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THE LARGEST CIRCULATION of Any Ntwpapr In tlia Fifth Conarowional District cf S. C. iVERY ONE PAID IN ADVANCE HE LEDGER SEMI-WEEKLY-PUBLISHED TUESDAY AND FRIDAY. n. C aUARANTEB THE RELIXbIlIT^ of Every AdverU—r WH# « Umo the Column« of Thlo Paper. » BEET ADVERT I El NO MEDIUM. » Nowepaper hi AN that the Ward Impllce and Deveted te the Beet Interact of the People ef Cherokee County. ESTABLISHED FEB. II. ISM. GAFFNEY. E. C* TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1907. 11.00 A YEAR. ft NEWSY LETTER FROM WILKINSVILLE.: comrade, 'William H. Sanders, ol Kel jit home to await better prices. They are not going to sell as long as they can help it unless they get good prices. We met our old friend and army SHORT NEWS ITEMS OF LOCH INTEREST. THROUGHOUT THE PftlMETTO STftTE. A GOOD WOMAN GONE. ton, at Jack Kendrick’s gin b >th yet terday and day before He was hav- ; ing cotton ginned. He Is good com* MOVEMENTS OF -HE PEOPLE OF pany—a great and interesting talker EVENTS IN GAFFNEY AND CHER* —full of reminiscences and especially LOWER CHEROKEE. wa r stories. His latest was about! OKEE. a green-horn mountaineer from (he King’s Mountain section—a member I i .. of the King’s Mountain guards, who' Personal Paragraph® ConccrnlnQ Pop was stationed near Charleston in th0 Happenings in and Around Happmngs AU Over the State Taken | ITEMS OF INTER8T OF PA$8INQ EVENTS IN SOUTH CAROLINA. _ , , .. -' early part of the war. The boys ul»r Peep e and Short Items o wou i d sometimes slip out of .camp and go to the city, almost any time 'they could dodge the pickets. He 11.—Until re- and Bill Harris started one day with- 1 that Section. th#, City and Other Events Gather ed by tha Local New* Editor. t The local cotton market yesterday WHkinsville, Oct cent years we have not been so favor- out a pass or the countersign to go to , was 111-2 cents. abl, hnprossed with "book farming." ',J i e 8 t Cl l!;i, W mounUlncT WM' Ob "ITU'S'! „ T>>* W™d» °f Mi8 S Montez But the more we see of it the more He had evidently just come in and Bramlet will be rejoiced to hear that hadn’t learned much about the army she is rap ^7 improving, regulations. He halted them with: j j ur y foj. the next term of “Whar you gwine, hoys?*' “To Char-; cour t wa s drawn Friday, and the leston, they replied. He said, You sheriff and his deputies are busy serv- can't pass here unless you can say j n g the papers. ^ "The Holy City,” unquestionably is the attraction at the Star Theatre tonight. J. O. Bramlet has installed a combi nation peanut roaster and popcorn popper, wblchc Is run by a perfect en gine. It is quite an ingenious tpven- we are convinced that the farmer must read and study as well as plow and hoe. Until he can tell something of the laws of nature governing ac cretion and excretion, inhalation and ‘ „ .. „ exhalation, indosmose and exosmose, Be f, ure ^n?' a We H> 1 ®An say it, he «aa never understand fully how to r©PH e d Bill SandOTS. Cant you say - get the best results from his labor. V 0 ?;® 111 Harris? “Yes, said Har- one of the best shows of the season To say these are nature’s laws we ris Beauregard. You re all rl^ht, can’t inderstand Is a very silly con- P*ss on gentlemen,’ returned, the elusion. The physician who doesn’t ■ , , * , ..v * understand the constitution of his pa- Tf 6 are 8,3,1 , to l' no ^ tliat tient can’t make a proper diagnosis J al)0r 8 /° up churches (P real) y‘ of his case, and his treatment may ^ a pi c hai^ e son eC of e Greers a8 and h^e 11 * B iuBtsuiuu» ijive and eon. can’t advise his client as to and Sabbaths. The ladies o f i The district meeting of the Odd the best course to pursue in its liti th ® Mt Ta £ 01 \ congregation have Fellows will convene in the court cation an the farmer must of made & reat headway in raising tunes house on Friday night. The public necessity know the constitution of to improve their church building, and in general is invited to attend this and'tbe seed he plants before ! it They cleared ,35 atan meetlns The ladle, are espeelally he ean expect the best results. If the ice crea “ laat Saturday after- invited to attend. pbysJelan doesn’t know something th hoSS Tbie^he The Humphries Shoe Company has of tte disease he is called upon to self-sacrifidne ladJes h who ha^e Idt a store whlch ,s e<lual to any ‘ 8tore treat he can’t know what medicine to ® of the kind in the up country. ^They give. So. if the farmer doesn’t know nnf Lw ho have installed all the latest ap- the nature of the soil and the seed . ^ ° D ® J^ 111 ^ pliances, including sliding ladders, he plants “he can’t know what fertl-i a ° ^ bat to {J* etc., and their stock of shoes Is equal - .to use or what are.hods of cal- —hlfj tolsWad" of^eopto M ‘ to We met our old friend Dick Askew Cousin Bob Wilkins sold a white yesterday. He is buying up ctalcbens man a pair of No 13 shoes Saturday about chemistry^knows"nothing^nbout I and 6888 for , th ® Lockhart market land claims he could have given him farming. Chemistry Is his study. To I Fro “ a Private letter we leara that a 14 If he had wanted it. That is al- know how to assist nature in expell- Miss Zallie Estes, daughter of Mr ways tne case, let some one tell a ing a disease is the lesson that the ; a ° d Mr8 ’ Hayes Estes, formerly of ; healthy yarn and you will always find doctor must learn before he can be- £ ,sco , unl y but n °w of Winlock, ; some one to go him one better, come a successful practitioner of ^ a8h * ls 1 ° be ™ ar;ded “f** m °° o tb In mentioning the fact last week i°. m TS that Mr. war! had raised 56 W lizera tivation to pursue in order to obtain the best results. This Is common sense. The man who knows nothing of Winlock, Washington State. To u 110 >,~i *. ‘v „’ bushels of corn on one-fifth of an chemical analysis of the fertilizers he uses, and to these, severally, he applies the most intelligent methods of cnltivation. One thing is certain —nature will do its work in Its. own way. Man can’t create anything, but he can utilize nature by nature’s own well established laws. We see a locomotive standing on the track with water in the boiler. Put fire and medicine. So. to assist nature in bringing the best results from the ... , * „ soil the farmer must understand 1 ^ , ^ ,8 70 u yg <»uple we extend our best acre and dld not employ the wll ii am . nature or qualities of the soil he tills, i J* 8b ® 8 ^ l ^ T f bod method either, we were in error, the nature of the seed he plants, the ba JP la ® 88 - ^ a > b ® a ^®“ 8 r,cb ® 81 ds we have learned since that he did pathway through life. ' omloy ^ Williamson plan. . Mrs. Sam J. Strain and child, Miss , Dr. Mysenheimer, of Charlotte, N. Ruth Isabella, are both sick. C., came over to Gaffney Saturday “Aunt Lena” Wood, colored, who and assisted Dr. Burnham in per- has been sick for a long time, was forming an operation upon Mrs. M. able to pull two very fine mullets L. Ross for appendicitis. The opera- out of Broad river yesterday. They tion was entirely successful and Mrs. were fine fish, sure. {Ross is doing as well as could be ex- Somebody sent Sam Lee a post pected. wood in the fire box and steam is card ^th the picture of a fox on | A party of glx young whlte men generated by whichc the ponderous fa- j" W® ® x P®® t .^,? u,d rat . b f^ i were arrested by the police on Satur- bric moves as a thing of life, Pulling ba ^® hadasure ® nou8n ra ® e - Joey day nIgllt charged wlth gam bling. an immense train with fearful rapid- ® ,8l ? t tOB ®” d some to the otber lo ^s All of them with one exception for- Wy. We stand aghast and say, what ° r ine cnaBe - l. s. ! f e i ted t i, e | r bonds when the cases an invention! What Is it that man ' j were called in mayor’s court yester- can’t do? But stop, reader, this is Notes from Timber Ridge. day morning. One of them demand- only nature’s laws at worfc and man Timber Ridge, Oct. 8—Messrs. E. ed a trial and his case will be heard business world forward at its rapid rate. By reason of machinery his strength has been multiplied many times. By Its aid one man can easily do what twenty formerly did and with a great deal more ease. The fall term of the United States District Court which was to have con vened last Tuesday at Greenville, with Judge Boyd, of North Carolina, pre siding, was deferred until the 22d. has only discovered how to utilize j. clary and R. Kirby, of Clary Line, j this morning, them and put them to his service. p a i d our Sunday school an appre- A ^ . Yes, It’s “the book farmer’’ who is elated visit Sunday. The school had Gaffnel mionle wa^that of Mr Sam moTto* and will continue to move the the pleasure of hearing a short talk a^.s Vlnnle stone, whtoh flHni Ir an^ lary Very benne event occurred at Birmingham, Ala., m! H d O Ta h te and family attendeo laBt Wednesday. Both of these young ffco y att ® naea , people were very popular while they the show at G flney today. resided in Gaffney and they have the rfanlhlt. if Bertha tite bright little best wlBheg of y , arge y clrcle of The farmer ha B never invented any Evans, had the misfortune to fall and ' od ,0r the,r future happiness, thing. It’s the book-learned man who break her collar bone one afternoon , The K. of P. District Convention has given him the advantages he en- i a st week. She is doing very well 1 which convenes on Monday will be Joys and employs today. We are told a n d we hope she will soon be well the first of a series of conventions by tourists, missionaries and travel- again. | which will meet In Gaffney. It be- lers that the same methods of agri- Mr. O. B. Tate, of Gaffney, spent! hooves every citizen of Gaffney to ex- culture are used even in the land of Sunday here with the family of Mr. 1 ert himself to make this meeting a Palestine that were used there 2000 :1, c. Tate. success in order that when these gen- years ago—no improvements made | Miss Eliza Kirby and brother, , tlemen return to their homes they whatever. So with regard to the Claude, of Clary Line, spent Saturday will have nothing but praise for Gaff- other countries of the Orient. It’s night and Sunday here with the ney time for the farmers in this, as well family of Mr. J. F. Jamieson and visit- as In other countries, to know that ed our Sunday school Sunday after- there is a power in brains as well as noon. muscles. * Miss May Bridges and Miss Vir- Instead of our State concentrating ginia Tate spent Satm , day night at all Its available resources to support Mesopotamia with Mr. J. Kendrick. nf our agricultural college at Clemson. i Mrs. H. B. Tate and children, of where 800 or 1,000 boys are taught Trough, visited relatives here last J' L P ^®4i d *' , J h [* how to farm. w6‘ ought to have at we ek I rom tals , ®® UDt y b ® . trl ® d at tflls least four other such schools in differ- A number of voung people were in- ** onh ent parts of the State where not only vited to a Hinging at Mr. J. F. Jamies- ^ the boys but older people—men and on’s Saturday night. All who attend-; Ml 8 stowe ’ wor ki n g In a distillery, women too—might see and know more e d enjoyed themselves very much and Two negroes, accompanied by a of the work of sientifle farming. The bone they will have more singings. little boy, went into the Humphries amount paid out to support Clemson p;. l. and j) wr_ Tate were busi- Shoe Company Saturday and one of College could be divided so as to ness visitors to Gaffney today. the negroes who wished to be fitted establish several other schools of this Mr. J. Pearson, our expert fisher- with a pair of shoes asked for a pair same kind without one cent additional naan, Is having unusually fine luck of of No. 13’s. After fitting him the expense to the tax payers. Thus the ] a t Ci catching several large carp at other negro wished to purchase a different sections of the State would a time. i pair for his six-year-old boy and told be accommodated and the different Mr. and Mrs. B. T. Porter, of the the salesman he wanted No. 7’s. soils tested. The time Is not far dls- 8 p e nt Sunday afternoon with us. “He surely does not wear 7’s at that tant when this will be done. ; Mr. C. W- Tate and daughter, Miss age,” said the salesman. “Yes,” said The postnffice has been re-establish- May me. visited relativeg above Gaff- j the man, “he Is kin to this negro,” ln- e.l at WHkinsville with C. W. Whlso- ne y Sunday. dlcating the man who had purchased nant postmaster. Mr. J. 8. Carter spent Sunday at the 13’s. Mrn. T. B- McCulloch came Yip yes- riarv Une. » ^ tortgto see Mrs gam J. strain, wko j M»y of Mr farmer, are h.nBns St^toZ Ml«5 iSS? mbritlns Mre. ome Brie, .pent yeaterday ^er h“ e S,ld «, yri lti.X£ W S^TiJSS T tS! ’ Stle# Bate. 1, raking kny In tW. 1 .„’fwn 8h ?i 1 ’''W re” r„JXg town grJdi (Sine™ wm neighborhood. He cut the drat of the state Is nov at home 1 " P 3 0 e alderable momentum, craahlng into week. ™ other cars on the main line. One flat Mr. J. Ed Leech, who has been suf- H to^ d a‘our Sunday^hSi^Bunday car w l! 8 ® 001 P let€ly deio ° 11 s hed and fering for some time with a sore foot afteraoon 7 other flat cars and a box car were ,B ga to Dgr ^ e > ba " I Carter, of Corinth, visited our G^nville ^eckSg^cr^ils s^n went to the hospital^! Chester yes- g U ndav school flnndav afternonu Greenville wrecunacMw was soon from Our Exchanges and Tersely .Tcld to Ledger Readers. It was reported on the streets of Rock Hill that the “Lover’s Tub,” a part of the merry-go-round at the carnival in progress in the western part of town, was wrecked Saturday j evening and three negro occupants injured. It is reported that the in juries are serious. I The penitentiary authorities have, as yet, heard nothing of Harry Dean and William Smith, the two white men who escaped from the prison Thursday night. Every, effort has I been made to apprehend them and it j is believed that they will be captur ed within the next few days. T. J. Sykes, a white man about 30 ; or 35 years of age, committed suicide ! in Darlington Saturday afternoon by 1 drinking laudanum. From the infor- mation obtainable it seems that he had been on a drunk, which lasted for more than a week, and had be come very despondent. The race for senator from Florence county to fill out the unexpired term of Hon. Walter W. Wells, who resign ed in order to accept the position of ; solicitor for the third circuit, promis es to be very interesting. So far there are only two candidates in the field. Mr. N. S. Gibson, of Wjnona, ; who made an excellent run for this place last year, and Hon. W. B. Cause, of Cowards, who represented that coun ty in the house of representatives for four years. Both gentlemen are strong and the race will be interest ing. The election has been ordered for Tuesday, November 5. Following the announcement that Prof. John G. Clinkscales of Wofford College will not be a candidate for United States senator, a report has 1 been circulated in certain political circles that Gov. Ansel has tinder con sideration the matter of being a can didate in the race for Senator Lati mer’s seat in the senate. There are those who say that this is out of the ! question but regardless of these the report is current and is said to have been started bv a gentleman who has ' recently been in Greenville and was |in conference with some of the gover nor’s closest friends. Smith Williams, a well known l carpenter, was run over and Instant ly killed by passenger train No. 41 on the main line of the Southern rail way, a short distance west of the Drayton mill village and within a quarter of a mile of the Spartanburg , station, Saturday night shortly after 1 8 o’clock. The man’s body was ter ribly mutilated and identification was only possibly by papers found in his pockets. He resided at Drayton mill, and is said to have a wife and several children. He was walking on the track, it is believed, but as yet little Is known aa to the details <»' , billing. Formal notice was served by Attor ney General Lyon Saturday upon Dr. W. T. C. Bates and Dr. W. H. Tim merman, former State treasurers, that on account of the recent decision In the bond case by the supreme court, they are liable on their bonds for the money due the State and fraudulently taken from the treasury during their terms. This was so decided by the supreme court and within the next few days all of the bonds will prob ably be presented for exchange. As the state can not lose Iq the trans actions each treasurer will be liable on his bond of $90,000 for the amount lost during his administration. These treasurer’s bonds are liable for 20 years. L. E. Wagoman, white, aged 19, shot and seriously wounded Dick Goodman, colored, Saturday after noon in the lot bach of the beer dis pensary in Sumter. Goodman, wau was drunk, attacked Wagoman’s father, and after striking him once or more drew a knife and was advanc ing on the elder Whgoman, but the young man came up just at this time and at once opend fire on the negro The first and only shot fired put Good man out of business. The bullet passed through the hand in which the knife wag held and into Good man’s chin. The ball has not been found, but the wound is not believed to be fatal. Wagoman was arrestpl and committed to jail. A Forme r Gaffney L*dv DIM In Charlotte. The King’s Mountain Herald has the following to say of the death of Mrs. C. S. Elam, who died in Char lotte recently: “Quite a gloom was cast over the town Thursday by the announcement j of the death of Mrs. C- S. Elam which 'occurred at the Mercy General Hos- i pital in Charlotte. Mrs. Elam had ' been in a critical condition for some I time and her death was not altpgeth- er unexpected. She had undergone several surgical operations at differ ent times and from the last one she : never rallied. The last operation was ! performed Wednesday and it wa» thought that the operation was suc cessful and recovery would result. Mr. Elam who was at his wife’s bed side returned home Wednesday night but early Thursday morning was ‘summoned to return, i “The remains were brought to Kings Mountain Thursday night on i No. 35 and were taken to the Moun tain View hotel where they remam- j ed until the services which were con- . ducted at the Presbyterian church : Friday afternoon at 3 o’clock by the pastor Rev. J. M. Forbis assisted by :Rev. J. J. Beach. I “Mrs Elam was before her mar- iriage Miss Corrie Ellis, of SoutlvCar- olina. and was about 40 years of age. She had been resident of Kings Moun tain for several years and during this time she made a large number of friends all of whom are greatly grieved at her untimely death. A large number of friends attended the funeral and followed the hearse to ! the grave in the city cemetery where the remains were interred in a cement vault. The casket and the mound iabove the grave were covered with a wealth of flowers as a token of the high esteem in which she was held by those who knew her. / “The town and the church have suffered a great loss in the death of this noble woman. Mrs. Elam was a consecrated follower of the Master and^ being a woman of great personal magnetism and exalted character, she was naturally a leader, and easily won to herself the love and friend ship of those who knew her. She was a member of the Presbyterian churcn, anj had been a consistent and active member of the cbcurch from her childhood. Her church and her home were the spheres in which she de- ligted to act, and in which her In fluence, gentle as the dew, was felt. She was a teacher in the Sunday school, and president of the Ladles Aid Society and will be missed by her associates more than we can ex press. She had been a great sufferer for several years, but in all her suf fering she met the world and her friends with a smile. She will be missed by her friends, but the heav iest blow comes to her devoted hus band who mourns the loss of a com panion who was devoted to him anu his interests with an unselfish devotion. “But we believe, while we mourn her loss here, her’s is an eternal gain, and while we are surrounded by sick ness, death and sorrow, she is bask ing in the smiles of the Redeemer’s love beyond, where there Is no sick ness, sorrw or death. “Sometime in April-kissed springs time, the flower we welcomed as the sunshine, droops and dies, but dur ing its life it inspired our hopes and performed our life with pure thoughts. It was so with the life of Mrs. Elam. “The sunshine of love could not warm her life nor the affection of friends and husband prevent her go ing. Her death went out like the ex halation of a sweetly fragrant minion of the woodland and In her stead was left only the beautiful memory—a memory that will last long in the hearts of friends and relatives.’ TWO EVENTFUL WEEKS. THROUGHOUT THE TftRHEEl STftTE. RECENT EVENTS OF NOTE IN NORTH CAROLINA. Item a of Interest Concerning Osr Neighbors In the Old North State Clipped from Our Exchanges. After deliberating less than two hours Saturday afternoon the Jury in Superior Court which had in hear 3 ) ing the $25,00 damage suit brought by Conductor John D. Bowen, of Wil mington, against the Seaboard Mr Line for personal Injuries received in | the Hamlet wreck in July a year ago, returned a verdict awarding the plain tiff $15,000 and costs of the action. Fire discovered in the Hotel Berk ley at Asheville Sunday morning abut 3 o’clock created considerable excitement for a few mlnntes bnt did no damage. Smoke was discovered issuing from one of the rooms, and an alarm was turned in. The guests piled out of their beds, in the mean time the guests in the room jrhere the fire started was taken out fr*if suffocated with smoke. The depart ment promptly responded to the alarm, hot the blaze was extinguished before it arrived. * Mx. Fred Gibbon, the 22-year-old son of Mr. Nick Gibbon, of Mallard j Creek, was seriously hurt in a run away accident Saturday night near Charlotte. He had been to Charlotte and was on his way home when Die accident occurred. The mules he I was driving became frightened, ran, , threw him from the sart and dragged him a hundred yards or more, beating him on the ground, maiming and bruising him. The young man was ; rendered unconscious. One ear was torn completely off. Late Sunday af ternoon, Mr. Gibbon was doing fairly i well but could not tell anything about bow he was hurt. | If the plans of Mr. Sumner B. Ser geant do not miscarry, Charlotte will have another cotton mill before long. For several week* past, in fact over since he resigned his position as gen eral manager of the American Ma- j chine and Manufacturing Company, Mr. Sargeant has been making his f arrangements with the view of put ting up a small yarn mill west of toe city on the Seaboard Air Line road. He secured a most desirable site near the Hoskins Mill and expects soon to commence the erection of a suitable building. The machinery equipment will consist of approximately 5,000 spindles. A large freight-receiving ware house. 75x150 feet in size, containing several cargoes of tankage and a large quantity of burlaps anq manu factured bags, immediately on the water front at Navassa Guano Fact ory, four miles from Wilmington, was destroyed by fire before day Sunday morning. The fire originated evident ly from spontaneous combustion in the tankage early In the evening, but the mill force thought it had extin guished the flames, declining aid from the city. Between 1 and 2 o’clock Sunday morning, however, the fire in the takage blazed up again, and the entire building and contents were consumed. The factory force of color ed employes used the mill hose to fine advantage and saved the factory proper, this being in close proximity. The loss was fully covered bv insur ance. but the amount has not been estimated. The fire will in no wise interfere with the operation of the factory, it Is stated. . . ^ .. . Sunday school Sunday afternoon, tordey in company with Dr. R. An- Mr . I. C- Tate was a Gaffney visitor deal Bratton with a view of having Friday. Blue Eyes the foot amputated. His friends are 7 anxious about the result of an _ ———— operation. —Typewriter supplies, ribbons, on the scene and with the aid of the powerful crane the tracks were clear ed. No one was hurt. A northern capitalist informed a . Cherokee county man yesterday that Mr. Jeff Hughes has had his house carbon pap«r and typewriter paper Jf one .fc a j f C f what was being said palatei. 31 (la T 0 ®J Ca ^ ni qaot ® about the minerals of Cherokee cuim- Mr. Lowery Webber is putting up y011 prices. a nles house. Mr. C. W. Whlsonant has bought Oct 8 tf. severs! bales of cotton this week. He —The Gaffney Drag Oo. baa a IT* Gaffney prices. Mr. Jack Ken- PINK PILL that will straighten that the half had not been told, and that ty was true that he would not hesi tate to invest half of his fortune In Cherokee county real estate. The Cherokee county man told him that Is buying cotton for Lockhart stomacb of yours. He has bought well on to 200 are having their cotton but many of them are hauling ney Drug Co If he did not believe It to come down and see for himself and that If be Why not try “Grip Tablets” for found that everything was not as re* that cold. . Guaranteed by The Gaff- presented that be would cheerfully pay bis expenses. Joe Foster, colored, was shot and killed by Buster Moorehead, colored, Saturday night at a hot supper at Joe Foster’s home In Union, this Foster not being related to the deceased. The lights were blown out, then the shooting commenced. Joe Foster was shot In the head with a shotgun and died instantly. It is stated by some that Buster Moorehead loaded his gun again and shot at the dead body. Foster Smith was shot in the right leg and one bullet grazed his cheek. The bullet was cut out of his leg by Dr. H. L. Hames and was found to be a .38 calibre. As the shooting torfk place In the dark, It is not known who did all of the shooting. Buster Moorehead was only about 16 years of age. It is rather singular that a negro by the same name, Joe Foster, was killed at the same place Christ mas. 1903. It Is not known whether the negro Buster Moorehead has been arrested- Thousands Will go to charlotte Fes tival and Fair. The fall festival begins at Char lotte this week and will continue through Sunday, October the 20th. Beginning Tuesday, October the 22nd, Charlotte will have another gay week and thousands of people from the surrounding country and nearby towns will go there to se the great Meck lenburg county fair. These two week* will be eventful in the history of Charlotte and that city will entertain more visitors within that time than ever before. The fair management has practi cally completed the four days pro gram. Every foot of space in the floral hall has been assigned to Ch-'i lotto and out-oftown merchants, thus assuring a full display of exhibits. Entries for the two stake races, for which purses of $500 each have been offered, are filled and competition is keen. Many otner noted horses have been entered for racing In the various classes. Manager W. 8- Orr has the consent from nearly every business house and manufacturing plant in Charlottee to close down on one day of the week In order that their employes may have a chance to take In one day of the big show. index to New Advertisements. Carroll ftByers. underwear, over coats. suits and hats. Gaffney Drug Co.. Sanltol, |$.70 worth for $100. Carroll & Byers, Ederhermer Stein clothes. Cherokee Drug Co., the man behind the prescription case. Star Theatre. “The Holy City” to night. MUCH CONCERN FELT. Littleton Female college. Its many friends will be gratified to learn that Littleton College, an ad vertisement of which appeared In this paper during the summer, has had the largest opening in Its history. The growth of this school has been almost phenomena], the total enroll ment last year showing an Increase of about is per cent, over the previous year. This Institution is doing a most excellent work for the young women of the South and richly merits the esteem In which It Is held by the public. Any parent having a daughter to send off to school would do well to correspond with the management of Littleton College. Ordinary Methods for iVcitlng Ca tarrh Prove Unsuccessful. Recent statistics showing an In crease In catarrh have shaken the confidence of medical men In the usual prescriptions to safeguard human health from the ravages of this disease. When stomach dosing proved In effective. it was natural to loci f- • some other treatment, and It Is be lieved that in Hyomel an absolute enre for all catarrhal troubles *a* at last been found. Breathed through a neat pocket inhaler. Its healing me dication reaches every spot where there are catarrhal germs, destroys them, prevents their fnture growia, and soothes the Irritated mucous membership so that relief is felt almost Instantly, while lasting cure la practi cally sure to follow. The complete Hyomel outfit costs hut $1.IM. and I* sold by Gaffney Drug Co. under an absolute agreement to refund the money If it does not give satisfaction. It la the only euro for catarrh that has ever been sold un der a guarantee to cost nothing m- 1e* H ft cures, but the Gaffney T>ntr Co. has so much faith In its power to cure all catarrhal trouble that It la willing to take the risk, so If Hyo mel does not heln you. there win not be a penny’s exnetise. Get an outfit at once on this liberal plan. —It will pay yop to look luto that $2.70 for $1.00 offer by The GaffUuy Drug Co. tf: