University of South Carolina Libraries
f. H’ COMELY MATRONS PRAISE PERUNA KENTUCKY OREGON OHIO, /n 1 M S.- ^ » •' , ./P5 Af?’ v \\ t fb&rh \ ’•ik. // \\: Vv ”3 The only valuable testimony which any household remedy || can have is the testimony of those who have used it. It Jj is worse than useless to discuss Pcruna from a theo- ! retical standpoint. It is what Peruna will do, not >; what people say about it, that constitutes eri- i| deuce. The housewives of the United Stats know what Peruna will do. They ha o tried it. They have realized its bencT'- in the fitmily. They are the ones tha are competent to speak of i f Self-appointed critics know noth ing of it whatever. * \yf > ^ Hattie Hamilton. Mrs. Anthony Rauch v Tislijiiony cl This? Three Housewives Demonstrates Beyond All Cavil Itvit Peruna is a Safe and Useful Remedy, / | Constipation. Torpid Liver. M Peruna Their Family Mcdicir.c. Mrs. Anna C. Ilydo, 712 It. Y.imhil street, Portland,Orepon, Viee Prosiih : Literary and Educational Organization of New Hampshire, writes: “I am pleased to endorse Peruna as a: all-round good family medicine-, ju one that is safe to givoehildren. I ; i\ ■ it t<) mine at the least riuig< stion <>f. cold, and take it myself to buiid ap iwy strength and nerves. “My sister, who is living with me. uses Peruna, too, and she is loud in i's praises. “Your medicine is certainly worthy of praise.” Backache, Headache. Mrs. Tressie'Nelsoa,00s) N. Fifth A vo., Nashville, 'i’eun., writer: “As Peruna lias done me a world of good, I feel in duty bound to toll of it, i i hopes that it may met the eye of ,-oinc woman who has suffered as I did. “For five years T really did md hie w what a perfectly well day was, and i r L did not have headache, 1 had !■•:■ ..v !; > or a pain somewhere and really life u RAVENNA READiNQt. Gained Flcsl' on Peruna. j . Hattie Hamilton, K. F. D. No. 2, j Mrs. Anthony Pvaueh, 300 N. Walnut I-pert:.. Ky., writes; i street, Ilucyrus, O., writes; • 1 l ave taken two bottles of Peruna “I was suffering from obstinate eon- and commenced on the third one. Idid stipation and torpid liver, when I took worth t!>u effort I made to l.< t really need the third one, but thought your advice and purchased six bottlesof. in Peruna and Manalin. When F had taken ... only one bottle F felt much better, and “A good friend advised mo U cilice I have taken two more bottles I feel entirely well, but I will continue taking the me make sure of my cure. “I think Manalin is one of the Finest it rwo t to take another bottle. “1 have rJways weighed 102 pounds, but si’ice 1 began taking Peruna I weigh Co the first time in all my life, and 1 am iow thirty-three years old. Your in Miicino has surely done me a great d.-ai of good, and I have recommended 1 , it t* several others who have begun remedies for constipation that I ever takin*- it ' tried. 1 will never be without it. It “My mother, who is seventy-sixy< ars >'** ’"ado me so strong. I can do a old, had grown so weak she could day’s work and never tre. I am so soaroely walk, sfm took two bottles of ^ i do not get those dizzy spells any Poruna and is fleshier Mid looking well.” my re. I haven t had one since 1 took , vour medicine. Peruna and l was gl:.d * » try any .hi and I am very ple.i.-'d to say that, ■dii'ine for*a short time to bottles made .. new woman of me an have no more pair.-iand .iJ looi. ■ tni::i . Internal Catarrh. Mis. M.F. Jones, of burning Springs, Ky. v writes; “No family should ever be without Pertain, for it is an unfailing cure for colds, and it is an «o:eellent remedy to prevent and relieve croup. “And to speak from a standpoint of experience, I can candidly say that it is the remedy for internal catarrh. I shall now, and I do not think I need to take it not hesitate to rec-jj.iinend it, especially any longer. to all suffering wone-a. | “I feel well, and my tongue is clear, “Pernna has gain d full confidence J and I have no bitter taste in my mouth, and a jiermanent stay iu our home.” I am very thankful for Pernna.” “I cannot thank you enough for what your medicine has done for me. All sick people should give it a fair trial,” Kidneys and Bladder. Mrs. Gus. H. Carlson, Box 801, Orton- ville, Minn., writes; “I had catarrh of the kidneye end bladder. I have taken Pernna until of Towels. again.’' Catnrr! Mrs. Maggie Durbin, 1332 North str.ot, Little Hock, A rk., v, rib.-s: “I was troubled for five years v ; ili e chronic disease. 1 tr: l every!h." : 1 heard of, but nothing did me any . < !. Some doctors said my trouhlo was . tarrh of the bowel g and some said con sumption of the bowels. One do.-wr said ho could cure me. t took his tm <1 - cine two months, but it did me no good. “A friend of mine advised me t>> try Peruna and 1 did . After I had ta: a two bottles 1 found it was he]pine me, so I continued its u- m and it lui, cured me sound and well. ‘‘I can recommend Peruna to anyone, and if anyone wants to know what Pernna did for inc if they will write to me I Will answer promptly.” Newsy Notes and Personals From Our Regular Corraspondant. Ravenna, Nov. 11.—All the tele phones have been Installed and we now have direct communication with Gaffney. At times there is so much fun going on that it is almost impos sible to get just what you want. M. W. Brown was a business visit or to Gaffney Thursday. T. E. Burgess is serving as a juror at Gaffney this week. Capt. J. B. Brown and son, Wilkes, were selling cotton in Gaffney last Friday. The protracted meeting that has been in progress at the Methodist church at Pacolet, closed Sunday night. Messrs. Maness brothers were the preachers and during the services between eighty and ninety joined the church; some the Metho dist and the remainder the Bap tist. Mr. and Mrs. C. T. Chalk spent Sunday at Asbury. the guests of Mrs. Chalk’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Rich ard Baines. t Miss Irene Foster, of Asbury, left last week for Westminister, where she engages in teaching school. The Maness brothers will com mence a protracted meeting at As bury Tuesday, November 17th, and it is noped all the surrounding com munity will attend ail the services. Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Green and family. Capt. and Mrs. J. B. Brown, Lamar Littlejohn, Douglas Spake, Misses Nan. Leila and Ua Mathis, Eva and Johnnie Burgess, and Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Mathis, all attended the services at Pacolet Sunday njght. Mr. and Mrs. Geo. E. Brown and children, of Jonesville, spent Sunday with relatives here. Mr. Brooks Porter and sister, Miss Bertie, of Asbury, were among us Sunday. Mrs. Willie Bardett, of Asbury, visited our Sunday school Sunday. Misses Pauline Pettit and Mary Lou ' Chalk went to Columbia Friday to spend a few days with Mr. and Mrs. F. J. Parham before gofhg to Charles ton to attend the Woman’s Mission ary Contention. Miss Addle Brown left Monday for Charleston where she will attended the Woman’s Missionary Union. Miss FSlla Brown has been on our sick k'st since our last letter was written, but we are glad to say she is much better now. Miss Ttossie Foster, of Asbury, is visiting her sister, Miss Maggie, at Lynnwood College, N. C. J. M. Green, of the Dixie, has re turned from a visit to F-ynnwood Col lege, X. C., where his sister. Miss Lona, is attending school. Mr. John H. Lipscomb, of Goucher, took up his potatoes Monday. His son, Broadus, also had a patch of his own. and one of the potatoes tipped the scales at six and three-fourths - J pounds We enjoyed the dinner very much for Mrs. Lipscomb is one of the finest cooks in Cherokee county. Mr. and Mrs. Lipscomb live at borne, and raise chickens by the hundreds, nav- ■ ing over 500 hatched out this season. Mr. FApscomb has made about 70« bushels of corn this year, and this says he will have meat a plenty, Mr. and Mrs. Lipscomb have three of their children, Broadus and Misses Dearie and Grace, living with them, Mr. Lipscomb is talking of building a new hou^p. Prof. T. G. Chalk opened his school at Rehoboth Monday morning. If all our friends having the tele phones iu their homes will ’phone us all the news, we will appreciate it very much. All news, both local and personal, will be cheerfuly received by us. Come along, friends, so we can keep The Lodger posted from week to wek. Rain is falling again this morning, with thunddr in the distance. Farmers and the Panic. Editor The Ledger.—It has been said that the cotton farmers of the South were the cause of the recent panic, and I hope that the statement is true. We have bad four or five panics in this country and this is the first that the poor farmers caused! They did not know that they had that much power. And some of them are blaming the union for causing the hard times. I think that the Farm ers' Union ought to serve notice that they will soon cause another panic if trying to hold their cotton for a bet ter price caused these “hard times.’' The speculators of the North miss ed their calculation last fall on the poor farmers’ cotton, and that threw the fat in the fire. We have it from good authority that about one hun dred years ago there were only a half dozen millionaires in this coun try, and now there are 4,600, and they are not here in the South, either, hoe- S I. LHUejohn and W. C.' Goforth S ° U “ > have entered .ho sradod school I ,, , 6 ” " g y racolet Still, we have some evidence of Mrs. Elizabeth Reynolds died at | Prosperity in our community, in spite her home at Lockhart, on the 7th inst„ after a lingering illness and was laid to rest in the Lockhart cemetery. She was a devoted Chris tian lady and had been a member of the Methodist church for twenty years. She was sixty-six years old. and is survived by her husband and five children, one girl and four boys. It is indeed good to say she died trusting in her Lord and to her breaved ones, we extend our sympa thies. The death- of Ernest Robbins, which took place in Gaffney this morning, will be sad news to many around here who loved Ernest. He lived near here before he moved to Gaffney. He had been in poor health for some time. To his father and brothers we extend our heartfelt sympathies. C. of the so-called panic, in the way of new buildings that are going up fix different places in our own communi ty. Mr. C. B. Hammett has added a seven-hundred-dollar addition to his house, and he has a palace, now, al most fit for a king. Mr. Hammett is also the champion potato-raiser of this section. He has the largest pile of potatoes that I ever saw; and he presented me with one from his lot last night that weighed five pounds. The colored people of Green Bethel are building a large church that will cost about seven hundred dollars when completed. Mr. M. C. Lipscomb has the contract, and Mr. Wm. Petty is doing the building. W. G. Patterson. HOMICIDE AT YORKVILLE. Twc Drunken Negroes Quarrel and One Shoots the Other. Yorkville, Nov. 10.—Rufus Ander son and Tom Hafner, two negroes living on the farm of Mr. L. G. Thom as, about two miles sou^iwest of town, came here on Saturday after noon. They got some blind tiger whiskey and, while drunk, became in volved in a row. Anderson left for home ahead of Hafner, but stopped at the house of Dump Miller, who al so lives on the same place, and told about the row that he and Hafner had had, and stated that he was go ing to shoot Hafner when he came along. Subsequently Hafner arrived at the house and, true to his threat, Anderson stepped out and shot him. inflicting a wound which caused the death of Hafner yesterday morning. Anderson claims that during the row in town Hafner cut him with a knife, that he stopped at Miller’s house to have the wound dressed, that Hafner, when he arrived, threatened to kill him and that he (Anderson) fired in self-defense. His statements, how ever, were not corroborated by wit nesses who testified at the inquest. Anderson is in'jail. JJoth negroes have been with Mr. Thompson several years, and he re garded them as far above the average from every stanpoint, and entirely peaceable, except when under the in fluence of whiskey. It is said that the whiskey that caused the quarrel was a half-pint given to Hafner by a white man. Hafner divided with An derson and later they purchased, it is said a quarrel from a blind tiger. Unclaimed Letters. • Pondfield Paragraphs. - List of unclaimed letters that re- ( 'pondfield, Nov. 4.—The election main in the Gaffney postofflee for the! p asse( j 0 ff quietly and pleasantly at I Draytonville. We are quite sure of the fact that this community has ~X Mind Your Business! If you don’t nobody will. It is your business to keep out of all the trouble you can and you will keep out of liver and bowel trouble if you take Dr. King’s New Life Pills. They keep biliousness, malaria and jaundice out of your system. 25c at Cherokee Drug Co. —Our Grip Tablets and Nature’s Cough Remedy taken together will cure any case of la grippe or money refunded. The Cough Remedy is 50 cents and the Grip Tablets 25 cents. Try them on our iron clad guarantee. Gaffney Drug Co. week ending Nov. 9, 1908; Mrs. Cordelia Allison. Mrs. Fannie Bueton. W. L. Blanton. Mr. A. C. Blanton. C. R. Byars. Mr. W. L. BRoodwell. Mr. Dilet Collins. Mr. F.i. W. Cooper. Mrs. Bessie Castle. Mr. E. B. Cromer. Mr. Pitta Davis. Miss Bessie Dexrom. Mr. Matel Damono. Miss Nellie Durrah. Celia Dawkins. Will Dodden. Miss Julia Gidney. Miss Anna Gair. Mr. Rush Green. Mrs. Cane Gaffney. Mrs. Etta Gaffney. Mrs. Nancy Gaffney. Mr. J. Z. Holmes. Mr. A. D. Hopper. C. M. Hamrick. Mrs. M. T. Hammett. Mr. J. W. Johnson. Mr. C. L. Jones. Rev. Sam Jones. Mrs. Henrietta Johnsqp. Mr. Walter Kennedy. G. W. Lack. John Lattimore. Mr. Tom Meriean. Mrs. Edilheia Maweeld Mr. J. T. Ouzts. R. M. F. Phillips. Miss Fannie Petty. Mr. 'Lues Phillips. Mr. Ulie Pates, (2). Effie Reid. Miss Sarah Rice. Mrs. Edy Ross. Miss Margaret Rice. Mr. C. P. Hooper. Sarah Robertson. Miss Elizabeth Stroud. • A. C. Turner. Miss Tunp Tobias. Miss Biddle Walls. Mrs. E. L. Webster. Please call for advertised letters. One cent due on each. / Thos. Hester, Postmaster. i many sensible and estimable citi- ! zens as can be found la amy other | section of the county, and they are i always ready to stand up for their i principles and vote the right way. The price of cotton has reduced j the contents of the farmers’ purse. ■ Is there any way by which it can be 'refilled? Yes. How? Stop raising ; the stuff in such large quantities. This is the only way by which the 1 price can be controlled By the farm- j ers. r Mr. W. S. Wilson is taking up his potatoes. Mr. Wilson is a hustlin;: : farmer. Mr. C. P. Huggins, of the Mt. Ararat section, was at DraytqBiYiDe yesterday. J. W. Alexander, Plsq., was .out yesterday. We are ever glad to afiOft and listen to all honorable aged Con federations ’ike him. J. L. S. FILBERT NEWB. Review of events from One Oer York County CorrsMontfsnta. Filbert, R. F. D. 1. Nov. 9.—As The Ledger is a country newspaper in every sense of the word, I am certain it won’t object to my discussing poli tics and economics in its columns occasionally. In doing this, I realize that I may sometimes “tramp on other people’s toes,” as the saying is. But I think I can manage to get along without losing my scalp any oftener than twice a year. But let me speak more seriously I do not intend to convert. The Led ger into an organ; I intend only to try to make the Filbert letter as in teresting. entertaining, and instruct ive as 1 can. I believe I have^ made my political opinions plain enough in my former letters, therefore, it is not necessary to repeat anything ieie that I have said before. „ , , .1 do, however, wish it understood Mr. B. G. L. Pettit yvas a juror ; that I have no intention whatever of the Gaffney fom'* last week. making any departure from my re- Mr. George Turner, of lower Chero-, K(llar and fixed ru i e s of writing to kee, tiled early last Sunday morning, j rp^p ledger. It is, of course, my pur- in his fiftieth year. Mr. Turner was p 0SQ improve my correspondence, a good Christian man and is survived ; jj j can an improvement is not by a wife and four children. He was a do p ar i Ure You know, when one is laid to rest in the Rehoboth comet er> being closely observed by such an Monday. . ' authority as The State, one is stimu- M. W. and R. R. Brown were b U8 f ' i a t ed do one’s very best, ness visitors to Gaffney Monday j p rvan j s defeated and Democracy Mr. Willie Brown, whom we have i is ( . rush e d ; but reigns and the mentioned several times in this cor-1 country st} jj llves respondence. had a slight relapse state, in Its “Survey,” ex- Sunday. but at this writing has^ rah i c j aims . <. 0ur flag ls still there!” First Baptist Church. * Regular service at 11 a. m. and 7:15 p. m. Sunday school at at 9:45. Strangers and visitors to the town cordially invited to all the services. FOR SALE. FOR SALE—A good 71-3 OCt, square piano in good order. A bar gain for $75. W. L. Johnson. Nov. 13-17. FOR SALE—Two mules and wagon. Apply to W. W. Hardin, Mill No. 1, Gaffney Mfg. Co. Nov. 10 tf. FOR SALE—101 acre larm just outside the northern linuis of Gaff ney. Will sell this at a bargain. Good buildings and twenty acres In fine timber. Gaffney Trust Co. Oct. 13 tf. FOR RENT. FOR RENT—The E. H. Gaines house on Victoria avenue at a very moderate price. Apply to Gaffney Trust Co. Nov. 10 tf. FOR RENT—Twenty-one acre farm, inside city limits. Apply to A. B. Kirby. Nov 10 2t pd. FOR RENT—Four-room cottage good well and bam on Buford street. R. S. Lipscomb. Oct 20 tf. lied again and now sems to be doing nicely. r R. and B. F. Brown went out possum hunting Saturday night af ter finishing up their work at 10 ^ ^ o’clock and caught a couple of nice campaign just closed The boys looked very sleepy And farther on in the same column, it says: “Some fat men have great ness thrust upon them.” Hurrah for The State, this time! It fought vali antly for “Shall the people rule?” in Subscribe to The Ledger, $1.60 ITCH cured in 30 minutes by Woolford’s Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. Sold by Gaffney Drug Co. 10-16-6m. CURED RHEUMATISM. Nearly everybody is susceptible to a twinge of rheumatism, sciatica, i ache, headache or neuralgia, and it's | never safe to be without a good ■ remedy for an emergency of this :kind. No matter what kind of pain you j have the beneficial effect of Sloan’s j Liniment is immediate. You lay it I on lightly—no rubbing whatever and 1 a pleasant warmth is felt at once. | The Liniment penetrates right to the i bone and quickly stops the pain. Mr. Chas. J. Budlong, of Anthony, R. L, Box 125, writes: “For many years I was a great sufferer from rheumatism. My hips would swell to enormous proportions and my knee joints would pain me in the most excruciating, awful manner imaginable. I used often to have to fall from the bed into a chair and thence to the floor, when I wanted to get from my bed. I used only some six or eight bottles of your celebrated Liniment and was cured. I cheerful ly recommend its use to all rheumatic sufferers. Refer to me if you so de sire. All letters answered.” —The most popular lady, the dia mond ring. Gaffney Jewelry v Co. ones. Sunday. Mrs. M. C. Burgess attended relig ious services at Pacolet Sunday night. C. P. Chalk was a Pacolet visitor last Friday. Mr. and Mrs. W. K. Guthrie and children, of Gaffney, and Prof. Chalk, of this place, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. John H. Lipscomb, of Goucher, Mrs. B. G. Ii. Pettit and sister. Mrs. Hammett, spent Monday at Goucher with Mrs. Willie Brown. Miss Annie Gore, of Goucher, and Mr. Jim Spake, of Thickety, surpris ed their friends and ran away last Sunday to White Plains, where Rev. J. D. Bailey soon made them one for life. We join in congratulations and best wishes they are receiving from their many friends. Mr. H. D. Mathis and son, Albert, spent some time in the White Plains district Sunday. They visited James W. Crocker, who is improving nicely after a long spell of sickness. A. A. Mathis, who planted ten acres of corn on the Wlllamson plan, ’phoned us yesterday that, from the ten acres he made 456 1-2 bushels. Mathis sfiid the ground was very thin and had he planted in cotton, he said it would not have made over 500 pounds of seed cotton to the acre. We want to hear from others, but the above will be hard to average. Mr. John H. Lipscomb, of Goucher, spent last Friday night in Gaffney. Broadus Brown raised a sweet po tato weighing 6*3-4 pounds. It wad very large, but Broadus wants a wife >o help eat it. Your correspondent, who is finish ing up his job at the Goucher ceme tery today, has to carry his dinner with him each day, but on yesterday we had the pleasure of eating a good hot dinner with Mr. and Mrs, John H. Lipscomb. About 10 o’clock Mrs. Lipscomb sent her little daughter. Miss Grace, to the cemtery to see if we wouldn’t eat dlhner with them, and, of course, we couldn’t “beg off.” “Errors of opinion may be tolerat ed where reason is left free to com bat it.”—Jefferson. “The writers against religion, whilst they oppose every system, are wisely careful never to set up any of their own.”—Burke. “A little philosophy inclineth a man’s mind to atheism, but depth of philosophy bringeth men’s mind about to religion.”—Lord Bacon. Now what is to become of all our reformers—Bryan, Watson, Graves, Hearst, and many others—since the wicked Republican party continues to be “lord of all It surveys?” Perhaps The State can answer. Farmers, one and all, improve your farming lands all you can. It is to your Interest and profit that you should do this. Mr. and Mrs. J. B. McCarter gave the young people of the neighborhood a party on Friday night which was very much enjoyed by all present, A friend has requested me to give the names of those who were there, but space forbids my doing so. “Ben Hope” spent Saturday night and Sunday very pleasantly at the home of Mt. J. R. Hogue. While there, he was visited for a few min utes by the Rev. W. T. Thompson, of Gaffney, who was spending the night with Mr. J. W. Bolin. In my next letter I shall tell of the meeting, Ben Hope. TO RENT—OfiM rooms Ledgor. Apply to Bd. H. Nor. 2. tf. DoCamp. WANTED. WANTED—To purchase one dollar gold pieces. R. S. Lipscomb at M. A P. Bank. Oct 1« tf. WANTED—Green hides and bees wax. L. W. McGulnn. Sept 18 tf. WANTED—Green hides; cash price paid. Clary A Kirby. Aug. 14 tf. Watched Fifteen Years. “For fifteen years I have watched the working of Bucklen’s Arnica Salve; and it has never failed to cure any sore, boil, ulcer or burn to which it was applied. It has saved ns many a doctor bill," says A. F. Hardy, of East Wilton. Maine. 25c at Chero kee Drug Co. —Nature’s Cough Remedy made and sold by the Gaffney Drug Co. Every bottle guaranteed to produce a complete cure or money refunded. —Two log cabins and dolls for two little girls at Gaffney Jewelry Co. MONEY TO LOAN. We have clients who will money on good real estate. OTT8 A DOBSON, Attys. Sept. 15 tf. Fire Insurance! We represent some to the largest and most substantial companies and would like to write your business. 5-14-tf Smith & Lipscomb, Agents. Fruit Cakes All sizes from 75o to $2.00. 25c a pound at FHEN'S BAKERY Phono No. 139. Special Sale For Thnrsday, Friday and Nov. 12th, 13th, 14th. Ladies’ $2.00 Kid Gloves 79c. 1,000 pieces Men's and Women's Underwear, 75c and $1.00 values for 39c. 200 Ladies’ Cravenet Coats, full length, $ 10.00 and $ 15 00 values, $4.29. We have hundreds of other articles at proportionate prices. Come quick and get the first pick at the Agusta Stock Buyers Store. Cheapest place in the State. Look for Big Red Sign. BANKRUPT STOCK BOYERS, Gaffney, Sonth Carolina. Store in the i. I. Sarrait Building, Limestone St.