University of South Carolina Libraries
1 Women as Well as Men Are Made Miserable by Kidney Trouble. tttv ¥ n V Kidney trouble preys upon tlie mind, dls* courages and lessens ambition; beauty, vigor and cheerfu^ess soon disappear when the kid neys are out of order or diseased. Kidney trouble has become so prevalent that it is not uncommon ji, Ij for a child to be born afflicted with weak kid- ‘ neys. If the child urin ates too often, if the urine scalds the flesh or if, when the child reaches an age when it should be able to control the passage, it is yet afflicted with bed-wetting, depend upon it. the cause of the difficulty is kidney trouble, and the first step should be towards the treatment of these important organs. This unpleasant trouble is due to a diseased condition of the kidneys and bladder and not to a habit as most people suppose. Women as well as men are made mis erable w th kidney and bladder trouble, and both need the same great remedy. The mild and the immediate effect of Sm up-Root is soon realized. It is sold by druggists, in fifty- ',ent and one dollar izes. You may haye a ?amp!e bol <* by mail ree, also p.. iphlet tell- Home of swannvRoot. ng all abou it, including many of the housar.do of stimonial letters received I rom sufferers cured. In writing Dr. Kilmer i i Co., Binghamton, N. Y., be sure and } tention this paper. Don’t make any mistake, but re member the name, Swamp-Root, Dr. Kilmer’s Sw; mp-Root, and the ad dress, Binghi mpton, N. Y., on every bottle. a b k b age Sermon By Rev. Frank DeWitt Talmafie, D. D. NOTICE! We want every man and women In the United States interested in the cure of Opium, Whiskey or other drug habits, either for themselves or friends, to have one of Dr. Woolley’s books on these dis eases. Write Dr. 1 M. Woolley, Atlanta, Ga., Box 287, and oi e will be sent you free. Ui-to-Oais Marks! Your fleat on Ice. S v i t., •» • i ■ i *, • 11 j cured Hams with skin taken off, sliced thin, for breakfast, or some nice Pork chop or Pork Steak, or some fine Kansas City Beef, g m l and mellow, or Cher okee Beef. Just as you like. Plenty of Irish Potatoes, Danish Cabbage, Onions and Sets, Country Produce when it can be got. Heavy and Fancy Groceries. Apples, Oranges, Lemons, Beans and Peas, white and colored. Fresh Fish Fridays and Saturdays. Can fill your whole bill at our place. Goods delivered on time. Yours for business, 1U. W. %ioOITIX:V Phone No. 6o. Residence No. 23. Lo . Angeles, Cal., Oct. 1.—In the sto- !<.>• of beautiful Queen Esther, who-e courage and-patriotism saved her race from destrui ion, the preacher finds a noble lesson for the women of today. The text is Esther Iv, Id, “If I perish, I perish." Have you ever read the blood curdling ,-tory of the massacre of St. Bartholo mew V No. Then perhaps you have seen copies of the great masterpieces of the Venetian artist, Tintoretto, and :>! Peter Paul Rubens, entitled “The Massacre of the Innocents.” From these two thrilling pictures you gain •an idea of what that most awful trag edy in Erauce, known as tin* massacre af St. Bartholomew, must have been like. In those pictures you can see the frantic eyes of the mothers watching the murderers of their children com ing nearer and nearer to their prey. You can see some of these mothers on their knees trying t > shield their ba bies with their arms. Or you can see them with their bauds clutching the murderous blades to ward them off from their children, though the keen edge cut their hands to the bone. Or you can see some of these mothers running away in the distance with their babies under their arms. In dra matic contrast to the pleading, praying, frenzied and helpless looks of these agonized mothers you can soo Herod's butchers driving in a sword horo, strik ing down a baity there, ripping open the tender body of a beautiful infant beyond, tossing up a child farther on as a trickster might toss a card and catching it upon the edge of a sharp pointed knife. All these fiendish mur ders were done as nonchalantly and unconcernedly and with as much dia bolical abandon as was shown by the agents of Nana Sahib, who entered the ( awnpur slaughter house during the Indian mutinv IS-7 and with their Host Anything And 1 little of everything is now being shown in my line: All the new'coneeptions and fads . : : ..In The Jewelry Line.. From the cheapest worth having to the .very finest specimens and grades. Re pairing done by an Ex ■ , ert. Thos. H. Westrope, Next to Shuford & LeWaster. MURRAY IRON MIXTURE *Now b the time to take a spring 'tonic. By far the best thing to take is Mnrniy'tQlrou Mix»ur«-. It makes pure blood and gets rid of that tired feeling. At’all drug stores or direct from The Murray Drug Co., Columbia, S. 0. Protect Yourself • • Against lossjbyjaccident.sick- •L:Lu-: .I'M • ' •>' . . im.--- I ness,re, storms.^and'iileave your family comfortablyJ“ fixed” ..• issiKJsa’ atsmmm whendie, by investing! in ' -ft - 7-V, r. .1. ■ an INSURANCE POLICY tr' ‘ ’ V •• * represent the best companies.< • • • D. G. ROSS. knives hacked into pieces the women and children tint;! the murderers liter ally waded In blood. The < rime of Herod. Yes, Uie pictures Tintoretto and Ru bens painted of that massacre send a shudder through every one who looks at them. But, horrible as that tragedy was, it has been eclipsed more than once in the world’s history. Far great er in cruelty and in the number of vic tims was that tragedy conceived by the queen mother ( atlierine de’ Medici and carried out by the order of her royal sou, King Charles IX. of France. Herod, although In* was an inhuman monster and capable of any crime, slew only th • male children of two : ear • and under living in and about Bethelohcm of Judaea, and the number of bis victims must have been compar atively small. On the other hand, be tween twenty and thirty thousand Hu guenots in uue night fell in the massa cre of St. Bartholomew. Old and young, rich and po.>r, unknow n peasant and iiliisttious Admiral Coligny, suck ling babes and gray haired men, wel tered in their life’s blood on that awful nigh:. Then this laughter was not re strieted in its area to the French ‘-api tat. its bloody work spread through the province '. Wi h one Mow the Cath ode dictator. Querni Catherine, tried to destroy all the enemies of the Catholic church forever. No wonder King Charles on account of tins crime died, as (iid King Riel.ord, in the ng >nies of remorse. What the Si. Bartholomew slaughter was to France the intended massacre of the Hebrews was to be to the I’er- sian kingdom of t74 B. C. A corrupt premier of a corrupt king in order to triumph over a Hebrew, Mordee.'ii by name, plotted to exterminate all the Jews who did not return to the Holy Land after tin* captivity was over and when Xehemi.di was allowed to return home to build the Jerusalem walls. The day of the massacre had been set. The couriers 1,1 the king had gone to tin* provinces and carried everywhere the orders for Ihe wholesale luhchery. All thi> executioners’ swords had been • barpened. But Hainan, the prime ndn- i«dcr, schemed without knowing that the beloved queen of King Ahasuerus was a daughter of the despised He brews. When Esther, the queen, heard of w hat the premier, Hainan, was to do by the command of the king she said to her foster father, Mordecai: "I will go unto the king and plead for my peo ple. This, 1 know, is not according to the law, hut I will do all I can to save them.” Then she uttered these dra matic words of my text, “If 1 perish, I Jierish." \ Wonian’N Conranre. I’erhaps some of you have listened to Handel’s wonderful oratorio, called “Esther.” You have marveled at the thrilling and plaintive notes of one of the greatest of all composers. But no touch of Handel can be more over whelming than the simple story of this brave Persian queen as recorded In the Bible. Let me draw for you a few r plain, practical lessons from a part of it. This heroic resolution. In the first place, was made by a woman. This may seem to some a very Insignificant statement to make. But I want to tell you that In the days of Klug Ahasue rus any woman who daml form such a resolution as Queen Esther made was literally taking her life hi her hands. With one act she was defying all the traditions of the centuries In reference to the position of woman. The wife of an eastern monarch was not suffered to be the companion, the (‘o-operator, the sharer, of her hu»- b'!nd’s responsibilities, as your moth er w as of the cares of your father. She w as looked upon ns a mere plaything, a toy, a human doll, a pet puppet, the chief end of whose existence was to humor the whims of her husband. Y.'hen he called she was to come. When he said “Go!” she was to go. But she was not to go or to come un less he give the command. And, fur thermore. in the far east, In the time of Ahasuerus. not only did a husband look upon his wife as a mere play thing, but if be so willed be might even compel her to honor or dishonor be self before the world. She had ab solutely no means to free herself from he tyranny of his will. Read today the tragic history of Queen Yashti. No one can truly study the life of Queen Esther unless he places alongside of her face the beau tiful face of Queen Yashti, who was her predecessor in the royal palace of the Medes and the Persians. The great capital of Shushan, about 200 miles away from Babylon, Is ablaze with lights. All the princes and the governors of the different provinces are being entertained in the royal pal aces. The streets of the city are fes tooned with flags and banners. The bravest warriors of the army of King Ahasuerus have assembled their troops for the magnificent military pageant. The bedrooms where the guests slept seemed to be the sleeping apartments of an Aladdin. The beds wore of solid gold, the tapestries of costliest linens, soft and fragrant in perfumes. The floors were all of the finest mosaic. Every eup was a chal ice and each chalice of especial work- manship, handmade and formed by the lingers of a master designer. Not only that, but every guest for the seven days could do as he willed. The chariots of the royal stables were all his. The most expensive viands of the banquet tables were his. “I Will Xot Come.” The royal entertainment had been go ing on for nearly a week. It reached its great climax on the night before King Aliasuerus and the governors and Mi'' princes were to separate. The chamberlains were there. Louder and louder played the music; more and more hilarious became the sport. Now it was an overturned decanter; again it was a fallen lord, tumbling upon the floor in his drunken stupor. The court iers were drunk; the king was drunk. “And on the seventh day, when the heart of the king was meryy”—what happened? The king turns to his fawning, cringing guests and says: “Now, gentlemen, I will show a sight tlu' like of which you have never seen in the past and you will never see again. I will compel my beautiful queen, Yashti, to come into this ban quet hall and unveil herself before you inebriated men. I will compel my queen to obey me because I am her master. Ho. chamberlain! Go forth and bring Yashti to me and let her re veal her beauty before these drunken brutes.” The messengers hastened away. They went to the queen’s apart ments anil carried the king’s com mands. Then what happened? The outraged queen drew herself to her full height. Her checks flushed, her eyes glittered with excitement, her bauds convulsively clutched as she said: "Go back to your royal master. Tell him 1 will not come. My honor is more sacred to me than my throne." When she spake tints she knew in all probability she was signing her own death warrant. Because she refused to come Yashti lost her throne. She was exih'd in perpetual disgrace. Yet these were the tyrannical laws which held women in perpetual degradation ill.it Queen Esther was ready to defy when she went to plead with the king for her Hebrew people. No wonder when she made her noble resolution that she should have said, “So will I go in unto the king, which is not ac cording to the daw, and if I perish I perish.” Women sitting before me today, are you as brave as Queen Esther? Wives and mothers and daughters, are you ready to be something more than a plaything, a human puppet for man? Are you ready to brave the social laws which would limit your sphere to the frivolities of a life of ease and pleas ure? You should truly be moral lead ers, moral teachers and noble compan ions of man. As Queen Esther was ready to take a share In the responsi bilities of her husband, a wife should be a positive quality in the moral world, not a negative one. An old English author once wrbte: “A good wife should be like three things iu some ways, but in others she should not be like. First, she should be like a snail, to keep within her own house, but she should not be like the snail to carry all she has upon her back; sec ondly, she should be like an echo, to speak when spoken to, but should uot bo like an echo always to have the last word; thirdly, she should be like a town clock, always to keep time and regularity, but she should uot, like a town clock, speak so loud that all the town may hear her.” 1 do not agree with that old English writer at all. 1 do not believe a woman should be ‘‘an echo and only speak when spoken to.” She should be like Queer; Esther. She should cease to be the plaything of man. She should cease to be the hu- morer of masculine whims. She should nobly and fearlessly take her position by her husband’s side and help him to solve the great problems of life. She should do this even if she has to say, as did the noble queen of my text, “And if 1 perish, I perish." I.lke Arria of Home. We follow with enthusiasm the cour ageous resolution of this brave wo man. But our wonder becomes more mid more pronounced as we realize that Queen Esther was ready to lay down her throne and her life, not for n prince or a princess, not for one of her daily companions in the royal pal ace, but for a despised race. She was almost identically lu the position of the brave Roman lady, Arria by name, whose husband, Oetavia Paetus, was convicted of one of the most heinous of all crimes, treason. He was not only a traitor, but a coward. The findings of the court declared that he must die the death of a suicide. Fear ing to take his own life, his wife, who stood by his side In the courtroom, picked up a dagger and plunged it into her own heart! Then as she was about to totter and fall she handed this dagger to her husband, saying: “Paetus, it does not hurt. Hurry. Be quick and die with me.” Arria was willing to die for her disgraced hus band. Queen Esther was ready to lay down her life for the Hebrew people, a collection of despised captives. She was ready to do in the capital of Shusban what that greatest of all hu man leaders, Moses, who was called the son of Pharaoh’s daughter, had been ready to do in the Egyptian capi tal—to die. She was ready to do in Shusban what David Livingstone had been ready to do in Africa, and Hud son Taylor in China, and John Patou in the New Hebrides, and as Judson and Brainard and John Elliott and Father Marquette and Father Damien were ready to do for the despised peo ples to whom they ministered. She was ready to do as the hosts of Christian martyrs did in the times of the Roman persecutions. She was ready to do as the Salvation Army girls are doing down in the slums of a great city. She was ready to give up her life for those who are despised and downtrodden and helpless, as yon and I should he willing to try to lift the fallen ones up out of sin, up out of ignorance, up out of superstition, up out of moral, mental and physical tilth. God help us to be like Queen Esther 11 ml to be ready, iu the name of Christ, to surrender our lives for a despised, downtrodden and sinful race. Tin- Honor of n Wife. But as I follow the noble resolution of this brave woman I am struck with another overwhelming fact. Queen Es ther was willing to defy all the social conventionalities that govern oriental ideas of woman. She w as ready if nec essary to lay down her life for some ex-slaves. But she was ready to do more than this. Sim was ready to wrench this concession if possible from a very had man. King Ahasuerus lived iu the depraved east iu a de praved age, but lie must have been a most notorious example even in that vile generation. No man but the most morally corrupt, even in the depraved east, is willing.to allow a wife to incur dishonor before other men. The more depraved a man Is, as a rule, the more lie tries to guard and shield the honor of ids wife from the depravities of other men. Could an\ one hut a criminal mon strosity, a man lost to all semblance of decency and honor, wish his wife to en ter a banquet hall tilled with drunk ards and social lepers, as King Alias- uerus demanded of Queen Yashti? Why, even iu India, where love is nev er reckoned as an essential of the mar Huge altar and where virtue in a man is looked upon as an unknown quanti ty, the women are protected. The wives and ihe sisters and the daugh ters are sliul up in harems. They are noi even allowed to look upon the faces of their fathers and brothers after marriage. A woman is guarded from the eyes of the world until her death, if the wife of a Hindoo travels she is carried to tin* station in dosed in a con veyance which suggests a Mg eolliu. Then a Mg sheet or curtain is thrown from the ear door over this box, and tin' wife, heavily veiled, crawls into her apartment, where every curtain i-. drawn and every door tightly shut. It is considered a disgrace for her to be seen by man. No sooner does a man enter a street where the women are than the cry is raised. The men, the men!" And every woman rushes in doors, fearing the eyes of iniiu as she would the fangs of a deadly cobra. If a man not a husband or a son dare en ter the women’s apartments he is shot down or cut into pieces, as though he were a mad dug. And yet here in licen tious Shushan we tlud King Ahasuerus demanding that his wife unveil herself before drunken and debauched men. Yet it was to this notoriously depraved monarch that Queen Esther was to plead for the salvation of a doomed race. Is there no practical application of this incident? Yes. If you and I are ever to accomplish much good in this world we must work through many different kinds of instrumentalities. If a man is a notorious libertine or scoun drel, that is no reason why you and I should regard him as wholly out of the reach of effort and beyond recla mation. Mr. Moody started his great Sunday school in Chicago by bravely going and asking a dissolute saloon keeper for his children that he might teach them of Jesus. Young Moody got them. Because a miser hangs on to his gold with a death grip is no rea son why you and I should not go and move his heart to use some of that gold for a mission of mercy. ICntlier'N Common genae. Dark and forbidding as were her sur roundings, there were two or three bright lines in this oriental, historical picture which show that though Queen Esther’s dangers might seem to be in surmountable, yet In truth they were uot. Queen Esther won her mighty vlctorj’ for the salvation of the He brew race by the use of plain, prac tical common sense, which lt\ this age would be railed brilliant Christian stratagem. The queen was not a fool. She was not one of those miserable shrews, always going around with mussed hair and shoes run down at the heels, with her dresses ill fitting and caught together with pins. She was not one of those women who wield a sharp tongue, priding herself upon the fact that she Is always speaking the truth, because she Is always say ing a lot of disagreeable things. Some women may be good women, but they are very coarse and stupid and im polite and repulsive women. There are women who* are good and irreproacha ble in character whose temper is so bad and whose tongues are so vitriolic that some good men would sooner make a pillow out of porcupine quills and go to sleep upon a mattress of Canada thistles than to associate with them. Their tongues may be as bit ter as gall. Queen Esther never prid ed herself upon her sharp tongue. Like Sarah, the wife of Abraham, she knew that it was no disgrace for a woman to be fair to look upon. Thus as a woman of great common sense she tried to do her work with sweet looks and gentle words and not with verbal sledge ham mer, spear, sword, battering ram and hurricane. How as a beautiful woman of great common sense did Queen Esther win her brilliant victory? In the first place, she goes to the king and asks as an especial favor that he, with his con temptible and dishonorable prime min ister, wicked Hainan by name, would come and take dinner some night iu her royal palace. Though this was against the law, yet the king consented. Then methinks I can see this beautiful wo man preparing for her plan of battle. She puts on her most attractive robes. She has her hairdresser intwine he- black locks in the way most becoming to her dark Hebrew features. She lias the dining room fragrant with flowers and adorned with the most beautiful of tapestries. She has the banquet table laden with the choicest of delicacies. And while the guests are eating and the musicians are playing this beautiful queen picks up one of her stringed instruments, and softly the notes are sounded. Then she be gins to sing an old love song, and the king, enraptured with her beauty, looks at her in tender and passionate affection. She drops her eyes and with a quivering voice and a heaving breast eloquently tells the story of her life and how Hainan wanted to slay her people. She paves the way for the victory by what we may call today Christian strategy. When you and I want to win our vic tories for Christ, do we do as Queen Esther did? Do we use Christian strat egy? Do we. to use a vulgar terra, try to “rub” people the right way? Do we go to them tenderly, lovingly, gently and yet flrmly and try to lead them to Christ, as Queen Esther paved the way in an oriental banquet hall for the res cue of her people? KnlHi In God. But, though Queen Esther went into this battle for her people determined to use Christian stratagem, yet this, after all, was only the secondary part of her strength. Her great strength came from the fact that she, first and last and all the time, was depending upon the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, the God of her people. This beautiful queen had been brought up in a religions atmosphere. Her foster 'father, Mordecai, was a devout wor shiper at tbi' divine throne. Rbe was grounded in the Hebrew faith when a child. She knew that God was omnipo tent and if she went forth in his strength she might be omnipotent too. Oh, my friends, will you and l go forth to battle for God feeling that the di vine power of God is in us and that wo through Min can do all things? How clearly the power of God can be seen’ in this story. In order to in crease your faith in the operations of the divine power I want you to step aside a little while from the queen's banquet hall to ee how God also paves the way for the conquest of his chil dren. A few nights before the king and Ids prime minister banqueted with Queen Esther, Ahasuerus was tumble to sleep. Back and forward he tossed upon ids couch. Then in disgust"he said to himself: “l cannot sleep. Then at least let me pass the hours of night away profitably.” So he began to call: “Light, guard, light! Send my secre tary to read to me!” Turn to the sixth chapter of the book of Esther: “On that night the king could not sleep, and he commanded to bring the book of the Chronicles, and they were read before him.” The book of Chronicles was simply the daily newspaper of olden times. As the court secretary read on he reads how Mordecai, the foster fa- ther uf the queen, had ferreted out an intended crime whereby two of tbe chamberlains, Bigthana and Teresh by name, were going to kill the kjng. Then when the queen told the story of her life and that Mordecai was her fos ter father at once the king said: "Yes, Mordecai. That is the Hebrew who saved my life.” Do you not naturally grasp the result ? At once the king was influenced toward the Hebrews, and this casual reading paved the way for granting the request of the pleading (]uecu. You say this sleeplessness of the king was a happen so. You say the reading of tin? Chronicles that night was a little thing. 1 say these tilings were ordained of God and vital in their after results. Thus by the seemingly insignificant things of life God is paving the way for the benefit of Ids children. And by the seemingly insignificant tilings he is today paving the way for the salvation of some souls within our church walls. Years ago there were Queen Esthers pleading with Christ for the salvation of their dear ones. For years and years that pleading went on. So today by a seeming in significance we were led to come to lids morning's service. Our mothers', our fathers', our wives’, our children’s, prayers are about to bo answered. Now is the accepted time for some of us. The Holy Hpirit Is working in our hearts now, as he worked In Shusban banquet ball. [Copyright, 1906, by Louis Klopsch.] A TRULYJEAL WIFE HER HUSBAND’S BEST HELPER Vigorous Health Is the Greet Source of the Power to Inspire end Encourage -All Women Should Seek It. _ One of the most noted, successful and richest men of this century, in a recent article, has said, “ Whatever I am and whatever success I have attained in this world I owe all to my wife. From the day I first knew her she has been an inspiration, and the greatest help mate of my life.” \% - m m JIArs. Bessie Jins ley To be such a successful wife, to re- j tain the love and admiration of her husband, to inspire him to make the most of himself, should be a woman’s constant study. If a woman finds that her energies are flagging, that she gets easily tired, I dark shadows appear under her eyes, she has backache, headaches, bearing- down pains, nervousness, whites, irreg ularities or the blues, she should start at once to build up her system by a tonic with specific powers, such as Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com pound. Following we publish by request a letter from a voung wife: Dear Mrs. Pinkham: “ Ever since my child was born I have suf fered, as I hope few women ever have, with in flammation, female weakness, bearing-down pains, backache and wretched headaches. It affected my stomach so I could not enjoy my meals, and half my time was spent in bed. “ Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound made me a well woman, anil I feel so grateful that I am glad to write and tell you of my marvelous recovery. It brought me health, new life and vitality.”—Mrs. Bessie Ainaley, 611 South 10th Street. Tacoma, Wash. What Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound did for Mrs. Ainsley it will do for every sick and ailing woman. If you have symptoms you don’t un derstand write to Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass. Her advice is free and always helpful. The Builders Supply Go. Successors to L. Baker, Will furnish your Building Material of the best that the markets afford and at the lowest living prices. No. 1 heart pine Shingles and Laths, Guar anteed Pure White Lead and Zinc, and Pure Linseed Oil. Nothing better to paint your house with and costa less than mixed paints. When In need of anything in the building line, call and see us; we’ll treat you cour teously and make your estimates for nothing. Iv. B a 1c e 1% MANAGER. UVASOL _ Arc your Kidneys, fJveror Blad der effected? If so, read our ^unr- untee $25.00 Reward. We offer f23.i>o reward for any case of Kidney, Liver or Bladder trou ble that cannot he cured hy Cva Sol. 1 m Interstate Chemical Co., For sale by Baltimore, Md. Wilburn & Co., Kin g’n Creek, S. ('. Dr. S. H. Griffith, PHYSICAN - SURGEON - OCULIST. Former pupil of the celebra ted Oculist, Dr. Julian J. Chisolm, ot Baltimore. Has also taken special post-grad uate course in the Eye, Ear, Nose and’Throat Hospital of Baltimore. Glasses Fitted Accurately and Scientifically. J* H#“Offic^ in Cherokee Drug Co., B’ldg For Sale acre farm, fXlMiucr acre. (17 acre farm in Yorkville$..“7.50 per acre. 22:i acre farm S’i.MH) per acre Lot 72x100. 2 houses, I Mock tlloo. tin acre farm, $22 on per acre K> acre farm $14 00 per acre ) :< miles from i Gaffney. 1 ti miles from I Gaffney. 119 acre farm, new 7 room house, \ 14 2 story, ham. poultry yard, etc price I miles f4 000, 11s acre farni on acres iu rue f from timber. $41.On per acre’ J Gaf*y 17 *, acres $100.00 per acre. 12*, acres improved good house etc.. $1,200.00 In Gaffney. 25 acre farm 4!4 miles from Henrietta and Ollffstile, 22 acresof it In tern her. flti.50 |>er acre. HOFSF.S and LOTS. s room house and 0 acres In Blaekshurg $1:100.00. Lot Hi.\200; large house, old Hotel property. $2,200.00. Fine (i room house, newly finished. Jl.sno. Lot 72x135, fliou 00 down. Ts-aere farm. fl,:i30; 2 years to pay for It 4 acres :i blocks from depot $.i,;ioo.U0. Lot S0.X2U0, west end $330.00. Lot 2*4 acres 1 room house $1030 00. Lot 135 feet hy 200, 3 blocks from depot, $725.0 Lot 90(1x200, 4 blocks fn in depot, $700 00. Fine il room house, newly finished neargraded school. 3 fine houses and lots near depot. Prices reasonable. R. L. Parish. One Minute la Cure For Coughs* Cohds aiui Croup* FOLEYSHONET^TAR Jfcr ihUSrmnt taft, sur*. Mo oplotoo