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I FOR SALK- FOR SALE—101 acre ladn just outside the northern linnu, of Gaff ney. Will sell this at a bargain. Good buildings and twenty acres in fine timber. Gaffney Trust Co. Oct. 18 tf. COT ION PICKING 1$ ABOUT OVER. L V FOR SALE—Uy house and lot on Fairview Ave. J. E. EselL 9-S-tl 1 FOR SALE—The Nelson store houst and lot on Limestone street Just below Galloway’s. Apply to J. Floyd Spake or Jno. P. Spake, Route No 4, Gat'iney, S. C. MOST OF THE FLEECY STAPLE NOW GATHERED. this week fearing they had been bit ten by a dog supposed to be mad. We don’t propose to run any risk or endanger the Hlje o^any one—no dog Is too good to kill under such clrcum- ftanees. ) J. L. S. FOR SALE—One No. 7 Blickens derfer typewriter, practically sew. A bargain. J. Kb Jefferies. Aug. 25 tf. FOR SALE—A lot of second-hand piping. Apply to Ed. OeCamp. FOR SALE—First-class babbit met al. Apply at Ledger Office. FOR SALE—Old newspapers ai tkla office. 10c a hundred FOR RENT. FOR RENT—Six-room house on Frederick street; water and lights, garden, wood house and barn. Apply at furniture store of J. W. Abbott. Oct. 27 2t. FOR RENT—Four-room cottage, good well and barn on Buford street. R. S. Lipscomb. Oct 20 tf. FOR RENT—A portion of my rest deuce to parties without children, either furnished or unfurnished Mrs A. V. Montgomery. Sept. 2K tf TO RENT—Office rooms ortc TV Ledger. Apply to Md. H. DeCamp Not. 2, tf. WANTED. WANTED—To purchase one dollar gold pieces. R. S. Lipscomb at M. & P. Bank. Oct. 16 tf. WANTED—Green hidea and bees wax L. W. McGulna. Sept 18 tf. WANTED—Green hidea; bighea; cash price paid. Clair A Kirby. Aug. 14 tf. WANTED—Issues of Ledger of September 11, 18, 25 and October 2 and 9. Lorr LOST—Green, raw-edged buggy robe within city limits. Reward If re turned to C. H. Robbins. Oct 23 It. LOST—Between R. C. Sarratt’s residence and First Baptist church, a gold pencil pen. Reward if return ed to this office. WOOD FOR SALE—We have a sup ply of the very best oak and pine wood which we offer at moderate prices Place your order now and save money, because as the winter advances so will the price of wood. Cline & Wood. Oct. 27th It np. NOTICE TO JURORS. The jurors drawn for the second week of court beginning next Mon day, November 2nd, are excused un til Wednesday morning, November 4th, at 9:30 o’clock, and are not ex pected here until that time. By order of the presiding judge. J. EB. JEFFERIES, Clerk of Court. NOTICE. NOTICE—I will not be in my office from Wednesday, the 28th, to Satur day 31st. W. K. Gunter. Nov 23-27. MONEY TO LOAN. We have clients who will loan money on good real estate. OTT8 A DOBSON, Attys. Sept. 15 tf. StaoTsroe Wilson Henry K. Osborne Wilson & Osborne LAWYERS Spartanburg;, S. C Will practice in Cherokee Courts. Call by phone, telegraph or letter. 8-26-tf Fire Insurance! We represent ttome fo the largest and most substantial companies and would like to writ*- your business. 5-14-tf Smith A Lipscomb, Agents. The Crop Being Short There Was Not Much Demand for Extra Hands and Prices Were Ngt High. Wilkinsville, Oct. 24.—The mad dog scare last Tuesday resulted in the death of some canines and more will probably follow. Wr. Walter Kirby was able to ride out In his buggy this week. Mr. Mize has put up a shop at Sar- ratts where he does all kinds of Ida* esmiting and wagon and buggy- repairing. There must have been an immense crowd at Gaffney last Tuesday If they went on all the roads as they did here. In going and returning It took the procession twenty hours to pass our home. Most of the men went to take the women and children ort o see some fellow on business. They were not particular about the show themselves, they had no curiosity in it. Cotton picking hasn’t brought such prices this season as it usually does. The crop is light and easy to keep up with and the demand for help hasn't been so urgent. Most of the corn crop has been gathered. It’s not so good as it was thought it would be before the gather ing season set in. Hev. C. M. Teal will fill his pulpit at Abingdon Creek church on the first Sabbath of November—1st instant- at 11 o’clock a. m. Those who attened the show at Gaffney last Tuesday think it a very good oiie. We understood one of our lower Cherokeeans made a good haul at the “chance stand.” Some people say it’s not gambling though we haven’t learned how many came home •‘stripped.’’ The rain Wednesday night. Thurs day and yesterday stopped cotton picking. Tuesday was a dark, dismal, smoky day and a good many people said they smelt an odor just like flesh burning. No one could account for It. We have heard of no great fires. When Dr. Fort's barn and mules were burn ed some years ago the odor of the burnt mules could be smelled for miles around, and Tuesday was a re minder of that time. We hope some body will be aide to explain what caused it. Mr. .1. N. Strain, who has been troubled with risings under his arm, is getting better but they still keep coming. What has become’ of our question box? It creates a good deal of amuse ment for some of .our readers. In what way can two odd numbers be combined so as to make 37? Mr. W. ,R. Walker sold sixty head of beef cattle off his Sunnyside farm this week. “Mad dog, mad dog, mad dog,” is a cry that will throw the people of this community into a frenzy of ex citement since the scare of last Mon day which some people haven’t got ten over yet. We have read' with much interest .Moderator Rev. B. P. Reid’s sermon at the opening of Synod at Sumter last Tuesday evening. His text was, “Thou art not far from the kingdom of God.” Mark 12:34. The 2fith day of next month—No vember—will be Thanksgiving day and we haven’t heard of any one who is going to have a turkey din ner. It’s not too late yet. Messrs. Garner and Brewington have been running their ginnery at the Thomson mill. Some weddings are to come off in this community between now and Christmas, so we understand. The dog of Mr. J. L. Daniel, of Gaff ney, which stayed with us a few days after Children’s Day at Salem and then followed some of the, Sharon people home from a fishing tour, we understand, turned up at Mr. Tom Shannon's at Blackstock. This is the last we heard of him. Mrs. Maggie Black, who has been visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. A. M. Estes returned to her home at Glendale last Wednesday. Your correspondent has been feel ing unwell for several days. Frohn Lucile Lee’s letter under date October 7th, we clip the follow ing: "Josh Wise says ‘Men sneer at no man’s shopin’, but when women shop they don t have to eat cloves ter disguise what they’ve been buying.' Do you agree with him, J. L. 8?” Yes, certainly we do, “Cousin Josh” is right. The man who would de prive the women of the principal hap piness they have this side of heaven is too mean to make wolf halt off. Wo enjoy reading the letters of the various correspondents and through them have learned much about th- people in the different sections from which they write. A long wet spell now will put farm ers behind in sowing small grain crops. Mrs. Wilson Brown, of Hopewell, is lying very low at this ^rltinr. She has been sick a long'time. If some kind friend will let ns know where we can get a shepherd pup we will go almost any distance for it. We had two good dogs killed Sweet Potato Pi#. Take several* sweet potatoes, and when they bavu I toiled themselves ten der peel and slice them. Line the bot tom and sides j of a deep dish with crust—the dishl must be fully three inches in deptll—and upon this nr- range a layer of the potatoes, butter- sugaring them free- them with nutmeg. >f very thin slices of Ith hot water, then follow with another, layer of sliced po tatoes and repeat uljtil the pan is full. The top crust follows, and the pie must then lie baked for am.hour or more.— Miles Bradford in Bohemian Magazine. ing them liberal If ly and sprinklini Add next a layer dough, sprinkle a Eupbemisrps For ,Death. “Decease" is now a regular form of word for death. But it, began as a gentle euphemism, “dectrssus (depar ture! seeming much less harsh to the Romans than “mors.” All languages abound in euphemisms pf the kind, which go Isick to a superstitious re luctance to mention death' plainly that gradually passed*into a kindly desire to soften the idea. “Pasted away.” “departed.” “gone.” “expire” (breathe out), “no more,” “demise”) and even “the late” are expressions bf this na ture. Most striking of ail !ls the Ro man euphemism for “lie is dead, “vis it” (he has lived). An Artificial World. The mingled feelings of admiration ! and skepticism with which we gazed upon the stuffed animals in the toy shops of our youth we still experience; in the society of many of the human animals we meet later in life. The more we admire the more do we mis trust, while there is nothing of which we are more convinced than that ev erything is unreal, from the complex ion of our friends to the genius of a great writer.—Loudon Ladies’ Field. An Experienced View. Bride (prettily)—I wonder why they call a wife's allowance pin money? Matron (savagely)—Because money to buy enough pins to hold her old clothes together is about all that the average man tlilnks a woman needs. — Balti more American. Britieh Army’s Firet Troueer*. Perhaps the army revolution of deep est Interest to the soldier himself was that effected in 1K2.'5. when for the first time he was put in trousers. The an nouneement from the horse guards took the following remarkable form: “His mnjosty has been pleased to ap prove of the discontinuance of breech es. leggings and shoes as part of the clothing of the infantry soldiers and ol bine gray cloth trousers and half boots being substituted.” In order to indem nify the “elotliin. r colonels" for any hardship which the new order might cause it was decided that these gentle men should, no longer be called upon to provide Hie waistcoat of Tommy, but that Tommy should himself supply it out of his shilling a day. To reas sure him it was pointed oat that he was in a position to do so with eom fort, because he would no longer have to buy gaiters. London Chronicle. The First Gas Tubes. William Murdock, a Scottish mining engineer employed in the Redruth mines. Cornwall, appears to have been the first to suggest that gas might be conveyed in tubes and used instead of lamps and candles. He made a very ingenious gas lantern for himself, with ■which lie used to light his way over the Cornish moors at night. This lan tern consisted of a bag filled with gas and fitted with a tube, at the end of which the gas could lie lighted. Carry ing the bag under Ins arm. Murdock used to light Ids way home at night. On meeting any one it is said that he would give the bag a squeeze and thus send out a long tongue of flame. This led to Ids being looked upon as the demon of the Cornish moors.—London Telegraph. The Voice of the People. Bot» Toombs of Georgia was massive in frame and a giant In intellect. A back country paper criticised a bill he was putting through the legislature. “This sheet," he roared, flourishing it aloft at a public meeting in Marietta, “is about the size of a boy’s shirt tail and is called Vox Popult—the voice of the people! It has been established eight years and lias a circulation of 100 weekly in a state with 1,000,000 population. Voice of the people! Why, it is the voice of one of the people, and he is an illiterate ass!” Addition. “A bigamist should be an arithmeti cian.” “Why?” “He adds one and has two to carry.” —Washington Post. Poverty of thought Is worse than poverty of pocket -Bohemian. —Don’t forget the diamond ring given away at Gaffney Jewelry Co. Economy In 1808* Pore Linseed Oil coot* modi Iccc sold from the barrel than tt done pvt up in Tin Cana as Mixed Paint—In the flrat Instance yon pay 08 cents pe r gallon—In the second $1.60. Now mix 8 gallon of pore linseed oil with 4 gallons L. £ M. Paint and yon hare, ready for nac, 7 gallons of the beet paint made coating only $1.20 per gal lon. Done In $ minutes. Smith Hard* ware Qo. L. Jk M. Paint Agents. Subscribe for The Ledger, only $1.50 a year. CLERK’S SALE. State of South Carolina, County of York. In the Court of Common Pleas. H. Marla Whitesides, individually and as Admrx. of the Estate of Thos. B. Whitesides, deceased, Plaintiff, against William C. Whitesides, Sr.. Mary A. Whit' aides, John T. Dar win and Ada Darwin Kennedy. Nel lie Whitesides. Mary Whitesides Good, Ella Whitesides, Robert E. Whitesides, John D. Whitesides, J. Samuel Whitesides. Thos. A. Whlte- nides, Arthur W. Whitesides, Rich ard H. Whitesides, William C. Whitesides, Jr., and Saille R. Whitesides, Defendants. By virtue of a decree of sale in the above entitled action. I will expose to sale in the town of Blacksburg, in front of the Ramseur lot, (described below), on Shelby' street, on Novem ber 18th, 1908. between the hours of 11 a. m. and 2 p. m.. the reat estate of the late Dr. Thos. B. Whitesides, in Cherokee county, described as fol lows: a. The Ramseur lot, deed to which is recorded in R. M. C. Office, York county. Book “J. 10.” pp. 694-698. This lot fronts on Shelby street, which bounds it on the Northeast, and lies between the lot known as the Holland lot and the lot known as the Drug Store lot. Tt has a front age of twenty-four feet, and a depth of eighty-three feet. b. The Rhyne or Town lot. deed recorded in R. M. C. Office, York county, in Book “C. 5,” pp. 418-420. This lot lies between Carolina street and the roadbed of the Southern Railway, and adjoined lots of Haas and G. M. Moore. e. The Robertson lot, conveyed"*to T. B. Whitesides by S. Louisa Robert son. containing two acres, more or less, and bounded by lands now or formerly of Rose Miller, D. L. Brown. O. A. Osborne, J. W. Gable, Zulia Carlton and others. (Deed not yet recorded). d. The Osborne lot, conveyed to T. B. Whitesides by O. A. Osborne. (Deed not yet recorded). This lot lies on Shelby street; commencing thereon, It runs eastward 150 feet; thence Southward 50 feet; thence Westward 150 feet to Shelby street; and thence Northward with Shelby street 50 feet to th«» beginning. TERMS—Ten per cent, of bid to he paid immediately upon the knock ing down of the property to the bid der. forty per cent, more (with in terest from day of sale) on the first day of January next after the sale, and the remaining fifty per cent, (with interest from day of sale at 8 per cent, per annum) on the first day of December, 1909; with leave to pur chasers to pay all cash. Purchasers to pay for papers. Should a purchas er fall to pay 10 per cent, of his bid cash, the property knocked down to him will he Immediately resold at his risk, upon the same terms. The credit portion of purchasers’ bids must be secured by the bond of the purchaser, and a mortgage of the pre mises purchased. All mortgages given by purchasers at the said sales must contain a provision that a fee of One Hundred Dollars Is secured by the mortgage, in the event that the same has to be foreclosed. J. A. TATE, C. C. C. Pie. GEO. W. S. HART, Plaintiff’s Attorney. Oct. 27, Nov. 8, 10, 17. All He Asked. Stephen A. houglus, who will he remembered in connectiotf with Lin- eoln at Spnic/ iehl. wa-i very denion- rative in hi> professions of friend- -hip. <)ne day he ^at down on Bev erly Tinker's knee and, throwing fii- arm around the Virginian’s shoulder, said, “Bev, old boy, I love you,” ‘’Douglas,” Tucker, “will you alwnv> love me:'” “Yes, IWerly, 1 surely will,” “But,” persisted Tucker, “will you love me when you get to he presi- donrt r” “Indeed J will. What do you want me to «lo for you?” “Well,” said Tin ker, “all I want you to do then is to pick out some public place and put your arm around my neck just as you are do ing now and call me Bcv.” Left His Imprint, .“Count Julius Andrassy,” says the Bud; ;l l If*.- V cue ’resse, “was a hand- I some man and was particular about his appearance. He had a habit of smoothing with his hand his richly oiled and greased hair. One day an important document had passed the Austrian council of ministers, in the contents of which Count An- drassy was interested. Shortly aft er I met the Austrian president of the ministry, Prince Auersperg, Vho iaid to me: ‘“Count Andrassy has read the latest document.’ “ ‘How do you know?' I asked. “‘1 have discovered on it the im prints of Count Amlrassy’s fingere,’ Prince Auersperg answered, laugh ing.” His Surprise Party. Tramp—Madam, can you help a poor man with a wife and eleven children at home? Housewife—Are you very needy? “Needy is no word for it, ma’am. I couldn’t sec the little ones suffer, so I left them to ask the assistance of the charitable.” “Did you leave home today ?” “No, ma’am. It will be seven jean tomorrow. Can’t you help ft man who want* to lorpriae his little ones?" Clothes and Cloths Clothes may Look Well and Fit Well and yet Not Wear Well High-Art Clothing Looks, Fits and Wears Well COPYRIGHT, 190ft. ft# 8TROU8C A BRO8. The foundation of good .Clothing is good cloth, and HIGH ART CLOTHING is made of the best materials of the foremost looms of the world. The strong-yarned worsteds are always yiniform and never crock or wear badly. Style and fit are two essentials of perfection in which HIGH ART CLOTHING ®xcels—th** quality of the cloth of which it is made makes a trjnity of excellence which cannot be surpassed. When you buy High Art Clothing you get beauty that is more than “skin deep,” for it wears as well as it looks! Gaffney Mfg. Co. Store // ttrn.m STMOUM * MO*. MITiaOM ✓ Y'v; \ / T V TU I; A 11 i: WATCH Is to watch where you buy your Winter Shoes and get the best from a real shoe store. The benefits and advantages to be derived from buy ing Shoes from an exclusive Shoe store are clearly shown in the wiear and fitting qualities of the Shoes which we are offering to the public. We stand behind every pair and are proud of the long list of high* class Shoes which we self. By carefully studying your requirements and en deavoring to supply you with the very best for the least money we hope to become a necessity to your Shoe buying as you are to ours. Let Os Sell Yon Yonr Winter boes Deilers in All Lentber Shoes, Giffee;, S. C.