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■ \ ?• " h* a JOYS OF MATERNITY k WOMAN’S BEST HOPES REAUZED ILn. Potts Tells How Women Should Prepare for Motherhood The darkest days of husband and wife are when they come to look for ward to childless and lonely old age. Many a wife has found herself inca pable of motherhood owing to a dis placement of the womb or lack of Strength in the generative organs. By Rev. Frank DeWitt Talmage, D.D. Airs. Anna Potts Frequent backache and distressing pains, accompanied by offensive dis charges and generally by irregular and scanty menstruation indicate a dis placement or nerve degeneration of the womb and surrounding organs. The question that troubles women is how can a woman who has some fe male trouble bear healthy children? Mrs. Anna Potts, of 510 Park Avenue, Hot Springs, Ark., writes: My Dear Mrs. Piukhaui:— r ‘ During the early part of my married life I was delicate in health ; both my husband and I were very anxious for a child to bless our home, but 1 had two miscarriages, and could not carry a child to maturity. A neighbor who had been cured by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound advised me to try it. I did so and soon felt that I was growing •tronger, my headaches and backaches left me, I had no more bearing-down pains, and felt like a new woman. Within a year I became the mother of a strong, healthy child, the joy of our home. Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vegetable Compound is certainly a splendid remedy, and I wish every woman who wants to become a mother would try it.” Actual sterility in woman is very rare. If any woman thinks she is ster ile, let her try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and write to Mrs. Pinkhain, Lynn, Mass. Her advice is free to expectant or would-be mothers. Weak Hearts Are due to indigestion. Ninety-ninaef every one hundred people who have heart trouble can remember when it was simple tndlgee- tlon. It is a scientific fact that elf casea of heart disease, not organic, are not only traceable to, but are the direct result of IndP gestlon. All food taken into the stomach which falls of perfect digestion ferments end swells the stomach, puffing It up against the heart. This Interferes with the action of the heart, and in the course of time that delicate but vital organ becomes diseased. Mr. D. Kauble, of Nevada, O , aaya: I had stomach trouble and was In a bad state as 1 had heart trouble with It I took Kodol Dyspepsia Cure for about four months and It cured me. Kodol Digests What You Bat end relieves the stomach of all nervous strain and the heart of all pressure. Bottles ooty. $1.00 Size boldine 24 tlmas the trial •Iza, which sells for 50c, Prepared by e. O. DoWITT AOO., OHIOACKX For sale by Cherokee Drug Co., Gaffney; L. D. Allison, Cowpens. CLERK'S SALE. Pursuant to the decree and order of the Court of Common Pleas for Cherokee county in the case of E. Earle Holland, etc., vs. Lilabel Hol land, et. al., I will expose to public sale at Blacksburg, S. C., on Saturday, November 25tb, 1905, between the hours of 12 M. and 2 P. M. In front of the store room lot of L. M. Holland, deceased, on Shelby street, the fol lowing property, to-wlt: All that lot with store room there on fronting 2G feet on Shelby street and running back southeasterly 83 feet, and being the same lot deeded to Eliza A. Holland by R. A. West brooks by deed recorded in clerk’s of fice for York county, Book “G.” No. 8, pages 557 and 558. Also that lot with residence thereon In Blacks burg, S. C., purchased from J. J. Whlsonant bv said Mrs. Eliza A. Hol land fronting on Carolina steert 100 feet and running back tg the road bed of the Southern Railway Com pany being 981-2 feet at said road bed, or right of way. Terms of sale one-half cash, and the balance on a credit of eleven months with interest from the date of sale at 8 per cent, per annum. Credit portion of bid to be secured by bond and mortgage of the premis es sold, with leave to the purchasei to pay all cash. Purchaser to pay for all papers and recording, and must comply with cash portion of bid with in thirty minutes, or a re-sale will be made on same day for cash at the defaulting purchaser’s risk. J. Eb. Jefferies, Cl’k. C. C. Pi’s. Gaffney, S. C., Nov. 4th, 1905. Pub. in The Ledger Nov. 7-14 and 21. FINAL DISCHARGE. Notice Is hereby given that I will apply to Hon. J. E. Webster, Probate Judg^j for Cherokee county, 8. C., at his office at the court house on Wed nesday, December 6th, 1903, at it o’clock a. m. for a final settlement and discharge as executor of the es tate of Robert G. Parker, deceased. All persons holding claims against said estate will present them on or before said date, or be forever barred. J. E. Sepoch, ■xr. estate Robert G. Parker, dec’d. Publish In Gaffney Ledger Nov. 10, 17, 24 and Dec. 1st. 1905. One Minute Cough Cure For CoMflhB, Golds and Croup* IOimH(WO^IAR Los Angeles, Cal., Dec. 3.—In this sermon the preacher sounds u stirring note of arousal and fresh encourage- ment to those who are disposed to sink in the battle of life and to give way to unavailing regrets. The text is II Sam uel xix, 15, “So the king returned and came to Jordan.” The world has no use for the common scold. When universal fault finders can see nothing but shortcomings in their fellow men they are apt to de nounce sins similar to those to which they themselves are addicted. “What is the matter with youV” the clapper asked the cracked bell In the old leg end. “You utter nothing but discords. You are no good to Anybody.” “Yes,” answered the bell, “that may be true. But what are you complaining about? Was not my metal all right until you pounded a crack in my side? And, fur thermore, would not the world think 1 was all right now if you did not con tinue to pound me and advertise my weaknessesSo It often happens that the people who are most active in de nouncing the weaknesses of others are really denouncing the evil results of which they themselves are the direct or indirect causes. Like a boomerang, their complaints fly in a circle. They strike back at the very lips which start ed those complaints on their evil flight. The world has but little us<» for the common scold. It lias also little use for those who do not heed the danger signals of life which are lifted all about them. It has unutterable contempt for the* pilot who will not steer away from the buoys marking the dangerous reefs, or for the engineer who will not stop hi ; locomotive when the warning tor pedo is exploded under his wheel, or for the sea captain who will not keep his eye upon the falling barometer when the ship Is drawing near the ice berg regions, or for the physician who does not keep a careful record of the patient’s fever, or for the statesman who does not ferret out and check the evils skulking hehhid the pillars of the legislative halls. There Is no sense In declaring that the sun Is shining when a tornado Is battering down the har vests and knocking the unripe fruit off the swaying branches. It Is no sign of great virtue to be always looking upon the bright side of things when condi tions about us are all askew and could be made right if we would only go forth to grapple with the wrongs and scatter the causes which are bringing forth evil results. General Joab was not a common scold; neither was he one of those wlshy washy, effeminate, pusillanimous characters who are afraid to say that their souls are their own. He could speak out boldly aud bravely when it behooved him so to speak. When the king did right, Joab was ready to say, “Thou art right, O my king.” When the king did wrong, Joab was also ready to say, “Thou art wrong, O my klug. u Aud because he was ready to denounce the king’s follies just as em phatically as he was to praise the king’s virtues he was able to exercise the far reaching influence on David’s life that is described In the chapter of my text. In the first place, the iconoclast open ed the eyes of the king to the many blessings with which he was surround ed. With one herculean blow Joab shattered the idol of the king’s grief and made him stop worshiping at the shrine of Ills wayward son’s grave. With the keen, sharp words of a friend he went into the royal bedroom and cut aud slashed that weeping parent with his verbal stiletto until at last the king realized that even a father has no right to spend a lifetime bemoaning a dead Absalom if by such a course he is doing an injustice to bis living friends. And yet, my brothers, how many men aud women there are Just like David! They never seem to be able to turn their weeping eyes away from the fo cus of a tombstone. They never seem to be able to see the laughing eyes and the smiling Ups or to hear the loving words of those who are living for them in the nurseries and sitting rooms of their own homes. David’s Greatest Battle. The greatest battle of David’s career was over. It was an awful tight. Dur ing the hours of that day the king’s throne had been tottering upon its foun dations. As Alfred the Great had to flee his capital when he was defeated by the Danes at Athelney, and as Rob ert Bruce was an exile in Ireland for Six long years before he came back to his Scottish throne, and as Charles II. was a wanderer upon the face of the earth when Cromwell was dictator at Westmlijstcr, so King David, on ac count of the uprising of his son Absa lom, was a fugitive from his Jerusalem palace. It was not a mere playful squall which had struck his ship of state. It wa»^ a tornado, which was ripping the sails and making the gunwales sink under the foaming, raging billows. King David’s head was In danger, and the whole royal family were menaced by the Insurrection of which this dis solute prince was the leader. The young princes in the London Tower met the same kind of a fate which Prince Absalom bad planned out for bis royal sire, bnt no sooner did the king’s friends rally to bis standard and at the risk of their fortunes and their lives fight the king’s battles and win back for him bis throne and kill the young prince than the king closed his eyes to all bis friends* sacrifices. All he did was to sit' in his room and weep and moan aud wring his hands and cry: ‘‘Oh, Absalom, my son, my son, my poor dead boy! Ob, Absalom,my son fc iuy sou, my poor boy!” He kept this crying and walling up for Lours and days. At last Joab heard of the king’s ingratitude. He walked into the royal chamber aud said: “My king, have you any heart? Can you not realize the sacrifices we have made for you? Can you not come forth aud thank us for shedding our blood, instead of weeping over that li centious, uutilial child who tried to murder you?” And today, O man, 1 ask. cannot you s;op woeping over the i.ves of some people who have been un- U’i.o to you and open your eyes to the sacrifices of those who have been de voting themselves to your comfort and happiness for the last ten or perhaps twenty years? You have lost a child. He died as the result of his sius, aud you know it. Yet you weep and cry for that child as though he had been to you a saint. What about tbe other children? What about those lovely daughters and that fine young son who are growing up by your side? Are you just to them? L>o you try to make home happy for them? Are you true to them? You have a dis solute father. "Oh,” you keep coui- plaiuing, "if my father were only wbat he ought to be!” Well, be is not. You cannot help that. But what about your mother? Have you ever thanked God that you have such a mother? Have not her noble example and her tender sacrifices been enough to start out a dozen boys like you right, even though your father has not been what lie ought to be t And yet the strange fact of life Is this: Most of our modern King Da vids will go on winning and groaning and complaining about one person who has done them a wrong and neglect to show gratitude to the scores of noble souls about them who are doing all in their power to make them happy and blessed. 'A lirave Girl. Ob, the meanness of not trying to do all we can for those who are doing ev erything for us: Some years ago there joined my church oue of the bravest young women I ever knew. Her father died when she was a young girl. Theh the executors robbed tbe widowed mother of her ah. The young girl, who was brought up in luxury, went forth to earn her daily bread. The mother never seemed to care or to realize what that daughter was doing. From morn ing until night she kept up her never ending series of complaints. She com plained about being left a widow; she complained about loss of money; she complained because she had to live where she did and that her daughter had to be away all day long. “But,” I said one day, “madam, you surely should be thankful for that girl of yours. A nobler girl I never knew. Of course yon have to be alone, but think of her down at the office working. It is not very pleasant for her.” “Yes,” said the complaining old lady, “I sup pose I ought to be thankful and not complain, but it is my disposition, and I can’t help It.” Ah, me! How many of us are like that dissatisfied old lady! How many of us are like King David! We brood over our misfortunes so long that we not only make life miserable for ourselves, but add to tbe burdens of those who are striving to make our lives happy and blessed. But King David was awakened to more than a sentimental realization of his blessings. General Joab gave to him a moral aud spiritual galvanic shock, which startled his hands, bis ears, his eyes, as never before. He made tbe king leap to his feet and stop his foolishness. General Jpab practi cally said to King David: “It Is not only mean and contemptible for you to Ignore the sacrifices your people have made for you, but it is more. This foolish crying proves to the world that you are unfit longer to be king. If you do not stop it your best friends will turn against you. Within u few weeks you will have another Insurrec tion upon your bauds, compared to which the late uprising will seem only a plaything. You will he hurled from your throne, and another will take your place, and lhat rightly, for If n man does not do as he ought to do the world will* throw him aside, aud he will huye no one to blame but himself.” Ah, that was a brave act of General Joab! It was one of the bravest acts of his life. He was willing, If neces sary, to sacriflee his own life in order that his friend and king might see the error of his ways and guard against the danger lurking at his feet. Are you and I willing to be us true to our friends as Joab was to his king? An Eauy Task. It is easy to praise our friends when they do right or to defend them when they have Injustice perpetrated against them. The story is told that many years ago the otticers of the army of the king of Hanover refused to have anything to do with a young lieutenant Who tyid been promoted on the field of battle for gallantry. They claimed that he was not tbclr social equal even though the shoulder straps of a com missioned officer were his. Tbe king beard about tbe boycott. The next day at parade he called the young man to his side. Then, arm In arm with the lieutenant, he walked before the whole army assembled on dress parade. Then that night, as his special guest, the king took the young officer with him to a banquet. Of course when the king went arm In arm with the young man the other officers at once felt he was not only their social equal, hut a friend well worth cultivating. "Yes,” I said to myself as I read that story, “how easy it Is for some of us to walk arm In arm with our friends when they are doing right, but how hard It Is for some of us to take the hands of our friends when they do wrong and to speak to them kindly and firmly and yet lovingly, as Joab told King Darld about his faults.” How hard it Is for the minister’s wife to go to her husband after the sermon has been preached and say: “John, you ought not to have said that! When you tell incidents like that in the pulpit you are truly undermining your own Influence, and you do but little good.” How hard it is for a minister’s wife to do that! Y’et there Is many a minis ter today who Is ready to say that he would not be what he Is unless his wife had been a faithful critic of his sermon. How hard it is to tell that old boyhood friend that he Is doing wrong and that unless he stops his sins his life will be ruined. How hard It is to tell that young girl classmate that she has no business to bo going out at night with tbe men with whom she is going! Easy to praise our friends for their virtues! Are you ready to be true and brave and to lift the danger signal over your friends’ faults? You know you can put your baud upon the life weaknesses of your frieuds as no one else can. Are you ready to be a Gen eral Joab to your King David? But we must not stop here. When we find King David going forth to work we also find General Joab, the great emancipator of grief. When we find David being induced to go forth to meet tbe responsibilities of bis king dom we find him breaking the shackles of sorrow which have bound him hand and foot, as the Roman captives used to be bound to the chariots of their conquerors in the triumphal entries into the capital of the Caesars. And thus, my friends, if you aud 1 want to be truly helpful to our friends In their time of trouble, we should not try so much to pet them aud sympathize with them, but we should go as General Joab went to King David to compel them to go forth aud do something. Work ns a raunoea. Work is the best panacea for grief. Many years ago a great trouble came to my father's home. The best com forter my father had was not to be found among those who came to weep with him aud to sympathize with him, but the best comforter was the old classmate who came and said: “Do Witt, 1 am going through trouble far worse than yours. My wife for ten years lias been in the insane asylum. I want to give you the only cure I know to help you at this time. Do not stay at home and cry. Go forth into God's great harvest field aud work. Work for God in the morning, work for God at noon, work for God at night, work aud keep on working for God all the time, and the blessed comfort from G6d will be yours.” Thus, my brother, when you aud I are going to carry true comfort to our friends in their time of trouble do not go to them to pet them. Go to them and rouse them out of them selves by urging them to do something for some oue else. It was by work that David overcame hts grief, not by selfish tears aud sobs and weepings in the silence of his bedchamber. Aud by the same reasoning, If there be any blessing above all others for which you and 1 should be thankful In our days of adversity, it is for the blessing of work. By imposing on us the necessity of earning our daily bread aud caring for those who are depend ent upon us God Is able to throw off the heavy burdens of our grief. And how near those burdens were once to destroying us! I today would have you treasure your necessity of work ing for your daily existence. Sorrow and trouble raised their axes and smote at you. At first you were stun ned by the cruel blows. But hardly had the blows of trouble and sorrow descended when, like David, you bud to be up and out and doing. And in your necessity for dally toll you found oue of God’s great panaceas for grief. Oh. my friends, thank God today that you have to work aud continue to work and, like King David, that you have to work all the time. But there is another fact 1 want you to notice about Jonh's upbrnldment and denunciation. He did not waste any words about other people’s shortcom ings. He did not go to the king and say: “Now, David, Absalom was an ungrateful dog. You ought to have banged him long ago. And those peo ple who mutinied against you and made you flee from your capital ought to be sought out and punished.” Oh, no, Joab did not bother himself about crying over the departed past. He practically said to David: “Here, the Insurrection has taken place. An aw ful lot of damage has been done. There Is no use of talking about who caused the difficulty. The one great fact we want to solve is how can wo get the kingdom hack upon its old, stable foun dation. It is not now a question who set fire to your palace, but how we can put the conflagratltii out. Now, you had better get out of this room as soon as possible and get back to your capital and pick up the reins of government without one moment’s delay.” And David returned and came to the Jor dan and went back to Jerusalem. Are you and I ready to do as did David? Are you trying to Jump In and over come the evil deeds of others Instead of sitting down and crying about them and magnifying them? The world will never be saved by our proving that other people are liars and Ingrates. I read an article some years ago, which I cut out of a paper and pasted in my scrapbook, with the pur pose of quoting It, but I lost the article aud lost the book. The article, how ever, went something like this: “What Is the use of men in business complain ing that their employees are t'othful aud Ignorant? What is the use of say ing that your help Is lazy and untrue and selfish? Men have always been lazy and untrue aud selfish ever since the world was started. It Is the strong leader and the successful man who takes his employees as they are and does not sit down aud complain about them. The successful man In spite of drawbacks uses all men for the best purposes for which they can be used. “Ah, yes,” I said when I read that ar ticle, “how true, how true! The sue. cessful merchant Is not the merchant who has perfect clerks, but ho takes his clerks as they are and drills tliCTn and keeps on drilling them until in spite of themselves they are compelled to do his bidding. The successful cap tain Is a man who, like Paul Jones, can Inspire a mixed crew, made up of all different nationalities, to fight his bat tles as though they were made out of the stuff of heroes. And the strong man for God Is not the man who sits down and repines over the weaknesses of his fellow men. He is like Joab, ready to shut his eyes to other men’s faults aud out of men’s weaknesses build up his own towers of strength.” Even a lion can be strangled to death with spider webs if you can weave enough of thorn together into one rope. Tbe sunbeams can change a ship's hull into coals of fire if you can only focus tb<5 sun's rays upon it by a powerful burning glass. What Gladstone Said. But I must not close without drawing your attention to one other fact. The awakened king was not a young man. He was not even a middle aged man. I ibink bis hair was white aud his step was becoming slower with age, and he knew it. William E. Gladstone said just before he gave up bis English pre miership. “I feel that the sands of my life are running out.” King David must have felt his sands of life running away also. His grown children proved it. Absalom must have been a grown man. No mere hoy could have had the brains or the power to raise the insm- rection which he did. Absalom was evidently a fully developed man. This meant that David, as the father, was probably past the fiftieth milestone if not nearing his threescore years of age. Now, uiethinks, when this insurrection started, David lost all his moral back bone. I can almost hear him soliloquiz ing something like this: “What is the use of my fighting? I am an old man. If I were young, as in the days when I fought Goliath. I could fight now; but. old and worn out, there is not much use. I .think I had hotter abdicate. It will only be a few years at the most, and then I must die.’-- But Joab bad none of this non sense in him. He came to tbe king and practically said: “Your majesty, your best days are abend. Get up out of this roout aud go to work. Your last years of reigning over Israel are to he your best years.” My friends, my middle aged or white haired friends. 1 bring to you Jonh's salutation, “Your best days are ahead; up and out.” That Is what your motto should be. YVn, up and out now! You are discouraged, like David. Thiugs have not been going right in business, have they? The younger men In the partnership want to push you to the wall? Don’t you let them do it. Things have not been going right in the homo and In the church. People say you are an old fogy and that you look at things through antiquated spectacles. Don’t you let them push you aside. Who ought to be so well fitted to lead and mold the world as the mature mid dle aged and white haired teachers or ministers or merchants or church mem bers? It is a sad cry which the world Is calling today: “Give us young men! Let us have only young men!” The voice of the church and the voice of the world should be the voice of Joab: “Give us older men for our leaders. Give us older men iu the pulpit and In the pew and in legislative hall.” The best days of King David were his last days. The best days of your earthly life, O aging man, are ahead, al though at the present time, as with David just after Absalom’s death, con ditions may seem to be black and al most hopeless. And I say this with the greatest confidence because I be lieve that the blackness and hopeless ness of your present troubles will drive you closer and closer to Jesus Christ, who alone is able to fit you for service for your fellow men. How black the world seems at times, even under the brightest of conditions! A short time before Henry Irving, the greatest actor of his day, passed away he made this statement: “With the ap plause of Ihe theater still ringing In my ears, with the memory of kind faces emblazoned on my memory, with the eonseloBsness that I have won the affections of multitudes whom I cannot meet in person, I have often gone borne from the theater feeling utterly deso late aud alone, yearning for the inti mate human companionship which fate has denied me.” As Henry Irving was yearning for an intimate human companionship you, on account of your troubles, have been yearning for Christ. Thus in clos ing I commit you uuto the hands of my Saviour. He is the Christ who will lead you if you let him. He will lead you out of your troubles Just as he led the king of olden times. He may not lead you to a throne of earthly power, but he will lead you to a throne of heavenly glory. Into the Saviour’s bauds I commit thee today, O King David, as I declare again: “Thy best days are ahead. Thy best days of earth and heaven are ahead if you will let David’s God lead you ns he will.” [Copyright, 1905, by Louis Klopsch.j Cheerful Introductions. The Rev. A. J. Kynett, presiding eld er of the Methodist Episcopal confer ence of the south district of Philadel phia, tells a story at his own expense. He was asked oue day to help the col ored brethren raise some money for a church. When he came to preach, the pastor >f the church, In order to Im press the congregation with the Rev. Mr. Kyuett’s Importance, said: “Breth ren and sisters, It Is now my great pleasure and delight to Introduce the Rev. Dr. Kynett, the sounding brass and the tlhkling cymbal of tbe Metho- illst church.” When Dr. Graeff ad dressed the same congregation some months later he was Introduced as “tbe (rout obstacle of the Methodist church.” Women as Weil as Men Are Made Miserable by Kidney Trouble. Kidney trouble preys upon the mind, dts- xurages and lessens ambition; beauty, vigor and cheerfulness soon disappear when the kid neys are out of order or diseased. Kidney trouble has become — so prevalent / V that it is not uncommon / for a child to be born i 3 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 with kidney and bladder trouble, and both need the same great remedy. The mild and the immediate effeu of Swamp-Root is soon realized. It is sold by druggists, in fifty- •^ent and one dollar i izes. You may have a| ;ample bottle by mail ree, also pamphlet tell- ng all about it, including many of the housands of testimonial letters received 'om sufferers cured. In writing Dr. Kilmer t Co., Binghamton, N. Y.. be sure and lention this paper. Don’t make any mistake, but re member the name, Swamf Root, Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, and the ad- Homo of Swamp-Root. dress, Blnghampton, N. bottle. Y., on every THX •BOSS** COTTON PRESS I SIMPLEST, STRONGEST, BEST tmb Murray Cinnino Systcm Mm, FttStrt, Condensers, Etc. OXBBKM MACHINERY CO. Colsimbfta. S. C. Overworked KIDNEYS Mnrruy’nj Ilochn, Gin" and f Juniper is prescribed and endorsed by emi nent physicians. It cures whetv all else fails.* Prevents*Kidney* Disease, Dropsy, Bright’s Disease,“etc. Atjall drug stores. gif $<l.oo *■» jEJottle.n i or directjfrom The Murra u Dtug Co,,Columbia, S. C See Us for Prices. 3 houses and lots, all modern Im provements. One 5-room house, |800. One 5-room house, $600. Lot 80x 200. One house and lot, $375. 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