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Over-Work Weakens Your Kidneys. Unhea'ihT KiJneys Make Impure Blood. All the b'cod tn your body passes through your kldmys or.oe every three rr.inutes. The kidneys are your blood purifiers, they fil ter out the waste or impurities in the blood. If they are sick or out of order, they fail to do their work. Pains, aches and rheu matism come from ex cess of uric acid in the blood, due to neglected kidney tr ouble. Kidney ♦rouble causes quick or unsteady heart beats, r>nd makes one feel as though they had heart trouble, because the heart is over-workii.g in pumping thick, kidney- poisoned biocd through veins and arteries. 1. used to be considered that only urinary troubles were to be traced to the kidneys, but now modern science proves that nearly all constitutional diseases have their begin ning ‘.n kidney trouble. If you arfr sick you can make no mistake by first coloring ycur kidneys. The mild and the extraomnary effect of Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp'Root, the great kidney remedy is soon rea..zed. it stands the highest for its wonderful cures of the most distressing cases and is Swld on its merits by all druggists in fifty- cent and one-dollar siz es. You may have a sample bctVe by mail Honit of Sounp-Root. free, a so pamphlet telling you how to find cut if you have kidney or bladder trouble. Mention this paper when witing Dr. Kilmer & Co.. Binghamton. N. Y. r .r.»» , C* a t?* % flj s <;*" LOOK OUT FOR IMITATIONS AND SUB STITUTES. THE GENUINE BOTTLE BEARS THE NAME, PERRY DAVIE A EON. ALL WOMEN Wine of Cardui is the guardian of * woman's health and happi- sm irom youth to old age. It i helps her safely into womanhood. ' It sustains her during the trials of pregnancy, childbirth and | motherhood, making labor easy | and preventing Hooding and mis carriage. It gently lead* her through the dangerous period I known as the change of life. WINE" CARDUI cures laucorrhcea, falling of the womb, and menstrual irregularity in every form. It is valuable in every trying period of a woman’s life. It reinforces the nervous system, acts directly on the geni- I tal organs and is the finest tonic for women known. Ask your druggist for a $1.00 bottle of Wine of Cardui. Bat«iiviJlo, Ala.. July 11, 1900. I am uainx Win* of Cardui and Thed- ford'a Black-OrauKht and 1 feel like a different woman already. Hever&l la- i die* here ko;-p the medicine* in their ■ home* *1] the time. 1 have three girl* i and they are uaiug it with me. Mr*. KATE BROWDER. for aSelce *o<l literature, odrireM, giving eyroi-li.ri.f ••The Ladle*' Adveory Dejert- ' merit ”, I'M (‘IjittMiuoga Redicin* romuan?, I ChaUanovga. Tenn. CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH nmmm&i nm e««s. Alwriy* reliable. I,.t'!let.. 4*k Drug,•'let Cot f F.lMil.lNtl in IU-«i .r.iti '•»! inetallu nu.\ ■ . si-hK'1 •.'•h blue r bbnn. Tb>.« aooitier. Ki'lto n euri- :!- and nul aifotik.. Ku.v nf your Dit'^'nt, •# <et.i! in for *!e:«icr.n«. ami •• Itelier (<,r 3..,iiie M'-r. •; v»‘t><!•<> Hull. tO.WWCT-stiu.-ji.iai.- rioia by el CRICHBHTER CHEMICAL CO. tun diMitao:! H'HtH.A.. FA. U*r bli t>rce>- Fin.il Dis liarg;. Notice is lic;c i> ^i ia tliat 1 will apply to fion. J. 1-,. WVIjsia r. I’roliaTi-.Iiidjri-, fi'i- t licr- okee County. S. tl., at his o'Hco at tlu- Court House Monday, .March :ilst next, at 11 o’clock a. m.. for a final settlement and discharge as Administrator of the est ate of Ur. Memory Bonner, deceased. All persons holding claims against raid estate will present them on o- before said date or forever be barred. KnwAKD Boxnkk. Administrator Estate of l>r. MentorylHonner. deceased. Published in Gaffney (H. C.) Ledger March 7. 14. 21. 2sth, 1902. BANNER SALVE the most hosting salvo In the world. Foley 9 s Honey aad Tar caret colds, prevents pneumtutfa. One Minute Cough Cure Pep Goughs, CoMe and Croup. ALWAYS MSP ON MAflE SinJif/A THERK IA HO KIHO OP PAIB OR i ACNE, IRTERRAL OR CXTERRAL, THAT PAIR-KILLER WILL ROT RE- LIEVE. Washington. Feb. 23.—This discourse of Dr. Talmago is full of inspiring thoughts for thbse who find life a struggle and shows that we have many celestial sympathizers; texts. Hebrews xii, 1. “Seeing wo also are compassed about with so great a cloud f wit nesses;” I Corinthians xv. 32. “I have fought with beasts at Ephesus." Crossing the Alps by the Mont Cenis JKl ss or thro k irr\ i the Mont ( ten is tun- nt* !. you are In a few hours set down •it Verona. I* v*.! v . and in a few minutes !k* "in exauii: up £ OIK of th( gra ndost :*u Ins of tin* Wt rid. the Am: ibitheater. T! it* v. hole hi lilti 'v-wr c i i - y-. weeps a r und you In a circle. You Ft: uni in the t irena iy K’rc the co ml at w is oiye foil.; lit or tll * race rim. at; 1 on Cl side)' the seats rise, tier above tier, until you count Arty elevations, c:' galieri s. as 1 shall soo tit to i'.-.H them, in which sat the •waters, the kings and the 25.'K>0 ex- ;<-<J spi viators. At the sides of the ue'ia and under tiie galleries are tlj(* ;-agcs in which the liotis and tigers are kept witiioui foal until, frenzied with never and tiiir-t. they are let out up on some p or victim, wh). witli ids ■sword and alone, is condemned to meet ;hem. I tliink that Paul himself once in st;-.di a piaee ar.d tliat it was net only slirurativcly. but literally, that lie laid “fought with beasts at Kphe- -•us.” Tiie ; r ala day has come. From all the uaa ld the pe- pie are pouring into Vero- •••i Men. woim n and children, orators :'n:i sc ators. (treat men and small, timus:: ".ds a; on tli usan is come, until .he first gallery is 1’nll. and the second, lit* th'.rl. lb • Puirth. the fifth-all the way up to tlse twentieth. alPthe way ■p to the thirtieth, all the way up to he fortieth. Cvery place is tilled. Im mensity of audience sweeping the great •ircle. Klienee. The time f r the contest lias come. A Uonian oltieial leads forth ;la- vietim Inlc the arena. Let him get hie sword with linn grip into his right aand. The "d.'Td sit lireathlessiy wateli- ;ng. ! hear the door at the side of the arena creak open. Out plunges the half starved lion. Ids tongue athirst for .iood. and with a roar that lyings all the galleries to their feet he rushes against the swerd of the combatant. Do you know bow strong a stroke a man will strike when his life del lends upon the first thrust of his blade? The \yild beast, lame and bleeding, slinks back toward the side of the arena: then rallying his wasted strength lie •omes up with fiercer eye and more terrible roar than ever, only to be driven back with a fatal wound, while the combatant comes in with stroke after stroke until the monster Is dead at his feet, and the 25.000 claj) their hands and utter a shout that makes the city tremble. Sometimes the audience came to Bee a race: • sometimes to see gladiators fight each other, until the people, com- paKskmate for the fallen, turned their tbumbo up as an appeal that the van quished be spared, and sometimes the combat was with wild beasts. All Have Idea* to Flsht. To one of the Roman umpbitheatrlcnl audiences of 100.000 people Paul refers when he says. “We are compassed about with so great a cloud of witness es." The direct reference in the last passage is made to n race: but else where having discussed that. I take now Paul's favorite idea of the Ch»is- tlan life as a combat. The fact is that every Christian man tins a lion to tight. Yours is a bud tem- i>er. The gates of the arena have been oiKMied. and this tiger has come out to destroy your soul. It has lacerated you with maay a wound. You have !>een thrown by it time and again, but in tiie strength of Clod you have arisen to drive it back. 1 verily liolieve you will conquer. I think that the tempta tion Is getting weaker and weaker. You have given it so many wounds that the prospect is that it will die. and you shall lie victor, through Christ. Cour age. brother! Do not let the sands of the arena drink the bicod of your soul! Your lion is the passion for strong drink. You may have contended Against it for twenty years: but it Is strong of body and thirsty of tongue. You have tried to fight It back with broken bottle or empty wine ttnsk. Nay. that is not the weapon. With one horrible roar he will seize thee by the throat and rend thee limb from limit. Take this weapon, sharp and keen- reach up and get It from Hod's armory -the sword of the Spirit. With that thou mayest drive hjm buck and con quer! But why specify when every man and woman has a lion to tight? If there be one here who has no besetting sin. let him speak out. for him have I * {Tended, if you - have not fought tiie lion. It is because you have let the lion -.•at yon up. This very moment the con test goes on. The Trajan celebration, where lo.uoo gladiators fought and 11.000 wild beasts were slain, was not so terrific a struggle as that which at tliis moment goes on in many a soul. Tiie combat was for the life of the body: this Is for the life of the soul. That was with wild beasts from the Jungle: this is with the roaring lion of hell. Men think, when they contend against •tn evil habit, tliat they have to tight it •11 aline. No! They stand In the cen ter of an immense circle of sympathy. !‘nui had been reciting the names of Alsd. Enosli. Noah. Abraham. Sr.rah. '.uuut, Joseph. Cab on and Burak uud then says. “Being compassed about with so great a cloud of witnesses.” • A Cloud of 'WitneHMen. Before 1 get through f will show you that you light in an arena, around which circle, in galleries above each other, all the kindling eyes and all the sympathetic hearts of the ages, and at every victory gained there comes down the thundering applause of a great multitude that no man can number. “Being compassed about with so great a cloud of witnesses.” On the first elevation of tiie ancient amphitheater, on the day of a celebra tion. sat Tiberius or Augustus or the reigning king. So in the great arena of spectators that watch our struggles and in the first divine gallery, as 1 shall call it. sits our King, one Jesus. On his head are many crowns. The Roman emperor got his piaee by c id blooded conquests, but our King hath come to his place by the broken hearts healed and the tears wiped away and tiie souls redeemed. The Roman cm peror sat, with folded arms, indiffer ent as to whether the swordsman or the lion beat, but our King’s sympa thies are all with us—nay, unheard of condescension! I see him come down from the gallery into the arena to help us in the fight, shouting until all up and down hir voice is heard: “Fear not! I will help thee! I will strength en thee by the right hand of my [low er!” They gave to the men in the arena in the ol len time food to thicken tlu'ir blood, s > that it would flow slowly and that for a longer time Hie people might gloat over the scene. But our King has no pleasure in our w ends, for we are bone of his bone, rtesb of his fiesh, blood of his blood. In a!! the anguish of our heart The Man of Sorrows bore a part. Once in the ancient amphitheater a Hon with one paw caught the combat ant's sword and with bis other paw caught his shield. The man took ids knife from his girdle and slew the beast. The king, sitting in the gallery, said: “That was not fair. The lion must be slain by a sword.” Other lions were turned out. and the poor victim fell. You cry, “Shame! shame!” at such meanness. But the King in this case is our brother, and he will see that we have fair play. He will forbid the rushing out of more lions than we can meet. He will not suffer us to be tempted above that we are aide. Thank (led! The King is in tiie gallery! His eyes are on us. His heart is with us. His hand will deliver us. “Blessed are they who put their trust in him.” The Ani;eIn In the Gallery. I look again, and I see tiie angelic gallery. There they are—the angel that swung the sword at. the gate of Eden, the same that Ezekiel saw up holding the throne of (Jod. and from which I look away, for the splendor is insufferable. Here are the guardian angels. That one watched a patriarch: this one protected a child; that one has been pulling a soul out of temptation! All these are messengers of light! Those drove the Spanish armada on the rocks. This turned Sennacherib's living host into a heap of 1S5.UU0 corpses. Those yonder chanted the Christmas carol over Bethlehem until the chant awoke the shepherds. These at creation stood in the balcony of heaven and serenaded the newborn world wrapped in swaddling clothes of light. And there, holier and mightier than all, is Michael, the archangel. To command an earthly host gives dig nity. but this one is leader of the 20,000 chariots of tiod and of the ten thou sand times ten thousand angels. I think Cod gives command to the arch angel, and the archangel to the sera phim. and the seraphim to the cher ubim. until all the lower orders of heaven bear the command and go forth on the high behest Now. bring on your lions! Who can fear? All the spectators in the angelic gallery are our friends. “He shall give his angels charge over thee, to keep thee in all thy ways. They shall bear thee up in their bauds lest thou dash thy foot against a stone. Thou shalt tread upon the Hon and adder; the young Hon and the dragon shalt thou trample under foot.” Though the arena he crowded with temptations, we shall, with tiie angelic help, strike them down in the name of our Cod and leap oo their fallen car casses! O bending throng of bright angelic faces and swift wings and lightning foot, I hail you today from the dust and struggle ot the arena! I look again, and I see the gallery of the prophets and apostles. Who are those mighty ones up yonder? Hosea and Jeremiah and Daniel and Isaiah and Paul and Peter and John and James. There sits Noah, waiting for all the world to come into the ark, and Moses, waiting till tiie last Rod sea shall divide, and Jeremiah, waiting for the Jews to return, and John of the apocalypse, waiting for the swearing of the angel that time shall be no longer. Clorious spirits! Ye were howled at. ye were stoned, ye were spit upon! They have been In tills fight themselves, and they are all with us. panlcl knows all about lions. Paul fought with beasts at Lpliosus. Help From the Prophets. In the ancient amphitheater the pim ple got. so excited tliat they would shout from the galleries to men in the -arena: “At It again!" "Forward!” “One more stroke!” “Look out!” “Fall buck!" "Huzza! Huzza!” So in that gallery, prophetic and apostolic, they cannot keep tueir peace. Daniel cries out. “Thy (Jod will deliver thee from the mouth of the lions!” David ex claims. “He will not suffer thy foot to be moved!” Isaiah culls out: “Fear not! I am with thee! Be not dis mayed!” Paul exclaims, "Victory tbrougli our Lord Jesus Christ!” That throng of prophets and apostles cannot keep still. They make the welkin ring with shouting and halleluiahs. I look again, and I see the gallery of tb« martyrs. Who ia that? Hugh Lab liner, sure enough! He would not apol ogize for ike truth be preached, and so he difd, the night before swinging from tiie bedp st In perfect glee at the thought of emancipation. Who is that army of GjltJd? Tiny are the The ban legion who died for the faith. Here is a larger host in magnificent array, S84,0‘J0, wh » perished for Christ in the perseeuti ns of Diocletian. Yon der is a family gr >ui>. Felicitas of Rome and her children. While they were dying for the faith she stood en couraging them. One son was whip ped to death by thorns; another was fi mg from a rock; another was behead ed. At last the mother became a mar tyr. There they are together, a family group in heaven! Yonder is John Brad ford. who said in the fire, shall have a merry supper with the Lord to night!” Yonder is Henry Voes. who exclaimed as he died, “If I had ten heads, they should all fail oT for Christ!" The great throng of the mar tyrs! They had hot lead p ,ured d >wu their throats; horses were fastened to their hands and other horses to their ,'eet. and thus they were pulled apart: tiny had their tongues pulled out by redliot pinchers; they were so* -ed up in the skins of animals and then thrown to the dogs; they were daubed with combustibles and si t en fire* It ail tiie martyrs’ stakes that have been 1;’ik.led <• :uld lie set at proper dis- tnnees. they would make the midnight all the world over bright as noonday! And now they sit yond. r in the mar tyi's' gallery For them the fires of pei's'K-ution have gone out; the swords are sheet Ik d and the tn b hushed. Now th •;>• watch us with an all observing sympathy They k:r w all the pain, all the hardildp. ail the anguish, all the in us-ice, all the privation. They can not ke p sti!l. They cry; “Courage! Th'* fire will not consume; the floods cannot drown; the Pons cannot do . our Courage down there in the arena!” Sorjj* nsnln<-nt Spectator*. What? Are they ail to king? This hour we answer bucksthe salutation they give am! cry. “Hail, sons and da ugh ; i s o ' 1 he th !” ! lo k again, and ! see another gal- | lory—that of eminent Christ';.as. W hat strikes me rtraryt-Iy th.* m.xing in companion.-!;:p <.f these who on earth canid not agree. There is Albert Barnes and around him the presbytery who tried I ini f >r hetcro ’ my! Yon der are Lym m Beecher ami lueelun'Ch court tint denounced him! stranger liian ali. tin no arc John Cnhin and Janies Arminins! Who would have thought tliat they would sit so lovingly together? There are (Jeorge Whitelield and tin* ministers who would not let him cum* into their pulpits because tin y thought him a fanatic. There are the sweet singers Top lady. .Montgom ery. Charles Wesley. Isaac Watts and Mrs. Sigourney. If heaven had had no music before they went up. they would have started the singing. And there the hand of missionaries—David Abeel. talking of China redeemed: and John Scudder. of India saved: and Da vid Bmlnerd, of the aborigines evan gelized: and Mrs. Ad niram Judson. whose prayers for Burma took heaven by violence! All these Christians are looking into the arena. Our struggle is nothing to theirs! Do we in Christ’s cause suffer from the cold? They walk ed (Jreenland’s icy mountains. Do we suffer from the heat? They sweltered in tropics. Do we get fatigued? They fainted, with none to care for them but cannibals. Are we persecuted? They were anathematized. And as they look from their gallery and see us falter in the presence of the Hons I seem to bear Isaac Watts addressing us in bis old hymn, only a little changed: Must you be carried to the skies On flowery bed* of ease While others fought to win the prize Or sailed through bloody seas? Toplady shouts in his old hymn: Your harps, ye trembling saints, Down from the willows take; Loud to the praise of love divine Bid every string awake. While Charles Wesley, tiie Method ist. breaks forth in words a little va ried: A charge to keep you have, A God to glorify. A never dying soul to save And tit It for the sky! I look again, and I see the gallery of our departed. Many of those in the other galleries wc have heard of. but these we knew. Oh. how familiar their faces! They sat at our tables, and we walked to the house of God in com pany. Have they forgotten us? Those fathers and mothers started us on the road of life. Are they careless ns to what becomes of us? And those cbil- dren—do they look with stolid indiffer ence as to whether we win or lose this buttle of life? They remember the day they left us. They remember the agony of tne lust farewell. Though years in heaven, they know our faces. They remember our sorrows. They speak our names. They watch this fight for heaven. Nay. I see them rise up uud lean over and wave before us their recognition and encouragement. Tliat gallery is not full. They are keeping places Ikir us. After we have slain the lion they expect the King to call us. saying. “Come up higher!” Between the hot struggles In the arena I wipe the sweat from my brow and stand on tiptoe, reaching up my right hand to clasp theirs in rapturous handshaking, while their voices come ringing down from the gallery, crying. “Be thou faithful unto death, and you shall have a crown!” The Gaze of the Universe. But here I [muse, overwhelmed witli the majesty and the Joy of the scene! Gallery of the King! Gallery of un gels! Gallery of prophets uud apostles! Gallery of martyrs! Gallery of saints! Gallery of friends and kindred! O majestic circles of light and love! Throngs, throngs, throngs! How shall we stand the* gate of the universe? Myriads of eyes beaming on us! Myr iads of hearts beating in sympathy for us! How shall weeverdare to sin again? How shall we ever become discouraged again? How shall we over feel lonely again? With God for us and angels for us and prophets and apostles for us and the great souls of the ages for us and our glorified kindred f r us— shall we give up the tight and die? No. Son of God. who didst die to save us! No, ye nngeis, whose wings are spread forth to shelter us! No. ye prophets and apostles, whose warnings startle us! No. ye 1 ;ved ones, whose arms are outstretched to receive us! No; we will never surrender’ Sure I must fight If I would reign, Be faithful to my Lord, And bear the cross, endure the pain, Supported by thy word. Thy saints in all this glorious war Shall conquer though they die; They see the triumph from afar And seize it with their eye. When that Illustrious day shall rise And all thine armies shine In robes of victory through the skies. The glory shall be thine. My bearers, shall we die In the arena or rise to join our friends in the gal lery? Through Christ we may come off more than conquerors. A soldier dying in the h ispital rose up in bed the last moment and cried, “Here, here!” His attendants put him back on bis pil low and asked him why he shouted "Here!” “(Jh, I heard tin* roll call of heav< i), and I was only answering to my name!” I wonder whether after this battle of this life is over our names will be calied i:i th murder roll of the pardoned and glorified ami. with j the joy of heaven breaking up .n oui souls, shall cry. “Here. her. !” [Copyright, 1912. Louis K1 psch, II. V.] So far only .fl.40d hu* pet-n c n* t’ih'td by Xor’h C<n!i i '0 tl e Ji-tf rson Davi* rn-moriai meh. Clerk’s Sale. STATh OF Sec-: H ((A tOMN V i CorXTY OF OHtHOKhK. ( .1. < .Tefftu-ie H.C. Kd No Time to Lose You cannot af?ord to disregard the warnings of a weak and diseased heart and put off tak ing the prescription of the world’s greatest authority on heart and nervous disorders— Maes- Heart Cure, If ycur heart palpitates, flutters, or you are short of breath, have smothering spells, pain in left side, shoulder or arm, you have heart trouble and are liable to drop dead any moment. Major J. W. Woodcock, one of the best known oil operatoi'i- In the coun try dropped dead frotii hc-art dlsea-e recently, at hits home in Pc! tluncJ, Ii,d., while mow lug his lawn —Jhe l'mss. Mrs. M. A. Ibrdsail, Watkins, N. Y., whose portrait heads this advertise ment, says; “I write this through grr.t- • itude for benefits I received from Lt. Miles’ Heart Cure. I t i 1 palpitatu n of the heart, severe p.iirs undei the left shoulder, and rry general health was miserable. A few Lotties cf Dr. Miles’Heart Cure cured me entirely. Sold by all Druggist*. Dr. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind. In obedience to an order of f ijec o ur*- rn ele in the'above entitF'd i-.-im on iln -th day of M a rob 19ii2. I will v*|i at Gaffney S be.or the Court Hou-e door, to the idgliest binder bur ng the legal hour* of vile, viles ciav, April Mi bH2. the following described Janes to wit; All those t wo certain 1*> s of land in tli- ’i’i-wnof Gelfuey >. ' . troi.tiini < acii eighty feet on bin), stone str> et ;tnd rutininz ha. k to th. right or way of the Soutle-rn railroad 27.1 feet more or less, ind h ■untied by said Limesto .J-itreet, light o ovay of the Southern railroad. M iitgornery s:r- et and an aih- , These two lots will be offered separately ami th. uas a whole, and if they should hr ng rnoie us a whole than as sold sf-pai- ■••teiy the hid on the whole shall be accepted a the true and lawful bid. I’erni of sale; Cush, and upon failure to comply with bid in one hour after sale then are suie shall be made on Hie sain- day on the terms and at the 'Isk of tiie former purchaser. Purchaser to uay for papers. Mai eh 17th li«i2. J. Eb I errKKiKs. Gi'k. C. c. Pi’s Pub. Meh. 21. 2H and Apr. 4th. ••.tfler I wit* luduced to try CAStt'A- IfF/i’B. I 'Till never tw wittiuut tberu hi the home iiy liver was la very Kail shale;, and my head) ached ami I had st iiuueli trout), * Now. tine-tail ing dasoarotv. I feel line My wife hiiK*idso u*e<l theai with benotleial results for sour stomach.' . os KiiEin.ixa. l.dl Cougrc&s .**t. si IxmiU. ,vta Clerk's Sale. State of South Carolina, t Coontt or Cherokee, f Thomas Spencer et al vs. Albert Cook et a). In uliedlenee to an order or decree for partition dated March 14th 1902. I will sell at Gaffney 8. C., before the Court House door, to the highest bidder during the legal hours of sale, salesday April 7 h 1902, the following described lauds to wit; All that certain tract or parcel of laud ly ing and being sltua e In Cherokee county and State of South Carolina, bounded on the North by lauds of 8. 8. Bobo estate, ou the South by lands of John Price and C. J. bow ler, on the East by lands of E. Price and on the West by lands of John Price, containing forty-three acres more or less. Terms of sale; Cne third cash and the bal ance on Nov 1st luftj with interest and cred • it portion • secured by bond and mortgage of the purchaser. Purchaser to pay for all papers and recording. March 17th 1M2. J. Eb .Jefferies, Cl'k. C. C. Pi’s. Pub. Mch. 21. 2s and Apr. 4th. Clerk’s Sale. t State of South Carolina. COUNTY OF CHEROKEE, J. A. Willis vs. J. W. Wilson, et a). In obedience to u decree of a foreclosure made In the above entit led matter on the 7th day of March, lts.2, I will sell at Gaffney. 8. C.. bC ft re the Gout t House door, to the highest bidder during the egal hours of sale, sales day, April 7th, 1902, the following described lands, t > wit: All that certain tract of hind In Cherokee County, containing tifty-two a res more or less, bounded on the South west by lands of O. (’. Dames; South by lands of Boss Amos, and West by lands of W. P. Vassey. Said tract of laud being letter described in deed from Kobt. Scruggs to Elizabeth Parris. TeuisotSule: Cash. Purchaser to pay for papers. March Kth. 19,>2. J. EbJeffekies. Cl’k. C. C. Pi’s. Pub March 21, 29 and April 4th. Clerk’s Sale. State of south Carolina, t Cot mty or Cherokee, f Smith Hardware Company vs. WJH. Ulchard- son. In oliedlence to a decree of foreclueure made In the aliove chhc on t he 9th day of March HJ02,1 will sell at Gaffney. S. O., before the Court House door, to the highest bidder during tbe legal hours of sale, salesday. Aprl 7th, 1902, t he following descfllM-cl lands, to Wit: All that certain tractor parcel of land ly ing Id the State and county aforesaid, hound ed on the West by Neely Wood; ou thu N 1 rth by Mrs. Rebecca Allen; on the East by Mrs. M 9'•McPIn rson, and on the South by John Jamlsm. containing thirty-four acres. Terms of Sale; Cash. Purchaser to pay for papers. March 17th. 1902. J. En Jefferies, Cl’k. C. C. PI’*. Pub. March 2i, 29 and April 4th. Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. I.’o •Jood. Never Siciten. Weaken, or Gri|ie. 10c. tic. Uti ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Htrillnir K.ni.ilf 1 •’«[>.n*. ( hlrtn., .Vuiitrri,l, X.*» tort. Mfl.TflLRAP Sold and giioranteed by alldrug- NM« I U-PAu gists to CCKE Tobacco llabtt. Dyspepsia Cure Digests what you eat. This preparation contains all of tbe digestunts and digests all kinds of food. It gives instant relief and never fails to cure. It allows you to eat all tbe food you want. The most sensitive stomachs can take it. By itsuse manjr thousands of dyspeptics have been cured after everything else failed. Is unequalled for the stomach. Child ren with weak stomachs thrive on it. Cures all stomaoh trap! Prepared only by E. C. 1>eWitt & Co., C The il. buttle contain*24 t!mt*lbe50c. bles BOWET DISEASES are the most fatal of all di»» lit uarantsid or money refunded. Contain* remedies recognized by emi nent physicians as the best for Kidney and Bladder troubles* PRICE 50c- and SU». Take Notice. The Chairman of each of the J’ownshii* Boards is hereby required to meet tit the Auditor’s office in the court house on Tues day, the 25th. Inst., as an Equalization tioaril- and to hear such grievances a* may come tie- fore me. W. D. Camp. Auditor. Snmioos for Relief. State of South Carolina, t In Com- County op Cherokee, f mon Pleat. J I. Harrutt. Plaintiff, ag ;ln.t J. C. P!,iUt|». Defendant. Summons for Belief. To the Defendant J.t.’. Phillips: You arc hereby required to answer the complaint lo this act Ion. which will be tiled itt tbe office of tbe Clerk of tbe Court of aa!<> County and to *erve a copy of your answer to Mild Complaint on the subscriber at their office In Gaffney. S. 0„ within 20 days after the service hereof, exclusive of the day ot such service; and If you I'all to answer tht- complaint within‘the time aforesaid. th<- Plulnttff In thlH action will apply to tlu- Court for Relief demanded tn the complaint. Butler & Osborne. Plaintiff'.*. Attorneys, Dated Jan. 10.1902. To J C. Phi 11 Ip*. Absent Defendant: Please take notice that an action was oe- gun against you on the loth day of January, 1902. by the Plaintiff above named iHtuIng and filing Ids summons, of which the fore going Is a copy, In the office of the Clerk at tbe Court of said County on said dale. Butler A Osborne. Plaintiff's Attorney* Gaffney. 8. C., Feb. 17.1902.