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a'.!*’? _ aaaa i t'-iv-.oa NmI - . , Women as Well as Men Are Made Miserable by Kidney Trouble. i- Kidney trouble preys upon the mind, dis courages and lessens ambition; beauty, vigor and cheerfulness soon disappear v/hen the kid neys are out of order cr diseased. Jr - Kidney trouble has become so prevalent "'jj that it is not uncommon :/ for a child to be born afflicted with weak kid- h -T* neys. If the child urin- ates too often, if the urine scalds the flesh or if, when the child reaches an age when it should be able to control the passage, it is yet afflicted with t>ed-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. ryon By Rev. Frank DeWitt Talmase, D.D. X Los Anueles, Cal., Jan. 29.—Frbui an incidental reference to an ancient ori ental marriage custom the preacher i . this sermon draws lessons applicable to modern life. The text is I’salm xlv. i Prussia. T lift before rour eyes the | beautiful diamonds and pearls which i the Ilohemtollern queens have worn for 1 t onera; ms. T1 a I s. ; to you, “When the eldest d:;uu!ner of oueon Victoria ! the ( mi fried she were t’nes you answer? “her we Ulina made of very •own Prince Frederick, ■ perns.” What would Ah." you would reply, dress must have been expensive material to have been a; piMpriute f r such adorn ments as those." Suppose I should tell you that when the noted German ar chaeologist Dr.Schliemanu made his ex plorations under ancient Troy he found there the costliest of feminine and masculine adornments. There were waistbands of gold, earrings of gold, bracelets of gold, headbands of gold, tiaras of precious stones, finger rings woman was made whole from that hour.” We have read how the ancient devotees used to travel many miles tr. be cured of their physical pains at ti. : tomb of St. Ann do Beaupro. or at the “healing spring” of Lourdes, or by the flowing robes of St. Anthony causes of thei • presen ation.” i.'erod- Otus. the “lather of history,” nearly St. Patrick or St. Bernard, but never j non yean before « In st was crucified, at the Egyptians always and of his bride, the daughter of a Women as well as men are made mis- queen, and the garments of her. many erable with kidney and bladder trouble, bridesmaids are rustling. Royal jew- 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 *ample bottle by mail ree, also pamphlet tell- nome of Swamp-Root. ng all about it, including many of the ■ • * . !__• | s. -All thy garments smell of myrrh j of gold. “Ah.” you say. “if the ancient and aloes and cassia out of the Ivory | inhabitants of 1 roy bad such rich palaces” I waistbands as these, truly the ancient V, . , .... , „ , . . m dresses and robes must have been of 1 he marriage bells are chiming. The ; . . , , , ,, », , . , I the most expensive materials. No won- glorious robes of a kingly bridegroom j d( . r tlion tliat Af:r ippina. wife of Em peror Claudius, had a robe made en tirely of gold. No wonder, then, Dari us, king of the Persians, had a golden els are flushing. The most skillful of musicians are playing. And as the wedding march sounds forth the mar riage procession is approaching the king's throne room over boulevards of gold. The numberless inhabitants of the metropolis of the universe, with housands of testimonial “letters' received its walls of jasper and Its gates of 1 . ro i? su !Jf re - cure d. In writing Dr. Kilmer j )e . ir j au j its palaces of spotless ivory, • t Co., Binghamton, N; Y., be sure and ‘ , . * „ , . 1 ... . | Motion this paper. are makin S the welkin ring with halle- , j luiahs of never ending joy. The ban- ~ ~ | quoting house is prepared with the Don t make any mistake, but re- ,, member the name, Swamp-Root, Dr. weddlns SUpper for the comin « Kuests ' Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, and the ad- for the Divlue Bridegroom of my text dress, Binghamton, N. Y., on every is bringing his queenly bride to her bottle. place at bis side, over which bangs the banner that his hands have placed there, the banner of love. Never on earth nor in heaven lias been seen and i never shall be witnessed a wedding procession like unto this. Gorgeous ness infinite, wealth and power unlim ited, splendor and magnificence pass- mantle with jeweled clasps and with two great golden war hawks woven in to the texture. No wonder that among the royal wardrobes of Herod the Great was found a garment made en tirely of silver threads and that Pliny the younger wrote of a Roman lady who had a dress made up entirely of precious pearls. If the adornments of the apparel of the ancients were so ex pensive, we can understand why Solou and Pythagoras and Cato and Fan nins and Didius by “sumptuary laws” tried to restrict extravagance in dress. An Oriental Description. Now, what gold and silver and pre cious stones in dress mean to the west ern mind myrrh and aloes and cassia in a sense mean to the oriental miud. As I would say to you, “Her dress was sparkling with jewels,” the oriental, to depict sumptuousness and expensive ness of apparel, would say, “His gar ments were aromatic with myrrh and aloes and cassia.” Myrrh was oqp of Thedford’s Black-Draught comes nearer regulating the entire system and keeping the body in health than any other medicine made. It is always ready in any emergency to treat ailments that are frequent in any family, such as indigestion, biliousness, colds, diarrhoea, and stomach aches. Thedford's Black-Draught is the standard, never-failing remedy for stomach, bowel, livrr and kidney troubles. It is a cure for the domes tic ills which so frequently summon the doctor. It is as good for children as it is for grown persons. A dose of this medicine every day will soon cure the most obstinate case or dys pepsia or constipation, and when taken as directed brings quick relief. Danvu.lk, III., Dec. 23,18C2. Thedford’s lilnck-DrauRht has boon our family doctor for. five years and wo want no other. When any of us fool badly wo take a dose and aro all rmlit In twelve hours. Wo have spent lots of money for ‘doctor bills, but pot aiontt Just ns well with Black-Draught. 1RA BADKU. Ask your dealer for a pnekafto of Thedford’s Black-Draugl'.t and if he docs not keep it scud 2jc. to The Chatta nooga Medicine Co., Chattanooga, Tcnn. and a package will be mailed to you. mg all understanding, will there be ., . - . „ r , ’ the treasures of the east. When the manifested ou every hand. I . . , ... . , . ,, . . , wise men came to bow at the manger, Earth has beheld some wonderful wedding pageants. When the present Emperor William of Germany was did tomb or fabled water or fiow- ing garments of dead saints hive such curative qualities, spiritual or physical, us will have the wedding garments of Jesus Christ. Tliolr llenlinur Vlrtne*. How do I know this? The symbols of the myrrh and the aloes and the cas sia teach it. They were all used medic inally. “The myrrh, as is well known,” writes an authority, "was celebrated for its use in medicines. The ancients prepared a wine of myrrh and also an oil of myrrh. It was found as an in gredient in many of the celebrated com pound medicines.” “Myrrh is especial ly of great use.” says another author, “along with uloetic medicines and com pounds of iron.’^The medicinal quality of aloes is defined in every dictionary, and cassia was also used as a drug by the ancients.' Thus when we come in touch with Christ’s wedding garments we know* that they are going to heal all of our diseases and assuage all our pains and he the balm which will, take away every heartache. In Goethe’s “Faust” we are taught that the royal robes of God shall appeal to us mostly by sight and not by touch. But I would change the wording of the master poet of Germany, as I describe the healing qualities of Christ’s wedding garments, as follows: Here at the roaring loom of time I ply ••Ye! " answered the ruler of the Jews, Fraud Exposed. “they will If v >u will examine the A few counterfeiters have ately UHJ ; _ thrtUHrtnds of been making and trying to sell Imi- mumtnles preserved for I . ;<tk , ng of I)r . King's New Discovery years In C • I.u:.p ' t'>in > . , Consumption, Coughs and Colds, find tint i' ’‘-e ; Nvero 1< ‘ u *“‘ ad other medicines, thereby defraud ing the public. This is to warn you to are of such people, who seek to p oflt, through stealing the reputation o. .emedioB which have been success- e bodies of ibcir dead with | fu.lv curing disease for over .13 years. “Tbev then fill the body ' ire protection, to you. is our name n the wrapper. Look for it, on all Dr. King’s, or Bucklen’s remedies, as all others are mere imitations. H. E. BUCKLEN Az CO., Chicago, 111., and TVinsdor, Canada. records preserve these spin with powder of myrrh and aloes and cassia and other perfumes, exeept 'bus we find by these fraukince -e. ' ' two statement (hat the wedding gar ments of Christ not only have a cura tive, but also a preservative, quality. That means, carrying the figure up to its aeme of symbol, that the tVedding garments of Christ ivlll never fade or grow old GarmentN Will Never Fade. No, they will never become yellow and worn, as are some of the bridal dresses; that were worn many years ago. They will never be put aside as useless. The wedding songs that we shall sing at the marriage of the Lamb shall never have an end. The raptur ous joy with which we greet our dear ones on the other side of the Jordan shall never grow monotonous. The loving kiss which the Divine Bride groom places upon the lips of his bride shflU never become cold and indiffer ent. The myrrh and the aloes and cas sia lhall preserve and increase joy, even as the wedding garment of Christ shall halt and cure and kill sorrows. Oh, yes, these wedding robes of Christ are to he aromatic robes, symbolical of never ending peace. The ever Increas ing joy of earth shall roll and swell what expensive presents did they bring? Gold and frankincense and myrrh. These oriental sages would not married to the beautiful Princess An- , lmve 0 qercd to a king a present of WK WANT AU. INTBKUTBD IN MACHINERY to lunra our namr •■roma turn DURING 1908 Writ* us stating what kind of ftlAOHINKRY you USO Of wMl (••tall, and wo will mall you Free of All Cost A MAM080US AND USBSOC POCKET DIARY AND ATLAS . oa a umaa Commercial Calendar (Hbbes Machinery Company, COLUMBIA, & a A OVOOK OF MORIS SOWOR MO . prcasta vo aa olosbd out so SPECIAL PRICES gusta Victoria the representatives of all the civilized governments of the earth were there. Among Berlin’s guests at that time were the king and queen of Saxony, the Grand Duke Alexis of Russia, Crown Prince Ru dolph of Austria, the crown prince of Sweden, the present king of England, the lute Duke of Aosta of Italy and scores of other notables. The young bridegroom came from Potsdam at the bead of his gigantic foot guards to meet his bride. On the day of the cer- emony the homes and the stores and the .public buildings were decorated. When the nuptial vows were taken the cheers of the people who crowded the streets about the royal palaces echoed the thirty-six salvos of artillery which thundered the news to the world that Prince William and Princess Augusta Victoria were one. When Napoleon III. in 1S.33 rode to the Cathedral of Notre .Dame to be united in marriage with Eugenie, the most beautiful woman in Europe, the progress was one continuous ovation. Seated In the wonderful''glass coach that had been built for the coronation of his illustrious uncle, the emperor passed through long lines of his eu- | thusiastic subjects, who rent the air j i with their vives. When the young j queen of England became the bride of j Prince Albert In the royal chapel of St. James nothing that the money, the j wealth and the love of a nation could 1 do to make the wedding ceremony im pressive and joyous was left undone. Memorable Spectacle*. uamiK iuuiu ui lime x jjiji ; . And weave for God the garment thou and continue to increase through all feel’st him by. the coming ages. “Hosanna, blessed is Pain, sickness, suffering, pain of the ! the king of Israel that cometh In the head, pain in the heart, all to disap- name of the Lord! Hosanna!” pear before the touch of Christ’s wed- From whence come these airs laden ding robes. Ob, think of the blessed with odor of the myrrh and the aloes rapture of such a wedding ceremony nnd the cassia of Christ’s wedding gar- with the Divine Bridegroom! I remem- ments? They come from the “Ivory her some years ago 1 was called to of- palaces of heaven.” Mark you well my ficiate at the saddest wedding of my answer. Not from one ivory palace, but life. A ysung woman was dying. Even from many. That means that when we then the summons of death was pound- a3 P ar ^ °f the church are to be united ing at her bedroom door. But before to Christ we are going to keep our own she left earth she wanted as a bride to I individualities. Had my text said, “In Girls catch love affairs just the way children do' the whooping cough. When he Is a drinking man it is a sign his wife thinks his health needs itS> 'f Notice is hereby given that the health of the people of this county Is in imminent danger and must be takeu care of. It has been decidedrthat 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 More- hound, Mullein and Tar. Only 25c a bottle. At all druggists. Women seem to thli k the way to show men how easy a time they have running their business is to tell them all the troubles about running the house when they come home. A Guaranteed Cure for Piles. Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protrud ing Piles. Druggists refund money If PAZO OINTMENT falls 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. No matter w r hat happens to a girl, you can make her feel better about it by telling her it will not spoil her beauty. myrrh unless It had been of great value. Dr. Kltto tells us this: “Myrrh was offered in presents, as natural products were iu those days, because such as were procured from distant countries were very rare. In the same way we often hear of a rare animal or bird being presented to royalty In the present day.” “The aloes of Cochin China,” wrote Dr. Faussett, “are worth their weight in gold.” The value of cassia also was enormous. It was used, as Dr. McClintock in forms us, as an ingredient in the cost liest unguents. When the psalmist tells us that Christ’s wedding garments smell of myrrh and aloes and cassia we know that he means us to understand how precious they will be. Let us consider what makes them precious. They are the glory of our Lord. He pill wear them iu joy and gratitude for the sacrifices his people have made In his cause. They are go ing to cost all the moneys we give to our churches and to our reformatory institutions. We must give this money for Christ’s robes. He bids us give. They are going to cost all the moneys we send to foreign missions. “Go teach all men” is the Bible command. Not only have they cost money, but blood. They are going to cost all the blood of the martyrs which has been shed in the past. Ah. now* the ex pense of those wedding robes is rolling up. If the dead body of a common la borer slain by au express train in New York state is worth !?.">,000, how much must have been wortli the martyred Memorable iu the annals of the world i,io<xl of a Paul, a Peter, a Stephen, a are such spectacles, In which all that i polycarp, a Justin Martyr, a Savona- Uuman ingenuity could conceive has rola, a Ridley, an Elphege, a Gileyu de clasp the hand of the lover by her side. We silently entered the sick room. The breathing was heavy and low, but the eye of the sufferer was bright and happy. A strong, young man stood by the side of the sickbed. The nuptial vows were spoken. The young bridegroom could give to the bride his love, -but he could not give to her health. The words “till death do you part” never had such solemnity for me as at that service. Even then death was saying to the couple being the ivory temple of heaven,” I might have had my doubts abqut it, but there is no doubt here. Just as ^ou and I, perhaps, have been married in our own homes surrounded by our fathers and mothers and brothers and Sister and dear friends, so in that “ivory palace of heaven” we are going to have a “home wedding.” Yes, they are all go ing to be there to meet us, just as they were when here. That little curly head ed daughter who slipped out of your embrace long years ago will be there, w*ed: “You must part. You must part I as sh® was when here. That dear at once. I am death, and I am coming i mother who lived for you and died to court your bride.” But at the hea^- ! ^ or y° u > 8 ^ e will be there. Not in a enly marriage of the Divine Bride- “celostiM temple,” but in a “celestial groom there shall be no pain on any home’ the ivory palaces! Do you not face, no heartache in any breast, no see kow near an( l familiar are the “old hacking cough, no tearful eye. The homesteads of heaven” glistening un garments that smell of the myrrh and der the celestial sun? White they are. the aloes and the cassia are curative are the same kind of gospel robes. They are wedding garments firesides about which w*e have gathered scented witli myrrh, n medicine, and j u P° n eart h-| he< n done to render the nuptials of the rulers of nations scenes of overwhelm ing magnificence. But the culmination Muler. a John Rogers, a Lawrence San ders, a John Harper, a Breboeuf, a Lal- lermand and of the thousands and tho iWI JJ’* Risers Tho ~ rttlc d-'H*' l:;:s yet to come—not here, but in that tens of thousands of men and women glorious realm in which the Lord of slain by sword and spear and battle- ax or burned at tho stake and tortured with untold agonies in many “cham bers of horrors!” God alone can know how the value of Christ’s wedding gar ments Is increasing. The Supreme Coat. But the supreme element in the cost of those wedding garments Is the blood of Christ himself. It was by his own suffering and death that he won the right to wear them. Do you wonder that Isaiah when In prophetic vision he sees these wedding robes describes them by their color-the color of the bloody sacrifice? “Who Is this,” cried he, “that cometh from Edom with dyed Is it Right? Hosts has set his throne. The mar riage of the Lamb will be the grandest and most glorious of all unions, when Christ takes to himself his church, which lie has redeemed with his pre cious blood, “a glorious church, not having spot or wrinkle or any such thing, holy and without blemish.” Human Imagination falls to conceive of a spectacle so glorious. Let us in stead of dwelling ou the marvelous .scene take but one detail of its beauty, the wonderful garments with which the Divine Bridegroom is to be robed on that glorious occasion. The psalm ist mentions them In the words of my text. They are wedding robes that have the aroma of myrrh and aloes 1 and cassia. Lot us try to describe them and to learn a few practical gospel les sons from them. The royal robes of the Divine Bride- with aloes, a medicine, and with cas sia, a medicine. A Joy In Suffering. But have the royal robes of Christ no higher purpose than the mere preven tion of pain or of heartaches? If that be all the efficacy of these wedding "garments of the Divine Bridegroom, then I say let me have my pain and heartaches. There ’s sometimes' a joy in suffering. There is sometimes a peace in pain. As Tennyson writes. “It is better to have loved and lost than never to have loved at all.” That wed ding ring upon your hand—would you wish never to have had it placed there? It may be many years ago since the hand that put it upon your finger was laid in the grave. Would you like to blot out all the memories you have had with that earthly life? “Oh, no,” you answer. “No, no! My joy today is In living in the beautiful balls of memo ry and in thinking over again all the happy days we spent together. I would sooner have had a dear husband as he was and have had him tfiken away than never to have known what the companionship of such a husband But, Many Ir&iy Palace*. though there may be many “ivory palaces” in heaven odorous with the myrrh and the aloes and the cassia. I fear that some of us who are invited to be at the wedding ceremony may not be present. It is one thing to get an invitation to the marriage ceremony; it Is another to he there. Shall we at this moment say to our Divine Bride groom: “Jesus, thou Prince, we will not love thee; we will not unite with thee; we shall not live with thee iu an ivory palace of heaven since Ave have not lived with thee on earth.” Shall It be that all our dear ones who have gone beyond, who are waiting to listen to our nuptial vows with Christ iu the ivory palace of heaven,shall have to wait for us in vain? Supposing you refuse to meet tho Divine Bridegroom at the marriage al tar of heaven, what will Jesus do? What will your loved ones, your wife and mother and father and little child, who have gone beyond—what will they all do? Supposing, when you were about to be married, your flnancee had refused to appear. What would you i have done? “Oh,” you say, “that was A Njqht Alarm. Worse than an alarm of fire at night is the brassy cough of croup, which sounds like the children’s death knell and it means death unless something is done quickly. Foley’s Honty and Tar never fails to give instant re lief and quickly cures the woijst forms of croup. Mrs. P. L. Cordier, of Man- nington, Ky„ writes: “My three year old girl had a sevens case of croup; the doctor said she could not live. I got a bottle of Foley’s Honey and Tar, the first dose gave quick relief and saved her life.” Refuse substitutes. Sold by Cherokee Drug Co. ^ A man can’t be too careful not to imagine his wife will stand from him what others will. Winter coughs are apt to result fn consumption If neglected. They can be soon broken up by using Foley’s Honey and Tar. Sold by Cherokee Drug Co. Tho harder a person tries to tell the truth the easier a little lie looks that would settle ft. To Cure a Cold in One Day take LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE Tablets. All druggists refund the money if It falls to cure. E. W. Grove’e signature is on each box. 25c. BANNER 8A LVE the most heeling salve in the world. WANTED! Alfyoui clothes that need brightening up. bring them to us. We will make them look fresh and new. All work done by expert tailors. See us and join our pressing club. W. H. ROBIISOI, Tailor. Over W. U. Telegraph Office. Phone No. 43. meant to a wife.” If you have au in- I 7“'" “.VT' c. 7' ”, * " "T not to have met me there.” Can it be, O would be bride of Christ, that you love Jesus any less than your loved one loved you? ^ . . "Lend on, Saviour! Lead on! Even than a hibernating creature or a log or I now we hear the Aveddi chlme8 a stoue Better my thinking mind with ; rlnff1np for tbe n tials in the ivorv pain than contlnua unconsciousness | ^ of heayen without pain.” Veil, then, the wed curable physical pain, would you have the physician give to you an opiate to deaden your sensibilities and your mind for years to come? “Oh, no.” you answer, “then I would be nothing more 1 ding robes of Christ must do n^ore for us than merely alleviate suffering else we would want none of them. I would garments from Bozrah-this that is n< * ^ t( > “j* « thousand years on ;lorious iu his apparel? Wherefore earth if to do It I would have to endure _x x. , xu. the mere animal existence of an Austra- Is it right that a property-owner . should lose $4.20 to let a dealer make Krooin win ,>e tho ul0S t expensive of 50 cents? A dealer makes 50 cents a ^ garments. Costly was the wedding more on fourteen gallons of ready- apparel of Louis XIV., which he wore art thou red In thine apparel and thy garments like him that treadeth in the wine vat?” .\h, my friends, I am glad today we can talk about the royal crlm- j son and not the royal purple of Christ’s wedding garments. 1 am glad that The royal robes of Christ even in heaven, wheu looking upon the us a positive assurance that I ^l-i a x-ayv sv «* <1# TAt I MA lian aborigine, even thou ;h then I | might not know physical or mental suf fering. # Thus I come to the climax of my for-use paint, at $1.50 per gallon, than when he was married to Marla There- : of Jesus wTslnlT'not'be ttie marriage ceremony of tbe Dlvlae our agent docs on eight gallons of L. sa of Spain; of ITince Ferdinand when a ii OW od for one moment to forget the Rrktegroom nU( i 0 f the church, his enormous cost iu money and blood of * 8 to be a beginning of never the marriage robes In which Christ will J°y> I,ot H'® mere end of sor- be clad as tho Bridegroom when he row or l )a * u or suffering or death, takes .the church as his bride In eter- How Ion*, oh. Heavenly Bridegroom, How long dost thou delay? And yet hew few nre grieving That thou dost absent stay! Thy very bride her portion And calling hath forgot And seeks for ease and pleasure Where thou, her Lord, art not. Awake, ye slumbering virgins! Send forth the solemn cry. Let all the snints repeat it — The Bridegroom draweth nigh. Let all our lumps he burning, Our loins well girded be, Each eeger hoert erpectlng With joy thy face to see. [Copyright. 1905. by Louis Klopsch.] & M. paint and six gallons of linseed he sto-xl by tho side of his bride, Isa- oil, which makes fourteen gallons of beita of ('ast’le; of the dauphin of the best paint in the world, at $1.20 F| . a uee, who. as Prince Francis, mar- per gaUon; the property-owner loues rUs , thp beailtiful Mary queen of It only requires 1 gallons of L. & ’ of I ^"7° r * lcho ' a » lI ” who in M. and 1 gallons linseed oil to paint K» v ® « n ‘ 1 han(1 ln Iaar - a moderate sized house. riage to the beautiful Princess Alix of Ten Thausand Churches painted Hesse; of Napoleon Bonaparte when with Ixongman & Martinez L. & M. in 1810 he wedded Marie Louise in the Paint. place of the dethroned and exiled Liberal quantity given to churches Josephine. But the robes of the Ueav- when bought from Smith Hardware t>ldy Bridegroom will surpass all these Co Gaffney; Blacksburg Drug Co., in th(>b . valU( , IIoW do we know? Blac sburg. | ,j. bo or iental imagery of the text signi fies it. Fine and beautiful in texture, they are to be perfumed with myrrh md aloes and cassia out of the Ivory uuniceH. By .he adornments of u robe you can r n-in some estimate of its value. Let me take you Into the Berlin palace, ' ere nre guarded tne royal Jewels of C. Eskridge B 4 U Have your HUoktii UIiIiik U iim*. All Smithing, Iron and Wood Work done In first-class style and at reasonable rates (Fortenberrys’ old stand.) ual nuptials. Am I going beyond my right in declaring that Christ’s wed ding robes arc? to be tbe most expensive of garments? Hut. drawing near to the Divine Bride- groom. I find that Christ’s wedding robes have a wonderful curative qual ity. Their touch is like the cool hand upon the fevered brow. Ob, yes, they are more than that. Their touch gives spiritual and physical healing. It Is like the healing power of Christ’s Prove this, you sny. I will. “Ho, Nie- odemus,” I cry, “whither art thou go ing? Friend, why is thy countenance so sad? Why dost thou hug to thy side that great burden of a hundred pouud weight?” At once Nlcodchius, the same NIcodemus who came to Jesus by Slit- I)im-m tlntc Men. Miss Sarah Jackson, living near Dil||- boro, Dearborn county. I ml., is such rt consistent hater of men that she has provided in her will that no man shall have anything to do with her funeral. The driver of the hearse, the pallbear ers and even the persons who fill the grave are to Ite women if the provisions of her will nre carried out. The will night, looks up. and I see that his eyes are filled with tears and his face 8 ®ta aside money for the services neces drawn down by a great sorrow. “I am sary In connection with her burial and going,” says he. “with this hundred stipulates that none but women shall pound weight of myrrh and aloes to he employed lu any capacity. Miss embalm the body of Jesus Christ, who Jackson Is said to have been crossed iu earthly rola? when the border of It was ha8 Just 1,0011 We are going love more than forty years ago and rxrx^,... tnat n i.v th.. for,. to bury the Saviour's body In the tomb not to have spoken to n man since she of Joseph of Arlmathea. I wish his body to be preserved by these spices as long as possible.” “What. NIcode mus, will these spices of myrrlF aud aloes preserve the body of Jesusf pressed Just an instant by the fore finger of the poor woman who had an issue of blood for twelve years. No sooner did her fiesh come In contact with Its folds than immediately “the moved to the little farm on which she lives, all her transactions taking place through a servant, who has been with her many years.—Milwaukee Wiscon sin. 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 Januair, 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 1905. 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. Thlckety (Smith’s store), .Monday, Jan. Kith. 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. ^Jrd. . King’s Creek, Tuesday, Jan. 24th. Antioch (Church), Wednesday, Jan. 25th. Blacksburg, Thursday and Friday, Jan. 20th and 27th. Buffalo (school house), Saturday, Jan. 28th. ( Allens, Monday, Jan. 30th. Grassy Pond, Tuesday, Jan. 31st. All persons failing to make their returns within this Urn'', the law re quires me to add 50 per cent. All males between 21 and 00 years of age except Confederate soldiers and those Incapable of earning a support by be ing maimed or othenglse disabled, are deemed taxable noils. Please let all persons Interested re member the days of my appointments and meet me on those days. Yours very respectfully, W. D. Camp. Auditor. M • * f