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V A Lazy Liver •••r.v. I'erhaps )ii>ins will h<> pm ini 1.1 :<>i))lil 11m i,i ly H'lll r or i.i'.iacli. Avuiil all , triddlf < aKi s and lid take the "i ioldci dai Ij and si ick to it May be only a tiivd liver, or a starved liver. It would lie a stupid as well as savage thing to beat a weary or starved man because he lagged in his work. So in treating the lagging, torpid liver it is a great mistake to lash it with strong dra-tic drugs. A torpid liver is but an Indication of an ill-nourished, enfeebled body whose organs are weary with over work. Start with the stomach and allied Organs of digestion and nutrition. Tut them in working order and see how quickly your liver will become active. Dr. Pierce's (loldon Medical Discovery has made many marvelous cures of "liver .trouble” by its wonderful control of the organs of digestion and nutrition. It re stores the normal activity of the stomach. Illcre;t.>es the secretions of the blood-mak ing ctands. cleanses the system from poi sonous accumulations, and so relieves the liver of the burdens imposed upon it by the defection of otlici 'a:. Ifyouhr- PitieroH <1 lasie ; lie niom- Ing. poor ■ . ariaPI p; ••t ie. eo-. i d tongue, foul bli i. const itcd or Irie rnlar bowels, feel weak easily .tiv«l t « esj omieiit. 'uueiit headaelie^, nain or distn ->s in ' m, nil «,f Pai'k," gnawing "i di-iressed feeling in st)ii.:e , n. perhaps nausea, n ter or sour "ri-iugs" in throat : or eating, and l. i’lred syint,toms of wea stomacb and t a; a liver, no medi cine will relieve .toil in ife i inptly or cure you nior onnaiienUj' ill .toetor Pierce's Golden 1 .eril 1 isc< ax>art ot the aoove syr at one time and yet i> biliousness and weak hot i ad and iiiscui otliei •’Mo food Medic lids. < very " re, use until you are vigorous and strong. The "Discovery" is non-secret, non-alco holic, Is a glyceric extract of native medici nal roots with a full list of its ingredients printed on each I >< it tie-wrapper and attested under oath. Its ingredients are endorsed and extolled by the most eminent medical writers of the age and are recommended to euro the diseases for which it is advised. Don't accept a substitute of unknown composition for this non-secrat medicine OF KNOWN COM POSITION. Indigestion Causes Catarrh of the Stomach. For many years it has been supposed that Catarrh cf the Stomach caused indigestion and dyspepsia, but the truth is exactly the opposite. Indigestion causes catarrh. Re peated attacks of Indigestion Inflames the mucous membranes lining the stomach and exposes the nerves of the stomach, thus caus ing the glands to secrete mucin instead of the Juices of natural digestion. This Is called Catarrh of the Stomach. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure relieves all inflammation of the mucous membranes lining the stomach, protects the nerves, and cures bad breath, sour risings, sense of fullness after eating, indigestion, dyspepsia and a!i stomach troubles. Kodol Digests What You Eat Make the Stomach Sweet. Bottles only. Regular size. $ 1 00, holding 2!4 tiro** the trial size, which sells for 50 cents Prepared by E. C. Lie .v IT I & CO., Chicago, Ilk For sale by Cherokee Drug Co., Gaffney; L. D. Allison, CowoCns. Calm age Sermon By Rev. Frank Dc Witt Talmage, D. D. * Los A navies, Dal., Auj,'. ‘20.—In thiH sermon the preacher gives itn altogeth er new interpretation to a passage which teaches us that Gods mercies and blessings sometimes come to us in strange disguises. The text is Luke xii, U>, "I am come to send lire upon the earth.” To the casual Bible reader these nine words may seem to convey a meaning which it is hard to reconcile with other passages. You eaunot tmdei'stand how Christ can be called the ‘Triuce of Peace” and yet how he could send fire upon the earth. "Fire,” you say—“why, tire is the agent of death, not the fore runner of life. It Is the most ruthless destroyer known to man.” Go today through any of our great forests, and what do you see printed by the road sides'/ It is a warning to the campers and the travelers to beware of starting ip.ve In God the Father Almighty. Mak- a forest (ire. Why do the governmen- or of heaven and earth, and in Jesus tal ollicials in Yellowstone park and * Christ, his only Son, our Lord?” Yosemite and in many of the mountain j »e<] of a Frovldeme. reserves refuse to allow the camper to Utter folly is it to deny the Father- carry a shotgun? Is it for fear that he hood of God an I the divinity of Jesus will kill game out of season? Perhaps Christ as revealed in the creations of but the chief reason nature. Many years ago in a debating the Earl of Rochester, in order I asked a wealthy gentleman at whose country home I was stopping. “These archways would form a perfect trellis where the vines could ding. Then, flic first view the visitor has ol I the hon e is fr i this driveway. In stead of planti.i ' most of your dowers tow.ml the ea-t side of flic house I ; would plunt them on {lie west.” *'A1j," I said m\ friend, "nothing 1 would like better than that, but my flowers will not grow hero. Yon must remember that the sun rises in the east and that moans that dur.ng the monih/fc hours the west side of my house is shut out from the light of the sun. That means the ground here is always cold. Seeds and dowers must have heat in which to grow.” Heat means life for the vegetable world, and cold always means death. So you see that fire is not always destructive, but is the sym bol of life. Now, when I hear Christ say, ‘T am come to send tire upon the earth,” in a broad sense I seem to hear Christ say, "I am come in order to put children info the cradles of the nurseries ami to weigh down the or chard branches with fruits and to cov er up tlit* harvest fields with golden headed grain and to till the gardens with busy bees and to hatch out the salmon eggs which have lain in the shallows of the rivers.” Oh. the won ders of nature as revealed in the mi raculous creations of life! Have you ever ceased to be amazed tit the first sentence of the Apostles’ Creed, “I be- ann that is,one reason, is that the forest rangers are afraid that the shotguns might set lire to the wo.>ds. Have you never attended a eountry college and witnessed the deadly I'oiv .t fires burn for weeks and weeks up ,u the mountain side? What was the i>a!v danger the western cow- It rsc than tin* Indian’s was the prairie fire, tip the dead grasses -e could ruu or deer ray. Have you ever eat hod sword of fire , ow to the ground? : • aide to devour the indomitable aiiibitcms of the “Little Corsican.” \\ ill our people ever forget the ghastly tragedy that destroyed Ameri ca's western metropolis, which ov , er- looked the Golden Gate of Kan Fran cisco bay? One of the first lessons we teach our children is to leave matches hoy fean-, warwhoo, ■ which could lie faster titan I i could scurry a read of the tin which razed M These flames v society to fili out the list of debates, tried to prove that this world had no need of an overruling or a creating Providence. After he had finished his speech and won the applause of his auditors he )itrued and said, “How can a man who walks upright, who sees the wonderful ovations of God and has the use of his senses and reason use them to the de nying of Ids Creator?” So say we all jf us. When we witness the miracu lous effects of heat in the creation of life, we how before the great God who has built the tires of reproduction upon every hillside and in every valley, whether we see that life illustrated in the wing of a bird, the leaf of a tret* nr in the throbbing heart of a mortal ind yet immortal man. But 1 find that fire is the symbol of purification as well as of creation. When Christ says he will send fire, 1 remember that one of his purposes is to take the dross out of the hard me alone and (ear the danger of fire. Yet. mllic heart. This Ls as truly a part of the so called "Prince of Peace” says, ;i | s mission as to create the seeds of j life and by heat burst those seeds into :h“ white blossoms of the springtime. | The more I study < lirist’s life the I more I am impressed with the fact Chew RED EYE TOBACCO The Best Chew on Eaitli, Aug. io-2m-pd. Host Anything And a little of everything is now being shown in my line: All the new conceptions 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. Thus. H. Westrope, Next to Shuford & LeMaster. The Builders Supply Co, Successors to L. Baker, Will furnish your Building Materia, of the best that the markets afford and at the lowest living prices No. 1 heart pine Shingles and Laths, Guar snteed Pure White Lead and Zinc and Pure Linseed Oil Nothing bettei to paint your house with and cost* less than mixed paints. When In nee.* V anything In the building line, cal snd see us; we’ll treat you cour teously and make your estimates toi nothing I v . 15*1 1c e v r. MANAGER. Dr. King’s New Life Pills The best in the world. “I am conic to send fire upon the earth.” How can you explain this anomaly? I can only suggest some of the effects of fire, which may give us a hint of our Lord’s meaning, for, though wo may look upon fire as an agency of death, we cannot forget that it may become In God’s hands an agency of eternal life and of the pur est and the best of all earthly lives. May God help us as we try to nnd«*- stand these holy words. A Symbol of livat. Fire, in the first place, is the symbol of heat, float Is the symbol of life. Therefore ve find that all true life comes from God, even as all beat of the earth primarily comes from the fires of the sun. In every bird that flies, In every bee that hums, In every squlrnd that chatters, In every flower that grows, in every tree that rustles and In every human being that walks we see the great divine fact Illustrated that the God who sent fire upon earth is the great God who was and is the Creator of all. Now, the fact that all animal and vegetable life is dependent upon fire and heat for creation and de velopment Is well understood. I am sitting upon the fanner's kitchen porch, and 1 hoar a cackling noise. The old s[>ockli*d Plymouth Rock ben Is calling: "I have laid an egg! I have laid cn egg! I am going to hatch out a little chicken, for I have laid an egg!” But the farmer’s wife lias another use for the egg. Each morning she goes aud takes that egg away from the hen. Kite is absolutely merciless In this ro- j spect. She cocks for her summer boarders the best food for a breakfast —namely, u fresh laid egg. When you break It oiten, there It lies cut In half, with Its center of gold covered over with Its wrappings of purest white. The snow could not be whiter than the albumen of a new laid egg. At last the old lien grows tired of having her eggs , so she, in turn, finds a secret nest. Khe tiles away to the top of the hay loft, or she goes off to the other side of the grain field and crawls under an old board near the fence, and there she makes her nest. Day after day the white beauties grow in number. The old feathered fowl keeps very still about her secret. When you go out aud say, “Biddle, where Is your nest?*’ she looks us innocent as an old owl. Then after twelve or thirteen of those eggs have been* laid side by side Riddle suddenly disappears. She comes ful maiden, to he among the treasured wedding gifts of a king's bride. 1 step across the bending, twisting, winding Ohio river, filled with its great freight boats and lined with its mighty railroads, and 1 enter the black, smoking heart of a great city and stand in one of the huge foundries that have tTiadc Pittsburg so famous around the worid. 1 see the stalwart workmen moving about the fires, in their weirdness they look like the mov ing spirits of Dante's “Inferno.” Then I see the men tossing the iron ore into the huge receptacle in whieh it be comes molten as a river of lire. Then I see the river of fire rolled out into huge bars and tempered and allowed to cool. “What are you difing, work men?” I ask. “Making steel." "What! Making steel out of that filthy, base iron ore?” "Yes; steel is nothing more or less than crude iron purified by fire and tempered aright. That iron ore shall yet he changed into steel rails, over which the huge locomotives will | run, and into steel beams to hold up the bridges that will span the rivers, ' and into steel columns which will make it possible for the twenty story j ollh-e buildings to lift themselves in our large cities. Iron ore could never do this unless It had its alloys or baser metals taken out of it.” What is true j of the pottery industry and the steel industry is also true of the hot fires which tire built about the sands aud the sodas and the limes and stilts of the glass industries. These tires not only make these substances molten, but they also burn all the impurities out of them. Thus Christ purifies us by the hot fires of trouble. He burns us and keeps on burning us that we ; may be like unto himself. Ko I begin to see that when Christ says, “I am come to send lire upon the earth,” he may mean a fire that shall purge and purify us aud make us fit for his com panionship In heaven. Tho Sun Fram'lnco 1'ire. I have already mentioned the San Francisco lire. I was in that city while it was burning. I saw some of the buildings in flames and heard there some of the tottering walls l>eing dynamited. But the most impressive place to me in all Kan Francisco was where I stood amid the smoldering wtills of its infamously famed China town. A prominent Kau Francisco minister was with me at the time. We had not spoken for some time when ho said: "Is it not awful? And yet, awful as it is, you must bear in mind one fact—this is the first time for fifty years man has ever been able to look upon Chinatown and call it morally pure and clean.” Friend, you have been having a hard time of late. Your troubles have been coming thick and fast. My, how quickly your money went. Your baby! It seemed she left you in the twinkling of tui eye. You are still pale and weak from that last dangerous illness. You are like Chinatown, 'ilio walls may seem and the tyrannies of the dark ages? It is said when Gustavus Adolphus, tin* great king of Sweden, was fighting his last battle at Lutzon that amid the roar and crash of carnage a little frightened bird knew not where to go, so he alighted upon the shoulder of the mighty warrior. Gustavus reached up and took tin 1 little fluttering heart in Ins hand. Then he spoke a few soothing words to the bird and bid it away for protection inside of his own armor. Alter Gustavus was slain and the loving soldiers reverently gathered about flu* Idee ling corpse it is said that this Ft.ie ! ird flew out of the cloak of tin* «. ■ .1 warrior, anil no soon er did he start to tly away than lie be gan to sing. (Snriit l j» l>> I"I re. Have there been no blessings born of that awful period of lire and blood in our own nation’s history? That was a lire that desolah 1 homos, north and south, that destroyed property, bereft families, broke many hearts. But was it till loss? Is it nothing Unit the curse of slavery was burnt up in that fire? Has not the brotherhood that now binds north and south been cemented i that lire? Has it not made civil war henceforth a thing hateful and impos sible in our borders? Now, God has a never ending war against sin. lie makes no compromise with sin. He is going to tight sin to the death. The saloon must go. The brothel must go. Kiu must go. God will not yield one inch to evil. With him it is an ex terminating war. This war is to be come fiercer ami more decisive, more uncompromising each year. God says: “Sin must go. Kin must and shall be Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera a Diarrhea Remedy Almost every family has need of a reliable remedy for colic or diarrhea at some time during the year. This remedy is recommended by dealers who have sold it for many years and know its value. It has received thousands of testimonials from grateful people. It has been prescribed by phy sicians with the most satisfactory results. It has often saved life before medicine could have been sent for or a physician summoned. It only costs a quarter. Can you afford to risk so much for so little? BUY IT NOW. CLERK'S SALE. State of South Carolina. County of York, In the Court of Common Pleas. Samuel M. McNeel, Plaintiff, vs. Henry W. Thomson et. al., Defend’ta. Bv virtue of the Decree of Foreclos ure in the above stated case, and by virtue of subsequent order, in the above stated case, I will expose to r ’ublic sale at York court house, on the first Monday in September 1906, between 11 A. M. and 2 P. M., the real annihilated.” Thus, as the two great estate described in the mortgage to armies, the army In blue and the army I Plaintiff, and description of which Is In gray, used to encamp upon the op- Quoted as follows: 'hat Christ continually has to make us aver uiul purify us, even ns the nuggets »f guld must 1 • burned In the smelting ’urnaec-s to separate the alloy from the .rue gold. "What,” you say: “all?” Yes; all. There is no exception to the •ule. We have till erred and strayed Ike lost sheep. We have all followed :oo much the devices aud the desires our own hearts. There is none that loeth good—no, uot oue. Atmoik ph rre Not Aatiiteptlc*. We have all been contaminated by Gn from the very atmosphere which we have breathed. To a certain extent it is possible in an operating room to kts-p the patienl’s wound free from poisonous infection. In the first place, the patient before Infing operated upon j has his body thoroughly cleansed. I'hcn he is etherized and carried to the >P'T:tting table. There every instru ment and every piece of furniture and cloth Inis been made antiseptic j to receive the patient. There the | nurses and the doctors are all dressed I in pure, clean, antiseptic linen. They •von wash their hands, their faces and ! their hair in carbolic solution. The ! very atmosphere Is filtered through apertures covered with gauze. Thus is I the sick patient cared for In the oper- | ating room. The attendants are thus I careful that no external dust or Impu- ! rity touch that patient But the atmos- i phere we breathe in life is uot made j antiseptic from sin. The hands that j touch us upon the streets are not al- I ways pure hands. The Ups which speak to ns are not always pure lips. I Behold, we were bom in sin: we have grown up amid the vitiating atmos phere of sin! 'Though we have again and again bowed at the mercy seat and made the publican’s prayer, "God ! lie merciful to me, a sinner,” yet today I we find that we have Just as great a need of Christ the Purifier as we ever had of Christ the Creator of our souls ; and physical bodies. Now, how does Christ purify our lives? It Is done by tho hot fires of trouble. A fire is always the best of till purifiers. I stand at one of the g"cat kiln doors of tin East Liverpool pottery. 1 say to the potter: “What are you doing? Why are you making those fires so hot?” “To bake the posite sides of the Potomac and you could see their long Hues of different campfires, so there are two lines of | campfires today. They are not the campfires of brothers who will yet be at peace, but of eternal uucompromis lag foes. The two lines are distinct and separate. These two campfires arc warring against each other. By which campfire are yon and IV But lastly, I learn from the word, of my text that God’s fires are to lie the fires of triumph. The same soldiers who plod wearily along upon their forced marches and tramp through the long hours of the night doing sentinel duty; the same soldiers who. week aft er week aud month after month and year after year, suffer exile from home and loved ones; the same soldiers who make tin* battlefields destructive, with the flames leaping out of the cannons’ mouths and 'with the tongues of fire spitting bullets from ritle barrels, are tho soldiers who will most joyfully build the campfires of triumph after glorious peace has been declared. It is said Unit when the peace agreement was signed at Appomattox every com pany piled on the wood in its com pany streets. Then, as the flames leap- to be broken and blackened, but they od higher and higher, the soldiers, like around mice a day for food, but that is clay,” lie answers. “Why do you bake oil. Then after three weeks you hear Hie clay?” I ask. "To get the impuri- n great commotion, and up to the ties out of it.” ho answers. Thou 1 kitchen door marches the proud mother, stand and hear the roaring noise of leading a largo-brood of fuzzy little those (seething flames. They leap, they i creatures which are her children. Now, hiss, they try to burn asunder the DeWKVs M Salvo For Piles, Bu rns, Sores* F0LEYSH0NEMAR for ehlidrmni tafr, turo. J/o oplatma BANNER SALVE tho moot hooting aolvo in tho world. how were the contents of those eggs turned Into little living creatures? Simply by the agency of heat. Day after day and week after week that old hen sat upon those eggs. She sat so long that the feaUiers were worn off her breast. Khe sat so long that her breast became like fire. The warmUi of her body went Into the eggs, and that warmth developed there the little genus of life which grew until they were able to burst asunder the sbello and walk forth as perfect chickens. “Why do you not plant your flowors •nd vines on this side of the boosef” heavy, massive brick walls which are confining them. As I peer through the little hole I seem to hear the clay calling: “Ix*t me out! Oh, let me out! They are burning me to death!” “No,” answers the potter; “we are not de stroying you; we are merely taking the Impurities out of you.” Not only do they burn some of tho clay once, but twice and even thrice. Each time the furnaces arc made hotter. Then the clay comes forth ns the beautiful vase, perhaps with Its sides painted Into a flower garden by a master artist or Into the exquisite features of a beaut’ are clean walls. God has been purify ing you by his h >t tires of trouble. He has been smelting the dross of sin out of your sinful heart. In the hot, biasing, seething furnaces of trouble bo 1ms been making you like unto hlm- scli and is encompassing you by his arms of love. Hear ye uot bis sen tence, "I am come to send tire upon the earth?” But God’s tires do uot allude only to the llames of creation and of purifica tion. Without doubt they allude to the fires of battle and carnage as well. If a human being will uot be purified by the hot furnaces of trouble, then be must tight God and fight him to the death. In tho book of Ecclesiastes we read, "There is a time to rend aud a time to sow, a time to keep silence ami a time to speak, a time to love and a time to hate, a time of war aud a time of peace.” Yes, there Ls a time for gospel carnage. And Christ further more said, “He that Is not with me is against me, and be that guthereth not with me scattereth abroad.” In other words, you and I must be mustered under Christ’s standard aud warm our selves by the campfires or else we must be enrolled among the cohorts of his enemies and have different counter signs and different purposes for which we fight. These fires of my text are the conflagrations of an Invtuling army upon the march, as well us the signal flumes which shall announce to the world a universal peace. A Carae or a Bleaalnc. Now, war may be a curse or it may be a blessing. It depends npon the purposes or causes for which we fight. And when I speak thus I have well in mind the awful cost. “Give me the money that has been spent in war,” said a noted speaker, “and I will pur chase every foot of land upon the globe*. I will clothe every man, woman and child in an attire of which kings and queens would he proud. I will build a sehoolhouse on every hillside and in every valley.” That eulogy of the [tower of peace was most beau tifully said, but, though past wars may have shed rivers of blood, I do not believe the awful gashes of the soldiers’ grave trenches were too deep or too wide for the blessings which many of them brought to this suffering world. Were uot the blessings which came to mankind from tho overthrow of the feudal system worth their sacrifices of human life? What was the intrinsic value of u few thousand or even a few million lives In comparison to the freedom of the home aud sanctity of our loved ones and the Independence of a man’s 1U>, whereby he could put his arm about his daughter and say to a petty king who claimed to l>e his a lot of schoolboys, joined hands and danced about these Art's. They kept singing. “No more war; no more war’ Pence has been declared! We are all going bon: » to our loved ones! No more war! Thank God, no more war!” Not • atly were the fire' in celebration of peace built in the armies, but these lime were also built In the streets of •our northern cities, and every hillside and every fertile valley was aflame j with them. lu the south, too, then* was Joy that die !oi g and bitter struggle had ended. It bad not ended as tie 1 j south LopevI, : at at least there was an | end of of tho slaugh.t r, an etui of saeri lice and of parting. Mothers as well as gray haired fathers, and wives and sisters a.. ’ d. lighters as well ns sw<f hearts, wept about these fires. They wept tears of joy. They embraced and kissed eacli other, for now the war was over. And the soldiers were to come home. Tin* firesides were again to be filled. “War, no more war!” was the cry everywhere. “Blessed peace— blossed, triumphant peace!” Thus shall It be when our Divine Leader shall be triumphant over sin. Then the camp fires of war shall he changed Into the leaping flames of triumph. Bln shall be forever done away. Dear ones shall then be reunited. Oh, the glorious tri umphant fires of earth anti heaven when God shall *mquer all his enemies ami everlasting peace and everlasting reunion* shall be ours. Can heaven he a truly happy place for our loved ones If we are not there to sing with them the song of redemp tion aud of Moses and the Lamb? One of the saddest sights I ever witnessed was when the Second Illinois regiment was about to leave for the Spanish American war. I was its chaplain. Just before we left the armory the cry was taken up, "Does any one know a man by the name of So-and-so?” “What is the matter?” I asked. One of the majors turned to me and salt]: “A young boy ran away from home to enlist. His mother is here, and she thinks he enlisted in our regiment. Khe wants to bid him goodby and give bim her blessing.” No sooner did the major speak thus than I saw this little old mother In (aded dress among the soldiers. I followed her. * Khe looked from face to face, ami as she looked she kept saying: "Do you know where my boy is? Do you know my boy?” Not a soldier laughed. Hardly an eye was dry. Why? They were watching a mother’s breaking heart hunting for a lost child. Can It he that such a scene as this shall be repeated in Leav en on account of our absence? Can it bo that In tin* most momentous hour of all time, when Christ shall build his fires of triumph, our mothers and fa thors and our wives and dear ones and L All that tract of land lying on Broad river in Bullock’s r ’reek town ship. County of York, and State of South Carolina, containing six hun dred and ninety (690) acres, more or less; and bounded by lands of Brown Bros., and .1. T. Wilkerson on the north: Leech, estate of Mrs. Smith, Emmett Wylie and estate of Mitchell Ion the o:tst: Rowland Thomson and •L T. Wilkerson on the south: and Broad river on the west: for a more j Particular description of which by courses and distances see deed of Rowland Thomson to myself (H. W. Thomson ), recorded in Book No. 21, page 258, R. M. C. office, York county, S. C. 2. All that tract of land lying in Gowdysville township. Cheroke* coun ty, State of South Carolina, contain ing fifty-six and 35-100 acres, more or less: and bounded by lands of Sill Estes on the north; Broad river on the east; A. Sarratt on the south; and Salem church and Sill Este- on the west; for a more particular de scription of which by courses and dis tances see the deed just referred to above. Together with all my rightfl and Interests in and to Howell’s Fer ry, with all the fixtures, heredita ments and appurtenances to the said • remises belonging or in anywise in cident or appertaining, including all franchises of whatsoever nature and j kind the same may be. Terms of sale: One-half cash and ! the remainder on a cretlit of one year, j with interest from day of sale to be secured In each case by the purchaa* I er’s bond and a mortgage of the prem- | isos sold, with leave to tho purchaser to pay all cash; purchaser to pay for all papers and to pay all expenses of foreclosure, including fees of plaint iff's attorneys in case of foreclosure. J. A. Tate. C. C. C. Pis. Aug. 21-24-31. SUMMONS FOR RELIEF. Complaint Served. State of South Carolina, County of Cherokee. William J. Harris, Christopher C. Harris and Mary E. Clary, plaintiffs, against Wofford Harris, Lavinia Harris, Zulie Harris and Daniel Har ris. defendants, to Wofford Harris, defendant in this action. You are hereby summoned and re quired to answer the complaint In this action, a copy of which is here with served upon you, and to serve a copy of your answer to the said com plaint on the subscriber at their office at Spartanburg, S. C., within twenty days after the service hereof, exclus ive of the day of such service, and if you fail to answer the complaint with in tLe time aforesaid, the plaintiff in this action will apply to the court for the relief demanded in the complaint Dated May 30, 1906. The summons and complaint in this action are filed In the office of the clerk of the court of common picas for Cherokee county. J. B. Bell. Carlisle & Carlisle. Plaintiff’s Attya. Aug. 24 1 a. w. CL HOLLISTER’S Rocky Mountain Tea Nuggeis A Busy Medicine for Busy Peop.e. Brings Gulden Health .nd Renewed Vigor. A specific for Const!i>:ition. Indigestion, T.ivet ar.d Kidney troubles. 1 iinpies, Kczeniii, Impure Blood, Had Breath. Sluggish Bowels, Headache and Backache. Its Kocky Mountain Tea in tab let fo"m. 3T) (•••nts a box. (Jenuinj made by Hollister Dim o Cumpanv, Madison, Wis. GOLDEN NICGETS FOK SAL10W PEOPLE O PIUM Atlanta, Go. t and WHISKEY HABITS cured at home with out paia. Book of par ticulars sent I ICF'.K. _ H. M. WOOLLEY. M. D. Otbce 104 N. Pryor Street. E lectric bitters Til F! BEST POR BILMU'SN i'.SS AND KIDNEYS. master; “Hands off Khe Is my child, our Christ shall be lool lug In vain for She la mine?” Were not all the sac rifices for religious freedom well made? Would you put out the fires which burned to death the mortal life of Uldley, Latimer, Hush, Savonarola, if lu order to do it we had to go back Snd grope about amid the ouperatitlons our faces among the rejoicing hosts of heaven? Shall it be? Khali some of us never be seen by the campfires of heav en whieh shall leap and blaze when the flaming torches of sin shall bo for ever snuffed out? [Copyright, 1906, by Lout* Klopach.] Kodol d?yspe^sr« Cure Digests v hat yoc 'at* THE ORIGINAL LAXAtC. C IP GH SYRUP KENNEDY'S LAXuTbutONEMAR Krd Clover Motion, «a<I b'tt / 6*c oa Lvtry Bohl*. Wc do not do all kinds of printitij wo do tho GOOD kind.