The ledger. [volume] (Gaffney City, S.C.) 1896-1907, September 27, 1907, Image 1
▼Ht LAROCST CIRCULATION
•# Any N«wapap«r In ttm
Flft*» Congm—lonnl
District «f t. C.
IVCRY ONE PAID IN ADVANCE
L HE LEDGER
SEMI-WEEKLY-PUBLISHED TUESDAY AND PRIDAY.
• M OUARANTES THE RSLlAStLlT4
of Evory AErortloor Wh*
Um* th« Colomnn of
Thin Popor.
•EST ADVERTISING MZOtUW.
A News*
ipar la AM But tee Werd Implies
0.
woted *0 th* Bast Interest of the Wsople of Cherokee County.
EBTABLI8HED FEB. 16, 1894.
GAFFNEY.
t. C-,
FRIDAY,. SEPTEMBER 27, 1907-
•UOO A YEAR.
SHORT NEWS ITEMS
- OF LOCH INTEREST.
EVENTS IN GAFFNEY AND CHER*
OKEE.
Recent Happenings In and Around
th* City and Other Event* Gather
*d by the LocaJ N«w» Editor
Remember the union meeting at
Ararat Saturday and Sunday.
Joe W. Gaffney has purchased a
lot near Mr. W- W. Galloway’s store
upon which he will erect a residence.
The “Old Man” is forty-two years
old today. The Ledger force, one and
all, wish tor him many, many happy
returns.
The Binging school conducted by
Prof. R. J. W. Moss at Mt. Paran
churoh will close October 6th. The
public is invited to attend.
That Contractor Joe Spake le a
“hustler” is evidenced by the rapid
progress which he Is making on the
postofflso building.
Mr. Thomas Daniel has purchased
a lot oa Johnson street upon which
he expects to build a residence in
the soar future.
The young ladies missionary so
ciety of the Cherokee Avenue Baptist
church will serve ice cream m tue
Sunday school room of the church on
Baturuay night.
Mr. Prldmore, the local weather
prophet, now says that we will have
some cold weather between nowand
February. As soon as The Ledger
force learned of Mr. Prjdmore’s pro
phecy they cut their orders for fuel
just one-half.
The fourth quarterly conference of
Gaffney circuit will be held at Meso
potamia on Saturday morning, Sep
tember 28th, at ll a. m. A full at
tendance is requested. There will be
no service at Sardis owing to associa
tion at Ararat Baptist church.
Will some of our readers please ex
plain why it is the case that on Fri
day afternoon and Monday so many
young men may be seen looking out
of the doors of their respective
places of business? Oh, yes, the
Limestone girls are here again!
A negro named Will Stewart was
brought before United States Com
missioner Bell, on Wednesday by
Field Deputy Marshal Floyd, charged
with perjury. Stewart gave bond for
his appearance before the commis
sioner on the 30th for preliminary
examination.
“Uncle George" Byars says that it
Is true that he learned to raise big
pumpkins In old York, but that he
learned to raise them by hard work In
stead of without work. “Uncle
George” Is respectfully referred to the
Maness yarn for further Information
In regard to pumpkins.
W. J. Maness had twenty-three
large pampklns in front of his store
on Tuesday which he said grew on
one vine, and that for two weeks be
fore palling these he had been feed
ing his pigs from the same vine. P.
V. Gaffney may now take a back seat.
Maness hau him “skinned."
There is considerable talk In Gaff
ney of establishing a chapter of Royal
Arch Masons. There are quite a num
ber of chapter masons here, and
doubtless if a chapter should be es
tablished a large number of the mem
bers of the blue lodge would take ad
vantage of the opportunity to take
the chapter degrees.
Mr. L. F. Plaisance is showing a
very high class of pictures at the
electric theatre opposite the post-
office. The show is being well pat
ronized and all who attend express
themselves as well pleased with the
entertainment. The programme for to
night will include scene, on the
Western plains and the county fair.
The town authorities in running
the corporate lines have discovered
that quite a number of bouses which
were thought to beoutside are within
the town limits. A number of those
who thought they were outside, have
expressed themselves as glad to find
that they were inside, as they would
now eajoy police protection.
The Era alarm was sounued yester
day just as the majority of the people
of Gaffney were sitting down to din
ner. It proved to be in one of the
en bnlldiags on Limestone
which le being used as a
for colored people. The Are
tlngaiAed without the aid of
departaaeEt which responded
ly to the call.
It la reported that isd
the day, as we will have to run some
of them down.” Billie promised to
quote prices when the weather turns
cool.
The Cherokee County Farmers
Union met at the cou:t house yetrer-
day and organized by the elec Tien of
E. Hardin, president; H- E. Jefferies,
vice-president; W. E- M- Kirby, chap
[lain; H. H. Moore, conductor; D. W.
Cooper, door keeper; S. Quinn, orga
nizer; executive committee, F. H- Do
ver, R. A. Westbroobs and A. H.
Moore. There were seven local
unions of the county represented at
the meeting.
The Edison electric theatre will
give its initial performance on Satur
day night. The proprietors are P. Z.
Holmes and George Hayes. The at
traction is located in tne building for
merly occupied by Boyd Sarratt as a
barber shop. The show will consist
of moving pictures and illustrated
songs. The entertainment is of a
high order. Mr. Herman Nelson, an
experienced electrician from Gas
tonia, N. C., is In Gaffney for the
purpose of assisting in opening the
performance.
A citizen of Gaffney in com
menting upon what The Ledger had
to say in regard to certain gentlemen
being so enthusiastic in regard to the
merits of certain makes of automo
biles and as to how they should, be
run, said that Walter Baker would
stop in the midst of receiving money
on a settlement any time to discourse
on the subject, and that Dr. Joe Lit
tlejohn, while he would not go so far
as to say that he would pause in the
midst of receiving iqoney, he
knew the doctor would stop selling
turnip seed to enter into a discussion
on this all-absorbing topic. This pa
per is able to give the name of the
citizen above referred to.
The city graded schools closed on
Tuesday for a couple of days for the
purpose of investigating the cases of
German measles which is so preval
ent in the city. The superintendent
and trustees deemed this sten auvis-
able in order that the situation coaid
be thoroughly investigated, and to
give them an opportunity to have the
school buildings fumigated. It is un
derstood that those who have had the
disease will not be allowed to return
to the schools until all danger of con
tagion has passed. Dr. S. H. Griffith
has been appointed to sw« uj.it tae
work is properly done, and it is to be
hoped that the disease will be stamp-
1 ed out, and that there will be no fur
ther Interference with the school
work by reason thereof.
A negro named Dock Bates, who
works at Gaston Shoals, had the mis
fortune to get his thumb mashed
: while working there on Monday. Dr.
Thorn, the resident physician, ad
vised amputation. Bates insisted that
the doctor administer an anaesthetic
which he did, giving him about an
ounce of chloroform. Bates never
recovered consciousness but died
within fifteen minutes afterwards.
Coroner Vinesett went over to the
shoals yesterday and empaneled a
jury to inquire into the cause of the
negro's death. After taking the tes
timony of some persons who were
present and that of Drs. Steedly and
Burnham who performed an autopsy
on the body, the Jury found that the
negro came to bis death from cholo-
form administered by Dr. Thorn. The
autopsy showed that the heart, lungs
and other organs so far as the phy
sicians could ascertain, were In a per
fectly normal condition, and It is
somewhat of a mystery that the
death of the negro should result from
the administering of an ounce of chlo
roform.
challenged Billy Doggett to a wi
Billy accepts the
will be pulled off
Hag match, aa<Tlf Bill
challenge the match
sometime In the near future. If those
two famous athletes should come to
gether there will be something doing.
Query: When an irresistible body
comes he son tact with an immovable
structure what will be the oonse-
qusneef
One ef Dr. Gunter'# best customers
cams to his office the other day to
employ him to go to hi* home in the
country to do some dental work for
his family tad wanted to. know bow
much the doetor would charge him,
as to the amount ef work,
"l wish to employ you by
WEEKLY WEATHER BULLETIN
For * h e Week Endin a 8 A. M., Sep
tember 23, 1907.
The week was warmer than usual,
a high percentage of sunshine and
with light precipitation, except in the
extreme portion of the western di
vision.
The daily maximum temperatures
were quite uniform throughout the
week, and ranged from 82 to 94 de
grees in all parts of the State; the
dally minimum temperatures were
less uniform and varied greatly, hav
ing been in the fifties on a few days
in the northwestern portion, and in
the seventies in the southwestern
portion. The extremes of tempera
ture were 94 at Walhalltfen the 19th
and 55 at Greenville on the 20th.
Very light and widely scattered
showers, occurred early in the week,
heaviest in the south central coun
ties. Thunderstorms accompanied
by general rains occurred on the
22nd. The rainfall was light on the
coast and Increased gradually towards
the mountain districts where, in
places, amounts in excess of three
inches were recorded, relieving the
drought In that portion of the Butte.
Moderately high winds accompanied
the thunderstorms on the 22nd,
though no destructive windstorms oc
curred.
The sunshine was abundant and
was above the normal except in a
few localities where much local
cloudiness prevailed, especially dur
ing the forenoons.
Dense fogs were recorded generally
on from one to three mornings.
. betwusn 9:80 p. m., ysotsr-
oav and noon today a bilious attack,
with nansa noi auk hoodaiha. This
loes was occaalonad by findfoV at™
Cherokee Drug Oa. a box of Dr.
KlnraNow Utb Pills, the guaranteed
cur* for MHoum
Jaundloo. Ha.
STATE PROHIBITION.
Senator Otts Expresses Hi* View* On
the Subject
Senator Otts, wno led the fight
against the State dispensary In the
senate last session, and framed the
amendment to make the original
Cary-Cothraw' bill, as passed by the
house, acceptable to the senate, Is
for State prohibition. He said: “I
shall Introduce a State prohibition
bill, at the coming session, but I am
, willing to retain the local option fea
ture of allowing any county, which
! has not voted a dispensary out under
the Brice act, or the Cary-Cothran ;
act, to vote upon the question of sell- ;
ing liquor upon proper petition. I do
not believe there will be more than
one or two counties in the whole
State that will ever vote for liquor
under such an act. I think It but fair
to place the burden of ordering such
elections upon the liquor element.
That the people of the State, who
are opposed to liquor should have
some protection. Take the decision
of the board of canvassers in Chester
field county the other day. There is
a county voting against the sale of
liquor by a vote of two to one, yet
the will of that majority is being
thawarted by technicalities. Such
tactics are but damming up the waters
of a prohibition deluge that will
sweep the State. I am personally op
posed to the sale of liquor, either by
the State, the county, the municipali
ty or State licenses. But to carryout
the principle of local option, I shall
favor a provision In such an act, that
will require a county after voting for
the sale of liquor, to also determine
j whether it shall be sold by a county
dispenser or by a licensee under the
constitutional and such legislative re-
i strictlons as may be imposed. In my
judgment, rotten uses and corruption I
;will creep into the county dispensary
! system. In the nature of the busi
ness, 'A man can not handle pitch
I and not be defiled.’ So If there is a
county in the Btate that will have
! liquor or where there is not enough
moral manhood and respect for law
! and order to enforce prohibition, then i
I would prefer to see the business In
such county handled by State licen
sees, under heavy bonds, for the ob
servance of the law, and to respond
! to Individuals for the consequences
arising from the sale of llauor by
; them. The idea of profit from the
business hag been exploded by the
experience of the State, and will fall
as to county dispensaries. You wi'i j
recall that when the fight was made
in Cherokee against the dispensary,
that we were warned by certain poli
tical prophets, that our tax levy would
be raised two or three mills, and our
public schools would be crippled.
Yet in the face of that prophecy we
have reduced taxes, and with the aid
of special school districts all over the
county, we have longer terms and bet
ter schools than ever before. No
county can get any permanent profit
by out liquor to Its citizens. !
All the liquor profits must come from
the pockets of your own citizens.
And every dollar that reaches the
county treasury by way of a dispeii
sary or a license, must cost thatcoun* i
ty ten dollars, the other nineteenth!
going to wholesale whiskey bouses,
beyond the limits of the county, un-
a* 8S * 11 Richland county, and the
State- to say nothing of the Indirect
C °«n ,n *l me ' l dlene «s and misery.
Prohibition has come to stay. The
legislature will take no step back-1
ward, and I would not be surprised to
see an inron-clad prohibition bill for
i the whole State adopted. Personally, !
II a m a prohibitionist, but I am willing
I to retain a local option provision in i
.the law, as a safety valve for certain
| counties where there is not public
nrnfcfMM* t0 i back ’ro * Bd enforce a
prohibition law. Because I realise
ittiat no lew can be stronger than the
i public sentiment back of it.”
A Big D*v *t Goucher.
Dext t £ ,rd Sunday, October
20th our regular preaching dav, every
member, old and young, male and fe-
i ma, f• toy and girl, sick or well, is ex- :
pected to be present
Regular services before noon. Din '
ne r on the ground, roll call and
covenant reading after noon.
Each member is expected to ans
wer when the roll Is called. Tf any
should be absent on this day, a com
mittee will be appointed to wait on
them. We trust this will not have:
to be done it is not only our duty,
l to 1 w ® *tou1d deem it an honored priv
ilege to take part in the worship at
lour own church. Therefore we urge
each member to be present, not only
on next preaching day but on every
occasion of worship.
Committee.
I
A Humane Appeal.
. ^ humane citizen of Richmond,
I ° d -- M*- U. D. Wiliams, w Wart
Main St, says; “i appeal to all pef^;
to®* with weak lungs to take Dr. I
King's New Discovery, the only rem-
edy that has helped me ana fully
tome* up to the proprietor's reoom-
meodstloB.” it saves mors lives than
ai] other throat and long remedies
put together. Used ae a cough and
cold cure the world over. Curee as
thma, bronchitis, croup, whooping
cough, quinsy, hearten ass, and
phthisic, stops hemorrhages of the
lungs end bnllds them u*. Guaran
teed at Cherokee Dreg Co. KOc and
$1.00. Trial bottle ftSe.
A NEWSY LETTER
FROM WILXINSVILIE.
MOVEMENTS OF THE PEOPLE OF
LOWER CHEROKEE.
Powder
ieh they
Drag Oo
Puffs,
are
their eeetomers. Gem*
have HI
In an the
giving away to
—While -they last the Gaffney
Drug Oo. are giving away a beautiful
Powder Puff with every box of their
Violet Teleum.
Sept || It
For blUlousnees, constipation, diz-
riness and disorders of the stom-
•eh take Oeffney Drag Oo.’s pink
pilla.
ft 1
Personal Paragraph* Concerning Pop
ular People and Short Items sf
that Section.
WUklnsville, Sept. 24.—Your cor
respondent had the pleasure of at-
tendng the North Pacolet Interde
nominational Sunday School Conven
tion at Ararat last Sabbath. It was
the regular preaching day and Rev.
Ben Hobe, pastor, delivered a very
Impressive sermon along the line of
Sabbath schdol work, and the train
ing of children in general. We re
gret that space doesn’t admit our
giving even a synopsis of what he
said, parents, guardians and teach
ers who were not present lost a splen
did opportunity to gather some good
ideas as to their duties and respon
sibilities. Mr. Hoke is an able man.
Imbued with a zeal commendable in
its nature and forceful In Its work
ings. He chose for his text Deut.
4:8-9 with 2nd TImonthy 14:15. The
church waa well filled with attentive
hearers—Just such &e were willing to
give attention. It was a representa
tive body of Cherokee county people
who bed assembled for a purpose. It
was the first time we ever met Mr.
Hoke to know him and we hope It
will nit be the last.
Six schools were represented.
Misses Miary Service and Mollie'
Montgomery and Mr. Willie Huskey
took their turn at the organ
wihle Messrs. Joe Humphries and A.
G. Davis and & splendid choir led the
singing, the congregation generally
Joining in the worship.
We have often taken occasion to
speak of those Ararat and Sardis
people and the evidence is still be
fore us that we have never overesti
mated them. The cordial welcome
and hearty hand shake from both
pastor and people made us feel that
we were in the house and hands of
our friends.
The dinner hour was In keeping
with the other pleasures of the occas
ion. The good ladies had prepared
an abundant dinner for all present
and with their own hands they dis
tributed it among their guests. How
ever, a shower of rain came on before
it was finished and all took refuge in
the church building, where many of
them with lunches in their hands,
finished their meal.
Too much praise cannot be given
the people of Ararat for their hospi
tality and kindness and their visitors
will carry with them many pleasant
recollections of the occasion. May
heaven’s richest benedictions rest
upon them and their work and their
homes.
Last Saturday, in company with
Mr. 8. F. Estes, we visited Mr. W. R.
Walker's Sunnyside farm and spent
the day looking over his crop and
stock, cattle and hogs and saw him
putting up hit winter’s food. Every
body on his farm, and in his employ
has a work to do and a sensible way
°f doing it. They were filling the
silo with ensilage. Abort thirty
tons Is a day's work. The machine
took the feed from the hand of the
feeder and did the work itself. An
automatic tube carried the cut food
from the machine and deposited it in
the gilo. They were using sugar cane
and corn. It cut the feed into small
chips and even into shavings, as fast
as a hand with the assistance of a
roller belt, could feed it. It took the
stalk, fodder, corn, snuck, cob and
all with a speed almost Incredible.
When it comes into the .^ceptacle
prepared for it, It is mixed up as If
done by hand—scientifically. As a
duty we owe to our readers and others
who are Interested in the improve-
ment of farming and farm work, we
have often spoken of the Sunnyside
farm and the way it is conducted, and
on our own responsibility have in
vited them to visit It and see for
tnemselves. This they have done and
are constantly doing. A visit from
Uncle Sill" is worth much in allay
ing any doubts. To convince him is
to convince any other clear-minded,
sensible man and he Is now like the
Queen of Sheba wag by Solomon—
the half has not been told ms.”
Mr. Esteg has been farming a’' b*
life and has seen many farms In the
valley of Virginia and East Tennessee
and he says he has never teen bet-
ler corn (even if as good) as he saw
^5? Walker’s farm last Saturday
, toth on his upland and river bot
toms where, too, he has hay, peavmes
and sugar cane without number.
M r - Wialker’e com crop alone le
modestly estimated at 4^00 bushels.
Ei*ht hundred bushels of which he
will tue as ensilage. He (Mr. Wal
ker) doeent think his corn will oost
him over ten cents per bushel. On
Me entire farm he hasn't used a par
ticle of commercial fertilizers. He
lays commercial fertilizer don’t en
rich land. It merely stimulates it for
a single crop and then leaves it as
Poor or poorer than ever. “This will
never do,” he says.
.i?? 0 ? 1 unUI froe* Mr. Walker
will be gathering hay and making
roady to ears for bis cattle next win
ter. This he can and win do with
the hay be baa on hand if be can only
succeeded In saving it.
*** ““y other things abort
this farm and the way it le managed
Suf J!? Ilk ® 10 <*. but
will defer it to another time.
we can be aay help la raw
irtlonlztag the gyrtem of fanning la
this country by ptaateg that honorable
and indispengfble calling on a higher
and more reumuneratwe piaue wfe wnl
be abundantly repaid for all we have
said or done, and consequently we
have selected this farm and Mr. Wal
ker’s methods as models.
By cultivating it deep during the
winter and spring months, Mr. Wal
ker prepares his land to take in the
rain in such manner as to furnish a
sufficient moisture for the crop
during the dry, hot weather in sum
mer, and consequently no reasonably
moderate depth can effect It. This, '
of Itself, is a great discovery.
Will Brother ”C.,” the Ravenna
correspondent, please cancel his
resolution to quit writing' for the pa
per mainly because he can’t please
some malcontents who, perhaps, are
bavin pr married and Inter-married with
each other and are all well-to-do pao-
pie. Had their lllnstrious name-sakea
been on the game friendly terms
during the sixties, the greatest civil
war known to modern history never
would have been waged. Grand old
Chester—it is the place where your
correspondent first saw the light-
hut that by no means adds to Its lu*
tre only in so far as we are con
cerned.
We verily believe the time Is com
ing when the secular newspapers of
this country are going to wage a war-
lie
sanctity of
Herald
fare for protecting
the Sabbath day.
Here is what the Boston
hau to say:
_ — , — - “Sunday continues to maintain Its
like others of their craft—chronic j grim record of horrible accidents of
grumblers? The world Is full of guch : travel. When it isn’t a harvest of
—we have them everywhere. Be-! death on the rail, it is on the water
sides, brother, your letters are very or on the road by automobile. A corn-
interesting to us In oiher parts of | plication of accidental deaths, arrang-
the county and you deserve great [ ed according to the days of the week,
jered’t for your energy in getting them 'during the present season, would
•up under such difficulties as wecoun- make an interesting subject to study,
try correspondents have to labor. If There Isn’t much doubt that the Sun-
those who find fault fall to give you day score would lead all the rest.”
the information the fault Is theirs i The fox hunters, we are told, got
, an d not yours. j up a race last Friday night but Hey-
Mr. Gadberry Wright, of Flint Hill. ! n *rd made good his escape and men,
tells us that his corn crop was badly dogs and horses returned tired and
| in jured—In fact mined—by the storms worn out. j. l. e.
some time ago. The wind blew one
! way a while, then changed in another
direction, and still In another until
! his corn—much of it
Notes from Timber Ridge.
" “ 24.-W«
. Timber Ridge, Sept 24.—We are
-- wag broken off. having stormy weather at present
• We stopped with Mr. J. N. Jefferies which is very disagreeable to tea
jlast Sabbath evening and ate a mess farmers. The rains caught much
of watermelons. He has plenty of cotton in the fields to he picked. We
jthejn yet. ; never saw it open more rapidly.
Mr. John Wright is fixing to build Mrs. Laura Bridges, of Clary Line,
him a new dwelling house. John is la spending a few day in our section,
one of our leading young farmers who ' Misses Belle and Bertie Porter
will make his mark In the world. He ! *pent Sunday with Misses Eula and
has the help of an excellent wife Rebecca Carter, of Corinth,
j which insure* his success. No man Mr. C- V. Tate, agent for the Chlca-
eve r amounted to anything but ruin S° Crayon Company, who Is working
with a lazy, no account wife. In Pickens county, spent Saturday
We are sorry to learn that Mr. and Sunday here with his parents,
John Kennpdy. Jr., is sick. Mr. and Mrs. H. O. Tate.
The people of Sardis have repaint- : Ml 88 May Bridges, of Clary Line,
ed their church which gives it an I )a l<l °ur Sunday school an appreclat-
elegant appearance. Church and e d v l 8it Sunday afternoon,
school buildings with good roads are R ev - T. B Owen closed a successful
the best evidences of a thrifty, pros- meeting at Corinth last Fridajr night
perous community. j Mr. Owen preached some of the mort
All day yesterday the river was impressive sermons we have had the
too high to cross at Howell’s ferry Pleasure of hearing for a long time. We
and many were water-bound on each foiled to get the number of converts,
side of the river. Mr. J. S- Carter, our genial super-
At the time Mrs. R. a. Foster’s leg intendent, spent Sunday at Clary
was broken, last Mar, she received L* 11 ®-
an injury in her arnl and shoulder B - F - Jamison, W. B. Tate and your
which hag given he r great pain and 8 cribe attended religious services at
inconvenience ever since, and last Anbury Sunday,
week she went to Bock Hill to hav<> i Mr. Owen preached a very strong
u examined and, if possible, treated. sen non on the Necessity of regene-
Since then she Ig^een suffering a rotlon.” His text was John 9:2.
■great deal mostT^nre suppose, from Ml88 Mamie Tate vpent Sunday
I tee effects of Alortfofni We learn wit h Misses Eula and Rebecca Car-
that the doctors ffpifild that the in- ter> °f Corinth.
Juries could not be repaired as they Mr * Henr y Evans and son, Jessie,
nad stood too long. We fear she will ond Lyance* Littlejohn attende ser-
have t° carry a disabled arm and 71068 at Asbury Sunday,
shoulder the rest of her life. Mr. and 1 Rev - “d Mrs. T. B. Owen spent
Mrs. 8. F. Estes, her father and Satu rday night with Mrs. R. m. Lit-
mother, are with her at this time. Itlejohn, of this place.
Sam Strain and hig lieutenant, b - ^ Tat ® mad ® a business
Charley Foster, started to Hickory tr n 10 Gaffney yesterday.
Grove yesterday morning but had to .. w ® tope “C.” is .not seriously
turn back at the river—it was too telnblng of discontinuing to report
nigh to cross. for The Ledger. We enjoy his let-
Miss Eliza Blgham, of Sharon, is 5?” rery mucl1 1111(1 tope be will con-
staying a few days with her neice, t na ® to report from Ravenna.
Mr*. T. J. Estes. j Miss Matilda Webster has been on
Dr. L. R. Black has been very sick ? ie 8 * ck l l8 ^> but is some bettor now.
rince the death of his wife. His
mother, Mrs. John o. Black, of Blacks-
we are glad to report.
Many of our farmers are making
nines, or Blacks- ,— 7 4 1 “re umiuuB
burg, is with him, so we understand “® la88e8 - Some are saving their late
almoBt foollr® the man fodder
5, proper respect for his Blue Eyes.
parents. Mr. Drayton Painter says
he never knew his father to swear , L,ttl8 M*ry Net
S? ® ath or tal?e a drink of liquor in L tt ® Mar T Ne t, the infant danght-
bls life, and, besides, he tried to raise tL of . Mr - and Mr8 ’ c - Wood - ° f
.Jmto respect the Sabbath day: and dled th e 22nd and was laid
if there are any defects in his life 5? ln , tee cemetery at Elbethel
they are the fruits of bad company , * > " 0 * ln E da y beneath a profusion
Ian* not fo r want of proper home ?L beautlfl ! r flow ®ra- Doubtless the
training. Such gratitude from a son “S® 1 was sent here on some
towards his father Is always com- ml88lon * an d her little mission was
mendable. Solomon made no mis- ^ ac ®omplished.
take when he said: Train ud a ^ not - f 9M parents, she bud-
child in the way he should go, and *1^ on *^ r te 40 bloom in heaven. Lit-
when he is old he will not depart ! e . e , rap !f crAd,e baby’s gone, gone
from It” P • te Jofo the angels, and forevermora,
M. T * e lr ? ul>1 ® ln this country Is that # a *v ys S° n ®! To the fond mother and
; the training of the children Is left too “^“Cr w ® extend our deepest sympa-
much to other people and doesn’t 00(1 comfor t them in this
"fort at the home, and the results the r darkest tour of life.
dntl b «,i hat X/i® COUrt " w1n d o the!- a Friend,
fluty there will be a rise in the price ~
tomp. 'T b ® r ® ,8 not one home in EAT WHA T YOU WANT.
nrty now where the will of the parent
LV b ® * th ® household-this will tolence Has Now Found tho True
Z™”- Some children are | W. v to Cure Indigestion.
be made to°ktin WG Z 00 8rnart te A few years ago. when a sufferer
should 1 kn ° W th ^ r P ,ac ® 8 a * teey . from indigestion went to a stomach
The farmer, n* * specialist, the result waa a rigid dirt
termlneri to F kee f co J untr y are de- list that almost meant starvation.
up 7 ?) a d llvin^ e »2iii? e I l r ce ?/ oo* 100 But the first thing to do in the case
market TW^ili !t °iL tbe J ndl ?® 8tl °n or stomach wrak!£5
men ean’t „„J. ro right, too. When i* to strengthen the muscular walls
5^rt?7alS?tU rl . C * on tbe <* tee stomach and intestine. „ tort
Drv ^ Io “*wfr®«. they will cane for the food that!*
ed ln ad£e£ ™ k™ 0 ?! ^‘ 88 «® ® aten - In *> way can XS be
farmer. th ® 8a bjeet to the done as wan a. by taking a Ml-o-na
(he rln 8 «r K, n J OU 001,1117 which has tablet before each meal. This ra-
o~ a majorit? of P th!* they *!° re * stren *te to the stomach mns-
lt—mark that f tbein ’ wlM M*ten to , cle. and stimulatea tbe pouring out
“0 "7- 8»nj J. Strain U d uTrSfrUtatS
Mes*r. R t T h «k- pent J Mt “‘•to "tte retained in the system to build up
a “ d Terry Estes, who energy and rSilitf 10 DUUd 9
th*. ♦iS* tochelor just now while ~
2S "•
[.Sul Y R-Brooks, in his history of
l Do not think the siok -
heartburn, ^ad taste in the mouth,
ooatod tongue, spots before th* eyes,
ulaaplessnssg and tho many other
Riitia. . a,m nwwry or stespiessnesg ana tho many otbei
1 b n B ^r^ry t® the war of symotoms that are tho direct toouM
OraSt^S Sert^^n^l 1 fodigortlon, will go away of them
twSforra l!!E^ r J 0m SZ^ *««*** "'"*. The stomach must bo brtM
hl^lOT battle^st ** to Mlo*a *
JfoJtou. June 12th, '64. thrown* one
rations of “hard tack*' to tho starring
»«, while the battle was
while the battle was going on
T** 8 ®?“ d old hero passed to his ra-
werd the tenth of thlsmonth as the
°f rt«hty-seven years.
Chester county can claim and even
»K*rt of what, we venture to say, m>
other section of this country eaa It
te, and has bean, the home for many ef
•mationa of tho UeT^Gfarta
who hero Hved la the eame
hood—oa tho rory boot of
fore you can bo well and strong, free
from suffering and distress.
Tho guarantee that The Gaffney
Drag Comaay give with every 66-
ceot box of Ml-o-na. 90 refund tho
money unless the remedy euroe. showo
their confidence la the troatme*.
! yearn.
vWw
that
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