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1 Headache kills, nut necessarily suddenly, but SURELY. It preys upon the intellectual powers more than we realize. It consumes the vitality faster than nature can replenish it, and we cannot tell just what moment a temporary or complete aberration of the ir ind wall result. Headache and pain should be promptly re moved— but properly. Many pain cures are more harmful than the pain. Beware. If you would be safe, take Miles' Pain Pills. “As a result of neuralgia I lost the j/ght of my right eye, and the pain I have suffered is incomprehensible, be ing obliged to take opiates almost con- timfally. A friend gave me one of Dr. Miles’ Pain Pills and it promptly re lieved me. I then purchased a box and now my trouble is gone. They have also cured my daughter of nervous headache, and I heartily recommend them to others.”—W. J. Corley, iire- mond, Texas. Sold by Druggists. 2$ Doses, 25c. Dr. Miles Medical C j., Elkhart, Ind. CHICHESTER’S ENGLISH PENNYROYAL PILLS "'t. e s. tUue. Always relluble. ask PniRiciM for C*M« HK*TKIt W KKUI.IMII in Ke.l and *4 i*il metallic ooxen, scaled with blue ribbon. Taw« no olh<-r. Kcfuae rtnntceroun MUh*ti- tmtion*anal imitatlamM. Buvof your r<nii{Kist, * -tend 4e. in stiunpa for Part ia-iil:m. TcHtl- n»<*niatU and •* Relief for l.aaliei,.*' in irflrr, ■to vet aim Mall. 10.000 Testimonials. Sold by l^nrttists. CHICHESTER CHEMICAL CO. «*«« SKadlaon Square, P1II1.A., FA. Mention tRU paper. Trespass Notice. A LL persons are hereby forbidden to tres pass on my lands for the purpose of luint- | In?, shooting, cutting timber, etc., under full Ity of the law. W. A. .1EKEKHIKS. 11-8-15-22 mL persons are hereby forbidden to tres- — pass on my lands In North and south Carolina for the purpose of hunting, cutting timber. Ashing, etc., under full penalty of the law. J. K. Phillips. Oct. IS, 25. Nov. 1-pd. State Line. T HE public Is strictly forbidden to shoot, net or destroy birds on my plantation 1 near the old Hawkins Mill JNO. E. .1 KK PE It IKS. 10-18-1 awk-4t. CANDY CATHARTIC 434 111 Wit. E I S** 1 Dranbta. nine stamped C. C. C. Never sold In bulk. Beware of the dealer who tries to sell “something just as good.” Clerk’s Sale. TiPrwor South Oakolin County or Chkkokbk f Ino. Q. Little vs. Mary Ann Williams et al. in Turner et al. vs. .1 no. VV. Gaffney et al. [obedience to a decree herein, for parti- I. dated Octolier 7th. I'.'OI, I will sell at iffney. S. G\, l»efore the court house d<x>r luring the legal hours oj sale on salesday (ovember 4th, 1!K>1. the following descrilted ads, to wit: AH that tract of land In above county and tate on the South West side of It road River, inded on the South by lands of W. U. Gaff- By, South West by lands of (). Sarratt and (. C. Stacy, North West by lands of Miss fane Ross and Margul L. Ross, Indiig the Bt of land whereon Mrs. (’. J. Gaffney re- Jed at the time of her death, and known as te Gaffney Fer>y tract of land, containing Ive hundred and thirty-one acres, more or )s of sale: One-third cash, and the Jee on a credit of one anti two years, interest at the rate of seven per cent, annum from the day of sale, the credit lion to bt! secured by purchaser's bond sd a mortgage of the premises. Purchaser shall/have tlie privilege of pay- ig the entire bid in cash and shall pay for papers, including cost for recording mort- Purebaser to comply with cash portion 'bid within one hour after sale, or a resale 111 be made on same day at former pur- tiaser’s risk. No bid will be received for less in twelve thousand dollars, which Is the Bt price Axed by the decree. ’Octolier Oth. llol. J. Eh Jekkkriks, Clerk 0. C. Pis. -ll-4t-law Clerk’s Sale. jr SOUTH CAHOLI.NA. I |rT or Chkkokkh. ( W. B. Wilson, et. al. vs. Wm. H. White. I In otorilence to an order made herein for Woelosure. dated nth day of Get. I!m|, | will bll at public outcry at Gaffney. S before (Court House door, during the legal hours ’ sale. Aa.esday. Nov. 4th l!»el, the following crllied 1 inds, to-wit: I AH of that tract of land lying and situate l the County and State alsn e named ud- Inmg landsof Mrs. Cashlon A. Hoar, Rufus ' Bits, W. B. Wilson. M. C. Byars and ers containing three hundred and twenty ro acres k rnore or less, and Isdng lot No. :»:i 1 the survey of the Ohl King Mountain Iron i., laud, and being the same tract conveyed i said Wm. 11. White hy said W. B. Wilson i W. L. Roddy. iTermx.if Sale: Cash; purchaser to pay for tipers. J. Eli. .1 KKPKKIKS, CPk. C. V. Pi’s. Btober lath, li*oi-;t times. frp i] o 0 . . ^; :,7n c;; .r > ■ '>' . .V lie, U lj dc—» N ‘< V-/ 1 - Ih I V V<» . 1 •. j ' ( . I - i $ '£* .v 'd-I «• -» -aw • > * ■ pirf If ? :t fw-i \v VMlINt. t'vvl'v , < 27. !;i fids dis . '..LI ■<* Dr. Tn) tbi’ lemon.-ti.).os that j tv t* a •.re 11 :T. etc i 1 y f roes ll at we sol 1 •Join IVC!> " L/.<* a; rl » ‘iiiarges upon Im man •; ounta 11 ty. The text is Joh X X X 'i;i. 0 L "( ’ ' v ■ Ml <!il hind lilt* sweet inliu enceS t r l’ lei; Hli .- V** \Y hat is • in* tuo. mil g of that question \vh;< •!; God i>n t t 0 .i< ih? Have we till our lives 1 •on re; nfiii g it. and are most of u s iguor Hit of its beauty and power anil Bract it- al s UK r uesl ivetiess? A mean High s pa --a ^e of Seriptmv many tiioi ..lit it to fit *. 1) lit llu* bioscopes wen * busy ! if'* after 1 ge, and astiidiom- ical obsorvatious kept on (|iiestiotiing llie skies until the nieaning of my text comes out lustrously. The Tleiadcs ts a constella!iou of seven stars appetir lug io the naked eye. but seieutilic in stniments reveal more thau 4ui» prop erly belonging to the group. Alcyone is the name of the brightest star of that group called the Pleiades A Uus : iau astronomer observed that Alcyone is the center of gravitation of our solar system. Hugh Macmillan says that the st’ii and its planets wheel around that center at the rate of 422(<><) miles a day in rn orbit which it will take K>.- OO! 1.000 years to complete. The Pleiades appear In the springtime and are asso ciated with flowers and genial warmth and good weather. The navigation of the Mediterranean was from May to November, the rising and the setting of the Pleiades. The priests of Dolus noticed that rising and setting *2.00(1 years before Christ Now. the glorious meaning of my text is plain as well as radiant. To give Job the beautiful grace of bumil Hy Cod asked him. "Can-t tlion bind the sweet inliuenees of the PleiadesV Have you any power ovu* the laws of gravitation? Can you modify or change an influence wielded by a star more than 4(it>.n00 miles away? Can you control the winds of the springtime? Pan you rail out Hie (lowers? How little you know compared with omuls ciencP? How little you can do com pared with omnipotence! Power of Interroftatlon. The probability is that .lob had been tempted to arrogance by his vast at tainments. Fie was a metallurgist, a zoologist, a poet, and shows by bis writ lugs he had knowledge of hunting, of music, of husbandry, of medicine, of mining, of astronomy and perhaps was so far ahead of the scholars and sci ontists of bis time that he may have been somewhat puffed up; hence this Interrogation of my text. And there is nothing that so soon takes down hu man pride as an interrogation point rigidly thrust. Christ used it mightily Paul mounted the parapet of his great arguments with sin h a battery: Men of the world understand it. Demos thenes began his speech to the crown and Cicero his oration against Catiline and Lord Chatham ids most famous orations with a question. The empire of ignorance is so much vaster than the empire of knowledge that after the most learned and elaborate disquisition upon any subject of sociology or theol ogy the plainest man may ask a ques lion that will make the wisest speech less. After the profoundest assaul: upon Christianity tin* humblest disci pld may make an inquiry that would silence a Voltaire. Called upon, as we all are at times, to defend our holy religion, instead of trgunn r.t that can always be answered by argument let us try the power of interrogation. We ought to be loaded with at least half a dozen questions and always ready, and when Christian ity Is ass:ii!cd. and we are told there is nothing In it and there is no (led and there never was a miracle and that the $ Scriptures are unreasonable and cruel and that there never will 1m* a Judg ment day take out of your poitahb armory of interrogation something like this; “What makes the condition of woman in Christian lands better than in heathen lands? Do you think it would be kind in (itnl t< turn the liu man race into a world without any written revelation to explain and on courage and elevate and save? Ami if a revelation was made, which do you prefer—the Zcnda-Vestn of the Persian or the Confuelan writings of the Chi ncuo or tin* Koran of .Mohammed or our P- blc? If Christ is not a divine t*eing. what did be mean when he sjiid. *Pe fore Abram was, I am?' I? the Bible is a bad hook, what are ih * evil r°su!ts of reading it? Did you set* any degrad ing inilueuee of tin* book in your fatlier or mother or sister who used to read it? Do you not think that a Judgment day is necessary in order to explain and fix up things that were never ex 'plained or fixed up? If our religion is illogical anti an Imposition upon hu man credulity, why were Ilerschc! and Washington and (ilndstone am! Wil liam McKinley its advocates? How did it happen that our religion furnished the theme for the greatest poem ever written. ’Paradise Lost.’ and to the painters their greatest themes in the Adoration of the Magi.’ *The Trunstlg iiration.’ *T1ie Last Supper.’ The Cruel fixion,’ ‘The KiHomlmient.’ ‘The Las Judgment.’ ami that all the schools of painting put forth their utmost genus In presenting The Madonna?' ” l-'n rr ouch I m* Intliiunres. Why was It that William Shake speare after amazing the world as be will amaze the ecuturies with the splendor a ml power of "The Merchant of Venice." and “Coriolaiiiis.’’ am. '‘Uichnrd ML.” and "King Lear.” and “OtlicMu," nuil ••.Macbeth,” ami ••Ham let’’ wrote with his own hand his last will and testament, beginning it with tlie words; “in the name of God. amen! 1. William Shakespeare, of StraHord- ou-Avon, in the county of Warwick, in perfect health and memory (God be praised!) do make and ordain this my last will and testament through the only merits of Jesus Christ, my Sav iour. to be made partaker of life ever lasting and my hotly to the earth whereof it is made?” Had Shake speare lost bis reason when he wrote his faith 111 < hrist and the great atone-' mint? Put your antagonist a few questions like that, and you will find him excusing himself for an engage ment he must meet immediately. These words also recognize farreaeh- Ing influences. Job probably had no adequate idea of tin* distance of the worlds mentioned from our world, but be knew them to be far off, and we. who have had the advantage of mod ern sidereal investigation, ought to be still more impressed than was Job with the question of the text, as it puts be fore us the fact that worlds hundreds of thousands of milts distant have a grip on our world. There art* sweet iuliu- enccs which hold us from afar. There may have been in our ancestral line perhaps 200 years ago some conse crated man or woman who has held over all the generations since an Influ ence for good which we have no power to realize, and we in turn by our virtue or vice may Influence those who shall live 200 years from now. Moral grav itation is as powerful as material grav itation. and If, as my text teaches and science confirms, the Pleiades, which are millions of miles from our earth, in fluence the earth we ought to be im pressed with how we may be influ enced by others far away back and how we may influence others far down the future. That rill away up among the Allegbanies. so thin you think it will hardly find its way down the rocks, becomes the mighty Ohio, roll ing into the Mississippi and rolling into the sea. That word you utter, that deed you do. may augment itself as the years go by until rivers cease to roll and tlie ocean itself shall be dried up in the burning of the world. Paul, who was all the time saying im portant tilings, said nothing more star tlingly suggestive than when he de clared. “None of us liveth or dieth to himself.’’ Words, thoughts, actions, have an eternity of (light. As Job could not bind the sweet influences of the Seven Stars, as they were called, so we cannot arrest or turn aside the good projected long ago. Those influ ences were started centuries before cur cradle was rocked and will reign centuries after our graves are dug. Oh, it is a tremendous thius to live! God help us to live aright. Itnpartanre of Good Actions. Astronomers can easily locate the Pleiades. They will take you into their observatories on a clear night and aim their revealing instrument toward the part in tlie heavens where those seven stars have their habitude, and they will point to the constellation Taurus, and you can see for yourself. But it is Impossible to point to influences far hack that have affected our character and will affect our destiny. We know the influences near hy—paternal, ma ternal. conjugal—hut hy the time we have gone back two generations, or. at most, three, our investigations falter and fail. Through the modern inter esting habit of searching hack to And the ancestral tree we may And a long list of names, but they arc* only names. The consecration or abandonment of some one 200 years ago was not record ed. It would not he so Important if you and 1. hy our good or bud behavior, blessed or blasted only those immedi ately around us, but our goodness or our badness will reach as far as the strongest ray of Alcyone—yea. across the eternities. Under this considera tion, what do you think of those who give themselves up to frivolity or Idle ness and throw away fifty years of their existence as though they wore shells or pebbles or pods instead of em bryo eternities? I suppose one of the greatest sur prises of the next world will he to see what wide, farrcaching influence for good or evil we have all exerted. I am speaking of ourselves, who are only ordinary people. But who can fully appreciate the farrenchlng good done hy men of wealth in Great Britain for the working classes — Mr. Lister of Bradford, Edward Akroyd of Halifax, Thomas Siki*s of Huddersfield, Joseph Wentworth and Joslah Mason and Sir Titus Salt? Tills last great soul, with his vast wealth, provided 75H houses at cheap rent for 3.000 working people and chapel and cricket ground and cro quet lawn and concert hall and sav ings bank, where they might deposit some of tiielr earnings, and life insur ance for those who looked further ahead and bathhouses and parks and museums and lecture halls with philo sophical apparatus, the generous ex ample of those men of a previous gen eration being copied in many places in Canada and tlie United States, making life, which would otherwise be a pro longed drudgery, an inspiration and a Joy. Two Might y World*. At Dunfermline, Scotland, is a stone house, tlie room on the second floor twelve f<*et by fourteen in size. Tlie annual rent of that loom years ago was $7.!V> That was the one room In which the father and mother of Andrew Car negie lived with tlie whole family. In fluences were started there which made Andrew Carnegie the nmst distinguish ed philanthropist of all time, and what his gifts of great libraries on both sides tin* sea will do for tlie coming genera tions I do not think any angel of God would have enough capacity to calcu late. Who could bind the sweet influ ences of that Pleiades? After awhile there will he a man who will do for churches and missionary so cieties and Bible distribution what An drew Carnegie i ns done for libraries, and then the tDilriiuium will he here. The millennium Is here! Tin*: bower < f uncount ‘d minions of dollars for all good pun)'ses I tl.iuk is tie* first step of tl..M golden tIn.:. :’ml years of peace ami holiness wd'.e.i have !>• on pivti’ict- c.l and for which the world i.as so loug waited. As t!>:* snowdrops belong to January, and '.lie violet to Mareli, anti the lioneysut kit* to June, and tin* ehrys- , aidhcmiitu to November, so thi.-* bio..in and fragrance of generosity on tlie part i of the world’s wealth mean tin* ad vancing summer of the world's release, of Ed< :i restored, of paradise regained. You say there are tilings lo distn ;;age. 1 Lsio•„• it. I at l a;a not now ex,.' ring sepulchers full of dead men’s bones and all uneleanncss. 1 am watching (lie daybreak. I am studying tlie light that streams into tlie darkness. I am considering tlie sweet influences of the Pleiades. Notice also in my text the influence of other worlds upon this world. \Ve all regard the effect which our conti nent has upon other contineuts or one hemisptiere upon the other hemisphere. Great harvest or drought on one side of our world affects the other side of our world. A panic in Wall street. New York, lias its echo in Lombard street and ilie bourse. Tlie nations of the earth eablegramined together all feel the same thrill of delight or shock of woe. But we do not appreciate the influence of other worlds upon our worid. The author of my text rouses us to tlie con sideration. It takes all the worlds of known and unknown astronomy to keep our world in its orbit. Every world dependent on other worlds. The stellar existence is felt all through the heavens. Every constellation is a sis terhood. Our planet feels the benedic tion of Alcyone and nil the other stars of the Pleiades. Yea, there are two other worlds that decide the fait; of our world—its . redemption or its demoli tion. Those two worlds are the head quarters of angelology and demonolo gy. From the one world came Christ, come ministering spirits, come all gra cious influences. From the other world rise all satanie and diabolic influences. From that world of moral night rose the power that wrecked our poor world six thousand years ago, and all the good work done since then lias not been able to get our world out of the break ers. But the signals of distress have been hoisted and the life lines are out, and our world’s release is certain. The good influences of the consecrated peo ple in our world will be centupled hy tlie help from the heavenly world, and the divine power will overcome the de moniac. O man, O woman, expand your idea and know the magnitude of a contest in which three worlds are specially interested! From all the seven worlds which my text calls the Pleiades there come no sucli powerful influences as from the two worlds that I am now mentioning. My only hope for this world is In the re-enforcement that is to come from another world. But that is promised, and so I feel as sure of the rectification of all evil as thotigh looking out of 1113-. window to day I saw the parks and the gardens flowering into another paradise and the apocalyptic angel flying through the midst of heaven with the news that the kingdoms of this world have become the kingdoms of our Lord. Home'* Sweet Inflnenceii. My text called Job and calls us to consider “the sweet influences.” We put too much emphasis upon the acidi ties of life, upon tlie irritations of life, upon the disappointments of life. Am- minnus MareelHuus said that Chaldea was in ole n times overrun with lions, but many of them lost their power be cause the great swamps produced many gnats that would get into the eyes of the lions, and the lions, to free them selves of tlie gnats, would claw their own eyes out and then starve. And in our time many a lion lias been over come hy a gnat. The little, stinging annoyances of life keep us from appre ciating tlie sweet influences. And how many of these last there are! Sweet influences of home, however plain It may he! That Is the harbor into which we sail; that is the goal for which we run; that is the place where we rest; there abide all confidence and affec tions; there we lay out our plans; there we extend our sympathies; there we talk over our successes; there we un load our griefs. Its four walls shut out a prying and inquisitive world. Thank God for the home in which we were horn, the home In which we now live, the home In which we expect to die! Not sufficiently do we recognize the sweet influences of the wife. We men are of a rougher mold, and our voice is loud, and our manners need to he tam ed. and gentleness is not as much of a characteristic as It ought to he, and we often say things we ought to take back. It Is to change this that the good wife comes In. The Interests' of the twain are Identical. That which from outsiders would be considered criticism and to be resented becomes kindly suggestion. Sweet Influences that make us better men than we oth erwise would have been or could have been! The last chapter of Proverbs recog nizes the good wife’s influence when It says, “Her husband is known in the gates when he sltteth among tlie elders of the land”—that Is. his apparel Indi cates that he has some one to look aft er his wardrobe, and ills manners show that lie Is under refining Influences at home. But no one fully appreciates the sweet influences of the wife until the dark day comes and the slight symp toms become serious and the serious piiases of tlie disorder pass Into the fatal and the temperature Is 1<)<i and medical Ingenuity is exhausted and you are told for your consolation that “while there Is life there Is ho[N*,” which means that there Is no hope at all, and tin* precious life flutters and Is gone, and you must put out of sight the one who from the day she took tlie vow amid the orange blossoms under the mun liige hell hud been to you more than nil the world besides. Then you realize as ne\. '• b< fore what had been tlie sweet influences. Itcnniui; Potter of ffie Gonpel. Sweet iul!i:'*iiiM , of friend Up! If we have helia et! < urselvcs tolerably well, we have friends. In our days of mirth they come with their congratula tions. in times of sorrow they come <§ This s :-r: * r ■■■. ry l«»x •'( <h«* genu in* t ovq‘jv,* - "O Optnine Tsbieu •' «v <»n«t v pn of si in 1 imes of pt rpiexity they come with llu ir advice. They are with us at weddings and at burials. If there is anything good in us. they find it out. and our frailties they overlook or excu.-c. If .son; 'tiling appears against us. they say. “Wait till 1 bear the other side.” If disast r shall befall us. we know from whom would come the first condolence. Fam ily friends; church friends; business friends; lifelong friends. In our heart of hearts we cherish them. Sweet influences of our holy religion, surrounded as we are by all the ameni ties of Christian society—men and wo men who have felt the refining and ele vating power of the gospel! Sweet in fluences of tlie Sabbath, fifty-two of them chiming their joy into every year! Sweet influences of the Scriptures, with their balm for all wounds and their light for every darkness! When the heirs of a vast estate in England wished to establish their claim to prop erty worth $100,000,000, they offered a reward of $.')00 for the recovery of an old Bible, the family record of which contained the evidence requisite. But any Bible, now or old. can help us to a vaster inheritance than tin* one spoken of, one that never fades away. The sweet influences of the heavenly world, which many wise men thought for a loug while was Alcyone, the ceu ter of the constellation of the Pleiades —world of our future residence, as we hope; world of chorus and illumination; world of reunion; world where we shall be everlastingly complete; world where our old faculties will be intensified and quickened and new faculties implant ed, world of high association with Christ, through whose grace we got there at all, and apostles and poets, Habakkuk, and St. John of Patinos, and Edward Young, his “Night Thoughts” turned into eternal day; and llomtius Bonar of modern hymnology, and Han nah More, and Mrs. Ilemans, and Mrs. Sigourney, who struck their harps till nations listened; and David, the victor over Goliath with what seemed insuffi cient weapons; and Joshua of tlie pro longed day in Glbeoti, and Havelock, the evangelist hero, and those thou sands of men of tlie sword who fought on the right side. What company to move in! What guests to entertain! What personages to visit! What choirs to chant! What banquets with lifted chalices tilled with "the new wine of the kingdom!” What victories to cele brate! The Star of Hope. The stories of that world and Its holy hilarities come in upon our souls sometimes in song, sometimes in ser mon, sometimes in hours of solitary reflection, aud they are, to use the words of my text, sweet Influences. But there Is one star that affects us more with its sweet influences than tlie center star, the Alcyone of the Pleiades, and that is what one Bible author calls the Star of Jacob and an other Bible author calls the Morning Star. Of all tin* sweet influences that have ever touched our earth those that radiate from Christ are the sweetest. Born an Asiatic villager, in a mechan ic’s home, living more among hum mers and saws and planes than among books, yet at twelve years of age con founding robed ecclesiastics and start ing out on a mission under which those born without optic nerve took in the clear daylight and those afflicted with unresponsive tympanum were made to hear and those almost doubled up with deformities were straightened into graceful poise and the leprous became rubicund and the widow’s only son ex changed the bier on which he lay life less for the arms of his overjoyed mother and pronouncing nine benedic tions on tlie Mount of Beatitudes anti doing deeds and speaking words which are filling the centuries with sweet in fluences. Christ started every ambu lance, kindled every electric ra3\ spread every soft hospital pillow and Introduced all the alleviations and pacifications and rescues and mercies of all time. He was the loveliest be ing who ever trod our earth--more i beauty in his eye, more tenderness in his manner, more gentleness in his footstep, more music* In his voice, more dignity In his brow, more gracefulness In the locks that rolled upon his shoul ders, more compassion in his soul. Sweet Influences of the Holy Ghost, with all his transforming and comfort ing aud emancipating power. When that power is fully felt, there will he no more sins to pardon, aud no more wrongs to correct, and no more sor rows to comfort, and no mere bondage to break. But as the old time shiv cap tains watched the rising of the Plei ades for safe navigation and set sail in Mediterranean waters, but were sure to get hack into port before tlie con btellntion Orion came into sight—the season of cyclone and hurricane—so there is a time to sail for heaven, and that is while the sweet Influences are upon us and before the storms over take the delay. Open all your soul to the light and warmth and comfort and Inspiration of that gospel which has already peopled heaven with millions of tlie ransomed ind Is helping other millions to that glorious destination. Do not postpone the things of Gtxl ami eternity till the storms of life swoop and tin* agitations of a great fu ture are upon us. Do not dare wait until Orion takes the place of the Plei ades. Weigh anchor now and with chart unrolled and pilot on hoard head for the reunions and raptures that await ail the souls forgiven. “Aud they need no candle, neither light of the sun. for the Lord God givcrli them light, and they shall reign forever and ever.” (( (.pyright, 1M1, LouH K!op«(-li, N. Y.] 3 C)/ f // V ( I ' NAN 1 > P - — . .. -~a VMM I A ktij ‘ /• $5,o(>o r • 7 „ R. H. FAME HAil) 200 FREE \v i lie lo OA. «ALA BUSIKESSCOLLECE. Macon.Cj* Estate Not : ce. All persons lioliiing claims against the es— tateof .1. HearyGault, ficce-sul. will present, same to me. duly proven, on or before No- vember l.>tli. I'.KU. and all persons indebted.to saitl estaU will please make, settlement atr once. .1 Eh. .1RKCKHIES, Admr. Kst. J. Henry Gault, dec’d. Oct. Is-:?."), Noy. 1st. ALWAYS KEEP ON HAND Jam THERE IS NO KINO OF PAIN ON 1 • ACHE, INTERNAL OR EXTERNAL, THAT PAIN-KILLER WILL NOT RE LIEVE. LOOK OUT FOR IMITATIONS AND SUB STITUTES. THE GENUINE BOTTLE BEARS THE NAME, PERRY DAVIS Sc SON. SA*r STOPS PAIN Athens, Tenn., Jan. 27,1901. Ever since the first appearance of nov menses they wore very irregular and I suffered with great pain in my hips, back, stomach and legs, with terrible bearing down pains in the abdomen. During the past month I have been taking Wino of C'ardui and Thedford’e Black-Draught, and I passed the month ly period without pat'* for the first time in years. Nannie Davis. What is life worth to a woman suffer* ing like Nannie Davis suffered? Y«( there are woipen in thousands of homes to-day who are bearing those terrible menstrual pains in silence. If you tre one of these we want to sa/ that <Mo same WINE°'CARD!JI will bring you permanent relief. Con sole yourself with the knowledge that 1,000,000 women have oeen completely cured by Wine of Cardui. These wom en suffered from leucorrhoea, irregular lenses, headache, backache, and bearing down pains. Wine of Cardui will stop all these aches and pains for you. Purchase a $1.00 bottle ol Wine of Cardui to-day and take it in the privacy of your heme. V ForsdvW uml;.lei-.uur*-.:i<ldres«,trivInKsymp- ■ tom*. **Th.- J..jtut*s* Acvirory lirpanmrut,” ■ The ChAttanooga .Medicine Co., Chattanooga, l T l n ; Clerk’s Sale. State ok South Carolina, i Count* ok Chbrokbe. f < J. J. Scruggs, et. al, vs. i John 0. Mills, et. al. *•* In obedience to an order made herein. f4»r partition, dated Oct. 2nd fiMI. I will $ell at Gaffney, S. C.. Itefore the Court House door., during the legal hours of sale, on Silestbij Nov. 4lh ltH)l, the following described lan4l*. to-wit: (A) All that tract of land Inthetownnf Gaffney, lN-gilining at stake at intersection of Mills Gap road witli Buford street; thence N. 55*. \V. 21.48 chains to stake; thence S. .’45*4 W. 90 li-lo chains to Iron pin at Carpet Mill; thence N. 55*% \V. li 42 chains to rook Scrugg’s coroner; thence 05!i K. 11.20 ciiains to rock Scrugg’s corner; thence 55*4 E. 1.90 chaine to stake Brown’s corner; thence S. itlti K. 3 chains to Brown’s land; thence S. 19*4 K. 4.UB chains to stake Brown’s land; t hence S. K. ii.:«> chains to rock on Brown’s land; thence 55*4 E. 9.00 chains to stake on MtUa Gap road; thence 25 E. 5.90 chains to bend; thence S. 1 W. U.TO chains to ta-gimitag corner, containing twenty-five and slaty- nine one hundredth* acres (25 09-100). (H) All that plantation or tract of land ly ing and being on the North of Bcaverdam- creek waters of Thickety creek, containing one hundred and forty acres, more or leaa, being a part of the tract of laud originally granted to Wm. Hart in tlie year 177:1. Itegln ning on a post oak originally W. Bostick** corner; thcuce 8. H7 \V. lo a red oak; ihencn along Wm. Bostick's line to Bcaveroam creek: thence down the meanders of ssfct creek to the mouth of a branch that dividnn said tract and Thomas Littlejohn* ianA; thence up said branch S. 74 E. t.l chains to a doKwooddn Hart's old Hue; thence 10 login ning corner. For a better description sc* deed from Michael Gaffney to H. G. Gaffney Trustee, dated Sept. 15tii.ls52, aud recordewfe Clerk's office of Spartanburg County iu bonk t. U. pages 521 aud 522. (C) All that lot of laud in tlie town of Unff- ney fronting 'JO feet on Smith street aud nulling withC. M. Smith and E. Willis linn I tin feet to stake Robb’s corner; thence M feet to stake Robb's corner; thence LiO feet to Smith street; thence 99 tert to ItcgluMlng corner, containing i4.4no square feet more ur le»s. Tlie 25 acre tract willin' sub-divided into suitable ami convenient building lots and plats of same can is- seen on nay ol sale. Will also sell all the streets and alloy ways that may appear on the poll made lor Lite division of said land which lies in tlie town of Gaffney, S. <'. Terms of Sale: One-half cash and the bal ance in one year with Interest fr on day of sale secured hy Isiud and mortgage of promises, with the option to pay all cash Purchaser to pay for papers, recording ;Mtd revenue stamps. .1. Eh. .1 KKKEItlBK. cVa. c, 1 . Pi's. October mill. I90l-:i times.