The ledger. [volume] (Gaffney City, S.C.) 1896-1907, September 23, 1907, Image 3
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TO
[ JAMESTOWN EXPOSITION \
We will give away, free, a return ticket to Jamestown
Exposition. Every purchaser of a Buggy during the next ^
ihirty days will be given a coupon, a duplicate of which n
will be kept on file at our office, 9,nd when twenty (20)
Buggies have been sold, these coupons will be placed in a
hat and drawn out by a disinterested child. The holder
of the “lucky number” will get the FREE TRIP TO
JAMESTOWN EXPOSITION.
We Make and Guarantee Our Harness.
[SMITH HARDWARE
n
THE GAFFNEY TIN MINE.
Tht owner inetalllno New Machinery
Ore pane Out 70 Far cent Tin.
(King’e Mountain Herald.)
An interview with Capt. 8- 8. Rosa,
of Gaffney, wliile an incidental callor
at our office last Friday, gave us
much information in regard to hie tin
interests that we did not know before.
Mr. Ross talks interestingly, but not
unreasonably about his tin Interests
about Gaffney.
Mr. Ross is now installing new ma
chinery at his mine since what he has
is not sufficient to do the work. He
has been compelled to suspend work
until he can get ventilation. This he
can do by using compressed air, or
bv an inclined shaft. He says he will
adopt the latter because this will give
him an additional outlet for ore. As
it now is, the steam used in pumping
the water heats up the mine till it
is impossible to work in it.
The shaft is now 135 feet deep, and
then from this It has been tunneled
out for a considerable distance. He
says he has a fissure vein five feet
wide and rich. He has shipped 52
tons of ore which analyzed 70 per
cent. The last car load he shipped
went to Germany. Before that he
shipped to England. He has had no
returns yet from his last carload, as
it has only been shipped about two
weeks. He has 50 tons now out and
ready for shipment. What he ship
ped was worth $650 per ton.
For billlousness. constipation, diz
ziness and disorders of the stom
ach take Gaffney Drug Co.’s pink
pills.
The School Enrollment
The enrollment In the city schools
is in excess of last year. Superinten
dent Spears urges upon the patrons to
help him to make this the most pros
perous year i n the history of the
Gaffney schools.
The teachers are as follows: Cen
tral school, B. J. Wells, principal and
teacher of ninth grade; Mrs. W. F.
Humphries, teacher of eighth grade;
Miss Elsie Carlisle, teacher of seventh
grade; Miss Lila Conner, teacher of
sixth grade: Miss Mary Bramlett,
teacher of fifth grade; Miss Annie
Miller, teacher of third grade; Miss
Julia McSwain. teacher of the second
grade, and Miss Leila Morgan, teacher
of the first grade.
Cherokee Avenue school: Prof. F.
E. Shuford, principal and teacher of
fourth and fifth grades; Miss lid
Ware, teacher of third grade; Miss
Ida Crocker, teacher of the second
grade and Mrs. F. E. Shuford. teacher
of the first grade.
Limestone Mills school; Mrs. G. P.
Hamrick, principal and teacher of the
first, second and third grades.
Colored school, Rev, R. C. Camp
bell, principal, and Gussie Gaither
and Eliza Littlejohn, assistants.
—Bay a box of the Gaffney Drug
Co.’s Violet Talcum Powder for 25c
and get one of their beautiful Powder
Puffs free.
Sept. 23 2t.
—The Gaffney Drug Co. have 288
beautiful Powder Puffs, In all the
colors, which they are giving away to
their customers. Come and get one
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SHEET METAL WORKERS
We are ready for buaintss. We do all kinds of
Sheet Metal work, Cornice, Finials, Cresting,
Tanks and anything else you need. AU kinds
of repair work. We make a specialty of
Roofings. Slate, Tin and Metal Shingles, and
are prepared to do all work promptly. All work
guaranteed. We ask you to share your busi
ness with us. Phone 200. : : : : :
Yours for business,
O. G. WILSON & CO
Opposite Ledger Office.
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fk FALL AND WINTER $
I OPENING OF MILLINERY j
§ Monday Evenii, 7 to 9 O'clock, Tuesday and .,i
* ".' ' r 23rd, 2401 and 25tli. ’
I TWITE!}. IVO OJARDS.
ILLINERY that is stylish and up-to-date. Millinery that is different to that you see in the
other shops. Millinery that is imported from France and Japan. Millinery to suit you
in style and price.
DRESS GOODS, SILKS AND TRIMMINGS—Everything that is new and novel in do
mestic and imported. Let us show you this line. We are glad to have you give us a look and
compare prices. 54-inch all wool Broadcloth, in black and colors and54-inch blue clay Worst
eds for only 79c. 34-inch all wool 50c Dress Flannels, to start the season we offer this excel
lent fabric in black and colors for only 29c
New Fall Suits and Cloaks
Arriving daily. Styles that£especially illus^
trate the trend of fashion. Some fitted,
some semi-fitted, some loose. Coats, 27-
50 inches long, plain and fancy materials,
from $3.50 up to $125.00.
New Fall Shoes
“Queen Cotton” and “Utz & Dunn.” The
swellest, most comfortable Shoes that it is
possible to produce out of shoe leather.
Prices $2.50 to $4.00.
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Curtains
of Lace,Tapestry and Chenelle. Everything
under price. You cannot duplicate a single
Curtain at the price we.^ are offering them
today.
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Carpets, Mattings and Rugs
New arrivals at old prices. Carpets and
Mattingslaid—no trouble to you.
The Yale
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Keep Up Appearances.
This store is run on the theory that the
majority of young men want stylish clothes
-that they’re as jealous of their appearance
as any young men, anywhere.
Average clothing, the kind we don’t sell,
is made in a rush and in large quantities; like
they turn out castings in an iron foundry,
or cut boards from a log in a saw mill. One
garment is like another; no individuality;
nothing distinctive, inside or out.
Between such clothing and that we sell
there is all the difference of ordinary and
superior tailoring; and this is the same in
clothing as the difference between hot
air and steam in a locomotive.
Each garment we sell is separately made
with special care. The tailoring of each
part is an operation by itself. This is the
foundation of good clothes. Style depends
upon it; so does shape and wearing quality.
i t
So does appearance.
Select a Standard, Yale or Longworth suit and overcoat when you next purchase. You’ll gat styla—Just as muoh off It as you ploaoo.
You oan buy a better garment for $20 than ffor $10 or $12, off course. But whatavar you pay wa guarantee ffull value in tailoring and wear.
Suita $12.50 to $36.00.
CAGE HATS
CARROLL & BYERS
GAFFNEY, S. C.