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) 1 r..' ":-V Not OverWIne. There i» an old allegorical picture of a Kiri scared at a ^riias-hopper, but fn the act of tiecdle-eiv on a snake. This is paralleled by the nun who spends a large sum of money building a cyelont cellar, but mg lects to e^rrtviHfl'hia familv with a hot* tie of Ch provide his family with 'bamberlain s Colic, C holeru 4 fk-hi and Diarrhoea Remedy as a safeguara against bowel complaints, whose vie 1 tinos outnumber those of toe cyclone a hundred to one. This remedy is everywhere recognized as ttn most prompt and reliable m.’dicine in use for these diseases. For sale bv Ohero- > tee DrugCo. ;L D. Allison, Cowpens. Opportunities and vacant lots must be improved to make them profitable DeWitt Is tli« Name. When you go to buy Witch Hazel Salve look for the name DeWitr. on every box. The pure, unadulterated Witch Hazel is used in making De- Witt’s Witch Hazd Salve, which is the best salve in the world for cuts, burns, bruises, boils, eczema and piles. The popularity of DeWitt’.- Witch Hazel Salve, due to its many cures, has caused numerous worth less counterfeits to be placed on the market. The genuine bears the name of E O DeWitt «fc Co., Chicago. Sold by Cherokee Drug Do. Since declaring tout the Belleville lynching was an “unspeakable out rage” (.roveruor Yates has declined to speak of it any more. Cures Eczema, ^ptchiuK .Huui'irs, IMuijiles ami Carbuncles, -Costs Nothing to Try. B. B. B. (Botanic Blood Bairn) is a certain and sure cure for eczema, itch ing skiu, humors, scab.-, scales, watery blisters, pimples aching bones or joints, boils, carbuncles, prickling pain in the skin, old, eating sores, ubers, etc. Botanic Blood Balm cures the worst and most deep seated cases by enriching, purify* ' ing and vitalizing the blood, thereby giving a healthy blood --uoply to the skin. Heals every sore and gives the rich glow of health to the skiu Builds up the broken down body and make* the blood red and nourishing. Especially advised for chronic, old cases that doctors, patent medicines and hot springs fail to cure. Drug gists, fjil.with complete directions for home cure. To prove B B. B cures, sample sent free and prepaid uy writ ing Blood Balm Co , Atlanta, Ga. Describe trouble, and free medical advice sent in sealed letter. TALMAGE SERMON t* Dy Rev. FRANK DE WITT TALMAGE. D.D., Pastor of Jefferson Park Presby* teria.n Church, ClncaLgo Kansas larmers will confine their yeligious duties today to singing that good old hymn, “Bringing in the Sheaves.” Save the Chihlren. Ninety-nine of every one hundred diseases that children have are due to disorders of the stomach, and these disorders are all caused by indiges tion. Kodol Dyspepsia (lure is just as good for children as it is tor adults. Children thrive on it. It keeps their litrle stomachs sweet and encourages their growth and development. Mrs. Henry Carter, Central St., Nash ville, Tenn., says: “My little boy is now three years old and has been suf fering from indigestion ever since he was born. I have had the best doctors in Nashville, but that failed to do him auv good. After using one not tie of Kodol he is a wail baby. I re commend it to all sulfirars.” K idol digests wnat you eat a id makes the stomach sweet. Sold by Cherokee Drug Co There are men who ‘own” a wife, who are not lit to own a dog. Maitland, Fla. The Hancock Liquid Sulphur Co., Baltimore, Md. Gentlemen:—I have had eczema over thirty years, have tried many remedies prescribed by various physi cians, but to nothing has tne disease yielded so quickly as to Liquid Sul phur. I think if Used properly it i« undoubtedly a specific for eczema I have prescribed it for others with most satisfactory results. I consider it the best remedy for cutaneous affections I have ever known, and re gard ,t as the greatest medical dis • covery of the age. Respectfully yours, W. A. Heard, M. I). For sib bv the Cnerokse Drug Co snort uu gold but Most men are long on brass. (iuU k Relief for Astlima .MitTerer.s. Foley’s Honey and Tar affords im- mediate relief to asthma sufferers In the worst stage 4 * and if taken in time will effect a cure. Sold by ChTokee Drug Co. Wit without wisdom is sauce with out meat. Foley’s Kidney Cure is a medicine free from poison and wi'l cure any case of kidney disease that is not be yond the rtaeh of medicine. Sold by Cherokee Dfug Co. Fear kills the famishing before they have time to die of starvation. Foley’s Kidney Cure will 4 oure all diseases arising from a disordered kidney or bladder. Sold by Cherokee Drug Cc. Mrs. Mollie Allen, of South Fork, Ky., says she has prevented attacks of cholera morbus by taking Cham beriain’s Stomach and Liver Tablets when she felt an attack coming on Such attacks are usually caused by indigestion and these Tablets are just whai is needed to cleanse the stom ach and ward off the approaching at tack. Attacks of bilious colic may be prevented in the same way. For sale by Cherokee Drug Co.; L. D. Al lison, Cowpens. POimiflWEY^TAR Chicago, Aug. 30—In this sermon the preacher inculcates the duty of truthfulness In all the relations of life—in business, in politics, in our so cial intercourse and our religion. His text is Acts v. 8: “Tell me whether ye gold the land for so much? And she said. Yea. for so much.” Morbid curiosity is to-the eye what gossip is to the ear. The grewsome, the hideous, the diseased, the appall ing, an' objects at which some of us never tire of looking. Let a poor work man tumble from a scaffolding and have his brains bespattered upon the city pavements below or let a helpless washerwoman, staggering under her load of clothes, be crushed by the truckman’s wheel or a drunken human brute be battered by a policeman’s club and the crowds will collect as rapidly as do carrion eating birds at the scent of a carcass. All day long a steady stream of sightseers passes in and out of the Parisian morgue. The more bloated and deformed the corpses the stronger the fascination and the bigger the crowd. Such is the scene of my text. There is great excitement in Jerusalem. The agitation is spreading everywhere. As the people are rushing along toward a common center some bystander asks a runner, “What is the matter?” “Why,” 1 answers he, “haven’t you heard the j news? You know Ananias, who used to live next door to me? He was my dearest neighbor. Well, Peter was preaching this morning near the tem ple. He took up a collection for the poor. Anaidas came forward and laid Ids contribution at the feet of the apostle and pretended that he had giv en all his money to the church. He wanted to appear well before his fellow church members. But Ananias told a falsehood. He had not given all, as he had pledged himself to do, but had kept back part of the money for his own use. Then Peter raised his finger toward heaven and said, ‘Ananias, thou hast not lied unto men, hut unto G6d.’ Immediately Ananias clutched at his heart. He gave one shriek and dropped dead. Come on; let us go up and see what is next going to happen.” X.Ion Canuot lie Clothed Xu White. These two men rush on toward the temple. They come to the outskirts of a great throng. There the multitudes are crowding and pushing and jostling their neighbors and trying to get near to the speaker. Suddenly the cry Is raised. “Make way, make way!” The sea of human faces surges to the right and to the left. Every head uncovers. The murmur of many voices is hushed to the silence of the tomb. Slowly and solemnly down through the open path way come the pallbearers, carrying be tween them a shrouded form. For, “tin* young men arose, wound him up and carried him out and buried him.” Hardly had the noise of the shuffling f''ot ceased when a newcomer, a wom an, began to elbow her way through the crowd. She asks the people as she pushes along: "What is the matter? Is any one hurt?" No one answers. They pretend they do not hear her, but they do. As soon as she passes along many an eye is moist, many a lip quivers. “God pity her! God pity her!” This is Sapphira. the wife of the dead per jurer. She is her husband’s confed erate in the premeditated lie. As soon as Peter sees her he points to the pile of silver and gold and says unto her, “Woman, tell me whether ye sold the land for so much?” And she says, “Yea. for so much." Quick as a flash the lightning of God’s wrath struck. "Then fell she down straightway at his feet and yielded up the ghost, and the* young men came in and found her dead, and. carrying her forth, buried her by her husband.” Such is the Bib lical description of two capital punish ments. The record stands there on the sacred page as a perpetual warning against falsehood, an object lesson, ter rible and exemplary, of the divine atti tude toward all kinds of lies and un truths and prevarications and inten tional distortions and misrepresenta tions. wherever they may he found. To catalogue some of the equivoca tions by which the Ananiases and the Sapphiras of the present day pervert the truth is the purpose of this sermon. We would prove that business lies and social lies and political lies and par ental lies and church lies can never he clothed in white and called “white lies.” Every falsehood Is covered with the black pall of death—black as the darkness of the bottomless pit. We would try to do this because there is a theory abroad that some lies are inno cent and respectable and that there is no harm If their black garments hang In the wardrobes of honest men. IliiNineaB Valaehootla. Falsehoods in the business world: They nest and thrive especially well In the haunts of barter and gain. They greet you at the opened doors of our largo department stores. They plc- torialize themselves in circulars and newspaper advertisements which are sent broadcast over the cities and coun try districts. They pose In fictitious reports of our large corporations and exaggerate the annual dividends. They have for their passports white slips of paper, purporting to represent bona fide stock, whereas the gold and sliver and copper mines are purely imaginary. They enthrone themselves In the “pits” of the produce exchanges. They finger the keys of the telegraph Instruments when the brendstntfs are about to be cornered. They are just as much at home with the wholesale manipu lator as with the retail dealer, with the great capitalist as with the humble trailer seated behind the counter of the little country store. We have all felt upon our hoi cheeks tin* baleful touch of their infectious breath. They ride down with us when wo go shopping in the morning. They come home with us when we turn our hacks upon the glass offices at night. Falsehoods in the business world! They figure not only in the transac tions of buyers and sellers, but in the declarations of the taxpayer. Here conies the county assessor. How much is your property worth? “Oh,” you answer, if a farmer, "not much. 1 hardly made a living off the place last year. My crops barely met expenses. The house is simply a ‘white elephant’ on my hands. I would get rid of It if 1 could. But it down, say, for $3,000.” The assessor departs. About six mouths later a railroad corporation wishes to have the right of way through your property. The representative of that road comes to you. “How much is your property worth?” “Oh,” you an swer, “I do not want to sell under any conditions. This is the finest farm land in all this region. Besides, the place has for me a sentimental as well as an intrinsic value. My father was born here. My children were born here. Well, if I must, I must. That fann and that old homestead are worth at least $10,000. They are cheap at that.” There are your two answers. Why the discrepancies? Why did you make one statement to the assessor and another to the railroad corpora tion? Did you lie first? Did you lie last? Did you lie both times? Go«l Abhors Lying. Fire insurance adjusters meet with the same kind of lying. The man who lias solemnly declare*! to the county commissioners that his personal hold ings are of little value discovers after they have been burned that they wore worth a fortune and demands that the fire insurance company compensate him on tiiat basis. False estimates and fraudulent misrepresentation, whether made in the assessor’s ofiice or to fire insurance adjuster or by the merchant to the customer or the customer to the merchant, all belong to the same cat - gory. They are lies. They are the ut- uook and run? Cdr, no; but because ii:o »t people would rather hear ill of their neighbors than good. Therefore when a falsehood is once started about a neighbor it league bools, one emissary twenty, fifty, peddle its » vil ing venom. Falsehoods Why? Because eurntoly repeat hear. Without travels on with seven and instead of having it gradually enlists ten, a thousand persons to and transmit its deslroy- in the social world! few people can ac any statement they intending to misquote. they make verbal changes which slight ly or seriously affect the meaning. If you would prove tins statement I | would have you play a simple game | which we children used to play In my ! younger days. We would have twenty | or thirty people sit about the parlor in i a circle. Then we would have one per- ! son, who was the leader, whisper a I simple statement or tell a short story ; to the person upon his right. That per son would in turn whisper the same story. And on and on the story would go until it had made the full circle. Then the last person in the circle would tell the story ns he heard it. , Then the first person would tell the ; story as he told it. And the two stories ! would tie no more alike than the | striped fur of a panther is like the white wool of a pet lamb. DentroycpN tit Clmmoter. So well known is this fact of uncon scious alteration, and so painful has been his experience cf its effects, that one of our best known United States Benators has made it a rule to refuse all applications for a verbal interview. He has been so often misrepresented unintentionally that when an inter viewer comes to him lie always says: I “Write your questions clearly and dis tinctly upon paper. Then I will write my answers and you must print them as I give them to you. I do this so that there may be no misunderstanding be tween us.” There ate many social falsehoods floating about every com munity. not because neighbors have deliberately lied against neighbors, but because when gossip starts her work the statements made in reference to a man’s character by oft repetition often unintentionally become malformed and satauic and character destroying mon strosities. Social falsehoods arc prevalent ev erywhere. How are we to guard terances of false tongues, and God against them? First and foremost, by . not making ourselves a medium for | their propagation. An aspersion on a i man’s character, once started, is.passed from lip to lip until the whole commu-. i nity hears it. But the calumny, often undeserved, might be stopped by the; observation of a simple rule. “Never believe any evil rumor,” my father said, “you may hear against your neighbor. Never believe it unless you have positively heard the evil confes-! sion from the man’s own lips, and even then you must hope there is some mis take about it.” Never allow yourself They, however, swarm to listen to any maligner of an innocent has recorded his abhorrence and his condemnation of all intentional verbal misrepresentations. Whether behind store counter or over church pulpit let your answers be “yea, yea, and nay, nay.” A lie is just as black and fatal tossed as a shuttlecock between the two battledoors of buyer and seller as though it were the deathknell of an Ananias and a Sapphira falling at the feet of an apostolic denunciator. Falsehoods in the political world; Oh, how many! Like the seventeen year locusts, they never entirely depart from a region, most at certain seasons of the year. They are especially numerous and virulent at a municipal or state or presidential election. The ballot box is their footstool. A national eonven- tion to nominate a president is their glorification. Political falsehood will take the record of the purest and public man that ever lived ao^rtT lutely bedaub it over with and false accusations. They 11 Washington and Jefferson an _ Quincy Adams and Lincoln and Hayes and Garfield and McKinley. But, though the concocters and utterers of political falsehoods may ‘never tire of blackguarding and misrepresenting our public men. the acme of meanness is only reached when, without just cause, they dyftg into the political mire the wives and the children of the, men whom they would indirectly attack. In this generation the family of any pub lic man is never able, like Cmsar’s wife, to live above suspicion. Ah, then, I wonder not that some of our public men become bitter and lose their faith in mankind. I wonder not that many a public man is tempted to carry.his political hatreds down to the grave. When Andrew Jackson was a very old man he wished to join the church and be baptized at her altars. When he ap peared before the church officers the minister asked him this question, “Gen eral, before you come into our fellow ship will you forgive all your political enemies us you would have Christ for give you?” “Yes,” answered Jackson. “What! All?” The old ex-president thought a moment. Then the aged conqueror who once defended Nevf Or leans raised bis bead, and, with flash ing eye and scornful lip, replied, “Yes, all except the merciless scoundrels who have li**d about my dead wife.” God pity the honest man who in public life is having ids heart gashed open by the attacks made upon the characters of his loved ones. Truly, then, as at the cross, an ungrateful people are offering him a crown of thorns Instead of a crown of treasured gold. Untruth !■ Cownrilly. A He is a lie, against whomsoever told. A lie is especially cowardly when it is told against public men, especially cowardly because for the most part the victims must writhe and twist under the insinuating and poisonous attack and suffer in silence. The nature of a lie is not changed by harnessing It to a qualifying adjective, nor is a political He less heinous than other lies. A lie told to besmirch a political candidate or to Ixmefit a political party is an of fense in the sight of God which will have to be accounted for in the day of Judgment. “All liars”—there are no exceptions to this rule—"all liars shall have their part In the lake which burn- eth with fire and brimstone, which is the second death.” Falsehoods in the social world; Why? Because, ns David in his haste ; grossly declared, “All rami arc liars?” Oh, no. Because most people would in tentionally and deliberately rob an In nocent man of his character as n sneak | thief might snatch a woman’s Docket- njld Sapphira, but in ail probability 1 absolutely destroy my little ones also. Falsehoods hi tin* church: That means many of us are weekly and daily breaking the public pledges we have made to God. 'lake, for instance, that promise which you made when you Joined the church. Have you kept it? Every Sunday night at the close of the meetings the members of hundreds and thousands of Christian Endeavor services are repeating the Christian Endeavor pledge, “I promise him thst ; i will strive to do whatever he would i like to have mo do; that I will make it j the rule of my life to pray and read | the Bible every day and to support my own church in every way, especially by attending all her regular Sunday and | midweek services, unless prevented by j some reason which I can conscientious- i ly give to my Saviour.” Do all the : young people read the Bible every day and conscientiously try to attend the | midweek church services? Are they simply perjuring themselves to God with their lips? Are they trying, con scientiously trying, to live up to the teachings of the beautiful motto, “It is better to be than to seem?” Remember, the perjurers of my text were destroy ed because they were making a false statement to the church. Many and many church members who deliberate ly at the church altars continue to lie to God and continue to break the prom ises which they are making Sunday after Sunday must answer to find for their sins as Ananias and Sapphira had to answer. A SuTKostion. Thus, my friends, the whole trend of this sermon is to prove that— Words arc mighty, words are living Serpents with their venomous stings, Or bright angels crowding round us, With heaven’s light upon their wings. It is to prove that every word we utter, whether true or false, that word shall never die. It shall at last meet us at the judgment seat of God and make us explain why we ever let t it come forth from our lips. It is to prove that God does not have one lan guage for the week day and another for Sunday. The Paphlagonian pigeons were said to have had two hearts, but uo human mortal can have two hearts. A man cannot have one honest tongue with which he speaks to God and an other false tongue with which he talks to his fellow men. The Bible distinctly and emphatically states that Chris tians must come forth out of the sin ful world and separate themselves from it. In no way can this be done better than by speaking the Christian Over-Work Weakens Your Kidneys. Unhealthy Kidneys Make Impure Blood. All the b-coa in your body passes through your kidniys or.ee every three minutes. 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 truuble. Kidney Toubla^auses quick or unsteady heart beats, 'md makes one feel as though they had heart trouble, because the heart is over-working 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 are sick you can make no mistake by first doctoring your kidneys. The mild and the extraordinary effect of Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, the great kidney remedy is soon realized, it stands the highest for its wor\de”fol<juies of the most distressing cases and is sold on its merits by all druggists in fifty- cent and one-dollar siz-j es. You may have a sample bcitie by mail Home of Swamp-Root, free, also pamphlet telling you how to find out if you have kidney or bladder trouble. Mention this paper when writing Dr. Kilmer 8t Co., Binghamton. N. Y. KW DISEASES arc the most fatal of all dis eases. FOLEY’S ™ eiI8E 111 Suarantsod Rsmedf or money refunded. Contains remedies recognized by emi nent physicians as the best for Kidney and Bladder troubles. PPJCH 50c, ac-d $1.00. Sour Stomach language of straightforward truth. Are No tite> , oss of st th> nervou# . wo ready tojgg that truth wherever nesS( headache, constipation, bad breaffT it may be i general debility, sour risings, and catarrh of But th' one little suggestion the stomach are all due to indigestion. Kodol L wq'I Y oake before I close, cures Indigestion. This new discovery repro- Rerf— \ ./hr. “j. iih is not always told sents the natural Juices of digestion as they with the lips. It can also be spoken e , xist * n a healthy stomach, combined with man’s life and thereby make yourself a party in the crime. Never allow your imperfect memory to transmit what idle gossipers and scandal mon gers may revel in. A fatal lie. like* a wolf in sheep’s clothing, sometimes at tempts to robe itself in the garments of sincerity. But by the execution of the two falsifiers of my text we know that God will condemn us when we repeat an evil report against our neighbors unless we positively and without any peradventure know that what we say is true. I’ureutnl DiNhoneNty. Falsehoods in the parental world: We would have broadened this head- i ing and called it “falsehoods in thej domestic world” but for one reason.! When a husband deceives his wife and | a wife her husband they do it deliber ately and preuieditatodly. They do it with their eyes wide open, and they | fully realize the enormity of their sins ; and toward what destrilctive rocks j they are heading. But. though a father never tells a falsehood to his marital! companion without forethought, that; parent may thoughtlessly fall into the i habit of deceiving his children. They ' are so young. He thinks they do not! remember and do not understand. Tbe 1 same law applies to the wife as well as to the husband. The mother some day, i wearied by the perpetual racket, says j to her ehild, “Now. Harry, if you will | go to lied this afternoon and take a 1 nice long nap I will take you out for a | ride this evening.” Tin* child goes to bed without a murmur. When evening comes the mother wishes to do some- j thing else. The ride is positioned. What is the result? 81ie deliberately 1 breaks her promise. She falsifies be- : cause she does not think it necessary to | bo honest with her child. The father comes to the side of the invalid’s crib and says, “Now, my son. if you are patient and good and will take your medicines as you ought, when you get well I will give you a bicycle or a watch or a printing press or a scroll saw.” The l>oy thinks and dreams about that coming present. | But when the child gets well the bills begin to come in. The doctor’s bill and the druggist’s bill and the trained nurse’s bill stagger the father. He neglects his promise, or he Buys: “1 cannot afford that bicycle now. You must wait, my son; you must wait awhile.” That night the mother says to her husband: “Husband, do you think It is right not to give the boy his present? Remember, you promised him.” “Oh,” says the father, “he is only a chikl ami will sooiii forget it." Will he forget your promise? Never, man. never! A child’s mind and heart are like the rolls of a phonographic in strument. Every time you speak into a child’s ears the roll of memory re ceives an •indentation. After awhile your human voice may be still, but these memory rolls will speak forth , the records of your broken promises, i I tell you candidly I would sooner He to any being on ynrth than to one of my own children. If I He to them I not only destroy myself, like Ananias the greatest known tonic and reconstructiva properties. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure does not only cure indigestion and dyspepsia, but this famous remedy cures all stomach troubles hy cleansing, purifying, sweetening and next sermon lie intended to strengthening the mucous membranes lining Beware, O man, that when the stomach. h Mr. S. S. Ball, of Ravenswood. W. Va., says:— 1 was troubled with sour stomach for twenty years. Kodol cured me and we are now using It In mlh for baby.” Kodol Digests What You Eat. Bottles only. $1.00 Size holding 2% times ths trial size, which sells for 50 cents. •repared by r C. DeWITT A CO., CHICAGO by the hand and the foot. The last words my father ever wrote in his study were these, “The Language of Action.” They were to be tbe caption of the write. you attempt to speak in this “language of action” you shall not only have an honest tongue, but a truthful hand and a truthful smile, a truthful shrug of the shoulders, a truthful foot and also, very imperatively, a truthful silence. There is a time to speak. There is also a time to keep still. But if a man keeps still when he ought to speak then silence itself may speak in the thunderous tones of the 'loudest af firmatives or of the loudest negatives. 7 GUARAN- ?/ TEED BY A firmatives or of the loudest negatives, « BANK Lot your life in all its parts bo “yea. 353,0*^0 Raiirwd f i yea,” and “nay, nay.” Some insects ; ^ 7 fhee C BANK DEPOSIT have a thousand eyes. The human be ing by the “language of action” may have a thousand tongues. These wor ship either at the altar of truth or at the satanic shrine of endless falsities. [Copyright, 19)3, by Louis Klopach.] ora Paid. 500 Our:. • Offered. B^ardatCost. Write Quick GEORGIA-ALABAUA BUSINESS COLLEGE.Macon.Ga. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure Digests what you eata GOLLEGEOFCHARLESTON CHARLESTON S. C. IlSTH YEAR BEGINS SEPTEMBER 25. Singing lull* n Phonograph. “Wlion n singer is up before an audi ence he or she can tell whether the effect of the voice is pleasing or not by watching the countenances of ’the lis teners,” says Thomas A. Edison in Popular Meihanics. “When, however, , ~ . • „ one sings Into a dead Instrument, like , Letters, Science, Engineering. One the phonograph, without the slightest Scholarship to each Count} o . out 1 ar- recognition as to whether the voice is Ga(Tne bv ; Count v Superintendent of Ed- properly tuned and pitched, the singer ucalio „ ai j,i j u dg e of Probate on July 10. becomes rather nervous. I know some Tuition £]o. Board and furnished room very capable singers who can sing in Dormitory, $10 per month. All can- splendidly before an audience, but | didates for admission are permitted to when it comes to getting their voice | compete for Boyce Scholarships, which into the phonograph they are dumb. 1 * pay 5100 a year. For catalogue, have brought people of great note out to the works and paid them handsome ly for their vocal efforts only to find when I came to reproduce these at tempts on the phonograph that the rec ords were utterly worthless.” Address HARRISON RANDOLPH, President. Summons for Debt. To Sam Frazier: Complaint having |been made unto me 1 by I). R.JBird that you are indebted to him fane of Frencli Grip. in the sum of twenty-eight dollars and Paris now boasts a “man with steel seventy-nine cents ($28.yqj'on account for bands.” Admitted to a hospital the goods, wares and merchandise sold and other day at ids own request, he was delivered you at your special instance examined bv a student and pronounced an< f rc< i uest at Blacksburg, S. C., tT? 1 ' 1 >solutely well. He thereupon J anuai '' ^ to to bo absolutely well. He thereupon seized the student’s hand and squeezed it till lie literally crushed the fingers to show his appreciation of the welcome Intelligence. On being removed to a police station amount you contracted and agreed to pay, but now refuse payment. This is, therefore, to require you to ap pear before me, in tny office in Blacks burg, S. C., within 20 days from the service of this summons, to answer to he broke a thick log of wood in two, the said Complaint, or judgment will be bent a pair of pinchers with his fingers K* ven against you by default. Dated Blacksburg, S. C., Aug. 6th. A. and burst a rope wound ten times 1 round a barrel. One would hardly blame the acquaintance of this man if ho reverted to the savage greeting of rubbing noses. I). 1903. B. J. Gold, (L. S.) • Magistrate. IAV>r Locomotive IIcndllKhtN. A recent improvement In railroad lo comotive headlights is to send a beam af light vertically from the locomotive, ns well ns straight ahead. The column of light rising vertically from the loco motive can he seen from a great dis tnnee, even though a hill should inter vene to hide the ordinary headlight and dull ilie sound of the whistle. The searchlight effect used aboard ships is thus 10 some extent utilized. An ap preaching locomotive with this device always signals its coming with a “pil lar of fire" by night, producing an im pressive as well us useful effect Building and Plastering Lime Coal, and Plaster ll tlr Plaster Paris Shingles, Portland (Jen: eat Dynamite, Blasting Powder. and Dynamite G-vw •V' or Limestone Springs Lime Worts CARROLL a CO.. L* <i. Telephone • '.u 9 r r y J : M i:/