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TRI Truth From the 3De Lil St. Louis "Truth From th?" Devil, or tho True Value of Life," was the subject of the evening seimon by the Reverend Josephus Stephan, pastor of Marvin Memorial M. E. Churon, South. His text was Job ll, 4: "Skin for skin; yea, all that he hath will a mau give for his life." He said, in part : "We have the Scripture statement that the devil ia a liar and the father of lies; but even a liar can sometimes tell the truth, as docs this arch liar in the words of thc text. That a man will give everything he has for his lifo is a self-evident truth, and corro borated tn the experience of all man kind. Truth is the /uune, it matters not who may utter lc, and hence the devil may bo taken for an authority as to the superlative value of life. "The lov? of life i's la God-given, universal instinct. The lowest sav age possesses the law of self-preser vation, and will defend his rights and interests, but as we go up the ascend ing seale there is a greater value and appreciation of the privilege cf living. So powerful is this ii stinet that no saorifice is too gre^l to preserve our physical life. Convince a man that the only way to save his life is to part with any or all of his limbs, and ht docs not hesitate a moment rather than to be buried with them all. We feel this passion for life before we can appreoiate its worth, or estimate the evil of the loss. Age does not diminish it ; misery does not extinguish it; during all the years of natural life it holds us like the stem the apple on the bough. "But this instinct was not given simply to preserve the mere physical, sensuous life for its own sake. Life has in it a higher valuation than mere ly h eathing and sleeping and eat ing and drinking, enjoying and suffer ing, workipg and obtaining. That would be a desperate estimate of it, and yet that is all that it means to the great masses. "One class adopt, consciously or unconsciously, the materialistic view, making life physical in its birth, phy sical in its aims and ambitions, and physical in its death, while different in degree from all other animal life, yet in the ultimate end on the same lovel. The thought of the other class, whose view is a logical result of our commercial age, is what is a man worth, not what is he? What can he produce, not what good can he accom plish? ?This is shown in the aims and ambitions of multitudes for themselves and their children, as they operate on the low plane of mere earthly and com mercial success. "This pre-eminent-value universal ly placed on life is to be found in its relation to the eternal world. ' 'Tis not all of life to live, nor all of death to die.' This is proolaimed within us all, but it waB left to Christ to bring to light life and immortality. This is the mere preolude to our true exist ence. To aonoiude that this life is ali--life, has reference alone to the present--would make life a most con temptible, trifling matter.' "But when we adjust him, as he rightly ^belongs, IQ a future world, then we have a solution to the enigma. Hie .being, and its conditions and em ployments and expectations are in telligible. As soon na wp see that the present is only introductory to tho future, and draws after its end less eonsequenoes, all is tremendous ly grand, omi !?*o has on it infinite value. As the foundation is impor tant in proportion to ?he buildings, height and grandeur, 30 life is to be estimated by tho grandeur and the permsnenoy of its effects. "Christ's warnings of danger are not directed to momentary dangers of time, with whioh we wrestle, but the peril of losing our soul. Tear not them whioh are able to kill the body, bat ere not: able to kill the soul; but rather fear him which is able to de s troy both soul and body in hell.' Thin was the basis.of his mediatorial worlc-not dying to ?ave us from sor row or ether, disabilities of life more ly,.but final and eternal loss, and to ??vb us the perfect bliss of heaven.. God gives us his estimate of our value in deeming him worth the infinite flaori?ce of hie son. * 'Our possibilities also give value to lifo. Even those of the natural SUPPORT %\. SCOTTS EMULSION serves at e brl?ffi to carry the weakened sad e?ryed system atoas natl! ? c?n fiad firm ?upport In ordinary food. \ Send for free eMjplo. SCOTT & BOWNE, Omt'ott, , 40*415 Pearl Sir*?, :.. ' M - New York, joaand/tijoo* tR?insggtai. vii, or*True Value of Republic. world. The mere success which is earthly, or the development of the mental faculties, or the astonishing achievements of man, are a wonder.' But they do not compare with the possibilities of his sainthood, and his true character as a man of God. The ; mere possibility of earthly advanco ! ment, is but a type of what is possible I on moral and spiritual lines. The j transformation of the wild grape, wild i apple, wild flower into tho finest fruit and most costly flower ie a picture of ' the transforming power of the grace i of God. A bar of irou in native state is 1 worth $5, when converted into horse shoes is worth $12; made into needles, $350; into penknife blades, $3,000, and into balance springs for watches, $350,000. But who ca estimate the i value of that life absolutely commit ted to the divine workmanship, in ! oharacter and in service for his age? "The very brevity and preFent limi tations of life are an argument for its value. We have but one life and a bhort, fleeting one at that. In it is wrapped up all our possibilities, our privileges, our preparation. It is like the youth who finds his time for life's preparation brief, ono if missed then is missed forever. "Life is our opportunity, the great ness of which is determind by the graatness of the prize whioh is to be won or lost. If there be a season to obtain the salvation of the soul and in which to glorify God, it will be as superior to every other opportunity as the salvation of the soul itself sur passes every secular claim. The gos pel is a sovereign and an only remedy; offers blessings answerable to ail our wants, but they are attainable only in life. Now '-s the acceptable time: now is the day of salvation. Although j fortunate enough .to secure forgiveness ? late in life, there is the inestimable loss of what we might have been through the grace of God. The chances are always against him who is dillydallying eonoerning the great question of salvation. "What cons?mate folly to let any thing get in between us and this great boon. To consider what others s:.y, or -'hink or do what we may material ly gain or lose. Cheap indeed is the price for which we are exchanging life's greatest blessings and possibili ties-mere temporal and personal trifles are the pitiable sum. We once knew an old man who died of a broken heart because he had sold a most valu able piece of mining property for a trifle, to the profit of another, but what is that to selling too eheap the glorious and unspeakable possibilities of life as weighed in the balance of eternity? Here is the secret of hell's remorse. This will be the chief in gredient of eternal woe." Evangelist Whipped Bufly. A Methodist minister of this oity j tells the following story about the late Sam Roze!, the great Virginia evangelist who in his day was one of the best known pulpit orators in the South. "Sam Bozel was a very big man and had a wide reputation for physical strength. In his college days he ?ame off thc field of combat, usually a oir nnmaeribed end secluded area ot ibe campus, wearing the laurel of victory on many occaciono, and after be bo oame a preacher stories of his physical prowess were spread far and near. . "One day he went to a village to hold a protracted meeting. The vil lage blacksmith, who waa a very big man, and who was recognised espe cially among the tavern habutcD; as a pugiliBtio Wonder, heard about the coming of Bozel, and the villagers did not fail to tell him all they had*heard about the size of the parson's arin and the length.of his legs, and of the con vincing way he had of closing an ar gument with hiB fiats. "All this nettled, the smith con siderably, so when Kozel reached - the town he Bought him out and asked bim to fight "Kozel. of course, said be did not want to fight; but the smith kept on insisting and finally Rozel became aa-' gry and agreed to gratify the fellow. "They fought. Kozel literally wiped up. the ground wi^t tba big man. When ho bad pounded him until the poor, vanquished, bolly waa gasping hard, Bozel picked him up and threw hinvover a fence. "The blacksmith had not said a word since the .affray began up to this point. As ho rolled over on the other side of thc fence,'however, he called out : * "Say, parson, kindly throw my horso over, too, I'm going away.' ' "But Bosci followed the man to bis home, and had him sitting on a front beach at the meeting that same night singing louder than any one else."-' Baltimore San. Making a New Nation in Alaska. Boys of more than ten years of age and of less thar eighteen are, in Alaska, in greater umber than they can be found io, jay. Delaware or Rhode Island, or, for that matter, in Wyoming or Nevada. An explanation for this is given by explorers of Alaska, who say that whereas, in olden pioneer days, when a now country was td be oponed, fath ers left their children behind them, now, through comforts of traveling and living already existing, they aro able to take the children with them. Hence, from Gape Lisburne on tho Far North to Juneau on the South, may be seen not only the church but the sohool-houso, and bo heard the laughter of American children making friends with Eskimo playmates. Alaska has now a population of con siderably more thau 100,000, and it is rapidly increasing. It is not a bleak nor unfricudiy land. It premises to be one of tho richest mineral, cattle raising and agricultural sections cf thc United States during thc next twenty five years. The trade of the country with Pacific coast States amounted to over $50,000,000 last year ; more than $30,000,000 of gold was dug ; over $8,000,000 of salmon shipped, and coal enough discovered to indioate that the land will never again lack for fuel. In other ways Alaska is also devel oping remarkably. Her oil fields now amount to more than 4,550 square miles, and two tank ships are kept busy exporting petroleum. Sixty ! steamers are being operated on the Lower Yukon river, and another on the Upper Yukon. A telegraph line has been constructed that connects Fort St. Michael, Cape Nome, Bam part, Eagle City and Yaldes. Shag way has been oonneoted by cable with Hames Mission and Juneau. In a short time the cable line will be in full connection with Seattle and the United States. Railways are being pushed into tho country from the South and the West, and are expected in the end to reach Bering Sea. As Capt. John Healy says : "The boy who is ten years old to day and lives an ordinary lifetime will be able in not many years, to take a train in New York city or Chicago, ard, without changing cars, go direct to Cape Nome, Bering Sea, and to al most in sight of Russian Siberia. Dr, Chas. Arthur Holliok, in oharge of a joint expedition of the United States Geological Survey and the New Yprk Botanioal Garden, who has re cently returned from a survey entirely aoross Alaska, brought back proof that the oountry was formerly tropi cal and later temperate. Hit'collec tions were largely of fossil flora, in cluding cycads, sycamores, cypresses, sequoia and ginkgo trees. The cycads, called sago palms, but still not palms, were plentiful. ' 1 It is ajelief to know that Central Alaska has more than 100,000 square miles of muoh milder climate than Georgia's, whioh is to be future em pire of power and wealth and the granary of the Far North. This area borders on Resurrection Bay, where Seward, a new city, is the terminus of the Alaska Central Railway, now be ing built inland 420 miles along the Susitna Valley. It is to this oountry that a rush of farmers is ezpeoted next spring, aa the agricultural experiment stations maintained there by the government have proved satisfactorily that the soil will raise anything, and is espe cially adapted to grain.. The area is surrounded by tho loftiest mountains, of whioh Mount McKinley, 21,000 foot, is one. The water never freeces, being tempered by the Japanese cur rent ; but little snow falls, and the thermometer has never gone lower than .two degrees Fahrenheit below ?oro. Resurrection Bay is 1,000 feet deep and has an area of seventy-two Bquare miles. As a naval and army base it would be ablo to protect Hawaii, while the Susitna Valley behind would afford an unlimited commissary for any num ber of troops and warships.-Boys' World. STOMACH DOSING WILL NOT CURE. Only Way to Cure Catarrh is by Breathing Hyomei. Ask any physician, if catarrh is a blood disease and he will tell you that it is a diseased condition of the mu cous membrane and that it cannot be cured by blood purifiers, pills, tablets, or other forms of stomach dosing. The only sensible and scion tifio way of eur ing catarrh ia by the use of Hyomei. Breathed far a few minutes, four or five times a day, through a hard rub ber inhaler that is ro small that it eau be carried in the vost pocket, Hyomei will absolutely destroy all eatarrhal germs and eure the disease. Catarrh can never oxist whore Hyomei ie used. It has a two-fold aotion, destroying the disease germs in the air passages and lunga, and .soothing ard healing the inflamed.muoous memb. .e. V Evans Pharmacy, one of the mott reliable firms in Anderson, 8. C., are giving their personal guarantee with every paekage of Hyomei they poll, that it will effect a cure or they will return the money. They have had scores of reports of remarkable cures of. both aoute and chrome cases of ca tarrh by Hyomei. The complete Hyomei outfit costs 31.00, sad comprises an inhaler, a bot tle of Hyomei and a dropper. The inhaler will last a lifetime ; and addi tional bottles can be obtained for 50c. .HIS MEAN TRICK. Scheme the Lawyer Proposed to' Beat a Fair Plaintiff. "Tomorrow," said tho li vyer, ''I r ill have to begin thc cross examina- < tion of the fair plaintiff." 1 Ilia face showed that he Vas trou bled. "lt will have to be carefully plan-' ned and executed," he added after a pause. "What, will?" inquired the unso- 1 phisticated youth. "Why, I have arranged to have a , clever party sit beside her and ab stract lier handkerchief just before she takes the stand for cross exami nation," explained the lawyer. "To what purpose ?" "Evidently," said thc lawyer, "you aro even more inexperienced than 1 supposed. I can seo that she is one of the kind that has no diffi culty in crying when she wants to." "Well?" "Well, do you not know that all the astuteness of the legal profes sion is not worth ono tear in the oyo of a pretty woman in a jury trial. "But Hie handkerchief ?" "Xo woman can cry effectively on the witness stand without an em broidered handkerchief. Lacking that, it is no moro than sniveling, and the woman who snivels is lost. With the handkerchief sha can beat nie. Without it she is at my mere}'. A? the poet truly says, 'In hoc hand kerchief vinces!' The verdict in this case is likely to rest on tho tem porary possession of a bit of linen and lace. When she finds it gone, oho will bo too rattled to even think clearly." "?? begin to see," remarked the un sophisticated one, "that there is moro than law to law." "In such n, case," was the reply/ "the law ia the least part of it. - Chicago Inter Ocean. Getting lt Right. "See here," said the smart man to the hotel proprietor. "I've just had an argument with my friend on tho matter of terms, and I want you to decide." "Fire away," said thc proprietor. "Well, I told my friend I was com ing dowji-here to the oflice to pay my bill. My bill, you understand? Was that right ?" "Of course. What did lie con tend?" "Ile said I should have said your hUl. How about it?" "Well, ye3. It certainly is my hill. That seems to bo correct." "But you said just now my bill was right." "Oh, well, it's both! It's your bill, and it's my bill." "That sorter makes it our bill, doesn't it?" "Yes," assented tho proprietor, anxious to get rid of tho man. "That's what it is-our bill." "Well, that decision suits mo to a T. Just you maice out my half of it, and I'll pay you right away. There's nothing like getting things straight."-New York Press. Good Cause For Blues. Smith-What is tho matter with you ? I never knew you to have the blues so badly. Jones-I am grieving over the death of my brother. Smith-I didn't know you loved him as much as all that. Jones-I don't, either. But the fact is after I had him locked up in an insane asylum he made his will and left mo all his property, and now I've got io prove that he wasn't crazy or his property will go io somebody else. Unreasonable. "You said," asserted the irate cus tomer, "that this tonic would make hair grow." "I did," admitted the clerk. The customer removed his hat and showed a head as smooth as a billiard hall. : ..i've been using that tonic for three months/' he said. "Oh, that's all tight 1" answered the* clerk promptly. "You have no hair to grow. If you had, the tonic would work all right. What more can you expect ?" - Weaving the Web of Fancy. "He says that watch is an heir loom in his family," observes the in timate acquaintance to the bosom friend. "Heirloom ? Why, I saw him buy the thing a little while ago," re marks tho bosom friend. "But he tells the most interesting stories of how it has been handed down from sire to son fo; years and years." if.j . > . "He does ? An heirloom, eh ? It's a hot air loom.""-^-Chicago Tribune. The Tibet Roof Show. It's a very slow, tiresome drama, frequent waits and hitches, that is going on this summer in the roof ?arden of the world. The only re eeming feature about it is that it will probably end happily for both British and Tibetans about the time the tragedy that is playing in the neighboring house has come to its finish.-Boston Transcript. - There is no time in life when op portunity, the chance to be and to do, ^gathers so richly about the son? as 1 when it has to suffer. Theo every thing depends on whether tho man turns to the lower or the higher helps. If he resorts to mere expedients and tricks, the opportunity is lost. He comes ont no richer or greater ; nay, he comes out harder, poorer and Small er for his pain. But if he turns tb God, the hoar of suffering is the turn ing point of his life.-Philip Brooks. MARCUS AURELIUS. A Stoic Who Was Called the Most Christian of Pagans. Marcus Aurelius, who has been called thc ' dower of stoicism'' and thc ''most Christian of pagans," was born in Koine early in the year 121 A. D. Ho was brought up by his grandfather ami in 137, ttl tho rc ijuest of the Emperor Hadrian, was adopted by Marcus Titus Antoninus Pius, who was heir to tho throne. He became C aesar in 139 A. D. About l lb' he married Faustina, tho beautiful sister of Lucius Vcrus, who was Caesar with him. Marens became emperor along with Vcrus in 100 and sole emperor on the latter's death in 1C>S. J Ie died of illness brought on by ex posure iu/a campaign on March .17. 180 A. 1). As he was tho best man of his time, she was the worst wo man. Her son, Commpdus, fid lowed in her steps, not in his father's. This emperor-philosopher regard ed himself as being, in faet, thc serv ant- of all. It was his duty, ho be lieved, to confront every peril in his ? own person, to bc foremost in tho hardships of war, most deeply im mersed in the arts of peace He practiced what ho preached, lie was one of those who hold that nothing should bo done hastily and that few crimes were worse than tho waste of time. His "meditations" were composed only for his own eye and were jot ted down as he found time. Thc lirst book was written while he was actu ally in the Held fighting the Quadi, a German tribe. From an early age he had been a ?toic, but instead of becoming cynic al and careless he softened stoicism toward others, though not toward himself. He learned to work hard, to deny himself, never to listen to slamler, to endure misfortune, to bc grave without affectation, "not fre quently to ?ay to any one or to write in a letter that 1 have no lei sure" or continually to excuse tho neglect of ordinary duties by alleg ing urgent occupation. Marcus Aurelius was the best pagan that ever lived. Mon''*y Puzzle Tree. During the cruise of Vancouver's expedition to the Pacific and north west coast of America (1791-95) tho members were entertained at dinner at Valparaiso by tho viceroy of Chile. In the course of the dessert some "nuts" were served which, so tho host told Archibald Menzies, the 6\irgeon of the expedition, were the seeds of the Chile pine. The doctor, being a wise man, put a few of these seeds in his pocket and on his return to England had them planted in tho botanical*gardens at Kew. From them grew the first ar aucaria ever seen in Europe. It be camo the lion of the gardens and was a prime favorite with William IV., who never failed to point it out to visitors when he happened to be at Kew. The king's interest in it first arose Eerhap3 from the fact that Menzies nd been a shipmate of his. This historical tree died early in 1893, and its kind, which stand the British climate fairly well, are known by the nome of monkey puzzle. Her Parent?. The mother of a young girl re cently secured a divorce from her husband and married another man, tho terms of the. decreo providing that the daughter spend half her time with her father, who had al?o remarried, and half with her moth er. Meeting a friend of her family after returning from a visit to one of her remarried parents, the little girl was asked ''how she spent her time nowadays." "Well," she replied, "I spend a month visiting rov father and my mother. Then the next month I sro on a visit to my mother and my father."-Harper's* Weekly. The American Servant. Sir Philip Burne-Joncs gave the following amusing instance of the lengths tb which the efforts of American menials to preserve their own gentility extend: A friend of Sir Philip's asked a waiter on ono of tho railways to perform some service. "No, I can't," was the re ply. "The other gentleman will at tend to you," referring to a fellow servant a few yards off. The first waiter then strolled across to the second waiter and was overheard to say, '"There's a man over there wants you to attend to him l" Swallows Attack a Cat. On the top of a disused chimney in his back premises a man in Maid stone. England, observed a huge cat endeavoring to reach a swallows' nest built under a projecting course of brickwork. The parent birds flew) around the cat, endeavoring to driva it away. Not being able to do so, they disappeared, returning in a few moments with nine other swallows. These in a compact body charged the cat with such force as to almost dislodge it, and it hurriedly de scended to a place of safety. - The Columbia State reviews the ) mammer records since they began to )n kept in 1897 and draws the con clusion that this summer so far has >een the mildest during that time. - Either you get laughed at for Harrying a girl or people pity her. - A girl is awful clever to be're irrangiog her garter and make you ,hink 'she is tying her shoe. - You'll never get close to God by o tuiniog away from your neighbor. FURMAN UNIVERSITY, i2?&N?PiL, Pre, CouraoH loading to tho degrees of Bachelor of Arts (B. A.) ami Mabtor of Arti.-? ( M. A.) Library Reading Room. Laboratorio;;. Largo ami Comfortable Dormitories.. lTX|teosti8 reduced to a M int mum. Next Beast ou begins Sept. 11. For rooms apply to Prof. H. T. Cook. For Cata logue or tnfomiaticii address Tho Secretary of the Faculty. Flooring, Ceiling, Siding-, Framing, Shingles, Lime, Cement, Lathes, Brick, Doors, Sash, Blinds, Mantels, Turned and Scroll Work, Devoe's Paint, Lead, Oil, Turpentino, Hard Oil, Glass, Putty, Etc. EVERYTHING ITU" TH S BUILDER. IKHPM?JM6' INVESTIGATE when need of any kind of ia See me. If I don't cell y om I'll make the other fellow SELL YOU RIGHT. ANDERSON, S. C. REAL ESTATE FOR SALE. Wo offer for salo tho following desirable property, situ ated in this and surrounding Counties. . Nearly all of these? places have good improvements on them. For full particu lars as to terms, location, &c, call at my office. "50acres, two. miles from city, un improved. House ami Lot, G acres, near city limits, very desirable. 1 acre, with new dwelling, in oity limits. Hi acres, near t y limits, cleared, no improvements. 200 acres in Fork township, on Tug aloo River, two dwellings. 400 acres in Oaklawn township, in Greenville Co., half in cultivation, 5 tenaat dwellings, 50 acres of this is in bottom land. 700 acres in Hopewell township, on Six and Twenty Creek, 300 acres in cultivation, 2good residences, G ten ant dwellings, -40 acres in bottom land. i?l acres in Garvin township, on Three-nnd-Twcnty Creek, good dwell inp, barn, &a. 200 acres in Center township, Ooo nee County, 100cleared, balance well timbered, well watered, good mill'site with ample water power. 133 acres, in Pendleton township, well improved. Berry place, Varennes, 87J aorea. .137 acres, Pendleton township, ten ant houses and dwelling. 145 acres, Evergreen place, Savor* nab township. 150 acres in Savannah township^ well timbered, no improvements. GOO acres in Hopewell township. ISO acres in Broadway township,, improved. 230 acres in Fork township, on Sen eca River, good dwellings, &c. 800 acres in Anderson County, on Savannah River. 96 acres in Lowndesville township Abbeville County. 84 acres in Corner township. 75 acres in Oconee County, 75 acres in Bickens County. 152 acres in Rock Mills township, on Seneca Bivcr, 2 dwellings. ,700 acres in Fork township. 5G aores in Macon Co., N. C.,f2P" miles above vValhalla, on road to Highlands. All thc above aro desirable Lands, and parties wanting good homes, -atr low prices, can oelee i from the above and call for further particulars. Not? is the time to scour?*) your homes for another year. JOS. J. FRETWEJLJL, ANpjERSON, S. G. ? td NW O' W 2 0 < H a < ~ fe O td 0 ? 2 M co 3 W H d el w H Z O S 2 o o 4 B 63 a .4 ?lest, Bimst Cteft Ml This Establishment bas been Selling \ IN ANDERSON" for more than forty years. During all that time competitors' have come and gone, but we have remained right here. We have always sold Cheaper than any others', and during those long years we have not had ons dis satisfied customer. Mistakes will sometimes oocur, and if at any time we found that a easterner was dissatisfied we did not rest until we had made hin? satisfied. Thia p olicy, rigidly adhered to, has made us friends, true and last ing, and we ean say with pride, but without boasting, that we have the confi dence of tho people of this section. Wo have a larger Stook of Goods this* ?eaeon than we nave ever had, and we pledge you our word that we have never sold Furniture at as close a margin of profit as we are doing now. This ip proven by the fact that we are selling Furniture not only all over Anderson County but in every Town in the Piedmont seotion. Come and see us, Your parents saved money by buying from UH, and you and your ohildren oan save money by buying t?te seo. Wo carry EVERYTHING in the Furniture line* G? F. TOLLY & 8ON, Depot Street. Thc Old'BoiiableiFurnitnre Dealer? THOUSANDS SAY THAT McClure's Magazine, Is the best published at any price. Yet it is only IQ cents a copy, 11.00 a year. * In every number of McClure's there are articles of intense interest cer* subjects of the greatest naiional importance. Six good short stories, humorous stories, stories of life and action-an?T< always good. - In 1904 McClure's'wiJl he more interesting, important and entertaining; than ever. "Every year better than the last or it would not be McClure's. THE 8. S. McCLURE COMPANY, 623 Lexington Budding, New York, N. Y NOW. IS THE TIME For ^?^nhauliiig Carriages and Indies so as to have them.^eady for sei vice in pretty weather. We have a ?oe lot of material and plen ty gobd, reliable help, and will do cur bett to,'please with repairs on all vehicles. PAUL E. STEPHENS. BANNER SiLfeXB the moat healing solve In the world. CITY L0TSF0R SALE. SITUATED on and near North Hain Street, Five minutes' walk Court House* Apply to J. F. CUnkscalea, Intelligenoer OfflOP._ N otice to Creditors. A OJ persons having demands again?? tbe Estate of P. 8. Maxwell, deceased, are herer>y notified to present them, properly proven, to the undersigned within the tims prescribed by law, ancb thOBO Indebted tb make payment. MRS. KATE B. MAXWELL, KX'X. Jane 22,1904 1 3