The ledger. [volume] (Gaffney City, S.C.) 1896-1907, June 04, 1901, Image 3

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» A •— Wealth of hair is wealth indeed, especial- 1 y t o a woman. Every other physical attraction is secondary to it. We have a book we will gladly send you that tells just how to care for the hair. If your hair is too thin or los ing its luster, get — Growth becomes vigorous and all dan druff is removed. It always restores color to gray or faded hair. Retain your youth; don’t look old before your time. $1.00 a bottle. All druggiits. “ I have used your Hair Vigor now for al>out !!.'> years and I have found it splendid and satisfactory in every way. I believe 1 have recommended this Hair Vigor to hundreds of my friends, and they all tell the same story. If any body wants the best kind of a Hair Vigor I shall certainly recommend to them just as strongly as I can that they get a bottle oi Ayer’s Hair Vigor.” ^ Sirs. N. E. Hamilton, Not. 23, IblW. Norwich, N. Y. Wrlio tha Doctor. If you don’t obtain all the benejts you desire from the use of the Vi^or, write the Doctor about it. Address, DK. J. C. AYER, Lowell, Mass. BEST FOR THE BOWELS If you haven't a regular, healthy movement of the bowels every dev, you're ill or will be. Keep your bowels open, ami he well. Force, In the shape of vio lent physic or pill poison, is dangerous. Tho smooth est, easiest, most perfect way of keeping tho bowels dear and clean is to tako CANDY fmf CATHARTIC ^ I? ly workwhil^ EAT 5 EM LIKE CANDY Pleasant, 1’nlrvt/iblo. Potent. Taste flood, Ilotlood, Never Hickon, Weaken, or tlrlpi . 10, ifi, and 00 cents per b' x. Write lor free sample, and booklet on health. Addrc.'s t33 STHtl.IXti UkXKDY fOMPAST, (lilt AliO or SEW YOltk. KEEP YOUR BLOOD GLEAN Do You Want Insurance ? i am prepared to furnish poli cies in the very Pest companies at the lowest rates. If you want a bond I can make It for you. See me before you insure. F. G. STACY. DR. J. F. GARRETT, Dentist, Gaffney, ■ - - S. C. Office over J. R. Tolleson’s new store In office from 1st to 26th of each month: Dr. C. T. LIPSCOMB. Dentist, Office over R. A. fonea ft Co.'s Store. Cun \>»! Trturd :it office si* dtivs Id the week G. W. SPEER, ATTOK ISICY-A'r-I V AW, GAFFNEY, S. C. Office i«r«r J. W. Tolleson’s Store. N. W. HARDIN, LAWYER. » PtMcAVest in »ili Courts and all branches of Vbe Law. Office over J. W. Tnlleson's store. Office Lours front k'dO a ru. tod p. m. every day in the week. WALLACE & OTIS, LAWYERS. Offl.a upstairs, between It. A. Jones and D u veu port. Phono 87. J. E. WEBSTER, .A-ttorney-Ajt- Ofliccin Court House.(Probate-iodge suffice Gaffney City, S. C. Practices in all the courts. Collec tions •» specialty H* J. C. JEFFERIES GAFFNEY, S. C. mmerelwl Law. Corporation Law Keal F.atat« Law. i wy to loan on approved security. JAMES A. WILLIS, ATTORNKY AT LAW. < 1 A H ie ,«Sl LC Y, ►*. c;. r Notary I'ubllc In offitte. Prompt attention g n o al> buslnoas. fflee ov^r It. A. Jones A Co.’s store. It inm an 0.1'. Handers. W. 8. Hall, Jr DUHCAK, SANDERS & HALL, Attornays-at-Law. over ; - U. Toll# oa* 0o. « ftora. WAsniNGTON, June 2.—This is a dis course by Hr. Talmage for those given to depreciate themselves anti who have an idea that their best attempts amount to little or nothing; text, Matthew xxv, l. r >, “To another one.” Expel first from this parable of the talents the word “usury.” It ought to have been translated "interest.” "Usu ry” is finding a man in a tight place and compelling him to pay an unrea sonable sum to get out. • ‘‘Interest” is a righteous payment for the use of mon ey. When the capitalist of this parable went off from Lome, lie gave to his stewards certain sums of money, wish ing to have them profitably invested. Change also your Idea as to the value of one talent. You remember the capi talist gave to one of his men for busi ness purposes five talents, to another two, to another one. What a small amount to last, you think, and how could lie he expected to do anything with only one talent? I have to tell you that one talent was about .Y7.2(K), so that when my text says, "To another one,” it implies that those who have the least have much. Wo bother ourselves a great deal about those who are highly gifted or have large financial resource or exalted ofticial position or wide reaching oppor tunity. We are anxious that their wealth, their eloquence, their wit. he employed on the right side. One of them makes a mistake, and we say, ‘What an awful disaster.” When one of them devotes all Ins great ability to useful purposes, we celebrate it, we en large upon it, we speak of it as some thing for gratitude to Cod. Mean while we give no time at all to consider what people are doing with their one talent, not realizing that ten people of one talent each are quite as important as one man with ten talents. In the one case the advantage or opportunity is concentered in a single personality, while in another it is divided among ten individuals. Now, what we want to do in this sermon is to waken people of only one talent to appreciation of their duty. Only a few people have five talefits or ten talents, while mil lions have one. My short text Is like a galvanic shock, “To another one.” The most difficult tiling in the world is to make an accurate estimate of our selves. Our friends value us too high, our enemies too low. To find out what we are worth morally and mentally is almost impossible. We are apt to measure ourselves by those around us, hut this is not fair, as they may lie very brilliant or very dull, very good or very had. Indeed there are no human scales that can tell our exact moral and mental weight, nor is there a standard by which we can measure our exact in tellectual height, so the hardest tiling to do Is to calculate our real stature or heft. But it will he no evidence of ego tism in any of us if we say that we have at least one talent. What is it and, finding what it is, what use shall we make of It? The most of the people, finding that they have only one talent, do us die man spoken of in the parable, they hide it. But if all of the people who have one talent brought it out for use before this century is half past and correspondents begin to write at the head of their letters 1050 the earth would he one of the outskirts of heav en. I ask you again, What is your one talent? Value of Clieerfalneaa. Is It a cheerful look? Carry that look wherever you go. It must come from a cheerful heart. It is not that inane smile which we sometimes see which Is an irritation. In other words, It must be a light within so bright that it Il lumines eye, nostril and mouth. Let ten men who are accustomed to walking a certain street every day re solve upon a cheerful countenance ns a result of a cheerful heart, and the in- Duenec of such a facial irradiation would he felt not only in that street, hut throughout the town. Cheerfulness is catching. But a cheerful look Is ex ceptional. Examine the first 20 faces tlnil you meet going through Pennsyl vania avenue or Chestnut street or Broadway or State street or Ln Salle street or Euclid avenue, and 11) out of the 20 faces have either an anxious look or n severe look or a depressing look or an avaricious look or a sneering look or a vacant look. Here is a mis sionary work for those who have trou ble. Arm yourself with gosjK*! comfort. I>d the Clod who comforted Mary anti Martha at the loss of their brother, the God who soothed Abraham at the loss of Sarah and the God of David, who consoled his bereft spirit at the loss of his hoy by saying, “1 shall go to him;” the God who tilled St. John with dox- ology when an exile on barren Batmos and the God who lias given happiness to thousands of the bankrupted am) persecuted, filling them with heavenly riches which were more than the earth ly advantages that are wilted out—let that God help them. l( jio take full possession of your nature, then yoa will go down the street a benediction to pH who see you, and those who ore In the lough places of life and are run upon and belied and had their homes Destroyed will say: “Jf that man can he happy. I can he happy, tie has been through (ronhies as big as mine, and he goes down the street with a face in every lineament of which there are Joy and peace and heaven. iVhat am 1 groaning about? Erotn the same place that man got bis cheerfulness I can get mine. ‘Why art thou cast down, O uty soul, and why art thou disquieted with in meY Hop*' thou In God, for I shall yet praise him who L tl>e health of my countenance and my God.' " L’awliolesoiue Humor. Again, to ,'o|ir talent that of wit or humor? Use It for fjod. Much of tho world’s wit Is damaging. of sa tire lias a si lug In it. Much of cui’hv turo is malevolent. Much of smart re tort Is vltr!nl)p. In order to say smart things how many will sacrifice the feel ings of olhers! The sword tta>y "Hary Is keen, and It Is employed to thrust and lacerate. But few men In all the world and In all the chinches realize that If wit Is bestowed It Is given them for useful, for Imjd’orUjf, for heglthftyj G tve iti! had IbHfe of afftl new how to use It tirlglii, liow much : It would improve our Christian conver sation and prayer meeting talk and ser mon! Robert Bout It and Rowland Hill and Jeremy Taylor and Dean Swift and Lorenzo Dow and George White- field used their wit and their humor to gather great audiences and then lead them into the kingdom of God. Fri volity is repulsive in religious discus sion, hut 1 like the humor of Job when he said to Ids insolent critics, “No doubt hut ye are the people, and wis dom shall die with you,” and I like the humor of the prophet Elijah, who told the Baalites to pray louder, as their god was out hunting or on an excur sion or In such loud conversation that he could not hear them. 1 like the sar casm of Christ when he told the self righteous Pharisees that they were so good they needed no help, "The whole need not a physician, hut they that are sick,” or when In mirthful hyperbole he arraigns the hypocritical teachers of his day who were so particular about little things and careless about big things, saying. "Ye blind guides that strain at a gnat and swallow a camel,” and the Bible is all ablaze with epi gram, words surprisingly put and phraseology that must have made the audiences of Paul and Christ nudge each other and exchange glances and smile and then appropriate the tremen dous truths of the gospel. There are some evils you can laugh down easier than you can preach down. The ques tion is always being asked, Why do not more people go to church, prayer meet ing and other religious meetings? 1 will tell you. We of the pulpit and the pew are so dull they cannot stand it. But when we ask why people do not go to church we ask a misleading ques tion. More people go now to church than ever in the world's history, and the reason is in all our denominations there is a new race of ministers step ping into the pulpits which are not the apostles of humdrum. Sure enough, we want in the Lord’s army the heavy artillery, but we want also more men who, like Burns, a farmer at Gettys burg, took a musket and went out on his own account to do a little shooting different from the oilier soldiers. The church of God is dying of the proprie ties. Set n Good Example. Or is your talent an opportunity to set a good example? One person doing right under adverse circumstances will accomplish more than many treatises about what is right. The census has never been taken of lovely old folks. Most of us, if we have not such a one In our own house now, have in our memory sucli a saint. We went to those old people with all our troubles. They were perpetual evangelists, by their soothing words, by their hopeful ness of spirit, an inexpressible help. I cannot see how heaven could make them any lovelier than they are or were. But there are exceptions. There is a daughter in that family whoso fa ther is Impatient and the mother querulous. The passage of many years does not always improve the disposi tion, and there are a great many dis agreeable old folks. Some of them for get that they were ever young them selves, and they become untidy in their habits and wonder how, when their asthma or rheumatism is so had, other people can laugh or sing and go on as they do. The daughter in that family hears ail the peevishness and unrea sonable behavior of senility without answering hack or making any kind of complaint. If you should ask her what her five talents are or her one talent is, she would answer that she has no talent at all. Gresftiy mistaken is slip. Her one talent is to forbear and treat the childishness of the old as well as she treats the childishness of the young. She is no musician, and besides there may not he a piano In the house. She cannot skillfully swing a croquet mallet or golf stick. Indeed, she seems shut up to see what she can do with a ladle and a broom and a brush and other household implements. She is the personification of patience, and her reward will be as long as heaven. Indeed, much of her reward may he given on earth. She is In a rough eollege, from whle , !i she may after awhile graduate Into brightest domesticity. She is a heroine, though at present she may receive nothing hut scolding and depreciation. Her one talent of patience under trial will do more good than many morocco covered sermons on patience preached today from the tasseied cushion of the pulpit. There Is a man in business life whose one talent is honesty. He has not the genius or the force to organize n com pany or plan what is called a "corner In wheat” or “a corner in stocks” or "a corner” In anything. He goes to business at a reasonable hour and re turns when It Is time to lock up. Uo never gave n check for $20,000 In all his life, hut he Is known on the street and in the church and In many honora hie circles as an honest man. His Word Is as good ns his bond. He has for 30 years been referred io .»s a clean, upright, industrious, consistent Christian man. Ask him how many talents he has, and he will not claim even one. He cannot make he cannot buy up a market, lie afford an outshining equipage, what an example he Is to the yo what an honor to bis household a pillar to the church of specimen of truth and Integrity and all roumluess of -character! Is there any Comparison in usefulness between that plan with the onp t.-ilpiit of honesty and the dashing operators of (hp money market? GenliiM I'nnFCPannry. The chief work of the jieople with piany talents Is to excite wonderment mid to startle and electrify the world. What use is there In ail that? No use at all. 1 have not so much Interest In the pi)e man out of a million as I have iti the million. Get the great masses of the world right ant) 1) docs not make pinch difference about what the exceptional people are doing. Have all the people with the one talent en listed for God and righteou.-yiess, and lot :;!) those with five or t«n talents migrate to the tioitii sj;ir pf the moon, and this world would get on splen didly. The hardworking, industrious classes of America are all right and would iti vo !♦« ,,ut 11 ,H t,,e genius who gives up work and on a big salary goes a round to excite dissatis faction and embroilment, the genius jvho quits work and stcfifc mi (lie stage or political platform, eats beefsteak and quail on toast and epuffes tue com mon laborers, compelled to idleness, to into empty pockaU and m Uth* a Mi piimV HstlfMi »in* fttftfd would ho mightily liiipiMved If It tnitild slough off about 5.000 geniuses, for there are more than that on our planet. Then the man or woman of one talent would take possession of the world and rule it in a common sense and Chris tian way. There would he less to amaze and startle, hut more to give equipoise to church and state and world. “To another one.” The most brilliant and many sided man that ever trod this world, in my opinion, was Napoleon Bonaparte, and no man that ever lived did the world more damage. I have read a hook ad vocating him as a great emancipator and reformer. I was not surprised at the hook, for I have heard of a pam phlet in defense of Judas Iscariot. I suppose it may set forth the idea that he was ont of money and needed the 30 pieces of silver, and the money was not spent for himself, hut to open a re spectable graveyard. I would not be surprised to lind a hook in honor of satan, the chief miscreant of the uni verse. We all admire industry, and there is uo more industrious being than satlj^ But when a man tells me Napoleon was a reformer and emanci pator 1 would like to take him out and show him 1)3,(XM) corpses in the Russian snow hanks and ask him if he likes that, and I would show him the grave trenches of those who fell in the year IT'JO during the Napoleonic wars. Only 110,000 men butchered in four months! I would ask him how he likes that. The country is beautiful, and I would ask our friend to cross with me to Leipsic and examine the grave trenches opened there. Only 101,790 fallen on both sides! That Is all. Come on, my friend, and see the further work of the great emancipator and reformer at Borodino, which I had an opportunity of looking at last summer. Only 100,- 000 dead men as a result of the battle! Pass by as hardly worth looking at Austerlltz, where the work of our re former left 42,000 of the slain, and come to Waterloo, to find that only 50,000 dead men were left on the field! Alas for the work of this great emanci pator and reformer! He turned Eu rope into a charnel house and filled Eu rope with widowhood and orphanage and childlessness. Though he was the brilliant man of the ages, would it not have been better for the world if he had died in ids cradle six weeks after he was horn? Compare that with the man who had one talent and that the talent of invention. He was born on a farm in Spencer, Mass., in 1819. He went to the district school in the win ter and never had any other literary advantages. lie became a machinist. In 1840 he came on to a battlefield where more women have been slain by the needle than in the wars I spoke of men were slain by the sword. Elias Howe! He could not make an oration. He could not marshal a host. He could not write a constitution. But he could contrive a sewing machine, which said to millions of beggared, consumptive, bent over, half blinded sewing women: “Go free! Take hack your health! Recover your eyesight! Come down out of that garret! Go free!” Slake Good I'ae of Your Talent. Is your talent that of persuasion? Make good use of it. We all have it to some extent, yet none of us think of it as a talent. But it is the mightiest of talents. Do you know that this one talent will fetch the world hack to God? Do you know It is the mightiest talent of the high heavens? Do you know that it is the one ti^nt chiefly employed by all 'ha augrCt o? God when they descend to our world—tha talent of persuasion? Do you realize that the rough lumber lifted into a cross on the hill hack of Jerusalem was In persuasion as well ns sacrifice? That Is the only, absolutely the only, persua sion that will ever induce the human race to stop its march toward the city of destruction and wheel around and start for the city of light. Now may the Lord this moment show each one of us that to a greater or less extent we have that one talent of persuasion ftnd impel us to the right use of it. You say you cannot preach a sermon, but can not you persuade some one to go and hear a sermon? You say you cannot slug, but cannot you persuade some one to go and hear the choir chant on Christmas or Easter morning? Send a bunch of flowers to that invalid in the hospital, with a message about the land where the inhabitants never say, “I am sick.” There Is a child of the street Invite him into the mission school. There is a man who has lost his for tune in speculation. Instead of jeering at his fall go and tell him of riches (hat never take wings and fly away. Buckle on that one talent of persuasion, O man, O woman, and you will do a Work that heaven will celebrate 10,000 years. Among the 114.000 words of Noah Webster's vocabulary and the thou sands of words since then added to our English vocabulary there is one ou mastering word the power of wide 1 cannot he estimated, and it reaches so far up and so far down, and that is the word “come.” It has drawu more peo ple away from the wrong and toward tho rigid than any word | pow think of. it has at times crowded all the 12 gates of heaven with fresh arrivals. It will yet rob the path of death of tjte last pedestrians. It will yet cbltac loudly and gladly that all the foiling bells of aflfrow will he drow^^^’ffh Hhc music. It is piled uc ttf tf 1 ® efynax and peroration, “And V 1 ® WWIt anj the bride say come, and let htur tit» M-* Allidaldy. si tbs tiMUl if lit* ■■ it y Hud AlitiTfihly. it you otimmi da nuy- thing else, go around and feel sorry for somebody. When some one asked, “What is the secret of William Wllber- fore'e's power?" the answer was, "His power of sympathy." And there are 19,000,000 people who have the same qualification If they only knew It. Sympathy! If you cannot restore the child to that bereft parent or the for tune to that bankrupt financier or health to that confirmed Invalid or an honorable name to that wrecked char acter, you can at least feel sorry for the misfortune or the bereavement or the suffering. Sympathy! If you have not the menus to do anything else, go and sit down and cry with them. That Is the way Christ did when lie went out to the desolated home in Bethany and the sisters told their sad story. He cried with them. Oh, cultivate that one talent of sympathy! A Mighty Dlvialon. After the resurrection day and all heaven Is made up, resurrected bodies joined to ransomed souls, and the gates which were so long open are shut there may he some day when nil the redeemed may pass In review be fore the great white throne. If so, I think the hosts passing before the King will move in different divisions. With the first division will pass the mighty ones of earth who were as good and useful as they were great. In this division will pass before the throne all the Martin Luthers, the John Knoxes, the Wesleys, the Richard Cecils, the Miltons, the Chrysostoms, the Uerscbells, the Lenoxes, the George Peahodys, the Abbott Law rences and all the consecrated Chris tian men and women who were great In literature. In law, in medicine. In philosophy, in commerce. Their genius never spoiled them. They were as humble as they were gifted or opulent. They were great on earth, and now they are great in heaven. Their sur passing and magnificent talents were all used for the world’s betterment. As they pass In review before the King ou the great white throne to higher and higher rewards it makes me think of the parable of the talents, “To an other ten.” I stand and watch the other divisions as they go by, division after division, until the largest of all the divisions comes in sight. It is a hundred to one, a thousand to one, ten thousand to one, larger than the other divisions. It is made up of men who never did anything but support their families and give whatever of their limited means they could spare for the relief of poverty and sickness and the salvation of the world, mothers who took good care of children by example and precept starting them ou the road to heaven, millions of Sabbath school teachers who sacrificed an afternoon’s siesta for the listening class of young immortals, women who declined the making of homes for themselves that they might take care of father and mother in the weaknesses of old age, ministers of the gospel who ou nig gardly stipend preached In the hack- woods meeting houses, souls who for long years did nothing but suffer, yet suffered with so much cheerful pa tience that it became a helpful lesson to all who beard of It; those who serv ed God faithfully all their lives and whose name never but once appeared in print and that time in the three lines of the death column which some survivor paid for, sailors who perished In the storm while trying to get the life line out to the drowning, perse cuted and tried souls who endured without complaint m a lenity and abuse, those who bad only ordinary equipment for body and ordinary en dowment of Intellect, yet devoted all they had to holy purposes aud spiritual achievement. As 1 see this, the largest of all the divisions, from all lauds and from all ages, pass in review be fore the King on the great white throne I am reminded of the won derful parable of the talents and more especially of my text, “To another one.” [Copyright, 1901, by Lout* KVopoch, N. Y.J tjoeol Cotton Report The following are the prices paid for cotton in Gaffney today: Good Middling 74 Middling 7| Seven Ycnre In Bed. '‘Will wonders ever cease?” inquire the friends of Mrs. L. Pease, of Law* rence, Kan. They knew she bad been unable to leave her bed in seven years on account of kidney and liver trouble, nervous prostration and general debility; but, “Three bottles of Electric Bitters enabled me to walk,” she writes, “and In three months I felt like a mw person. Women suffer 1 ru^from Headache, Backache, Ng^ffuttness, Sleepless* ness^ Melancholy, Fainting and y Spells will And It a priceless easing. Try It. Satisfaction is guaranteed. Only 50o. Cherokee Drug Co. Some women would rather listen to a story about a spell of sickness than to read a novel. The bilious, tired, nervous man cannot successfully compete with hie healthy rival. DeWitt's Little Early Bleeri, the famous pills for constipa tion, will remove the cause of your trouble*. Cherokee Drug Co. Let It Pot be forgotten th*( printer’s' Ink is th*. beet spring, medicine for a sluggish business. “ The Annual Summer Sale l op I Mmslins and Other White Goods. You no doubt will be surprised to read of this sale now—a month ahead of its usual time—but you will agree that it is a move in tho right direction, because the stocks are larger, the goods newer and fresher than they would be in Jtmp. which is an important advantage; therefore we are serving the public better than we could a month hence. Corset Covers, “'1, Drawers. in Cambric, Nainsook, Muslin, etc., all well made and. hand somely trimmed, almost at your own [trice. White Goods. Lawns, Organdies, Persian Mulls, English Long Cloth, Nain sook and Checks, actually the best values ever shown in Gart'ney. Lace Specials. Mousseline de Soie, Chiffons and Liberty Silk Drapery, fine qualities, all colors, aud prices way down. Embroideries, lesertioes aed Laces. A tremendous line at 5c per yard, all styles. Come early and enjoy your pick of the pile. Men’s Shirts and Shirt Waists. All colors, all the new shapes and the very newest fabrics. Lines sure to suit. Business is Constantly Increasing—Why? Because it’s more often in the quality than in the price that you find the True Bar- gain. y. UPSCOMB & BRO. The Gaffney City Land and Improvement Company Offers for Mle Building Lots In this flourishing town, Gaffney Olty; Also Parma nt>*r by and in reach of the Schools of Limestone Springs and of this place. In lots of from 30 to 100 acres on liberal time rates; also Agricultural Lauds to rent for Farm pur poses. For full particulars apply to J- V. @A.I<I*jVTT% Agent. N. B.—All trewpaMlnK OD t.ndaof this comp..,, cuttlo .od emUTln, timber. hunting are forbidden under pensHy of >sw -Attention ! The season Is now at hand when you must have implements with which to prepare your lands, plant and cultivate your crops, and don’t forget that I have "Everything for the Farmer" at popular prices. All kinds of Flow Stocks, single and double, and Turn Flows. Flow Points, Flows. Clevises. Heel Bolts, etc., Dow Law Cotton Seed Planters. Call and see my Syracuse Disc Harrows. They are unexcelled, and no farmer can afford to be without oue-especlally when I sell them so cheap. As In the past I shall continue to lead in and Why such an assertion? It Is plain enough—the vast amount of business 1 have done In this line in the past attests the fact that my goods and prices are right. Tyson A Jones, or Studebaker, is all the recommendation needed on a vehicle to tell you It is At. W’agons—BIRD8ELL, STIIDKBAKEB. TAYLOR. WHITE HICKORY a quartette that is hard to “down." prices aud quality considered. Hay. Corn, Oats, Bran, Syrup, Molasses, Tennessee Sorghum, and in fact a full line of plautalkm supplies. Hats lit variety for everybody. Nice, new and strictly “up-to-date" lino of Clothing. (Jive us a look and we’ll sell you. My stock of Shoos and General Merchandise was never more complete’ and, listen! 1 have got a lot of genuine bargains for you. Come and see. - Forth* accommodation and convenience of th^pm.««<*-»ffWItyfff tioforths S.U., 1 have added a Hue of _ _ V> my stock klnd« L New f> Gc arriving. - W s - , plane consisting of Soothing Byrnp, Squills. Paregoric, Pills of various ' aad extracts for flsvortng. Syrup of Figs, Wine of Cardul, Dr. King's |f, Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets, Mexican Mustang Liniment, etc. (Goode, Notions. Hats, Shoes.Groceries, etc., constantly on hand and - • ' Yours for trade. .iv# s r k HANI ti TELEPHOIE US MY TIME.” that fceareth say cotno, udu) let him tba) I? ptbhust comp.” flave It on ftse ut yourVicn. b»vp H or tho R(J of your 0 f connter- ionpuo. 1 Monosyllables svi* lutgUtlw snd nev« Wls. ot COUDte lyUttbltM, and that word mlghtiCKt of mfinos^A- are save of one orsjtls epsuks poniards, tfld \Vp may sjf| ftf rds whicli are of ant) llfp. than pol “come” tiles. Sl)!^ character j; pyery w* others, hu- ,bann and music, a Master pup of those wor^kbprufSS pqp of those words, project oniit Of tkeew words, prove tho full power of one of those won Garrick, the dramatist, ea give 100 guineas If he C< ns George Whltefleld might wo not gtvfi * "come” as Jesus sal has said dipt syllu world, and I think t might suvO th* worlff. particularize. Whatever talent, cultivate it. Once full; that you have something with wl enhance heaven and take hold kternities, am] It will add a of keys to the music q{ your Iff Jffdtlptg ULiauft kiqa «• pot neces. rj W |r'* un.-i. Haael Salve save* a! rer fail*. Bee Ofaerokee Drug Co Blue Old the blue Is very glaze blues they're genei oneaed so l Thera la a blue shading Is touched u; desig»—«« iSSES W** ^ madneee In women, not their Rfi-PiftCI Slt« beauteous look*, shall win my love. —-Sbaktepears, * Bcjeuit, saltrbeum, tetter, ohaflng. Ivy poleonlngand all skin tortures ars qnlekly cured by DeWitt’s Witch Ha- ‘ i. The certain-pile cure. prof Oo. acts At Will bravest boy who fear of God. Ijrrap Vurtu tha moat . is and lung affections, ^sumption iois been suo- thW marvelous remedy, ellef after a few doses, You Screen Blue-] W< Wi TOBACCO! 5M0KI Ml.