The ledger. [volume] (Gaffney City, S.C.) 1896-1907, June 07, 1907, Image 6

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I MISERY is one of woman's worst afflictions. It always leaves you weaker, and is sure to shorten your life and make your beauty fade. To stop pain take Wine of Cardui and it will help to relieve your misery, regulate your func tions, make you well, beautiful and strong. It is a re liable remedy for dragging down pains, backache, head ache, nervousness, irritability, sleeplessness, dizziness, fainting spells, and similar troubles. A safe and efficient medicine for all women’s pains and sickness. Mrs. J. L. Broadhead of Clanton, Ala. writes; "I have used Cardui for my disease, which was one peculiar to women, and it has completely cured me.” AT ALL DRUG STORES, IN $1,00 BOTTLES WRITE US A LETTER describing fully all your symptoms and we will send you Free Advice In plain sealed envelope. Ladies’ Advisory Dept„ The Chattancx>ga Medicine Co., Chattanooga, Tenn. J1D WINE OF CARDUI Fire, Life Health and Accident Insurance For Old Reliable Companies i NONE BETTER--! SOLICIT YOUR BUSINESS I am offering for sale real estate in every part of the city. Also some very line farm property, (tome and see my list of 100 different pieces of property I have for sale. I can supply your demands. 5.1 lots in one body, two blocks from Court House, near Irene Park, a fast growing part of the city, as well as the most attractive. Z. A. ROBERTSON. Bride to Le's Scheme For Safe guarding Her Husband. ADVANCE CURE SCHOOL Chicago Society Girl Is Studying Culi nary Art With Future Domestic. Newly Wed Cookery and Kitchen Striie Burred by Panacea For Evils. «^iiiit for \ouu£ woiiii n itl>o;:t fo be marrit*:!- train your domestic in ad- vanee. The j-as stove* is no lonwr iln* ofrvo of Hymen's bower. Throufrh t!ie ;eia of a .Kea^to soeu Kiri was receully discovered bow the yas stove eati be bouse trained and made to ••hueUr in every ignited burner, says lb' 1 iiiea.vm .Was. Miss Myrtie Belle Brown, m;.' North Park avenue, who i; soon to be married to Charles ilitj- [d’ls MeNel is the von in' woman who in th Jeon that warns upiitid r .-a < of iuilig‘*tion. Were her method a 0|»ted by the majority of en- 1'i^ed yoet!'* women the leer would soo • bo i ■ ■ ip r '*d from tb? featur-t of im : e.ll^a iion. Fe,lowing a e the nieans she is tak- i.iiX to in.me her husbjinJ a^niiist the snares of the average young wife's din.ter: Site is ta' injv cooking sehotd lesson. . h'ln* is paying for the tuition of a do- me .tie. whom she will retain when she beeoi>}(*s Mrs. McNeil, at the sr«me school. One of the gold plated advant::;., • o," this scheme will be that Mr. M 'N il wiil have two exjierts to tempt his palate and to safeguard him from iiuii ge.siion. They will work iu entire ac cord, having been trained by the same methods. There will be no grating Hound in the management of the klteb- en. save the occasional friction of the nutmeg. Miss Browu and a domestic attend a school of domestic science downtown. Miss Brown is greatly interested in the progress of this Institution and has been attending its classes for over a year. The idea of training a domestic for her service after the marriage dawned upon Miss Brown early in the spring. Shortly afterward the domes- Uc became u constant attendant on classes at the institution and vied with her mistress for honors. Meanwhile Mr. McNeil’s friends are congratulating him. He can gaze on the future with serenity and spy no biscuits “bound in boards,” slushy pie or murky coffee to make him shudder. Instead he will view a vista of mouth Irrigating salads, rapturous roasts and French thiugs that taste better than they sound. Pepsin tablets are strict ly barred from the picture. "I think it a good k’ea to get perfect co-operation net ween a cook and her mistress, and that is why I have sent a domestic to the school.” said Miss Brown the other day. "Often the mis tress cannot transmit an idea to the kitchen as si e w ould like to have it. I In tliis manner. I think, all one’s ideas I can readily be put into eatable form. “My don. lie goe- every Thursday j afternoon. v’n.!i is the special cook’s i afternoon. .’il.s s<“ sion is for domes- I ties only, hut i eon’t know of any oth- I er engaged girl who is sending her , AH the rest are from j useholds. It is a course | that slu* is taking, and 1 >y she comes home and t lings she has learned. ' i r 1 knew nothing about •ooking, but now I know emg Mlight the same cook iu adv. established I of ten less* . every Thur tells me tin Before I sent h her ability for * that she i 1 things in which I was instructed. It will be veiy easy for us to work to gether now.” There is a grave question in connec tion with tliis panacea revised by Miss Brown. V. hat if the trained cook should get up and leave? That is a problem over which many young wom en will run the risk of permanent wrin kles. A suggestion was made that such a cook should sign a contract be fore beginning her education. But, then, the husband is safe in the thought | that bis wife is as good as the profes- ; solnal at the bread board. OLD BY IMPURITIES^’^ \ Whenever a sore refoacs to heal it is beo, 3** ^ \ healthy, as ft should be, but U Infected with £ tlK Uood is not pure vm olood taint which has corrupted and polluted germa or • om V>.ue« usually afflicted with old sores are persona who haV^ation. dle life. The vitality of the blood and strength of th^acied or p^^turally begun to decline, and the poisonous germs which have'I have n# becsuSS of S sluggish and inactive condition of the system, or aortP* tt l a ffi|tary taial which has hitherto been held in check, now force an outlet oiP r TMace, armiL legs or other part of the body. The place grows red and angry festers a«d eaxs Into the surrounding tissue until it becomes a chronic And stubborn ulcer, fed and kept open by the impurities with which the blood is saturatedL Nothing is more trying and disagreeable than a stubborn, aon-bealing sore. The very fact that it resists ordinary remedies and treatments is good reason for suspicion; the same germ-producing cancerous ulcers is back of every old sore, and especially is this true if the trouble is an inherited one. Washes, salves, nor indeed anything else, appli vd directly to the sore, caa do any permanent good; neither will remov ing the sore with caustic plasters or the surgeon's knife make a lasting cure. If every particle of the diseased flesh were ihriicunir- fhSr-m T," 1 ' 3 , c ' m ?- if ■seated me but th* sore continued cause the trouble is m the blood, and the nffiS’KrioiaS&'Vi & “ OOD camhot bc CUT AWAY. end after taking it a while I was The cure must come bv a thorough cl^ana- ^ 4 «S *“* of the blood. I„ s. S. S. will be found effect of B. 8. s., and there has not s remedy for sores and ulcers of every kind. 8 °* tl16 * 0r * * lao * It is an unequalled blood purifier—one thej directly into the circulation and Z was afflicted wit of j four year Waa a small pimple at first bx gradually grew larger and wi m every way until I beo alarmed about it and oonsn goes SeSeS* Cellulose and the Pine Tree. Prom the standpoint of industrial utility, says Professor Duncan in Har- jier’s Magazine, the subject of cellulose ran only be characterized as stupen- [ dous. Take a pine tree, for Instance. Standing It Is ’worth $10 a ton; cut and 1 stripped it Is worth $15; boiled Into | pulp It Is worth $40; bleached It is worth $55; turned Into viscose and spun Into silk it is worth $5,500 Cures B|Ood, Skin Diseases. Cancer. Greatest Blood Purlfle r Free. If your blood is Impure, thin, dis eased, hot or full humors. If you have blood poison, cancer, carbun cles. eating sores, scrofula, eczema, itching, risings and bumps, scabby, pimply skin, bone pains, catarrh, rheumatism, or any blood or skin j disease, take Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. B.) Soon all sores heal, aches and pains stop and the blood Is made pure and rich. Druggists or by ex press $1 per large bottle. Sample free by writing Blood Balm Co.. At lanta, Ga. B. B. B. Is especially ad vised for chronic, deep-seated cases, as it cuers after all else fails. Sold In Gaffney. S. C., by Cherokee Drug Co. April o, 1907, 1 year. —Call and let us show you some thing entirely new in perfumery. We unhesitatingly affirm that Block's Is the moat eleqant perfumery we Have ever handled, as delicate as it Is last ing. Gaffnev Drug Co. promptly cleanses It of all poisons and taints. It gets down to the very bottom of the trouble and forces out every trace of im parity and makes a complete and lasting cure. S. 8. S. changes the quality of th« blood so that Instead of feeding the diseased PURELY VEGETABLE TV 1 , impurities, it nourishes th* irritated, inflamed flesh with healthy blood. Then the sore begins to heal, new flesh is formed, all pain and inflammatioa leaves, the place scabs over, and when S. 8. 8. has purified the blood th* •ore is permanently cured. S. S. S. is for sale at all first class drug store*. Write for our special book on sores and ulcers and any other medical advice yoa desire. We make no charge for the book or advice. TH£ SWIFT SPECmC CO., ATLANTA. GAm HONEST INSURANCE Plain, sure protection<to the family at premium rates fixed on|the basis of the actuaries’tables of life expectation, and therefore, absolutely fair is the only kind of life insurance written by The Southeastern Life Insurance Company of Spartanburg, S. C No ‘‘deferred” dividends, no “participating” policies, no schemes for profit, no opening for speculation, no element of scandal, but strict and straight Life Insurance of the kind that takes care of a man’s family by providing an immediate cash estate on his death, the time of all times when they will need it most keenly. It is every man’s sacred duty to carry life.insurance for the benefit of those de pendant upon him, and all men know this, hut no South Caroliuan need go out of his own State to get it. The Southeastern Life Insurance Company is a home institution, chartered by the State of South Carolina and subject to the South Carolina* laws governing Life Insurance. It is directedjby men whose homes and interests are in this Slate. It is an old line, Ifgarreserve. Straight Life Company of tae soundest kind,'and should have the support of the people of the State. Southeastern Life Insurance Company, ELLIOTT ESTES, Jr. General Agent, Spartanburg. S. C. Mar. 16th. 1908 A SALE OF MATTING CARPETS FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, JUNE 1 AND Rill ^ Remember the Date and Save Money All of this line of goods has advanced since March and will advance again July 1st. Three pieces heavy China Matting, jointless, cheap on to day’s market at 22 1 -2c, our sale price, 15c. Seven pieces 90-pound Matting, China, cheap today at 25c, sale price, 19c. Five pieces 180-thread warp Jap Matting, a good 25c grade, 19c. Remnants of Matting in lengths running from 3 yards up to 18 yards, suitable for hall, stairs, rugs, etc. at a big saving to you. Three bales more of those beautiful Matting Rugs, 36x72 inches for only 65c. Axminster Rugs, 36x72 inches, a regular $5.00 grade, in one pattern only, Russian design, 19 of them for $2.98. 9x12 Tapestry Rugs, our regular $15.00 grade, best pat terns woven, only eight of these, while they last, $ 12.50. “Krex” Rugs and Art Squares 9xld Granite Rugs, large enough for a room and cheap at $5.00, sale price, $3.90. Think of covering your room for only $3.90! One Velvet Carpet worth $1.50 yard, beautiful parlor pat tern, made, lined and laid for only $1.19. A genuine bargain for some one. Remnants cf Velvet, Axminster and Ingrain Carpets from 1 1 -2 to 15 yar2s each, at a saving to close. Remember the Dats-Friday and Saturday, June 7th and 8th. These prices are for this date only. Velvet Carpet, two pieces, only 88c. CARROLL BYERS Gaffney, South Carolina.