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\khrm I L. . - ;y c; j -.i.-M 1 AN EVRTJl REDEEMED P ' l -i ^ v!: \A ^| ft Li t-u 'its ii-n V*J m REV. DR. TALMAGE V/ORLD IT PICTURES THE WILL BE. otlior p;roii|t "of ImlMititfs th::t mr.si have horn tr.insfonix'd from tlit iroiij; Inal shape ami adapted to other uses. Many persons have their good day and their bad day. Othera are abou*: half sick all the time. They have headache,‘backache, and are restless and nervous. Food docs not tasje good, and the digestion is poor; the skin is dry and sallow and disfigured with pimples or eruptions; sleep brings no rest and work is a burden. What is the cause of all this? Impure blood. And the remedy? The Twenty-first Century Will Pee ttie Cojunlete (.oMfieli/.atittii of All the I’ccyle of the Unrlli—Ifvll Oior- eome by the I’o-.ver of Clirixt. [Copyright, I.ouls Klup-iti. 1 <3.] Washington, Dec. ti. — Ily a novel mode Dr. Talmage in his discourse shows how the world will look after it has boon revolutionized for pood; text) II Peter iii, 13, “A new earth, wherein dwelleih righteousness.” Down in the struggle to ina’.e the world better and happier we sometimes get depressed with the obslacdes to he overcome and the work to be accom plished. Will it not be a tonic and an inspiration to look at the world as it will ho when it has been brought back to paradisaical couditionV So lot us for a few moments transport ourselves | into the future and put ourselves for- ! ward in the centuries and see the world j in its rescued and perfected state, as ! we will see it if In those times we are permitted to revisit lids planet, as 1 | am sure we will. We till want to see i the world after it has been thoroughly ■ gospelized anti ah wrongs Imre been j righted. We will want to eo.no back, ! anil wo will come hack, to look upon j j the* refulgent consummation toward i “What is all lli* *insworst and hospitals and prudence nil sorts have of cits unities. w UK .his7" we ask tear escort. “Those were iilmshntises but tufuntey In making In running machinery of almost a In ,lish''d the list niul sobi iety and Indus try have nearly abolished pauperism, so that those buildings, which oti 't* .* hospitals anti nlmshou • s, have i lunitd into beautiful homos lor less prospered, and if yi-u will look in you will set* the poorest table has abundance and the smallest wardrobe liratry and the harp, walth*;: to have bs strings thrummed. Icunisig ayiiimt tin* piano, waiting for its Ijv h> he Augen d. \ i s. we have on tbo shelves of our free libraries Inc full story of dispensaries, and erutelies, and eiiuies, and surgery, and what a time i f suf fering there must ha re been on those item ‘ib Ids of Sedan and tlettysbmg utli Africa one or two hundred go. A Now World Born. pltals and almshouses mast era a lueessitv once, but they ,'OUivi i ■an uov:. u see have been draim d. i he or h: It clears out the channels through which poisons arc carried from the body. When all hrr'uriti which we have been on larg smaller scale toiling. Having hoard j l * : its* orchestra, on whoso ll - 11s traveled, we will i ■ ii: t lain ter drew its lirst ureli aaiiis of the* great towns has been , d. And the worlds climate* a proved that there a re no pm tt- ,i) come ot’.t of tl’.e* cold or gs jus out *d the dampness or out i i the* ui at. (. onsumpiions ,,, pis iiinonias banished, tlipii- |..;inls!: ,|. opiitli.iimia l.iiuislietl, tounter anti tlie* draymen at the door- vv:iy ami the errand boy on him rounds and the messenger who brings the* mail and the men who open the store in the morning, ns well as those* who close it at night, all look ns If they were satisfied anti well treatcnl. No swallowing up of small houses of mer chandise by great houses. No ruinous underselling until those In the same line are bankrupt and then the prices lifii d. No unnecessary assignment to defraud creditors. No overdrawing of accounts. No abscoudings. No sharp | practice. No simp Judgments. Hut the manufacturer right in Ids dealings , with the wholesaler, au 1 the wliolesal- ’ or with the customer. No purchasing j of goods that will never be paid for. All right behind the counter. No repe- ! titiou nf what Solomon describes when he writes. "It Is naught, it Is naught, saith the buyer; hut when ho Is gone his way, then he boastedh.” "Hut w hat is yonder row- of build ings, majestic for architecture'.''’ The spirit of the t vonty first century says, “Those are our legislative halls and places of public trust, and. If you would like it, 1 will show you the po litical circles, tin* modes of preferment, the styles of election, the character of public men In this century.” “Thank you,” 1 reply. “1 can easily under stand how gospcli/atii n woul I im prove individual life and social life am! ccmmen ia! life, but 1 w ■aid like what an <i( i political life.’ text ITovcrbs x. 7, ‘Th di-itl rot,’ or Jor BS i JV1 loriie.y-A. s ~ Otll t in bou11 House. (I’r> -Oat • Juilgu’s of:ico Gaffney City, S. C. rractioC-3 in all the courts. Col' fcions a s(>.-uialty '(•- W. T. THOMPSON, Blacksmith and Vvond Shop. Al Sho Oak til' in WOi’l rny < mi slii i-. Is in lol,; . !«< r ;tiii •n in p. n •pi* it. vt t lint 11 \v;i.\ • m i* m il 1 llOt .v’t*. WiNihk: OH Hickory. ! M H k I; .Ns V 1 M ' ' ! 11 i')|* lior. I or |). i-.N) fed rent. A k » m WOOD r - A 11 T ^ 7^* 13 b A i\ K n, h, docs st genera) Banking and Excha nge business. W oil secured with Burglar- Proof safe and Automatic Time Lock. Safety Deposit Boxes at moderate rent. Buys and sells Slocks acdBonds. Buys County ami School Claims. Your business solicited tilll til iinilt iirmiig out . Ui-oii.ihImt ns win'll you ui-. VVi- will call for your i b.' i Jinx c I ii opuratiou A First \Vi- n Hi? 00 S Ui St Mill. 1 L 1 h v let* at all I urn*. pitiroriM/Ero >vii to MH* I M tO fiO of Mio hos| • ‘ week and pi'oinpt and i fliciont htr- it- ol to i ticy co »t,4 1 4’I IS, 41114 1 Mr. P iy in If . rn: 1 veracity i.-, sworn to it that it will r< 11 in. and as the* redeemed in heaven do as they please and have all (he facilities of transit from world to wo:Id you and I. my hearer or reader, will come look tit what my text calls “A oartu.wir :eitl dwelk’th ri-diteousni. 1 imagine that we arc* descemlin that period of the world's com; gospclizaticn. There will ho no peril in such a descent. Creat heights and depths have no alarm for glorified spirits. We can come down through chasms between worlds without grow ing dizzy and across the spaces of half a uni verso without losing our way. Down and farther down we come. .\s we approach this world we breathe the perfume <d' inimitable gardens. Florali- zalion that in centuries pm-d was here | and there wulicd in. lest roe!:less and j dishonest hands pluck or despoil it, ! surges ils billows of color across the In-lds and up tin* hiiisnics, and that which was desert blossoms as the rose. All the foreheads of crag crowned with Rowers, the feet of tlm mountains slip pered with Rowers. Oh, this perfume of the continents, this aroma of hem ispheres! As we approach nearer and nearer we hear songs and laughter and hosannas, hut not one groan of distress, nut one sob of bereavement, not one clank of chain. Alighted on the redeemed earth, wo are Rrst accosted by the spirit of the twenty-first century, who proposes to guide and show us all that we desire to see. Without his guidance wo w’ould lose our way. for the world is so much changed from the time when we lived la it. First of all he points out to us a group of abandoned buildings. We ask this spirit of the twenty Rrst cen tury, “What are those structures whoso walls ore falling down and whose gates are rusted on the hinges'.'” Our escort tells us: "Those were once penitentiaries Riled with offenders, hut the crime of the world has died out. Theft and arson mid fraud and vio lence have quitted the earth. Feoplo have all they want, and why should they appropriate the property of oth ers, even if they had tin* desireV The marauders, the assassins, the bucca neers. tlii* Ilorods, tlii.* Nana Sahibs, the rullians, the bandits, are’dead, or, transformed by the power of the Christian religion, are now upright and ts-nellc-ent and useful. I’risoniT are of uo more use in this world except as places to he visited by curiosity Kickers, as further hack in the annals of time tourists visited the fortress whi rc the prisoner of Chillon was in carcerated, or Devil’s island, where Dreyfus endured four years of cruel ty.” After passing on amid columns and statues erected in memory of those who have been mighty for goodness in the world’s history, the highest and the most exquisitely sculptured those in honor of such us havo been most effectual in saving life or Improving life lather than of those renowned for destroying life, wo come upon tin i re - ■ much use of Ariel tint! n dirges. v to our twenty-lust century I cannot umierstaud this. l* v/oi’skipurs no sorrows, or 111 y l o ■» .u vN»o n 111 oi r sorrows/ Our escort responds: “Borrows! Why, they had sorrows more than you could count, but by a divine illumination that the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries never enjoyed they timi'r- staml the usi-s of sorrow and are com forted w ith a supernatural condolence such as previous centuries never expe rienced." I*.-.-,i.heey FiiKil'ed. 1 ask again of the interpreter, "Lias death b—n banished from the world7' The answer is, "No; but people die y when the physical machinery out and they realize it is time ml that they are certainly and doubt going into a world they will in* infinitely better off and are to live in a mansion that awaits their immediate occupancy.” "Hut how was all this effecteil7" 1 ask our escort. Answer: "By Roods of gos pel power. Von who lived in the nineteenth century never saw a re vival of religion to he compared with what occurred in the latter part of the twentieth an l tin* early part of the twenty-iirst country. The prophecy nation shall b! ,000,0( >0 to SCO “Lot i io tell you," says the spirit of the twcnty-lirst century, "that I have read about political chi -ancry and cur- hundred years in which v political nee of the box, and >.v promise nigh li-gis- 1. 1 , T i \-1 f * * i i * i. * t ’. f election was pn aciu r oiii- taklng for his • nami* of the uaiah xxii, 10, with the burial of east forth beyond the gates of .Jerusalem.’ “Our laws are good and will exe cuted. .Men do not in our century have to wade chin deep through moral slush in order to gain office.” i :o a <>r i ii no<*i 11 > . As in company with our escort wo pass down from tin* heights on which these buildings stand, 1 see a dis mounted cannon planted on the side of the hill, ami 1 go to examine it, and 1 rend the ius'-ription, cut In letters of bronze*. "This is the last gun that was fired in the last battle of the last war that will over be fought. Presented by the last regiment of war just before disbanding. (llory to Cod in the high est, and on earth peace, good will to men.’ says: on our right'/ That was a fortress, but now it is a college, ami instead of guns aiming out of the portholes arc looking tho students of a higher literature and a wiser science and a grander civiliza tion than the world ever before imag ined. And tlio.se students arc taught by a professorate of men as renowned for piety as for science. Arclueolo- us to retrace our way heavenward. This voluntary exile must soon end. “But,” I say to our escort, the spirit of the twenty first century, aud you and 1 say to each other, “wo must go home now, back again to heaven. We have staid long enough <>n this terres trial visitation to see that ail the best things foretold in the Scriptures and which we read during our earthly resi dence have come to pass, and all the Davidic, Solomonic and I’aulinian and Johannean prophesies have been ful- Rllcd, and that the earth, instead of being a ghastly failure, Is the mighti est success in the universe. A star re deemed! A planet rescued! A world saved! It started with a garden, and it is going to close with a garden. What a happiness that we could have seen this old world after It was righted and before it burned, for its internal tires have nearly burned out to the crust, according to the geologist, mak ing it easy for the theologian to believe in the conflagration that the Bible pre dicts.” Tlie L'nlveraal Song,. And now you and I have left our es cort as we ascend, for the law of grav itation has no power to detain ascend ing spirits. Up through immensities and by stellar and lunar and solar splendors which cannot lie described by mortal tongue wo rise higher and higher, tlii we reach the shining gate as it opens for our return, and tlie questions greet us from r - sides: “What is the news? What did you find iti that earthly tower? What have .\oti to report In tins city of the suit?” Prophetic, aprstoilc,- saintly inquiry. And, standing on tlie* steps of the* house nf many manxiuns, we cry aloud the a w. : “1!., r it, all ye glorified Chris tian workrr.. of all the past centuries! We 1'uuiul your work was successful, w het iu r on earth you toiled with knit ting needle, i t* rung a trowel on a ris ing wall, or smote a : •il a univ rally, or GOWDEYVILLE GOSSIP. ioe last, or on- - waved a scep- wiict! :* on iart!i you gave a cup O' It of cold water in the name of a disciple or at s i111e Pentecost preached 3,000 snub: into th*. 1 kingdom. In that world we have Just visited the deserts are all abloom and the v, ildornesses are bright witii F-nnlains. Sin is extirpated, t iime is reformed. Disease is cured. Tl.i* race is emancipated. ‘The earth is fall of I n: knowledge of Cod, as the Then 1 look up, and our escort Jo you see that large structure aimne ami •oiogist s crow T - labonftory and have Joined in truth of the until there is not in all the earth, through Ills telescope waters cover the si of the Lord have songs and e\i rl . -i heads.’ ‘The Lon rcigueth, aud tin* world have beeom our Lord .Jesus C!i: eis of heaven -trii from the sii d .s :' trumpeters put t! ■ their trunii'.et 11;i-::i Into 111> nities. and al the gn at rap: them ail over i a.’ ‘The redeemed come to '/.[■ n with lug J"y upon their 1 Cod Omnipotent ! i: . Jc ;as of the tlie kingdoms of •i-t.’ Let the harp- \e the glad tidings their harps, and the u. in the mouth of , and the orchestras roll gland match of the (’tor tile cathedral towers of X oli Hiilc K:rti|)lIons Are grand, hut Skin Eruptions rob life of joy. Bucklen’s Arnica Salve cures them; also Old, Running and Fever Sores, Ficers, Boils,' Felon*?, Corns, Warts, Cuts, Bruises. Burns, like it is a mighty hard matter j ^ualds, (diapped Hands, Chilblains . , Best File cure ontarlh. Drives on Anti-Mormon Tliluks Tnltusige’ft ,Sermon* Worth tlie Trice of The ^‘eiiger. (Corrcsivondince of The Ledger.) Gowpeyvii.le, November, 27.—It seems for the people to get rid of the fever of dilferent kinds in this settlement. I don’t reckon the like has ever been known, as has been the case within the last two months around here and not so much here as there is over in the near edge of Union county. There have been several deaths in Union county near us from typhoid lever. Some mothers has peaceably passed away and left a husband and several little ones to mourn their loss. The people to a certain extent, es pecially the farming class, have be come disgusted at the farm and have got u big factory fever on them. But I wouldn’t bo surprised at it being cooled of! by plow timo again. I have just got through reading Dr. Talmage’s sermon, and I think it to be the best I ever heard of. Iv alone is worth twice tlie amount paid for The Ledger. If we had enough such men as he we would have a heap bet ter country than we have got. But preaching is like everything else. There are several jack legs in it that ought to be plowing and chopping for their living like the old darky of slavery said. ‘ God call some else and he answered.” 1 can’t keep from saying something about the Mormons. I notice in your last issue about ono of those gentle men being elected to congress from Utah. Such places need to be civiliz -d, or rather they need to have to suffer, like the people in the Philippines, un til they would regard the religion of the Lord Jesus Christ. You might as well call it their own self right eousness. I remember some seven or eight years ago their came through ti is neighborhood several of these beats, laying up on the very poorest people in the county for a month at the time, having them to work for them until the good people became so enraged against them they threatened them with a cowhide, and they put patty to the ground and have been pretty scarce about here since that time. I am glad that there is such a place as Utah for thorn because we don’t need them here. The people have lived and died for 1SDD years and if they have not found the right way yet • it isn’t prohalls that they ever wiii. Anti-Mokmon. out Pains and Aches. Only 20 cents a box. Cure guaranteed. Sold by Cherokee Drug Co. Ifun'i 1 -.ii- m ■ .* uhI v.:-.:.c Year Ufe J .v.-iy. To ij-iit t'lba.co eusily anilfoi-ci'ir.boinau- r,otic, lull <,.[ nci ve ::nil v't'or, take No-To- Bi*c, the Vvoii'i r work-that makes neat; men strong. All Crugsists,COsor 11. Cureguaran- ti-'-d Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Kcrocdy Co.. Clilcaeo or New York. FREE! Coughs, Colds, Croups, Asthma and all Throat and Lung Tcouble relieved in- ) stantly by Dr. Wofford's Expectorant Call at the Cherokee Drug Co., and get a free sample bottle. Trespass Notice. _ A LL parties art* licroby forbidden totres- 7 » pass on my kinds for any purpose what ever uiulei- penalty of the law. ii-i i-iaw-:;t Joseph Prick. A J.L persons an- hereby forbidden to tres- ^A[ias> on our lands for ilu* purpose of hunt- inir, cutting- timber, etc., under penalty of tlie law. Louis TAYhOB. I. A. Williams. ll-14-St-pd Mrs. Jane William. A i.L L. ipnssinjr. huntlny or otherwise, on my kinds is forbidden under penalty of law. \V. I*. Love, Cowpens, S. (J. 11-7-41-1 w-jhI A LI i trespass! try, hunting or otherwise, on my lands is forbidden under penalty of law. It- nry Jenkins. I'crry, N. C. 11-7-41-Hv-pd Dr. C. T. LIPSCOMB, Dentist, Office over R. A. Jones ii Co.’s Store. Can be found at office six days In the week DR. J. F. GARRETT, Gaffney, Dentist, S. C. i * Ti oni th.- IP [io. cit s', \v<; t!i.uk i. i; a larger s-!e I in *i properties a; ti, :al r , i,-!.;rv ineii; (,< am] not oni now IS l vorn \nS. to 4'0 i\ a at wit liolit Roto wh L i ro It ii.i Li i ;i fulfil!',1 tli.it ‘a na be 1 . iru iu a ilay’—th; ;t is. or 2 !!.()()() • ;j or lo.ci.-J. 000 pi vert' ml In 21 liotiid.” As ; yD11 and 1 see in tills vi it ation of tiio conilin 2 cent n estriul •U*s that tin* ckdi'ch I’.ns. umler (kid. accom plished so nuieii. \\’M a k our escort, Iho spirit of the twenty first century, to show us the iliiiereni kinds of cluirehes. .So we an* taken in and out of tlie eliureJics of different denomina tions. an ! we find that they are just us different in the twenty-first century as they were different in the nine teenth. when we worshiped in them. There is unity in them as to the great essentials of salvation. Hut we enter the Baptist church, and it is baptismal day, and we se l* candidates for membership immersed. And we go into a 1’reshytei iat* eliurch and see a group of parents at nmd me baptismal font holding up their children for the christening. And we enter P e Episeo pal church aud hear the solemn roll of her liturgies, and her ministers an* d -•mpl: *And we enter hmih, aud we hear In •iiei.ed the (k.-ei.'ines of a rel K’-’ievs. And gdvmu amt tin* Lutheran eh;;; the sermon preac! the* g:latest of Jt•: we go into tin* Met!) .11. t church just in time to sit dawn at a iove f a t ami give audible "Aineu” when 11.e .service stirs us. At least .'*.» kinds ( f chmcht.; in the twenty first cenimy, as tlure were Idn diticrcut kinds of ckmches in the nimteentli century. “O s;iirit of the twenty-f.iat cen tury, will you n t show us something of the commercial life of your time.' He answers, “Tomorrow 1 w.ll show you all." And on the morrow he takes us through the great marts of trade and shows us the bargain makers and the shelves on which tlie goods lay on the tierces and hogsheads in which they are contained. 1 notice that Hie fabrics are of better quality than any thing I ever saw in our nineteenth ceu- tur.v, for the factories are more skillful, and the wheels that turn aud the looms that clack and the engines that rumble are driven by forces that were not ti century ago discovered. Iloiictit)’ Ilvcryi* here. The prices of the fabrics indicate a reasonable profit, and the firm in the counting room and the clerks at the gixt s bar and chemist's explorer’s journey a confirmation Holy .Scripture iin unbeliever The astronomer lias seen the Morning Star of the Re deemer, and the geologist has found the Rock of Ages, and the geometri cian has demonstrated that heaven is the city which ‘lietli four square, and the length and the breadth and the^ height of it are equal.’ ” “What!" I say to our escort. "No skeptics? No Infidels? No agnostics?" Ilis reply is: "Absolutely none. The hist foul who ‘said in Ids heart there is no (lod’ was buried a half century ago without any liturgical service.” In response to my question as to what had wrought all this change— obliterated all the evil and fully In augurated all the good—our escort, the spirit of the twenty-first century, tells me that gospelization had directly or indirectly done it. It was a practical gospel that had not only changed the heart, but made the man honest—a practical religion, which did not ex pend all its energy in singing “Fly abroad, thou mighty gospel,” hut gave something to make it fly. Sin Obliterated. I ho good work was helped on by tlie fact that it became a general habit among millionaires and multimillion aires to provide churches and schools and institutions of mercy, not to be built after tlie testators were dead, hut built so that they might he present at the laying of the cornerstone and at the dedication and leave less Induce ment for the heirs at law to prove in orphans’ court that when the testators made their last will and testament they were crazy. The telegraphic wires in the air and the cables under the sea thrill with Christian invitation, i’ho- nographs charged with gospel ser mons stand in every neighborhood. The 5,000,000,000 of the world’s inhab itants in that century arc* 5,000,000,000 disciples. “But,” I say to our escort, the spirit of tlie twenty-first century, “you have shown us much. But what about iu- tcrnutional conditions? When we lived on earth, it was a century that bled With Marengo and Chalons and Lodi Bridge and Lucknow and JSolferlno and Lelpsic and Waterloo and San Juan.” Our escort replies, “Come with me to tills building of white marble and glittering dome.” As we pass up and on we are taken into a room where the mightiest and best representatives of all nations are assembled to settle international controversies. As wo cu ter I hear the presiding officer opening the council of arbitration, reading tlie second chapter of Isaiah: "They shall heat their swords Into plowshares and tli<*ir spears Into pruning hooks; na tion shall not lift up sword agsdnst na tion, neither shall they learn war any more.” Questions which In our long past ninetei nth century caused quar rel and bloodshed, as when Germany and France were deciding about Alsace and Lorraine, as when tlie United Rtalcs and Spain were deciding about Cuba—such questions In this twenty- first century settled in five minutes, one drop of Ink doing more than once could have been accomplished by a river of blood. But \vi* cannot stay long In this hall of arbitration, for it is almost time for al * f the uni verse chime icaven.” And now ! luuk up and see the cast ing down of the hejcweled and radiant crowns at the sacred feet of tlie en throned Jesus. Missionary (.'icy is casting down bet ore those feet tlie crown of India saved. Missionary Jud- son is casting down the crown of Bur ma saved. Missionary Aheel easting down the crown of China saved, Da vid Livingstone easting down at those feet the crown of Africa saved, .Mis sionary Hrainerd casting down the crown of tins country's aborigines sav ed. Hoiiis that went up from all the denominations in America in holy ri valry, seeking which could soonest cast down the crown of this continent at the* Saviour’s feet, and America saved. But often you and 1 who were com panions iu that expedition from heaven to earth, seated on the green bank of the river that rolls through the para dise* of God, will talk over the scenes we witnessed in that vacation from tlie skies in our terrestrial visitation, we* who were early residents in the nineteenth century, escorted by the* spirit of the twenty-first century, when we* saw what my text describes as “a new earth, wherein dwelleth righteous ness.” "Glory be to the Father and to the Son and to the Holy Ghost, ns It was in the beginning, is now and ever shall he, world without end. Amen." ills Li tV Wilrt Hurt’ll. Mr. J. E. Lilly, a prominent citizen of Hannibald, Mo., lately had a won derful delivtrence from a frightful death. In telling of it ho says: “I was taken with Typhoid Fever that ran into Pneumonia. My lungs be came hardened. I was so weak I couldn’t even set up in bed. Noth ing helped me. I expected to soon die of Uonsumption, when I heard of Dr. King's New Discovery. One bottle gave me great relief. I con tinued to use it, and now am well and strong. I can’t say too much in its praise.” This marvelous medi» cine is the surest and quickest cure in the world for all Throat and Lung Trouble. Regular sizes f>0 cents and $100. Trial bottles free at Cherokee Drug Co.’s Drug Store. Every bot tle guaranteed. Dcaaty Is Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by atirring up the lazy liver and driving all im- purities from the body. Begin to-day to banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets,—beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 5Uc. u iblo l-;in 1) case o tery, i 1*1 ur. Avoid substituL Sifin-Killi’i', Ft’! rv ! >:c. :• ’ o b.) ■ nt, or: o ;i, < ,:<> in this inn h :s Kill*.;:. Its val- •:y c; re for pain )y sq.preeinteii, in i iitt i •!: of fiys< n- orbu.;.- Montreal tin-re is but ona Price 25c. u 150c. Kilurato Your l.r-r.-iis Y«'i!!i Cascarets. (’unity <’iit!i:irtii’, run* con linatiou forever. 10c. •.V 1 . Il U. C. C. fail, UiUindsisrclund money. e Olfice over J. R. Tolleson’s new store In office from 1st to 2Gth of each month; COM IC to our More if you want to got your money's worth. TO see our full lino of groceries find our low t-rj*'* * iiieans to buy from us. We also carry a full line of Northern fruit. THIS pooule of our town will have to b - fed, and our jilaco is tlie ohea) cst and I“ sl place 1 i ", i something to feet! I hem on. We "dll have ;i big line of fresh cakes from l-'ineken’s bakery for our STO!£ IQ (‘very day. * lei e ii re i In* names of some of the ea kes we Inoidli; I'ruit (kike, Doiie-stic t.'ake. Lady l-ingei-s. str;,wherry t ake. Sueherry Cake, W hite and Yellow Cake, Iced Cakes of all k I nils a ml 1 >rop Ca ke. Orders taken for any kind Old' cakes you want. rti ift 'Ll T. CLAI1Y & CO. SOUTHERN RAILWAY. The Place to P.jiv/ vruir Prnch fiesh DU) julii I iwOst mu’.HO Is at I,. W. I kel the on i i I always Imv S.i us e e ,i.!*i I i -ll Foul try wle-n iu l i rocerles, 1 ices (’one. or i a Good fat eall! will pay spot east Kcspec line p-to-ibuo meat ii rity style. Fork. Mutton, ry Produce and .nuten. Fancy i’.uniett block, i hide , wanted ; I •j.—, Condoasad fl»h«.Ylule of Pass-enger Trains. In Effect Nov. 10,1809. Tea. ! Xo. Its FstMa l !;>l th t fully, L. W. The Dr. Mines House BE8TF0RTHE BOWELS If yon linven’t a reuular, healthy-movement of the bowels every day, you’re sick, or will be. Keep your bowels open, and he well. Force. In tlie shape of violent physic or piil poison, is dangerous. The smoothest, easiest, most perleet way of kcepiiiK the towels clear aud clean Is to lake CANDY CATHARTIC f WkirtMKIILi -A mncjceuato TRADE MARK RlfllSTERED Pleasant, Palatable, Potent,Tastetlood. DoOoort, Never Sicken, Weaken, or Gripe. 10c, 20c, Me Write for tree sample, and hooklelon hcalih. Address Kl.rllui: lu-mrily fpiupany, I'hlr.-o, Jluntn.l, K.w York. 322a KEEP YOUR 01000 GLEAN ft rests with you whether you <-«niinu« lu-i vu-kiliii^ir tobsei-o hsbit. NU-Y'O-UAq.Ma rt'movcc lh» dt-giro for tal'sci o, w11<> jmsWofcS out. aorvuusdistross exnclkltice-^dfK ^ H L tir.o. purifles the blood, H t Bt.a j lost manhood. — ./f o s « F boxes Oiikos you strong --WV |S1 J AF^f^sold, ttO.ixK) In lioaltn.norvo^rf-fa ea it C f cnii'iT hoy Hod oockih Ttk-iAAC from book. wA**x uur own druggist, who ** ri 3 J2oR-^wi!l vouch foru.i. Tako it r.-ilh .-{CfT. wlll.patl. i.tly, pcrsistthtly Cne ?' -~i. , n, ■‘tit-- box , SI, i..u.>!ly fin i-1. ,i i.o»« S'.':*/, kiisriinu , i-ii to i-iire. or »i: refund inonoy. BBMP^ BUrb»( KuasSj Gi., tklcssv, Mulfxxl, hew I«rL on Petty street, ami one lot ad joining. Also valu.Tblo Property Near Limestone. Three tracts, within one-half mile of the College. Three tracts on the Metal Road, from 5 to 7 miles of Gaff ney. One tract of 187 acres near the Macombson Shoals on Broad River. Apply to Northbound. No. 12. ‘ No. 3.8. Ex. j N o. 38. Daily, j Dali v. 1 Sun. | Daily. Lv. Atlanta,UT - . . 1 4 t) ) fl 12 l.Om 4 80 p 11 50 p Ik Atli/it:- p:r s W a. 1 OOp 5 3f'p 12 50 a »( iNor-ro.-s.. ii 3) a c. ’Air; 1 28 a 1 *‘ liuford lv) b** u 7 03 ’ 1 5J a 1 “ Gainesville Id 85 a 2 25 p 7 33 p 2 is a H Lula IU 58 a 2 45 p 8 OJp 2 3Su U < v i-jielia.... 11 26 a 8 30 p it I.ft. Airy... 11 30 J 8 o5 p Lv. Toccoa 1 I l) ) l\ 3 23 p » 00p 3 25 a W'minster. 12 31m 4 01 a It Seneca 12 52 p 4 i5p ....... 4 22 a •« < i-iug’al 1 4‘u* 4 Ola tt Greenville. 5 22 p 5 50 a ll Spay burg. 3 37 p 6 13 y 8 45 a <t Gaffney 4 2i'p 0 'Gy p 7 25 a tt I’.im kspurg 4 33li 7 02 ! ■ 7 42 a it King’s Mi.. b yJ.J J) 8 05 a ii Gastonia.. «) J» 8 :.'8 a tt Charlotte.. () Jl 8 18P 9 25 a A. r Gre’nsboro 9 62)) 10-M' .... 12 Oo p Lv tlro'nsJwro 11 45 p Ar Norfolk.. . ...... 8 SB a .... Ar Danville... 11 25 p 1.1 58 p 1 22 p Ar. Richmond.. 0 00 n 0 00n| (1 25 p At% W'hington. C 42 a 0 05 p 41 ) .'mm e I’.H 8 00 a 11 25 p 44 1’h’de!) ida. ... 10 15 a 2 55 a tt New Vmk. 12 4 m l) 23 a Fst M a Yes. hot'.tliliouiid. N\>. 55. V O. 37. No. 11. Daily. Haiiy- Dally. Lv N.Y.. i'-t.U. 12 15 a •1 3‘)p tt PI. eehihia. «.> tiO Ll 8 55 p . , it I'nilbnote. tt 22 a (i i’lp ... tt Wssh'ton.. 11 15 a ! 10 45p| Lv Rtcli’nond. j 12 Olu 11 OOp I 11 OOp Lv DmiviWe... i e<j8v ! 5 50 a 0 10 a Lv N((tfolk. . i 8 25 i Ar . (4-re'nsboro 5 15 a First-Class RepairiuE of fine Watches Chicks and Jewelry; also engraving. All promptly done at moderate prices. Respectfully, J. R. COOPER. Letters of Administration, Tnl St.vti: of Sm th ( uiolina. I. COL'XTY OF t'HEKOKLE.* ) lly J. E. Webs tee, Esij., Probate Judge. WJiereas, U. H. I.emaster lias made suit to me to grunt him letters of administration of the estate of and t 11 oc t s of Ll l/.aiieih be mas ter. deceased; These are therefore to cite anil admonish all amt singular the kindred and creditors of the said Eli/aheth Remaster, deceased, that they he and appear before me, In the Court, of Probate, to he held at ( affney. F. t\, on Sat urday, Ucoembor9th, next after putilieation thereof, at 11 o’clock In lhe forenoon, to show cause, if any they have, why tlie said admin istration should not b ■ granted. Given under tny hand, this “hi day of No vember, A, D. IslKt. J. E. WunsTEU. Pnihale Judge. Nov. 11 and Dee. 5. Lv. Gru’iicjoro Ar. Flmrlgito.. Lv. (^'istoti’n... “ King's Mt.. “ Rla'lisliurL' “ Gaffrey.. “ f-par’burg. t-rreenvillo t'l’ntral 10 07 a 11 flip 1.0 45 n 11 4<iji 10 50 n 12 ’.o iti 11 ^‘4 u 125 a 12 ISO p “ Seneca .... 2 28 a 1 80p| «<«p “ W’ndnstOF. 0tli)p “ T'oceoa 3 25 a 2 16 p 7 Oup “ Mt. Airy... •••••••• 1 1» “ Cornelia... 7 32 p I.u'a “iisa 3 14 pi 8 0)p “ Gr.iuc.-iville 4 U a 3 33 p 8 20 p “ Buford.... 4 5*) a 8 4 >ii “ N ore roes. 5 25 a 0 18 p Ar. A!k'uta.ET 0 10 n 4 55 p 10 OOp 5 Id a> il S.'ipl 0 ;>) n 0 :i5 a fl 57 a 7 20a 7 48 a 8 27 a 0 :*• a 0 00 p 8 SO ^ JBetwoon Lula nml Athens. ivo. 11.1 | I I No. 10. Kx. No. 13. STATIONS. !Xo. 1*1 Ex. feuu. Dally. 8 10*>! ll 05 a Lv .Lula .Av 8 21) 11 hi) a “ Mnysville “ 8 50m 11 f.Ua; “ liarmony “ P UOpI 12 30 p Ar. Athens Lv Dailj tin. 10 5ft al 7 35 p 10 10 a j 7 09 p lu 03 n 6 53 j) ti 25 a 6 1X1 p Note close connection made at Lula with main line trains. “A” a. m. “P” p. m. “M” noon. “37” night. Chesapeako Line Steamers in daily service! between Norlolk and Baltimore. N«.s. 37 and 88—Daily. Washington ami Southwestern Vestibule Limited. Through Pullman sleeping cars between New York and New Orleans, via Washington, Atlanta and Montgomery, and also between Now York and Memohia, via Washington, Atlanta and Bir- iniiighaii). Also elegant Pullman' Library Okskhvation (Jaiis 'iH-.wecn Atlnnta and New- York. Kirstelass thoroughfare coaches Ix,- tweea Washington and Atlanta. Diuiug ears serve all meals on route. Leaving Washing* iiiKton Motulnys, Wednesdays and Fridays n tourist sleepisigear will run through bet ween Washington and San Francisco without ohango. Pullman draw ing-l uo:u sleetiing cars lietween Gneusboro and Norfolk. Close connection at Norfolk for OLD Poin* CoMl'oi.T. Nos. S5 and !W—United States Fast Mail runs BOiid tiolweeu Washington and Now Orlcrus, via Smthorn Railway, A. A W. P. K. K. ami L. A N. U. U.. being composed of baggage car aud couches, through without change tor pus- sengers of all classes, i’lilhimn drawing room Sleeping ears between New York and New Or leans, via Atlanta and Montgomery and be tween Charlotte and Atlanta. Dining cars servo all meals un route. Nos. 11, :»3, 34 t»ud 12—Pullman sloei>ing ours Ik-twv 'n Richmond and Charlotte, via Dan- vine, southbound Nos. 11 and 33, northl>ounil Nos. 34 and 12. , t HANK S. GANNON, J. M. CULP. Tided V P. a: Gon. Mgr. T. M., Washington. W. A. TUKK, ti. H. HAHDWlt’K. (i. P. A.. Washington. A. G. P. A., Atlanta.