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* DO.YOU GET UP WITH A LAME BACK ? Kidney Trouble Makes You Miserable. Almost everybody who reads the news papers is sure to know of the wonderful form of kidney trouble. Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root is not rec ommended for everything but if you have kid ney, iiver or bladder trouble it will be found Just the remedy you need. It has been tested In so many ways, in hospital work, in private practice, among the helpless too poor to pur chase relief and has proved so successful in every case that a special arrangement has been made by which all readers of this paper who have not already tried it, may have a sample bottle sent free by mail, also a bcok telling more about Swamp-Root and how to find out if you have kidney or bladder trouble. When writing mention reading this generous offer in this paper and send your address to Dr. K’^nerScCr Bing- naniton, N. Y The tegula- fifty een. doTarsues are sc.d cy at Swninf-.»uot. ha cri gg'sts. CUBES STOMACH t m \ *HE body gets its life from * food properly digested. Healthy digestion means pure blood for the body, but stomach troubles arise from cartjessnesa in eating and stomach disorders upset the entire system. Improp erly masticated food sours on the stomach, causing distressing pains, belching and nausea. When over-eating is persisted in the stomach becomes weakened and worn out and dyspepsia claims the victim. Thedford’s Black-Draught cures dyspepsia. It frees the stomach and bowels of congested matter and gives the stomach new life. The stomach is quickly invigorated and the natural stimulation results in a good appetite, with the power to thor oughly digest food. You can build up your stomach with this mild and natural remedy. Try Thedford’s Black- Draught today. You can buy a package from your dealer for 25c. If he does not keep it, send the money to The Chattanooga Medicine Co., Chattanooga, Tenn., and a package will M mailed you. THEBFORD’S LBMC&EIAUGHTJ WK WANT ALL INTKHKSTKD IN MACHINERY to navi oun NAiaa oKPona tnkm DURING 1900 Write us stating what kind of MAOHINKRY you use or will lastell. and wa will mall jrou Pres op All Cost A NAM08011B AND USBPUL POCKET DIARY AND ATLAS on a lasob Commercial Calendar Glbbes Machinery Company, Columbia, a a op nossb rowan mat to as okoaao out at SPECIAL PRICES Early Lasers The fantau ? WIxPo oilUw Notice! Don’t forget, call on us when you want something nice in fresh Meats and Country Produce. Our meat cutter has fifteen years ex perience and can cut your meat to suit you C.ive us a trial order and see for yourself. A^ur prices; of r “ - Pork All Steak straight io? lb. loc, l2 l /iC and 15c. favoff. Yours for business, Thank you. Dempsey & Hawkins, Opposite Star Theatre. J. M. Hambright In the Burnett Block, near McGuinn’s Mar ket, makes ami does all kinds of repairing of Shoes on short no tice. Your patronage solicited. Prices rea sonable. Good mate rial used. : : : : All Work Guaranteed. Calm age Sermon By Rev. Frank DeWitt Talmatfe, D. D. Los Angeles, Cal., Jan. 13.—For these times of multiplied and conflicting religious beliefs that vex and confuse the earnest soul the preacher in this sermon supplies the only test whereby the truth or falsehood of any religion is to be discovered. The text is Mat thew v, 14, “Ye are the light of the world.” At no time since the beginning of the world has man been confronted with such a multiplicity of diverse and even conflicting systems of religious belief as now. Yet all of these sys tems appeal with more or less force for his acceptance and support. In the east Mohammedanism, Confucianism, Buddhism and similar beliefs maintain the ancient vigor of their creed in the appeal to human credulity and super stition, while Europe and the western world have their numerous systems of creeds and “cults,” each presenting its claims for man’s belief and allegiance. Thus the great problem presents itself: Are these systems of religious belief and worship really efficacious? Are their dogmas, tenets and creeds, their ways of thinking and living, their so cial, fraternal or religious spirit as or ganizations—are these things what they onght to be or what they claim to be? Are their teachings true? And how may we distinguish beyond all doubt the true from the false? An infallible test is supplied to us by Christ himself by which we are en abled to decide as to the real value of any religious system. He tells us that we may know whether its claims are valid by its effect on the lives of its adherents. "Ye shall know them by their fruits. Do men gather grapes of thorns or figs of thistles? Even so every good tree bringeth forth good fruit, but a corrupt tree bringeth forth evil fruit.” An Illustration of this test is furnish ed by the fakirs of India. The prind- ple*of self denial is commendable, and we admire men who sacrifice their com fort and devote themselves to service for the world. But the principle ceases to be admirable when it produces vol untary squalor and filth such as are ex hibited by the fakirs. It must be a corrupt tree that produces specimens of humanity so debased and disgusting as these men. I have seen these fakirs. They did not seem to me to be men or even wild beasts. They were a lower creation. They seemed to have crawled out of the darkest caverns of an inferno. I have seen them with their matted hair and filthy bodies; I have seen them with uncut finger nails six inches long and twisted about in all shapes; I j have seen them, as John L. Stoddard describes them in one of his lectures: ! “A combination of beggar, fanatic, im- j | postor and spy. In disgusting sur- , 1 roundings resembling a garbage heap, ; a score of these men were seated, en- ! tirely naked, upon a mound of ashes, in which they rolled repeatedly. They even rubbed the dirt all over their bodies, which had been previously j greased in order to retain it. Their ; hair, matted with filth, reached nearly to their waists and was painted yel low. and on this they threw occasion- ! ally handfuls of dust and ashes. A 1 sickening feeling came over me at the sight of this human degradation, espe cially when I remembered that there are in India more than a million of these half crazed mendicants and frauds, who are revered and almost worshiped by multitudes of men and women, who will actually stoop and kiss their feet.” “Are these the fruits of India fakir- ism?” you ask. “Is that the result of the oath of poverty under which some Hindoos worship? Then I want none of it. Away with it. Its fruits are worm eaten and filthily diseased and had.” By the fruits found in the lives of the believers ye must judge the re sult of a creed or system of belief. Not True Wornhlp. Why do you not worship God as do the dancing dervishes of the east? “How do they worship him?” you ask. Instead of entering a little church, as you or I, to kneel in prayer, they begin to move around in a circle. They keep on circling around and around until your brain gets dizzy with looking at them. They dance on^id on, more and more furiously, until aMfr awhile some work themselves into the most violent forms of physical hysteria or in utter bodily exhaustion drop In their tracks in a dead swoon. “Oh,” you say to me, “that is no true worship of God. The holy God does not expect any devotee to make an Imbecile out of himself. Away with the worship of the dancing dervishes!” By the fruits of a creed or a cult, studied in the lives of the men and women who believe in and practice it. you can Judge the truth or the falsi ty of the teachings. By the same criterion according to which we Judge the failures of the false religions the world is to Judge the failure or the elficacy of the gospel of Jesus Christ. The Saviour, in toe words of ray text. Is practically saying: “Men. women. It is to you I look to exhibit the principles of my religion •o the world. My life will be short, :ny teaching will soon be forgotten, lutes* you. my followers, embody it in your lives. The only way in which the world can know the grandeur and puri ty of the truths I have taught must be in the lives you lead. Ye are the light of the world. Ye are my representa tives'upon earth. Ye are the flaming torches to guide sinners to the foot of the cross. Hear me. men! Hear me, women! Hear me. children, who pro fess to bo my disciples! Ye tire the light of the world, by which the world may judge who:her or 11 » my gospel is a savi ig •■ isjiel.'' Ye members of Christi tn cb'.m lies. is it not an over whelming fact that it depends on our lives what is tlaj estimate the world will form of the religion we profess?' What an impressive fact it is Miat men will determine by our lives whether | Christianity is the sustaining, the' transforming power that it claims to 1 be! Christ’s disciples, in the first place, must have a divine light. Their tires must be ignited at the great altars of God’s mercy. They must so live and act that they shall feel God lias par doned and cleansed them from all sin. They must so live and act that other people will feel that spiritual fires are burning within them and that those spiritual tires are cleansing the Impuri ties out of our lives. The greatest puri fier on earth is fire. As we are appoint ed to lead othe:-s to the Christian al tars we must guide them by a flame which is pure, because Christ’s fires have burned and are burning within us. We Need the Divine Flame. Only the divine light can produce the true light of life. “One day the lantern was talking to the candles which stood upon the mantel,” wrote an imagina tive author. “Oh, how much my mas ter thinks of me.” it said. “He has of ten told me it would be impossible for him to go out into the dark nights if I did not go with him to point out the way.” “Aye, aye,” answered a candle, “that may be all true. But your master would sing a different song if it were not for my bright eye in your socket, shining through your windows of glass. Did it never occur to you, O lantern, that you would amount to naught un less my light shone within you and through you?” Christian disciples, does it not occur to you that you are as noth ing and will continue to be as nothing as a divine light unless Christ's light is in you and shines through you? We must have a divine fl .me burning with in us before we can be a divine light to a sinful and a dying world. But. though the divine flame within us is absolutely essential for the send ing forth of a divine light out of our lives, how many of Christ’s professed disciples neglect imparting the holy fires within themselves which are al ways burning at God’s mercy seat! In one of the heathen temples of the east I saw a fire which, the priest told me, had been in existence hundreds of years. Those priests never allow that fire to go out. Have we always kept the divine flame burning within us? By diligent and unceasing prayer, by continual reading of God’s word, by holy communications with God’s saints, by a pure, gentle, true, forgiving spirit, have we always fed the necessary fuel to the fire.-i of our spiritual life? Like Enoch, have we been continually walk ing baud In hand with God? Do not think for one Instant that you can im pose upon the world an earthly flame as a heavenly light. Music For Music's Sake. A musician told me recently that she could Intuitively feel when she was playing whether or not the members of her audience loved music. If there were twenty listeners present and nine teen were merely pretending to be lov ers of harmony,she would play over the heads of those nineteen to the twenti eth, who loved music for music’s sake. So in your life God knows whether your light is a divine flame, and mau also intuitively can separate the earth ly light from the divine. Oh, so called | Christian disciples’before you attempt to lead others to the cross get the di vine fires burning within you at the al tars of your own hearts! Be not like the five foolish virgins with lamps, but with no divine oil for their lamps. Pray, pray, pray! Plead, plead, plead at the altars of mercy for this light! He only can make the spiritual fires burn within you. When the divine fires begin to burn within us, what happens? Their influ ence exerts Itself ail around us. Their power is felt by the people with whom we come in contact. Their quickening rays fall on fields that we know not of and nourish and develop seed that may have been carried from remote sources. Many years ago Mr. Beecher, homesick and lonely, was wandering through an Alpine village, where, to his surprise, he found some of the Ameri can flowers growing in the gardens of the Swiss hamlets far from their na tive soil. When our gospel light be gins to shine it will develop spiritual plants In fields or rocky soil and in mountain ravines, far from the places we ever expect to find them. Spiritual Llirht Needed. Did you ever stop to think that spir itual seeds are a great deal like the common seeds we plant in our gardens? Their development depends not more upon the soil than the sunbeams which kiss them. “What is the matter with my garden?” I ask a neighbor. “I have bought exactly the saine*kind of seed as you. , I have faithfully watered the ground every morning and evening. I have* dug out all my weeds as soon as they poked their green heads above the turface of the earth. Y'et here am I with a few straggling plants looking for all the world as though they were dying from a fatal attack of typhoid in a ’hospital of flowers,’ while you have roses galore and great, sturdy flo ral beauties that are scattering their incense every whither.” “Ah,” answers my neighbor, “you have starved your plants for light. You have not given them the sun’s rays. Make your garden not under the shadow of a wall. Dig It in a place where the first sunbeam which dances over the eastern hills can play hide and seek among your roses. Give them sunlight! Flowers, like veg etables and harvest fields, must Ijave light They must have light 1” All men have their spiritual seeds within them, even the lowest of social outcasts. These seeds may be developed. But what they need is spiritual light. If you are the light of the world, it may be your privilege by the grace of God to quicken them into life. They are dormant now, but when the light im planted in your soul shines upon them they may awake Into vigorous life and bear fruit to the glory of God. What sinful man needs is gospel light, divine light, spiritual light. If this deduction is true, I would be careful how your spiritual light touches that drunkard or that beggar or that woman with a faded shawl who goes down under the gaslight. I would be careful how you speak to that man who cheats you in business and has lied about you. The ancient Romans had a custom of placing a lighted lamp in the coffins of their dead. Duriug the pontificate of Paul III., when the eolfln was dug up containing the body of Tullia, tiie daughter of Cicero, the famous orator, such a lamp was found among her bones. It was a strange idea to give the dead a light on their path beyond the grave. Better far is the Christian hope that the divine light, kindled during life in their souls, will shed its rays on their path to the heavenly haven. A Guiding; Beacon. Our divine Sght is a quickening and transforming light. It is also a guid ing light. It not only calls into spir itual activity those human seeds buried in the quagmires of sin; it guides to Christ those wandering souls which, like a mariner who has lost his reck oning. are drifting toward the rocks of destruction. How many n weary soul tossed in the storm, with hope and courage failing, may fi.id strength and spirit revive as it sees the divine light kindled by the grace of God in your soul shining out clear and true, us the sailor is cheered by the sight of the Diamond shoal light, which signals year in and year out fifteen miles to sea ward off Cape Hatteras, or the Cape Charles fight burns upon the water front of old Virginia, or the Hog island shoal lighthouse burns off Rhode Is land, or the Braddock point lighthouse stands sentinel upon the banks of Lake Ontario! How necessary that the Christian’s light should be always bright and shin ing! How many souls there may be looking to it for guidance through the storms of life! If it failed to burn, those souls might lose their way as, were the Barnegat light snuffed out, some noble ship freighted with precious lives might in the darkness go crashing on the reefs. Near Michigan City I enter a lighthouse established there many years ago by the United States government. I see there an old wom an, over eighty years of age, of the name of Miss Harriet E. Colfax. For forty years she has cared for that teethig guards about them In a legal sense. SiinlM-n him Cure DlMenNe. The sunbeams can cure physical dis ease. The gospel light, if Christian people will only perform their Chris tian duties at the ballot box. will eure governmental disease. The late Dr. Neils Finsen by scientific investigation found that certain microbes would die under certain colored lights. We know that all governmental injustices and so cial crimes and city temptations will disappear under the bright rays which may be flashed from the gospel light. Thus it is every Christian’s duty to see to it that as far as he may be able he shall have a Christian supervisor and a Christian common council and a Christian mayor and a Christian gov ernor aud a Christian congressman and a Christian senator and a Christian president of the United States. If Christian church members will stand shoulder to shoulder at the ballot box the Injustices and crimes and evil temptations which run rampant through our great cities will no longer exist. But I bethink myself as I come to the close of this sermon on "Tran scendent Light” that I have two duties. The one is to the servant of Jesus Christ; the second is to the man and the woman who have not yet been willing to accept the Saviour’s love. The one is to the disciple of the Chris tian light; the second Is to the child of Satan, who is living in the darkness of sin. These are the two classes of my audience. There is no third group, for “he that is not with me is against me, and he that gathereth not with me scattereth abroad.” As I come to this closing part of my sermon I tremble with excitement. I know, as you ought to know, the tremendous results of your decision. Why do I tremble? Because your father, your mother, your wife, your child or the preacher of this morning cannot make you become a “child of light” if you are not willing to do so of your own accord. The gospel light, like that of the sun’s light, with all of its creating, saving power, is the easiest of all great influences to be resisted. The light nings strike everywhere. They cut to the right aud to the left With one blow they can split rocks and wreck homes and dismantle trees. The sun’s heat cannot be ignored, even if one would. When the hot summer months come, all who can do so flee from the cities and hie themselves away to the woods or the seashore. Closed doors and windows make the stifling air only the more oppressive. The poor little children moan and cry. The sick, if they are not taken away to the sea shore or the high mountains, often die. The city parks are crowdM with suf fering humanity. Cannot Eaeape Thander. You cannot escape if you would the sounds of the cannonading of the ele ments when the thunderstorm begins precious light. I say to her: “Come, to growl and to crash. The frightened let us take a night off and go see some gfirl may run to her bedroom an<l<?lose friends. You have been a faithful the windows and draw the shades and servant to our government long enough, j bury her ears in the pillows. The Take just one night to yourself in forty booming discharges of the heavenly years.” “Oh. no,” she would answer, i artilleries send their echoes even “I cannot go. Tonight there might through stone walls. But the sunlight come up a storm. A ship driven before can be overcome so easily that all one the wind might head toward these dan- has to do is to close the eyelids and tie gerous rocks. The captain, standing a bandage over the face, and as a blind upon the bridge, would peer out into mau he will have to grope his way the darkness, saying: ‘Where am I? along the darkness. All one has to do Michigan City lighthouse must be near is to plant the flowers under the shad- at hand. Harriet Colfax has never ows of a wall, and you can see them failed me in the past.’ If I failed him pale and droop and wither and die. tonight, perhaps that captain and all Light may have a creating, a develop- his crew might find a watery grave. I ing, a protecting, a saving influence, cannot go tonight. I must attend to but light will never force its way the light. 1 cannot go tonight.” Be Curefal of Falae Llgrbta. Would you have a simile of Miss Col- through a blocked vestibule or through a thick obstruction which has been erected to keep it out. Thus the gos fax’s answer? As I, a seaman, sail Pe> »g ht wl)1 never enter your heart over the sea of life I find I have been unless you wish It to come. Christ watching certain spiritual lights as said, "I am the light. What is your Lake Ontario captains watch Michigan answer? W ill you accept that light ? City lighthouse. If these spiritual Y ou reject it and live in eternal lights had failed me I know that I darkness? would have been lost. It was my What is your llfe^ to be? What is mother’s prayers, my father’s guld- your death to be? W bat is your eterni- ance; it was certain Christian leaders’ tY 1° b®’ 006 moonlight night upon bauds which led my right. As I was the Hudson river there came the quick dependent upon the spiritual lights of ring of the pilot s bell, warning the en- others I know that others are watching &lneer that danger was ahead. It was your spiritual lights and mine. O a moonlight night. No boat was near, man, O woman, be careful and not! The ship was in midstream, so the en- glve out false lights to your fellow gineer could not tell what the signal Christians. Be careful that you do not say one word which might lead some A Grim Tragedy is daily enacted, in thousands of homos, as Death claims, in each one, another victim of Consumption or Pneumonia. But when Coughs and Folds are properly treated, the tragedy is averted. F. G. Huntley, of Oaklan- don, Ind., writes: “My wife had the consumption, tend three doctors gave her up. Finally she took Dr. King’s New Discovery for Consumption, Coughs and Colds, which cured her, and today she is well and strong.” It kills the germs of all diseases. One dose relieves. Guaranteed at 50c and $1.00 by Cherokee Drug Co. Trial bot tle free. Married women who know how to manage husbands seldom give their plans away. meant. He went at once to the pilot house. There he found the old pilot dy- Stomach Troubles and Constipation. “Chamberlain’s Stomach and Liver Tablets are the best thing for stomach troubles and constipation I have ever sold,” says J. R. Cullman, a druggist of Potterville, Mich. They are easy to take and always give satisfaction. I tell my customers to try them and if not satisfactory to come back and get their money, but have never had a complaint.” For sale by Cherokee Drug Co. When a man has one and sounds the final “t” in valet he seems to think he isn’t getting his money’s worth. Notice. Notice is hereby given that the health of the people of this county Is in imminent danger and must be taken care of. It has been decided that every precaution be taken to prevent prolonged cases of pneumonia, grippe, etc. The best thing to do is to give a good cough mixture as soon as the cough starts. Get Murray’s Hore- hound, Mullein and Tar. Only 25c a bottle. At all druggists. A man who knows enough to make his living is never thought as much of as the genius who can’t. A Guaranteed Cure for Piles. Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protrud ing Piles. Druggists refund money If PAZO OINTMENT fails to cure any case, no matter of how long standing, in 6 to 14 days. First application gives ease and rest. 50c. If your druggist hasn’t it send 50c in stamps and It will be forwarded post-paid by Paris Medicine Co., St. Louis, Mo. Parents are always praying for the salvation of their children and indulg ing them to their ruin. Children Poisoned. Many children are poisoned and made nervous and weak, if not killed outright, by mothers giving them cough syrups containing opiates. Fo ley’s Honey and Tar is a safe and certain remedy for coughs, croup and lung trouble, and is the only promi nent cough medicine that contains no opiates or other poisons. Sold by Cherokee Drug Co. A young man’s idea of an attractive girl is one who doesn’t care for ice cream or oysters. A Life at Stake. If you but knew the splendid merit of Foley’s Honey and Tar you would never be without it. A dose or two will prevent an attack of pneumonia or la grippe. It may save your life. Sold by Cherokee Drug Co. A large portion of our standing armv does a stunt on the street cars durfag the rush hours. To Cure a Cold in One Day take LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE Tablets. All druggists refund the money if it fails to cure. E. W. Grove’s signature is on each box. 25c. one to leave the right course. It was ■ i n S- *^ 8 h® fitted up the prostrate man just a sentence, “I do not believe in the the pilot murmured: “It Is dark. A excitements of revivals,” uttered by has settled upon the river, and I the president of Princeton college, that cannot see. lell the captain it is dark kept Aaron Burr from becoming a an( l l can’t see.” Oh, my friends, is Christian aud a man of God instead of your life 8 close to be shrouded in dark a monster of iniquity. Watch well your mists? Is your “river of death to be lives lest your inconsistency causes i n a spiritual sense like that of the some weak soul to stumble. As Paul Hudson river pilot-in an atmosphere said he would eat no meat while the dark, impenetrably, awfully and eter- world endured if meat caused his nally dark? brother to offend, so do you beware M hen King Philip III. of I ranee, lest your indulgence dim the light called “the Hardy, returned ff° m h 8 which you should be giving. Ye are w ar against the Mo ® r8 and his cou- the light of the world. Ye are the fi”® 8 * over the bey of Tun s, it is said lighthouses, standing sentinels over the Umt h ® brought back in his train h\e rocks of sin upon which many a Chris- coffins. He came back to Pans, na S- tlan craft will be wrecked if your light 1 ^ t h ® deatl bodies bis father h s goes out. Bum brightly. Bum tme. w lf®» bis sou. his brother-in-law and his Ye are a guiding light. brother. Can it be, O God. that after But I find the divine light In man . our f** 61 ® a ^P ai ^ * ™ looks after God’s weaklings In a tem- ? u8 ‘ to + bee d f d ’ « ® ®temally I poral as well as in a spiritual sense. de f d ; 8 P irit f s : the *T ,S d f. ad 0 aU gos ; It strives to lift the iron heel tyran- P e * ,l f ^ nay of these thy dear ° ne9 ’ ny from the prostrate neck of the help- God forbid Open your eyes and your , 1 1 * 4. • . *1 n 1 hearts to him who is the light of the less. It labors to prevent injustice and , .... a , . 11 * 4. *1 - n world.” Today become children of light, crime and evil temptations of all sorts , from walking unchallenged through meaaeugera of Ight and eongnerom in our atreots to ha a menace to the Uvea f, n ? ( “f,, lgl “- ie “ re "" of our hoya and glrla. It aeea that '‘e" 1 ° ( **’ , one class of men shall not be allowed [Copyright. 1S06, by Louia Klopsch ] to quench this fiendish thirst for the blood of another's arterie<5. Darkness 1h the symbol of sin. Light is the sym Artlflelal Cotton. “Artificial cotton lias been produced ^ ^ _ . . - in a small way from cellulose obtained Uol of the gospel The one mlaalou of from l>ark ,. nou o( Ur the goape hght la to develop men for u „, Tl , stl|e Btcord .. Tke Christ. The oilier mission is to burn out sin where\ er found In the light of the gospel we, as Christian men and women, must go forth to plead for Christ with nn*'! in n spiritual sense. With the wl lu -lip of paper at the ballot box wo must place the pro- 1s first crushed inti' a fibrous mass, then subjected to steam pressure In a closed cylinder for ten hours, when a solution of bisulphate of soda Is intro duced and the material kept under pressure for thirty-six hours more." When it comes to a quick parting the fool and his money are a close second to a woman and her secret. BANNER SA LYE the most healing salve in the world. AUDITOR’S NOTICE. To all whom this may concern: The Auditor’s office for Cherokee county at the court house at Gaffney, S. C. will be open from the first day of January, 1905, to 20th day of Febru ary, 1905, for the purpose of receiving returns of all taxable property and road duty for tax for the year 1995. All who wish to do so may make their returns at the office during that time as the office will be kept open for that purpose. Mr. Geo. W. Speer, Magis trate, will take pleasure in taking re turns. And for the convenience of all I will attend the following places at the dates named below: Ravenna (Brown’s store), Friday, Jan. 13th. Webster (Mrs. M. M. Tate’s), Sat urday, Jan. 14th. Thickety (Smith’s store), Monday, Jan. 16th. White Plains (R. C. Lipscomb’s), Tuesday, Jan. 17th. Macedonia, Wednesday, Jan. 18th. Butler’s Thursday, Jan. 19th. Ezells, Friday, Jan. 20th. Maud (Linders’ store), Saturday, Jan. 21st. Cherokee Falls (Factory), Monday, Jan. 23rd. King’s Creek, Tuesday, Jan. 24th. Antioch (Church), Wednesday, Jan. aoth. Blacksburg, Thursday and Friday, Jan. 26th and 27th. Buffalo (school house), Saturday, Jan. 28th. Allens, Monday. Jan. 30th. Grassy Pond, Tuesday, Jan. 31st. All persons 'ailing to make their returns within this time, the law re quires me to add 50 per cent. All males between 21 and 60 years of agi except Confederate soldiers and those incapable of earning a supi>ort by be ing maimed or otherwise disabled, ar - deemed taxable polls. Please let all persons lntere|ted re member the days of my appointments and meet me on those days. Yours very respectfully. W. D. Camp, Auditor.