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I THE LARGEST CIRCULATION of Any Newspaper In tho Fifth Congressional District of 8. C. EVERY ONE PAID IN ADVANCE LEDGER SEMI-WEEKLY — PUBLISHED TUESDAY AND FRIDAY we GUARANTel THE RELIABILITY of Every Advertiser Who Uses the Columns of This Paper. BEST ADVERTISING MEDIUM. A Newspaper In All that the Word Implies and Devoted to the Beet Interest of the People of Cherokee County. ESTABLISHED FEB. 16, 1894. GAFFNEY, 8. C., FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1907. tVOO A YEAR. SENATOR. TILL MAN'S SPEECH. FITTING FINALE BRRONSVILLE AFFAIR TO THE A treat Deal of Historic Narration of Peculiar lnt®rest to South Caroli nians. Washington, Jan 23.—Cervantes laughed chivalry out of existence in Mp incomparable work of humor, ‘Don Quixote,” making the Nick Carters, the Laura Jean Libbeys. the Archibald C. Gunters and others of Itoeir Ilk look like a wooden Indian cigar sign in front of a small shop am a back street in bad weather. And Senator Tillman's crude minhtrel sketch of the “Greatest deliberative body’* gavS an imptus to the exit of the Brownsville negro troop discharge alair, which has fluttred phantas- magoricaliv over the Senate chamber i battle charged by men since Congress convened the first j men who had seen real battles, where negro militia organized by carpetbag ! Carolina today would be a bowling gers. The carpetbag governor had | wilderness, a second Santo Domingo, come to Washington and had persuad- 1 It took the State fifteen years to re ed General Grant to transcend his au thority by issuelng to the State its quota of arms under the militia ap propriation for twenty years in ad vance. in order to get enough to equip these negro soldiers. They used to drum up and down the roads with their fifes and their gleaming bayonets, equipped with new Spring- field rifles and dressed in the regula tion uniform. It was lawful, I sup- po c e. but these negro soldiers or this negro militia—for they were never soldi Lira—growing more and more bold, let drop talk among themselves where the white children might hear their purpose, and it came to our ears. This is what they said: The President Is our friend. The North is with us. We intend to kill ail the white men, take the land, mar ry the white women, and then these white children will wait on us. Those fellows forgot that these were in South Carolina some forty- odd thousand ex-Confederate soldiers, men who had worn the gray on a hun dred battlefields; men who had charg ed breastworks defended by men In blue; men who had defended lines of In blue; cover and begin to move forward again along the paths of development and progress; and In consequence of the white men interpreting the word “liberty” to means the liberty of white people and not the license of black ones, the State Is In the very vanguard of Southern progress, and can point to the result as the abso lute justification for every act which we performed in ’76, however lawless our acts may be in the eyes of the Senator fro mWisconsin. South Carolina and Louisiana were the two last States to throw off the blood sucking vampriers which had been set over them by the recon struction acts. I would not have tried to do more than to give a statement of facts the other day, but I was not permitted to db so. I was ordered to take my own time, and I am now taking It in ans wer. * / Now, Mr. President, a word about lynching and mv attitude toward It. A great deal has been said In the newspapers. North and South, about mv responsibility In connection with tht~ matter. Mv position has been There are written laws and unwritten laws, and the unwritten laws are al ways the very embodiment of savage justice. The Senator from Wisconsin is incapable of understanding condi tions in the South or else he has lost those natural impulses which for cen turies have been the characteristics of the race to which we belong. Tacitus tells us that the “Germanic people were ever jealous of the virtue of their women.” Germans. Saxons, Englishmen, they are practically one, springing from the same great root. That trinity of words, the noblest and holiest in our language, womanhood, wifehood, motherhood, have Saxon origin. I believe with Wordsworth— it is my religion— A mother Is a mother still, the no blest thing alive. And a man who? speaks with light ness or flippancy or discusses cold- alone can furnish legal evidence, and i make her testify to the fearful ordeal through which she has passed, under going a second crucifixion? That is what the Senator from Wisconsin says he would do. and he is welcome to all the honor he can get out of It. Our rule is to make the woman wit ness, prosecutor, judge, and jury. I have known Judge Lynch’s court to sit for a week while suspect after sus pect has been run down and arrested, and In every instance they were brought into the presence of the vic tim. and when she said. “That is the man,” civilization asserted itself, and death speedv and fearful, let me say —certainly speedy—was meted out I have never advocated, I have de precated and denounced, burning for this or anv other crime. I beliye’ it brutalizes any man who participates in a cruel punishment like that. I am satisfied to get out of the world such nurnosely mlsrenresented. and the ing In segregated farm houses, more bloodedlv a matter so vital as the purity and chastity of womanhood Is j creatures a disgrace to his own mother and un- 1 * ar as people of the South worthy the love of a good wife. ! ore concerned, it 1® said I *o not re- liook at our environment in the r)1 ^ Ken t them here. Somehow or South, surrounded, and in a very other I seem to reorosent one State large number of count! -s and in two . ,n ' 1 <1 ° hesitate to assert that it States outnumbered, by the negroes— is my religious belief that on this engulfed, as it were, in a black flood 5U W®? t of rape * 0 v . oice the feel ng of semi barbarians. Our farmers, llv- an< the purpose of 9o per cent of the NEWS ITEMS OF LOCAL INTEREST. EVENTS IN GAFFNEY AND CHER OKEE. true white men of the Southern Recent Happenings | n and the City and Other Events Gathm- ed by the Local Nawa Editor. «• Cotton sold yesterday at 10:60 wttl a very light offering. “A Country Kid,” with band and orchestra, will be the attraction al the Star Theatre next Thursday eve ning. The firm of Hause & Coyle fcM been dissolved. Mr. Coyle will co»- tinue the business. His shop la is The Ledger building. Painters have transformed the ap pearance of Mrs. Dora Hopper’s resi dence. It looks a thousand dollars better than it did a week ago. Senator from Wisconsin has assum- or less thinly scattered through the Whether I do or nor I voice aim**, v^u*icoo me —^ —- — —. r . j # i The regular services at Midway Monday in December last. While the ! heroes had to do. They forgot that 1 ed to himself the right to arraign me country, have negroes on even- hand. own - 1 a ™ . asnan J ea OI tnem. | w jjj be con( j uc .t ed by pastor. Rev. _ i __ . I . _ ■ * a. _ a > • .. I 11 'i \r t o't /-t r< f m o L* tVav* T'h d tyv ' __ __ _ _ _ IE. G. Ross, next Saturday at 2.30 p, m. and Sunday at 11 a. m. A cordial invitation is extended to all to attend. attempt at fun was the “last lay” of nutting in uniform a negro man with in this body and to pass Judgement of For forty years these have be n condemnation in most biting and vin dictive phras?. It is not worth while to ask who made John C. Snooner * lnt; mv keeper or gave hfm the right to up-1 assure this hectoring and masterful the minstrel in that particular line, j not sense enough to get out of a show- the Senator will continue in his frank, er of rain did not make him a soldier, open, straight forward way to utter So when this condition of desperation his views whenever occasions arive. had reached the unbearable ^pint; and scheming and plotting and plan ning about that one piece of logisla lion, offered as a resolution by Sen ator Foraker, that the people of the entire country were getting heartily sick of it. it was a fitting finale— taught the damnable heresy of equali ty with (he white man. imule the pup pet, of scheming ■politicians, the In- strumem for the furtherance of noli tical ambitions. Some of them have on us. we set to work to take the j attitude. Whith a self right/'ousness lust enough educ ation to be able to government away from them. that it characteristic of his breed, he read, but not al'vaya to understand We know—who knew better?—thatldA-- the role of the Pharisee, spreads i what they read. Their minds are I have no apologies to make for them. The Senators from Wisconsin and! ihe North then was a unit in its op position to Southern ideas, and that it was their purpose to perpetuate ne- that speech of Senator Ti.lman Mon-1 gro governments in those States day, which preceded the passage of where it could be done by reason of th« amended resolution. That speech there being a negro majority. Hav- wag something more than an attempt al fun, although its exordium was a Mi* up of prominent participants in aiastrel show style. The speaker, after this preliminary, launched into a reply to Spooner who has bitterly attacked him a few days preceding for giving utterance to such expres sions as “We shot them; we killed thorn, and we will do it again.” (Them, of course, referring to the ne groes). The address contains a great 4ea) of historic narration, peculiarly of Interest to South Carolinlgns. and coacludes with an eloquent, earnest, patriotic appeal to the people of the North for relief from the legislation which proclaims the 14th and 15th amendments as the law of th; land, la handling the speecn for the press the Associated Press gives a very ing made up our minds, we set about it as practical men. I do not say it in a boastful snint. broad his phviacterDs. and r nl ^ up (those of children, while thev have the the Senator from South Carolina for | passions and strength* of men. sentence and pronouu' , ''S his decree. These are bis words: Mr. Spooner. Now President. T be lieve in law. I believe that wherever a man perpetrates a crime, or a crime is eommiteed and the perpetrator or suspected perpetrator can be identi- although I am proud to say it. that fled, the law should seize him. I be- Colorado may rave, the newspapers may howl, but men who were reared bv virtuous mothers and who revere womanly puritv as the most price less iowei of their civilization will do us we of the South have done. On this "question I take back nothing and apologize for nothing. I spurn and scorn the charlatanry and cant, the hypocrisy and cowardice, the inso- 1 the people of South Carolina are the nurest-blooded Americans in America. Thev are the descendants of the men who fought with Marion, with Sum ter, with Pickens, and our other he roes in the Revolution. We have had no admixture of outsiders, except a small trickling In from the North and from other Southern States. Clashes came. The negro militia grew unbearable and more and more Insolent. I am not speaking of what T have read: I am apeaking of what I know. There were two militia com panies in my township and a regi ment in my county. We had clashes with these negro militiamen. The amall and unsatisfactory report: so Hamburg riot was one clash. In which far as common justice to the speech j seven negroes and one white man goes. The following is the general | w-ere killed. A month later we had outline of what Senator Tll.man said, the Ellentop riot, in which no one taken from the Congressional Record: ! ever knew how many negroes were Hevo he is entitled to a trial before sentence. I believe he is entitled to a dav in court. I am onnosed. Mr. President, to anv man making himself judge, juror, and executioner. I look upon It as shock ing beyond expression in civilized communities, Mr. President, for the ponulace to seize a human being, charee him with crime, drag him to a tree protesting bis lnnoc Q nse. and bnng him or burn him at the stake. “In the corrupted currents of this world” It sometimes happens. All just men deplore It. No man ought to en- -courage it. It Is'a crime against civi lization to encourage it. I have looked with peculiar honor and pride ""on the brave, continued efforts of Southern governors to con- Taueht that thev are oppressed, and with breasts pulsating wiih hatred of the whites, the younger generation of nP"To men are roamiag over tho land, passing back and forth without . .... . .. „ ... . - hindrance, and with no possibility of or cvmdi ions in the South today adequate police protection to the com- bel,eve 1 understan d the eonditi munities in which they are residing. Now let me suonose a case. Let us take anv Senator on this floor—I will nob particularize—take him lence and effrontery of any and all men who call my motives in question. Now. Mr. President, I will give a very brief outline of my conception I conditions there as well as any other man. I may be mistaken. Never in the history of the world has a high-spirited and chivalrous II was adriot for the Senator to shift killed, but there were forty or fifty t i n every civjliJied community is intern! hom e alone for a brief while. Some Ihe minds of his auditors and the or a hundred. It was a fight between d’d to throw around a man accused lurking demon who has watched for readers of the Record from the Presi-! barbarism and civilization, between ' ‘ ~ _ it dent’s outrageous discrimination the African and the Caucasian, for against the black soldiers and favor- mastery. ing the white ones to my own utter- .It was then that "we shot them: ances and attitude toward the negro rapists, and the shrewdness and dis- honestv of the argument and the in- decency of the attack was emphasiz- us.' “You must stop this rioting.” w.e ; ' And. Mr. President. I have been ed when the Senator from Wisconsin had decided to take the government shocked more than once. I was proceeded to quote from a former away from men so debased as w-re | shocked the other day here bv the •peeeh of mine in this body .in which the negroes—I will not say baboons: ! statement of th^ Senator from South I said: I never have called them baboons: I ' Carolina justifying it and sunnortmg from some great and well-ordered Xfp " ? ° n V 8 ?,® 8 Tv™* State in the North, where there are t and dangerous situation That possibly twenty thousand negroes, as a 1 cris,s ls ^Proaching e^ry thought- there are in Wisconsin, with over two u mni | mM3t confess. That there is million white. Let us carry this Sen- f ° h f v a "f fe ^ h a DPy solution ator to the backwoods in South Cam- doubt f d b * a11 : The Senator from lina. put him on a farm miles from a TTZ „ tbe ^ ^ lon town or railroad, and environed with mJS.T 8 e f 0f tb ° h8I !i <1 * tb negroes. We will suppose he has a ° n t0 ^, 8nd 7 bo fair young daughter just budding Into tb “ k J * ^ m ° f v t ®* k v eP h q !l et H a Jj d T womanhood: and recollects this, the “T* 1 ®* tbat h?,,!* 8 ? or1eIna1,y white women of the South are in a ^ ted the forc l b111 - bat “"f? 8 ? state of siege: the greatest car e is J 88 f WI * ,ng a „ d that !t ,s exercised that thev shall at all times t b "^ n , pa8 v; ®? nt ?7. d8 wher* It is possible not be left a lone ' \ X and wh,te ; or unprotected, but that can not al- "I'f,! 1,v e together and that the rest - — wav, and l n every instance be the ?JJ b f have fo r tbe beb, K serve the law to maintain neace to case. That Senator’s daughter under- ! ert th QJ" atter to rest; that there has make tbat a real shield while the law ! t^kes to visit a neighbor or is l°ft ,, en n ? d ' SCUS8 l° n among the Repub- • — Means in this chamber such as mark ed his earlier service in the Senate unon he subject. He says he knows of crime. I have admired Governor the onnortunitv seizes her: she is , n 8 r 'or It: I have admired the , ohok-d or beaten Into insensibility °1 JL 0 , wav tp P^clnltate a race of other States in the and ravished, her body prostituted. c ° n, '| ct ban . to be alwyas talking t: I admire tbe governor her purity destroyed, her chastity - out one Anf l be hold* me up as was then that “we killed them;” itjanywhere who has done his uttermost taken from her. and a memory brand was th°n that “we stuffed ballot box- t 0 nrevent lynching and to nunish es.” After the troops came and told j lynching. Mr. D. W. Ramsey, of Shelby, N.C., is visiting relatives and friends in the city. Mr. Ramsev is the Inventor of a cotton stalk chonner. He has one of the machines with him and is ex plaining its merits to those interest ed. There will be a play, by local tal ent at the Star Theatre Friday night February 8th, proceeds £o go to Me thodist church. An interesting nnusle- al program has also been arranged la addition to the plav in which some ol our best singers will take part. 1 .The attention of Ledger readers la calle-i to the announcement of Auditor W. D. Camp, which can be found 1* another column of this Issue. The time for returning taxes is growla# short and the auditor desires to sare the taxpayers undue annoyance. Telephone subscribers will regret to know that Miss Juanita Pinson who has been one of the “Hello Glrla* at eenral for some time, and who has "Iven general satisfaction because of ! her uniform courtesy and nleaslag manner, has resigned her position. Bessie, the little daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Wilkins, fell from a chair in the dining room last Tuesday and bit her tongue so badly that It had to be held together with thr*a (stitches. Dr. Steediv attended to th* j wound and the little girl was playing with her dolls the next day. We hop* she may soon be well. ed on her brain as with a red hot iron to haunt her "Mit and day as long as tbe greatest sinner in that regard. You can not pick un a paper any day but that you will find an appeal from Nature’s Catarrh Cure. sb^ lives. Moore has drawn U s the some , c , on ; picture in most granhic language: One fatal remembrance, one sorrow tbat throws vention. some resolution of some kind somewhere denouncing the wrongs ■’ n the negroes in the South and demanding justice for them. Those W e shot them; w e killed them; and believe they are men. but some of its continuance. If there is one man Its bleak shade alike over our lovs Daners circulate in the South, They ~ A if o n-o \ tv ~ ~ 1„x _ xt_ ■» ..... ..... _ J'-J cr/-\ nr Ohm V. . 1 „ w« will do it qgain. them are so near akin to the monkey ; under the sky who ought not to do When I asked for permission to that scientists are yet loobinf; for the , it u is a maker of ' the laws which point this out and show how unfair missing link. We saw the evil of glv-! srovern the people and unmanly was the attack he shut ing the ballot to creatures of this Mr p res Ment thi* u not an attack- me off incontinently, refusing abso-, kind, and saving that one vote shall ^ , s 5t intendPd to 3 ^ Sen : 1 Jtelv to give me an opportunity to ex- count regardless of the man behind plain or defend myself. i.. . . . .. ,. , , - , i ator from South Carolina. It Is a. . . . .. . ... „ the vote and whether that vote wou’d uIpa fnr coo ., eovernment ord-rlv ; In otber words - a deat ^ Me. Now. what about those words of kill mine. So we thought we would Lvornmen^ real ihertv—not the This y0Un * R,rl thus flighted aad in a- tharr, ” in wViQf *v„* «* * i. covem mem, real nneriy noi me i 1* . , and our woes, To which life nothing brieht-’r can bring, ^ For which joy hath no balm and af fliction no sting. Se mi ?he slnator from wLoasm ' ^LTUf.. l,,e shaB< " ot a i »M . What l s liberty? It la not linen- man to make a man. was in this Chamber when I used that Grant sent troops to maintain the bp •■fVSrn to do that which the^aw language. There were present a large carpetbag government In power and n trmi£f” That is whit liberty is number of leading Republicans. I to protect the negroes in the ri~ht to t ^ A, a f ar ^ fln h-re or e,, 8 ' challenged each and every mao here vote. He merely obeyed the law. I 1 that an man h e or e . to show wherein the people of South have no fault to fln<( with him. It ™ Carolina were not justified, and no 1 was his policy, as he announced, to i der ' law ^ 8snes8 ^ lI l bave £1 ,cb one dared reply. I wil reoeat the enforce the law. because If it were 1 statement of fact and circumstances, bad then it would be repealed Then L 011 and v* 1 ® b,a indu ace It was In 187C. thirty years ago, and it was that we stuffed ballot boxes | aw the people of South Carolina had been because desperate diseases require 1 a**!^ t L e " I ana living under negro rule for eight years, desnerate remedies, and having re- at any ^ i ha-e There was a condition bordering up- solved to take the State awav we w, fl 0 o D , ™ y f lT ^ J on anarchy. Misrule, robbery, and hesitated at nothing. I I’lstifled it /° r on® " nd one murder were holding high carnival. I It is understood that the Republl- ?? The people’s substance was being cans will assume all responsibility ^ 81 ^'/, f ^i rf ll n d ! h LL!ll^ r f nf •toten and there was no Incentive to for the condition In the South at that o n ®,pi^ Tnrnrinlm^ J labor. Onp legislature was composed time. They have never shirked it. i ^onth Carolina I proclaimed tba ^- al vw though I had taken the oath of office to snnuort the law and enforce It. I would lead a mob to lynch any man, black or white, who had ravished a off a majority of negroes, most of The Senator from Wisconsin at mowl- wbom could neither read nor write, edged his participation in it the other They were the easy dupes and tools day. He has no apology to make for of as dirty a band of vampires and it. I do not ask anybody to apologize ., , _ ... robbers as ever preyed upon a pros- for It; I am only justifying our own b a 1 9 k , 0r n ^ b !®i,vZ^*lil S trate people. There was riotous llv- action. I want to say now that we attltud ® . caand deliberately tak ing In the statehouse and sessions of hive not shot any n o groes in South en ’ and 1u8tiflpd b> conscience in the legislature lasting from year to Carolina on account of politics since 1876. We have not found it neces-, sary. (Laughter.) Eighteen hundred Wisconsin sneaks of “lynching bees, and seventy six happened to bo the Aa far 88 lynching for rape is con hundredth anniversary of the Derla- <‘o r n pd . the word is a misnomer, ration of Independence, and the action When stem and sad faced white men while. They were taxing us to death of the white men of South CaroMna n,, t to d°ath a creature in human and confiscating our propefTy. We In taking the State away from the form who has deflowered a white wo- year. Our lawmakers never adjourned. They were g°tting a per diem. They felt that thev could Increase their in- eome by remaining in session all the the sight of God. Mr. Presld°nt. the Senator from felt the very foundations of our civi lization crumbling beneath onr feet, that w#were sure to be engulfed by the black flood of barbarians who were surrounding us and had been out over us by the Army under the reconstruc tion acts. The sun of hope had dis anoeared behind a cloud of gloom and despair, and a condition had arls- negroes we regard as a second decia- 1 there is nothing of the “bee ration of Independence by the Cauca about it. There is more of the feel- slan from African barbarism j 'n? of participating as mourner at a The other day the Senator from i funeral. They have avenged the Wisconsin defined liberty. “Liberty r,r < i atest wrong. th« blackest crime In is that.” I believe he said, “which Is 1 ’’N tbe category of crimes, and they permitted by law to be done” The have done it. not so much as an act Senator has the right to give what- e’""- Idea of liberty he may have, and eu such as has never b°en the lot of I have no objection to that, in a gen- white men at anv time in the history »*ral wav it is a very good definition, of the world to endure. Life ceased Bqt I here declare that if the white to be worth having on the terms un-' men of South Carolina had been con- der which we were living, and in dm- jtent to obey the laws which karf been peratlon w© determined to take the forced down our throats at the nolnt, _ government away from the negroes, of th“ bavonet and submit to the re into a drity which must he worshln- We reorgunized the Democratic construction acts which has thrust ed regardless of luctlce. He h?s stud- partv with one nlank. and onlv one | the ballot Into the hands of Ignormt i i°d law hooks until h's mind has o© plank, namely, that “this is a white and debased negroes, slaves five com P saturated with the b|gntr-r which man’g country and white men must! vears before, and only two or three ignores the fundamental nrlDcin’e In of retribution in behalf of the victim as a duty and as a warning as to what any man mav expect who shall re neat the offense. They are looking to the protection of their own loved ones. The Senator from Wisconsin pra tes About th° law. He erects the law o evervwher°. Our schools, suoport darker or ed by the taxes Dald by the wh lte neo^ nle. are educating these negroes to read such apneals. If talking about a race conflict Is going to nreciniate one. I wish to ask. has the Senator forgotten the procla mation of William H. Seward that brutalized drags herself to her father there was “an irrepressible conflict” and tells him what has hapnened. Is between the North and the South on there a man here with red blood In the matter of slavery and that his his veins who doubts what impulses Prophecy came true? Does he for 4he father would feel? Is It any won- Ket that Lincoln declared that the Re der that the whole countryside rises Publican could not 'exist half slave as one man and with set, stern faces and half free? Are we to hide our seek the brute who has wrought this heads in the sand, like an ostrich, and infamy? Brute, did I say? Why, Mr. ismore the dangerous signs of tbe President, this crime is a slander on Hmes and wait until the / tempest the brutes. No beast of the field bursts upon usJn all of Its fury? The forces his female. He waits Invita tion. It has been left for something in the shape of a man to do this ter rible thing. And shall snch a crea ture. because he has the semblance of a man. apoeal to the hug? Shall men clod-bloodedly stand up and de- S°nator from Wisconsin, living in a Northern Commonwealth whe^ there are no negroes, who knows nothing about the situation, can not under stand ft and will not take the trouble to go and study it What ri~M has he to criticise me, who sees down the mand for him the right to hare a fair co«d these dangers and would try to trial and be ’mulshed in the regular course of justice? So far as I am evade them? The Senator warns us that the concerned he has put himself outside i fourteenth amendment contemplates the pale of the law. human- and di vine. He has sinned against the Holy Ghost. He has invaded the holy tb reduction of representation in the electoral college and In the House of Representatives on account of the of holies. He h*'- struck civiftzation I South’s attitude. It is a question of % blow, the most deadly and croel 1 oolitical jfower or Is it a question of that the imagination can conceive. I the Preservation of our civilization? It is idle to reason about it; it is idle I The Senate last week unanimously te preach about it. Our brains reel declared that the war of 1861-1865 was »nde?> the staggering blow and hot j not a rebellion . It struck out the bl^od surges to the heart: Clvillza j words “war of the rebellion” and sub tlon peels off us, any and all of us | stituted "civil war.” If this means who dr© men. and we revert to the anything, it means that the lawmak- original savage type whose impulses ers of this country have at last come Sensible and Scientific Way to Cure this Disagreeable Disease. Nearly everyone sufferes at an* time or another with catarrh. The natural way to cure this dis agreeable diseas° is by applying heal ing medications direct to the diseased spot. In no other w'y can this be dona as naturally as by the us<? of Hvomei breathed through the neat pocket ia- haler that comt«*? with every outfit. Put several drops of Hyomei in the inhaler and t^en for a few minutes, four or five times a day, let the air you breathe come through it. In that ’” n all the air that enters the nasal passages, the throat or the lungs. Is filled with Hyomel’s healing medica tion.. reaching the most remote air cells of the respiratory organs, de stroying all catarrhal germs and p '' / 'thing and healin 0, the irritated mu- cot is membrane. A few days’ use of Hyomei wifi show how nuickly it relDves all ca tarrhal conditions and you will not have to u«e it long before you find It has effected a complete and lasting cure. So strong Is the Gaffney Dru*» Oo'a. faith in the power of Hyom c i to cur# catarrhal troubles that with , every dollar outfit thev give a guarantee te refund the money unless the r*m°dy eive« satisfaction. The Gaffn°v Drug Co. takes all the responsibility snd you cannot afford to suffer longer with ntarrh when an off^r like thla is made to you. Should extra bottles of Hvomle he need°d they can be ohtaind for 50c, making this one of the most econo mical as well as the most rellabl« re medies for catarrh that Is known. under any and all such circumstances has always b°en to “kill! kill! kill!” I do not know what the Senator from Wisconsin would do under these circumstances: neither do I care. I have three daughters, but. so help me God. I had rather find either 6ne of them killed by a tiger or a bear and gather up her br>n°s and bury them, conscious ^hat she had died In the nurlty of her maidenhood, than have her crawl to me and tell me the hor rid story that she hsd b°en robbed pf the lewel of her womanhood by a black fiend. The wild beast would o-l" obev the Instinct of nature, and wo would hunt him down and kill him hist as soon as possible. Wh»t shall we do with a man who has outbnit°d the brute and committed an act which govern it.” Under that banner we ' generations temoved from the bsrba [this government: “Law |j|^ fioth'ng i is more cruel than death? Trv him* went to battle. We had had 8,000 j rians of Africa, the State of South I more than the will of tfcp peoole. M j Drag the victim Into court, for she to realize that it was a civil war and that it was a contest over constitu tional Interpretation, and that the Southern neonl© fought for what they believed to me their constitutional rights. A couole of days ago, at Lexington, a distinguished citizen of Massachu setts a man of affairs, a representa tive of Northern civilization, a soldier in the Union army, proclaimed that b« bad fought Lee dunng mo«t of his «ervlc« in the war. and would have bc^n glad to kill him then: but he recognized the greatness of tnat "’•and man’s character and said that if he had be°n In the South he would ’'ave fought with Lee. That is ail w© want anybody to acknowledge— (Continued on page 2.) J A Valuable Leaaon. “Six vears ago ! learned a valuable i lesson.” writes John Pleasant, of Magnolia Ind. "I then began taking Dr. King’s New Life Pills, and th# longer I tak© them the better I find them.” Thev nleaa© overybodx.. G>iap- anteed at Cherokee Drug Co. 26a —B«at thing on eartfc for cold and grin. Nature's Cough Remedy and Grip Tablets. If a Rhc bottle of Na- (ture'e Cough Remedy and a 2!?c box of Grip Tablet* don't knock that cold we wl'l refund that 75c aa cheerfully aa we took it. Gaffney Drug Co. A GUARANTEED CURff FOR RILE* Itching. RMnd Bleeding 4,, P-rntnidlnE Piles Dnirglata are author’f«*| to ■*» I fund monev If PAZO OINTMENT fajla tr> core In 6 to M .lava Rite —we are pushing seed luet nom Everybody knows that we are In th# drug buslnes* Gaffney Drug Ca