION. On Monday, December 3rd, 1905, (salesday). we will offer for sale be fore the court house door, during the legal hours of sale, the following property, to wit: All that parcel and tract of land known as the Dawkins mill, contain ing corn and wheat, mill, cotton gin, press, machinery, building, etc. to gether with sixty three acres of land, more or less. Terms of sale; One-third cash, balance in one and two years, with interest at 8 per cent., secured by mortgage of the premises. Purchaser to pay for papers and recording, with full privilege of pay ing all cash. Plats mav be seen by applying to C. A. Jefferies. J. I). Jefferies, Sr.. Chas. A. Jefferies, Attorney in fact for the heirs of Wm. Jefferies. FOR SALE—Old newspapers at this office. 10c a hundred. Women as Weii as Men Are Made Miserable b> Kidney Trouble. Kidney trouble preys upon the mind. di»* x>urages and lessens ambition; beauty, vigor and cheerfulness soon •4 disappear when the kid neys are out of order ZjlSIf*—or diseased. Kidney trouble has become so prevalent ^ that it is not uncommon for a child to be born afflicted with weak kid* -* neys. If the child urin- " ates too often, if the urine scalds the flesh or if, when the child reaches an age when it should be able ta control the passage, it is yet af.listed with bed-wetting, depend upon it. the cause of the difficulty is kidney trouble, and the firs' step should be towards the treatment of these important organs. This unpleasant trouble is due to a diseased condition of the kidneys and bladder and not to a habit as most people suppose. Women as well as men are made mis- •rable with kidney and bladder trouble, and both need the same great remedy. The mild and the immediate effect of Swamp-Root is soon realized, by druggists, in fifty- •ent and one dollar i •zes. You may have a| ;ample bottle by mail ree, also pamphlet tell- Homo of swamp-Hoot. ng all about it, including many of the housands of testimonial letters received mm sufferers cured, in writing Dr. Kilmer t Co., Binghamton, N. Y.. be sure and rention this paper. Don’t make any mistake, but rt> member the name, Swamp-Root, D; Kilmor’s Swamp-Root, and the ad Iress, Binghampton, N. Y., on ever) •ottle Thoroughly Explained. On an ocean steamer, bound for Enrope, says an exchange, one of the pass'ivers came upon deck when the boat was several days out with what was unmistakably a “black eye.” • “Hullo, Robinson,” exclaimed an acquaintance. “What’s the matter with your eye?” “Matter with my eye?” repeated Rob.nson. “Nothing. I guess. Only a birthmark.”’ “A birthmark! I hadn’t noticed it.” “Of course you hadn’t. Only got it last night. I tumbled out my berth.” The best treatment for indigestion and troubles of the stomach is to rest the stomach. It can be rested by starvation or by the use of a good digestant which will digest the food eaten, thus taking the work off the stomach. At the proper temperature, a single teaspoonful of Kodol will wholly digest 3,000 grains of food. It relieves the present annoyance, puts the stomach in shape to satisfactorily perform its functions. Good for indi gestion, sour stomach, flatulence, pal pitation of the heart and dyspepsia. Kodol is made in strict conformity with the National Pure Food and Drug Law. Sold by Cherok-e Drug Co.. Gaffney; L. D. Allison. Oowpens. Better be alone than in had com pan>. Good for everything a salve is used for and especially recommended for piles. That is what we sav of De Witt’s Witch Hazel Salve. On the market for years and a standby in thousands of families. Get DeWitt’s. Sold by Cherokee Drug Co., Gaffney; L. D. Allison, Cowpens. Character is a success and there is no other. Pneumonia Follows Cold but never follows the use of Foley’s Honey and Tar. It stops the cough, heals and strengthens the lungs and prevents Pneumonia. Cheroker- Drug Co. B.> not simply good—be good for something. The New Pure Food and Drug Law. We are pleased to announce that Foley’s Honey and Tar for coughs, colds and lung troubles is not affect ed by the National Pure Food and Drug law, as it contains no opiates or other harmful drugs, and we recom mend it as a safe remedy for children and a lults. Cherokee Drug Co. To preserve credit, do not use it much. Peanuts mashed into a powder in a mortar, seasoned with salt and mois toned with cream, make a good sand wich filling. Subscribe for The Ledger; $1 a year. HAMPTON'S MONU MENT DEDICATED. THOUSANDS OF CAROLINIANS PAY HIM TRIBUTE. Gen, Butler Speaks—Bishop Capers Offers Prayer—Gov. Heyward In troduces Speaker. Columbia, Nov. 20.—The Wade Hampton slatue was unveiled in the presence of a vast throng. Thous ands of people lined the sidewalks alone the route of parade and after wards moved to the state house grounds, where the formal exercises vero held. These were opened with prayer by Bishop Capers and Govern- Heyward, on behalf of the State, accepted the statue and introduced General M. C. Butler, orator of the day. . ? iiaii 5,000 People Present. Columbia, Nov. 20.—The impress ive ceremony of the unveiling of a handsome $30,000 bronze equestrian stiltue of General Wade Hampton, one of the world’s greatest cavalry men, and South Carolina’s greatest statesman and most lovable son, brought 5,000 people to the city to day, the special and regular trains front every portion of the State be ing crowded. The Procession Cheered. Main stmt, which is beautifully decorated in Confederate colors, was thronged as on a big day of the fair week, and the long procession rep- lesenting the Confederate organiza tion of the State, the schools and col leges an* the national guard organ izatious, the executive judicial and legislative brandies of the State gov ernment, was cheered to 'lie echo as it moved down Main street from the postoliice, thence around the capitol building, opposite the stand erected for special guests by the side of the statue which faces the capitol build ir-' from the east. In the crowd present to witness the unveiling of the monument to Wade Hani'dou today and to give a last greeting to South Carolina’s dead cliieftan, there are old and voting, veterans who had followed him to battle, men who were with him in 1876, nun and women then unborn, and strangers from afar caught up by the spirit of the occasion. Significant is the fact that just 30 years ago all eyes were turned to Hampton. At every Railway station anxious crowds were assembled to catch any news that might be atloat. Hourly messages came and went from one end of the State to tiiu oilier. Here in Columbia angry crowds surged to and fro. No man knew what an hour might bring forth. Tlie one supreme ligur -. calm and unruffled, that kept his bead thiough all the storm, was Made Hampton. On his broad shoulders rested tin* fate of the people. Tin* p -ople trusted not in vain. He rose to the occasion, saw that con- llict with the federal authorities must bo avoided at all hazards, met the excited crowd of his t’eliow coun trymen at democratic headquarters and told them to go home—that was all. “I nave been elected governor of South Carolina and by the eternal (Tod I shall be governor, or else there shall be none. Disperse quietly and go to your homes.” These were his words, and they settled the g-avest crisis in South Carolina’s history. No man saw Hu* way out bn'. Wade Hampton, the chevalier without re proach. Now. 30 years after, Wade Hamp ton sleeps beneath a great live oak in Trinity churchyard, and what remains of him is ids memory and the memorials that a people's love have erected to him. The Monument. The handsome equestrian monu ment shows the great cliieftan mounted on a fiery steed, in the act of greeting ills troops. His hat is in bis right hand, the left grasping the reins short and the charger’s arching neck showing how unwilling Lu* ste< ' is to stop. Tlie wind of his forward move ment is fanning his hair and the triage of his coat is blown back. The expression is one of love mingled viL' fatherly pride in ids men. The artist, F. W. Ruckstuhl, has broken up ids studio in New York city and the work was, therefore, done in Paris. At Paris it was * asy to get t ie handsome marble from Alsac. where the Vosges mountains spur off from the Alps and cut through the eastern part of France. Many of the world’s famous works of art rest, on liases of tills marble. Tlie plinth of the pedestal is made of Alsatian marb'e. but the basis be neath were quarried from our Winns- boro granite, in whose historic hills Hampton had hunted in ids youth, when Fairfield was as full of wild game as Montana is now. The ..tal.ie of Hampton and of his horse are east in hollow bronze and strikingly handsom -. The face of the hero is turncil to the west, whether by design or accident, in any case, there is appositeness in the selection, since Hampton spent much of his time in the West, and it was from Mis is.-im i that he came back to redeem Soi'tli Carolina. He was facing Hie West in 1865, wnen he retr aetd from Columbia. West ward was the com so of ihe old | pioneers, and Hamilton harked back to the old days of the republic. . Butler's Oration. General M. C. Butler, who deliv ered tug oration today, has been all Ids life associated with Hampton. He was with Hampton during tie war, in the same branch of the ser vice. After the war lie was the lirst denioe: at elect' d to the United States senate, nreceding Hampton there by three years. General Butler is a nephew of Commodore Perry and is on every siiie connected with the best of Amer ican life. His ancestors came into the woods of upper South Carolina long before the Revolution and dur ing that conflict servid with great distinction. Pick d out by the French ambassador at i lie Yorktown celebration as tin* most distinguished | looking individual ihere, he is the j prince imperial of Ids g. neration. Today in Ids ag" he is perhaps the most eloquent living South Caro linian. It is, therefore, peer, iarly appropri ate that M. (’. Bmler s.aiuld deliver the oration and fortunate that, he is spared to do ii Ju-. t a few years more and a 1 the men who were as social ed witli Hampton will have crossed over to In* with him always in the lields of asphodel. Gen ral Ruth* said in part: The story of Made Hampton’s H e goes back to the founders of tlie yltaie. Those g’oi ions men who had taken issue with ihe .Mother Coun try had bequeathed ihe “divine right t rule" lo every citizen of this country. Among t ho-e men, bat tling for their count r.> s rights was found a Hampton. General Wade Hampton, in wlios honor Him tatue is erected, was one o’ t.iose who op posed senarati se:-*- ;.*io:i < f a .'date Weak Lungs Need VINOL its cod liver oil elements heal and strengthen the lungs Many people inherit weak lung« which are likely to bo attacked by consumption. So also are lung* weakened by disease or by a stubborn hacking cough. Vinol, which Is a real cod liver prep aration with all the useless oil elimi nated and tonic iron added, strength ens weak lungs and gives one the power to throw off wasting diseases. We ask every person suffering from weak lungs, stubborn hacking coughs or any w-asting disease to try Vinol on our guarantee. The Gaffney Drug Co. FASTIDIOUS WOMEN consider Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic a necessity in the hygienic care of the person and for local treatment of feminine ills. As a wash its cleansing, germicidal, deodorizing and healing qualities are extraordinary. For sale at Druggists. Sample free. Address The R. Paxton Co., Boston, Mass. but when the long debate was ad- ioiirned to the battlefl Id he saw his duty to his State and did H He had no doubt in his mind as to where ' b»~ first allegiance was due. It has been fhe speaker's ourpose to review Gen. Hampton’s mili tary record, and to that end he had •"ritten to the war department, re questing to be furnished with such information as the government pos soss d on the military services of General Hampton. He hid found on investigation and reflection that it would require a vo ume to do justice to such a oa reer as Hampton’s. The battles men tioned on the base of the monument were but a few of the fights he was engag d in. Want of space forbade m.t'on of more, but us lie thought of old days, what an array of battles rose up before him. He had often been asked if Hamp ton were a tactician, and in the nar row sense of that word, he would answer, “No.” He seriously doubt ed if Hampton ever read a book on tuc'ics in ids life. He was first a citiz n not a soldier. But in tlie broader sense. General Hampton was a grand tactician. He knew how to sicze the vantage points in a field o' - battle far better than most com- ruan'iers, and the en my was always guessing where lie would strike next. He kept them mystified. He said Hampt >n stalked the en emy lik; he was hunting big game As an instance in point, he cited Thevlllian’s station, where Hampton had defeated the enemy with odds of thr e to one against 1dm and had thereby checked one of Grant’s grand movements. It was due General Hampton, af ter General J. E. \V. Stuart’s death in April, 1864, that, he receive the appointment of lieutenant general, but did not receive it until the fol lowing year. General Butler here traced in de tail some of the stirring incidents of ihe war. citing incidents of conspic uous gallantry, and mentioned Maj. Thro. G. Baker, as having been left for (li*au. wlb.n he was here today on L.e stand, forty odd years afterward. ; \g'i d to tlie burning of Colum- | bin he gave a graphic account, nev <t before made. He said that he i Bmler) was ordered to remain in eha“ ,r e of the evacuation and see that no act of offense was eommit- ed. lie remained in the city three hours after General Hampton had quitted it and personally saw that fire had been started ail when h.' lef. hi i ahead of Sherman's ad vance guard, there was no fire in ike city. it was pri fec'. .• cbor tba* The fire .('.gun after all ('o:if"dtiate troops and let: 'he city fo, ,ua iy hour '. Gem ral Butler gave a ruubie ac count a! o of the nomination of "mupt' n in 1876 and ciml the speech tn.ob\ He also ea led attention to Hampton’s messages and letters a- containing wise deliverances In r lassie phrase. He predicted that Hampton would down !h<* o<*nturi<*s with increas- ' h t e • x roi Me vouth of the State. His peroration was pa tl.etic and impressive. Dairy and Food Commission's Report The .Minnesota Dairy and Food Commissioner's analysis shows that Kennedy’s Laxative Honey and Tar and Bee’s Laxative Honey and Tar contained opiates and croton oil. Op iates are poisons and croton oil is a violent poisonous purgative. Refuse to accept any but Foley’s Honey an ! Tar is a yellow package. Foley’s Hon ey and Tar contains no opiates cr dangerous drugs and is the best cough and cold cure. Cherokee Drug Co In tilings pertaining to enthusiasm, no man is sane who do s not know how to be insane on proper occasions. Dancing Proves Fatal. Many men and women catch colds a’ dances which terminate in oneu moilia and consumption. After ex posure. if Foley’s Honey and Tar is taken it will break up a cold and no serious results need be feared. Re fuse any but the genuine in a vellow package. Cherokee Drug Co. The first proof of a man’s incanaci- ty for anything is ids endeavoring to fix the stigma of failure jjpon others. Ne'>d a good cathartic? A pill is best. Say a pill like DeWitt's Little Early Risers. About tli» most reli able on the market. Sold by Chero kee Drug Co., Gaffney; L I) Allison, Cowmens. He who is false to present duty breaks a thread In the loom, and will find the flaw when he may have for gotten its cause. Rheumatism Is one of the constitutional diseases. It manifests Itself in local aches and pains,— inflamed joints and stilf muscles,—but it cannot be cured by local applications. It requires constitutional treatment acting through the blood, and tne best is a course of the great medicine Hood’sSarsapariUa which has permanently cured thousands of ca~cs. For testimonials of remarkable cures 5«nd for Book on Rheumatism, No. 7. C. L Hood Co., Lowell, Mass. Killed at Wilmington. Wilmington. N. C, Nov. 17—Bottle Johnson, a negro woman about twen ty five years of age, was brutally murdered tonight by Fiank James, a young South Carolina negro of bad police record. Today the woman was assaulted by James and early tonight, as she was returning home from a magistrate's office where she had sworn out. a warrant against tlie man, he again attacked her. With a razor ho cut her throat and savagely gash ed her body. Death resulted in a few moments from a hemorrhage, lames D at large. ‘‘For years I starved, then I bought a 50 cent bottle of Kodol Dyspepsia Cure, and what that bottle benefltted me all the gold in Georgia could not buy. I kept on taking it and in two months 1 went back to my work as maehinest. in three months I was as well and hearty as I ever was. I still use a little occasionally as I And it a fine blood purifier and a good tonic. May you live long and pros per"—C. N. Cornell, Roding, Ga„ Aug. 27, 1906. Kodol is sold here by Cherokee Drug Co., L. D. Allison. Cow- pens. Young courage and old caution make a strong pair. Give children a remedy with a pleasant taste. Don’t force unpleas ant medicine down their throats Ken nedy’s Laxative (containing) Honey and Tar is most pleasant to take. Children like it. and as a relief for colds, coughs, etc., there is nothing bettor. No opiates. Conforms to Na tional Pure Food and Drug Law Sold by Cherokee Drug Co. Gaffney; Self-reliance is one of the progeni tors of greatness. Cured of Bright's Disease. .Mr. Robert O. Burke. Eluora. N. Y., writes^ "Befor * I started to use Fo ley’s Kid nev Cure I had to get up from t t '.verity times a night, and I v Moated up with dropsy and my eyesight was so impaired I could scarcely see one of mv family across the room. I had given up hope of living, when a friend recommended Foley’s Kidney Cure. One 50 cent bottle worked wonders and before I had taken the third bottle the dropsy had gone, as wed as all other s.vm - toms of Bright’s disease.” Cherokee Drug Co. Nothing great was ever achieved without enthusiasm. Here is our condensed opinion of the Original Laxative Cough Syrup: “Nearly all other cough syrups are constipating, especially those contain ing opiates. Kennedy’s Laxative (con taining) Honey and Tar moves the bowels. Contains no opiates. Con forms to the National Pure Food and Drug Law. Sold by Cherokee Drug Co., Gaffney; L. D. Allison. Cowpens. Ix*t those falter who must and let those follow who dare. We have secured the agency r»r Orino Laxative Fruit Syrup, the new laxative that makes the liver lively, purifies tlie breath, cures headache and regulates the digestive organs. Cures chronic constipation. Ask us about it. Cherok-ee Drug Co. Where others quit is just where v - e get our second wind This is Worth Remembering. As no one is immune, every person should rememb r that Foley's Kidney Cure will cure any case of kidney or bladder trouble that is not beyond the reach of medicine. Cherokee Drug Co. 1 ■ 1 1 " 1 a S.ii. and Oliildren’ We have the prettiest and most complete line of Cloaks for Ladies and Children evei’ broi^ht t>) Gifaey, aal our prices are the most attractive. The ideal combination is the best quality at the lowest price—that's what we have. There is nothing shop-worn or shoddy here-all the latest. : : : : Boy’s and Hen’s Clothing and Overcoats are in demand and our line is full and attractive, both as to goods and price. We mike it a point te gi^e a perfect fit of both the person and the purse. What more could be asked .1 f Our Line of Shoes and Rubbers is the best and most varied we have ever carried. We can fit any foot, from the smallest to the largest. It is a pleasure to show our Shoes and we will appreciate it if you will give us an opportunity of showing you what we have. Dress Goods and Kindred Lines Our line of Dress Goods and Trimmings is one that we especially selected to meet the demands of this section. Our experience in this line has enabled us to. antici pate your wants and we have done so. You will make a mistake by not giving us an oppDrtunity of showing you wait we have. W. J. WILKINS COMPANY.