The ledger. [volume] (Gaffney City, S.C.) 1896-1907, December 20, 1907, Image 7

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Calm age Sermon By Rev. Frink De Witt Ttlmitfe, D. D. NOTICE OF ELECTION. Los Angeles, Cal., Dec. 15.—At thir lea sou, when all the world gc*es Khoi> ping and hargniu bunting, tills prac tical sermon has nn eBi>eclal tliueli ness The text Is Hebrews xll. 12. “Wherefore lift up the har.is which han^ down and the feeble knees.” How the ways of doing business have changed within the lust fifty years! When our grandfathers lived the land v :u- sparsely ettled. Then every man willing to work could find plenty o. work to do Then the universal mot to wen: “Never build upon another man’s foundation. Never try to un do: mine the work of your neighbors.' If a man had a little country store no one ever thought of building an other store just across the street to spill his trade In half. It was a uni versallv recognized truth that there be easy enough to phop If we had pleu ty of nioue^. but we haven't, and the clothing must be bought, and how to buy it Is the ipiesiiou. Well, I will try •gain tomorrow and see whut I can do.” Then your father said: "Too bad. Mary; too bail! I hate to see you look eo tired. But perhaps when we pay off the mortgage you will have a little money to spend, and then you can hire a girl for the kitchen and for the scouring." Do you not remember such a discussion In the old home? Well, there are thousands and tens of thou sands of homes in the city like your father's home. There are plenty of babies In those homes and but little money to provide for them. Buying for such families Is no joke. The ex penses must be cut down, and that Is one reason the bargain counters have dead. The greatest sufferers of a na tion’s vers are the unseen sufferers. Who. then, are the martyrs of the bargain counter? 1 will tell you. In all probability those goods which are sold belonged to some smaller dealer who was driven to the wall and who had to sell his stock for anything he could get. or they are the goods of some poor woman who had to work lu the Chicago or the New York sweat shops, or they are the goods that have been marked down below cost In order to run sonic rival out of business. It Is easy enough for a druggist to take in a line of stationery and sell it at cost in order to destroy the trade of | the stationery store near iiitn, but that sale means blood money. No man ever | bought somethinc for less than cost unless some one had to suffer. God State of South Carolina, County of Cherokee. Pursuant to the commission to us, WH8 nn |y ro0 | U enough for one store lu directed by the Hon. R. 8- WhateY’ ( v |u n g e aUi i the first man who start •peaker of the House of Representa- ” , _ , , u* tiyes an election Is hereby ordered tJ(1 fdore had a personal right to that to be held in the county of Cherokee, trade, and no oik* else dared say him on Tuesday, December 3lst, 1907, to nay- elect a Representative to serve for ,‘ f ailotber started a blacksmith shop in a village he had a monopoly the remainder of the term for which the Hon. W F. McArthur was elect- ad ag Representative from the county ()f ' his line of bush in hat region, of Cherokee, and the following per- A uelghlxir had the right to start a sons are hereby designated as manag- blacksmith shop leu miles away, but era of the election at their respect- n ot another lu that locality. What was lye precincts; true of the blacksmith was also true of Allens—C. A- Spencer, .1. B. Car- u,,. , u jii e r, upd the cobbler, and the ter, Horace Lipscomb.. physician, and the lawyer. Then the Antioch K. Hardin, J. R. Dover, ba .. vl , st | ia ,| f ew laborers that, no J... . .... .. T „ j imm tried to build up his success upon AiKrrfa" • '• M - -<• * “*•, »“* f Butler’s—M. S. Swafford, G. W. have changed. Instead of trade Baker, W- W- Hopper. hunting the man the man has to hunt Buffalo—Lewis Hopper, Mangum hi trade. Whereas lu olden time? Gastcn, D- H- Wylie. there were a dozen different places Cherokee Falls—M. C- Byars, U- K- for each man, now there are a dozen Allen. R. C- Cobb. different applicants for each place. Draytonvllle^—W. S- Wilson, R. S- 'nma men today seem to win their suc- Spencer, d. C- Phillips. ; ce! . s m- o-usbing out the lives of their Ezell R. P. Scruggs, Swan Parris,; fellovv ‘ m( . n Amt thlg fa( . t ls especial Geo. D- Scruggs. Grassy Pond—A. J. McCraw, G. N. Webb, Lee Allison. Goucher—M. L- Guthrie, J. M- Up- ■comb, B F- Bonner. Gaffney No. l—p. R. Wilson, L. D. Hippy- J A- Harvey. Gaffney no- 2—T- R. Wilkins, Dr. W. A Fort, B- B- Morgan. Gaffney No. 3—W T- Thompson, J. H. Turner, J. J. Gallagher: Limestone—Roan Gibson, D. J. , Bright, W- A. Green. Littlejohns—John A. names, W- B- M- Kirby, J. W- Sparks. UTaeodunla—I^andrum Clary, Lee Smith, J. V. PriC9-, Maud—A. C- PHjc«. John Godfrey, R, E. Linder. Kings Creek—J. H- WSlbnrn, James Caldwell, Hayes Mitchell Ravenna—Wilkes Brown, K- Go- j forth. T- J- Chalk. Sarratt—J. G- Kendrick, J. H. Wll- fclns, F. A. Goforth. Turners—J. C. Pryor, C. A. 8. ly true In the mercantile world. Each year the mai'rin of profits Is being cut down. The merchant who can buy the closest and sc’! .- cheapest is the mm who buildf- tp th» blgge: ; trade and has the l.ii'gcd tore. This comiteUtio.i for trade has be come so bitter that the merchants In order to underbid each other have sal! to their partners. “We will take some goods and mark them down below cost. These we will put upon the bar gain counter. Then after the people have flocked to tills bargain coi n er perhaps we can sell them some other goods that will reimburse us for our direct loss." Thus almost every day you can see some I advertisements In the newspapers which tell you that at such ami such store at certain times such and such goods will tie sold at a price below cost. When you read these reductions you know that these poods oou!1 not he made Aar such n “l the struggling multitudes about them ' pity the poor sewing girls whose nee i The Bargain Counter Leeeon. ^ made those cheap garments. God | But the bargain counter teaches us M the y reeled business out of wh ch | another lesson. Though most people those bargain countc-s have lK*n ! fb are having a hard time financially, j Oof pity the men and the wo.nen , there are a great nu nber who fatten who forbears have had to labor ami themselves upon the misfortunes of yet all their Ubo. go for naught Do | others These modern vandals or you and I want to make a profit out of , ghouls of the night are not producers 8Uch tra £**<lles? or developers. They are human lieasts j The Bargain Counter and Crime, t of prey whose business In life Is to - But. though It Is hard to starve anl find some victims in distress and then i to wear ragged clothes and go to the to pounce upon them and make profit , poorbouse. yet there are even worse out of their misfortunes. They are results from the bargain counter than like the wreckers of old who used to those. Poverty Is hard enough. But, patrol the western coast of England, though poverty dresses in rags, pover- When a merchant ship was approach- ty too often has a handmaid ready to ing the coast they would, with false run at her l>eck and call. Poverty's lights, decoy It upon the rocks. Then handmaid is crime, ami crime’s name they would gather up the wreckage can be spelled In many different ways, and take the plunder to theft homes Sometimes It Is culled immorality, and sell It. So from time Immemorial sometimes theft, sometimes drunken- men have Increased their own for- ness, sometimes forgery, sometimes tunes by living upon the wreckages wrecked and dismantled homes. It Is and the shipwrecks of other lives. The easy enough for some of us to lie good tragedy of our last national panic when we have full stomachs and are i proves that what I say Is true. sitting with our dear ones before the J During the financial stringency in grate In the cheerful library, but It Is ' October there were certain men In another thing for some of us to be New York dty who had ready money, good when we are hungry and cold Some of these men began to run up and are hearing our little ones cry for their premiums 20 and 50 and 75 an<i their daily bread. Yes. the bargain even 100 per cent. In other words, in counter nearly always means poverty, order to borrow $10 from you I would A.nd, alas, poverty too often means have to give s-;o In return. Because crime. these men had cornered the money The history of the bargain counter ! market they attempted to take from | H ruinous everywhere. It means pov- i their fellow men every dollar they erty, and poverty too often means ■ possessed. These plunderers were fat- crime. See that young girl leading a ! teulng their purses upon the mlsfor nf e 0 f e . The bargain counter ! tunes of their fellow men. And ha ' ma y b ave made her do It. See that not the secretary of the treasury and f or g Pr ijchit.J Iroy bars. The bargain men like J. P. Morgan and others of counter may have made him dip the ! that ilk brought millions upon millions | fa | ge pen fntu the luk gee that drunk : of dollars Into Mall street this conn- | ar( j Tin* bargain counter may have J try w'ou!il have seen the darkest days lifted the Intoxicating cup to bis lips, in its finatu lrtl history. Alas, Wa! y ou cannot buy something for less , street is no different from every other i than tost, unless some one Is being street! In every country there ore a p^e,] t o the financial wall. The bar- | lot of human vultures. Like haunting g n i n always moans pecuniary ; Don't Shiver Just scratch a match—light the Perfection Oil Heater— and stop shivering. Wher ever you have a room that** hard to heat—that the fur nace doesn’t reach—there you’ll need a PERFECTION Oil Healer (Equipped with Smokeless Device) Just the thing for blizzard time or between seasons. Its genial glowing heat makes any room cheerfj and cozy. No smoke— no smell—smokeless device prevents. Brass font holds 4 quarts of oil burning 9 hours. Fin ished in japan and nickel Every heater warranted. which is so much appreciated by workers and students. Made of brass, nickel plated with the latest improved central draft burner. Every lamp warranted. Write our nearest agency for de scriptive circular if your dealer cannot supply die Perfection Oil Heater or Rayo Lamp. Standard Oil Company (Incorporated) specters, they arc* hovering around ready to banquet upon the carcasses o the flnai dully slain. As soon ns any man gets into trouble they pounce up on him and rip and tear him to Httlo pieces. Like tin* ghouls of the night, they live by desecrating the grave- loss some “it re, and the loser Is driv en by po'’e' y m* 1 crime to take the cup of de^pai. 1 and drink it to the bit ter dregs Now. there are two great practical applications of this subject. Never let your children become the victims of Campbell, L. F. Blanton. _ Timber Ridge—B. L Tate, J. D. selling price. And yet therff Is a larye Carter, John F. Jamison. 'class of people who daily scan the Thlckety—I. M- Smith, D- L- Va*-[ newspaper columns for the* bargain ■ey, M- W. Goforth. ! *:•)<-. These i u; era g > from bargain Wllklnsville—J. R. Hughes, Boyca (.on,,!,,,- p, , iin counter and them Wklsonant, J. A- M- Estes. come* home g' > !i:g over the fact tiwt White plains R. H- Taylor, M- C. tbev |, aVt . p <t those goods cheap Lipscomb, James PnJmer. er t baI1 i| iev could have iteen made. Woods—L. B* Wood, Joseph Hands, Wesley Hawkins. Polls will be opened at 7 o'clock A. M and closed at 4 o'clock P. M. The above named managers will call at the Court House for ballot boxes and ballots for the respective * precincts, not later than Saturday, December 28th, 1907. \ Dated this November 20th, 1907. R. A- Westbrooks, J. H- Allison, D. R. Hughes. Commissioners of State Election. yards. Like tin* robbers of stranded bargain counter’s tyrannies. Nev •hips, their incomes are derived from the wreckages of their fellow men. Be Just to Others. Now, my brother. If you have a good income and ate not in abject want be morally and spiritually honest. As you aspect men to pay you a Just price for jour labor, you should be willing to pay others a Just price for their labor. Because u poor seamstress Is unfortu •r start your own loved ones forth into the battle of life unless they are men tally and physically trained to do one thing well, so that by their own skill they are able to earn a decent living. The direct cause of the bargain coun ter Is that this world is flooded with unskilled labor. Those unskilled la borers sre almost entirely at the mercy of the unseruunions, who say to the nate and cannot get work do not give poor needle . o aan, “Make these shirts her 75 cents a day for her services when j at so much a day or starve," and there jou ought to pay her $1.50. If you have is no redres The unskilled workmen an Industrious boy lu your employ who have to l;.!x>: - at ‘starvation wages la doing the w ork of a full grown man. The goods mos ly found upon the bar- do not pay him simply tin* wages of a gain counter are the products of each boy. Pay him the wages of a man. lal^or. Never let your children grow ” c ? 'ounter Tragedy. Now t 1 ;, i. a sad commentary up on the social condition of modern life. Whenever a man or a woman buys an article cheaper,than it cost to produce that article some one has to suffer There is no exception to the rule. To day I would use for my serraonic theme “The Tragedy of the Bargain Counter” anil the lessons it teaches. In the first place, the great throngs pushing and jostling about the bur gain counter Impress me with the thought that for the great masses of NOTICE OF FINAL DISCHARGE* people life is a terrific financial strug .... , . • . .. , aw gle- From morning until night and an^i° ^ ^ at l from night until morning the vital apply to Hon. J. E. Webster, Probate Judge for Cherokee county, 8. C., on Saturday, January 4tb, next at 10 question uppermost in most people': minds Is hov they tan make their In Because you have a mer hant In a financial "hole” do not s jt’ceze the life out of him. Be honest. Be fair. Pay a Just price for all labor—that is. pay as you expect others to pay you. The tragedy of the bargain counter up to loin the pathetic army of un skilled laborer ;. Make them loam to do well some one thing by which they can earn an honest livelihood If there should ever be a necessity for It. An' this warning applies Just as much to teaches us another great lesson. When 1 what you shall do for your girls as f< an article has be sold below cost, your boys, the unseen sufferers are those who are | Tha Turn of Fortune, hurt the worst by the financial sacrl- "Oh.” but you sav, “you do not know flee. The clerk who sells you the goods j who j am , um a p aup er. I am over the counter may not l>e the suf- one Q f t be | t . ;u iing business men In ferer. Neither is the man who to at thlR toWM vviien I die I expect to the head of the great dry goods em- leave tpy children enough money to be o’clock A. M. for final settlement and cou 10 their outgo. The children discharge as administrator of the ea- must have shoe* and dresses and tin- tate of James P. Smith, deceased. derw< ar. The house servant must tie All persons holding claims against paid. Food must lie provided for tin* said estate must appear and present table. Medicines must lie bought. the same, on or before that time, or be forever barred. A. 8. Smith, Administrator estate Jamea P. Smith, deceased. Pub. in Gaffney Ledger Dec. It, 20 and 27. 1*07, and Jan. 8, 1908. THE ORIGINAL • i T.'<»up KENNEDY'SL ’ r "WWAI 8c4 Clover Sk. v M. y , y r ittu. Kodol Dv* pepsia Cure DigCf I'J V; 15 ' (*»t. School bills niiist be met. Yet the sal ary cannot im made any bigger. Now. what is the average man to do? He must cut down his expenses. And in every way In which those expenses can Is* cut down people do It. This is one of the great reasons of the multi tudes flocking about the bargain coun ters You do not Itelieve this? Well, per haps the dollar question Is not a vital question In your family. Yon have made u financial success, and your borne is on L isy street. But Is your memory so short lived that you can not remember the experiences of your i old father's house. Money was not as plentiful then as it is now Then every dollar had to lx? made to do Its full stint of work. Then there was no waste and no foolish buying. Do yon remember how your mother used to go shopping day after day? How tirel she would look when she came home! ' And the strange fact was she would ! ' so <>fu u come home empty handed BVkE V.ITVjrvTiT*nr Your father would come In for supper JrOlxEjfsJ .OvCr. £ I ^ ^A AK ' •nd say. "Well, motlnq. what did you •’xdi accomplish today?" and with a tirel vo!<p nbe Would answer: “Nothin"' John: nothing. I no not know what I shall do. Tin* two girls must have new coats. Then the boys need warm underwear I nn.st get another tef of warm blankets for Jennie's bed. L. erythlng is sp high! Of course It would PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM Cletnw* will m.liftin- hair. I'rurnotM n ’rixurlmit growth. N+vur ' j i -.V-oro O-ray li.-iir to r thfiU Color. Cil»* x-n'e ■ '.iir .ullinj 4< » —I Dr.king's New UfePIHs The In the world. far Tha fl • porium the one who ought to be the independent. Why. mv wife would feel most pitied. But tin* unseen sufferers disgraced if I sent my daughters out are the men and women whose names t0 wor |j >• (; re at mistake that, my you never know and whose faces you brother. The money you have saved never saw. I licso are the people who w m never make your family independ- •hould lie commiserated. e nt of financial risks. The easiest A Civil War Tragedy. thing in the world to scatter is a for- The tragedy of the bargain counter 1 Wne when it is gathered by the hands la like tin* tragedy of the late civil j of another man. And 1 want to tell war. I have lteen over many of the you something else. The labor market great battlefields of our country. Per- today Is simply glutted with the un haps you have also been to some of skilled labor of the men and women them. Then, like me, you have stood who were once denizens of wealthy before the plain white tombstones In ! homes. Your daughter may know bow our national cemeteries and said: drum upon the piano from now un- “Poor fellows! Poor fellows! Most til doomsday or paint upon some china of these martyred soldiers were only • flowers which her teacher has boys. Think of tlie long mavchee and drawn for her. but such accomplish the days of hunger and cold. Think ments In coming days of financial of those soldiers falling In the awful ■tress will not gain for her her dally charges and the despair that must have bread. No man. I care not who he overwhelmed them when they fell. B°®y h 0 - whether he lives In palace or Think of the horrors of the operating to but, has done his full duty to his table and their agony when dying.’ children unless he gives bis boys and But, though no man honors the dead Ifhrl® the best education In his power soldiers of the* late civil war more End teaches them how to become sklll- tttan I do. yet 1 would tell yon that workmen lu some line so that they those who died for their country did ced eErn their dally bread. When I not make I he greatest sacrifices. A have trained my children's brains and living sorrow is a far heavier burden hands to earn a living. I have given to bear than a dead triumph. Did you ^hem the l>est Itoon on earth, next to ever atop to think of what became of introducing them to my Kaviour and the wives and the mothers and th* , King. children of those dead soldiers when I would impress upon your minds the breadwinners were stricken down? today the old gospel lesson that our Did you ever think of the soldiers mission should lie to help those who whose health and strength were de are helpless and to fare for those who •troyed discharged from service be are financially, morally and spiritually cause they were unfit for further dvty tripped up In the battle of life. In the and who came home with mangled old Roman Coliseuru. when e gladiator limbs, doomed tote lifetime of physical was flung, the ntm-ry foe standing over they would point their thumbs to the heavens; If tlu^ wanted hl;u ,to die. they would polul Ik !r tlia.uljs down. Bo to'..iy bj the lessoas of tile bargain conn.i r \vo hoi.I ..in* life and the deiu!) of multitudes as they did in the Uo- man (’ollneuiu. Shall we say “Thumbs up" or “Thumbs down?” Th<j Earl of SHaf.ssbvry’s Career. Did you e\er hear how the Earl of Shaftesbury was led to devote him self to bis great life’s work? No soon er did he enter parliament as a young man of twenty-five than he at once be- *j gan to look a round tie see whom he could help. First he arose and advo cated lavs for the alleviation o? the sufferings of the Insane In the public asylums. As soon as the pitiful ex istence of these poor unfortunates was bettered he wrote in his diary, “And so by God’s blessing my first effort has been made for the advafe mnent of hu man happiness.” Next he advocated laws to better the condition of the poor pan tiers farmed out to work. some of our states farm out their crim Inals to work in the mines. Tnen lie extended a helping band to the poor little children who as chimney sweep ers were compelled to work for a liv ing. Then this nobleman, noble not only by blood, bat by achievement atarted out to help the seamstresses of London and the bootblacks and at last even the criminals themselves. And when he died the Prince of Wales •■ well aa the London poor vied with each other to show honor when the good Earl of Shaftesbury's body was laid away among the honored dead o Westminster abbey. All these noble philanthropies received their first Im pulse when as a boy he saw a friend lees petiper In a cheap box being car ried by five drunken men to the pot ter’s field May these thoughts on the bargain counter lx* to ns what thn f plain wooden box was to the nobD earl. May we from lids moment real tze that there are countless multitude In want and In poverty. May we go forth prayerfully, hopefully, trium phantly, to do the greatest good we can to the greatest number and to help all suffering humanity In Christ’s name as Jesus helped us. Then will the trage dy of the bargain counter lx* for us a lifetime Inspiration for Christian serv Ice. [Copyright, i*/;, by LouU Kloimoh.l Bad Symptoms. The woman who lias periodical head* aches, backache, sees Imaginary dark fcpots or specks boating or ihnclng before her eyes, ba&^nawlng distress or heavy fall feeling UiJtomach, faint spells, drag ging -downA/ ling in lower abdominal or K lvlc region, easily startled or excited, •eguWfror painful periods, with or with out [rlvic catarrh. Is suffering from weaknwses a n<kflerangements that should have elMy auention. Not all of above symptoiis ape likely to be preaent in any case at one/i me. Neglpetyd or badly treated and such eases/Often run into maladies which de- man/ dfe surgeon’s knife if they do not 1J y medicine extant has Such a loni ^'OVt2* Stomach N > apyedte. .0- c. rtrfcr.fctn. nerveu* . j. haauacne. c— ;j; -.non, bid breath, :crai deputy, sou. v jo. ana cauirh the to nacli are to kidigesbon. iUJol rc..*vfcsl:.d gt ■ i;. .'..is nev/ discos •; v represents the i.at'.r- juices of t!ige> tion as they exit! In a ! althy stomach, -o fcined v/i’h *'* '’nowr. tonlo <• . recot.‘■tr"e*ive r- r- ties. Kocol for epsia c' 1 ' not oniy r*..ieve indt£:$tW>B < dyspepsia, ! "t to— ' mors remedy - - rs Pil storrara (rotjolr c ■ cleansing, O'lrdying. sweeicanit; ana strtngtnenlng in muoous mem hr air:, ir.iig . — siomach. Mr. j. S. Hull. o< \ ■ •• W. V» . 5uy*.— I v..i- i-i.ub:«d -ath ji :: fi.- iwent* years. < • . e ! ne *j-J .V jrin* It in m'fc ter ' Kodol Dive-ts Vv r.ac 'You Eat. kittle* only. R<- <-v*-s tndli’estlm. snur s to meek, be.chir.< i ,.... e.c. 'rmpmrmd by t. C. De'.vlT-c a OO-. CHICAGO. For aala by Charakaa Drug Ce> Jones J. Darby Insurance Olee Star Tbeatre Boildinf OR. W. K. GUNTER 1> N T I lB»'r 'btfice in Star Theatre Building. Phonic No. ‘20. Orow» sag brides work a spadatty. DR* J. F* QARRCTT. DCNTIST* Office an Frederick Street ’Phone In Office ang Reeldenca. tmr chlldrmni safe, *ur«. Mo aplatoo lectric ..’BSfflga- i BITTERS andkidnmhl ifiW1 WTnv:T ■ u^.lira rrrrfe u TOT l -Jirm <*nta—worth mnro ihap »1|Y Inery n^p.jipnfcaetnna I rr>a. vltasioiu „ ie very lM*st ingredicm medical science for the cure of woman’s peculiar ailments enter into Its composition. No alcohol, harmfttl, or haliil-forming drug is to be found in the list of its ingredient* printed on each bottle-wrapper and attested under oath. in any condition of the female system, Dr. Fierce’* Favorite Prescription can do only good—never harm. Its w hole effect Is to strengthen, invigorate and regulate the w hole female system and especially the pelvic organs. \\ hen these are de ranged in function or affected by disease, the stomach and oilier organs of digestion become sympathetically deranged, the nerves are weakened, and a long list of bad, unpleasaat symptoms follow. Too much must not be expected of this "Fa vorite Prescription." It will not perform miracles- will not cure tumor*—no med icine will. It will often prevent them, If taken in time, and thus the operating table and the surgeon's knlfa may be avoided. Women enffering from diseases of long standing, are Invited to consult Doctor Pierce by letter,/ree. All correspondence ■ held a* strictly private and sacredly confidential. Address Dr. B/V. Pierce, Buffalo. N. Y. Dr. Plerea's Medical Adviser (1000pages) to sent fret on receipt of 21 one-ceni stamps lor pttuer-oover'*d, or 31 »ua,j;s wr cloth-bound copy. Address aa abeva decrepitude and pain? Ah, these were him had first to the greatest sufferers of the national ! virgin* to find oi cErnage, not the men who felt the spare him or pin tingling of the bullet and then with a cry of "Oh. my God. Pm ebetr fell lJ>ok up to the nit whether he age Into bis bea fatal sword, wanted the vestal might heart the If/ the vestal virgins rate fighter to Hve. BANNER SALVE the meet healino salve in the world -:rr" OBJUNO’S (NEW DISCOVERY WHI Surely Step IM Ceafk. FOLmHONET^IAR Dana Beldai Fiexeula Facaamala • ii"-■ '■... . . Dewitt’s O Safeo RumKlMIYCDBB Wakes Kidneys vod Bladder Right Buckton's Arnica Salve The Bfftl Salve la The World. FOR ALL COUNTY NEWS. IM- FORTANT HAFFENING3 I’- THE •TATI AND EVINTI OF i. .T r.H- ■•T IN FOREIGN LANDS AND READ THE LEDGER -mil' * 91 3§V m mm