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X I Plant Wood’s Garden Seeds V FOR SUPERIOR VEGE TABLES & FLOWERS. Twenty-eight years experience —our own seed farms, trial grounds—and large warehouse capacity give us an equipment that is unsurpassed anywhere for supplying the best seeds obtainable. Our trade in seeds Z} both for the Garden and Farm is one of the larges* in this country. We are headquarters foi Grass and Clover Seeds, Seed Oats, Seed Potatoes. Cow Peas, Soja Beans and Other Farm Seeds. Wood's Descriptive Catalog give fuller arfl mi'- com pi '< infor mation about both ildnten ainl I’nriii fcotxi.s than any oilier similar pulilien lion issued in this country. Mailed free on request. Write lor it. , Catmags Sermon By Rev. Frank De Witt Talmage, D. D. per mines, of which he has control for a few years tire his tiud Ids alone. They are no more his than the talent widen the master gave to his unfaith ful servant in the parable was his. They are no more Ills than the money which you give to a Wall street broker to buy for you some Pennsylvania rail road stock Is bis. They are no more Ids than the tree growing in my fruit yard belongs to the robins who cm • there each year to build their nests in it. They arc no more his than the waters which flow down from the Adirondack mountains and work their way past the Highlands and cool them selves under the shadows of the Pal- Los Angeles. Cal., Feb. 17—In deal ing in a new and strikingly personal *vay with the parable of the talents Isa ties belong to the men who live on dor eagle, how it mounts? Does It can limit. I am my neighbor's friend and G til’s dueiple, alth >ugh people know it not.” His Hypocrisy. My brother, when you try to defend your sinful, selli h actions by putting tiie blame of your sins upon others, do you honestly mean that you are telling : the truth? No, you know you are not. tike the unfaithful servant in the par able. you are trying to cover up your | tiger claws with sheep’; wool. You are trying to shield your sown sins with a tissue of lies. People admire the strong i wing on which the eagle soars, but a j great preacher took a different view of i its flight. ‘‘Do you see,” he said, ‘‘yon- tbe preacher -hows how it applies to an estate whieh rims the banks of the men of means and influence in every Hudson T.W.Wood&Sons, Seedsmen U RICHMOND, . VA. THE Cr^GOAL ‘V“U! . eui For all Couchs and in expelling Colds fron. me sys tem by gently moving ! .1 bowels. A certain — /7 position in life today. The text is Luke viii, 18, ‘Whosoever hath not, from him shall be taken away even that which he seemeth to have." It is amazing how the addition of one little word may change the whole meaning of a sentenee. For a long time 1 could not understand the twen ty-ninth verse of the twenty-fifth chap ter of Matthew. Christ in his wonder ful way had been telling the parable of the man who went into the far country after he had delivered unto his serv- | ants his goods. The story is almost identical with the history of your own I life. i For years and years you were a i slave to business. You kept up a brave 1 frout. but for nearly a quarter of a Belongs to Public. I might feast my eyes upon that wa ter if I would on a moonlight night. 1 might launeh my skiff into those wa ters and with powerful stroke fill the blades of my oars with its treasures so that when those drops fall back into the bosom of the stream they look like a beautiful collection of sparkling gems. P.ut 1 could not control it or change its course. If I tried to change the current of the Hudson river those who live below me would rise up in wrathful protest and cry: "Stop! Stop! That river belongs to us as much as to you. You can use those waters to irri gate your gardens and fields if you will, but after your flowers and corn money for the ethereal blue or aspire to com- ; *» uts mune with the stars of the heavens? Not a whit. Such airy considerations have no weight with the bird. And yet you will not wonder that it soars when the town where these servants lived j and said: ‘‘The ; t .• is coming. He will soon be here. You must make : preparations to receive him. He t.- coming very soon.” Preparing For His Return. At once the d'fferout servants went ■ forth and gathered in their talcn s, ■ j to use the business parlance, the mon ; eys which thj> had invested. On the, night before the master came thev* | three servants were seated together be i fore the great fireplace of the master’s turned what ents?" know room. One of those sorv.'i illtS to allot 1 icr and Vaid: ".lolin, hnvi i- you made with your to! “Well." auswt rod John. “ you the mast IT LI' 0 4 me five tal- Of course ■ that is a big lot . of to invest . but 1 kept busy. I lit' Would <■ ome s< ion. A ml as the result of my labors i have gained five | talents more. ) shall delight to give j you remember that it thus obtains a | t | iern „ n to jp,,, i, e pas been a kind ; broader range of vision and so becomes an j i 0V iv:g master to me." the more able to provide for its nest. “What have you done, Peter?” I The bird mounts toward heaven, but it j “Well,” answered Pet-r. "i did not) always keeps its eyes upon the outlook , havp as manv iau.„ts its you, hut I for its prey. It soars that it may flash j took what ) H> j, avp< and 1 went to work downward with full swoop upon the ; for his (loar namo . He gave me two object of its desires.” So with some sinful men. With their honeyed words they seem to he mounting toward the heavenly blue. They pretend to he liv ing an unselfish life. But they are not mounting thus toward he wen to live nearer to God. They are mounting thus in order that they may tjs ve wider range for their depredations. They as- reliet for croup ana Lg js oa wtiooping-couch. ^-.V //Y bottle Nearly a l -r , i' c.fg- every touch cures are^-r eonsti pat inc.Mr especially those.F t ecr.!am;:.cOpiatr Kennedy’s Laxative ^ Hj-ev & Tar moves the bowels, contain:. no Opiates. . . v m, u ’ >.*U: r.q «*t( >• .»i'. s PREPAPKD AT T’ir; t.AHOHATOPY OP L. O. DeiA ITT K CO., CHICAGO, U. 8. A For by Oerokce Drug Co., Gaffney; L O Allison, Cowtena. and grain have drunk tlieir fill j’ou The Red century you were trembling upon the must let those waters flow back into sumo the white, spotless robes ( >f vir- eomand'ih# i brink of bankruptcy. The children the river again. You must not change Honey B?e 1 we re young and had to be supported the onward flow which will bring those and educated. Your business had not waters to us. You can use the river as yet been well established. The busi- it creeps past your land, but then that ness world was eyeing you askance, river belongs to us and not to you.” So with the great river of gold. The worldly wise rich man may say, “This land is mine, these rivers are mine, this endless system of railroad tracks is mine, these newspapers and these of fice buildings are mine.” “No,” an swers God, “not thine, but mine. I give thee the use of them for a little while ns the employer gave the talents to the servants in the parable. But soon I shall take them back again.” “All?" “Yes. all. Then 1 shall demand an account of thy stewardship.” Do TrjdtM.riiRfdstcfti) j comjjtjou made a tun fltlJl,0 LAXATIVE; nUNt NOTICE OF SALE. By virtue of a decree of nartition *nd sale of the Court of Common Pleas for Cherokee county In the ease of Didlema Blanton, et al. plain- *ffs vs. Joseph M. Runyan, et al, de fendants. I will sell at Gaffney, be fore the court house door, during the legal hours for sales, on salesday, Monday March 4th. 1907, the follow ing described property, towit: All that certain tract or parcel of land lying, being and situated in Cherokee Township. Cherokee coif • ty. (formerly York county) and State of South Carolina on thf* wa - ers of McEntiro branch, adjoining lands of H. K. McSwain and others. Beginning on red oab corner: thence N. 38 1-2 W. 137 poles to post oak; thence W. 54 poles to pine, old cor ner; thence S. 42 E. 164 poles to fence corner; thence N. 51 E. 28 boles to the beginning, as per deed from Jane L. Bechtler and C. E. Bechtler to Jacob Runyon, dated 5th day of January. 1874 and record'd in R. M. C. office for York countv on January 24th, 1874, In Deed Rook, "Y.” pages 687 and 688, and contain ing. as per said deed, thirty-seven and one-fourth (37 14) acres. Said land is now bounded by lands of Le- rov McSwain, Lawson McSwain Jas. McSwain and G. R Wylie, and the same being the Interest of J^'' I Bechtler in the lands of her father. Jas. Wylie, deceased. TERMS OF SALE: Cash. Pur- ehaser to pay for patters. J. Eb. Jefferies, Cl’k. C. C. Pi’s. Pub. Feb. 14-21 and 28. .Eating House. When in town give us a call. We will do all that is in our power to please you. Fresh Oysters served in all styles. Parker’s Eating House Opposite Postoifice. You had to buy your goods on long credit and therefore pay higher for them than if you had the ready cash. The result: It was grind, work, econo mize. But after a time the financial turn for the better, finished their sehool- to support them- selves One of your daughters married. With the lessening of expenses at home there came a marvelous growth at the sliu-e. Instead of living upon the “narrow l.i:i - of difficulty” you moved iuto Easy stu home and al'v wife: “My dear. I have fought the bat tle of life and v n it. It is time for us to bike a weiid.inu trip. We did not go very far when w - were married. We were too poor. L a us next spring start upon a trip around the world.” “Ob, John,” she saitl, "can you afford it?” “Yes,” you answered. “And 1 think we can take our youngest daughter along. She is all we have left at home." At once you began to make prepara tions. Your wife planned for the care of the house. Y'ou made the arrange ments at the store. You called in one employee and said, “Harry, you will take care of this department.” Y'ou called in another and said, “Joe, you take charge of that department.” To another man you gave oue task and to another a different responsibility. Then you set sail. With your wife and daughter you were away from home nearly a year. When yon returned you called your various employees to ren der an account of their stewardship. You rewarded each man according as he had fulfilled the trust committed to his charge. Such is the modern par allel of the parable of the twenty-fifth chapter of Matthew. Now, when the good man of this parable found out that there was one who bad failed to fulfill his trust he says. “Take therefore the talent from him and give it unto him who hath ten talents, for unto every one that hath shall be given, and be shall have an abundance, but fiom him that hath not shall be taken away even that which he bath.” “Strange,” I used to say when I read these words. “How can anything be taken away from a man who has nothing?” Can nothing come from nothing? Yet here in this parable of Matthew we read, “From him that hath not shall be taken away even that which he hath.” “I cannot understand these words,” I used to aay; “I cannot understand them.” The Real Meaning. But some time ago 1 had a strange illumination of the meaning of this chapter. Just as you enter a dark t. One night you came you not see what I am driving at? The dinner you said to your rich man may seem to own his land, but ho (lex's not. He is a trustee and a trustee alone. Soon at the brink of the grave that trusteeship shall be taken away. Y’et. to hear some worldly wise men talk, you would suppose that when they are taking an inventory of God’s money they are taking an inwntory of their own gold, which they could keep forever. They seem to act like a selfish dog. After you have fed your Scotch collie all he can eat what does he do? He takes the bones that are left and carries them out into the gar den and there digs a big hole. Then he puts those bones into that hole and covers them up. Then he looks at the place a minute and seems to say: “Ah. I am very prudent! No trouble can entrap me. Some day I will get hun gry when my master may be visiting or dead. Then I will be Independent of all my surroundings. I will go to yonder brook and find water to drink. I will come here and dig up these bones and have a glorious feast. Therefore I shall never die, because I have lots to drink and lots to eat.” Thus with the worldly wise man. He does not look upon his lands and gold ns God’s, but as Ills own. lie goes and digs his holes and buries in them his gootls. Then his actions .-eem to say: “I will live forever. I am independent of all my surroundings.” The Unfaithful Servant. When 1 see this cringing, crawling, unfaithful servant of the parable be- tuo, but their hearts are as black .-11111 as craven as the unfaithful servant of the parable. But not only does the worldly wise man incur loss of property when his Lord comes and reckons with him. He loses the society and eternal compan- ionship of those dear to him. He seems to assume that, no matter how selfish ly he may live or what sins he may commit, he shall be able to live for ever with the same kind of good peo ple with whom he has associated on earth. He seems to think, because the Master of the parable has let him work side by side with his faithful servants here for a time, that when he comes back he will still let faithful servants live side by side with him. Now, this is not to be. Not only did the Master take away from his 'un faithful servant his talent and tear away his hypocritical preleases to vir tue. but the Master also debarred that unfaithful servant forevermore asso ciating with those who had been faith ful to their trusts. If you turn to the twenty-fifth chap ter of Matthew, you will find that Jesus taught this fact beyond all per- adventure. After Christ had told the partible of the unfaithful servant with the dramatic power of a true orator he suddenly changed his illustration into the scene of a courtroom. Here is the open court of the east. Here are the multitudes of all ages assembled. There is the throne upon which God will sit as the Divine Judge, who shall pass upon each mortal life. After each servant has given an account of his steward ship the Divine Judge will pronounce the sentence. Listen to the awful ring May the Holy Spirit help you to rcal- tnlents, and. I earned for him two J talents more. I shall be proud to give . them to him. He has been a good | master to me.” “Good, good,” say> ^ John. “How pleased the master will j be with your work, Peter! I know he | will be just as pleased with your la- j hors ns he is with mine. We have i both done what we could.” Just to the rear of Peter and John sat the third servant. 1 think his name was Judas. Judas was sitting very still. Peter says to Judas, “Well. Ju das. what have you done for the mas ter?" Judas looks up. He gruffly an swers: “Nothing. To tell the truth, I know that I ought to have labored for the master as you fellows did, but I wanted to have a good time while the master xvas away, and 1 had it. I think, however, I have done better than you two. I have eaten my cake. I and I still have It. What I am going J to do when he comes is to throw al! ; the blame on him. Then he will feel | ashamed to punish me.” Just then the three servants jumped to their feet. The cry was taken up ontsld' “Make way! Open the door! Tin* master is coming. Render ye servants an ac count of your stewardship. Open the door aud let the master in." My brother, do you think that con versation which I have been telling you was merely a fictitious one? Do you believe the unfaithful servant would ever have another chance to make a proper use of the master’s tal ent? Deep down In your heart you know whether Christ will grant you another chance for salvation beyond the grave. You may say, “The un faithful servant in the parable did not have another chance, but I shall.” All that I can say is: “If the unfaithful servant did not, neither will you. If the unfaithful servant did have anoth er chance, then you will have." Re member this is not my parable, but Christ’s. Y'ou alone must apply the lesson of this parable in order to real ize the eternal destiny of your soul. Women Who Wear Well. It is astonishing how great a change a few yt.ars of married life of on make in the appeararme aud (imposition of many women. The freshness, the charm, itae brilliance vanish It e the I loom from a peach which is rudely handled. The matron is onl. i dim shadow, a faint echo of the charming maiden. There aro two reasons for this change, ignorance aid negiect. Few young women appreciate the shock to the system through the change which comes with marriage a*d motherhood. Many neglect to deal with the unpleasant pelvic drains and weak nesses which toy often come with mar riage and motherhood, not understand!ag that this secret drain is robbing the cheek of its freshness and the form of its fairness. As surely as the general health suffers when there is derangement of the health of the delicate womanly organs, so surely when these organs are. established in health the face and form at once witness to the fact in renewed comeliness. Nearly a million women have found health a«d happiness in the use of Dr. Pierce’s Fa vorite Prescription. It makes weak wom en strong and sick women well. Ingredi ents on label—contains no alcohol or harmful habit-forming drugs, made wholly of those native. American, medic inal roots most highly recommended by leading medical authorit ies of all the sev eral schools of practice for the cure of woman’s peculiar ailments. For nursing mothers,or for those broken- down in health by too frequent bearing of children, also for the expectant mothers, to prepare the system for the coming of baby and making its advent easy and almost painless, there is no medicine quite so good as ’’Favorite Prescription." It can do no harm in any condition of the system. It is a most potent invigorating tonic and strengthening nervine niedy adapted to woman’s delicate system by a physician of large experience in the treat ment of woman’s peculiar udments. Dr. Pierce may be consulted by letter free of charge. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Invalids’ Hotel and Surgical Institute, Buffalo, N. Y. of those words: “And before him shall be gathered all nations, and he shall separate them one from another as a shepherd dlvideth his sheep from the goats, and he shall set the sheep on his right hand and the goats on his left.” Oh, yes; there will be an awful sepa ration some day! The faithful serv ants must lie separated from the bad. That means, “If I do not render a good account of my stewardship, Gpd will separate me in eternity from living with those who have been faithful to their trust.” Ize it in Christ's way, aud then you will give up your indolent lives and go to work for him who has endowed you with the talents for which you will have to give account. [Copyright, 1907, by Louis Klopsch.] Neighbors Got Fooled. “I was literally coughin gmyself to Joath and bad become too weak to ! eave my bed; and neighbors predict 'd that 1 would never leave It alive: but they got fooled, for thanks be to God. I was introduced to try Dr King’s N“W Discovery. It took just •our one dollar bottles to completely cure the cough and restore me to good sound health,” writes Mrs. Eva llncapher of Grovertown, Stark Co.. Ind. This King of cough and cold cures and beal°r of throat and lungs, is guaranteed by Cherokee Drug Co. 50c and $1.00. Trial bottle free. tf FOR SALE. DeWitt’s JKSf Salvo For Pales, Burnsy Sores* <Jh, unfaithful servants, ye pretend lug deprived of his one talent, which' to believe that your mother, your wife, he hits hidden in his bank vaults, as a your daughter, your son, belong to dog hides a bone, 1 cannot shut my you? If you do not render a true ac- ears to the false assumption of virtue count of your stewardship, God will with which this unfaithful servant just as surely take them away from tried to assail his master’s character, you as some day he will take away He seems to say: “Master, I know your money aud shatter your hypocrit- what a tyrant thou art. I know how ical pretenses to virtue. Some-day God unrelenting and bitter thou wouldst shall send his death angel Into your be if I made one mistake in my In- home. You may bar and bolt the frout vestments. I knew that if I made a door, but the death angel will come poor purchase and lost any of the cap- right In. He will not loiter much In I will offer for sale -Jo the ital thou wouldst never cease to hound the dining room or the parlor. He will highest bidder on the first Mon- me and that thou wouldst demand all ascend the staircase and stop at this 'lay (saiesday) in March immediate r thy gold back or my life’s blood. And bedroom and that. He will look Into ' v a ft e r the^ legal sales, before the room and go to the window and lift so, on account of the fear of making oue bedroom and there find your old ^ourt houso ooor, the nropretv known the green shade aud a flood of sunlight a mistake, I did nothing. Here thou mother reading her Bible. He will ap- n,r r "' co nn ■ ntrnn pours in, so I had a windowful of gos- hast the money that is thine.” What proach her gentle form and tap her pel light poured upon these words. One happened? With one mighty grip the upon the shoulder and say: “Come, master tore Into shreds the black gar- child of God. Come! By thy illumined meut of hypocrisy which covered that face I know thou hast been faithful craven heart. With one denunciatory to thy trust.” Then he will find your verbal blow he silenced those lying daughter upon her knees. He will say lips. He tore away all the unfaithful to her: “Come, daughter. Jesus Is servant's pretenses to virtue when he waiting.” He will call thy Christian said: “Hypocrite and falsifier thou art. father. He will stop a minute as he Thou hast not only proved recreant to hears your dear wife pray, “O God, day while reading the expression as found in Luke I came upon the one word “seemeth.” Then I read the con clusion of the parable in Matthew in conjunction with my text in Luke, and I found that the two verses meant practically the same. This is the way I read the two verses: “Take heed therefore how you hear, for whosoever hath to him shall be given and whoso ever hath not from him shall he tukeu away even that which he seemeth to as the Gooding house, on Logan street. This Is a five-room cottaere. city water. Sale subject to mortgage of J. Q. Little. Mrs. Minnie Cox. Feb. 19. 23, 26, Mar. 1. NOTICE. On each Tuesday and Saturday of each week we will grind your corn the talent I gave thee, hut thou art save me and save my dear husbaud, or wheat on short notice. Sasttefact- now trying to cover that guilt with that we may dwell together with thee '°n guaranteed. Your patronage so- perjury and lies. Thou art doing as in paradise.” Why will yonder angel belted. most unfaithful servants and evildoers be weeping? Thou knowest or ought do. When they are convicted of wrong- to know. Unless thou dost repent and FOimHONEMCAR Cures Colds; Prevents Pneumonia have." “Oh,” I exclaimed, “1 see it! When a man is untrue to the trust doing they try to lay the blame at make a right rendering of thy steward Yours for business, W. J. Daniel & J. S. Spencer. FOLEYSHONEY^TAR •tope tlx* cotiglx and heel* lung's ■ and WHISKEY HABITS cured at home witb. out pain. Book of par ticulars sent FKKB. I B. M. WOOLLEY. M. D. Office 104 N. Pryor Street. rhjyskidneycure Makes Kidneys and Bladder Right Kodol Dyspepsia C»re Olgasts what you eat* Dr. King’s N6w Life Pills The best In the world. ! God has given to him, he may seem to have wealth and happiness, he may •eem to be blessed with Joys which are denied the children of God, but i there shall come a time when he shall j stand before all men stripped of his false assumptions.” To pretend to have i does not prove that we have. That word “seemeth” Is the pivotal word of my sermonic theme. I want to prove to you that no man cau eternally pos-* Bess anything that is good and true and pure unless he possesses them through his fidelity and consecration to : Jesus Christ. When a man has gifts ! and talents given to him that there with he may do effective service for Christ and he uses them for his own advantage or does not use them at all, he will be called to account al the bar of God. Then God will say, “Take away even that which he seemeth to have.” The most absurd assumption. In the first place, of a worldly wise man ts to suppose the gold, or the land, or the railroad Itocka, or the Montana cop some one else’s door.” Oh, my friends, ship thy family circle after death will are you and I taking that course? never be reunited. You may say your When we think of our unused talents, loved ones belong to you, but your pre- when our consciences tell 11s that God sumption may be based upon false Intended us to use the gifts that are premises. Y’our Christian loved ones lying idle, what is our answer? Is our belong to you if you are faithful to excuse that other men prevent us or your divine trust as they are faithful, that God Is a hard master In requiring If thou art not faithful, then they do us to work? not belong to you. They shall not be- Then, again, there aro men who long to you any more than your gold would make their Inactivity appear as after death will belong to you. “And true kindness. How often do we see he shall separate them one from an- the unfaithful servants of life with an other, as a shepherd dividetb the sheep assumed expression of virtue upon from the goats," “For whosoever hath their countenances? They are saying: to him shail be given, aud from him “I know people say I am selfish. I that hath not shall be taken away even know people say that I am mean. But that which he seemeth to have.” what can 1 do? I wish that I might be But I must not talk about eternal able to help others. But if I help them separations unless I tell you a conver- 1 I will only do them an injury. It Is sation that would probably, go on be- l>ettor for every man to learn to help tween the faithful servant and the un- hlmself rather than to be helped by his faithful one before the master o r the brothers. The easiest way to make a parable returned and demanded an ac- well man a cripple Is to give him a counting for the trusts which he had emteh. The easiest w-ny to make a eommitled to them. The news was lame man well Is to take away his carried ahead to the three servants of crutch and compel him to use his weak the parable. Thp messengers came to DON’T FORGET 1 you cr.n be cured of Cancr, Tu 1 • aior or Chronic Oki Sores. Ten I ' thousand cams treated, it Is the i 1 surest cur*! on earth. Delay If t 1 fata! How to be cured? Just I write I O B GLADDEN Grover. N. C. I DR w, K. GUNTER, I > K M T I T ut Star Theatre Building, Phonk No. 20. Crow *0;! bridge werk a specialty DR. J. F. GARRETT. - DENTIST. Mover to new office over Frederick Street. Front of the Battery. ’Phone in Offlc* and Residence. Fire, Life, Accident, Health Insur-i ance Surety Bonds. Jones J. Party Ramsey & Coyle Painters, Paper Hangers and Decorators Gaffney, S. C. We have just received the largest and most complete line of samples of Wall paper. Sin-O-Wall an<lSanitas ever shown in Gaffney. We also paint. Esti mates and references cheerfully fur nished. Feb. 5-ime, RAMSEY & COYLE HOLLISTER’S Rocky Mountain ^ea Nuggofo A Busy Medicine far Busy People/ Brings Golden Health «nd Renewed Vigor. A specific for Constipation. Indigestion. Ltrar and Kidney troubles. Pimples. Eczema, Impure Blood, Bad Breath, Sluggish Bowels. Headache and Backache. I ts Rocky Mountain Tea in tab let tom, 35 cents a box. Genuina made fay Hollister Drug Com pant, Madison, Wia. GOLDEN NUGGETS FOR SAL10W PEOPLE PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM CI«anrea and brautifiee the hah. Pro motet a Inimriant growth. N»ver Fails to Restore Grew Hair to its Youthful Color. Cure, scalp i. - A hair tilling. LOUGH syrup KENNEDY'S LAXATiVF KONEMAR Bed Clover Biossom and Honey V,te oa Every Botda. a A N rt 8 A LVE the rnof-* ‘-'''.-tino salve in the world* FOLEYSRCiPT^TAR for chlldr-jn: in i+re» oplatot OH.KING’S NEW DISCOVERY Will Surely Slop That Cough. >1 POTDItf* THE BEST FOR biliousness 1 BITTERS ANDKIDNEY8. Buckfen’s Arnica Salve The Best Salve In The WorM. W« do not do all kinds of printing —we do the GOOD kind. I