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‘^rti v?Wj 4 rj>- ' r 4 / e 'wyswr*}'# Peoples’ Building and Loan Association THIRD — The Home=BuiIder and Money-Saver = SERIES OPENS SATURDAY, APRIL THIS IS A LIST OF OUR CONTENTED SHARE HOLDERS: 11th, 1908 R. M. Wilkins B. B. Steedly A. Louis Wood Allie Osborne Z A. Robertson Sam Hopper, Jr Bob Davis H. T. H J. T. W. J. R. 0. T K. Osborne B. Moore M. Brown L. Walker C. Petty J. Wilkins Eb Jefferies C. Garland J. N. Lipscomb M. H. Morrow Sallie Erwin Mrs. Fannie Montgomery J. T. Darwin Henry Black J. N. Nesbitt E. H. DeCamp P. C. Little L. D. Rippy T. H- Curry John Blassingame M. G. Huskey N. B. Brown Adeline Berry J. J. Laney Rev. I. hf. stone F. N. Wood J. F. Garrett Earl Watkins R. B. Harvey T. W. Jones L. C. Warmouth Albert Kirby C. G. Parish Walter Baker Miss Carrie Barlard J. E. Lipscomb D. S. Collier T. C. Parker Chas. Baber W. E. Anderson H. S. Douglas J. S. Lemmons T. R. Owens W. M. Goodwin Lafar Lipscomb Prof. F. E. Shuford T. D. Daniel D. C. Anderson John K. Cedi H. S. Drummond T. Robbs Mrs. E. Corny Garnett Martin Miss Addle Harvey W. K. Guthrie Will Darby E. Wright N. Wood S. Lipscomb Baker E. R. Cash Stanyarne Little W. K. Davenport H. L. McBriar Chas. D. Kirby C S. Harvey A R. L. W. W. Gaffney A. F. Kendrick Rev. T. B. Owen Harriet M. Shanks ♦ J- Floyd Spake J. K. Wood Everett Waddey, Jr T. B. Butler Mrs. Nannie 0. Owen Thomas K. Shanks Lloyd Austell v/ Claud Flack C. M. Smith Dever Little C. Q. Wood J. M. Hampton J. O. Sparks I. Clyde Peeler R. M. WILKINS, Prest. J. F. GARRETT, V.-Prest. H. K. OSBORNE, Attorney, R. S. LIPSCOMB, Secy, and Treas. OKKIOK MEKGHAlVrS A IN I> I^AISXKRH 1JAISK if <>-v > t '.o> i ■ o.' +?o.' It? ^tpy. <f kKifi t i >’ <■•>•• FARMERS’ UNION NEWS ONE YEAR. Farmers’ Union Fertilizer Bulletin AND THE GAFFNEY LEDGER ONE YEAR ALL FOR $2.00 We are glad to annouace that we have just ma le arrangements with the Farmers’ Union News, published at Union City, Ga., the National and Georgia headquarters of the Farmers’ Union, whereby we are enabled to make the above offer. HERE IS WHAT YOU GET: 52 copies of the FARMERS’ UNION NEWS, Eoited by Hon. R. F. Duckworth, Georgia State President of the Farmers’ Union. In this publication you will find all official news of the Farmers’ Union ; you will find strong and able editorials on current events ; you will also find an Agricultural and a Home-Talks Department. A copy of the Fertilizer Bulletin, issued by the Farmers’ Union of Georgia. This tells you how to mix your fertilizers, also the anal ysis to use on different soils, for the raising of different crops, as well as a great d^al of other information. This bulletin alone, if carefully studied, is well worth the full amount of this offer. Aud you get THE GAFFNEY LEDGER twice a week, one full year, giving all the local and county news. : : : : j The recent post office ruling compels us to collect for subscriptions or discontinue the paper. We are willing to meet our subscribers more than half way, and we have there fore arranged for you the above extraordinary offer. This offer applies to both old aud new subscriptions. Greater value for the money was nevor offered by a serai-weekly paper of. this State. Now let’s all get together aud send in our subscriptions and re newals at once, and you will never regret the investment. : : : : : ADDRESS THE GAFFNEY LEDGER GAFFNEY, S. C. Flower Pots —AT— W. Kyle Davenport’s MU- • The New Shoe Store. I am receiving New Shoes nearly every week and will give you new, fresh stock at the very lowest prices. Try me and be convinced. Yours to please, I. M. Peeler. FOR SALE. FOR SALE—On easy terms, a five- horse horse gasoline engine. Apply to J. F. Fincken. Mar. SI tf. FOR SALE—First-class babbit met al. Apply at Ledger Office. FOR RENT. FOR RENT—House back of 3mM Hardware Co.’s store. Apply to W. H. Smtlb. Mar. S4 tt TO RENT—Office rooms over The Ledger. Apply to Bd. H. DeCamp Nov. 2, tf. , WANTED. BRING your chlckeas, ter. country produce, gre« Clary A Kirby. Highest < paid. ggs. bat hides te *h prises Fire Insurance! We represent some o' the UrRent and moMtNUbatanUal conipanleN and would like to write your bualne*. Smith & Lipqeomb, Agents J. GOING HAYES Boot and Shoe Repairing. Shop in Parish Hotel Building. All work guaranteed. Your work Solicited. 150 OLD-TIME SONGS Which the young and especially the old, delight In hearing played and song. Words and music to each song complete hy mall 10c. Address B. D. McQueeney Co., Dept 8.. 7I7A La fayette Ave., Brooklyn, N. T. DR. W. K. GUNTER nENTIWT Office in Star Theatre Building Phonk No. 20. Crown and bridge work a SISTERS, READ MY FRBB OFFBR. This ad. with a two-oent stamp and your address to Mrs. M. A. Hilton, Kershaw, g. 0.. will entitle you to tun days treatment wfclafc euree leneor- rhea, ulceration, dtapla of the womb, menstrual tumors, eta. Mar. IT v,;V„Y RAVENNA NEWS. j Personals and Local Events From a Thriving Neighborhood. Ravenna, April 1.—Mrs. K. R. Go forth spent last Thursday with Miss Ella Brown. Mrs. J. M. Lipscomb, of Goucher, and Mrs. J. B. Brown, of Ravenna City, spent last Thursday with Mrs. B. G. L. Pettit. Mrs. c. E. Kitchens has returned from a pleasant visit to Spartanburg, after spending a few days with Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Kitchens. One of our young ladies while at tending school last weeb, got a letter from her fellow and as the letter was a rather sweet one, sho forgot to eat her dinner. Mr. J. \V. Brown and son, Broadus, were Gaffney visitors last Thursday. Mrs. Prater Smith and daughter, Miss Fannie, of Goucher, spent last Thursday with Mrs. B. G. L. Pettit. M. W. Brown, our prosperous mer chant, spent part of last Friday in Gaffney. Mr. Brown is our leading merchant and is very popular with the young ladies. ’Squire T. C. Green, our Sunday school superintendent, has been quite sick for several days. Mrs. K. R. Goforth and son, Jona than, spent last Sunday in Gaffney. Mr. Wallace Burgess and Mr. Al len, of Pacalet, spent last Sunday afternoon in our midst. Miss Eva Burgess and brother, Claude, spent last Sunday with rel atives in Cowpens. Your correspondent spent last Sun day with his friend,.Floyd K. Goforth. C. T. Chalk and F. K. Goforth were ,th<> only attendants from here at the singing at Asbury last Sunday after noon. Tlie singing was given by Misses Bessie and Mary Mason. A good crowd was present and some good music was rendered. Mr. G. E. Brown, of Jonesville spent few hours here last Sunday. Miss lla Mathis furnished our Sun day school with some good music last Sunday, on account of the absence of our organist, Miss Eva Burgess. Charles E. Pettit spent last Sunday in Gaffney. Miss Pauline Pettit and brother Charles, spent a pleasant while last Sunday afternoon with C- T. and Miss Mary Lou Chalk. Jfr. Vaud Smith, of Thickety, pass ed through our “burg” last Sunday. Our rally last Sunday war a grand success and quite a good crowd was present. Mrs. C. C. Kirby, of Gaffney, is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. B. G. L. Pettit. We wish to thank “School Boy” for his kindly reference to our letter* and to be sure we appreciated It. Yes, we are expecting to report for our best county paper again and may decide to “take in” a companion to help us in our correspondence as this is leap year. We enjoy the excellent letters “School Boy” is getting up for The Ledger. We learn Mr. J. M- Green is serious ly thinking of “taking in” a boarder. You are right, good boy. Mr. G. O. Wilkins is in very poor health. C. D. Burgess still has his musk rat on exhibition. Rev. J. W. Guy, of Pacolet, is able to be up and about again. The Woodman of the World has or ganized a camp at Goucher. Miss Rossie Foster returned from a visit to Greenville last Saturday. Today Is "all fools day” but we hope the day is named wrong. Mr. M. M. Mize was a Gaffney visit or last Friday. Master Arthur Littlejohn, of Paco.- let. Is spending a few days with his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Felix Littlejohn. The “kids,” of Kegtown. came over last Saturday to play the "men” of Ravenna, but somehow the “men” failed to meet the “bids” and no game was pulled off- Come back again, “kids,” we love to see you get disap pointed—not disappointed but dis placed. Prof. T. G. Chalk spent last night with Mr. and Mrs- Porter, at Daw kins’ mill. Mr. C. C. Kirby, of Gaffney, spent a few hours here yesterday after noon. i Clyde Goforth stuck a nail In his foot yesterday and today he can hard ly get about. Misses Grace and Pearle Lipscomb, of Goucher, spent last night with Miss Carrie Goforth. We are glad to welcome “A.,” of As bury, to the list of Ledger correspnd- ents. “A.,” you should give us a re gular letter each week, for Asbury should be represented In The Ledger. Charles B. Pettit, after'a few days visit here, returned to Furman Uni versity, Greenville, yesterday. Carvllle Chalk received a sweet post card yesterday. It waa from his best girl. J. M. Green was down to see his best girl at Asbury Sunday. From the tone of an editorial in yes terday’s issue of The Ledge®, MU. DeCamp, the faithful editor, appears to desire to sell out his excellent pa per. We hope this will not take place as we hold Mr. DeCamp in high esteem. Mr. DeCamp, we know you have some critics, but we believe you have been doing your whole duty and striving at all times to write such ar ticles as would benefit all reading them. The Ledger, with Ed. DeCamp, has built up Gaffney and at every oppor tunity has placed its shoulder to the wheel and pushed Gaffney and Chero kee county. As for us, give us The Ledger, with Mr. DeCamp editor, and we feel confident everything will go right. We wish The Ledger and the "Old Man” many more years of prosperity and at all times we long to read the scuta’s best semi-weekly—The Led ger. C. TEXTILE NEWS. Local and Peraonal items Gathered Fro m Our Exchangee. Davlg Bishop, from Griffin, is now superintendent of the new (No. 3) mill of the Southern Manufacturing Company at Athens, Ga. L. A. Hinson, from the Highland Parb Mills, Rock Hill, has accepted a position with the Manetta Mill, l^ando, S. C., as loom fixer. H. B. Massey, from Wlnnsboro, S. C., has accepted a position with the Manetta Mills as overseer of carding in place of D- C. Sanders, resigned. J. L. Sessoms has resigned his po sition with the Manetta Mills, Lando, S. C., as loom fixer to accept a similar position at Draper, N. C. B. C. Whittle, from Augusta, Ga.. has accepted the position of weaving, slashing, web drawing and the cloth room at the Eastman (Ga.) Cotton Mills. L. W. Misenhelmer, from the shops of the Cooleemee Cotton Mills is now in charge of the engine and machine shops of the Spr’ngstein Mill at Ches ter, 8. C. H. E. Erwin, formerly of the Con tinental Mill, Charlotte, is now over seer of spinning In the mill at Mayes- worth, N. C., which is still running on full time and has orders for the gcods. , P. H. O’Neill has resigned as over seer of weaving at the Dallas Mills, Huntsville, Ala., to accept the posi tion of superintendent of the Uncoln- ton Cotton Mills, Evansville, Ind. He is succeeded by K. W. Vare, formerly second hand and timekeeper. E. L. Sargent for the past two or three years superintendent of Ather ton Mill Charlotte, Is now superinten dent of the Fidelity Mill, of which his brother, S. B. Sargent, formerly with the D. A. Tompkins Co., Is secretary pud treasurer. F. R. Duncan, from the Atherton Mill has accepted the position of overseer of the card room In the Fi delity, and Ches. Williams, also from the Atherton, is now In charge of the Fidelity spinning room, with D. E. C. Clough as overseer of warping and twisting. J. W. Burnett has resigned as over seer of carding in the Loray Mill at Gastonia, to accept a more satisfac tory position which has not yet been announced. On leaving he was pre sented by his second hands (assisted by the other overseers and office men) with a fine suit case, one of the best that could be found. J. T. Cole, who has been for the past two years overseer of splnnng and twisting In the York Cotton Mill at Yorkvllle, s. C.. has resigned and will for the summer be with the Wil lard Carnival Company, traveling In Virginia and further North, but any correspondence addressed to him at Albemarle, N. C-, will be forwarded. H. G. Tucker, formerly overseer of carding and spinning at Midway Mill, hut who has been holding a similar position In the Alpine Mill at Mor- ganton, for the past year, has accept ed a position of overseer at Pee Dee No. 1, and will return to Rockingham. There Ig nothing that speaks better for a man than to be able to go back to his old home and get a good posi tion. —Our motto: "A small profit satls- fles.”~ The Haberdasher. CAP VISORS. The Making of Them Is an Extensive Business In Itself. There is one man in the business who in 1909 will have been making cap visors for half a century, and he isn’t such an old man either. He started at the trade as a boy in 18o9, working for a concern of which now he is the head, which was then established in a build ing at Broadway and Rector street, where the Empire building now stands. He recalls the fact that when the war broke out they worked night and day turning out visors for soldiers’ caps. The manufacture of cap visors is a business by itself. Duly about fifteen concerns are engaged In it, of which number all are in this city save tu» or three located in Philadelphia and Bos ton. New York supplies visors for cap manufacturers all over the country, producing in the aggregate millions of them annually. For the very cheapest cloth caps visors are made of cardboard paper or of imitation leather covered with the cloth of which the cap body Is made. For other grades of cloth caps visors are made of various sorts of light leather, and for some cloth caps of fine quality there are now used, because It is lighter than leather, visors made from a heavy, specially woven and waterproofed canvas. For visors there Is now made an imi tation leather composed of bookbind ers’ board tllid what Is called mole skin, the two being cemented together under pressure. In a madeup cap, where Its edge could not be seen, this material might pass even an expert for leather. The best leather visors are made of leather specially tanned and prepared. Take the country at large and caps are not used by people in general for ordinary wear so much as they were fifty years ago, but caps are still worn in great numbers by younger people and by sportsmen and travelers and golf players, and of uniform caps of one sort aud another there are now worn 300 per cent more than twenty years ago. Very simple little things cap visors might seem, but great numbers of them are used, aud In a factory where they make them you would find around rolls aul sides of leather or other mate rials aud hundreds of dies and molds for cutting and the shaping of the visors and men busily at work follow ing visor making Just as they might any other trade.—New York Sun. W* 4o not do all kinds of printing ■** do ths GOOD kind The Lesson of the Morgue. M. Gaud, for thirty years the super intendent of the Paris morgue, said farewell to the grewsome place with tears hi his eyes and words of regret on his lips. Newspaper men asked him for “experiences” and "Impressions,” and when be had given them he re ceived from those who heard him the title “phllosoper of the morgue.” To a representative of the Matin be said that he had been very happy at the morgue and had learned there the les son of life. “When one sees before him continually,” he said, “what It is for which we work and slave and commit all sorts of folly, our fears and our worries vauisb. Of course It took quite a while before I realized that a dead man is no longer a man before I learned to look upon those who are brought here from the phys ical point only. Until that was accom plished I could not eat except with aversion. Two weeks cured me.” The Club Mania. To many men club membership is a kind of fad. J. Plerpont Morgan, for Instance, Is a victim of this mania. He belongs to thirty-five clubs, and hN membership dues figure over $7,000 annually. August Belmont Is a moni- lier of thirty-four clubs, and Chauncey M. Depew belongs to thirty-two. Per ry Belmont has membership in twen ty-nine clubs. George Gould In twenty seven, John Jacob Astor in twenty-one and Willie K. Tanderbllt, Jr., In eight een. Many men belong to a dozen or more. Of course all these clubs are not New York clubs, but still a very large proportion of them have their homes on Manhattan Island.—Broad way Magazine. WHIN IN A HURRY 8|ND TO THI LIOOIR FOR YOUR JOB PRINTING