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IO Makes XTRAGOOD ^ W E always like to know all we can about the makers who produce the clothes we offer you; and we’d like you to know about them too. G. One of the main reasons we sell VTRAooon is the fact that they are made by Ederheimer, Stein & Co., Chicago, in the most modern and re markable tailor shops ever built; in large, light, airy, clean buildings specially erected and fitted for making clothes better and differ ent than others have done or are doing. Q. Beside the longer wear your boy will get out of XTRAGOOD. the better appearance and more perfect fit that you’ll appreciate, it’s an ad vantage to know they’re clean and wholesome, as well as J" e most durable, reliable, honest, economical. Overcoat b an XTRAGOOD. Ages 7 to 17. Prices $5 to $12. m-km i ■ u IM: fci (a it m CARROLL & BYERS. '^y. ./ < / • f. j. y J•.vv N S' t vv’’ r S', t ^ ^ t * < < < ■ j if if .‘■'‘if • J.: .f ■ if ■■"if.:'‘i S' ( S’ t ^ t vC* t if t S' t S' t S' t' S' t S’ ( S r s t S f -fS GAFFNEY TRUST GO. Authorized Capital, $20,000. Loans—Let us loan your money at 7 and 8 per cent, net to you. Our capital guarantees to you (1) title to property, (2) interest semi-anually, (3) principal when due. We lend you money on long or short term payment. R UAL Estate—We have constant demand for city and country prop erty. If you want to sell, we can sell for you. If you want to buy, we will buy for you, and loan the money to pay for it. Fire Insurance—We represent quite a number of the best home and foreign companies. Let us write your insurance. LIFE Insurance—We represent the Southern Life and Trust Company, of^Greensboro, N. C., the strongest life insurance companies in the South. This company invests its total net premiums collected in this territory in Gaff ney. Keep Your Money at Home. A Home Company Pledged to Home Development D. C. Ross, Prest. J. N. Lipscomb, V.-Pres. * * .*• . f O’ < S'. * S S S' i * S> i 1 S' ■■ * S' i * S' • * S' i * S'. f St- ■■■ t : .s t-.s try y.s t-.syt'.st' C. W. Hames, Secy, and Treas. J. C. Otts, Atty. The Hunting Seasnn Will soon be here. We have a complete stock of Guns and Ammunitionon hand. IK fiEwiLKINS-Wailtit HARDWARE C0T| Real Estate For'Sale Six-room cottage, Depot St., east front, 13,500. seven-room dwelling, east front, f 2,000. Six room cottage between Limestone College and Graded School, with lot 160x244; this is a beauty, 13,350. Six-room cottage, Petty St., near business center of town, lot 85x185, very de sirable, $2,500. The Kabe Wood house in West End at a bargain $1,000. Farms The Bill Anthony place, 95 acres, 2% miles south-east of Gaffeey, $40 per acre. 13 acres near the Irene Mills. This is a nicy city farm and a good one to ‘‘sit on.” SAH L. FORT, Real Estate and Fire Insurance, Phone 258. Office second floor National Bank Building. DIVERSIFIED FARMING. Close study and Syrttmatlc Use 0 f By-Products the Roa<f to Success. The average farmer thinks he Is a specialist, and that he is wasting time and money In trying to do any thing else. There Is a theory that In the limited area In this world where cotton may be successfully grown, and among the comparatively few men on earth who really under stand the production of cotton, it would be a perversion of Nature for these few men in this limited area to attempt anything hut to grow cot ton. The thing which stands in the way of this argument is the great subject of by-products. There Is scarcely a manufacturing enterprise in the world today that could profit ably continue business on the basis of the production of one single arti cle, without the utilization of the other products which are the Inci dental output in connection with the main article. Not many years ago, the cotton farme r overlooked the fact tmu. u.u product was seed cotton. He thought It was lint cotton. He threw the seed away, and would have thanked any one to haul them off the farm. But now, every producer of cotton knows he could not survive without taking Into account the enormous value of his cotton seed, which might be call ed a by-product. If he raises 100 bales of cotton, worth about $6,000, he ineidentlly raises 50 tons of cotton seed, which he can sell for about $1,000, thus adding to the value of the main crop about 18 per cent. This 18 per cent would be considered by any manufacturer as a fine profit on his business. This matter has become so well known, that it Is no longer discussed as a mooted question. There is a by-product of the farm that Is just as obvious as cotton seed, and 13 now just as widely Ignored as was cotton seed forty years ago. This is cattle raising. It is even more than a by-product. It Is almost a necessity. The Intelligent raising of cattle on a farm In the cotton region costs less money (though perhaps more conscious thought) and pro duces more rotum than any other one branch of the business. It is not alone in the market value of the beef or dairy products, but It Is In the almost Immeasurable value to the cotton lands themselves. The cotton farmer who raises large herds of cat tle becomes. In a sense, a manufact urer who uses raw material of his own production, and makes a finished product of high commercial value, while the process of manufacture not only costs him nothing—except thought—but actually adds to his re sources In the enrichment of his lands, so he can grow more cotton and pro duce more beef which enables him to grow still more cotton and produce still more beef. The present commercial value of cotton seed meal Is based on one two things, according to the locality, namely (l) the value of Its nitrogen as a fertilizer, In comparison with the value of the nitrogen in other avail able fertilizing chemicals; or (2) the value of Its nitrogen as a feed stuff In comparison with the value of the nitrogen In other available feed stuffs. But now the great and comparatively new truth Is being discovered that, with the proper manipulation, the true value of cotton seed meal Is not an alternative one, but a cumrtlativo one, that is. the nitrogen value as a feed, and the nitrogen value as a fertilizer. This truth cannot long remain dormant; but while It Is dor mant to the farmer who does not reau and study, it is the golden harvest time for the farmer who thinks. When he buys a ton of cotton seed meal at Itg feed valuation, say $28 per ton, he should use this value as a feed, and should save the resultant manure from the cattle, and use the fertilizer value of the meal, say $28, and thus make 100 per cent on his Investment In meal, and realize as an incidental profit, all of the beef (or the butter as the case may be) which his skill and foresight can produce. Upper Cherokee Locale- Cowpens, Route 1, Nov. 12.—The farmers are about done picking cot ton and are beginning to make prep arations for wheat sowing. Some are still bolding their cotton while others are selling. Mr. Wofford Price closed out his crop yesterday at Mary Louise Mills for ten and a quarter cents. None of our farmers through this section belong to the Farmers’ Union. Mr. Joe Humphries, of Mt. Olive, will begin a singing school at New Pleasant next Monday morning, If not providentially hindered. Miss Annie Hamrick, a daughter of Mr. Jas. Hamrick, of State Line, and Mr. Grover Collins, of Arrowood, were united In the holy bonds of matrimony at State Line church at nine o’clocb last Sunday morning in the presence of quite a number of friends and rel atives, Rev. C. M- Teal, officiating. Quite a number of our people at tended the fair at Spartanburg last week. Among those who attended were: Mr. Gen Bonner and wile, Mr. C. C. McDaniel and wife, Mr*. Fannie Bonner and daughter, Miss Emma and Miss Janie Hicks. They report a good time. Mr. Chas. McDaniel went to Spar tanburg last Friday on business. Mr. Wofford Price has gone to Spar tanburg today on business. He does not mind the sleet and rain. Mrs. Dorothy Cash visited her mother yesterday. Mr. Zeno Blackwell has got his plnders gathered. He made about forty-flye bushels; the most I ever saw made by one person In this coun try. He retails them at six cents per pound. Mt. Jackson Thompson, of Mill Springs, N. C., visited at Mr. G. M. Champion’s last Sunday and we be lieve “Jack” Is rather struck on our community or girls one. Come again, Jack, we welcome all young business men In our section. Some of our neighbors have killed hogs. Miss Mattie Davis was In our com munity yesterday looking after the interest of New Pleasant school. Miss Made Jarrett has given up he? Job with the Bee Hive at Spar tanburg and rod® to Hot Springs to school. C. H. M. RHEUMATIC FOLK8I Are You Bure Your Kidneys Are Well? Many rheumatic attacks are due to uric acid In the blood. Bat the duty of the kidneys Is to remove all uric acid from the blood. Its presence there shows the kidneys are Inactive. Don’t da’ly with “uric ••cid solvents” You might go on till doomsday with them, hut until you cure the kidneys you will never get well. Doan’s Kid ney pills not only remove uric acid, but cure the kidneys and then all danger from uric acid is ended. Rupert B. Calvo, bookbinder, em ployed at The State Publishing Co., official printers for the State of South Carolina, living at'1010 Lumber St, Columbia, S. C., says: M I thought I had rheumatism and treated for it on that belief. 1 used all Muds of lini ments. The pain was In my back and in my hips clear to the shoulders. The liniments did no goon and I took to blood medicines hat they did not help me. 1 took a long trip in hopes that the change of climate might help me. I was away for three months but could see no change tor the better. I heard of Doan’s Kidney Pills and determined to try them, and got a box at a drag store. Thev com pletely removed the pains ont of my bacb and I have not felt a touch of the old trouble since I used tneiu." For sale by all dealers. Price 60 cents. Foster-Milbnrn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United StatesL Remember the name—Doan’s—and take no other. Cures Biaod. Skin Diseases, cancers Greatest Blood Purifier Free. If your blood is Impure, thin, die- oased. hot or full humors, if you have blood poison, cancer, carbun cles. eating sores, scrofula, ecsema. itching, risings and humps, scabby, ntmplv skin, bone pains, catarrh, rheumatism, or any blood or skin disease, take Botanic Blood Balm (B B. B.) Boon 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 cners after all else fails. Sold In Gaffney, S. C., by Cherokee Drag C . April 5. 1907. 1 year. I ain’t feeling right today, Something wrong 1 must say; Come to think of It, that’s right I forgot my Rocky Mountain Tea last night. Gaffney Drug Co. —It will pay you to look into that $2.70 for $1.00 offer by The Gaffney Drag Co. tf. —For hUHonsness, constipation, diz ziness and disorders of the stomach take Gaffney Drug Go ’s PINK PILLS. CLERK’S SALE. By virtue of a decree of partition and sale of the Court of Common Pleas for Cherokee county In the ease of M. A. Littlejohn. H. D. Little john and Agnes Littlejohn, plaintiffs, vs. Elmer Coob, Oscar Horn, Clara Casey, Benson Hora^ Furman Horn. Walton Horn, Charley Horn, Elsie Gault, F. D- Horn, James W. Wilkins. Norris T. Wilkins, Jane M. Wilkins, DeWltt S. Wilkins, Ethel A. WIIkhis, Charley 8. Wilkins, Robert Y. Wil kins and Hugh Wilkins, defendants, I will sell at Gaffney, S- C., before the court house door, during the legal hours for sale on salesday, Monday, December 2nd, 1907, the following de scribed property, to-wlt: All that certain piece, parcel or tract of land lying, being and situate In Cherokee County, containing one hundred and eighty-three (183) acres, more or less, bounded by lands now owned by V. C. Lipscomb, George Mathews, John Fowler, G. Wilkins, Jim Wilkins and James Blanton, the same being the property of W. E. S. Littlejohn and Mary yttlejohn, de ceased. said property will be sold In lots In accordance wlta plat to be ex hibited on day of sale. TERMS OF SALE: One-half cash, balance on a credit of one year; cred it portion to bear interest from day of sale, and to oe secured by bond of purchaser and mortgage of premises. The purchaser to have leave to pay all cash, and to pay for papers and re cording. Should, the purchaser fall to comply with the terms, the prop- perty will be re-sold on the same day at the risk of the defaulting pur chaser. J. Eh Jefferies. Cl’b. C. C. Pl’B. Pub. Nov. 15, 22 and 29. SKIN DISEASES HUMORS IN THE BLOOD Wbai th* blood is para, traok nod hcalthj, the skin will be eoft, —wmQ 1 •■i free from blemishes, bat wfrea some edanamor takes root in the dra» Its presence Is manifested by a akin crap tion or diiraee These ■ get Into the blood, generally because of an Inactive or sluggish condition of the members of the body whose duty it is to collect and a ef the waste end fefaae matter of the system. Tnia unhealthy matter is In soar and ferment end soon (he circulation becomes chained with the 1 e m. The blood begins to throw off the humors and acids through tkn 1 end glands of the skin, producing Brasilia, Acne, Tetter, Peoriesm^ __ Rheum and skin eruptions of various kinds. Eczema appears, nsr.J^p 1C. with a slight redness of the eUn ftowe a sticky fluid that dries and forms ll fs generally on the back, breast, face, followed by pustules from a crust, and the itching it burning! pustules WO om which these flow* old; crusts would oeme when tsesiohed a uarJhr which ini . . _ . ... end le^s, though other pertB sf the body may be affected. In Tetter the ehd»« dries, cracks and bieedai the add in the blood dries up the natural oAe of the skin, which are intended b» keep it soft and pliant, causing a dry, feverish condition and giving it« herd, leathery appraranna. Acne makes its appearance on the lace in the form of pimples and black heads, while Psoriasis comes in scaly patches on differ ent parts of the body One of the wont forms of akin trouble is Salt Rheum) its favorite point of attack is the scalp, sometimes causing baldness. Poison Oak and Ivy ere also disagreeable types of akin disease. The humor producing the trouble lies dormant in the blood through the Winter to break out and torment the sufi-ji er with the return of Spring. The best treatment for all akin diseases is 8. 8. 8. It neutralises the acids and removes the humors so that the skin instead of being irritated end diseased, is nourished by g •apply of fresh, healthy blood. External applications of selves, washes, lotions, etau, while they soothe the itching caused bw •kin affectioais, can never cure the trouble they do not reach the blood. S. 8.8. goes down into the Hrrnliti— m cut every particle of foreign matter and restores the blood to Hi ooadltfon, thereby permanently earing every form of skin ok oa Skin Diseases and any medical advice dee is all otee write. A. 8. 8. is for eale at aU Mjoruata aad wh«i r .« lift m raw as •uffared •wpi.y japs yean I waa afllloWd, but K m I uaadB. 8.$. X touuda par« aun. Than has navar Man leWura at tha troubU. Nab. TAMS, SaSaSa PURELY VE6ETABE / m Skin Diseases and any medical advice desired 8. 8. 8. is for sale at all first class drug stores. THE SWIFT SPKOmO CO- ATIAMTA, •;«! ft Buy a Home With Rent Money! Si) 1 cm can do this by taking stock in tm i*«| Cherokee Building and Loan Associs tion. This is the oldest Building ai Loan Association in Gaffney. It conducted along conservative linA. We can help you to the road of weatyi. See any of our officers. Read ur Booklet and learn our plans. : Cherokee B.sL Associatbn V. V. Gaffney, Sec’y & Treas. G. A. Jefferies,tet. |] 1 'ft HONEST INSURANCE Plain, sure protection to the family at premium rates fixed on basis of the actuaries’tables of life) expectation, and} therefore, abselutef (air is the only kind of life insurance written by The Southeastern Life Insur/nce Company of Spartanburg, S. C No ‘‘deferred” dividends, no ‘‘participa/ng” policies, no schemes for profit, no opening for speculation, no element o(scandal, but strict and straight Life Insurance of the kind that takes care of 4 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 everv man’s sacred duty to carry life insurance for t/e benefit of those de pendant upon him, and all men know this. But no SouthCarolinan need go out , of his own State to get it. t-: / 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 directed by men whose homes and interests are in this State. It is_an old line, Irgal reserve,’Straight Life Cotipany of ’ tae soundest kind, and should have the support of the people of th« State. Southeastern Life Insurance Gompy, ELLIOTT ESTES, Jr. General Agent, Spartanburg, S. C. Mur, Irtth. 1MW FARM AND TIMBER LANDS FOR SALE In Old Virginia. Do you want a grass, grail, stock, cotton, tobacco or combination farm? If so, we have it. We have the chocolate, red and /ray soil with .red clay subsoil. No land in the South is naturally l*etter or more easily improved than the land around Chase City in Mecklenburg and adjoining cmnties. It can he bought at from $7 00 to $15.00 per acre. Why continue to work yoor, small, high priced farms when we are offering for sale such land at such priced Come to see us at once or write for land and timber circular. Get. 29-2taw-3m». JEFFREYS, HESTER & CO., Inc. Real Eetaw Agents. Chase City, • MeokUnburg Co., - Virginia. \Aj SELBY A BIG SHIPMENT OF THE SHOES JUST RECEIVED Perfect Dreams. A pretty Shoe sets off a pretty foot. Call on us for elegant Footwear. & THE COMPANY STORE. Gaffney. S. C. $