The ledger. [volume] (Gaffney City, S.C.) 1896-1907, April 04, 1902, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

Women as Well as Men Are Made Miserable by Kidney Trouble. ■t.-nisSM i' Kidney trouble preys upon the mind, dis courages and lessens ambition; beauty, vigor and cheerfulness soon disappear when the kid neys are out of order ' or diseased. Kidney trouble has become so prevalent that it is not uncommon for a child to be born ' afflicted with weak kid neys. If the child urin ates too often, if the urine scalds the flesh or if, when the child t reaches an age when it should be able to control the passage, it is yet afflicted with bed-wetting, depend upon it. the cause of the difficulty is kidney trouble, and the first step should be towards the treatment of these important organs. This unpleasant trouble is due to a diseased condition of the kidneys and bladder and not to a habit as most people suppose. Women as well as men are made mis erable with kidney and bladder trouble, and both need the same great remedy. The mild and the immediate effect of Swamp-Root is soon realized. It is sold by druggists, in fifty- cent and one dollar izes. You may have a tample bottle by mail ree, also pamphlet tell- ng all about it, including many of the \housands of testimonial letters received rom sufferers cured. In writing Dr. Kilmer \ Co., Binghamton, N. Y., be sure and lenticn this paper. Foley’s Honey m* Tar 'ures colds, prevents pneumonia. Horn* of Swamp-Root. HOUSEWORK Too much housework wrecks wo men’s nerves. And the constant care of children, day and night, is often too trying for even a strong woman. A haggard face tells the story of the overworked housewife and mother. Deranged menses, leucorrhoea and falling of the wgmb result from overwork. Every housewife needs a remedy to regulate her menses and to keep her sensitive female organs in perfect condition. WINE°'CARDIil is doing this for thousands of American women to-day. It cured Mrs. Jones and that is why she writes this frank letter : Glendeane, Ky., Feb. 10,1901. I am so glad that your Wine of Cardui 1b helping me. I am feeling better than I have felt for years. I um doing wy own work without any holp, and 1 washed last week and was not one bit tired. That shov i that the Wine is doing me good. 1 am getting rie.shier than I ever was before, and sleep good and eat hearty. Before I began taking Wine of Cardui, I used to have to lay down five or six times every day, but now I do not think of lying down throu gh the day. Mks. Kichard Jones. Sl.i-O AT IHtt UGlST*. For advice and lit. rature, iid lren, giving tymp- tom«, “The l.adicr Ad i»orv I)-.-; iitm.-nt . TUe Cliettanooga Medicine Cu., Lhettanoo^a, Tenn. Notice to Taxpayers. The following in reitiird 10 the law for working and maintaining the puhl <r high ways is taken from Act 5.15 of the General Assembly of I'.urf. Head and govern your selves accordingly: Sec. 6. All persons from the age of eighteen to fifty years of age Inclusive in this state, except those excepted In this Act. shall be llsb’e to road duty. “All male persons corning within the ages so fixed and able to perform or cause to be performed the lalsjr herein required, except ministers of the Gospel In actual charge of a congregation, teachers emuloyed lu a pubile i school,school trustees during their tern: f office, and persons permanently disabled iu the military service of the State, and persons who served in the lateWarBetween the States and all persons actually employed in the quarantine service of the State, shall l>e re quired annually to perform or cause to performed labor on highways, under the di rection of the overseer of the road district in which he shall reside, eight days, if so many be necessary”: Provided. Ail students while actually attending any of the colleges or schools *n this State shall r exempt from road or street duty or the payment of any commutation tax. Sec. 7. In lieu of performing or causing to be performed the labor of ten hours per day as required for the several counties, a corn- mu tatiou tax of one dollar may b<- paid by the person so liable on or by the lii'.rty-tirst day j,of March, and on or by the first day of .March of each year thereafter: Provided, Persons liable to labor under this section shall have the right to furnish a competent substitute to labor in bis stead. J. V. WHEOCHEf.. Supr. Cherokee Co. Notice to Overseers, You will please send In list of names of hands liable to road duty in your section not later than April 15th. J. V. WHKLCHfcU March gs, 2t County supervisor. PILES! PILES! PILES! r>r. Williams’ Indian Pile Ointment wll cure Blind. Hu . ding, Clcerated and Itching kPUeg. It absorbs the tumors, allays the ■itching at once, acts as a (smitlce. gives In- ^tant relier. Ur Williams ImiMii Pile Oint ment Is prepared only for Piles ami Itching of the prlvntt parts, and nothing else. Every box Is guaranteed. Sold by druggists, sent by mail, for Site, and |! Ou per box. WILLIAMS M’F'U. CO.. Prop's, Cleveland Ohio. For sale by Cherokee l>rug Co. Washington, March 30.—The Chris tian view ol death as the entrance to a fuller life is presented in thm Luster discourse by Dr. Taimage from the text I Cor. xv, 54, Death is swallowed up in victory.” About 1.S70 Easter mornings have wakened the earth. In France for three centuries the almanacs made the year begin at Easter until Charles IX. made the year begin at Jan. 1. lu the Tower of London there is a royal pay roll of Edward I. on which there is an entry of 18 pence for 400 colored and pictured eggs, with which the people sported. In Russia slaves were fed and alms were distributed ou Easter. Ecclesiastical councils met in Pontus. in Gaul. In Rome, in Achaia, to decide the particular day and after a contro versy more animated than gracious de cided it. and now through all Christen dom in some way the first Sunday aft er the full moon which happens upon or next after March 21 is tilled with Easter rejoicing. The royal court of the Sabbaths is made up of fifty-two. Fifty-one are princes In the royal household, but Easter is queen. She wears richer diadem, she sways a more Jeweled scepter, and in her sm r .:* nations are irradiated. How welcome she is when, after a harsh winter and late spring, she seem:- to step ort of the snowbank rathe" .;,an the c .nserva* ry, to come out of the ’ orth Instead of the south, out of F. • arctic rather than the trop ics. iLsmoirning from the ley equinox, out w. Id me this queenly day, holding hiah ..i her right hand the wrenched off bolt of Christ's sepulcher and bold ing high in her left hand the key to all the cemeteries in Christendom. My text is an ejaculation. It is spun out of halleluiahs. Paul wrote right on in his argument about the resurrection and observed all the laws of logic, bi t when he came to write the words < f the text his fingers and his pen and the parchment on which he wrote took tire, and he cried out, "Death is swallowed up in victory!” It is an exciting thing lo see an army routed and fiying. They run each other down. They scatter ev erything valuable in the track. Ln wheeled artillery: hoof of horse on breast of wounded and dying man. You have read of the French failing back from Sedan, of Napoleon's track of HO.OOO corpses in the snowbanks of Russia, of the retreat of our armies from Manassas or of the five kings tumbling over the rocks of Beth horau with their armies \\ bile the hailstorms of heaven and the swords of Joshua s host struck them with their fury. The (Jharue of the Itlaek Giant. In my text is a worse discomfiture. It seems that a black giant proposed to conquer the earth. He gathered for uis host all the aches ami pains and tna- iarias and cancers and distempers and epidemics of the ages. lie marched them down, drilling tlnm in the north west wind end amid the slush of tem pests. He threw up barricades of grave mound. He pitched tent of churnal house. 8ome of ihe troops marched with slow tread cuinmandcd by cou- sumptiufis, snine in double quick com- j uumd.Ml’by pneumonias. Some be took by long bt siegement of evi! habit and some by one stroke of the battleax of casualty. With bony hand he pounded at the door of hospitals and sickrooms and won all the victories in al! the great battlefields of all the five conti nents. Forward, march! ordered the conqueror of conquerors, and all the generals and commanders in chief and ill presidents and kings and sultans and czars dropped under the feet of his war charger. But one Christmas night ! his antagonist was born. ! As most of the plagues and sickness- i as ami despotisms come out of the east. it was appropriate that the new cen- ■ : '.■•[nr should come out of the same ,natter. Power is given him to awak- ! en all the fallen of ail the centuries | and of all lands and marshal them ' agninst the black giant. Fields have ' already been won. but tbe last day of 1 the world’s existence will see the de risive battle. When Christ shall lead forth his two brigades, the brigade of the risen dead and the brigade cf the celestial host, the black giant will fail hack, and the brigade from the riven sepulchers will take him from beneath, and the brigade of descending immor tals will take him from above, and death shall be swallowed up in vie tory The old braggart that threatened the conquest and demolition of the planet has lost his throne, has lost his seep ter, biis lost his palaee. has lost his prestige, and the one word written over ail the gates of mausoleum ami cata comb and necropolis, on cenotaph and sarcophagus, on the lonely khan of the arctic explorer and on the catafalque of great cathedral, written in capitals of azalia and calla Illy, writt* » In mu steal cadence, written In doxology of great assemblages, written on the sculptured door of the family vault, is “Victory." Coronal word, etnbannered word, apocalyptic word, chief word cf triumphal arch under which conquer ors return. Hunt «»f flie KIiik of Terrors. Victory! Word shouted at Culloden ami Baluklava and Blenheim, at Me- giddo and 8oi ferine, at Marathon, where the Athenians drove back the Medes; at Poitiers, where Charles Martel broke tin* ranks of the Sara cens; it Salamis. where Themlstocles In the great sea fight confounded the Persians, and a? the door of tbe east ern cavern of chiseled rock, where Christ came out througn a recess and throttled the king of terrors and put him back In the niche from which thy celestial Conqueror had just emerged. Aha! When the jaws of the eastern mausoleum took down the black giant, “death was swallowed up in victory.” I proclaim the abolition of death. The old antagonist is driven back into mythology with all the lore about Stygian ferry and Charon with oar and boat. Melrose abbey and Kenil worth castle are no more In ruins than is the sepulcher. We shall have no more to do with death than we have with the cloakroom at a governor's or a president’s levee. We stop at such cloakroom and leave in charge of a servant our overcoat, our overshoes, our outward appar.l, that we may not be impeded in tbe brilliant round of the drawing roo:n. Well, my friends, 1 when we go out of this world we are 1 r going to a King's b. nquet and to a re- . ceptiou of monurehs. uni} at the door of the tomb we leave the cloak cf fiosh and the wrappings with which we meet the storms of this world. At the close o. - an eatnbiy recopi. >n. under the bn: it and broom of t he porter, the coat o. hat ay be banned to us bet ter than vvben we resigned it. and the cloak of human!.y -..ill finally be re turned to us improv “d aim brightened and purified and gk lied. You and I do no: want our bodies re turned as they are u< We want to get rid of all their weaknesses and all their susceptibilities to fatigue and nil their slowness of locomo..ou. We want them put through a chemistry of so l and heat and cold and cuanglng seasons, out of winch '» d will recon struct them as much U .ler than they ar>* i • v as the bod; of the rosiest and L 4 est child that hounds over the 1 va iu Central park is tetter than the s. uest i tient in Bellevue hospital. But as to our soul, we will cross right o..r, not 'vnitlng for obsequies, inde- peudeut of obituary, into a state iu ev- eiy way better, with wider i om and velocities beyond computation, the dullest of us Into compaun uship with the very best spirits lu their very best mood, in the very parlor of the uni verse, the four walls burnished and paneled and pictured and glorified with all the splendors that the in^uite God in ail the ages has been able .o invent. Victory! The Urn or the Tomb. This view, of course, makes it of but little importance whether we are cre mated or sepultured. If the latter is dust to dust, the former is ashes to ashes. If any prefer inciueratiou, let them have it without cavil or protest. The world may become so crowded that cremation may be universally adopted by law as well as by general consent. Many of tbe mightiest and best spirits have gone through this process. Thou sands and tens of thousands of God’s children have been cremated—l*. R. Bliss and wife, the evangelistic singers, cremated by accident at Ashtabula bridge; John Rodgers, cremated by persecution; Latimer and Ridley, cre mated at Oxford; Pothiuus and B!an- diua. a slave, and Alexander, a physi cian. and their comrades cremated at the order of Marcus Aurelius; at least a hundred thousand of Christ’s disci ples cremated, and there can be no doubt about the resurrection of their bodies. If the world lasts as much lon ger as it has thus far, there perhaps may be no room for the large acreage set apart for resting places, but there is plenty of room yet, and the race nJed not pass that bridge of fire until it comes to it. The most of us prefer the old way. But whether out of natural disintegration or cremation We shall get diat luminous, buoyant, gladsome, transcendent, magnificent, inexplicable structure called the resurrection body. You will have it; I will have it. 1 say to you today, as I’aul said to Agrippa, “Why should it be thought a tiling incredible with you that God should raise the dead?” That far up cloud, higher than tin* hawk (lies, high er than the eagle Hies, what is it made of? Drops of water from a river, other drops from a lake, still other drops from a stagnant pool, but now embod ied in a cloud and kindled by the sun. If God can make such a lustrous cloud out of water drops, many of them soil ed and impure and fetched from miles away, can he not transport the frag ments of a human body from the earth and out of them build a radiant body? Cannot God, who owns all the material out of which bones, muscle and flesh are made, set them up again if they have fallen? If a manufacturer of telescopes drops a telescope on the floor and It breaks, can he not mend it again so you can see through it? And if God drops the human eye into the dust, the eye which he originally fashioned, can he not restore it? Aye, if the manu facturer of the telescope, by the use of a new glass and a change of material, can make a better instrument than that which was originally constructed ami actually improve it, do you uot think the fashioner of the human eye may improve its sight and multiply the nat ural eye by the thousandfold additional forces of the resurrection eye? Everyday Keanrrectlona. “Why should It be thought with you an incredible thing that God should raise the dead?” Things all around us suggest It. Out of what grew all these flowers? Out of the mold and the earth. Resurrected! Resurrected! The radiant butterfly—where did It come from? Tne loathsome caterpillar. That albatross that smites the tempest with Its wings—where did It come from? A senseless shell. Near Bergerac, France, In a Celtic tomb under a block, were found flower seeds that had been bur led 2.000 years. Tbe explorer took the flower seed and planted it, and it came up. It bloomed in bluebell and helio trope. Two thousand years ago bur ied, yet resurrected! A traveler says be found in a mummy pit in Egypt garden peas that had been burled there 3,000 years ago. He brought them out, and on the 4th of June, 1844, lie plant ed th« in, and in thirty days they sprung ap. Burled 3,000 years, yet resurrect ed! “Why should it be thought n thing incredible with you that God should raise the dead?” Where did all this silk come from— the silk that adorns your persons and your homes? In the hollow of a staff of Greek missionary brought from Chi na to Europe the progenitors of those worms that now supply the silk mar kets of many nations. The pageantry of bannered host and the luxurious ^ articles of commercial emporium blaz ing out from the silkworms. And who ] shall be surprised if out of this insig nificant earthly body, this insignificant earthly life, our bodies unfold into something worthy of the coming eter- ; nitios? 1’ut silver Into diluted niter, and it dissolves. Is the silver gone forever? No. Put in some pieces of t pp r. : ’id the silver reappears. If cue force l issolves, another force or- guuizcs. ’’Why should it be thought a thing inciviL.Ie with you that G< i should raise the dead?" The insec t flew and the worms crawled last autumn fee bler and feebler and then stopped. They have taken no food. They want none. They lie dor:..ant and insensi ble, but s. on the s-.^th wind will blow the resurrection trumpet, and the air and the earth v ;.l be full of them. Do you not think that God can do as much for our bodies as he does for the wasps and the spiders and the snails? This morning at half past 4 o’clock there was a resurrection. Out of the night the day. In a few weeks there will be a resurrection in all our gardens. Why not some day a resurrection amid the graves? Ever and anon there are instances of men and women entranced. A trance is death followed 'by resurrection after a few days; total suspension of mental power ’.id voluntary act.i n. Rev. Wll- I in Tcnuent, a great evangel 5 ?* of tbe last general ion, of whom Dt. \rchi- buU A!' Xiiiiwer, a man far from being seutime wr.re in most eulogistic tev.’ Rev. William ’i'evumt seemed to die. . .. : ; !rit apparently left the body. People came in day after day and sa.J. ”!> is dead, be is dead.” But the soul that tied returned, and Will Tennent lived to write what he bad seen while his soul was gone. Excnrslona Into tbe Cnknowa. It may lie found some time that what A 9 called si., pended animation or corna- f .ose state is brief death, giving the soul an e::'*urs:jn into the next world, from which it comes back, a furlough of a few hours granted from the conflict o* life to which it must return. Do no^ this waking up of men from trance and this waking up of insects from winter lifelessness and this waking up of grains buried 3,000 years ago make it easier for you to believe that your body and mine after the vacation of the grave shall rouse and rally, though there be 3.000 years between our last breath and the sounding of the arch- angelic reveille? i Physiologists tell us that while the most of our bodies are built with such wonderful economy that we can spare nothing, and tbe loss of a finger is a hindermeut, and the in jury of a toe joint makes us lame, still that we have two or three useless phys ical apparatuses, and no anatomist or physiologist has ever been able 11 tell what they are good for. They may he the foundation of the resurrection body, worth nothing to us in this state to he indispensably valuable in the next state. The Jewish rabbis and the sci entists of our day have found out that there are two or three superfluities of body that are something gloriously sug gestive of another state. I called at my friend’s house one summer day. I found the yard all pil ed up with the rubbish of carpenter's and mason's work. The door was off. The plumbers had torn up the floor. The roof was being lifted in cupola. All the pictures were gone, and the paper hangers were doing their work. All the modern improvements were be ing introduced into that dwelling. There was not a room in the house lit to live in at that time, although a month before when I visited that house everything was so beautiful I could not have suggested an improvement. My friend had gone with his family to the Holy Land, expecting to come back at the end of six months, when the building was to be done. And. oh, what was his joy when at the end of six months he returned and found the old house had been enlarged and im proved and glorified. That is your body. It looks well now—all the rooms filled with health, and we could hard ly make a suggestion. But after awhile your soul will go to the Holy Land, and while you are gone the old house of your tabernacle will be entirely re constructed from cellar to attic, and every nerve, muscle and bone and tis sue and artery must be hauled over, and the old structure will be burnished and adorned and raised and cupolaed and enlarged, and all the Improve ments of heaven introduced, and you will move into It on resurrection day. “For we know that If our earthly house of this tabernacle were dissolved we have a building of God, a bouse not made with hands, eternal iu the heav ens.” Oh, what a day when body and soul meet again! They are very fond of each other. Did your body ever have a pain and your soul not pity It, or your body have a Joy and your soul not re echo it, or, changing the question, did your soul ever have any trouble and your body not sympathize with it, growing wan and weak under the de pressing Influence? Or did your soul ever have n gladness but your body celebrated it with kindled eye and cheek and clastic step? Surely God never intended two sueh good friends to be very long separated. Tlie KIiihI Victory. And so when the world’s last Easter morning shall come the soul will de scend. crying, “Where Is my body?” And the body will ascend, saying. “Where Is my soul?” And the laird of the r«*»urrecti<on will bring them to gether, and it will be a perfect soul In a perfect body, introduced by a perfect Christ into a perfect heaven. Victory! Do you wonder that on Easter day xve swathe our churches with garlands? Do you wonder we celebrate it with the most consecrated voice of song that we can Invite, with the deftest fingers on organ and cornet and with doxologies that beat these arches with the billows of sound as the sea smites the basalt at Giant's Causeway? Only the had disapprove of the resurrec tion. A cruel heathen warrior heard Mr. Moffatt, the missionary, preach about the resurrection, and he said to the missionary, “Will my father rise in the last day?” “Yes,” said the mis sionary. “Will all the dead in battle rise?” said the cruel chieftain. “Yes,” said the missionary. Then said the warrior: “Let me hear no more about the resurrection. There can he no res urrection; there shall be no resurrec tion. I have slain thousands in battle. Will they rise?” Ah, there will be more to rise on that day than those whose crimes have never been repent ed of will want to see! But for all others who allowed Christ to be their pardon and their life and their resur rection it will be a day of victory. Tbe thunders of the last day will be the salvo that greets you Into harbor. The lightnings will be only tbe torches of triumphal procession marching down to escort you home. The burning worlds flashing through Immensity will be tbe rockets celebrating your coronation on thrones where you will reign forever and forever and forever. Where is death? What have we to do with death? As your reunited body and soul swing off from this planet on that last day you will see deep gashes all up and down the hills, deep gashes rl! through the valleys, and they will be the emptied graves, they will l,e the abandoned sepulchers, with rouga ground tossed on each side of them, and slabs will Me uneven on the »*er f hillocks, and there will bo fallen mo:ir meats and cenotaphs, and then for tin firs* Fme you will appreciate the iY.il exhilaration of G. u*j:t. “Death Is Bv G'o'vod np in vie’ ify.” Hail UK- l.'.n! of e::—.Is nnh h**aven! rr°!se io thee hy Both be given. Tiue v Ki' - i trmuiphnnt now; Hail the re»ii-taewou thou! [Copyright IOOJ, by Louis Klopsch.J A Good Hearted Man, or in other words, men with good sound hearts, are not very numerous. The incre a s i n g number of sudden deaths from heart disease daily chron icled by the press, is proof of the alarm ing preva lence of this dangerous complaint, and as no one can foretell just when a fatal collapse A * will occur, the danger of neg lecting treatment is certainly a very risky matter. If you are short of breath, have pain in left side, smothering spells, pal pitation, unable to lie on side, especially the left, you should begin taking M?ieV Heart Cure. J. A. Kreamerof Arkansas City, Kans^ Says: “My h.Mft was so bad it was im- pos" : ble t >r me to lie down, and I could r.eii i^r sleep nor rest My decline was rapid, and I realized I must get help S' n. I was advised to try Dr. Miles’ 1 ' irt Cure, which I did, and candidly believe it saved my life.” Dr. Mltea’ Remedies are sold by all drugetsts en guarantee. Dr. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind. Clerk's Sale. Ae Ancient Coronetlon Relic. Probably the ouly existing relic of the old regalia fvbicb will be used at the coronation of Edward VII. is the anointing spoon. It is of pure gold, with four pearls in the broadest part of the handle; the bowl Is finely chased and of very curious antique workman ship. Into this spoon the consecrated oil is poured from the ampulla, which is in tbe form of an eagle with extend ed wings upon a pedestal of pure gold finely chased. The head screws off at the middle of the neck for the conveu- : lence of putting in tbe oil, which is ;'poured out through the beak. This golden vessel is capable of containing six ounces of oil. Its height is nine inches, its breadth from the points of the wings seven inches and the weight about niue ounces.—London Chronicle. State or South Carolina. I County or Cherokee f J. E. Jefferies vs. FI. C. Knox. In obedience to an order of foree’obure made In the above entif ed i’i»e on the nth day of March 1902, 1 w:.i sel 1 at Gaffney S. C. before the Cour i ou edoor, to the highest bidder during the leual hours of sale, sales- day, April 7th 1902. the followiag described lands to wit: All tl ose wo certain lots of l .nd in the Town of G.tffr* y 8. O., front!'* • *-ach eighty feeton L.mesi.me street: n inning back to the right of way of the .» ithern railroad 270 feet more or less, and o unded by said Llmestoneistreet, right of-way of the Southern railroad. Montgomery street and an alley. These two lots will be offered separately and then as a whole, and if they should bring more as a whole than as sold separ ately the bid on the whole shall be accepted m the true and lawful bid. Term of sale: Cash, and upon failure to comply with bid in one hour after sale then a re-sale shall be made on the same day on the terms and at the risk of the former purchaser. Purchaser to nay for papers. March 17th 1W2. J. Eb Jeekeries. Cl’k. C. C. Pi’s Pub. Meh. 21. 28 and Apr. *th. Traah Sent to Indiana. A worker in the Indian mission field “rises in her wrath” to remonstrate in i The Indian’s Friend against the trash that some people regard as suitable contributions for the Indians. She j writes: “I have just fired some hats and bon nets which should have been burned at the stake before entering the mission ary field. They could never have head ed off anybody aright and would have been stumbling blocks to many. If the apostle Paul bad sent them, he never would have recommended such ‘covers’ for the heads of women in his congre gation. The ashes of these will make turnips grow, but may their roses uev- fl»r bloom above the sod. though seedy ♦lough to plant an acre!” An OwI’b Toe*. It is alleged that taxidermists are careless in the mounting of owls. Iu museums and elsewhere our wise eyed friends are set up with three toes in front of and one behind the perch on which they are seated. One who has observed tbe habits of the hooters I u* liuiaius that this Is incorrect and that no living owl ever places three toes iu front of his (terch. liow is this?—New York Press. —Use Blue Ribbon lemon snd vuniliH flivoring extracts, cone better at any price. —“bure Cure” Sarsaparilla., oO cents, the great Spring tonic, Clerk's Sale, State of South Carolina, i County of Cherokee, \ Thomas S|x-ncer et a! vs. A.t>4*rt Cook »-t al. In obedienue to an order or <Ji- -r**e for partition dated March 14th I'"/2. I wiil sell at Gaffney S. C., before tl.•-Court House door, to the highest blild*-r during the leg.-t hours of sale, saiesday April 7di Iti.r following deseribed lands to wit: Al! that certain tract or parcel of land ly ing and being situan- in Clc-rokt-e county and State of South <’aro'ena, D . me- i ..n the North by lands of S. S Bobo estati-. on the South by lands of John Price and ( J. Fow ler, on the East by laudsof E. Price and on the W, st by lands of John Price, containing forty-three acres more or less. Terms of sale; Cue third cash and the ba’.- anceouNov 1st Urfd with interest ami cred it portion' secured hy bond and n rtgage of the purchaser. Purchaser to pay At all papers and recording. March 17th VMXl J. Eb Jefferies. Ci'k. C. C. Pi’s. Pub. Mi'h. 21.2S and A pr. 4th. Clerk's Sale. WATCH Your label and the date, And pay before Tis too late. One Minute Gough Cure For Coughs, Cold* and Croup. Foley’s Kidney Cure makes kidneys and bladder right Kodol Dyspepsia Cure Digests what you eat. This preparation contains all of the digestants and digests all kinds of food. It gives instant relief and never fails to cure. It allows you to eat all the food you want. The most sensitive stomachs can take It. By its use many thousands of dyspeptics have been cured after everyt hing else failed. Is unequalled for the stomach. Child ren with weak stomachs thrive on it. State ok South Carolina, t Col NTY OF CHEROKEE. | Smith H.-irdwarc Company vn. W.JH Richard son. In oljedience to :t decree of foreclosure made in the above case ou the srh day of March 1:02, I will sell at Gaffney, s. (:.. before the Court IIoum* door, to the highest bidder, during the legal hours of sale, saiesday. April rth, llMvq, tin* following described lands, to wit: All that certain tract of parcel of land ly ing In the State and county aforesaid, hound ed on the West by Neeiy Wood: on the North by Mrs. Rebecca Allen: on the East by Mrs M ry McPherson, and on the -South by John Jamison, containing thirty-four a -res. Terms of Sale: Cash. Purchaser to pay for papers. March 17th. l'.K)2. J. Eb Jekker'es. Cl’k. C. O. Pi’s. Pub. March 2*. 28 and April 4th. Clerk's Sale. Cures all stamach troubles Prepared only hy F. C. HeWitt A Cn., OhlAjO Thu IL bottle contains-ii times the 50c. »: State or South Carolina, i County OF CHEROKEE, ( J. A. Willis vs. J. W. V/iison. et al. In ol>odlence to a decree of a f^ireelosure made in the above entitled matter on the 7th day of March. 1>!2. 1 will sib! at Gaffney. *4.C., bef' re the Court Bouse door, to the highest bidiler during the legal hours of sale, sates- day, April 7th, I'.vJ. the following devriU-d lands. 11 wit: All that certain tract of land in Cherokee County, containing flfty-two a r» *4 more or less, bounded ou the South west by lands of O. c. lian.es; South by lands of Boss Amos, and Wi st hy lands of \V. J’. Vassey. Said tract of land being bettor dysorlbed in deed from Kobe Scruggs to Eliza! eth Parris. Terms of Sale: Cash. Purchaser to pay fur papers. March l?th. twe. J. EnJiffekies. Cl’k. c. C. Pi’s. Pub. March 21, 28 aud April 4th.